<?xml version="1.0"?><TEI xmlns="http://www.tei-c.org/ns/1.0" xmlns:xsi="http://www.w3.org/2001/XMLSchema-instance" xsi:schemaLocation="http://www.tei-c.org/ns/1.0 http://digital.lib.ecu.edu/tei/xsd/tei_P5.xsd"><teiHeader><fileDesc><titleStmt><title></title><author></author><respStmt><resp>Text encoded by</resp><name>Digital Collections</name></respStmt></titleStmt><publicationStmt><distributor>East Carolina University. J. Y. Joyner Library</distributor><address><addrLine>Digital Collections</addrLine><addrLine>Joyner Library, East Carolina University</addrLine><addrLine>East Fifth Street, Greenville NC 27858-4353 USA</addrLine></address><date>2012</date></publicationStmt><sourceDesc><bibl></bibl></sourceDesc></fileDesc><encodingDesc><samplingDecl><p>All quotation marks retained as data.</p><p>All end-of-line hyphens have been removed, and the trailing part of a word has been joined to the preceding line.</p><p>All smart quotes have been converted into straight quotes.</p></samplingDecl><classDecl><taxonomy xml:id="LCSH"><bibl>Library of Congress Subject Headings</bibl></taxonomy></classDecl></encodingDesc><profileDesc><creation><date></date></creation><langUsage xml:lang="en-US"><language ident="en-US" usage="100">English</language></langUsage><textClass><keywords scheme="#LCSH"><list><item></item></list></keywords></textClass></profileDesc></teiHeader><text><body><div type="other">
<p rend="align(centerbold)">[This text is machine generated and may contain errors.]</p>
<pb facs="00058127_0001"/>
mmmmmmm<lb/>
Inside<lb/>
EDITORIALS??.??4<lb/>
CLASSIFIEDS.?6<lb/>
FEATURES 8<lb/>
Features<lb/>
Maritime history and underwater archaeology<lb/>
will trip to Cape Fear.<lb/>
Check out page 8,<lb/>
v Sports<lb/>
Edwards, O'Connor win CAA players<lb/>
for the week.<lb/>
Turn to the action on page 12.<lb/>
Bhz i:ast (Earnlinian<lb/>
Serving the East Carolina campus community since 1925.<lb/>
Vol. 63 No. 53<lb/>
Thursday February 23, 189<lb/>
Greenville, NC<lb/>
14 Pages<lb/>
Circulation 12,0CJ<lb/>
Rape prevention discussed<lb/>
Bv M1NP McINMS<lb/>
Mac Wnlft<lb/>
? lo ECU students know<lb/>
A questionnairedeal-<lb/>
impus rapes was given<lb/>
 -elected ECU stu-<lb/>
rtsto compile data on<lb/>
rap i vareness.<lb/>
questionnaire included<lb/>
ns which pertained to stu-<lb/>
dents knowledge of campus<lb/>
?s security andresolutions.lt<lb/>
wasn't surprising to learn that<lb/>
students at ECU know either<lb/>
ven r nothing at all about<lb/>
- rapes.<lb/>
( ampussecurity was another<lb/>
it students were asked to<lb/>
imenton Mostolrthe students<lb/>
security isn't strong<lb/>
 - the) offered some reso-<lb/>
I<lb/>
uritv should have more<lb/>
fool rather than in pa-<lb/>
1 a rs one student said. When<lb/>
re on foot, they can patrol<lb/>
i patrol car can't and<lb/>
ikely the areas that a<lb/>
? : gel to are the areas<lb/>
most probable for a<lb/>
k.<lb/>
ling to Keith Knox,<lb/>
t prevention officer at ECU<lb/>
tpus Security, ECU is like a<lb/>
thin a city making it easier<lb/>
because all of the stu-<lb/>
dent- are in one condensed area.<lb/>
mpared to Pitt County,<lb/>
there are more campus police per<lb/>
n there are police per<lb/>
I County resident.<lb/>
Knox admits that there is a<lb/>
? rrtore security. On certain<lb/>
ts there may be as few as<lb/>
e officers patrolling the<lb/>
grounds of ECU. Oi those three,<lb/>
not one will be on foot.<lb/>
He added that despite the<lb/>
condensed area of campus there<lb/>
are still too few campus police.<lb/>
Not one officer can have a day oft<lb/>
during a regular school year be-<lb/>
cause there aren't enough officers<lb/>
to cover all of the shifts.<lb/>
Security is not the only prob-<lb/>
lem that causes a lower safety<lb/>
level on campus. Most students<lb/>
believe that campus lighting is<lb/>
inadequate.<lb/>
The SGA approved a resolu-<lb/>
tion in march 88' to improve<lb/>
campus lighting bv installing 150<lb/>
watt high-pressure sodium lamps<lb/>
to replace the present lighting<lb/>
system. The high-pressure so-<lb/>
dium lamps not onlv yield more<lb/>
light but they consume 13 less<lb/>
energy than ECU'S present light-<lb/>
ing system.<lb/>
ECU has hired a lighting<lb/>
engineer to map out the campus<lb/>
area in order to provide a suffi-<lb/>
cient lighting system.<lb/>
Experimental sodium bulbs<lb/>
have been placed in different loca-<lb/>
tions on campus such as in one<lb/>
between Slay and Garrett dorm,<lb/>
two in parking area between<lb/>
White and Greene dorm, and<lb/>
three behind the nursing build-<lb/>
ing. A final date on when the en-<lb/>
tire lighting system will be re-<lb/>
placed has not been set.<lb/>
The ECU security isn't to<lb/>
blame for all of the problems con-<lb/>
cerning safety. Students could<lb/>
avoid possible attacks bv using a<lb/>
little common sense.<lb/>
Knox addsThe only way<lb/>
that we can have a safe campus is<lb/>
through a cooperative effort<lb/>
taken bv each individual in the<lb/>
university community<lb/>
To deter rape attacks on cam-<lb/>
pus, a student should not walk<lb/>
alone. Rape can also be deterred<lb/>
bv avoiding dark streets, high<lb/>
shrubbery, short cuts and dark<lb/>
doorways.<lb/>
anet ohnson, chairperson of<lb/>
ECU'S Sexual Assault Awareness<lb/>
Committee says that eighty-five<lb/>
percent of rapes can be prevented;<lb/>
bv a little precaution, preparation<lb/>
and awareness, your chances of<lb/>
attack can be reduced by half.<lb/>
To help in prevention, ECU<lb/>
otters services such as the Pirate<lb/>
Walk and emergency blue lights.<lb/>
The blue lights, which are placed<lb/>
at different locations on campus,<lb/>
are used as a means for students to<lb/>
contact security when in danger.<lb/>
Hopefully if the Pirate Walk<lb/>
is allowed to continue and Knox's<lb/>
recommendation to add an addi-<lb/>
tional twelve blue light phones is<lb/>
approved, there will be an im-<lb/>
provement in campus security.<lb/>
ECL's Department of Public<lb/>
Safety otters classes in sexual as-<lb/>
sault prevention, date rape, men<lb/>
concerning date rape, simple<lb/>
techniques for self-defense in<lb/>
preventing sexual assault and<lb/>
rape preventions.<lb/>
For further information con-<lb/>
tact Keith Knox at "57-6294, or<lb/>
come by the ECU Department of<lb/>
Public Safety<lb/>
Noted poet Maya Angelou spoke at Hendrix Theate: Tuesday night to an enthusiastic audience.<lb/>
Angelou is the author of the autobiographical bestseller, "I Know Why The Caged Bird Sings<lb/>
(Photo by J.D. Whitmire, ECU Photolab).<lb/>
Nanotechnology may control<lb/>
structure of matter in future<lb/>
By DAVID HERRING<lb/>
Assistant News Editor<lb/>
(Editor's note: This is a two-part<lb/>
series looking intoNanotechnol-<lb/>
ogy. Tuesday, David Herring<lb/>
will report on the applications of<lb/>
this theoretical technology)<lb/>
Nanotechnology, by defini-<lb/>
tion, is "a thorough, inexpensive<lb/>
control over the structure of mat-<lb/>
ter and although this technol-<lb/>
ogy is purely theoretical at pres-<lb/>
ent, it is firmly rooted in existing<lb/>
technologies, which could ulti-<lb/>
mately lead us to nanotechnology<lb/>
capability, according to K. Eric<lb/>
Drcxler, MIT alumnus.<lb/>
Drexler's brainchild,<lb/>
nanotechnology offers humans<lb/>
the capacity to build program-<lb/>
mable' molecular machines (as-<lb/>
semblers) which, according to<lb/>
Drexler, "will work like tiny in-<lb/>
dustrial robots, directing chemi-<lb/>
cal reactions by positioning mo-<lb/>
lecular tools to build complex<lb/>
structures atom by atom<lb/>
The technology would imi-<lb/>
tate the natural chemical bonding<lb/>
processes found in nature, ena-<lb/>
bling humans to cheaply mass-<lb/>
produce any structure, natural or<lb/>
man-made, simply by breaking<lb/>
existing bonds, repositioning the<lb/>
desired molecules and then form-<lb/>
ing a new bond to hold it in posi-<lb/>
tion ? and one machine will do<lb/>
this millions of times per second.<lb/>
To give an indication of the<lb/>
size involved, microtechnology<lb/>
deals with objects on the mi-<lb/>
crometer scale (a millionth of a<lb/>
meter), such as construction of<lb/>
computer chips, transistors, etc.<lb/>
Nanotechnology would operate<lb/>
on the nanometer scaie (a bil-<lb/>
lionth of a meter) ? each assem-<lb/>
bler so small you could count the<lb/>
number of atoms on its surface.<lb/>
Easier said than done. We<lb/>
must first learn how to build one<lb/>
of these machines, consolidating<lb/>
information from disciplines in<lb/>
biology, chemistry, computer sci-<lb/>
ence, engineering, geology, medi-<lb/>
cine and physics. Then comes the<lb/>
hard part: manipulating these<lb/>
assemblers, which will require<lb/>
vast amounts of software, on<lb/>
which we will need to store vir-<lb/>
tual libraries of data from the sci-<lb/>
ence disciplines.<lb/>
Drcxler proposes two ap-<lb/>
proaches to nanotechnology: top-<lb/>
down and bottom-up. The top-<lb/>
down approach is illustrated by<lb/>
the current trend in computer<lb/>
technology toward miniaturiza-<lb/>
tion.<lb/>
Fifty years ago it would take<lb/>
rooms of equipment to process<lb/>
information which a computer<lb/>
chip the size of a fingernail can<lb/>
process in a fraction of the time. It<lb/>
can be argued that if the trend<lb/>
continues, microcomputers will<lb/>
ultimately evolve into nanocom-<lb/>
puters.<lb/>
Drexler credits the top-down<lb/>
approach to physicist Richard<lb/>
Feynman, who in his 1959 article<lb/>
"There's Plenty of Room at the<lb/>
Bottom" wrote, "The principles of<lb/>
physics, as far as I can see, do not<lb/>
speak against the possibility of<lb/>
maneuvering things atom by<lb/>
atom. But it is interesting that it<lb/>
would be, in principle, possible<lb/>
for a physicist to synthesize any<lb/>
chemical substance that the chem-<lb/>
ist writes down. Give the orders,<lb/>
and the physicist synthesizes it.<lb/>
How? Put the atoms down where<lb/>
the chemist says, and so you make<lb/>
the substance<lb/>
Yet Drexler himself is skepti-<lb/>
cal of the top-down approach and<lb/>
focuses mostlv on the bottom-up<lb/>
approach. In 1944, Erwin<lb/>
Schrodinger wrote What Is Life?<lb/>
which, according to Drcxler, cor-<lb/>
rectly viewed life as based on<lb/>
molecular devices and machines.<lb/>
Understanding of the func-<lb/>
tions and structures of molecular<lb/>
devices found in nature, such as<lb/>
DNA and enzymes, has since in-<lb/>
creased so that molecular biolo-<lb/>
gists, through biotechnology, can<lb/>
manipulate these molecular de-<lb/>
vices for purposes other than their<lb/>
normal "behavior Drexler has<lb/>
theorized that molecular biolo-<lb/>
gists could mimic natures proc-<lb/>
esses by employing biotechnol-<lb/>
ogy to build assemblers out of<lb/>
proteins.<lb/>
Given certain characteristics,<lb/>
these first-generation assemblers<lb/>
could then build better, more<lb/>
complex assemblers made of sta-<lb/>
bler substances, such as diamond.<lb/>
"The road to nanotechnology<lb/>
may pass through protein tech-<lb/>
nology, using parts as stiff as<lb/>
wood states Drexler, "but<lb/>
nanotechnology itself will use<lb/>
materials like diamond, five times<lb/>
as stiff as steel and fifty times<lb/>
stronger<lb/>
"To picture such a device he<lb/>
continues, "don't picture a pro-<lb/>
tein molecule or a biological cell<lb/>
See NANOTECH, page 2<lb/>
Workman clear the Chancellor's yard of fallen debris from the weekend ice storm. (Photo by J.D.<lb/>
Whitmire?Photolab)<lb/>
Basketball coach Kay Yow to speak at ECU<lb/>
Bv CLAY DEANHARDT<lb/>
Staff Wnw<lb/>
When Kay Yow was an Eng-<lb/>
lish major at East Carolina<lb/>
Teacher's College from 1960- ? ,<lb/>
1964, the former Gibson ville High ?? 8 ?"<lb/>
School basketball star couldn't<lb/>
when, as ECU'S 1989 Distin-<lb/>
guished Alumna Lecturer, she<lb/>
speaks Monday on "Striving to<lb/>
Excel?Going for the Gold Her<lb/>
public lecture will be held at 4<lb/>
p.m. in room 1031 of the General<lb/>
plav that sport at the collegiate<lb/>
level There just weren't that<lb/>
manv women's basketball teams<lb/>
in the United States.<lb/>
A lot has changed since then.<lb/>
E.C.T.C. is now ECU. Kay<lb/>
Yow has won an Olympic gold<lb/>
medal coaching women's basket-<lb/>
ball and is the head coach of the<lb/>
perenially powerful North Caro-<lb/>
lina State Unversity women's<lb/>
Wolf pack squad.<lb/>
ECU campus.<lb/>
Yow began her career teach-<lb/>
ing English and working as a li-<lb/>
brarian at Allen Jay High School<lb/>
in North Carolina's piedmont af-<lb/>
ter she graduated with a<lb/>
bachelor's degree from E.C.T.C.<lb/>
When the basketball coach<lb/>
there decided he wanted to coach<lb/>
only the men's athletic teams,<lb/>
quite a surprise.<lb/>
"It's not something I had even<lb/>
thought about doing she says.<lb/>
Coaching, at that time, was an<lb/>
almost exclusively male profes-<lb/>
sion. "I can't imagine their think-<lb/>
ing it (I could be a coach) any more<lb/>
than I was thinking it<lb/>
But blazing new frontiers has<lb/>
never bothered Yow. Her Allen<lb/>
Jay teams went 77-20 in four<lb/>
years, winning the conference<lb/>
title each year. After she coached<lb/>
one year at Gibsonville High, she<lb/>
decided to work on a master's<lb/>
degree in physical education at<lb/>
the University of North Carolina<lb/>
at Greensboro.<lb/>
"1 planned to go back to<lb/>
Allen Jay's principal remembered<lb/>
that Ms. Yow had been a basket-<lb/>
ball standout during her years at (teaching) high school after that,<lb/>
ShTwU?talk about her Olym- Gibsonville High School and he she says.<lb/>
pic experience and her rise to the ? " to la1ce ?nfAllen W It was not to be.<lb/>
top of the coaching profession women s program. It came as Yow spent her second year of<lb/>
the master's program working<lb/>
part-time in the physical educa-<lb/>
tion department at Elon College,<lb/>
just down the road from UNCG.<lb/>
Elon was just developing a<lb/>
women's athletic program, and<lb/>
when they advertised for a<lb/>
women's basketball, volleyball<lb/>
and tennis coach and a coordina-<lb/>
tor of women's athletics, Yow was<lb/>
coaxed into applying. She began<lb/>
her collegiate coaching career<lb/>
there in 1971.<lb/>
She began coaching colle-<lb/>
giately at a time when many<lb/>
people still felt women should not<lb/>
participate in sports.<lb/>
According to Yow, however,<lb/>
intercollegiate athletics teach<lb/>
women more about life than they<lb/>
learn in just the classroom.<lb/>
"If s a very educational ven-<lb/>
ture she says. "You learn a lot<lb/>
about yourself. Team competition<lb/>
is challenging physically, emo-<lb/>
tionally and spiritually.<lb/>
"There are many challenges,<lb/>
and you can create confidence.<lb/>
You leam dedication, determina-<lb/>
tion, sacrifice, commitment and<lb/>
how to work with other people. It<lb/>
can be a very valuable experience.<lb/>
"It has been for me<lb/>
But Yow says she faced a<lb/>
battle getting the Elon program<lb/>
off the ground.<lb/>
"When I started at Elon there<lb/>
were no scholarships (for<lb/>
women's basketball) she says.<lb/>
"Not at Elon But Kay Yow has<lb/>
never let a little thing like no<lb/>
scholarships stand in her way. In<lb/>
five years at Elon her teams<lb/>
posted a 57-19 record and won<lb/>
two state championships.<lb/>
Then, in 1975, Yow took on a<lb/>
new challenge, becoming coordi-<lb/>
nator of women's athletics and<lb/>
the softball, volleyball and bas-<lb/>
ketball coach at NCSU. She never<lb/>
looked back.<lb/>
You would, of course, expect<lb/>
the new head coach of a growing<lb/>
power in women's basketball to<lb/>
feel a little pressure. Especially if<lb/>
that new coach was one of the few<lb/>
women in her field: a kind of role<lb/>
model for future coaches. But<lb/>
then again, you must expect the<lb/>
unexpected from Yow.<lb/>
"I didn't feel any pressure<lb/>
Yow the philosopher says,<lb/>
calmly, quietly, as if to emphasize<lb/>
the fact. "I've never felt a great<lb/>
deal of pressure.<lb/>
"I think pressure is some-<lb/>
thing we put on ourselves that can<lb/>
either help you or hurt you. You<lb/>
See KAY YOW, page 5<lb/>
<pb facs="00058127_0002"/><lb/>
THE EAST CAROLINIAN<lb/>
FEBRUARY 23.1989<lb/>
Guess what? Fast Food isn't healthy<lb/>
College students are known<lb/>
for their fast food habits. Fast food<lb/>
and foods available on campus<lb/>
are often high in calories, fat,<lb/>
sodium, and cholestero' Many<lb/>
students are concerned about eat-<lb/>
ing a healthy diet because of its<lb/>
importance in maintaining<lb/>
weight and minimizing choles-<lb/>
terol levels. Eating a health diet is<lb/>
easy once vou learn how to make<lb/>
the proper food choices. Knowing<lb/>
how to make the proper food se-<lb/>
lections is important. Many food<lb/>
items have the calorie, fat, so-<lb/>
dium, cholesterol, as well as other<lb/>
nutrient contents listed on the<lb/>
label.<lb/>
Before reading a label you<lb/>
should know what you are look-<lb/>
ing for. Many food choices in-<lb/>
volve making a trade off. For ex-<lb/>
ample, pretzels have more so-<lb/>
dium than potato chips, but have<lb/>
significantly lower calories, fat,<lb/>
and cholesterol. You need to de-<lb/>
cide for yourself which of these<lb/>
vou most need to avoid.<lb/>
You should also know about<lb/>
specific ingredients that can clue<lb/>
you in on things that you may not<lb/>
be aware of in your food. Hydro-<lb/>
gcnated oil and palm or coconut<lb/>
oil indicate high saturated fat<lb/>
content. Eating foods that are high<lb/>
in saturated fat can raise your<lb/>
blood cholesterol level. Corn<lb/>
syrup, dextrose, fructose and malt<lb/>
sugar indicate the presence of<lb/>
refined sugar. Sugar supplies<lb/>
calories but very few nutrients.<lb/>
Foods high in sugar are usually<lb/>
high in calories which can lead to<lb/>
weight gain. Sugar is also a major<lb/>
factor in tooth decay.<lb/>
Health Column<lb/>
by<lb/>
Mary-Elesha<lb/>
Adams<lb/>
Sometimes you can improve<lb/>
the nutrient content of fast foods<lb/>
by making smart choices from the<lb/>
menu. For example, if you want a<lb/>
burger, Big Mac has 518 calories,<lb/>
but a Quarter Pounder without<lb/>
mayonnaise has less than 400<lb/>
calories, and less fat. Likewise, a<lb/>
turkey sub without oil or mayon-<lb/>
naise has fewer calories, less fat<lb/>
and more protein than a salami<lb/>
sub all the way. You don't always<lb/>
have to go for "a salad" to ensure<lb/>
low calories and good nutrition.<lb/>
For example, a fast food baked<lb/>
potato has only about 150 calories,<lb/>
complex carbohydrates and lots<lb/>
of vitamins, compared to a burger<lb/>
at around 400. Remember to order<lb/>
your butter on the side and use<lb/>
sparingly.<lb/>
Choosing good alternatives<lb/>
to junk food is the next step to<lb/>
healthier eating. Raw vegetables<lb/>
make an excellent snack that ful-<lb/>
fills your desire to crunch. Try ice<lb/>
milk, sherbert, or low fat yogurt<lb/>
instead of ice cream, and replace<lb/>
chips and pretzels with unbut-<lb/>
tered popcorn and nuts in the<lb/>
shell. When you have a sweet<lb/>
tooth, try fresh or dried fruit in-<lb/>
stead of candy and chocolate.<lb/>
Many of these healthy alterna-<lb/>
tives are available at on-campus<lb/>
eating sites and in different fast<lb/>
food restaurants. It just takes<lb/>
some nutrition sense and a little<lb/>
will power to make the proper<lb/>
choices.<lb/>
If you want to know more<lb/>
about foods and good nutrition<lb/>
consider taking a nutrition course<lb/>
like FNIM 2100. Also, the Student<lb/>
Health Service has a "Guide to<lb/>
Healthy Eating" booklet which<lb/>
you can pick up in the Health<lb/>
Resources Room. This health col-<lb/>
umn was written by Laurie So-<lb/>
dano, student Health Promotion<lb/>
Assistant and Margie Gallagher,<lb/>
Associate Professor in FNIM.<lb/>
Join Chip Carter<lb/>
and the East<lb/>
Carolinian features<lb/>
staff as they go<lb/>
featuring<lb/>
T<lb/>
Campaign to increase organ donors<lb/>
ECL" Nrwi Bureau<lb/>
Donor organ recipients will<lb/>
be sharing their experiences with<lb/>
others in a campaign to increase<lb/>
organ donation among eastern<lb/>
North Carolinians.<lb/>
A support group being estab-<lb/>
lished under the auspices of the<lb/>
transplant surgery division at the<lb/>
East Carolina University School<lb/>
of Medicine will serve both as a<lb/>
public education tool and a sup-<lb/>
port network among organ recipi-<lb/>
ents and patients waiting to re-<lb/>
ceive an organ.<lb/>
Elder Donald Solomon, a<lb/>
Kinston minister and three-time<lb/>
kidnev recipient, will help coordi-<lb/>
nate the support group.<lb/>
"Before I had to have an organ<lb/>
transplant, 1 knew almost nothing<lb/>
about organ donation said Solo-<lb/>
mon, who was 23 when he re-<lb/>
ceived his first transplanted kid-<lb/>
ney, which his body later rejected.<lb/>
"I suffered from a lot of fear<lb/>
because I was just uninformed<lb/>
he said.<lb/>
Though the support group<lb/>
will focus mainly on educating<lb/>
those who are contemplating an<lb/>
organ transplant, Solomon says<lb/>
he hopes to also launch a mass<lb/>
public education program using<lb/>
organ recipients as witnesses to<lb/>
the value of organ transplants.<lb/>
"I can share much about my<lb/>
experiences?from learning that<lb/>
without it (a transplant) my life<lb/>
would be short, to experiencing<lb/>
the rejection of an organ he said.<lb/>
Solomon, associate professor<lb/>
of the Herring Grove Free Will<lb/>
Baptist Church in Kinston, and<lb/>
ECU transplant surgery physi-<lb/>
cians will set up a speakers bu-<lb/>
reau. Speakers will be available to<lb/>
meet with civic, social and<lb/>
church-sponsored organizations<lb/>
to discuss organ donation.<lb/>
Solomon, who is black, says<lb/>
he is particularly interested in<lb/>
more education in programs for<lb/>
blacks. According to state statis-<lb/>
tics, of the 2,800 people with kid-<lb/>
ney failure, 68 percent are black.<lb/>
Statistics also show that blacks<lb/>
donate their organs less fre-<lb/>
quently than do whites.<lb/>
"I feel strongly that the more<lb/>
people know about organ dona-<lb/>
tion and its benefits the easier it<lb/>
will become for them to consider<lb/>
donating their organs to help oth-<lb/>
ers said Solomon.<lb/>
"More education programs<lb/>
will dispel myths he said.<lb/>
Organ recipients interested in<lb/>
becoming a part of the support<lb/>
group are asked to contact Larry<lb/>
McClinton, Department of Sur-<lb/>
gery, Transplantation Surgery<lb/>
section, East Carolina University,<lb/>
School of Medicine, at 551-2620.<lb/>
The East Carolinian<lb/>
JamcsF.J.McKccDirectorof Advertising<lb/>
Advertising Representatives<lb/>
J. Keith Pearce<lb/>
Adam Blankenship<lb/>
Ashley E. Dalton<lb/>
DISPLAY ADVERTISING<lb/>
OpenRate$4.95 Local OpenRate$4.75<lb/>
Scott Makey<lb/>
Phillip V. Cope<lb/>
Nanotech dreams<lb/>
Continued from page 1<lb/>
? picture a jointed, computer-<lb/>
directed industrial robot arm, full<lb/>
of gears, bearings, and drive<lb/>
shafts An atom, relative in<lb/>
size to an assembler arm, would<lb/>
"He's (Drexler) dreaming<lb/>
and it's a pretty heavy dream<lb/>
continued Smith. 'The tools are<lb/>
not there at present to do the<lb/>
things he wants to do. Many man-<lb/>
THE FACTS OF LIFE<lb/>
Myth<lb/>
be like a BB pellet compared to a years of thinking and research<lb/>
man's arm. will be required to do these<lb/>
To program the assemblers, things<lb/>
Drexler describes a process<lb/>
wherebv Bell Lab researchers are<lb/>
able to produce "bumps" on ger-<lb/>
manium crystal surfaces by-<lb/>
evaporating single germanium<lb/>
atoms from the tip of a scanning<lb/>
tunnelling microscope (STM).<lb/>
"The presence and absence of<lb/>
such bumps might be used to<lb/>
store the ones and zeros of com-<lb/>
puter data, crowding many tril-<lb/>
lions of bits into a square millime-<lb/>
ter he states.<lb/>
A similar process has been<lb/>
devised by IBM whereby mole-<lb/>
cule fragments are chemically<lb/>
bonded to graphite crystal sur-<lb/>
faces using current from an STM.<lb/>
However, such experiments have<lb/>
been unsuccessful so far because<lb/>
the nature of the bumps has<lb/>
proven to be uncontrollable.<lb/>
Once scientists overcome<lb/>
these problems and get assem-<lb/>
blers up and running, they would<lb/>
be used to mass produce more<lb/>
assemblers so that trillions of<lb/>
them could be built in a relatively<lb/>
short time. Drexler cites three<lb/>
possible means of sending com-<lb/>
mands to them: colored light sig-<lb/>
nals, radio wave signals or by<lb/>
stretching a wire so that it tapers<lb/>
at the end, small enough to con-<lb/>
nect to the device.<lb/>
The assemblers would work<lb/>
in an environment rich in the raw<lb/>
materials they would need to do<lb/>
their work, which would vary<lb/>
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formed. For example, we could<lb/>
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phere, obviously rich in oxygen,<lb/>
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molecules.<lb/>
With na no technology there is<lb/>
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and "bad" accomplishments<lb/>
which will affect the human race<lb/>
as significantly as the invention of<lb/>
the wheel, control of fire, harness-<lb/>
ing electricity, etc. "If we could<lb/>
arrange atoms as we pleased, we<lb/>
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control of the structure of matter<lb/>
Drexler states, "Nanotechnology<lb/>
will give us this control, bringing<lb/>
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most past imaginings<lb/>
"The things he's (Drexler)<lb/>
thinking about would require<lb/>
expendi tures of trillions of dollars<lb/>
over hundreds of years argued<lb/>
Dr. Jim Smith, ECU biochemist<lb/>
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<pb facs="00058127_0003"/><lb/>
Tl IE EAST'CAROLINI AN<lb/>
FEBRUARY 23,1989 3<lb/>
I<lb/>
Appalachian hopes installation of condom<lb/>
machines will spur similar plans in UNC<lb/>
BCONE, N.C. (AD ? Appa-<lb/>
lachian State University students<lb/>
hope their latest safe sex cam-<lb/>
paign ? condom-dispensing<lb/>
machines in residence halls ?<lb/>
will catch on this vear at other<lb/>
campuses in the University of<lb/>
North Carolina system.<lb/>
Since January, an outside<lb/>
vendor has supplied some 20<lb/>
coin-operated machines to offer<lb/>
students convenient access to<lb/>
condoms, a leading AIDS preven-<lb/>
tion device. The ASU campus was<lb/>
the first in the 16-campus svstem<lb/>
to install the machines.<lb/>
Gary Greene, ASU student<lb/>
body president, will offer his<lb/>
campus' approach Saturday to<lb/>
the University of North Carolina<lb/>
Association of Student Govern-<lb/>
ments in Raleigh. He wants the<lb/>
body, meeting on the N.C. State<lb/>
University campus, to adopt a<lb/>
resolution supporting the placing<lb/>
of condom machines in all UNC<lb/>
system campus residence halls.<lb/>
"We want to tell them how it<lb/>
was done and why they may want<lb/>
to consider doing it Greene told<lb/>
the Asheville Citizen Tuesday.<lb/>
"We think the students want it<lb/>
With plans in hand, other<lb/>
campus leaders could then ap-<lb/>
proach their campus administra-<lb/>
tors as Appalachian students did.<lb/>
Appalachian Chancellor John<lb/>
Thomas approved the machines<lb/>
last December.<lb/>
"We want to send the resolu-<lb/>
tion to UNC svstem President<lb/>
(CD.) Spangler (Jr.) so all the<lb/>
other 15 campuses can consider<lb/>
it Greene said.<lb/>
Although health clinics on the<lb/>
UNC campuses have been dis-<lb/>
tributing free condoms for years,<lb/>
ASU students thought the ma-<lb/>
chines would make it easier and<lb/>
more convenient to get condoms<lb/>
from coin-operated machines.<lb/>
"The second best way to pre-<lb/>
vent AIDS is with the condom<lb/>
Greene said. "And we have to<lb/>
take this seriously. We have had<lb/>
one case on this campus and it is<lb/>
estimated that three of every 1,000<lb/>
people in the UNC system may be<lb/>
carriers. If the averages hold, we<lb/>
may have 30 carriers on this cam-<lb/>
pus who don't know they have<lb/>
it<lb/>
The machines are in 18 ASU<lb/>
residence halls and commons<lb/>
areas. The campus splits profits<lb/>
from the condoms about 70-30<lb/>
with the vendor. Greene said,<lb/>
with the campus' 30 percent<lb/>
going into an AIDS education and<lb/>
a sexual abstinence counseling<lb/>
program. A Charlotte company,<lb/>
Barnett Inc maintains the ma-<lb/>
chines.<lb/>
Greene would not say how<lb/>
many of the 50-cent condoms are<lb/>
purchased each week on his cam-<lb/>
pus and other business details,<lb/>
but that information will be avail-<lb/>
able at the Raleigh convention, he<lb/>
said.<lb/>
"We can't run from this prob-<lb/>
lem because college students are<lb/>
sexually active. It's a choice for<lb/>
safe sex. The machines are back<lb/>
away in the lobby restrooms and<lb/>
are very discreet Greene said.<lb/>
Don't Forget Our Lunch Specials<lb/>
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The NEWEST<lb/>
WAVE<lb/>
Man arrested for 35th DWI<lb/>
DURHAM (AP) ? A Raleigh<lb/>
man was sentenced to four years<lb/>
in prison after being found guilty<lb/>
of at least his 35th driving while<lb/>
impaired charge, but an anti-<lb/>
drunken driving group said the<lb/>
prison term ? the maximum al-<lb/>
lowed bv law ? wasn't enough.<lb/>
Otis' Donald Wadford, 52,<lb/>
was sentenced Tucsdav to two<lb/>
vears for DWI and two years for<lb/>
puny sentences long after his arrest, and she sug-<lb/>
Master Officer D.G. Millanot gested that his sleepiness and<lb/>
the Durham Police Department ruddy complexion could have<lb/>
testified Tuesday that he saw resulted from his medical condi-<lb/>
Wadford driving slowly and tion rather than from alcohol<lb/>
weaving on a Durham street on impairment,<lb/>
the morning of Dec. 17, shortly Prosecutor Lawrence<lb/>
after 9 a.m. He said that Wadford Campbell described Wadord's<lb/>
kept driving for about half a mile driving record, on the other hand,<lb/>
even after he turned on his blue as "horrendous" and said that<lb/>
received a four-year jail term. But<lb/>
he appealed the cases to Superior<lb/>
Court the next day and was re-<lb/>
leased on bond.<lb/>
driving while his license was per- stop him<lb/>
lights and siren in an attempt to<lb/>
manently revoked by Durham<lb/>
Countv District Court by fudge<lb/>
Samuel Tate.<lb/>
Tate also found Wadford<lb/>
guiltv of obstructing police, trans-<lb/>
porting a liquor bottle with a bro-<lb/>
ken seal, driving with no liability<lb/>
insurance and displaying a ficti-<lb/>
tious license tag. Wadford, who<lb/>
received no additional penalties<lb/>
for those offenses, was found "not<lb/>
responsible" for onlv one of<lb/>
Millan said he found a half-<lb/>
empty bottle of bourbon on<lb/>
Wadford's front seat and beer<lb/>
cans scattered about the car.<lb/>
"He mumbled and slurred<lb/>
 Millan said of Wadford. "He<lb/>
about poured himself out of the<lb/>
vehicle. He wras unable to stand<lb/>
on his own accord  His face was<lb/>
very ruddy<lb/>
"It was like someone had<lb/>
bathed him in alcohol. There was<lb/>
"this man has no concern whatso-<lb/>
ever for the public<lb/>
In sentencing Wadford to<lb/>
four years in prison, Tate recom-<lb/>
mended that he receive "inten-<lb/>
sive, ongoing treatment" for alco-<lb/>
hol abuse while he is incarcerated.<lb/>
Tate denied a defense request to<lb/>
recommend work-release for<lb/>
Wadford.<lb/>
Last month, Wadford was<lb/>
sentenced in Harnett County to<lb/>
seven years and 30 days in prison<lb/>
after being convicted of driving<lb/>
numerous charges against him: just a total smell of alcohol about while impaired, driving while his<lb/>
driving left of center.<lb/>
"It doesn't seem like a stift<lb/>
sentence at all Susan Teer, vice<lb/>
president of the Durham chapter<lb/>
of Mothers Against Drunk Driv-<lb/>
ing, said. "He'll be out cTtTvihg<lb/>
him Millan said.<lb/>
Millan and Durham Police<lb/>
Officer Mike Evans both testified<lb/>
that Wadford refused to take a<lb/>
Breathalyzer test.<lb/>
Defense lawyer Martha New<lb/>
again Tguess it'll take a crash to loid latc tn wadford washospi-<lb/>
gct him in jail longer than these talizcd with a heart ailment not<lb/>
license was permanently re-<lb/>
voked, not wearing a safety belt,<lb/>
transporting an open bottle of<lb/>
fortified wine and giving a ficti-<lb/>
tious name to a state trooper.<lb/>
In September, he pleaded<lb/>
guilty in Wake County District<lb/>
Court to four DWI charges and<lb/>
RALEIGH (AP) ? Gov. Jim<lb/>
Martin says he is putting together<lb/>
a public school initiative that<lb/>
would implement the career-lad-<lb/>
der program statewide and un-<lb/>
tangle the teachers' salary sched-<lb/>
ule, which he called "a horrible<lb/>
mess<lb/>
The governor told reporters<lb/>
about his budding plan Tuesday<lb/>
but provided few details, saying<lb/>
it's still in the planning stage. He<lb/>
said it will be ready to submit to<lb/>
the General Assembly in a week<lb/>
or two.<lb/>
The blueprint will include<lb/>
funding proposals, Martin said.<lb/>
He would not rule out a tax in-<lb/>
crease, although some lawmakers<lb/>
say they'd oppose a school tax on<lb/>
top of a gasoline tax for highway<lb/>
construction that has broad legis-<lb/>
lative backing.<lb/>
"I would not be inclined to<lb/>
support a tax increase every time<lb/>
we need some money said Sen-<lb/>
ate President Pro Tern Henson<lb/>
Barnes, D-Wayne. "We should<lb/>
try to find the money in other<lb/>
savings and programs<lb/>
A 5.25 cents-per-gallon in-<lb/>
crease in the gasoline levy is a key<lb/>
component of the highway pack-<lb/>
age. "I do not believe that this<lb/>
(highway plan) should pre-empt<lb/>
consideration of a tax package or<lb/>
any other means of paying for<lb/>
school improvements that would<lb/>
be needed Martin said. "But<lb/>
before I'm in a position to say how<lb/>
that should unfold, I've got some<lb/>
more homework to do<lb/>
Martin called a news confer-<lb/>
ence to embrace the $8.6 billion<lb/>
highway construction program<lb/>
pending in the Legislature. But he<lb/>
said he did not want publicity<lb/>
generated by a study<lb/>
commission's approval of the<lb/>
road package to deflect attention<lb/>
from needed school improve-<lb/>
ments.<lb/>
He said he wanted to "assure<lb/>
the people of this state  that<lb/>
improvements in our public<lb/>
schools remain among my high-<lb/>
est priorities (and) will be the top<lb/>
priority in this legislative year<lb/>
He said he will suggest ways<lb/>
to make the program more flex-<lb/>
ible as recommended by the State<lb/>
Board of Education. He said he<lb/>
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<pb facs="00058127_0004"/><lb/>
r<lb/>
?<lb/>
oUje iEaat (Earoltman<lb/>
Pete Fernald, omu<lb/>
Stephanie Folsom, mm mm<lb/>
JAMES F.J. MCKEE, Director of Advertising<lb/>
Tim Hampton, n?zju?<lb/>
KRISTEN HALBERG,Sp?rrtEi,for<lb/>
Ci up Carter, F?re &amp;<lb/>
Susan Howell, Prod m-<lb/>
Dean Waters, cmfctM??cr<lb/>
Stepi i anie Singleton, g m?<lb/>
Brad Bannister, cant<lb/>
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TOM FURR, Circulation Manager<lb/>
Debbie Stevens, sfcr??ry<lb/>
Stephanie Emory,m t? sp???<lb/>
Mac Clark, mm mm<lb/>
February 23.1989<lb/>
OPINION<lb/>
Pago 4<lb/>
SGA<lb/>
It's time for everybody to get involved!<lb/>
The president, vice president,<lb/>
treasurer, secretary, and speaker of<lb/>
the Student Government Organiza-<lb/>
tion are all fraternity sorority- ori-<lb/>
ented. In fact, the overall percentage<lb/>
of Greek involvement in SGA is over<lb/>
60 percent, according to statistics<lb/>
compiled by The East Carolinian.<lb/>
Only an estimated ten percent of<lb/>
the undergraduates on ECU'S cam-<lb/>
pus are in fraternities or sororities,<lb/>
so 60 percent is a high representa-<lb/>
tion for those particular groups.<lb/>
The reason for this high percent-<lb/>
age is not a result of anything Greeks<lb/>
are doing. Or maybe it's a result of<lb/>
everything they're doing. Greeks<lb/>
are getting involved in campus<lb/>
government and that's something<lb/>
other students seem disinterested<lb/>
in. If there's to be true representation<lb/>
of all types of students, then a vari-<lb/>
etv of people have to get involved.<lb/>
This apathy also shows up at<lb/>
election time when students have a<lb/>
chance to elect top officers for SGA.<lb/>
The activists at ECU, the ones who<lb/>
do come out in numbers, the ones<lb/>
who are behind a candidate aftd will<lb/>
cast their vote to see that person put<lb/>
into office are those in fraternites<lb/>
and sorontk ?.<lb/>
What we end up with is the situ-<lb/>
ation wherein a small minoritv de-<lb/>
cide the fate oi the majority, which<lb/>
rarely satisfies the population as a<lb/>
whole (take South Africa for in-<lb/>
stance, though that's an extremeex-<lb/>
ample). Here, however, there is no<lb/>
excuse for such exclusivity in our<lb/>
government, which any student can<lb/>
become a part of.<lb/>
Perhaps that is the problem. An<lb/>
organization such as the Student<lb/>
Government is very intimidating to<lb/>
most students and doesn't often<lb/>
clearly invite new candidates. This<lb/>
results in an in-breeding which is<lb/>
detrimental to the equal representa-<lb/>
tion of various viewpoints. Many<lb/>
students feel that if they don't have<lb/>
some sort of political background in<lb/>
high school or elsewhere, that it's<lb/>
too late to start pursuing one.<lb/>
It's not. All a student has to do is<lb/>
to go and attend one of the SGA<lb/>
meetings anv Monday at five and<lb/>
watch the government body in ac-<lb/>
tion. It will soojx become obvious<lb/>
that no-one there is much more<lb/>
qualified to participate than any<lb/>
other student on campus. In fact,<lb/>
once you view the proceedings, the<lb/>
urge to have your voice heard in the<lb/>
decision-making will Hkely mani-<lb/>
fest itself.<lb/>
J? iJAIT! THIS 19 THB SATANIC NllRSBSi'<lb/>
RtAU-Y, U? MNT CARRY THAT BOOK"<lb/>
'Satanic Verses' vs.<lb/>
'Last Temptation'<lb/>
By SCOTT MAXWELL<lb/>
Editorial Columnist<lb/>
The furor generated by Moslem funda-<lb/>
mentalists over Salman Rushdie's novel<lb/>
'The Satanic Verses" strikes many in this<lb/>
country as almost comical. Since there are<lb/>
comparatively few American Moslems, the<lb/>
controversy is being treated almost light-<lb/>
heartedly by the American media.<lb/>
The Moslem world is remote in more<lb/>
than distance, however. It is a remote frame<lb/>
of reference for most Americans, which<lb/>
could help make it easier for Americans to<lb/>
view the situation objectively.<lb/>
It is worth considering the reaction that<lb/>
would follow from Christian fundamental-<lb/>
ists in this country had the book dealt with<lb/>
Christianity instead. Christian fundamen-<lb/>
talists here and in other parts of the world<lb/>
have behaved similarly to their Moslem<lb/>
counterparts when faced with similar situ-<lb/>
ations.<lb/>
'The Satanic Verses" offers a chance to<lb/>
reevaluate the validity of Christian funda-<lb/>
mentalists' uproar over "The Last Tempta-<lb/>
tion of Christ In both cases, the outraged<lb/>
group responded to the presentation of an<lb/>
alternate view of its beliefs with violence<lb/>
and calls for censorship. Granted, the Chris-<lb/>
tian fundamentalists didn't call for Martin<lb/>
Scorcese's execution but they did destroy<lb/>
property and intimidate many theater<lb/>
owners, much as Waldenbooks has been<lb/>
scared into dropping the book.<lb/>
Books should not be banned, and their<lb/>
authors should not face death threats ?<lb/>
even on religious matters. Questioning and<lb/>
criticism are essential to a healthy and vig-<lb/>
orous faith, as the Jesuits well know.<lb/>
One hopes that the public will keep in<lb/>
rrirnd the Moslems' reaction to "The Satanic<lb/>
Verses" next time the Christian fundamen-<lb/>
talists are up in arms. If so, the latter group<lb/>
may at last get the amount of attention it<lb/>
deserves- none<lb/>
Student G cTVipCtywe<lb/>
HES, But v yf<lb/>
Cjm?5 to rm. nt<lb/>
Hysterical overreaction to bats<lb/>
To the editor:<lb/>
I fear we have recently witnessed<lb/>
yet another historical overreaction<lb/>
based on ignorance and myth. 1 refer<lb/>
to the poisoning and bludgeoning to<lb/>
death of over a hundred bats in Belk<lb/>
Dorm.<lb/>
According to the biologists who<lb/>
study bats, fewer than 1 2 of 1 of all<lb/>
bats are rabid and these are rarely<lb/>
aggressive. These biologists say that<lb/>
"when people are threatened, it is<lb/>
usually because they have picked up<lb/>
a sick bat that bites in self-defense<lb/>
Bats are not blind; they navigate not<lb/>
only using their eyes, but aided by<lb/>
high frequency sound, and can detect<lb/>
obstacles as fine as human hair. It is<lb/>
unlikely they will ever become en-<lb/>
tangled in your hair.<lb/>
Bats are very efficient insect ex-<lb/>
terminators, consuming several<lb/>
hundred insects nightlv. Many eco-<lb/>
nomic plant crops, including<lb/>
peaches, are bat-pollinated, and thus<lb/>
depend on bats to produce fruit.<lb/>
Granted that few of us, myself<lb/>
included, would want a bedroom full<lb/>
of roosting or flying bats. Butbv using<lb/>
a little more thought and a lot less hys-<lb/>
teria, it is plain that a more rational,<lb/>
humane, and ecologically wise<lb/>
method of removing these creatures<lb/>
is simply "exclusion block their<lb/>
entry into the building and operwin-<lb/>
dowsBrilow them to exit. S?<lb/>
1, for one, do not rest easier know-<lb/>
ing that any variant in our customary<lb/>
routine can be swiftly brought under<lb/>
control by calling housing workers<lb/>
with brooms to beat out the brains of<lb/>
any intruder and reduce the unpro-<lb/>
tected to a bloody pulp.<lb/>
Ann Bellis<lb/>
Dept. of Biology<lb/>
North is bad<lb/>
To the editor:<lb/>
In response to Nick<lb/>
Skottcgaard's letter supporting?1-<lb/>
iver North I would like to ask Mr.<lb/>
Skottegaard and others like him how<lb/>
they can show sympathy for a<lb/>
Constitution violating liar? Oliver<lb/>
North degraded the country and<lb/>
Constitution he seemingly fought so<lb/>
bravely to protect. Not to mention the<lb/>
fact that supporting the fighting in<lb/>
Nicaragua is supporting death<lb/>
whether it's done legally or not. It's<lb/>
my opinion that Oliver North should<lb/>
be punished for treason. Is this how I<lb/>
want to thank him for 20 years of<lb/>
loyal service to this country? Yes it is<lb/>
because obviously that was 20 years<lb/>
served in vain. Oliver North stabbed<lb/>
his country and humanity as a whole<lb/>
straight in the back. And if he gets<lb/>
away with it, well then I guess he gets<lb/>
the last laugh.<lb/>
Mr. Skottegaard said Mr. North<lb/>
"isbeing prosecuted for his hard and<lb/>
loyal work for the U.S. of A Since<lb/>
when did shipping illegal weapons<lb/>
to support another country's war<lb/>
become part of a Lt. Cols job? Mr.<lb/>
Skottegaard also pointed out that<lb/>
"the government has already spent<lb/>
between 7 and 9 million dollars to<lb/>
send this patriot to jail Another rea-<lb/>
son to loathe the man. His utter fool-<lb/>
ishness and treachery cost moncv,<lb/>
money that could have been spent on<lb/>
something useful. I guess this is a<lb/>
case of the lesser-of-two-evils. I'd be<lb/>
terrified to think that some mar<lb/>
getting off scott-free to roam I<lb/>
world selling and trading whi<lb/>
knows what to people that ma<lb/>
stroy themselves and others. &amp;<lb/>
million dollars i a ridiculous<lb/>
amount to spend on someone s<lb/>
viouslv guilty and it pains me to sa<lb/>
this when there are indeed son<lb/>
that could have benefited from th(<lb/>
monev as Mr. Skottegaard said. I<lb/>
sleep better thinking maybe one<lb/>
more maniac will be taken off the<lb/>
streets. It makes me sick to my st<lb/>
ach when I think oi how people in<lb/>
trying to turn this back-stabbing<lb/>
nto some sort of hero.<lb/>
BethEiln,<lb/>
Broadcast11 .<lb/>
Sophor<lb/>
Pirate Walk<lb/>
To the editor<lb/>
After hearing the informahoi<lb/>
concerning the Fast Carolina L'niver<lb/>
sity Pirate Walk, we the members i I<lb/>
Sigma Sigma Sigma feel the program<lb/>
should be abolished. We feel the besl<lb/>
alternative would be that the Pn.iu<lb/>
Waik'te in the hands of the Pu<lb/>
Safety Department, it is the responsi<lb/>
bility oi the Public Safety Depart<lb/>
ment to look after our safety on thi<lb/>
campus. We hope the Public Safer)<lb/>
Department recognizes the impor<lb/>
tance oi this program and will agree<lb/>
to its terms.<lb/>
Membei<lb/>
Sigma Sigma Sigma<lb/>
Forum Rules<lb/>
The East Carolinian welcomes letters expressing all points of view. Mail or drop them by our office in the Pus<lb/>
cations Building, across from the entrance to Joyner Library.<lb/>
For purposes of verification, all letters must include the name, major, classification, address, phone number<lb/>
the signature of the author (s).<lb/>
Letters are limited to 300 words or less, double-spaced, typed or neatly printed. All letters are subject to editii .<lb/>
for brevity, obscenitv and libel, and no personal attacks will be permitted. Students, faculty and staff writing<lb/>
letters for this page are reminded that they are limited to one every two weeks.<lb/>
The deadline for editorial material is 5 p.m. Friday for Tuesday papers and 5 p.m. Tuesday for Thursday<lb/>
editions.<lb/>
I<lb/>
I<lb/>
Spectrum Rules<lb/>
In addition to the "Campus Forum" section of the newspaper, The East Carolinian features "The Campus<lb/>
Spectrum This is an opinion column by guest writers from the student body and faculty- The columns printed<lb/>
"The Campus Spectrum" will contain current topics of concern to the campus, community or nation<lb/>
The columns are restricted only with regard to rules of grammar and decency. Persons submitting columns<lb/>
must be willing to accept byline credit for their efforts, as no entries from ghost writers will be published.<lb/>
IF GUNSPONT KILL PEOPLE<lb/>
PWCHOfWHWA<lb/>
SGH00WARP utm "J<lb/>
A GUN, - <lb/>
0UTAGUN.<lb/>
<lb/>
<pb facs="00058127_0005"/><lb/>
?? '<lb/>
THE EAST CAROLINIAN<lb/>
FEBRUARY 23,1989 5<lb/>
I<lb/>
t<lb/>
I<lb/>
<lb/>
I<lb/>
.<lb/>
t<lb/>
-<lb/>
i<lb/>
a<lb/>
j.<lb/>
d<lb/>
Pending $8.6 billion highway<lb/>
give NC economic boost, says<lb/>
plan to<lb/>
Martin<lb/>
RALEIGH (AD - The $8.6<lb/>
billion, 12-year highway con-<lb/>
struction program pending in the<lb/>
General Assembly is "a phenome-<lb/>
nal piece oi work that would<lb/>
give North Carolina's economy a<lb/>
big boost, Gow Jim Martin says.<lb/>
It will strengthen our ability eluding a 3-cent boost in the flat<lb/>
to bring manufacturing jobs into per-gallon rate and an increase<lb/>
an) area of the state Martin said<lb/>
Tuesday. "It will strengthen the<lb/>
abihtv to get our goods to market.<lb/>
It will strengthen the ability of<lb/>
travelers and tourists  to travel<lb/>
where thev want to go in North<lb/>
Carolina<lb/>
Martin officially endorsed the<lb/>
package at a news conference,<lb/>
although he had said for months<lb/>
he expected to support the recom-<lb/>
mendations of the Highway<lb/>
Study Commission, lie ap-<lb/>
pointed five of the commission's<lb/>
13 members and his administra-<lb/>
tion worked with the panel in<lb/>
developing the plan.<lb/>
It is "the boldest highway<lb/>
Democratic legislative lead- ture Subcommittee on Highways,<lb/>
ers have said Martin's stamp of said he already had been ap-<lb/>
approval was crucial to the proached by someone wanting to<lb/>
program's enactment. They said add a road project to the list of<lb/>
the General Assembly would not those promised funding under<lb/>
raise taxes over the Republican the study commission plan. "1<lb/>
governor's motor fuels tax, in- said 'absolutely not" Church<lb/>
said.<lb/>
"If we start tampering with it<lb/>
from 3 percent to 7 percent in the too much, it'll come unraveled<lb/>
tax at the wholesale level. Infrastructure Committee Chair-<lb/>
It also would levy a 2 percent man Sam Hunt, D-Alamance,<lb/>
fee on automobile title transfers, said. Legislators and administra-<lb/>
The governor was briefed on the tion officials said they knew of no<lb/>
studv group's plan Tuesday significant opposition to the<lb/>
morning at an Executive Mansion program's major components,<lb/>
meeting with Transportation Sec- despite lingering questions about<lb/>
retary Jim Harrington, House what combination of taxes and<lb/>
Speaker Joe Mavretic, Senate fees should be levied.<lb/>
President Pro Tern Henson Bar- "I haven't heard from any<lb/>
nes, Lt. Gov. Jim Gardner and opponents Harrington said,<lb/>
others. "How can you be against God,<lb/>
The package is expected to be motherhood and highways?"<lb/>
introduced in the House and Sen- Gardner said in an interview<lb/>
ate this week. It will be scruti- he also backed the package, dc-<lb/>
nized bv more than half a dozen snite the aversion to higher taxes<lb/>
that conservative Republicans<lb/>
committees and subcommittees,<lb/>
construction program in the his- but sponsors say they will resist traditionally espouse.<lb/>
tory of North Carolina  a phe- major changes that could endan- "You're basically talking<lb/>
nomenal piece of work Martin ger the coalition of support it en- about a user's tax Gardner said,<lb/>
said. "It will helpbring jobs to the joys. "If we're going to have economic<lb/>
people, it will help get the people Rep. John Church, D-Vance, development in this state, you've<lb/>
to the jobs chairman oi the House Infrastruc- got to have roads. That's the key to<lb/>
Join Tim Hampton<lb/>
and the East<lb/>
Carolinian news staff<lb/>
as they cover the<lb/>
events on campus and<lb/>
Greenville<lb/>
it<lb/>
The program would establish<lb/>
a trust fund that would pay for an<lb/>
"intrastatc highway system" that<lb/>
would put 95 percent of the state's<lb/>
residents within 10 miles of at<lb/>
least one four-lane highway. It<lb/>
also would fund "loop" highways<lb/>
around major urban centers and<lb/>
pave all state-maintained secon-<lb/>
dary roads within 16 years.<lb/>
One piece of unfinished busi-<lb/>
ness is developing an "equitable<lb/>
distribution formula" to ensure<lb/>
that every region of the state gets<lb/>
a fair share of the construction<lb/>
money.<lb/>
Harrington is considering a<lb/>
plan that would combine the<lb/>
state's 14 highway divisions into<lb/>
seven regions to which money<lb/>
would be distributed, Martin<lb/>
said. "That's a good concept, one<lb/>
that I'mpreparcd to support he<lb/>
said.<lb/>
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'IINMLK"<lb/>
Kay Yow<lb/>
Continued from page 1<lb/>
make your own decisions about<lb/>
pressure. It can be a motivator, or<lb/>
a destrover<lb/>
Yow began her international<lb/>
coaching career in 1979 as an as-<lb/>
Mstant coach for the World Games<lb/>
in Mexico Citv. "From that point<lb/>
on 1 had quite an extensive career<lb/>
coaching international!v<lb/>
Extensive ? and successful.<lb/>
In 1986, Vow coached the Ameri-<lb/>
can team to a victory over the<lb/>
Soviet team in the Goodwill<lb/>
Games in Moscow, marking the<lb/>
first time in 2 vears the U.S. team<lb/>
had beaten the Soviets in major<lb/>
competition. (The U.S. team won<lb/>
the 1984 Olympic gold, but the<lb/>
Russian team boycotted those<lb/>
Olvmpics.) Folio wing the loss, the<lb/>
U.SS.R. fired their women's<lb/>
coaching staff and began to pre-<lb/>
pare for the W rki Champion-<lb/>
ships iater that year.<lb/>
The US, lea bv Yow, met the<lb/>
Soviets again in those champion-<lb/>
ships. And once again the score<lb/>
came out in favor of the Ameri-<lb/>
cans. Finally, after years of grow-<lb/>
ing to reach a level where they<lb/>
could compete internationally,<lb/>
the U.S. team took the lead in<lb/>
women's basketball.<lb/>
lt was a lead they would not<lb/>
relinquish for the 1988 Olympics,<lb/>
where Yow's team devastated the<lb/>
Soviets in the semifinals before<lb/>
knocking off the Yugoslavians to<lb/>
win the gold medal.<lb/>
Yow says winning the gold<lb/>
medal was the most thrilling<lb/>
thing that's happened to her as a<lb/>
coach, with the experience of the<lb/>
opening ceremonies running a<lb/>
close second.<lb/>
Back home at N.C.S.U. this<lb/>
year, Kav Yow stresses the impor-<lb/>
tance of academics to her players.<lb/>
"We have an assistant coach<lb/>
in charge of academics, as kind of<lb/>
a liaison between athletics and<lb/>
academics she says. "We also<lb/>
have a required study hall and an<lb/>
extensive tutoring program.<lb/>
There's a great emphasis on it all<lb/>
the time<lb/>
And then there's tradition to<lb/>
think about. Yow's Wolf pack<lb/>
squad is 19-5 as of Tuesday and<lb/>
10-2 in the Atlantic Coast Confer-<lb/>
ence. Their final game is Saturday<lb/>
against the University of Virginia,<lb/>
and the team is assured of its 14th<lb/>
winning season in 15 years.<lb/>
Ms. Yow's work, as impor-<lb/>
tant as it has always been, has<lb/>
taken a new focus since a recent<lb/>
brush with cancer. In 1987 Ms.<lb/>
Yow had a radical mastectomy.<lb/>
Afterwards, she agreed to serve as<lb/>
a spokesperson and fundraiser<lb/>
for the Lineberger Cancer Re-<lb/>
search Center in Chapel Hill. She-<lb/>
is on a mission to raise $1 million<lb/>
for research there, and after just<lb/>
over a year she has passed the<lb/>
half-way point, having raised<lb/>
$600100.<lb/>
Through it all, if there is one<lb/>
thing that has remained constant<lb/>
about Yow, it is her faith. Deeply<lb/>
religious, Yow feels her faith has<lb/>
helped her to face the challenges<lb/>
that have confronted her on the<lb/>
court and off.<lb/>
"It's like a wheel. Each<lb/>
person's wheel has a hub around<lb/>
which all the spokes connect and<lb/>
from which the wheel revolves.<lb/>
My faith is my hub. Everything I<lb/>
do is going to relate to that she<lb/>
says.<lb/>
"It's the same with other<lb/>
people. For some the hub is<lb/>
money, for others basketball.<lb/>
They don't always know what it<lb/>
is, but they've got one she says.<lb/>
Yow's faith has been a matter<lb/>
of public discussion ever since she<lb/>
smuggled Bibles and other reli-<lb/>
gious literature into the Soviet<lb/>
Union, where they were illegal,<lb/>
during the summer of the 1986<lb/>
Goodwill Games and World<lb/>
Championships.<lb/>
She still will not openly dis-<lb/>
cuss the matter for fear there may<lb/>
be some reprisals against the<lb/>
people who took the literature.<lb/>
Expect faith to be a key focus<lb/>
of Yow's lecture when she speaks<lb/>
Monday at ECU. Using the Olym-<lb/>
pic theme as a reference, Yow says<lb/>
she will talk about what it takes to<lb/>
be successful: focus, vision, plan-<lb/>
ning, teamwork and desire.<lb/>
It would be tough to find<lb/>
some one more qualified to dis-<lb/>
cuss what it takes to be a success.<lb/>
Throughout her life, and beneath<lb/>
the many hats she has worn, Kay<lb/>
Yow has always worked to be the<lb/>
best she could.<lb/>
Just watch her on the basket-<lb/>
ball court.<lb/>
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Sociological problems to<lb/>
be examined in conference<lb/>
FCU New Bureau<lb/>
Educators, career persons<lb/>
and students in the field of sociol-<lb/>
ogy will examine many of today's<lb/>
zoological problems this week<lb/>
at the 17th annual sociological<lb/>
research conference held at ECU.<lb/>
More than 120 participants<lb/>
from mid-Atlantic region colleges<lb/>
and universities are prc-regis-<lb/>
tered for the conference which be-<lb/>
gins Thursday at the Ramada Inn.<lb/>
The event is cc-sponsored by<lb/>
Alpha Kappa Delta International<lb/>
honor society in sociology chap-<lb/>
ters at ECU and Virginia Com-<lb/>
monwealth University,<lb/>
Richmond, and the Department<lb/>
of Sociology and Anthropology,<lb/>
the College of Arts and Sciences<lb/>
and the Student Government As-<lb/>
sociation, East Carolina Univer-<lb/>
sity.<lb/>
The event opens with a panel<lb/>
on "Responding to the Chal-<lb/>
lenges of Rural Health Care" and<lb/>
a reception Thursday evening.<lb/>
William D'Antonio of Wash-<lb/>
ington, chief executive officer of<lb/>
the American Sociological Asso-<lb/>
ciation, will keynote the confer-<lb/>
ence with a banquet address,<lb/>
"Recruiting Sociologists for the<lb/>
Year 2000 Friday.<lb/>
Friday and Saturday sessions<lb/>
include sections on the sociology<lb/>
of pornography, crime, war<lb/>
trauma, career opportunities, eat-<lb/>
ing disorders, medical sociology,<lb/>
religion and society and value<lb/>
choices. Fanelists will include<lb/>
student presenters.<lb/>
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<pb facs="00058127_0006"/><lb/>
Tt IE EAST CAROLINIAN<lb/>
FEBRUARY 23,1989<lb/>
Classifieds<lb/>
FOR RENT<lb/>
APARTMENT FOR RENT Two blocks<lb/>
from campus. (One bedroom available<lb/>
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tance to campus and downtown, hard-<lb/>
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ROOMMATE NEEDED: For summer at<lb/>
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APARTMENT FOR RENT: March 1st<lb/>
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TWO FEMALE ROOMMATES<lb/>
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CAN ?OU BUY: Jeeps, Cars, 4 x 4's seized<lb/>
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COUCH FOR SALE: Battan wood with<lb/>
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OVERSEAS JOBS: Also Cruiseships.<lb/>
S10,000-S105,000vr Now Hiring! 320<lb/>
Listings! (1) 805-687-6000 Ext. OJ-1166.<lb/>
SOCCER COACHES NEEDED: The<lb/>
Greenville Recreation and Parks Depart-<lb/>
ment is recruiting for 10-14 part-time soc-<lb/>
cer coaches for the Spring Indoor Soccer<lb/>
program. Applicants must possess some<lb/>
knowledge in soccer skills and have pa-<lb/>
tience to work with youth. Applicants<lb/>
must be able to coach young people, ages<lb/>
5-18 m 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/>
S3 55 hr. Application will be accepted<lb/>
starting Mon February 6. Contact Ben<lb/>
James at S30-4550 or 830-4543.<lb/>
WANTED: ENG Editor, proficient 34"<lb/>
video tape editing. Part-time. Contact<lb/>
News Director, W1TN-TV, 946-3131.<lb/>
EOEAffirmative Action Employer. Mi-<lb/>
norities and women encouraged to apply.<lb/>
BRODY"S AND BRODVS 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: Brodv's, Carolina<lb/>
East Mall, M-W, 2-4 p.m.<lb/>
HELP WANTED: Summer pb, June-<lb/>
August, at Emerald Isle. Mechanically<lb/>
inclined individuals to operate jet ski<lb/>
rentals. Call 523-4798 in Kinston day or<lb/>
night.<lb/>
i.<lb/>
NEW ENGLAND BROTHERSISTER<lb/>
CAMPS: (Mass) Mah-Kee-Nac for Boys<lb/>
Danbee for Girls. Counselor positions for<lb/>
Program Specialists: All team sports, es-<lb/>
pecially baseball, basketball, field hockey,<lb/>
soccer and volleyball; 25 tennis openings;<lb/>
also archery, nflery and biking; other<lb/>
openings include performing Arts, Fine<lb/>
Arts, yearbook, photography, cooking,<lb/>
sewing, rollerskahng, rocketry, ropes,<lb/>
camp craft; all waterfront activities<lb/>
(swimming, skiing, sailing, windsurfing,<lb/>
canoeingkavak). Inquire J &amp; D Camping<lb/>
(Boys) 190 linden Ave Glen Ridge, NJ<lb/>
07028; Action Camping (Girls) 263 Main<lb/>
?Rflatg MOntfrffig,Ty?07045 Phone (Bovs)<lb/>
014<lb/>
SERVICES OFFERED<lb/>
PARTY: If you are having a party and<lb/>
need a DJ. for the best music available for<lb/>
parties: Dance, Top 40, &amp; Beach. Call355-<lb/>
2781 and ask foT'TOorgan "?<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 DJ. Call<lb/>
early and book for your formal or party.<lb/>
75S-1700, ask for Dillon or leave a mes-<lb/>
sage.<lb/>
PAPERS TYPEDRESUMES COM-<lb/>
POSED: Call 756-9136.<lb/>
ATTENTION?HIRING Government<lb/>
jobs?your area Many immediate open-<lb/>
ings without waiting list or test. $17,840-<lb/>
S69,485. Call 1-602-838-8885. 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 Center,<lb/>
1009 Dickinson Ave. for interview.<lb/>
NATIONAL MARKETING FIRM<lb/>
SEEKS: Ambitious, mature student to<lb/>
manage on-campus promotions for top<lb/>
national companies this school year. Hex-<lb/>
ible hours with earnings potential to<lb/>
$2,500. Call Lisanne or Rebecca at 1-800-<lb/>
592-2121<lb/>
PERSONALS<lb/>
REWARD Know anyone who has a<lb/>
new large oval-shaped purple stone ring?<lb/>
One was lost 2-9-89 in the downtown area.<lb/>
Call Wendy 758-6946 Sentimental value.<lb/>
Will pay for its return.<lb/>
ZETA TAU ALPHA: Would like to con-<lb/>
gratulate the newest sisters of our soror-<lb/>
ity. April Barbour, June Barker, Elizabeth<lb/>
Batson, Elizabeth Gerard, Suzanne Grace,<lb/>
Shannon Malsey, Jeni Hedrick, Kellie<lb/>
Houchen, Jane Huggins, Joyce Parleey,<lb/>
Katherine Price, Lori Reynolds, Lisa Tay-<lb/>
lor and Tracy Tuten.<lb/>
ZTA BASKETBALL PLAYERS: Good<lb/>
luck in the basketball tournament tonight.<lb/>
We love you. ?The non-playing sisters<lb/>
and pledges of ZTA.<lb/>
AOPI'S OWN: Jacque Farris, Caroline<lb/>
Haire and Fay Jones. Congratulations on<lb/>
becoming sisters of AOPi. Sorry Guys!<lb/>
AOPI'S: Get ready for a wild weekend.<lb/>
Friday's the sister party (be festive!). Who<lb/>
knows what the rest of the weekend will<lb/>
entail.<lb/>
GREEKS: We hope everyone's plans for<lb/>
Spring Bieak are coming along. Have a<lb/>
spankin' week. ?The sisters and pledges<lb/>
of AOIM.<lb/>
ADPI: Hope ya'U are ready for the pre-<lb/>
downtown throw down at Grog's tonight!<lb/>
We're all lookin' forward to it! ?Love,<lb/>
Theta Chi.<lb/>
THETA CHI WANTS: To congratulate<lb/>
Pat Moye on his work with Special Olym-<lb/>
pics and we can't forget Clay's o-fer per-<lb/>
formance on the Coach Steele Show. Way<lb/>
to go air wacker!<lb/>
THETA CHI PLEDGES ARE: Having a<lb/>
car wash Saturday at the Fuel Dock. Come<lb/>
out and get your car washed cheap! We<lb/>
specialize in buses and urban assault ve-<lb/>
hicles!<lb/>
SIGMA BASKETBALL: Good luck in the<lb/>
tournament. We'll be cheering for y'all<lb/>
?Love, the Sigmas.<lb/>
SIGMA FIELD REP: Hope your stay at<lb/>
ECU will be one to remember. We look<lb/>
forward to working with you. ?Love, the<lb/>
Sigmas.<lb/>
SIGMA WATER POLO TEAM: t lang in<lb/>
there, y'all are doing a great job We love<lb/>
each &amp; every one of you. L.D. stay in that<lb/>
innertube ?Love, the Sigmas.<lb/>
FREE CAR WASH TO SUPPORT THE<lb/>
MARCH OF DIMES: Will be held Satur-<lb/>
day at Quincy's Steak 1 louse by Sigma<lb/>
Alpha Epsilon Please support the March<lb/>
of Dimes<lb/>
SAE: Basketball team?y'all are doing<lb/>
awesome. 'Nuff said. Water polo team,<lb/>
keep it up and stay in vour innertube<lb/>
Chuck.<lb/>
SAE AFTERNOON DELIGHT: Every<lb/>
iatrirngiii, nworinftppB at,5s30-<lb/>
&amp;mmiimdmmt D?te and thetwcredtblg ?<lb/>
bearded lady.<lb/>
SIG-EPS: Paul Ax, Willie, Trum, Tripper<lb/>
IL, and Chuck Wagon take your FAT A's<lb/>
up North for Spring Break! So you don't<lb/>
have to take your shirts offj-<lb/>
KA'S: Thanks for inviting us over for the<lb/>
pre-downtown party. We had a great<lb/>
time. Let's do it again, soon ?The Sig-<lb/>
mas.<lb/>
SCOTT SNYDER AND WENDY ARTS:<lb/>
The cat is out of the bag. May your lies be<lb/>
filled with happiness and many plump<lb/>
children. ?The Sweethearts.<lb/>
HEY ALL YOU HOODU GURU AOPI'S:<lb/>
Grab your tie-dyes and sandals and get<lb/>
ready for a sixties flashback tonight. It's<lb/>
going to be a gToovy time so get stoked! ?<lb/>
Peace, chicks. ?Love, the Alpha Sigs.<lb/>
GREEKS: Here's the news, have you<lb/>
heard the latest!? We're selling t-shirts<lb/>
and they're the GREATEST! 'Ten rea-<lb/>
sons to be Greek" is what it's all about, buy<lb/>
yours today?you WON'T want to be left<lb/>
out! Just ask any AZD for more details!<lb/>
ECU: Get psyched for Spring Break! Don't<lb/>
forget to buy your 'Ten reasons to b?<lb/>
Greek" t-shirts?JUST IN TIME FOR<lb/>
SPRING BREAK! ?The AZD-s.<lb/>
LAMBDA CHI'S: In just a few hours,<lb/>
we'll be rorkin' with you! Wearing leather<lb/>
and chains, and riding motorcycles too!<lb/>
Bring your helmets, 'cause the ride will be<lb/>
rough! We're GETTING GNARLY ON A<lb/>
HARLEY?are you tough enough!? (We<lb/>
can't wait for this one. . .?Love, the<lb/>
AZD's.<lb/>
HEY HEY: DZ this weekend was a blast.<lb/>
Alumni and fun, it all went too fast. Pick-<lb/>
ing up spoons, three man dice. A big silver<lb/>
barrel and three bags of ice. Kappa Sigs,<lb/>
SAE's, and a lone Sig Ep. Stratford Arms<lb/>
rocked?no tenints slept. Faye Head<lb/>
came by, yogurt in hand. The stereo<lb/>
rocked the girls in the band. The girls then<lb/>
stormed Pantana B's place. On the ice we<lb/>
slid home, everyone safe. Let's do it again.<lb/>
HEY: ECU Basketball Team: The Delta<lb/>
Zetas would like to congratulate you on<lb/>
your win against American U. Keep up<lb/>
the good work! ? Love, the sisters and <lb/>
pledges of Delta Zeta.<lb/>
KAY YOW: Your Delta Zeta sisters would I<lb/>
like to welcome you back to ECU and we<lb/>
hope you enjoy your visit. We are very<lb/>
proud of your success! ?Love, the sisters I<lb/>
and pledges of Delta Zeta.<lb/>
DELTA ZETA PLEDGES: We hope your<lb/>
week is going fine. You're almost there.<lb/>
We're having a great time! (Hope you are<lb/>
too!). ?Love, the sisters.<lb/>
PI KAPPA ALPHA LIL' SISTERS: Ifs<lb/>
your Appreciation Week. Your Big<lb/>
Brother will be gettin' in touch with you<lb/>
all during the week. Party with you Thurs-<lb/>
day before the Fizz at the place. You are<lb/>
the Best! ?The Guys.<lb/>
THANKS TO EVERYONE: Who partici-<lb/>
pated in Win, Lose or Draw Tuesday. You<lb/>
made it the success that it was. PIKE-IT.<lb/>
ALPHA PHI: Thanks for a killa' good time<lb/>
at the Palace last Thursday. We'll do it<lb/>
again. ?Pi Kappa Alpha.<lb/>
THETA CHI TOP 10 MOST TOLD LIES<lb/>
AT WAKE FORREST: 10 It never snows<lb/>
in Winston-Salem. 9. Mike's friends are<lb/>
good looking. 8. It's not gonna stick. 7. The<lb/>
first meetingis at 8:30.6. Ye OT Duck Trap<lb/>
has a stop light. 5. Front desk? This is<lb/>
Charles Pfautz 4. Hey, the Beast is good.<lb/>
3. Eat up guys, there's plenty of food. 2.<lb/>
Moncla knows how to drive. I. Wake<lb/>
Forrest can party.<lb/>
HOMYS: Tag team wild thing nosh<lb/>
masters cheezy road trip lust <lb/>
lightning farts mv "bwovs I Love You!<lb/>
?The Nickster (HLS).<lb/>
SIGMA NU: Be a part of the fastest grow<lb/>
ing fraternity on campus. Sigma Nu is<lb/>
holding a second rush Mon. and Tues<lb/>
Feb. 27 &amp; 28. Enjoy pizza Mon Chinese<lb/>
food Tues and on both nights live music<lb/>
with a live DJ. Come on out and meet the<lb/>
Brothers, pledges and Little Sisters. Go<lb/>
GREEK! Rush Sigma Nu Fraternity. 410<lb/>
Elizabeth St right next to Lambda Chi's<lb/>
house. Call for rides and more info. 758-<lb/>
6472.<lb/>
THE PI KAPPS PRESENT LITTLE SIS-<lb/>
TER RUSH: Monday and Tuesday, Feb-<lb/>
ruary 27th and 28th, 8-11 pm at the<lb/>
house. If you are interested in us, we are<lb/>
interested in you! The Pi Kappa Phi or-<lb/>
ganization looks forward to seeing you<lb/>
there!<lb/>
We started Friday with a wild time at the<lb/>
house which continued into Saturday<lb/>
with some basketball and a ribbon cutting<lb/>
ceremony that will never be forgotten!<lb/>
Saturday night we partied hard once<lb/>
again with 180 Proof and Tommy doing a<lb/>
good fill in as DJ The alumni were im-<lb/>
pressed and the rest of us had a blast!<lb/>
BETA PSI PLEDGES: Never fear another<lb/>
day is here Sunday may have brought<lb/>
fright, but it should have shed some light<lb/>
Get strong, be proud because we know<lb/>
you have potential, now is the time to use<lb/>
it<lb/>
NEED A RIDE: Back from Charlotte this<lb/>
weekend Will contribute gas<lb/>
PI KAPPS: Founder's Day was a success' money. Call Stephanie at 752-8579.<lb/>
DISPLAY CLASSIFIED<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 I<lb/>
AT 752-2865<lb/>
ATTENTION!<lb/>
PAN HELLENIC<lb/>
COUNCIL<lb/>
ANNOUNCES:<lb/>
FALL<lb/>
SORORITY<lb/>
RUSH<lb/>
WILL BE HELD<lb/>
BEEORE<lb/>
CLASSES.<lb/>
DISPLAY CLASSIFIED<lb/>
Phi Sigma Pi Car Wash<lb/>
9 am - 4 pm<lb/>
Saturday, Feb. 24th<lb/>
Fuel Doc<lb/>
lOn the comer of Greenville Blvd and 10th Street<lb/>
$2.00 <lb/>
ABORTION<lb/>
"Personal and Confidential Care"<lb/>
FREE Pregnancy<lb/>
Testing<lb/>
M-F 8:30-4 p.m.<lb/>
Sat. 10-1 p.m.<lb/>
Triangle Women's<lb/>
Health Center<lb/>
Call for appointment Mon thru Sat. Low<lb/>
Coat Tennin.iMon to 20 week nr pregnancy<lb/>
I 1-800-433-2930<lb/>
THE EAST CAROLINIAN<lb/>
Subscription Form<lb/>
Narru<lb/>
ALPHA PHI: Tonight will be a blast.<lb/>
Luotewg swwe) la r Tlwi'Brotheraa ?<lb/>
SlgtrfrjaEftstWrt ? <lb/>
ALPHA PHI: Can't wait for Thursday.<lb/>
Just bo ready for an awesome time?SAE<lb/>
style. ?Love, SAE.<lb/>
THETA CHI AND PANTANA BOB'S:<lb/>
Are having Happy Hour from 9 till clos-<lb/>
ing on Wed. Come down to the best party<lb/>
in town!<lb/>
THETA CHI: How was that weekend at<lb/>
Wake Forrest?<lb/>
AOPI: Cowboy hats and Indian attire<lb/>
were the outfits that we desired. Kingston<lb/>
Place served as the ok. corral, cause, ev-<lb/>
eryone there was throwin' down! With<lb/>
Big Silver things lined along the wall, all<lb/>
but one bit the dust, but they could have<lb/>
been the death of us all. Once again, y'all<lb/>
have outdone the rest, that's what makes<lb/>
y'all the definite best! ?Love, the Theta<lb/>
Chi's.<lb/>
BE A FOUNDER OF A FRATERNTIY:<lb/>
No pledging is involved. It you're inter-<lb/>
ested in making a difference, come to<lb/>
Mendenhall room 2-?8 tonight at 8:15 p.m.<lb/>
For more info, call Kevin 830-13.<lb/>
Address:<lb/>
Date to Begin:<lb/>
Date to End:<lb/>
Amount Paid:<lb/>
ss- Business: a<lb/>
Date Paid:<lb/>
Rate: Individual $25 prr yearBusiness SIS per year<lb/>
Return to: The East Carolinian, Publications Bldg - HCU. Cwcnvillc. NC 27838-4353<lb/>
Right After Spring Break comes the:<lb/>
14th Annual<lb/>
TKE BOXING<lb/>
Ringgirl Competition<lb/>
March 14 th<lb/>
at<lb/>
THE ATTIC<lb/>
1st Place $100<lb/>
2nd Place $75<lb/>
3rd Place $50<lb/>
Plus all three places receive $40 each toward purchase<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 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. 10 a.m. to<lb/>
5 p.m. and additional hours during the<lb/>
week. (10 to 15 hours per week). If inter-<lb/>
ested, please call Connie ? 757-6665 or<lb/>
Lou Anne 757-6336.<lb/>
TUTORS NEEDED<lb/>
Tutors needed for all business classes.<lb/>
Contact Lisa at Academic Counseling,<lb/>
Dept. of Athletics ? 757-6282 or 757-1677.<lb/>
WEIGHT LIFTING CONTEST<lb/>
Muscle and muscleless bound men and<lb/>
women should attend the Intramural<lb/>
registration meeting for the annual<lb/>
weight lifting contest Feb. 20 at 5:00 p.m.<lb/>
in GCB 1026.<lb/>
FCU NAVIGATORS<lb/>
"Flight 730 the weekly get-together of<lb/>
the Navigators, continues its streak of<lb/>
good Bible study every Thur 730-9 in<lb/>
Biology 103. The non-stop, no-frills meet-<lb/>
ing is designed to help you develop a<lb/>
closer walk with God. In-flight refresh-<lb/>
ments served. No ticket required; just<lb/>
reserve your time.<lb/>
COppFRATTVEED.<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. Semiror in the GCB. Seminars for<lb/>
spring '89: Feb. 23,4 p.m room 2016; Feb.<lb/>
27,4pm, room 2016.<lb/>
ASffi<lb/>
A Service Auction sponsored by the stu-<lb/>
dent chapter of ASID is scheduled for Feb.<lb/>
23 from 7-9 p.m. The auction will be held<lb/>
in room 205 of the Home Ec. Bldg. All<lb/>
proceeds will benefit the physically dis-<lb/>
abled. Donations are tax deductible. Serv-<lb/>
ices include: 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/>
INTERVIEWING WORK-<lb/>
SHOPS<lb/>
To help ECU people prepare for on and off<lb/>
campus interviews, the Career Planning<lb/>
and Placement Service in Bloxton House<lb/>
is offering 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/>
CAMPFIRE<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 (Methodist and Presbyte-<lb/>
rian Campus Ministries), 758-2030 or 752-<lb/>
7240.<lb/>
SOPHOMORES AND TRS<lb/>
Earn over $600 mis summer. Earn $100 a<lb/>
month during your last 2 years in colleg?<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/>
VISITING LECTURES PRO-<lb/>
GRAM<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. 7:00pmroom 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. Connere?Geog. Dept Radiord Univ<lb/>
Radford, VA, author of 5henandoh<lb/>
National Park?An Interpretive History<lb/>
730 p.m room 1028 GCB.<lb/>
QM BUCCANEERS<lb/>
lNJ Buccaneers will be given away on a<lb/>
fi -come, first-serve basis starting Feb.<lb/>
2. 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 Whichardby 5 p.m. on March 15.<lb/>
The winning entry will be awarded a $25<lb/>
cash prize. Don't delay, enter today! For<lb/>
more info contact Tonya Batizy (w)757-<lb/>
6611 ext. 210 or (h) 830-8888.<lb/>
PHI ALPHA TKETA<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/>
P.F? 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 you are unable<lb/>
to make the meeting, ask a friend about<lb/>
the details. Don't forget?Party is this Fri.<lb/>
night Make plans to attend.<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 830 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 arc<lb/>
issues to be discussed. Please come out<lb/>
and meet people from 20 other universi<lb/>
ties in the NC 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 Peoria, 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. 26, 3:15 p.m Fletcher Recital<lb/>
Hall, free); Tom McGinnis, piano, junior<lb/>
recital (Feb. 27,7:00 pm Fletcher Recital<lb/>
HaU, 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 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 miss the big event!<lb/>
<lb/>
<pb facs="00058127_0007"/><lb/>
y<lb/>
THE EAST CAROLINIAN<lb/>
FEBRUARY 23,1989 7<lb/>
Announcements<lb/>
BLACK FACULTY SYMFQ-<lb/>
SiilM<lb/>
1 lembers 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/>
mi atth of Feb in the Ledoma Wright Afro-<lb/>
American Cultural Center from 1130-<lb/>
l.X). Students, faculty and staff are en-<lb/>
couraged to bring a brown bag lunch and<lb/>
enjoy the discussion. Sponsored by the<lb/>
Office ot Minority Student Affairs.<lb/>
SWIM MEET<lb/>
Drown vour sorrows by signing up for<lb/>
this years intramural swim meet. This will<lb/>
be the only swim meet until 1990! Don't<lb/>
miss registration meeting March 15 at 5:00<lb/>
p m. in GCB 1026. Your spring tan should<lb/>
ki k great'<lb/>
SOFTBALL<lb/>
P-utter up! Intramural softball registration<lb/>
meeting will be held March4 at 500 p.m.<lb/>
in BIO 103. All men's and women's teams<lb/>
must send a representative.<lb/>
ALPJ1AJAFPAAJLPHA<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/>
IMPyriviNCi STV"Y 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 Wnght<lb/>
Bldg. Feb. 27?Time Mgrnt, 3-4:30 p.m<lb/>
Feb. 2S?Time Mgrnt, 3-4:30 p.m.<lb/>
Feu LAW SOCIETY.<lb/>
Oar next meeting is Feb. 23 at 6:00 p.m. in<lb/>
GCB 1012 Please attend.<lb/>
PSI CHI<lb/>
All new members who have recieved a<lb/>
letter of acceptance into Psi Chi honor<lb/>
society must fill out membership cards<lb/>
along with a check for $35 (made out to Psi<lb/>
Chi) by Fn Feb. 24 in the Psi Chi Mailbox<lb/>
(RswllOt). If both check and membership<lb/>
card are not recieved, you will have to<lb/>
reapplv for membership next semester<lb/>
The next meeting will be held in Rawl 302<lb/>
on March 1 at 400- All members must<lb/>
attend<lb/>
fdI GOSPEL CHOIR<lb/>
The ECU Gospel Choir thanks you for<lb/>
your support throughout our 10 years 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/>
$1, Adults- $2. We look forward to sharing<lb/>
our happy occasion with you.<lb/>
ACCOUNTING SOCIETY<lb/>
The next Accounting Society bus. meeting<lb/>
will be held on Feb. 27 at 3:00 in GCB 1032.<lb/>
Wachovia's Regional Internal Auditor<lb/>
will be the guest speaker. Professional<lb/>
dress is recommended.<lb/>
ODN<lb/>
The Overseas Development Network will<lb/>
meet today at 5 p.m. in room 247 MSC All<lb/>
members should attend because we'll be<lb/>
discussing our fundraisers, especially the<lb/>
upcoming dinner. Anydn interested in<lb/>
learning about Third World problems<lb/>
please attend. For more info call Tonya<lb/>
Batizy (h) 830-8888, (w) 757-6611, ext. 210.<lb/>
HONORS ORG.<lb/>
The EC Honors Org. is the student honors<lb/>
group at ECU; it works closely with the<lb/>
Honors Program and is affiliated with the<lb/>
N.C. Honors Assoc, Southern Regional<lb/>
Honors Council, and National Collegiate<lb/>
Honors Council. Meetings are held on al-<lb/>
ternate Thursdays at 5:00 in room 1004<lb/>
GCB. The next meeting will be held today.<lb/>
Contact Dr. Sanders (757-63731 for more<lb/>
info.<lb/>
PIVE CLUB<lb/>
There will be a meeting Feb. 27 in rm. 1012<lb/>
GCB. Ray Scharf will be presenting a slide<lb/>
show and discussion on diving in the<lb/>
Bahamas. New comers welcome. For<lb/>
more info call David Angel at 355-3546<lb/>
after 800 p.m.<lb/>
outreach production coming to ECU<lb/>
March 27th and 28th. Come join us!<lb/>
CAMPUS CRUSADE<lb/>
Looking for fellowship, fun, and bearding<lb/>
God's word? You are welcome to attend<lb/>
Prime Time at Rawl, rm. 130?every<lb/>
Thursday night at 7:30. Refreshments<lb/>
served.<lb/>
CONCERT<lb/>
In, varsity is having a concert of prayer<lb/>
Feb. ?4th in GCB 3008 at 7 p.m. We will be<lb/>
praying specifically for the HABAKKUK<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 Hansor. of the U.S. Office of Per-<lb/>
sonnel Mgrnt. on 224R9, from 1000 a.m<lb/>
-12 noon in room 1031, GCB.<lb/>
CULTURE MEETING<lb/>
You can learn what Mormons believe. We<lb/>
will be holding a culture meeting every<lb/>
Thurs. from 630-8:00 p.m. in room 248<lb/>
Mendenhall. Any questions, please call<lb/>
752-4310. Everyone welcome to attend.<lb/>
It's hip.<lb/>
It's now.<lb/>
And, best of all<lb/>
It's free.<lb/>
The<lb/>
East<lb/>
Carolinian<lb/>
"You get what<lb/>
you pay for"<lb/>
Waldenbooks explains reasons for withdrawal<lb/>
NEW YORK (AP) - yhen is a<lb/>
okstore legally liable for terror-<lb/>
ism? The bookstore chains that<lb/>
pulled "The Satanic Verses" off<lb/>
their shelves probably aid so with<lb/>
at least one eye on lawsuits filed<lb/>
against Tan Am after a terrorist<lb/>
limb blew up the airline's Flight<lb/>
103 last year.<lb/>
The companies - Walden-<lb/>
books and B. Dalton - said concern<lb/>
for employees' and customers'<lb/>
safety mandated withdrawal of<lb/>
the novel.<lb/>
The Ayatollah Khomeini had<lb/>
prenounced the book sufficiently<lb/>
blasphemous to warrant a death<lb/>
sentence for its author, Salman<lb/>
Rushdie, and those involved with<lb/>
its publication.<lb/>
Waldenbooks said its store<lb/>
managers had received bomb<lb/>
threats. Legal experts say the<lb/>
companies undoubtedly had an-<lb/>
other cause for concern: their po-<lb/>
tential liability if someone were<lb/>
injured or killed in a terrorist at-<lb/>
tack.<lb/>
The companies "might be<lb/>
concerned about their employees,<lb/>
and they might be concerned<lb/>
about themselves said George<lb/>
Gabel of Jacksonville, Fla chair-<lb/>
man of the American Bar<lb/>
Association's committee on defa-<lb/>
mation.<lb/>
Spokesmen for the compa-<lb/>
nies declined to say what role, if<lb/>
any, the threat of lawsuits played<lb/>
in their decision, or on exactly<lb/>
what information they based their<lb/>
actions. But in an article Tuesday<lb/>
on the op-ed page of The New<lb/>
York Times, Waldenbooks presi-<lb/>
dent Harry Hoffman referred to<lb/>
the fate of Flight 103 and the 259<lb/>
people aboard.<lb/>
Saying that his decision to<lb/>
remove the novel followed "real<lb/>
threats made against the lives of<lb/>
real people Hoffman added:<lb/>
"We have only to contemplate the<lb/>
downing of the Fan Am flight to<lb/>
be reminded that such threats<lb/>
may be taken seriously<lb/>
In that case, the airline was<lb/>
informed by the government that<lb/>
bomb threats had been made<lb/>
against Pan Am jetliners flying to<lb/>
the United States from Frankfurt,<lb/>
West Germany. U.S. diplomatic<lb/>
personnel were notified of the<lb/>
threats, but the general public was<lb/>
not.<lb/>
Flight 103 from Frankfurt to<lb/>
New York blew up over the vil-<lb/>
lage of Lockerbie, Scotland, on<lb/>
Dec. 21. killing all 259 aboard.<lb/>
Some of the victims' relatives<lb/>
have sued, claiming Pan Am<lb/>
should have disclosed the threats.<lb/>
In the "Satanic yerses" case,<lb/>
the ayatollah sentenced to death<lb/>
its author, Salman Rushdie, "and<lb/>
all those involved in its publica-<lb/>
tion who were aware of its con-<lb/>
tent<lb/>
Legal experts said that a law-<lb/>
yer could legitimately interpret<lb/>
"publication" to mean "distribu-<lb/>
tion and give his client sound,<lb/>
albeit rather conservative, advice:<lb/>
gee the book off the shelf and out<lb/>
of the windows.<lb/>
Several prominent lawyers<lb/>
said they liked the store's chances<lb/>
in a legal fight. "I don't see a spe-<lb/>
cific warning having been given<lb/>
here toy Khomeini) said Robert<lb/>
Bohner, a Brooklyn attorney who<lb/>
has represented plaintiffs in<lb/>
many negligence cases. "The<lb/>
chances of liability in a case like<lb/>
this are probably rather slim<lb/>
Andrew C. Hecker Jr a Phila-<lb/>
delphia attorney who heads the<lb/>
ABA's committee on torts, said,<lb/>
"The question is whether a com-<lb/>
pany must heed every warning it<lb/>
gets. It might be that if every<lb/>
warning were heeded, you could<lb/>
not conduct your business.<lb/>
P<lb/>
&amp;<lb/>
G BREAK Sj<lb/>
Q,<lb/>
$ BUY ?<lb/>
YOUR SPRING BREAK SUPPLIES<lb/>
AT<lb/>
FARMCO DRUG CENTER<lb/>
Get 10 OFF the total Purchase<lb/>
with this Ad!<lb/>
(Purchases must be rung up In the Pharmacy)<lb/>
rffj<lb/>
VV<lb/>
T)<lb/>
&amp;&amp;<lb/>
$h<lb/>
<lb/>
?<lb/>
Toothpaste<lb/>
Pot<lb/>
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?.<lb/>
?n,<lb/>
?o<lb/>
CO<lb/>
6?<lb/>
-<lb/>
<lb/>
pirin<lb/>
PLUS FREE "HOW TO PREVENT SUNBURN<lb/>
Brochure<lb/>
j<lb/>
K  (rlf.<lb/>
1989<lb/>
1990<lb/>
SGA SPRING ELECTIONS<lb/>
FOR<lb/>
? PRESIDENT<lb/>
?VICE-PRESIDENT<lb/>
? TREASURER<lb/>
? SECRETARY<lb/>
(16 hours completed)<lb/>
RFQIITREMFNTS FOR NOMINATION;<lb/>
1-Full-time Student<lb/>
2-48 hours completed<lb/>
3-Previously enrolled at ECU for two<lb/>
Consecutive Semesters<lb/>
4-In good standing<lb/>
5-2.0 GPA<lb/>
Filing Begins Friday, February 24th thru Friday, March 3.<lb/>
Deadline For Filing is Friday, March 3 at 4:00 p.m.<lb/>
SGA Office, Room 222<lb/>
Mendenhall Student Center<lb/>
Mandatory meeting of all candidates will be held Tuesday,<lb/>
March 14 at 5:15 pm, Room 242, Mendenhall Student Center<lb/>
<pb facs="00058127_0008"/><lb/>
THfc EAST CAROLINIAN<lb/>
Features<lb/>
?<lb/>
FEBRUARY 23, 1989 PACE 8<lb/>
Students search ships<lb/>
By ALICIA FORD<lb/>
Staff Writer<lb/>
ECU students help excavate a shipwreck in Virginia last year. This year, the field school will be<lb/>
on the Cape Fear river. Any interested student is invited to sign up.<lb/>
Cabaret' is a worthy diversion<lb/>
ECU will lx sponsoring its<lb/>
11th annual Field School in man<lb/>
time history and underwater ar-<lb/>
chaeology at Cape Fear, N( , dur-<lb/>
ing the second session of summer<lb/>
school 1989.<lb/>
The trip starts on )i:ne 2S and<lb/>
runs approximately through<lb/>
August 3. The Field School is<lb/>
designed to provide the students<lb/>
with a basi introduction to<lb/>
American maritime history an i<lb/>
the scientific methods thai are<lb/>
employed in underwater re-<lb/>
search<lb/>
Each student will participate<lb/>
in classroom lectures, workshops,<lb/>
seminars, and will conduct on<lb/>
site research at a series of Civil<lb/>
War period shipwrecks in the<lb/>
Cape Fear area. The field research<lb/>
isdesigned to locate, identify, and<lb/>
assess approximately 30 areas of<lb/>
shipwreck sites, all sunk during<lb/>
the Civil War.<lb/>
Gordon Watts and William<lb/>
Still, both professors of maritime<lb/>
history and underwater archaeol<lb/>
ogy, will bo supervising the trip<lb/>
"We will accept almost anv<lb/>
one, it's not a cut and dried situ<lb/>
ation. Last vear we had i music<lb/>
major sign up The only requin<lb/>
ment is that you are al least .i<lb/>
junior, and if you div y u must<lb/>
have your own scuba equip<lb/>
ment said Watts<lb/>
I Fndergraduatcand graduate<lb/>
t redil of up to five hours will he<lb/>
offered for the Field ScIkk1, and<lb/>
you don't hue to be a diver to<lb/>
p irtcipate. They need students to<lb/>
work on the boats, conduct his<lb/>
torical land research, and re-<lb/>
search the conservation oi hist n<lb/>
cal artifacts.<lb/>
Ten students will beac( epted<lb/>
for the trip, although in the past<lb/>
they have had as manv as 16 who<lb/>
participates!<lb/>
"We have to cut it i (i al nine<lb/>
or ten due to a limited am<lb/>
space, facilities boat and<lb/>
members You need a<lb/>
ratio of student to ti<lb/>
to adequately sup n isi i verj<lb/>
one said Watts<lb/>
The ! i'ld s hool is i um i "<lb/>
working out arrangm i I<lb/>
use the studentsat an air tor<lb/>
radar si itio in f " ; r " '<lb/>
? in operation In 1<lb/>
have; S ?? ?<lb/>
base, ,i middle s hool in i ?<lb/>
Island,and utilized rental 1- us -<lb/>
rhc (ost for the h ?using is still<lb/>
undetermined, and the Students<lb/>
will b- responsible I r their own<lb/>
? ils.<lb/>
program his 1<lb/>
ratioi iii c ? ' ? i I<lb/>
recently wrapped up thro-<lb/>
of research on the Yorktown Ship<lb/>
See HELD, pae 9<lb/>
F?v FEE HIGF1SMITH<lb/>
Stiff Writer<lb/>
Tuesday night, I found my-<lb/>
self sitting in my room thinking<lb/>
What good is sitting alone in<lb/>
? Mir room? Come hear the music<lb/>
play Yes, Cabaret was in Wright<lb/>
Auditorium, and I couldn't resist<lb/>
'tie of the greatest musicals ever<lb/>
lone on stage. In other words, I<lb/>
opened the doors of Wright with<lb/>
?t of expectations.<lb/>
The play is set in Berlin just<lb/>
prior to World War Two. Cliff<lb/>
tradshav (played by Dan<lb/>
harkev), an aspiring novelist,<lb/>
i omes to Berlin to find a master-<lb/>
iece. Instead he finds love in<lb/>
ightclub dancer Sallv Bowles,<lb/>
md decadence and rising turmoil<lb/>
in the world around him.<lb/>
He rents a room in a boarding<lb/>
house run by tough old Frau Sch-<lb/>
neider (Judy Ferrell), an elderly<lb/>
ladv preparing to marry one of<lb/>
her boarders, Herr SchultzCTim<lb/>
Hover).<lb/>
One of the major conflicts of<lb/>
the play arises out of this situ-<lb/>
ation, since Schultz is a few, and<lb/>
the Nazi's are making their pres-<lb/>
ence felt in German life. Another<lb/>
conflict emerges when Sally be-<lb/>
comes pregnant.<lb/>
All of this is viewed amid the<lb/>
lewd Kitkat Club, hosted by the<lb/>
Emcee(Scott Thompson) an out<lb/>
rageously and wickedly wise<lb/>
character. "Leave all your prob-<lb/>
lems outside he demands at the<lb/>
beginning of the show, as he leads<lb/>
you in to the problems of these<lb/>
unfortunate Berliners.<lb/>
The Emcee was excellently<lb/>
portrayed. He was rude, loud and<lb/>
offensive. Perfect. He set the tone<lb/>
of sleazy desparation that per-<lb/>
vades the plav.<lb/>
The song that should have<lb/>
been the climax of the show, the<lb/>
title number "Cabaret didn't get<lb/>
me out oi mv seat. Sallv Bowles,<lb/>
played by Carolvn Wesley, is in-<lb/>
tended to be very strange, ener-<lb/>
getic, sultry and English. Wesley<lb/>
never had a consistent accent<lb/>
throughout the plav.<lb/>
Overall, 1 enjoyed the show.<lb/>
The singing, dancing and chore-<lb/>
ography were excellent, and thus<lb/>
buried my dissatisfaction with the<lb/>
Sally Bowles character. Top<lb/>
notch? Maybe not, but almost<lb/>
worth the seven bucks 1 paid to<lb/>
get in.<lb/>
 day in the life of  an art major<lb/>
Art major not so 'typical'<lb/>
By KAREN MANN<lb/>
Miff Writer<lb/>
Finding a typical art major is<lb/>
ut as easy as finding typical<lb/>
irt Students range from busi-<lb/>
n like commercial arts majors<lb/>
to theso-called nonconformists of<lb/>
th fine arts departments.<lb/>
Senior metal design student<lb/>
Mice Zincone sees herself as<lb/>
?eing some where in the middle of<lb/>
these two extremes.<lb/>
 lot of people think we're<lb/>
.H weirdos but vou'll find all<lb/>
kinds of people over here she<lb/>
savs. "I'm just me, a very up front<lb/>
and ordinary person. I have my<lb/>
own ideas and style. Every art<lb/>
mapr is an individual<lb/>
For all their individuality, art<lb/>
Coming<lb/>
this<lb/>
weekend<lb/>
Thursday<lb/>
Susie's:<lb/>
The Beam<lb/>
New Deli:<lb/>
The LA Booker Band<lb/>
Attic:<lb/>
Lex Luthor<lb/>
Mendenhall:<lb/>
Crocodile Dundee II<lb/>
(through Sunday)<lb/>
Friday<lb/>
New Deli:<lb/>
The Distance<lb/>
Attic:<lb/>
Over the Garden Wall<lb/>
(Genesis Tribute)<lb/>
Saturday<lb/>
New Deli:<lb/>
The High Water<lb/>
Blues Band<lb/>
Attic:<lb/>
White Heat<lb/>
Monday<lb/>
New Deli:<lb/>
Open Mike Night<lb/>
majors do have certain things in<lb/>
common. Most become interested<lb/>
at an early age and enter school<lb/>
with the intention of being com-<lb/>
mercial artists. Zincone is from<lb/>
Greenville and began taking art<lb/>
classes at Rose High School. Her<lb/>
father is chairman of the ECU<lb/>
Decision Sciences Department<lb/>
and the family went to many<lb/>
School of Art gallery openings.<lb/>
WTien it came time for college,<lb/>
Alice naturally picked ECU.<lb/>
"1 wasn't interested in going<lb/>
far away she says, "that's too<lb/>
much of a hassle. Besides, ECU<lb/>
has one of the better art schools on<lb/>
the East Coast<lb/>
Zincone decided against<lb/>
commercial art after dealing with<lb/>
a very technical project in her first<lb/>
design class. After a brief stint in<lb/>
environmental design, she finallv<lb/>
settled on metals.<lb/>
"1 like to build with nrt)<lb/>
hands. The fabrication in metals<lb/>
appealed to me. It's more 3-D<lb/>
than, say, CA, and I can get my<lb/>
hands on it better<lb/>
Tuesdays and Thursdays are<lb/>
devoted to metal design classes.<lb/>
At 8 am. Zincone has an inde-<lb/>
pendent study with Linda Darty.<lb/>
Ine class members meet about<lb/>
oneeevery three weeks to present<lb/>
their work in a critique. Other-<lb/>
wise, students don't have to go to<lb/>
class but they are expected to<lb/>
spend at least 3 hours a week in<lb/>
the metals studio. Zincone likes to<lb/>
utilize the alloted class time<lb/>
though she usually starts working<lb/>
around nine instead of eight.<lb/>
After a lunch break, Zincone<lb/>
is back in Jenkins for an advanced<lb/>
jewelry techniques class. Stu-<lb/>
dents learn to work with faceted<lb/>
stones such as emeralds and dia-<lb/>
monds and explore new ideas in<lb/>
metal. This semester the course is<lb/>
being taught by visiting artist<lb/>
Steven Albair.<lb/>
"Steven's from a different<lb/>
market and area of jewelry Zin-<lb/>
cone said. "We'll all benefit from<lb/>
having a different teacher<lb/>
When class is over, she either<lb/>
heads home or to the New Deli,<lb/>
one of her favorite downtown<lb/>
restaurants. Then it's more work<lb/>
in the art building until around<lb/>
1:30 or 2 a.m. when her day is<lb/>
finally over.<lb/>
"I try to make myself come<lb/>
See ART, page 9<lb/>
Bill ?ind Ted have an excellent adventure with Socrates and Hilly the Kid in ' Bill and Ted's<lb/>
Excellent Adventure Thev travel in time in a phone booth. Holy Tardis!<lb/>
Bill and Ted's adventure not so<lb/>
excellent unless you dig Tiff an<lb/>
ByMICAH HARRIS<lb/>
S'j'f Writer<lb/>
Once in a while a movie come<lb/>
along that you want to rush out<lb/>
and see at once. Bill and Ted's<lb/>
Excellent Adventure" is not that<lb/>
movie.<lb/>
The idea of two California<lb/>
surfer types tripping through<lb/>
time and having adventures is<lb/>
appealing in itself. But what the<lb/>
production team has done with it<lb/>
is closer to appalling.<lb/>
Bill (Alex Winters) and Ted<lb/>
QCeanu Reeves) are two aspiring<lb/>
teen rock stars who've spent so<lb/>
much time practicing in the ga-<lb/>
rage that they're failing history.<lb/>
Ted's father (played by 1 lal Lan-<lb/>
don, jr. as the despotic parent<lb/>
these teen movies are lousy with)<lb/>
threatens to send Ted to military<lb/>
school and break up their friend-<lb/>
ship and their band<lb/>
No great loss, right? WRONG<lb/>
 the paradise of the 27th century<lb/>
is dependent on these lads' suc-<lb/>
cess The rulersof the future send<lb/>
the "super-cool" Rufus (George<lb/>
Carlin) into the past to give Pill<lb/>
and Ted the secret of tune travel<lb/>
and a history project tint is a<lb/>
guaranteed A<lb/>
"Bill and Ted's Excellent<lb/>
Adventure" has its moments The<lb/>
special effects are good, and there<lb/>
are some genuinely funny bits,<lb/>
such as Socrates and Billy the Kid<lb/>
becoming pals and trying to pick<lb/>
up some valley girls at the mall.<lb/>
Or Ted's being analyzed live on<lb/>
stage by Freud as part of the his-<lb/>
tory project.<lb/>
There's enough cleverness<lb/>
glinting through courtesy of<lb/>
scripters Chris Matheson and Fd<lb/>
Solomon (story editor of "The<lb/>
Gary Shandlinc Show") to show<lb/>
this movie could've been better.<lb/>
But then, it wouldn't be a teen<lb/>
movie, would it?<lb/>
"Bill and Ted" is no foot in<lb/>
reality to either be removed later<lb/>
or remain as an anchor and refer<lb/>
ence point for the viewer. As zany<lb/>
. K Hitchhiker's <lb/>
Galax) was. there was alv<lb/>
Arthur Dent's straight-man cl -<lb/>
acter who couldn't quite a<lb/>
the bizzare situations he and<lb/>
weirder pals found themselvesin.<lb/>
"Bill and Kd' offers no<lb/>
straight man. Not only are both of<lb/>
them spaced out, but the stable<lb/>
characters oi their real world<lb/>
with the exception of their history<lb/>
teacher are presented as par<lb/>
dies: Te I - estapo d.A, Bill'<lb/>
oversewed father and ur<lb/>
step-mother Instead of I<lb/>
moving into absurdity Bill and<lb/>
led' goes from silliness to silli<lb/>
ness<lb/>
"Bill and Teds E<lb/>
?dventure" could tun e w rfc 1<lb/>
on a parodic or even an absurd<lb/>
level but the producers were t.s1<lb/>
busy making sure they cranked<lb/>
out the apropriate teen drivel. If<lb/>
you groove to Tiffany<lb/>
to emulate Corey Haim, <lb/>
like this. ton. This movie get<lb/>
bogus two cat heads<lb/>
Pickin' the Suspicious Bones<lb/>
Top 13<lb/>
Top 13 Albums<lb/>
1 ? Elvis Costcllo "Spike'<lb/>
2 ? Replacements "Don't<lb/>
Tell A Soul"<lb/>
3 ? Guadalcanal Diary<lb/>
"Rip Flop"<lb/>
4 ? XTC "The Mayor of<lb/>
Simpleton"<lb/>
5 ? Thrashing Doves<lb/>
'Trouble in The Home"<lb/>
6 ? Christmas "Ultrapro-<lb/>
phets of Thee Psykick Revolu-<lb/>
tion"<lb/>
7 ? The Wonder Stuff<lb/>
"Eight-legged Groove Machine"<lb/>
8 ? Slammin Watusis<lb/>
"Kings of Noise"<lb/>
9 ? The Slugs "Non-stop<lb/>
Holiday"<lb/>
10 ? Buck Pets "Same"<lb/>
11 ? DT &amp; The Shakes<lb/>
"Hits"<lb/>
12 ? Throwing Muses<lb/>
"Hunkpapa"<lb/>
13 ?Sweet Baby "It's a<lb/>
Girl"<lb/>
Bonehead suspects plot from cordons<lb/>
By CHIPPY BONEHEAD<lb/>
Sutf Conspirator<lb/>
Winter is in the air. At ECU,<lb/>
conspiracy is in the air. All over<lb/>
campus, things are beingmystc-<lb/>
riously roped off. Buildings,<lb/>
sidewalks, trees, certain profes- <lb/>
sors  everything is being cor-<lb/>
doned by fences, tape, rope and<lb/>
string.<lb/>
The trend started a few<lb/>
years ago, when they blocked<lb/>
off the street in front of the stu-<lb/>
dent store. Ostensibly, this was<lb/>
to repave the street, but campus<lb/>
insiders knew it was a scheme to<lb/>
stop the almost militant gather-<lb/>
ings of students outside the<lb/>
store every day between classes.<lb/>
It continued last year, when<lb/>
the fence around Mendenhall<lb/>
sprang up overnight. Inside the<lb/>
fence, a large hole appeared.<lb/>
Many students thought this was<lb/>
the foundation for the Menden-<lb/>
hall Reflecting Pool, but plans<lb/>
changed. The annex got built in-<lb/>
stead.<lb/>
The fence was for, quote,<lb/>
"the protection of the students<lb/>
so they are not harmed by fall-<lb/>
ing debris as the concrete patio<lb/>
is destroyed Right. What else<lb/>
was the patio but a place where<lb/>
students congregated between<lb/>
classes  possible plotting the<lb/>
overthrow of the administra-<lb/>
tion.<lb/>
In the past semester alone,<lb/>
patches of sidewalk have been<lb/>
roped off. University officials<lb/>
say this was to keep newly-<lb/>
dried concrete from being van-<lb/>
dalized. But if s no secret that<lb/>
those sections of sidewalk were<lb/>
the most heavily trafficked<lb/>
walkways to classes.<lb/>
Eventually they tried to sec-<lb/>
tion off the Publications Build-<lb/>
ing, home of The East Carolin-<lb/>
ian. This came during our ex-<lb/>
pose of the squirrel man affair.<lb/>
Obviously, the university was<lb/>
trying this lame method of con-<lb/>
tainment to stop our coverage of<lb/>
the squirrel attacks.<lb/>
Erwin Building was the<lb/>
next to fall victim to this odd<lb/>
method of censure. It's common<lb/>
knowledge that delicate gov-<lb/>
ernment secrets were being<lb/>
stored there secrets that might<lb/>
have indicted several school of-<lb/>
cials in the Iran-Contra affair.<lb/>
This week, after the Great<lb/>
Blizzard, taped cordons ap-<lb/>
peared around several trees and<lb/>
bushes. The official university<lb/>
explanation is, "We're trying to<lb/>
keep students out from under<lb/>
trees where large deposits of ice<lb/>
have been melting and falling.<lb/>
Honest"<lb/>
Right, folks. If all were so<lb/>
concerned about our health,<lb/>
why wasn't the huge Menden-<lb/>
hall Canyon roped off when it<lb/>
appeared three months ago.<lb/>
The student center was al-<lb/>
most completely inaccessible<lb/>
for weeks, and several students<lb/>
returning home from down-<lb/>
town at night were found the<lb/>
next morning, half-suffocated in<lb/>
mud.<lb/>
Never saw any ropes<lb/>
around that, did we? No. Of!<lb/>
course not. There's obviously<lb/>
some plot going on. But what<lb/>
exactly is the plot71 put a team of<lb/>
crack reporters on the job and<lb/>
the facts are startling.<lb/>
Why were certain things<lb/>
contained and others weren't?<lb/>
Well, the most common de-<lb/>
nominator were the areas where<lb/>
students frequented. Denyng<lb/>
students access to these places<lb/>
denied them the chance to meet,<lb/>
gossip and communicate infor-<lb/>
mation with other students.<lb/>
Point one: Ignorant stu-<lb/>
See BONEHEAD, page 9<lb/>
<lb/>
<pb facs="00058127_0009"/><lb/>
THE EAST CAROLINIAN<lb/>
FEBRUARY 23. 1989 9<lb/>
Rope skipping rhymes are fun<lb/>
STORRS, Conn. (AP) ?<lb/>
Those who hear the rhyme should<lb/>
also know there's reason behind<lb/>
the child's game of skipping rope,<lb/>
according to a University of Con-<lb/>
necticut English professor.<lb/>
I think maybe that if I've<lb/>
found out anything, it's that all<lb/>
found th world, children skip<lb/>
savs Fracelia M. Butler, author of<lb/>
Skipping Around the World:<lb/>
The Ritual Nature of Folk<lb/>
Rhymes" (Library Professional<lb/>
Publications, $18.50 paperback,<lb/>
$29.50 hardcover).<lb/>
The book is a collection of<lb/>
skip rope rhymes and chants that<lb/>
Butler collected from 57countries<lb/>
during more than 40 vears of trav-<lb/>
els.<lb/>
Butler, who teaches<lb/>
children's literature, savs no mat-<lb/>
ter what the country, when she<lb/>
hands a child a rope, the skipping<lb/>
begins<lb/>
Chants are universal in<lb/>
themes ? protest, loneliness,<lb/>
love, nonsense and the future,<lb/>
such as the rhyme: "Who will I<lb/>
marry? Doctor, lawyer, merchant,<lb/>
chief<lb/>
"That 'who will 1 marry'<lb/>
rhyme is in every country Butler<lb/>
says. Butler maintains that saying<lb/>
rhymes while skipping is more<lb/>
than childish rambling; it's a rit-<lb/>
ual.<lb/>
"There's magic connected<lb/>
with it she savs.<lb/>
"If a child skips and he<lb/>
stumbles, he doesn't just go on<lb/>
chanting. He stops and begins at<lb/>
the beginning again  he feels<lb/>
that in the invisible world of the<lb/>
whirling rope, if he stumbles, he's<lb/>
let bad influences in or evil in. So<lb/>
he has to start the ritual over<lb/>
again<lb/>
Butler says one of the most<lb/>
beautiful American rhvmcs is one<lb/>
she first heard in the 1940s:<lb/>
"On the hilltop, stands a lady<lb/>
Who she is, I do not know<lb/>
All she wears is gold and sil-<lb/>
ver<lb/>
And she needs a nice young<lb/>
man<lb/>
Butler says what struck her<lb/>
about the rhyme was that she<lb/>
heard it in a black community<lb/>
J<lb/>
near Falls Church, Va and it's an<lb/>
example of a black culture pre<lb/>
serving a white rhyme.<lb/>
While there are some general<lb/>
themes, the collection also in-<lb/>
cludes a chapter of rhymes that<lb/>
Butler says "will make your hair<lb/>
stand on end She was referring<lb/>
to a group of rhymes collected<lb/>
from urban playgrounds.<lb/>
"Some adults are surprised,<lb/>
even shocked she says, "to learn<lb/>
that many children's rhymes, in-<lb/>
cluding those for skipping, have<lb/>
an unmistakable sexual, even<lb/>
bawdy, element.<lb/>
'They're very, very dirty<lb/>
While many of the skip-rope<lb/>
rhymes change little over the<lb/>
years, Butler says some new one?<lb/>
do crop up and reflect current<lb/>
events and times, such as a popu-<lb/>
lar rhyme during the administra-<lb/>
tion of President Jimmy Carter:<lb/>
"Peanut shells, Carter smells,<lb/>
Amy got suspended<lb/>
But for the most part, Butler<lb/>
says, the rhymes remain very tra-<lb/>
ditional and are very much like<lb/>
folk tales in that "nobody really<lb/>
knows the history of them or how<lb/>
old they are<lb/>
The art of skipping rope itself<lb/>
is timeless, she says, adding that<lb/>
there is evidence that ropes were<lb/>
used by people in ancient Scandi-<lb/>
navia and ancient Greece, but it's<lb/>
not knovn if they had rhymes and<lb/>
chants.<lb/>
MALPASS<lb/>
MUFFLER<lb/>
See US for all Your<lb/>
Automotive Needs<lb/>
2616 East 10th Street<lb/>
Greenville. NC 27834<lb/>
758-7676<lb/>
Bonehead thinks something<lb/>
funny is going on around campus<lb/>
Continued from page 8 chance o, becngujlormedo, wouU, be a?oTJroubte<lb/>
Continued from page 8<lb/>
dents equal easily manipulated<lb/>
students.<lb/>
Why were the newspaper<lb/>
building and the ROTC build-<lb/>
ing quarantined? The newspa-<lb/>
per provides in-depth explora-<lb/>
tion of events on campus. The<lb/>
ROTC provides an easily mobi-<lb/>
lized armed force.<lb/>
With these two organiza-<lb/>
tions paralyzed, the easily ma-<lb/>
nipulated students from two<lb/>
paragraphs ago would have no<lb/>
chance of becoming informed or<lb/>
being stopped should they de-<lb/>
cide to mass together.<lb/>
Point two: Someone doesn't<lb/>
want to be stopped.<lb/>
What about the other, seem-<lb/>
ingly innocent areas, the trees<lb/>
and sidewalks? Well, without<lb/>
the resources of shelter the trees<lb/>
provide and the easy access the<lb/>
sidewalks provide, anyone<lb/>
opposing a mass grouping of<lb/>
easily-manipulated students<lb/>
would be in a lot of trouble.<lb/>
So what can we conclude? Is<lb/>
an unknown force trying to ex-<lb/>
ploit the student body of ECU<lb/>
into some kind of perhaps ille-<lb/>
gal activity? Is there something<lb/>
sinister going on? Is the whole<lb/>
thing one of my paranoid delu-<lb/>
sions?<lb/>
Could be. Or else somebody<lb/>
at maintenence is real bored and<lb/>
doesn't have anything better to<lb/>
do than rope off things.<lb/>
The Clearly Labeled<lb/>
Satire Page, currently<lb/>
under new<lb/>
management, is still<lb/>
the<lb/>
hippest part of the<lb/>
non-offensive East<lb/>
Carolinian.<lb/>
Our motto:<lb/>
"You get what you pay<lb/>
for<lb/>
Local and Out of<lb/>
Town Newspapers<lb/>
Full Selection of Magazines<lb/>
Greeting Cards For All Occasions1<lb/>
Balloon.v.for all occasions<lb/>
,i?Ktv3i ?' -3W7 ? ?? i, <lb/>
?sjKii'W St (iSk JFCt<lb/>
CENTRAL BOOK<lb/>
&amp; NEWS<lb/>
Greenville Square Shopping Center ? 756-7177<lb/>
Open Til 9:30 pm Seven Days A Week<lb/>
laza Cinema<lb/>
Consolidated<lb/>
Theatres<lb/>
Adults $275 'til<lb/>
5:30<lb/>
CHILDREN<lb/>
ANYTIME S250<lb/>
BUCCANEER MOVIES<lb/>
756-3307 ? Greenville Square Shopping Center<lb/>
Field school scheduled<lb/>
Continued from page 8<lb/>
wreck Archaeological Project.<lb/>
The school spent the past three<lb/>
summers in Yorktown, VA, near<lb/>
the Coffer Dam excavating the<lb/>
remains of this revolutionary-<lb/>
warship that was scuttled by<lb/>
Comwallis during the Civil War.<lb/>
Glenn Overton, a graduate<lb/>
student with a B.S. degree in<lb/>
Public HistoryMaritime His-<lb/>
tory, participated in the research<lb/>
at Yorktown and plans to attend<lb/>
the Field School again this sum-<lb/>
mer.<lb/>
"It was fantastic. You can<lb/>
learn so many different tech-<lb/>
niques in underwater archaeol-<lb/>
ogy and historical research while<lb/>
vou are actually at the site Over-<lb/>
ton commented.<lb/>
Overton is also a graduate<lb/>
teaching assistant and is currenly<lb/>
teaching a class in scuba diving<lb/>
this semester.<lb/>
"The great thing about the<lb/>
field school is that it gives the<lb/>
students an opportunity to actu-<lb/>
ally see the research. They have to<lb/>
make an analysis of what they<lb/>
find, record all their work, and<lb/>
basically try and figure out ex-<lb/>
actly what it is they're looking at<lb/>
said Overton.<lb/>
The students usually work<lb/>
from eight in the morning to five<lb/>
in the afternoon, Monday<lb/>
through Friday. "We get to go<lb/>
diving every day said Overton.<lb/>
"You can stick around the site if<lb/>
Art major can<lb/>
still party<lb/>
Continued from page 8<lb/>
over here every night so I'm not<lb/>
jammed up on weekends she<lb/>
says. "Even so, I'm usually over<lb/>
here both Saturday and Sunday<lb/>
While not exactly the perfect<lb/>
party schedule, especially for<lb/>
Greenville's nightlife, Zincone<lb/>
said, "I always find time for that<lb/>
Her future is almost as organ-<lb/>
ized as the present. After gradu-<lb/>
ation in December, she plans to<lb/>
continue her job repairing jewelry<lb/>
at Brendle's.<lb/>
"It's good experience because<lb/>
I get to work with gold and use<lb/>
different torches and solders<lb/>
Even though she likes learn-<lb/>
ing about jewelry's commercial<lb/>
aspects, Zincone would rather be<lb/>
doing her own intricate designs.<lb/>
With the money saved from<lb/>
Brendle's, she hopes to open her<lb/>
own studio here in Greenville and<lb/>
begin taking commissions.<lb/>
"I really like Pitt County and I<lb/>
want to stay here she says. "The<lb/>
people are all nice and the area has<lb/>
a lot of history. I suppose you<lb/>
have to be a native to know what's<lb/>
here<lb/>
you want, but most of the stu-<lb/>
dents go home on the weekend<lb/>
Although Still and Wats pick<lb/>
the students who arc already en-<lb/>
rolled in the graduate program,<lb/>
they also go by a first come, first<lb/>
signed-up basis.<lb/>
"This program is for anyone<lb/>
who is interested in history, div-<lb/>
ing or the conservation of arti-<lb/>
facts. It's a good way to combine<lb/>
the three into an interesting learn-<lb/>
ing experience said Overton.<lb/>
BEFORE YOU START YOUR CAREER,<lb/>
IT PAYS TO LEARN THE ROPES.<lb/>
Making decisions. Handling responsibility. Working with<lb/>
others. These are things vou must learn to do to succeed in a<lb/>
career, according to a survey ot 850 employers.<lb/>
These are also what vou have to leam to succeed in the Army<lb/>
which makes the Army a good place to prepare tor the working<lb/>
world. This is where you'll learn teamwork, responsibility and<lb/>
self-disc inline?the qualities employers look tor. Nobody will<lb/>
have to show yiw the ropej?? you'll already kn?u them.<lb/>
kind ixil more about now the Army can help give you an edge<lb/>
on a career and on lite. C all your Army Recruiter today.<lb/>
Sgt. Cottrell 756-9695<lb/>
ARMY. BE ALL YOU CAN BE.<lb/>
yiMlt Our Badger<lb/>
Section<lb/>
There's A<lb/>
New Breeze<lb/>
Blowing<lb/>
over at<lb/>
1900 Dickinson Ave,<lb/>
Greenvillex<lb/>
830-0174-<lb/>
i Tom Togs<lb/>
Factory Outle<lb/>
900 Dickinson Ave Greenville<lb/>
830-0174<lb/>
All New Price Categories<lb/>
Our Irregulars &amp; Close-outs<lb/>
Start at $2?? . . .Nothing over $24"<lb/>
(Retail values up to $48)<lb/>
Discount Prices Daily<lb/>
Stores owned &amp; operated by<lb/>
the manufacturer<lb/>
Trocadero Tom<lb/>
Conetoe Togs Fashions<lb/>
Hwy. 64 East Memorial Drive<lb/>
ATTENTION ALL STUDENTS<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 participating should pick<lb/>
up an application at Mendenhall Student Center<lb/>
Information desk<lb/>
or Call Mike at<lb/>
752-9756<lb/>
All applications should be turned into<lb/>
701 Fletcher Dorm by March 1.<lb/>
Tickets on sale at door.<lb/>
For more information call<lb/>
752-9069<lb/>
T"t "V<lb/>
<pb facs="00058127_0010"/><lb/>
<lb/>
Stye iEaat (Eawliman<lb/>
: ft rj?: CM -u j?irv. pmmhmIj si?rf !<lb/>
FRATBOY FERNALD, Big Smy Fr Boy<lb/>
Freckles Marvel, mumtimi<lb/>
James F.G.H.IJ. McKee, g<lb/>
E arlvis, iuka ofhuzi uitor Brad Stairwell, oryt ???<lb/>
KR1STEN FANCLUB, Almo Anytk,nt Go. EAtor U'L EFF BARKER, SUff McKm, Uogr,fha<lb/>
BIPPY CONEt IEAD, Co M.jmm U,tor TOM FURRCOAT, ? Lrprc Urftetirr<lb/>
Sweet Baby, h , L?fcy Little Debbiecakes, shu m a tw? &amp;<lb/>
Dean Clean, d??m, iwh Stephanie Notfolsom, w ib,<lb/>
Stephanie Alsonotfolsom, Pkr??, f? Clay Deanhardt, d ??, nm??<lb/>
mm 23.1989 NOT-TOO-CLEARLY-LABELED SATIRE PAGE Page 10<lb/>
Bats<lb/>
They're all Reagan's fault<lb/>
Recently, several bats were dis-<lb/>
covered roosting in Belk dormitory.<lb/>
The presence of these bats poses a<lb/>
grave threat to the nature of democ-<lb/>
racy and the moral basis of Ameri-<lb/>
can society.<lb/>
It is obvious that the missing<lb/>
cinderblock that allowed the bats to<lb/>
enter was purposefully removed by<lb/>
overzealous agents of the Religious<lb/>
Right who are attempting to under-<lb/>
mine the efficiency of colleges which<lb/>
allow male and female students to<lb/>
mix freelv.<lb/>
And even if it wasn't ? so<lb/>
what? The point is that the right<lb/>
wing is doing all it can to remove<lb/>
rights from the rest of us. This type<lb/>
oi scare tactics simply cannot be al-<lb/>
lowed to persist.<lb/>
It's all Reagan's fault. Under his<lb/>
so-called leadership, cinderblocks<lb/>
lost their status as an equal part of<lb/>
buildings and were reduced to sec-<lb/>
ond-class building material. The<lb/>
Reagan administration's lackadaisi-<lb/>
cal attitude towards and reluctance<lb/>
to prosecute cinderblock removers<lb/>
has led to a rash of such incidents all<lb/>
across the country.<lb/>
It's easy just to treat this as an<lb/>
isolated incident. But it clearly is not.<lb/>
The right wing has been removing<lb/>
cinderblocks from dormitories,<lb/>
ACLU offices, and abortion clinics<lb/>
all across America. Statistics re-<lb/>
leased just last month by People for<lb/>
the American Way, a liberal lobby-<lb/>
ing group, show an exponential in-<lb/>
crease in the number of cinderblock<lb/>
thefts ? up to 1024 last year, from a<lb/>
low of two in the last year of the<lb/>
Carter administration. Such thefts<lb/>
were nonexistent under our first<lb/>
president, George Washington,<lb/>
who wasn't a Republican.<lb/>
It is ironic that the Reagan ad-<lb/>
ministration took such a soft view of<lb/>
cinderblock tamperers. The Soviets<lb/>
used advanced cinderblock-re-<lb/>
moval technology to plant sophisti-<lb/>
cated bugs in the U.S. embassy<lb/>
under construction in the Soviet<lb/>
Union. One would think the admini-<lb/>
stration would have taken a lesson<lb/>
from this cinderblock-related disas-<lb/>
ter and declared cinderblocks off-<lb/>
limits to Americans who seek to<lb/>
advance political goals.<lb/>
It's time we all fought back. It's<lb/>
time for true Americans to stand up<lb/>
for their rights, no matter how con-<lb/>
fused they may be about just what<lb/>
those rights are, and insist that the<lb/>
right-wing lunatic fringe just plain<lb/>
leave them alone. Because if they<lb/>
don't ? by 5:42 p.m. today at the<lb/>
latest ? they'll find themselves<lb/>
hideously deformed, despised by<lb/>
family and friends, suffering from<lb/>
crippling, incurable and highly con-<lb/>
tagious diseases, and just generally<lb/>
not the sort of person who gets in-<lb/>
vited over for Pictionary? a lot.<lb/>
WMPffl<lb/>
Forum Rules<lb/>
The East Carolinian does not wel-<lb/>
come your letters. Uhn-uhn. No way<lb/>
Jose. Especially those letters expressing a<lb/>
point of view differing from our own<lb/>
divine opinion. But if you M UST, if your<lb/>
immortal soul won't rest until your<lb/>
name is blazoned across our letters page,<lb/>
here's what to do. The mailing address is<lb/>
British Airways, Ingrams Drive,<lb/>
Greenwich.<lb/>
For verification purposes, you must<lb/>
include your name, major, classification,<lb/>
address, phone number, photo, pet's<lb/>
names (if any), mother's maiden name,<lb/>
blood type, student ID card, two major<lb/>
credit cards, social security card, library<lb/>
card, proof that your name isn't Stepha-<lb/>
nie, and a partridge in a pear tree.<lb/>
Letters better not be more than 200<lb/>
words, 'cause we count every one. Actu-<lb/>
ally, we make the secretary do it. Feel free<lb/>
to libel, slander and personally attack<lb/>
anybody you feel like. Even that guy with<lb/>
the zits in your Geography class. Stu-<lb/>
dents, faculty, and staff who still think<lb/>
they need to voice their unworthy opin-<lb/>
ion are reminded you may only write one<lb/>
letter a decade, so save up til you need it.<lb/>
The deadline for all letters was yesterday.<lb/>
ECU: Problem-free or what?<lb/>
To the editor:<lb/>
In response to your last issue of<lb/>
The East Carolinian, 1 personally<lb/>
found it to be the rottenest (sic) issue<lb/>
of your rag yet. I have been reading<lb/>
for the seven years I've been here and<lb/>
you obviously don't know the first<lb/>
thing about journalism (except<lb/>
maybe the yellow kind).<lb/>
Of course, I'm referring to almost<lb/>
every article you printed in that edi-<lb/>
tion. Your paper keeps claiming<lb/>
there are problems on our campus.<lb/>
There are NO PROBLEMS on this<lb/>
campus! I am a third-year senior, and<lb/>
I should know.<lb/>
The only reason you make up<lb/>
titles like "Board opposes tuition<lb/>
hike" is to grab the readers' attention<lb/>
with racy stories. Even if a problem<lb/>
did, by some chance, pop up on<lb/>
campus, instead of leaving it to the<lb/>
administration to handle, you'd<lb/>
probably run an in-depth article on it!<lb/>
1 can't believe that the SGA and<lb/>
the administration, and the student<lb/>
body of our fair school let you keep<lb/>
printing this trash. I hope someone<lb/>
closes you down now that I've ex-<lb/>
posed you for what you are ? LIB-<lb/>
ERAL GARBAGE!<lb/>
Bleedin Poofter<lb/>
Third-year senior<lb/>
Industrial Hygeine<lb/>
Whiny fascists<lb/>
To the editor:<lb/>
In response to Alec Smarty's let-<lb/>
ter in the Feb. 16 edition of the East<lb/>
Carolinian, in which he accuses me of<lb/>
being a conservative fascist Republi-<lb/>
can, I would like to respond by say-<lb/>
ing:<lb/>
WAAAAHH! WAAAAHHHH!<lb/>
AM NOT! AM NOT! AM NOT<lb/>
Justa Kiddin<lb/>
Not sure what year<lb/>
Not sure I have a major<lb/>
Poem vindicated<lb/>
To the editor:<lb/>
In response to the letter printed<lb/>
in your paper decrying Sir Scott of<lb/>
Scanning's poem in your Valentine's<lb/>
Day issue, I would like to rifyafew<lb/>
things.<lb/>
I am Mr. Scanning's editor at<lb/>
Cellulite Poetry Press, Inc. The poem<lb/>
printed in the East Carolinian, "Ori-<lb/>
gin of the Species was the rough<lb/>
draft of Mr. Scanning's poem. We<lb/>
mistakenly sent the features editor of<lb/>
your paper the version of Scanning's<lb/>
poem that contained the verb "f?"<lb/>
17 times.<lb/>
The new, improved and less<lb/>
naughty version reads as follows:<lb/>
Intercourse, intercourse,<lb/>
intercourse, intercourse,<lb/>
Intercourse, intercourse,<lb/>
intercourse, intercourse,<lb/>
Intercourse, intercourse,<lb/>
intercourse, intercourse,<lb/>
Intercourse, intercourse,<lb/>
intercourse, intercourse,<lb/>
Intercourse.<lb/>
We hope no one was inconven-<lb/>
ienced due to our error.<lb/>
Apologies,<lb/>
James Volume<lb/>
Cellulite Poetry Press<lb/>
Clay has a dream<lb/>
To the editor:<lb/>
There used to be this guy named<lb/>
Martin Luther King Jr. But forget<lb/>
about him  I'm Clay Deanhardt<lb/>
and I have the real dream. I'm a erad<lb/>
SBBHB! arca f MMWSHF fl '<lb/>
I would have been the one to get<lb/>
quoted if I'd been born forty years<lb/>
ago. I know it. I have lots of good<lb/>
ideas. Did I mention that I'm a grad<lb/>
student?<lb/>
I also graduated in three years.<lb/>
I'm a university scholar. I know I<lb/>
would have come up with all those<lb/>
cool quotes like "I have a dream if<lb/>
I'd been more than a toddler in the<lb/>
60s.<lb/>
But anyway. I do have a dream. I<lb/>
see a day when everybody, under-<lb/>
grad and grad student alike, bow<lb/>
down in worship to me Clay Dean-<lb/>
hardt. Did I mention I used to work<lb/>
for the paper?<lb/>
I see a day when I get articles<lb/>
printed about me in thealumni news-<lb/>
letter. I see a day when I run for<lb/>
chancellor. I see a day when I finally<lb/>
realize I'm never getting out of<lb/>
Greenville.<lb/>
Well, I think it's a good dream.<lb/>
Clay Deanhardt<lb/>
Graduate Student and<lb/>
Part-Time Deity<lb/>
Njeff: man or myth<lb/>
To the editor:<lb/>
In response to Mr. Smarty's let-<lb/>
ter in your Tuesday edition of the<lb/>
paper, I just want to state that I AM a<lb/>
real person, with hopes, dreams, and<lb/>
beliefs of my own. I am NOT a he<lb/>
ment of Justa Kiddin's imagination,<lb/>
created solely for the purpose of<lb/>
getting two or three of his letters in<lb/>
The East Carolinian each week. It<lb/>
clearly states in the rules of the East<lb/>
Carolinian letter column that<lb/>
pseudonvms are not allowt-d in the<lb/>
letters to the editor.<lb/>
Enclosed is a photograph th.it<lb/>
you may wish to print. It shows Mr.<lb/>
Kiddin and mysel f together, proving<lb/>
we are not one and the same.<lb/>
Thank you,<lb/>
Njeff Menaleus<lb/>
A Real Person<lb/>
Honest<lb/>
Editor's Note: We did indeed ret ewe<lb/>
a photograph of Mr. Kiddin and Mr<lb/>
Menaleus. Mr. Menaleus seems to have<lb/>
a female body and an oversized head that<lb/>
resembles an old publicity photo oj Don<lb/>
Knotts. We're thinking r iiight, Justa.<lb/>
Bad! Bad Satire Page!<lb/>
To the editor:<lb/>
In response to the so-called<lb/>
"Clearly Labeled Satire Page" you<lb/>
run every Thursday, 1 have a few<lb/>
things to say.<lb/>
You arc all going straight to hell.<lb/>
Do not pass "Go Do not collect $200.<lb/>
Rev. N Tolerance<lb/>
Church oi St. Marv oi the Cacti<lb/>
Spectrum<lb/>
Rules!<lb/>
In addition to the totally us<lb/>
Campus Forum, we have a section called<lb/>
the Campus Spectrum Rules! This is a<lb/>
rod opinion column written by guest<lb/>
writers, usually by a grad student who<lb/>
used to work for us. The columns printed<lb/>
will contain current topics of interest,<lb/>
like the fact that my apartment building<lb/>
is sliding into the tar River.<lb/>
The columns are restricted with<lb/>
regard to the laws of grammar, decency<lb/>
and physics. People and other mammals<lb/>
submitting columns must be willing to<lb/>
accept byline credit for their efforts, so<lb/>
that everybody who picks up a pa ?<lb/>
know who wrote such laughable dn<lb/>
Spectrum Rules, man.<lb/>
Big E argues for co-species habitation in school<lb/>
By EARLVIS HAMPTON<lb/>
New E-Public<lb/>
With the recent resurgence of rodents, house-<lb/>
hold pests and other creatures living in the homes<lb/>
and rooms of college students, landlords and build-<lb/>
ing tenants have taken unethical measures in eradi-<lb/>
cating animals and insects created by God.<lb/>
The time is no w to stand up for the rights of rats,<lb/>
mice, cockroaches, ants and bats.<lb/>
Case in point: last week's bombing of Belk Dor-<lb/>
mitory on the ECU campus by five F-15 US Air Force<lb/>
jets to rid the building of "little brown bats" was<lb/>
uncalled for.<lb/>
University officials repeatedly bypassed pro-<lb/>
posals made by the Biology department to turn the<lb/>
dormitory into a zoological complex. Indoingso, the<lb/>
ECU powers that be forced themselves into a "little<lb/>
brown corner" with the sole alternative of nuking<lb/>
the entire campus.<lb/>
My question is this: if the administration felt so<lb/>
strongly, why didn't old Dick call up the Ayatollah<lb/>
and tell him the author of "Satanic Verses" was<lb/>
living in Belk? This would have pushed the US into<lb/>
war with Iran, a police action all true Americans<lb/>
want.<lb/>
But this is not the only instances in which ECU<lb/>
officials have taken drastic measures to kill rodents.<lb/>
Few people know the real reason behind the<lb/>
construction of the General Classroom Building. The<lb/>
huge complex wasn't constructed to. provide addi-<lb/>
tional instructional-lectures rooms. It was built to<lb/>
cover up the largest rat's nest in North Carolina.<lb/>
Under the elaborate inner wall crevices of the<lb/>
complex there are literally millions, yes millions of<lb/>
rattia rodenti crawling in pestilent herds. Known to<lb/>
have bred with squirrels, the rats can't be distin-<lb/>
guished from squirrels and therefore they go unno-<lb/>
ticed; but beware: they are really rats.<lb/>
Other campuses around the nation have faced<lb/>
similar dilemmas. The University of Oregon in<lb/>
Eugene fire-bombed a cafeteria infested with cock-<lb/>
roaches while the multi-colored potatoes were still<lb/>
warm. Blockhead College in Wanna, Utah solved<lb/>
their silverfish problem in a gym locker room by<lb/>
unleashing silverfish-eating rats. Blockhead later<lb/>
regretted the decision when they had to place rat-<lb/>
eating pit bulls in the gym locker room. The dogs ate<lb/>
all the rats, which ate all the silverfish; but my oh my<lb/>
the mess they made.<lb/>
The classic case involves cows and pigs at NC<lb/>
State, where campus officials made the decision to<lb/>
overlook the situation and enroll the barnyard ani-<lb/>
mals as students.<lb/>
Save the bats, rats, cows, pigs and other animals,<lb/>
because by the year 2121 we will all be living in inner<lb/>
wall crevices with the rest of nature.<lb/>
Quote of the week is:<lb/>
"Robin, you're feeling<lb/>
the first thrusts of manhood.<lb/>
? Batman<lb/>
worst time wanting to do something. She actuallv<lb/>
came over to my place last week and made a scene<lb/>
because I wouldn't leave my friends while we were<lb/>
watching the Carolina-State came. I mean, the Caro-<lb/>
lina-State game is like the Super Bowl to me, so I<lb/>
kinda blew her off.<lb/>
E, what do I do?<lb/>
Dear Big E,<lb/>
After going out for a year and a half, I think I am<lb/>
on the verge of leaving my girlfriend. At first it was<lb/>
a great ? we were caught in the passions of lusty<lb/>
immorality?but now the candles of love are barely<lb/>
flickering and a sudden gust of wind just may sap<lb/>
the spark from the wick.<lb/>
We have a big communication breakdown.<lb/>
Whenever I ask her to go out, she always says she is<lb/>
going downtown to get sloshed with her friends.<lb/>
And then on other occasions, she shows up at the<lb/>
Signed,<lb/>
Should I stay, or should I go.<lb/>
Dear The Clash<lb/>
According to many mellow songs, breaking up<lb/>
is hard to do. Untrue. Nothing a little road trip to The<lb/>
Fat Lady in Raleigh won't solve. But do you really<lb/>
want to break up?<lb/>
The flicker on the candle of love can always be<lb/>
made a blaze with the help of a lighter. In other<lb/>
words, with flowers in hand do the real guy kind of<lb/>
thing and act like there is no problem. Cheesy ad-<lb/>
vice, isn't it? If this doesn't work, go get beat up and<lb/>
stand outside her window after midnight and yell<lb/>
"Adrienne, yo Adrienne<lb/>
<lb/>
I<lb/>
<pb facs="00058127_0011"/><lb/>
t<lb/>
TI IE EAST CAROLINIAN<lb/>
FEBRUARY 23, 1989 11<lb/>
By Friedrich Orpheus<lb/>
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rWAPPY MShtriiJF '5 DAY<lb/>
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MATTER? OF" TVlI HEART 1<lb/>
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FROM TOO YEARS HLCE.<lb/>
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OF MY DAY KNOW<lb/>
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1X1 dUE5rtt)f?<lb/>
READ OUR COM PAN ON P?ri M -TteJ<lb/>
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CONT.<lb/>
AND NOW READ THE COMPANION STORY<lb/>
he Undercover Cats<lb/>
Bv Parker<lb/>
?V- v ?? ?-? .rs tm Vut<lb/>
St Jj W5 jASt KNOW NOTHN5 OF<lb/>
ttCIU<lb/>
rm?<lb/>
I "Dogs and horses are such maroons. Pigs<lb/>
are far more intelligent<lb/>
?McKay Sundwall<lb/>
Once again featuring  Cartoonist Biography!<lb/>
I his neck Fun and Games takes a closer look at the life of Tom Gurganus, a<lb/>
biologist grad student here at ECU. (You'll notice that often our cartoonists<lb/>
aren't art students? and it's probably just as well.) Tom originally began on<lb/>
this page drawing the long-lost strip Discoman (and it's probably just as well)<lb/>
and in 1988 began work on Orpheus with co-creator Micah Harris. And now<lb/>
THE INTERVIEW YEARS IN THE MAKING <lb/>
I<lb/>
Who or what influenced you in your comics work? Al Williamson,<lb/>
Steve Rude, Alan Davis, Michael Whelan, Barry Smith, Boh<lb/>
Burden<lb/>
What is your greatest achievement? Walking on the surface of the<lb/>
sun<lb/>
Greatest failure? Not wearing my insulated boots while walking on<lb/>
the surface of the sun<lb/>
Career ambitions: Yes<lb/>
Favorite books or works: Anne Rice's 'Vampire' Trilogy, The Lord of<lb/>
The Rings books, Well Enough &amp; Time, 1984, Brave New World<lb/>
Favorite movies: Creature From The Black Lagoon, Who Framed<lb/>
Roger Rabbit?, Bladerunner, Invasion of the Body Snatchers<lb/>
(original one) The Fly (the remake), Plan 9 From Outer Space<lb/>
? Mission in Life: To explore strange new worlds, to seek out new life<lb/>
When not illustrating and new civilizations?to boldly go where no man has gone before!<lb/>
Orpheus Tom likes to Favorite wrestlers: El Espectro and Chief Wahoo McDaniel<lb/>
spend his spare time Interests, past-times: Driving to Carrboro, Vicky, Creating new life<lb/>
tr ?hP lost forms, deciphering Micah's handwriting<lb/>
searching for the lost ' M VCR myTV, light switches, my truck's ignition<lb/>
of Atlantis. ? UMtm<lb/>
Turn-offs: See above<lb/>
(I on Iso communicates in an Favorite music Sting, REM, Alice Cooper, David Sanbom, Don "No<lb/>
intricate system of clicks and Soul" Simpson , The Smithereens<lb/>
bee j Everyone should be my friend because: I'm not precomous<lb/>
Eve of Fire<lb/>
By Oglesby<lb/>
NixTix cuRsto<lb/>
AAAHHH1.1.<lb/>
111<lb/>
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ana<lb/>
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neo6et colics<lb/>
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BULLOCKS, KoyJ' I Wwr j<lb/>
713 ? P?MP ? V6AY fcAKAS <lb/>
AA0?AlTkTHM <lb/>
IfKHP O'GCSHtNS<lb/>
CARTOONISTS<lb/>
WANTED<lb/>
See how popular Jimmy is now that he's a<lb/>
cartoonist for us? Well, this could be you!<lb/>
Bring us some samples of your cartooning,<lb/>
any characters or ideas, whatever?just<lb/>
make sure it looks polished and is funny, or<lb/>
entertaining if ifs a serious strip (which<lb/>
we don't really need but will consider).<lb/>
Contact Jeff Parker at 757-6366 or come by<lb/>
the Publication Building across from Joyner<lb/>
Library.<lb/>
Biographer Jeff "Vanguard of the Comics Revolution'Tarker<lb/>
<pb facs="00058127_0012"/><lb/>
.<lb/>
i<lb/>
THE EAST CAROLINIAN<lb/>
18th straight opening win<lb/>
ECU 2-0 after sweep<lb/>
of pair from Bison<lb/>
By MICHAEL MARTIN<lb/>
Sport? Writrr<lb/>
The men's baseball team<lb/>
opened their season with two<lb/>
decisive victories over Howard<lb/>
University Wednesday night and<lb/>
extended their season opening<lb/>
winning streak to 18 games over<lb/>
the last 18 years<lb/>
Howard University, from the<lb/>
Mid-East Athletic Conference,<lb/>
came to Harrington Field looking<lb/>
for season opening victories, but<lb/>
left with two decisive losses.<lb/>
The Pirates started the season<lb/>
on the right foot after having a<lb/>
double-header postponed Satur-<lb/>
day and Sunday s game cancelled<lb/>
due to inclimate weather. In their<lb/>
first meeting with the Pirates,<lb/>
several players showed consis-<lb/>
tency, but the Pirates just out-<lb/>
played the young Bison team. The<lb/>
Bucsdominated the Bison 8-1 and<lb/>
were even more impressive in the<lb/>
second game as ECU held How-<lb/>
ard scoreless, 10-0.<lb/>
Tommy Eason's first colle-<lb/>
giate homerun was the deciding<lb/>
factor in the Pirates first win, a<lb/>
two run shot in the fourth inning<lb/>
that gave the Pirate's a lead that<lb/>
they would never relinquish.<lb/>
When Eason was asked about<lb/>
his homerun he said, "I wasn't<lb/>
trying to hit it out, I was just trying<lb/>
to get a good hit<lb/>
That good hit preserved a<lb/>
tradition, but more importantly<lb/>
gave the Pirates their first win of<lb/>
the season.<lb/>
Eason went twojor four at bat<lb/>
in the first game and had two<lb/>
RBI's. He also had two runs<lb/>
scored.<lb/>
The scoring was far from over<lb/>
for the team, as they went on to<lb/>
I score six more runs over the next<lb/>
three innings.<lb/>
On the mound for the Pirates<lb/>
in the first game was Jake Jacobs<lb/>
who gave up one earned run<lb/>
during the first three innings.<lb/>
Jacobs recorded six strike outs<lb/>
and onlv gave up five hits after<lb/>
facing 17 batters.<lb/>
In relief, Jonathan Jenkins<lb/>
came in for Jacobs in the fourth<lb/>
inning. In three innings, Jenkins<lb/>
struck out two batters, walked<lb/>
another and gave up two hits, but<lb/>
still managed to hold the Bison to<lb/>
their only run after six innings.<lb/>
In the final inning, freshman<lb/>
pitcher Warren Hall pitched to<lb/>
four batters to seal the victory for<lb/>
the Pirates.<lb/>
Coach Gary Overton, in his<lb/>
fifth season as head coach, had<lb/>
nothing but positive comments to<lb/>
say about the Pirates victory. "We<lb/>
played ECU style baseball to-<lb/>
night, excellent defense and<lb/>
pitching Overton said. "The in-<lb/>
field played well, and it was a<lb/>
great way to start the season<lb/>
Another freshman, third<lb/>
baseman John Gast, turned a solid<lb/>
offensive performance when he<lb/>
hit his first collegiate homerun in<lb/>
the fifth inning. Cast's three-run<lb/>
homer brought in Calvin Brown<lb/>
and Eason to extend the Pirates'<lb/>
lead to 8-1.<lb/>
Brown, a junior, also played a<lb/>
solid game both offensively and<lb/>
defensively. On the offensive<lb/>
side, Brown had two scores on<lb/>
two walks while batting three<lb/>
times. His defensive skills also<lb/>
excelled as he made several key<lb/>
stops at first base.<lb/>
In the second game, it ap-<lb/>
peared as if Howard was still lick-<lb/>
ing its wounds from the first<lb/>
game, and ECU wasted no time by<lb/>
jumping out to a three run lead<lb/>
after the second inning.<lb/>
After freshman John Gast<lb/>
walked, senior Mike Andrews<lb/>
and freshman David Daniels<lb/>
reached base and all three scored<lb/>
on another Howard walk and<lb/>
several errors.<lb/>
Tommy Eason again hit a<lb/>
homerun, his second of the eve-<lb/>
ning, to extend the Pirates lead to<lb/>
Sports<lb/>
FEBRUARY 23, 1989 PAGE 2<lb/>
Sam Croft, the official looks on as a battered and black-eyed Reed<lb/>
Lose drives in for the basket (Photo by J.D. Whitmire, ECU<lb/>
Photolab).<lb/>
CAA honors Edwards'<lb/>
and O'Connor's play<lb/>
RICHMOND (AP) ? Blue<lb/>
Edwards and Chris O'Connor,<lb/>
both of East Carolina, have been<lb/>
named the Colonial Athletic As-<lb/>
sociation players of the week, the<lb/>
league announced Monday-<lb/>
Edwards scored 32 points<lb/>
and grabbed seven rebounds to<lb/>
lead East Carolina past American<lb/>
last week. He scored 31 points and<lb/>
pulled down six rebounds in a 65-<lb/>
60 victory over Campbell.<lb/>
Senior catcher Chris Cauble awaits the fast pitch from Jake Jacobs in the first game of the doubleheader (Photo by ECU Photolab)<lb/>
five. Eason compiled one hit<lb/>
while at bat four times, and re-<lb/>
corded two RBI's, all from his<lb/>
fourth inning homerun.<lb/>
Offensively, several Pirates<lb/>
excelled. Calvin Brown exploded<lb/>
for three hits in four at bats, in-<lb/>
cluding two singles and a double.<lb/>
Sophomore Steve Godin was<lb/>
one for two with two RBI's and a<lb/>
score.<lb/>
Freshman David Daniels, the<lb/>
desiginated hitter, had an out-<lb/>
standing performance with two<lb/>
walks, a hit and two runs scored.<lb/>
Also scoring runs for the Bucs<lb/>
were seniors David Ritchie (1)<lb/>
and John Thomas (1).<lb/>
Defensively, the Pirates were<lb/>
nearly flawless as they com-<lb/>
pletely shut down the Bison of-<lb/>
fense. They allowed only one hit<lb/>
and no runs through the cold sec-<lb/>
ond game. In fact, the Bison team<lb/>
was so coldboth on and off the<lb/>
fieldthat they built a small fire<lb/>
beside their dugout in hopes of<lb/>
warmth.<lb/>
Heat was what Howard<lb/>
wanted and that was just what<lb/>
starting pitcher Tim Langdon<lb/>
gave them. The junior held the<lb/>
Bison to one hit in six innings,<lb/>
allowed only one walk, had six<lb/>
strike outs and came away with a<lb/>
shut-out to post a 1 -0 mark on the<lb/>
season.<lb/>
Relief pitcher Mike Whittcn<lb/>
came into the game in the top of<lb/>
the seventh inning to hold the<lb/>
Bison scoreless. Facing six batters,<lb/>
he walked two, allowed one hit<lb/>
and struck out the last two batters<lb/>
to end the game.<lb/>
Overall, the defense proved<lb/>
to be the strongest point of the<lb/>
Pirates' victory. Coach Overton<lb/>
had stressed defense to the team<lb/>
since practice started. According<lb/>
to Overton, "All along we've<lb/>
stressed defense, we've worked<lb/>
on it, and it payed off<lb/>
With the troublesome<lb/>
weather Eastern North Carolina<lb/>
has faced lately, the Howard team<lb/>
suffered greatly. Having to travel<lb/>
to North Carolina on Saturday,<lb/>
and return to Washington DC.<lb/>
Saturday evening, the Howard<lb/>
team definately was tired. They<lb/>
left the nation's capitol Wednes-<lb/>
day at 5 a.m. anticipating a 1 p.m.<lb/>
start at Harrington Field. How-<lb/>
ever, the tomadic activity and<lb/>
rain that hit the East Coast earlier<lb/>
in the week delayed the game to 3<lb/>
p.m. .<lb/>
When Overton was asked<lb/>
about the inclement weather and<lb/>
its effects on the team, he re-<lb/>
sponded with the positive note<lb/>
"We were anxious , itching to<lb/>
play<lb/>
The Bucs return to Harring-<lb/>
ton Field Saturday at 1 p.m. for a<lb/>
double-header with George<lb/>
Washington University.<lb/>
Longest winning streak since 1977-78<lb/>
Pirates down Flames for fourth straight win<lb/>
By MARK BARBER<lb/>
Sports Writer<lb/>
It was not a pretty game to<lb/>
watch. Nevertheless, East<lb/>
Carolina's Pirates were able to hit<lb/>
16 of 18 free throws at the end to<lb/>
hand the Flames of Liberty Uni-<lb/>
versity a 69-60 loss and with the<lb/>
win extended their win streak to<lb/>
four games, guaranteeing them-<lb/>
selves a winning record for the<lb/>
season.<lb/>
"Was that a struggle, or<lb/>
what?" Pirate coach Mike Steele<lb/>
said afterwards. "But it was the<lb/>
fourth game we've had in eight<lb/>
days and I really think we were<lb/>
worn out in the second half<lb/>
ECU, up by 10 at the half, led<lb/>
by as much as 17 in the second<lb/>
period, but the Flames changed<lb/>
their defense in order to stop Blue<lb/>
Edwards and slowly worked back<lb/>
into the game. Edwards, who had<lb/>
15 points in the first half, could<lb/>
only score seven in the second<lb/>
period, with no points in the last<lb/>
13 minutes.<lb/>
"They went to a box-in-one<lb/>
defense with a chaser on us and it<lb/>
worked, Steele said, "And that<lb/>
was the difference in the second<lb/>
half<lb/>
With 1:30 to play and behind<lb/>
by only six, Liberty began to foul<lb/>
the Pirates in order to get the ball<lb/>
back on missed foul shots.<lb/>
But the Pirates wouldn't<lb/>
miss?Reed Lose hit eight<lb/>
straight free throws, Kenny<lb/>
Murphy hit four straight and Gus<lb/>
Hill hit on two attempts to spread<lb/>
the lead back to nine by the final<lb/>
buzzer. The only two misses un-<lb/>
characteristically came from Jeff<lb/>
Kelly, one of ECU'S best clutch<lb/>
foul shooters.<lb/>
The win raises the Pirates'<lb/>
record to 14-12 with only one<lb/>
game remaining ? a home con-<lb/>
test against rival UNC-Wilming-<lb/>
ton. The winning season will be<lb/>
the first since ECU went 16-13in<lb/>
1982-83 and the four straight wins<lb/>
is the longest win streak for the<lb/>
Pirates since the 1977-78 season.<lb/>
ECU is now 6-7 in the CAA. The<lb/>
Flames fall to 8-16 with the loss.<lb/>
The Pirates got the opening<lb/>
tip, and after the ball changed<lb/>
hands a few times on missed<lb/>
shots, broke the ice when Ed-<lb/>
wards stole the ball and broke<lb/>
away for a reverse, two-handed<lb/>
slam. After a double-dribbling<lb/>
call on the Flames, Stanley Love<lb/>
hit an eight footer in the lane.<lb/>
Liberty's Charles Richardson<lb/>
hit a three point goal for the<lb/>
Flames, but then fouled Edwards<lb/>
at the other end; Edwards sank<lb/>
both free throws to put the Pirates<lb/>
up 6-3 at the 17:26 mark. Flames<lb/>
guard Bailey Alston pulled the<lb/>
Rames to within one, 6-5, with a<lb/>
15' jumper at the foul line and<lb/>
Murphy took a cross-court pass<lb/>
from Edwards and made good for<lb/>
three from the right side, ECU up<lb/>
9-5.<lb/>
After a travelling call on Lib-<lb/>
erty, Edwards sank a three<lb/>
pointer for ECU to make the score<lb/>
12-5. The Flames scrapped back,<lb/>
aided by several Pirate misses,<lb/>
and pulled to within one, 12-11,<lb/>
with 13:07 to go.<lb/>
Steele called for a timeout for<lb/>
his squad, and the Pirates came<lb/>
back out to score nine straight,<lb/>
highlighted by another steal and<lb/>
breakaway bv Edwards, who this<lb/>
time capped-off the drive with a<lb/>
Jordan-ish long-flying one han-<lb/>
der between two Flames defend-<lb/>
ers.<lb/>
The two teams swapped bas-<lb/>
kets for the last 10 minutes in the<lb/>
period, the ECU lead varying<lb/>
from eight to 12 points. With the<lb/>
Pirates up 24-16, Liberty's Eric<lb/>
Cunningham let out a "Help me<lb/>
cry as soon as Edwards got the<lb/>
ball in front of him. Ball in hand,<lb/>
Edwards shuffled and promptly<lb/>
drove left around Cunningham<lb/>
and down the baseline for a pow-<lb/>
erful two-handed slam.<lb/>
It was even play for the re-<lb/>
mainder of the half, and ECU<lb/>
went into the intermission ahead<lb/>
32-22.<lb/>
"This was our 24th game of<lb/>
See PIRATES, page!4<lb/>
ECU looks to pluck Seahawks<lb/>
By MARK BARBER<lb/>
Sport Writer<lb/>
The<lb/>
senior<lb/>
from<lb/>
Walstonburg, N.C, was 67 per-<lb/>
cent from the floor for the week on<lb/>
24-of-36 shooting, and upped his<lb/>
league-leading scoring average to<lb/>
26.5 points per contest.<lb/>
O'Connor scored 35 points to<lb/>
lead East Carolina's women's<lb/>
team to an pair of victories last<lb/>
week. She tallied 11 pointsagainst<lb/>
George Mason before scoring a<lb/>
career-high 24 points against<lb/>
American.<lb/>
The senior from Altoon, Pa<lb/>
made 16 of 22 shots from the floor<lb/>
last week for 73 percent.<lb/>
Like a line straight from a<lb/>
Hitchcock movie: Look out Pirate<lb/>
fans, the birds are coming. Only<lb/>
this time, the line can be reversed:<lb/>
Look out birds, the Pirates are hot<lb/>
and waiting for birdmeat.<lb/>
In what is certainly the big-<lb/>
gest game of the year for ECU's<lb/>
cagers, the Seahawks from UNC-<lb/>
Wilmington will try to come into<lb/>
Minges Coliseum and leave with<lb/>
the feeling only a win on the road<lb/>
can give. Likewise, the Pirates<lb/>
want more than ever to close out<lb/>
the regular season with a win over<lb/>
their biggest rival.<lb/>
ECU has a lot more at stake in<lb/>
the contest than the Seahawks,<lb/>
who only have regional pride to<lb/>
lose.<lb/>
First, a win for the Pirates will<lb/>
allow the Pirates to close out their<lb/>
conference play at the .500 mark,<lb/>
7-7. The last time the Pirates had at<lb/>
least a .500 conference record was<lb/>
in 1975-76 when the school was<lb/>
still in the Southern Conference.<lb/>
And if the Dukes of James Madi-<lb/>
son lose on the road to George<lb/>
Mason Saturday, their record will<lb/>
fall to 6-8, which will mean ECU<lb/>
will finish the season in fifth-place<lb/>
in the CAA, an important finish in<lb/>
regards to the seeding at the CAA<lb/>
tournament.<lb/>
ECU and Wilmington would<lb/>
then meet again in the first round<lb/>
of the tourney, set for March 4-6.<lb/>
Win or lose Saturday, the<lb/>
Seahawks will finish league play<lb/>
in fourth place.<lb/>
Another factor for the Pirates<lb/>
is that a win over UNC-W would<lb/>
extend their win streak to five<lb/>
games, the longest at the school<lb/>
since the 1974-75 season. Besides<lb/>
records, the extended streak will<lb/>
provide a much needed mental<lb/>
boost going into the tournament.<lb/>
At a time when the team seems to<lb/>
be playing together better than<lb/>
they have all year, the added<lb/>
confidence from the win could go<lb/>
a long way in the conference<lb/>
championships.<lb/>
A win would also improve<lb/>
ECU's home record to 11-3, the<lb/>
best since the 1979-80 squad won<lb/>
11 in Minges.<lb/>
But perhaps the most gratify-<lb/>
ing result of a win Saturday<lb/>
would be the breaking of the<lb/>
eight-game losing streak to the<lb/>
Birds. The last time the Pirates<lb/>
defeated UNC-W was in 1985,<lb/>
when ECU downed the Seahawks<lb/>
78-61 in Minges.<lb/>
The last three games in<lb/>
Wilmington between ECU and<lb/>
the Seahawks have been sellouts.<lb/>
UNC-W is expected to bring a<lb/>
sizeable crowd into Minges Satur-<lb/>
day.<lb/>
"I think the biggest reason I<lb/>
want to win Saturday is that<lb/>
we've lost so many in a row to<lb/>
(UNC-W) Pirate record-breaker<lb/>
Blue Edwards said. "It would be<lb/>
nice to beat them this time<lb/>
The last time the two teams<lb/>
met Jan 28 in Wilmington, the<lb/>
awks a two point<lb/>
half time lead and pulled away for<lb/>
an eventual 8166. Edwards set<lb/>
e Trask Coliseum opponent<lb/>
?"nS "ot with 36 p?nts in<lb/>
the televised game.<lb/>
JltSS?wks were led with<lb/>
see STEELE Mai, page 14<lb/>
Y<lb/>
i<lb/>
<pb facs="00058127_0013"/><lb/>
THE EAST CAROLINIAN<lb/>
FEBRUARY 23,1989 13<lb/>
New Gamecock football coach has 'Spark'<lb/>
COLUMBIA, S.C. (AP) ?<lb/>
Sparky Woods found out what<lb/>
Gamecock fans want when he<lb/>
stopped at a convenience store on<lb/>
the way to a news conference<lb/>
where he was introduced as the<lb/>
new football coach at South Caro-<lb/>
lina.<lb/>
"A guv had a Gamecock hat<lb/>
on and 1 said, 'Winning is a matter<lb/>
of life and death in this football<lb/>
business down here, isn't it He<lb/>
said. Hell it's a lot more impor-<lb/>
tant than that<lb/>
"I can assure you that if it<lb/>
wasn't for these games, this<lb/>
would probably be a very, very<lb/>
great job said Woods, who left<lb/>
Appalachian State after five sea-<lb/>
sons.<lb/>
Woods, whose selection<lb/>
ended a search that began just<lb/>
over two weeks ago following the<lb/>
sudden death of Joe Morrison,<lb/>
said Tuesday he was a bit over-<lb/>
whelmed about jumping from<lb/>
Wet and wild<lb/>
Division 1-AA and taking job of<lb/>
"more magnitude but had no<lb/>
qualms about his decision. "If<lb/>
they wanted me as much as I<lb/>
wanted them, then we're very<lb/>
happy with each other he said.<lb/>
"I'm thrilled to be the head coach<lb/>
at the Universitv of South Caro-<lb/>
lina<lb/>
Wood said he had three goals:<lb/>
"graduation, win football games<lb/>
and have fun while we're doing<lb/>
it<lb/>
While he wants to have fun.<lb/>
Woods said he was nervous about<lb/>
his new job and a 1989 schedule<lb/>
that includes Clcmson, Georgia,<lb/>
Florida State and North Carolina<lb/>
State - nine Division I games in all.<lb/>
"I'm nervous about going<lb/>
against Division I schools. In his<lb/>
final game as coach at the school,<lb/>
the Mountaineers tied Wake For-<lb/>
est 34-34.<lb/>
Woods said he planned to<lb/>
meet soon with the Gamecock<lb/>
players and the assistant coaches<lb/>
left on the staff. He said he hoped<lb/>
to have a complete staff by the<lb/>
time spring practice begins March<lb/>
13.<lb/>
He received endorsements<lb/>
from President James B. Holder-<lb/>
man and Athletic Director King<lb/>
Dixon.<lb/>
"I think he's got a fire in his<lb/>
stomach. He's got a lot of enthusi-<lb/>
asm Holderman said.<lb/>
Dixon, who informed Woods<lb/>
of his selection late Monday after-<lb/>
noon, said the 35-year-old coach<lb/>
"has the characteristics we were<lb/>
looking for - unquestioned integ-<lb/>
rity, strong character, student-<lb/>
athlete oriented, and a genuine<lb/>
feeling and concern for young<lb/>
people<lb/>
Dixon said the terms of<lb/>
Woods' contract have not been<lb/>
decided on, but the athletic direc-<lb/>
tor said he expected it to be a five-<lb/>
year deal.<lb/>
"We feel as though the con-<lb/>
tract we will enter into with<lb/>
Sparky will be consistent with<lb/>
what is normally in the Southeast,<lb/>
will be very comfortable and very<lb/>
competitive Dixon said.<lb/>
While Woods was officially<lb/>
introduced at the news confer-<lb/>
ence, his hiring was less than a<lb/>
well-kept secret. Several news<lb/>
organizations, including The As-<lb/>
sociated Press and the state's larg-<lb/>
est newspapers, had already re-<lb/>
ported that Woods would be<lb/>
hired.<lb/>
Woods guided the I-AA<lb/>
Mountaineers to Southern Con-<lb/>
ference titles in 1986 and 1987 and<lb/>
was named the leagues coach of<lb/>
the year an unprecedented three<lb/>
straight times, beginning in 1985.<lb/>
Woods, whose real name is<lb/>
Phillip Perry Woods, was 38-19-2<lb/>
in five seasons at Appalachian<lb/>
State in Boone, N.C His father<lb/>
nicknamed him Sparky "maybe<lb/>
he was looking for a cocker span-<lb/>
iel or something, I don't know<lb/>
Woods said.<lb/>
Woods replaces Morrison,<lb/>
who died at the age of 51 of a heart<lb/>
attack Feb. 5 after playing rac-<lb/>
quetball.<lb/>
North Carolina State coach<lb/>
Dick Sheridan turned down the<lb/>
Gamecock job last week. Sheridan<lb/>
was widely believed to be the<lb/>
school's top choice, but he said he<lb/>
had not been offered the job.<lb/>
Woods was one of three<lb/>
Southern Conference coaches in<lb/>
the running for the position. The<lb/>
others were Coach Jimmy Satter-<lb/>
field, who guided Furman to the<lb/>
1988 I-AA championship, and<lb/>
Marshall coacn George Chaump.<lb/>
South Carolina assistant head<lb/>
coach and defensive coordinator<lb/>
Joe Lee Dunn was also among<lb/>
those considered for the position.<lb/>
Woods, a native of Oneida,<lb/>
Tenn played college football at<lb/>
Carson-Newman and began his<lb/>
coaching career as an assistant at<lb/>
Tennessee in 1976. One season<lb/>
later he was at Kansas, and in 1978<lb/>
he was an assistant at North Ala-<lb/>
bama.<lb/>
Woods then went to Iowa<lb/>
State, where he coached the de-<lb/>
fensive secondary in 1979 and<lb/>
receivers the following three sea-<lb/>
sons before moving on to Appala-<lb/>
chian State in 1983.<lb/>
IRS water polo teams take to the pool<lb/>
In the men's independent<lb/>
division, the leagues leading<lb/>
scorer, David Onks will lead his<lb/>
team Phi Sigma Pi in to their divi-<lb/>
sional spot. Onks has tossed in 19<lb/>
goals in three contests including a<lb/>
(IRS) ? Aquamen and aq-<lb/>
uawomen have ascended on the<lb/>
campus of East Carolina Univer-<lb/>
sitv bearing inner tubes and claim-<lb/>
ing to be water polo specialists.<lb/>
And indeed some have proven to<lb/>
be just that as intramural water powerful 9 goals as his squad de- pendent women s champions the<lb/>
?or into feated rcnnmal powerhouse the Belk Babes as they paddle their<lb/>
ing the fun as well. The ladies weather of February, spring time<lb/>
from Alpha Delta Pi are taking no is more than just a refreshing<lb/>
prisoners and taking their con- thought. Make plans now to<lb/>
tests serious enough to drown spend some of your spare time in<lb/>
their sister Sigmas 20-0. They are the great outdoors with an adven-<lb/>
challcnging the defending inde-<lb/>
polo teams carrv their rubbei<lb/>
the playoffs.<lb/>
In the fraternity B league, Phi<lb/>
Kappa Tau is staying afloat of<lb/>
their competitors with an un-<lb/>
blemished record as thev take on<lb/>
pennniai po<lb/>
Belk Ball Slingers 12-9.<lb/>
Umstead residence hall is<lb/>
also tops in the independent divi-<lb/>
sion as they are the main ingredi-<lb/>
ent in the formula for success. The<lb/>
way into the all campus female<lb/>
finals.<lb/>
Timex Aerobix Week con-<lb/>
cludes tomorrow with an array of<lb/>
their playoff rivals. Leading Umstead Sharks will have to pass<lb/>
scorer Greg Smith will have to bv an Umstead Yellow Cloud to<lb/>
slam a few more goals in home<lb/>
before the Phi Taus head in to the<lb/>
all campus championship.<lb/>
ture trip coordinated by the De-<lb/>
partment of Intramural-Recrea-<lb/>
tional Services.<lb/>
The spring of 1989 marks<lb/>
registration for several exciting<lb/>
adventures including: hang glid-<lb/>
ing, camping, kayaking, canoe-<lb/>
ing, white water rafting and<lb/>
windsurfing. Registration is cur-<lb/>
valuable giveaways for all aerobic<lb/>
class participants. Timex watches,<lb/>
aerobic fitness apparel and infor- rcnty heJ gct morc in<lb/>
find themselves in the plavoff mation will be given away to sev- formation in 204 Memorial Gvm-<lb/>
tinals. oral lucky PP?. nasium or call 757-6387.<lb/>
The sorority ladies arc enjoy- After the unpredictable<lb/>
In Penthouse article<lb/>
WadeB<lb/>
talks<lb/>
BOSTON (AP) ? The long-<lb/>
awaited Penthouse magazine ar-<lb/>
tide. w Boston thjrd, baseman<lb/>
AVade Boggs is arriving on<lb/>
newstands next week. It has eve-<lb/>
rvthing promised - sex, infidelity,<lb/>
racism, grudges, pranks and nas-<lb/>
tincss.<lb/>
Margo Adams, Boggs' former<lb/>
that sex weakens your legs, and<lb/>
he needs strong legs to play third<lb/>
basQ<lb/>
Boggs also had a superstition<lb/>
related to Adams' undergar-<lb/>
ments. "One night I went to the<lb/>
game and he went 4-for-5<lb/>
Adams said in the article. "He<lb/>
found out that I hadn't worn<lb/>
lover, details graphic descriptions panties underneath my dress. So<lb/>
of the sex lives of several Red Sox for the next couple of months<lb/>
players in the article, which was when he went into a slump, he'd<lb/>
described in Wednesday's edi- ask me not to wear panties to the<lb/>
tions of the Boston Globe'and the game. It wasn't sexual, it was that<lb/>
Boston Herald. he'd gotten hits and wanted to be<lb/>
The article said Boggs also sure of the little things he had<lb/>
made a racist remark about team- done to get those hits<lb/>
mate Jim Rice, saying the left There are no nude photos of<lb/>
fielder "thinks he's white Adams in the April issue, which<lb/>
Boggs also "would jokingly goes on sale next week. There are<lb/>
sav Keith (Hernandez, the New four pictures showing Boggs and<lb/>
York Mets first baseman) was a Adams together, the Globe said,<lb/>
homosexual but the issue does not have the<lb/>
Adams is suing Boggs for $12<lb/>
million and is being paid a mini- t TINJp.Wilmington<lb/>
mum of $100,000 by Penthouse Ul VY Ullliiiiuu<lb/>
for the story, entitled the "Desig-<lb/>
nated Swinger which was writ-<lb/>
ten by David D. Shumacher. She - rcmaining tickets on Sat-<lb/>
could make ?fs? Fcb. 25 ECU-UNC Wilmington urday can be picked up by stu-<lb/>
dependingosas of the issue. n wiU dcntsyafter 5 pFm. Qn Saturday,<lb/>
, T!fntnfloTcasLns dav, Feb. 23 at 8 a.m. at the Ath- srudcnts can only pick up their<lb/>
,t remarks on several occa Qffix fo M Co. sho anECU<lb/>
photo that Boggs has admitted<lb/>
taking when he and Adams set up<lb/>
pitcher, Bob Stanley with a strip-<lb/>
per.<lb/>
Penthouse said there would<lb/>
be a sequel in its May issue. "Next<lb/>
month: Margo bares all - sensa-<lb/>
tional pictures, plus more on<lb/>
baseball wives and groupies and<lb/>
sizzling locker room intrigue<lb/>
The Globe and Herald did not<lb/>
identify any players Adams al-<lb/>
leged were involved in sexual in-<lb/>
cidents.<lb/>
Red Sox general manager Lou<lb/>
Gorman, who according to<lb/>
Adams is not liked by Boggs, said<lb/>
the article was not likely to make<lb/>
him increase his efforts o trade<lb/>
the third baseman.<lb/>
"I'm not going to trade him<lb/>
unless someone makes an offer<lb/>
that'll improve our ballclub<lb/>
Gorman said. "As you know,<lb/>
Wade denies many of these state-<lb/>
ments were made<lb/>
The Houston Astros have of-<lb/>
fered pitcher Bob Knepper, out-<lb/>
fielder Kevin Bass and third base-<lb/>
man Ken Caminiti for Boggs, but<lb/>
Boston had asked for pitcher Mike<lb/>
Scott to be included in the deal.<lb/>
Several other general managers<lb/>
have said they do not want Boggs<lb/>
at the moment because of the<lb/>
controversy generated by<lb/>
Adams' lawsuit.<lb/>
A BEAUTIFUL PLACE<lb/>
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UNIVERSITY<lb/>
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2899 E. 5th Street<lb/>
(Ask us about our special rates to change leases, and<lb/>
discounts for February rentals)<lb/>
?Located near ECU<lb/>
?Near major Shopping Centers<lb/>
?ECU Bus Service<lb/>
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Contact J.T. or Tommy Williams<lb/>
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RACK ROOM SHOES<lb/>
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Greenville Buyer's Market<lb/>
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TAKE AN EXTRA<lb/>
Tickets available Thursday<lb/>
I<lb/>
Opcii<lb/>
Monday Sat<lb/>
Snndav l (<lb/>
;Y 10 0<lb/>
"Several of the white ball<lb/>
plavers preferred black women<lb/>
when they were on the road<lb/>
Adams said in the article. "This<lb/>
was very upsetting to Wade. One<lb/>
white player was dating a black<lb/>
girl from 'Milwaukee, and Wade<lb/>
told him it wasn't good for his<lb/>
image to be seen with a black<lb/>
woman<lb/>
Al Nero, Boggs' agent, said<lb/>
"it's a very sick, weak attempt on<lb/>
Margo's part to hurt Wade and his<lb/>
teammates<lb/>
"I'm going to take a day and<lb/>
then decide if I'm going to make<lb/>
any kind of statement Boggs<lb/>
said in a statement issued by his<lb/>
lawyer, Jennifer King. "I'm not<lb/>
going to dignify the story with a<lb/>
response right now. Basically, I've<lb/>
already refuted everything<lb/>
Adams said Boggs told her he<lb/>
had contracted venereal disease<lb/>
from one woman and impreg-<lb/>
nated another. The woman subse-<lb/>
quently had a miscarriage,<lb/>
Adams was quoted as saying.<lb/>
Adams also detailed a num-<lb/>
ber of Boggs' superstitions. She<lb/>
claimed she took 64 road trips<lb/>
with Boggs, purchased his clothes<lb/>
and avoided sex with him during<lb/>
the day because "Wade believes<lb/>
seum.<lb/>
On Friday, students can pres-<lb/>
ent their own identification and<lb/>
one other student's I.D. to obtain<lb/>
two free tickets. There are also a<lb/>
limited number of half-price stu-<lb/>
dent euest tickets available.<lb/>
C ELEBRATE<lb/>
I.D. and their activity card.<lb/>
East Carolina officials are<lb/>
predicting a large crowd and stu-<lb/>
dents are suggested to get their<lb/>
tickets early to guarantee a seat in<lb/>
Minges Coliseum.<lb/>
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<pb facs="00058127_0014"/><lb/>
14<lb/>
THE EAST CAROLINIAN<lb/>
FEBRUARY 23, 1989<lb/>
Madden leads Heels to non-conference win<lb/>
CHAPEL HILL, N.C (AP) -<lb/>
North Carolina coach Dean Smith<lb/>
predicted that Nevada-Reno<lb/>
would, give the fifth-ranked Tar<lb/>
Heels a difficult game, and he was<lb/>
half right.<lb/>
Nevada-Reno gave North<lb/>
Carolina a difficult first half.<lb/>
The Wolf Pack took a 12-3<lb/>
lead in the first three minutes as<lb/>
all five starters scored. But North<lb/>
Carolina tied the score at 17 and<lb/>
went on to beat the Nevada-Reno<lb/>
109-86 on Tuesday. The Tar Heels,<lb/>
23-5, have won five straight.<lb/>
"I was very concerned com-<lb/>
ing into this game because every-<lb/>
one was saying this was our Har-<lb/>
vard or UNC-Asheville game, but<lb/>
you saw some talent out there for<lb/>
Nevado-Reno Smith said. "I<lb/>
honestly didn't think it would be<lb/>
like that. We had too much inside<lb/>
strength<lb/>
Kevin Madden scored 21<lb/>
points and J.R. Reid and Rick Fox<lb/>
added 19 each. 1 he Tar Heels took<lb/>
the lead for good when Fox, who<lb/>
scored 15 of his points in the first<lb/>
half, made two free throws with<lb/>
13:04 remaining.<lb/>
North Carolina's lead grew to<lb/>
36-21 midway through the half<lb/>
when the Wolf Pack, 14-10, threw<lb/>
away the ball eight times in a six-<lb/>
minute span and managed only<lb/>
one field goal.<lb/>
"I was disappointed in our<lb/>
play in the first half Smith said.<lb/>
"It seems we have one game every<lb/>
year where we come out and play<lb/>
for our scoring averages. But in<lb/>
the second half, we did a much<lb/>
better job<lb/>
Later in the half, Fox keyed a<lb/>
10-0 spurt with six points, includ-<lb/>
ing back-to-back dunks, as the Tar<lb/>
Heels went ahead 46-27. The Wolf<lb/>
Pack closed to 16 points early in<lb/>
the second half after trailing 60-39<lb/>
at halftimc, but could pull no<lb/>
closer.<lb/>
"The size factor obviously<lb/>
hurt us Nevada-Reno coach Len<lb/>
Stevens said. "We are going<lb/>
against giants with a front line<lb/>
that is 6-3,6-6 and 6-7. When you<lb/>
go against a mismatch like that,<lb/>
sometimes you can negate size,<lb/>
but not when a team like Carolina<lb/>
has size and athletic ability.<lb/>
"Our plan was to get certain<lb/>
shooters a certain amount of shots<lb/>
and we did that. The problem was<lb/>
that we did not get the percentage<lb/>
we needed to be in the game<lb/>
Nevada-Reno made 33 of 88<lb/>
shots for 38 percent, and were 8-<lb/>
for-29 on three-pointers.<lb/>
Scott Williams scored 11<lb/>
points for North Carolina. Steve<lb/>
Bucknall and King Rice scored 10<lb/>
each.<lb/>
Darrvl Owens scored 28<lb/>
points for Nevada-Reno and<lb/>
Gabriel Parizzia, 18.<lb/>
Tyson at peace, ready for eighth title defense<lb/>
LAS VEGAS (AP) ?Just days<lb/>
before his eighth title defense,<lb/>
Mike Tvson says he's at peace<lb/>
with himself and ready to go to<lb/>
war with Frank Bruno.<lb/>
"Things are a lot clearer<lb/>
now Tyson said Tuesday.<lb/>
"There are no problems. I'm very<lb/>
happy at this particular moment<lb/>
in my life<lb/>
The heavyweight champion<lb/>
declared himself free of personal<lb/>
turmoil as he. and promoter Don<lb/>
King met the press at the Las<lb/>
Vegas Hilton. He then issued a<lb/>
warning to Bruno, who be will<lb/>
meet Saturday night w h his<lb/>
undisputed heavyweight title on<lb/>
the line.<lb/>
"I'm not going to give him<lb/>
any chance the 22-year-old Ty-<lb/>
son said. "This is where .1 domi-<lb/>
nate. 1 dominate in the ring. That's<lb/>
what I do best<lb/>
Tvson, who had ballooned to<lb/>
about 260 pounds before begin-<lb/>
ning training for Bruno, appeared<lb/>
fit and in fine spirits during the<lb/>
impromptu news conference,<lb/>
laughing frequently and joking<lb/>
with the assembled reporters.<lb/>
Tyson spoke easily about his<lb/>
personaj troubles, which in-<lb/>
cluded a Valentine's Day divorce<lb/>
from his wife, actress Robin Giv-<lb/>
ens, his squabbles with his es-<lb/>
tranged manager Bill Cayton and<lb/>
his manhandling of a television<lb/>
camera during a January visit to<lb/>
his ex-wife.<lb/>
"I made a lot mistakes Ty-<lb/>
son said. "But I'm not going to<lb/>
commit suicide. I'm not going to<lb/>
kill myself over it<lb/>
Tyson said he weighed 217 or<lb/>
218 pounds and planned to come<lb/>
in at 218 for the fight.<lb/>
"I'm not a hostile person, but<lb/>
he's in some trouble he said of<lb/>
the British challenger.<lb/>
Bruno earlier had expressed<lb/>
hope that Tyson's problems, espe-<lb/>
cially his split from trainer Kevin<lb/>
Rooney, would take something<lb/>
away from the champion inside<lb/>
the ring.<lb/>
But Tyson said he felt less<lb/>
turmoil than he felt last June when<lb/>
he knocked Michael Spinks out<lb/>
only 91 seconds into their title<lb/>
fight.<lb/>
"It seems like there was more<lb/>
then than there is now he said.<lb/>
"Then, there were constant lies<lb/>
being fed to the press. Even<lb/>
people inside my camp were feed-<lb/>
ing things<lb/>
Spinks, in Las Vegas for a civil<lb/>
trial brought against him and<lb/>
manager Butch Lewis by the Las<lb/>
Vegas Hilton, said Bruno should<lb/>
hope Tyson means it when he says<lb/>
he's without problems.<lb/>
"It just pumps him up<lb/>
Spinks said, adding ruefully,<lb/>
"Ask me, I know<lb/>
Spinks said he wasn't looking<lb/>
for Tyson to have an off-night<lb/>
against him because of his prob-<lb/>
lems, but didn't expect that they<lb/>
would add to his fury inside the<lb/>
ring.<lb/>
'People just get him angrier<lb/>
by getting into his personal life<lb/>
Spinks said. "Boxing is the best<lb/>
job in the world to let off steam,<lb/>
and people are in trouble when he<lb/>
(Tyson) wants to let off steam<lb/>
Most think Bruno, a hulking<lb/>
Englishman who hasn't fought in<lb/>
16 months, will indeed be in<lb/>
trouble when he meets Tyson in<lb/>
the scheduled 12-round fight,<lb/>
which will be televised by HBO.<lb/>
Oddsmakers have made the<lb/>
unbeaten champion a prohibitive<lb/>
7 12-1 favorite to win the fight,<lb/>
and if s even money the sched-<lb/>
uled 12-round fight won't last<lb/>
four rounds.<lb/>
ACC honors players<lb/>
GREENSBORO, N.C. (AP) ?<lb/>
Brvant Stith of Virginia was<lb/>
named the Atlantic Coast<lb/>
Conference's rookie of the week<lb/>
for the fourth time this season.<lb/>
Stith, a 6-foot-5, 192-pound<lb/>
freshman, scored 19 points and<lb/>
grabbed seven rebounds in a 92-<lb/>
79 victory over Virginia Military<lb/>
and added 15 points and eight re-<lb/>
bounds in a 65-63 victory over<lb/>
Clemson.<lb/>
Earlier, North Carolina for-<lb/>
ward Steve Bucknall, who scored<lb/>
a total of 50 points in three victo-<lb/>
ries last week, was named the<lb/>
ACC's player of the week.<lb/>
Bucknall hit 15 of 27 field<lb/>
goals, including six of 16 from<lb/>
three-point range, and had 20<lb/>
assists. He grabbed 11 rebounds<lb/>
and had six steals as the Tar Heels<lb/>
posted victories over Old Domin-<lb/>
ion, Wake Forest and Maryland.<lb/>
On Sunday, Bucknall scored<lb/>
14 of his 16 points in the second<lb/>
half to lead the Tar Heels to an 86-<lb/>
75 victory over Maryland.<lb/>
Pirates hot from line<lb/>
Continued from page 12<lb/>
the year, and I can say that ECU<lb/>
gave us as much pressure as any<lb/>
team we've played yet, and that<lb/>
includes Clemson and Towsom<lb/>
State Flame coach Jeff Meyer<lb/>
said. "Our 10 turnovers in the first<lb/>
half made the difference in the<lb/>
game for us. In the second half,<lb/>
our guys responded to the chal-<lb/>
lenge, but ECU did a good of not<lb/>
letting us cut into their lead<lb/>
The. Flames did cut into the<lb/>
lead, but the Pirates were able to<lb/>
sink the free throws at the end to<lb/>
hold off Liberty. Even missed foul<lb/>
shots didn't help the Flames.<lb/>
"The difference at the end<lb/>
came when Kelly missed his four<lb/>
free throws Steelesaid, "and our<lb/>
guys, instead of sitting back and<lb/>
expecting him to hit the shots like<lb/>
he has all year, got in there and<lb/>
tipped the balls back out to an-<lb/>
other one of our guys. Of the four<lb/>
misses, Gus tipped three of them<lb/>
back out, and we were able to<lb/>
keep the ball<lb/>
Alston led all scorers for the<lb/>
night, scoring 26 while nabbing<lb/>
six rebounds for the Flames. Todd<lb/>
Cline and Richardson scored 10<lb/>
each for Liberty. For the ECU,<lb/>
Edwards paced the team with 22<lb/>
points and nine rebounds. Lose<lb/>
and Murphy were the only other<lb/>
Pirates in double figures, scoring<lb/>
15 and 14, respectively.<lb/>
Steele said his Pirates would<lb/>
relax Thursday and look at films<lb/>
in preparation for Saturday's<lb/>
matchup against UNC-W. "They<lb/>
killed us on the boards last time<lb/>
we played them, and we'll have to<lb/>
be ? and we are ? a lot better<lb/>
now than we were then Steele<lb/>
said<lb/>
Steele also said that he felt the<lb/>
Pirates would be emotionally up<lb/>
for the game, which would enable<lb/>
them to overcome any fatigue<lb/>
possibly felt by their busy playing<lb/>
schedule.<lb/>
Steele Mill the site for season<lb/>
closer between ECU-UNC-W<lb/>
continued from page 12<lb/>
19 points from senior center Larry<lb/>
Houzer, who has been averaging<lb/>
16.3 points per game on the year.<lb/>
UNC-W's leading scorer, senior<lb/>
Antonio Howard, scored 11<lb/>
against the Pirates in Wilmington.<lb/>
The player that hurts ECU the<lb/>
most, according to Steele, is 6-6<lb/>
senior forward Greg Bender, a<lb/>
player who Steele says always<lb/>
seems to play well against his<lb/>
Pirates. Bender scored 13 in Janu-<lb/>
ary against ECU.<lb/>
The Seahawks come into<lb/>
Saturday's contest with an 8-5<lb/>
CAA record, 13-13 overall, after<lb/>
losing their last two games,<lb/>
against American and Campbell<lb/>
Universities, both in Wilmington.<lb/>
One of the biggest advan-<lb/>
tages for the Pirates this time will,<lb/>
hopefully, be a sellout crowd in<lb/>
the "Steele Mill Students are<lb/>
encouraged to get their tickets<lb/>
early Friday and to arrive early in<lb/>
purple Saturday.<lb/>
Tipoff is at 7:30 p.m.<lb/>
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i-J ? -<lb/>
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3. Get a nice, fat check.<lb/>
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rebate tor up to half the suggested retail price of the Apple" peripherals you add on -so you II saw up to $800.<lb/>
Ask tor details today whore computers are sold on campus.<lb/>
m<lb/>
Apple Pays Half<lb/>
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<pb facs="00058127_0015"/>
</div></body></text></TEI>