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<pb facs="00058128_0001"/>
2sa?M?<lb/>
Crime Report2<lb/>
Editorials4<lb/>
Classifieds6<lb/>
DJ Jazzy Jeff and The Fresh Prince to<lb/>
play in Camp Lejeune,<lb/>
Get the concert info on page 8.<lb/>
'irate men go to the wire with UNC-W,<lb/>
Pirate women beat the Hawks.<lb/>
Catch the action on page 10.<lb/>
?be lEaat (ftaroltman<lb/>
Serving the East Carolina campus community since 1925.<lb/>
Vol. 63 No. S4<lb/>
Tuesday February 28, 1989<lb/>
Greenville, NC<lb/>
12 Pages<lb/>
Circulation 12,000<lb/>
Art project dismantled after controversy<lb/>
By TIM HAMPTON<lb/>
s I'ditor<lb/>
dt<lb/>
Two creators of an art project,<lb/>
picting a black figure hanging<lb/>
by a rope from a tree, say their in-<lb/>
tentions have been misconstrued<lb/>
after ECU officials dismantled<lb/>
portions of the work deemed to be<lb/>
offensive in the wooded mall area<lb/>
of the campus Monday morning.<lb/>
Marc Svlvestre and Victoria<lb/>
Higgins, two ECU graduate stu-<lb/>
dents in the school oi art and crea -<lb/>
tors of the work, said they at-<lb/>
tempted to convey an anti-racist<lb/>
statement through theuseof three<lb/>
plaster figures in the mid-term<lb/>
project for an art class. "People<lb/>
saw part  of it (the work) but they<lb/>
took the symbolism out of con-<lb/>
text S l estre said.<lb/>
In a statement to the press,<lb/>
Chancellor Richard Eakin said<lb/>
tins display which was on view<lb/>
tor a short time this morning<lb/>
I Monday) has resulted ina sharply<lb/>
mixed reaction and many have<lb/>
found it to be offensive and re-<lb/>
pugnant<lb/>
Explaining the art, Sylvestre<lb/>
and 1 liggins said thev placed two<lb/>
white figures seated in lounge<lb/>
chairs before the hanging black<lb/>
figure in efforts to symbolize<lb/>
apath) towards racism, anapath)<lb/>
visual imagery was very power-<lb/>
ful 1 liggins said.<lb/>
But one of the first students to<lb/>
see the work early Monday morn-<lb/>
the work. Quoting the banner,<lb/>
Sylvestre said "WAKE UP - there<lb/>
is much to learn from others - It is<lb/>
difficult to overcome innate ra-<lb/>
ingsaid the project upset her.The cism-To ignore or avoid racism is<lb/>
criminal - Racism comes from<lb/>
ignorance and fear - We are all<lb/>
student, who wishes to remain<lb/>
anonymous, said she called cam-<lb/>
pus security at 230 a.m. to inves-<lb/>
tigate the mall area after she wit-<lb/>
nessed the art students construct<lb/>
the project.<lb/>
"1 was offended by the art and<lb/>
1 wanted the ECU police to find<lb/>
out if the students had university<lb/>
approval the source said.<lb/>
The artists said the observers<lb/>
racist - WAKE UP<lb/>
Instead of placing the work<lb/>
indoors, the artists said the project<lb/>
would be more effective outdoors.<lb/>
The thrust of the piece was to "stir<lb/>
discussion and to compete the<lb/>
denial of racism which so many<lb/>
have Higgins said.<lb/>
Citing a recent letter to the<lb/>
editor in The East Carolinian stat-<lb/>
M the project would have under-<lb/>
feel is pre alent in the South stood the project's intent by read- ing that there is no racism on the<lb/>
md particularly at ECU. "The ing a six foot banner included in ECU campus, Higgins said "this<lb/>
guy is so blind" Svlvestre and<lb/>
1 liggins said through their art thev<lb/>
wanted to alert the campus that<lb/>
racism does exist and is not "just<lb/>
hidden on bathroom walls<lb/>
In preparing for the project,<lb/>
the artists researched graffiti on<lb/>
the ECU campus. They compiled<lb/>
a long list of racist statements<lb/>
written on bathroom John stalls.<lb/>
Both artists said the graffiti is only<lb/>
(me indication oi racism on the<lb/>
campus.<lb/>
Using the list of racist state-<lb/>
ments, Sylvestre and Higgins<lb/>
wrote the graffiti on the two white<lb/>
figures. Below the feet of the whi te<lb/>
figures were 50 to 60 beer cans,<lb/>
barbed wire and an abundance of<lb/>
cigarette butts in efforts to sym-<lb/>
bolize "the garbagery environ-<lb/>
ment in which many racists live<lb/>
according to Sylvestre. "It is svm-<lb/>
bohc of the degradation" of the<lb/>
racist, Higgins said.<lb/>
Chancellor Eakin moved to<lb/>
have the portions of project dis-<lb/>
mantled at approximately 8 a.m.<lb/>
Monday.<lb/>
"It easily could be misunder-<lb/>
stood as to its intent and could be<lb/>
seen as conveying a message in<lb/>
direct opposition to the artists'<lb/>
intent Eakin said in the press<lb/>
release adding, "This work, while<lb/>
well-intentioned, was judged to<lb/>
lack sensitivity (to the feelings of<lb/>
all members oi the community.)"<lb/>
'Teddy White hearings were fair'<lb/>
according to VC Ronald Speier<lb/>
By CLAY DEANHARDT<lb/>
Stiff Writer<lb/>
The charred remains of the social room on the sixth fhxir of Clement dorm after Saturdays Tire.<lb/>
Fire guts sixth floor social room<lb/>
of Clement dormitory Saturday<lb/>
By TIM HAMPTON<lb/>
No? Editor<lb/>
Eire gutted a social room on<lb/>
the sixth floor of Clement Dormi-<lb/>
tory earlv Saturday morning. Af-<lb/>
ter evacuating residents, firefight-<lb/>
ers were called back onto the scene<lb/>
to extinguish a second blaze dur-<lb/>
ing the afternoon.<lb/>
No one was seriously injured<lb/>
in the fire, but an ECU campus<lb/>
policeman was treated for smoke<lb/>
inhalation at Pitt Memorial Hos<lb/>
pitial, according to Chief Johnnv<lb/>
Rose.<lb/>
Investigators are searching for<lb/>
a cause oi the fire in the room<lb/>
which houses a table, a couch and<lb/>
several chairs but have had few<lb/>
clues in the case as of Monday,<lb/>
Rose said.<lb/>
The first outbreak oi fire<lb/>
urday morning. (ampus Security<lb/>
arrived at the location oi the fire<lb/>
before being joined by Greenville<lb/>
Fire and Rescue Units.<lb/>
Residents of the dorm were<lb/>
evacuated until noon on Saturday<lb/>
after the initial fire was extin-<lb/>
guished.<lb/>
Hut at approximately 2:30 a<lb/>
second tire erupted from the so-<lb/>
cial room.<lb/>
The second fire was sighted<lb/>
by residents of the sixth floor as<lb/>
gathered clothes and other neces-<lb/>
sities We were walking back to<lb/>
our room to get the remainder oi<lb/>
our things and we saw smoke<lb/>
Elizabeth Hane, of (ill Clement,<lb/>
said.<lb/>
I lane said she then grabbed<lb/>
her belongs from 611, loca ted three<lb/>
doors from the social room, and<lb/>
ran to tell the resident advisor of<lb/>
the second fire. After evacuating<lb/>
Parted at approximately 1:15 Sat<lb/>
From gold medalist to philosopher<lb/>
from the second fire, Hane said<lb/>
she left the scene oi the fire. "I<lb/>
didn't want to see it anymore<lb/>
she said.<lb/>
Although university officials<lb/>
offered temporary campus hous-<lb/>
ing for the victims of the blaze,<lb/>
1 lane said she would rather live<lb/>
with a friend.<lb/>
Carolyn Fulghum, director of<lb/>
ECU housing, said there is no esti-<lb/>
mate on the damage from the fire.<lb/>
There is heavy smoke damage to<lb/>
the floor Fulghum said.<lb/>
I lane said the smoke damage<lb/>
to her room is minimal. "Nothing<lb/>
is really too damaged, but there is<lb/>
soot all over the place she said.<lb/>
The housing department will<lb/>
be working during next weeks<lb/>
vacation so residents of the smcke<lb/>
damaged floor may move back.<lb/>
"We hope to have the sixth floor<lb/>
ready for the rcsidentsafter spring<lb/>
break Fulghum.<lb/>
The controversial Honor<lb/>
Board hearings involving Teddv<lb/>
White were conducted fairly and<lb/>
without prejudice according to a<lb/>
university official.<lb/>
Dr. Ronald Speier, assistant<lb/>
vice chancellor of student affairs,<lb/>
on Thursday told past and pres-<lb/>
ent members oi the Honor Board<lb/>
that recent allegations of impro-<lb/>
priety in the board's handling of<lb/>
the White case were unfounded.<lb/>
White was found guilty last<lb/>
spring of assaulting at least two<lb/>
students in Garrett Hall and was<lb/>
subsequently suspended for two<lb/>
years. Several weeks ago the case<lb/>
came back into the news when<lb/>
Dennis Schatzman, executive di-<lb/>
rector of the North Carolina<lb/>
NAACP , made allegations that<lb/>
the board had violated White's<lb/>
rights.<lb/>
Speier said he reviewed the<lb/>
judicial file (which includes trial<lb/>
transcripts and his own memory<lb/>
of the incident) on the case when<lb/>
Schatzman first began to speak<lb/>
out. His review, conducted inde-<lb/>
pendently oi Chancellor Eakin's<lb/>
recently promised review, yielded<lb/>
no evidenceof impropriety, Speier<lb/>
said.<lb/>
According to Speier, White's<lb/>
rightsasanaccused student, which<lb/>
are found in the Student Govern-<lb/>
ment Association Documents,<lb/>
were reviewed with him on at least<lb/>
three occasions. Speier said he first<lb/>
discussed these rights with White<lb/>
when he met with White to ban<lb/>
him from thedormitoriesafter the<lb/>
incident. Normally, when Speier<lb/>
is not required to see a student<lb/>
because of a housing or like viola-<lb/>
tion, a student would not have<lb/>
that third opportunity at discuss-<lb/>
ing his or her rights, Speier said.<lb/>
Later, White, likeall students<lb/>
who face the Honor Board, read<lb/>
and signed a statement explain-<lb/>
mg his rights. Speier said. White's<lb/>
third opportunitv came when he<lb/>
faced the full board and was asked<lb/>
if he understood his rights, an-<lb/>
other routine procedure. White an-<lb/>
swered that he did, Speier said.<lb/>
'We have people sign that<lb/>
thev understand their rights. We<lb/>
have a booklet that we go over,<lb/>
and the first question that we ask<lb/>
in the hearing is 'Do you under-<lb/>
stand your rights<lb/>
"In addition I do think that<lb/>
the judicial process worked ex-<lb/>
actly as I described it to you,<lb/>
Speier said. Earlier in the meeting<lb/>
he had reacquainted the board<lb/>
with the procedure followed be-<lb/>
fore a case is heard. That proce-<lb/>
dure, which is also spelled out in<lb/>
the S.G.A. Documents, begins<lb/>
when charges are generated by<lb/>
police reports.<lb/>
If the police feel a student is<lb/>
an alleged or possible criminal,<lb/>
thev will read the student the<lb/>
See SPEIER, page 3<lb/>
The smouldering couch which caught on fire causing the second fire in Clement dormitory.<lb/>
Kay Yow discusses the secrets of success<lb/>
?J  . H.n .ndremem- "It's impossible to be success- beaten it We can't change the others I havebeen a<lb/>
By DAVID HERRING<lb/>
A??i?Unl Nrwi Fditor<lb/>
According to Kay Yow, head<lb/>
coach of N.C. State's lady<lb/>
Wolfpack basketball team md<lb/>
Olympic gold medalist, her secret<lb/>
is: vou can't lose if you hold all the<lb/>
ACES, an acronym standing for<lb/>
attitude, committment, enthusi-<lb/>
asm and services.<lb/>
In an inspirational lecture,<lb/>
entitled "Striving to Excel?Going<lb/>
for the Gold Yow drew upon<lb/>
her coaching expertise, insightful<lb/>
anecdotes, and her personal phi-<lb/>
losophy to demonstrate why she<lb/>
is so successful, both on and off<lb/>
the court.<lb/>
"You can shoot airballs (in<lb/>
life), but you can come back and<lb/>
get another shot she began.<lb/>
"People think the only concern in<lb/>
basketball is winning, but every-<lb/>
thing about it is broader than that.<lb/>
If basketball was as superficial as<lb/>
winning, I wouldn't be in it.<lb/>
"I'm an educator first and<lb/>
foremost and accidentally got into<lb/>
coaching continued Yow, an<lb/>
ECU alumnus holding bachelors<lb/>
and masters degrees in education.<lb/>
"Coaching gave me the opportu-<lb/>
nity to work with a smaller num-<lb/>
ber of youths than teaching, so I<lb/>
was able to work more closely<lb/>
emotionally, physically, intellec-<lb/>
tually and spiritually. And it ex-<lb/>
cited me<lb/>
Yow stressed the importance<lb/>
of learning to cope with achieve-<lb/>
ment and prosperity, as well as<lb/>
adversity. "It's fine to rejoice in<lb/>
golden moments, but you must<lb/>
move on to step two and remem-<lb/>
ber your roots ? where you came<lb/>
from she stated. "It makes you<lb/>
more appreciative of your accom-<lb/>
plishment,and then you can reach<lb/>
out to others and help them to be<lb/>
successful.<lb/>
"I'm in tune with who I am<lb/>
and where I came from and that<lb/>
enables me to reach out to others<lb/>
around me. The La rd gave me the<lb/>
ability to work with people and<lb/>
I'd rather have that than any other<lb/>
ability<lb/>
Attitude, Yow's first key to<lb/>
success, determines whether you<lb/>
"respond" positively to a situ-<lb/>
ation, or "react" negatively. Ac-<lb/>
cording to Yow, we have little or<lb/>
no control over what happens in<lb/>
our life, but we have 100 percent<lb/>
control over our attitude and how<lb/>
we will respond.<lb/>
It's impossible to be success-<lb/>
ful without a good attitude Yow<lb/>
noted. "What's inside determines<lb/>
what a person can do. Picture two<lb/>
balloons, when released one rises<lb/>
to the ceiling and one sinks to the<lb/>
floor. The difference is what's<lb/>
inside.<lb/>
"When life kicks you, let it<lb/>
kick you forward ? it can if you<lb/>
let it said Yow in reference to her<lb/>
personal battle with cancer. "1<lb/>
recently had a battle with cancer<lb/>
that was negativeand hard to take.<lb/>
But because of that experience 1<lb/>
serve as chairman of the Lin-<lb/>
eberger Cancer Research Center,<lb/>
Chapel Hill, and so far we have<lb/>
raised $600,000 toward our $1<lb/>
million dollar fund drive.<lb/>
"I have grown so much as a<lb/>
person through battling this dis-<lb/>
ease, even though I can't say I've<lb/>
beaten it. We can't change the<lb/>
direction of the wind she rea-<lb/>
soned, "but we can adjust our-<lb/>
selves<lb/>
Commitment, according tc<lb/>
Yow, is important and our society<lb/>
is losing it. "When we make a<lb/>
commitment to excellence we<lb/>
must commit to a team ? be it in<lb/>
a family or business ? and we<lb/>
must have the same goals and<lb/>
understanding to pull in the same<lb/>
direction for a common purpose<lb/>
she said.<lb/>
According to Yow, no one can<lb/>
win alone, therefore each team<lb/>
must make sacrifices and work<lb/>
together to maximize the poten-<lb/>
tial of each team member. "We<lb/>
others I have been able to do what<lb/>
I've done<lb/>
Yow described a project she<lb/>
assigned to the women's Olympic<lb/>
team, where each member was to<lb/>
draw a picture of their personal<lb/>
goals for the team. According to<lb/>
Yow, everyone on the team drew<lb/>
the same picture: the ceremony at<lb/>
w hich thev would receive the gold<lb/>
medal.<lb/>
Her team was united in their<lb/>
total committment to excellence.<lb/>
"If you accept second place when<lb/>
first place is open, you'll have <lb/>
tendency to do it the rest of your<lb/>
life. Don't put limits on yourself<lb/>
warned Yow. "We don't know<lb/>
what we can do, but 1 guarantee<lb/>
drink from wells others have dug you it's above and beyond our<lb/>
and warm ourselves from fires imagination<lb/>
others have built she observed. Enthusiasm and mdustnous-<lb/>
"Thisappliestome.It'sbecauseof See KAY, page 7<lb/>
<pb facs="00058128_0002"/><lb/>
r<lb/>
<lb/>
1 v '<lb/>
Crime Repdrt2<lb/>
Editorials4<lb/>
Classifieds6<lb/>
v?<lb/>
DJ Jazzy Jeff ind jrhe Fresh Prince to<lb/>
play in Camp tejeunc.<lb/>
Get the concert info oat page 8.<lb/>
?!<lb/>
te men go to tfcrwire hUNC-W,<lb/>
Pirate women beat the'H?n?,<lb/>
patch the action on page 10.<lb/>
ii<lb/>
She lEaat (Earnlmian<lb/>
Serving the East Carolina campus community since 1925.<lb/>
Vol. 63 No. 54<lb/>
Tuesday February 28,1989<lb/>
Greenville, NC<lb/>
12 Pages<lb/>
Circulation 12,000<lb/>
Art project dismantled after controversy<lb/>
By TIM HAMPTON<lb/>
New. Editor<lb/>
Two creators of an art project,<lb/>
depicting a black figure hanging<lb/>
by a rope from a tree, say their in-<lb/>
tentions have been misconstrued<lb/>
after ECU officials dismantled<lb/>
portions of the work deemed to be<lb/>
offensive in the wooded mall area<lb/>
of the campus Monday morning.<lb/>
Marc Sylvestre and Victoria<lb/>
Higgins, two ECU graduate stu-<lb/>
dents in the school of art and crea-<lb/>
tors of the work, said they at-<lb/>
saw parts of it (the work) but they visual imagery was very power- the work. Quoting the banner,<lb/>
took the symbolism out of con- ful Higgins said,<lb/>
text Sylvestre said. But one of the first students to<lb/>
In a statement to the press, see the work early Monday morn-<lb/>
Chancellor Richard Eakin said ing said the project upset her. The<lb/>
"this display which was on view student, who wishes to remain<lb/>
for a short time this morning anonymous, said she called cam-<lb/>
(Monday)hasresultedinasharply pus security at 2:30 a.m. to inves-<lb/>
Sylvestre said "WAKE UP - there<lb/>
is much to learn from others - It is<lb/>
difficult to overcome innate ra-<lb/>
cism - To ignore or avoid racism is<lb/>
criminal - Racism comes from<lb/>
ignorance and fear - We are all<lb/>
racist - WAKE UP<lb/>
Instead of placing the work<lb/>
guy is so blind Sylvestre and<lb/>
Higgins said through their art they<lb/>
wanted to alert the campus that<lb/>
racism does exist and is not "just<lb/>
hidden on bathroom walls<lb/>
In preparing for the project,<lb/>
the artists researched graffiti on<lb/>
cigarette butts in efforts to sym-<lb/>
bolize "the garbagery environ-<lb/>
ment in which many racists live<lb/>
according to Sylvestre. "It is sym-<lb/>
bolic of the dregradation" of the<lb/>
racist, Higgins said.<lb/>
Chancellor Eakin moved to<lb/>
mixed reaction and many have tigate the mall area after she wit<lb/>
found it to be offensive and re- nessed the art students construct indoors, the artists said the project written on bathroom John stalls<lb/>
pugnant the project. would be more effective outdoors.<lb/>
Explaining the art, Sylvestre "I was offended by the art and The thrust of the piece was to "stir<lb/>
and Higgins said they placed two I wanted the ECU police to find discussion and to compete the<lb/>
white figures seated in lounge out if the students had university denial of racism which so many<lb/>
chairs before the hanging black approval the source said. have Higgins said,<lb/>
figure in efforts to symbolize The artists said the observers Citing a recent letter to the<lb/>
editor in The East Carolinian stat-<lb/>
the ECU campus. They compiled have the portions of project dis-<lb/>
a long list of racist statements<lb/>
tempted to convey an anti-racist<lb/>
statement through theuseof three apathy towards racism, an apathy of the project would have under<lb/>
plaster figures in the mid-term they feel is prevalent in the South stood the project's intent by read- ing that there is no racism on the<lb/>
project for an art class. 'Teople and particularly at ECU. "The ing a six foot banner included in ECU campus, Higgins said "this<lb/>
Both artists said the graffiti is only<lb/>
one indication of racism on the<lb/>
campus.<lb/>
Using the list of racist state-<lb/>
ments, Sylvestre and Higgins<lb/>
wrote the graffiti on the two white<lb/>
figures. Below the feet of the white<lb/>
figures were 50 to 60 beer cans,<lb/>
barbed wire and an abundance of<lb/>
mantled at approximately 8 a.m.<lb/>
Monday.<lb/>
"It easily could be misunder-<lb/>
stood as to its intent and could be<lb/>
seen as conveying a message in<lb/>
direct opposition to the artists'<lb/>
intent Eakin said in the press<lb/>
release adding, "This work, while<lb/>
well-intentioned, was judged to<lb/>
lack sensitivity (to the feelings of<lb/>
all members of the community.)"<lb/>
'Teddy White hearings were fair'<lb/>
according to VC Ronald Speier<lb/>
By CLAY DEANHARDT<lb/>
Staff Writer<lb/>
judicial file (which includes trial<lb/>
transcripts and his own memory<lb/>
of the incident) on the case when<lb/>
Schatzman first began to speak<lb/>
out. His review, conducted inde-<lb/>
The controversial Honor<lb/>
Board hearings involving Teddy<lb/>
White were conducted fairly and pendently of Chancellor Eakin's swered that he did, Speier said.<lb/>
ing his rights, Speier said. White's<lb/>
third opportunity came when he<lb/>
faced the full board and was asked<lb/>
if he understood his rights, an-<lb/>
other routine procedure. Whitean-<lb/>
without prejudice according to a recently promised review, yielded<lb/>
The charred remains of the social room on the sixth flooi ?. .<lb/>
Fire guts sixth floor social room<lb/>
of Clement dormitory Saturday<lb/>
By TIM HAMPTON<lb/>
News Editor<lb/>
Fire gutted a social room on<lb/>
the sixth floor of Clement Dormi-<lb/>
tory early Saturday morning. Af-<lb/>
ter evacuating residents, firefight-<lb/>
ers were called back onto the scene<lb/>
to extinguish a second blaze dur-<lb/>
ing the afternoon.<lb/>
No one was seriously injured<lb/>
in the fire, but an ECU campus<lb/>
policeman was treated for smoke<lb/>
inhalation at Pitt Memorial Hos-<lb/>
pitial, according to Chief Johnny<lb/>
Rose.<lb/>
Investigators are searching for<lb/>
a cause of the fire in the room<lb/>
which houses a table, a couch and<lb/>
several chairs but have had few<lb/>
clues in the case as of Monday,<lb/>
Rose said.<lb/>
The first outbreak of fire<lb/>
started at approximately 1:15 Sat-<lb/>
urday morning. Campus Security from the second fire, Hane said<lb/>
arrived at the location of the fire she left the scene of the fire. "I<lb/>
before being joined by Greenville didn't want to see it anymore<lb/>
Fire and Rescue Units. sneid: u ??. auu.<lb/>
Residents of the dorm were ? Although u?versity offals<lb/>
evacuated until noon on Saturday ??? ?"P?g TJTw<lb/>
w iu? ;?i a . ,? wi? me for the victims of the blaze,<lb/>
after the initial fire was extin- TT?  ?? ??? -<lb/>
otwcKgrf Hane said she would rather live<lb/>
But at approximately 2:30 a with Mfnd' . ,  . ,<lb/>
second fire eVupted from the so- ? ?"?" FuluKm' director of<lb/>
cialroom. F ECU housing, said there is no esb-<lb/>
The second fire was sighted ?te on lhe damage from the fire<lb/>
by residents of the sixth floor as 'There is heavy smoke damage to<lb/>
gathered clothes and other neces- the floor, Fulghumsaid<lb/>
university official.<lb/>
Dr. Ronald Speier, assistant<lb/>
vice chancellor of student affairs,<lb/>
on Thursday told past and pres-<lb/>
ent members of the Honor Board<lb/>
that recent allegations of impro-<lb/>
priety in the board's handling of<lb/>
e White case were unfounded.<lb/>
White was found guilty last<lb/>
pring of assaulting at least two<lb/>
tudents in Garrett Hall and was<lb/>
subsequently suspended for two<lb/>
years. Several weeks ago the case<lb/>
came back into the news when<lb/>
Dennis Schatzman, executive di-<lb/>
rector of the North Carolina<lb/>
NAACP , made allegations that<lb/>
the board had violated White's<lb/>
rights.<lb/>
Speier said he reviewed the<lb/>
noevidenceofimpropriety,Speier<lb/>
said.<lb/>
According to Speier, White's<lb/>
rights as an accused student, which<lb/>
are found in the Student Govern-<lb/>
ment Association Documents,<lb/>
were reviewed with him on at least<lb/>
'We have people sign that<lb/>
they understand their rights. We<lb/>
have a bookletJhat we go over,<lb/>
and the first question that we ask<lb/>
in the hearing is To you under-<lb/>
stand your rights?'<lb/>
"In addition I do think that<lb/>
the judicial process worked ex-<lb/>
three occasions. Speier said he first actlY as l described it to you<lb/>
discussed these rights with White Speier said. Earlier in the meeting<lb/>
when he met with White to ban<lb/>
him from the dormitories after the<lb/>
incident. Normally, when Speier<lb/>
is not required to see a student<lb/>
because of a housing or like viola-<lb/>
tion, a student would not have<lb/>
that third opportunity at discuss-<lb/>
ing his or her rights, Speier said.<lb/>
Later, White, like all students<lb/>
who face the Honor Board, read<lb/>
and signed a statement explain-<lb/>
he had reacquainted the board<lb/>
with the procedure followed be-<lb/>
fore a case is heard. That proce-<lb/>
dure, which is also spelled out in<lb/>
the S.G.A. Documents, begins<lb/>
when charges are generated by<lb/>
police reports.<lb/>
If the police feel a student is<lb/>
an alleged or possible criminal,<lb/>
they will read the student the<lb/>
See SPEIER, page 3<lb/>
sities. "We were walking back to<lb/>
our room to get the remainder of<lb/>
our things and we saw smoke<lb/>
Elizabeth Hane, of 611 Clement,<lb/>
said<lb/>
Hane said the smoke damage<lb/>
to her room is minimal. "Nothing<lb/>
is really too damaged, but there is<lb/>
soot all over the place she said.<lb/>
The housing department will<lb/>
Hane said she then grabbed workmg du"n?n?' <lb/>
herbelongsfrom611,locatedthree vacation so residents of the smcke<lb/>
doors from the social room, and ?gf HLTSJttt<lb/>
ran to tell the resident advisor of ?e huto ? th floor<lb/>
the second fire. After evacuating ready for the residents after spring<lb/>
b break Fulghum.<lb/>
From gold medalist to philosopher<lb/>
Kay Yow discusses<lb/>
The smouldering conch which caught on fire causing the second fire in Clement dormitory.<lb/>
the secrets of success<lb/>
By DAVID HERRING<lb/>
According to Kay Yow, head<lb/>
coach of N.C. State's lady<lb/>
Wolfpack basketball team and<lb/>
Olympic gold medalist, her secret<lb/>
ful without a good attitude Yow<lb/>
noted. "Whafs inside determines<lb/>
is youcan't lose if you hold all the coaching continued Yow, an<lb/>
ACES, an acronym standing for ECU alumnus holding bachelors<lb/>
attitude, committment, enthusi- and masters degrees in education<lb/>
asm and services.<lb/>
In an inspirational lecture,<lb/>
"People think the only concern in ?ve on to step two and remem-<lb/>
basketball is winning, but every- ber your roots - where you came<lb/>
thingaboutitisbroacrthanthat. from she ?- J y?u , f a rKnn ?,n . PirHirr twn<lb/>
more appreciative of your accom- what a person can do. Picture two<lb/>
plishment, and then you can reach balloons, when released one rises<lb/>
out to others and help them to be to the ceiling and one sinks to the<lb/>
successful. floor. The difference is whafs<lb/>
"I'm in tune with who I am inside.<lb/>
and where I came from and that<lb/>
enables me to reach out to others<lb/>
If s impossible to be success- beaten it. We can;t change the<lb/>
direction of the wind she rea-<lb/>
If basketball was as superficial as<lb/>
winninp I wouldn't be in it.<lb/>
"I'n an educator first and<lb/>
foremost and accidentally got into<lb/>
soned, "but we can adjust our-<lb/>
selves<lb/>
Commitment, according tc<lb/>
others I have been able to do what<lb/>
I've done<lb/>
Yow described a project she<lb/>
assigned to the women's Olympic<lb/>
team, where each member was to<lb/>
"When life kicks you, let it<lb/>
kick you forward ? it can if you<lb/>
let it said Yow in reference to her<lb/>
cancer. "I<lb/>
entitied"StrivingtoExcel-Going r or youths than teaching, so,1 raramernaveu.u.yuu g?<lb/>
for the Gold Yow drew upon "? g Jg?,gS j?L. YoWa first key ? But becu?of that experience 1<lb/>
her coaching expertise, insightful emotionally, Pg?wW ??.Ue success determines whether you serve as chairman of the Lin-<lb/>
anecdotes, and her personal phi- tuaHy and spiritually. And it ex- Z asto- eberger Cancer Research Center,<lb/>
losophy to demonstrate why she cited me. aHon or "reacf' neeativelv Ac- Chapel Hill, and so far we have<lb/>
issoPsuyccessful,bothonandoff ?? Stott.lSfSS raiseT $600,000 toward our $1<lb/>
the court. TZStoVZSkZ noconttol over what happens in miffion dollar fund drive.<lb/>
"You can shoot airbaUs (in "??? SffffilSS ? our life, but we have 10C(percent "I have grown so much as a<lb/>
life)butyoucancomebackand TuvZmu contiol over oiir attitude and how person through naming mis dia-<lb/>
get another shot she began. ? moments, but you must respond. eex, even though I cai?t say I've<lb/>
Yow, is important and our society draw a picture of their personal<lb/>
is losing it. "When we make a goals for the team According to<lb/>
commitment to excellence we Yow, everyone on the team drew<lb/>
must commit to a team ? be it in the same picture: the ceremony at<lb/>
a family or business ? and we which they would receive the gold<lb/>
must have the same goals and<lb/>
understanding to pull in the same<lb/>
direction for a common purpose<lb/>
she said.<lb/>
medal.<lb/>
Her team was united in their<lb/>
total committment to excellence.<lb/>
"If you accept second place when<lb/>
AccordingtoYow,noonecan first place is open, you'll have ?<lb/>
win alone, therefore each team tendency to do it the rest of your<lb/>
must make sacrifices and work life. Don't put limits on yourself<lb/>
together to maximize the poten- warned Yow. "We don't know<lb/>
ual of each team member. "We what we can do, but I guarantee<lb/>
drink from wells others have dug you it's above and beyond our<lb/>
and warm ourselves from fires imagination<lb/>
others have built she observed. Enthusiasm and industrious-<lb/>
"ThisarHestome.It'sbecauseof See KAY, page 7<lb/>
<pb facs="00058128_0003"/><lb/>
11 IE EAST CAROLINIAN<lb/>
FEBRUARY 28, 1989<lb/>
Five arrested on drug charges<lb/>
Reports taken from ECU 4:05 Gregory Lynn Maine of<lb/>
Campus Security logs. Military Topsail Beach arrested for tres-<lb/>
passing.<lb/>
20:45 Two students reported<lb/>
refusing to leave Memorial Gym.<lb/>
23:11 Jarvis resident issued<lb/>
campuscitation fordamage to real<lb/>
property by throwing snowballs<lb/>
time is used.<lb/>
Feb. 21<lb/>
14:00<lb/>
EdwinTaft Parker of 477 Jones<lb/>
arrested for simple possession.<lb/>
Mark Andrew Steffer of 415-<lb/>
A Scott arrested for possession through two windows in Jarvis.<lb/>
with intent to sell marijuana.<lb/>
Robert Peter Boyer of 415-B Feb. 24<lb/>
Scott arrested possession with 1:00 Six students were given<lb/>
intent to manufacture marijuana, campus citations for various alco-<lb/>
Mark Stephen Milantoni of hoi violation including possession<lb/>
415-C Scott arrested tor conspir- and consumption in 152 Umstead.<lb/>
acv with possession with intent to 1:35 Three students issued<lb/>
sell and deliver cocaine. alcohol citations and after hours<lb/>
11:18 Two windows reported<lb/>
broken at 204-A Belk.<lb/>
11:40 Aycock resident re-<lb/>
ported a dorm mate assaulted him.<lb/>
16:30 Jones resident reported<lb/>
being struck by snowball while<lb/>
driving on College Hill Drive.<lb/>
16:40 Window broken at 309-<lb/>
BBelk.<lb/>
16:59 Two Belk residents seen<lb/>
throwing snowballs at a police<lb/>
vehicle.<lb/>
21:10 Clement RAs report<lb/>
odor of marijuana.<lb/>
1:40 Two students and one<lb/>
non-student banned fromcampus.<lb/>
2:00 Clement resident issued<lb/>
Stuart Franklvn Mintz of 401- visitation violations and for being a citation for being in violation of<lb/>
A Scott arrested for conspiracy uncooperative in 126 Aycock.<lb/>
with possession with intent to sell<lb/>
and deliver cocaine.<lb/>
15:50 Subject reported to be<lb/>
threatening to kill people in the<lb/>
Art building.<lb/>
19:05 Bat reported hanging<lb/>
from ceiling in Belk.<lb/>
21:56 A run away child found<lb/>
on College Hill Drive.<lb/>
Crime Report<lb/>
1:53 A pillow was reported to<lb/>
be smoking in a dryer in the<lb/>
Aycock basement.<lb/>
2:10 Ten students issued alco-<lb/>
hol citations.<lb/>
2:35 Five students issued al-<lb/>
cohol citations and visitation vio-<lb/>
lations.<lb/>
3:05 Visitation violation in<lb/>
Clement.<lb/>
10:00 Clement resident re-<lb/>
Feb. 22<lb/>
1:08 Michael Parathof 951 East<lb/>
10th St. was arrested for larceny of<lb/>
tire extinguisher and tampering<lb/>
with tireextinguisherwest of Spill-<lb/>
ma iv<lb/>
3:0b Officer reported subjects<lb/>
making loud noises.<lb/>
8:10 Fleming resident trans-<lb/>
ported to student health center ported hallmate missing<lb/>
after passing out in the General<lb/>
Classroom Building.<lb/>
4:20 A student was issued<lb/>
criminal summons for worthless<lb/>
checks in the General Classroom<lb/>
Building.<lb/>
17:i5 Non student banned<lb/>
from all resident halls after living<lb/>
in 115-D Belk without authoriza-<lb/>
tion.<lb/>
20:05 Car trunk lid found<lb/>
open.<lb/>
20:55 Report of a student being<lb/>
angrv in Memorial Gym.<lb/>
' 22 40 ThadAlben Williamson<lb/>
of 138 lones arrested for worthless<lb/>
rhecks.<lb/>
22 55 Patricia Sue Oakley of<lb/>
315 C Belk arrested for worthless<lb/>
checks.<lb/>
visitation policy.<lb/>
20:09 ECU Campus Security<lb/>
assisted in apprending Gregory<lb/>
M. Biven of 215-A Belk and Chris-<lb/>
topher L. Yow of 215-B Belk after<lb/>
they removed a 12 pack of beer<lb/>
from the Freshway on 10th Street.<lb/>
22:28 Slay resident issued ci-<lb/>
tation for underage alcohol con-<lb/>
sumption.<lb/>
Feb. 25<lb/>
00:05 Umstead resident re-<lb/>
ported a breaking and entering of<lb/>
his car with the removal of stereo,<lb/>
speakers and two tapes.<lb/>
00:25 Alcohol citation given<lb/>
to Umstead resident.<lb/>
1:08 Ptl. Austin responded to<lb/>
a fire alarm at sixth floor of Clem-<lb/>
ent. Greenville Fire and Rescue<lb/>
Units called.<lb/>
14:25 Resident Director of<lb/>
Clement reported smoke coming<lb/>
from roof of Clement.<lb/>
18:17 Night Manager of Men-<lb/>
denhall reported removal of a sign<lb/>
from lobby area.<lb/>
21:54 Night Manager of Men-<lb/>
denhall reported the larceny of<lb/>
cushions from the student center.<lb/>
Feb. 26<lb/>
1:00 Fleming resident made<lb/>
obscene gesture toward officer.<lb/>
1:40 Domestic dispute re-<lb/>
ported in 217-C Belk.<lb/>
1:45 Two students observed<lb/>
unwinding a spool of phone sou th-<lb/>
west of Erwin Building.<lb/>
15:00 Umstead resident re-<lb/>
ported unidentified subject ex-<lb/>
posed himself to her on second<lb/>
floor of Joyner Library.<lb/>
15:50 Car hit and run south of<lb/>
Joyner.<lb/>
19:14 Jarvis resident reported<lb/>
her roommate was upset over the<lb/>
breakup with her boyfriend and<lb/>
had discovered an unusual note<lb/>
in notebook.<lb/>
This Wednesday, March 1st<lb/>
SPRING BREAK SPECIAL<lb/>
$1.25 "Killer'<lb/>
Buckets<lb/>
$5.00<lb/>
Rockefeller's<lb/>
T-Shirts<lb/>
One Nite Only!<lb/>
Feb. 23<lb/>
00:35 Unknown person bent<lb/>
bicycle tire east of Mamie Jenkins<lb/>
building.<lb/>
00:50 Report of a man acting<lb/>
suspicious in lobby and second<lb/>
floor of Slay.<lb/>
INTEREST ED?<lb/>
Write About It!<lb/>
in<lb/>
The East Carolinian<lb/>
yMovrAgfleptinjr Applications<lb/>
t<lb/>
Right After Spring Break comes the:<lb/>
14th Annual<lb/>
TKE BOXING<lb/>
Ringgirl Competition<lb/>
March 14th<lb/>
at<lb/>
THE ATTIC<lb/>
1st Place $100<lb/>
2nd Place $75<lb/>
3rd Place $50<lb/>
lu? all three placet receive $40 each toward purchase<lb/>
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Summer's on its way time<lb/>
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bikinis in blazing hot colors<lb/>
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The choice is yours at<lb/>
Brody's Junior department.<lb/>
Carolina East MaU-The Plaza<lb/>
The East Carolinian<lb/>
James F.J.McKee, Director of Advertising<lb/>
Advertising Representatives<lb/>
Scott Makey J- Keith Pearce<lb/>
Phillip V. Cope Adam Blankenship<lb/>
Ashley E. Dalton<lb/>
DISPLAY ADVERTISING<lb/>
OpenRate$495 LocalOpenRate. $475<lb/>
BulkRate(Contracts)<lb/>
100-199 col.inches$4.50<lb/>
200-299 col. inches$4.40<lb/>
300-399 col. inches$4.30<lb/>
400-499 col. inches$4.20<lb/>
500-599 col. inches$4.10<lb/>
600andibove$4.00<lb/>
ClassifiedDisplay<lb/>
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Color Advertising<lb/>
OncColorandblack$90.00 (T-751<lb/>
TwoColor and black$155.00<lb/>
Frequency (Contracts)<lb/>
5Insertions(4m<lb/>
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15Insertions(4m $4.4<lb/>
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20 Insertions (4ii)$4.40<lb/>
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25 Insertions IT-ID$4.35<lb/>
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BUSINESS HOURS:<lb/>
Monday-Friday<lb/>
10:00-5:00 p.m.<lb/>
PHONE:<lb/>
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HDvEriISE WITH US<lb/>
Contact The Advertising Staff at the<lb/>
East Carolinian Today!<lb/>
5P<lb/>
THE<lb/>
EAST<lb/>
CAROLINIAN<lb/>
The East Carolinian<lb/>
Publications Building<lb/>
(across from Joyner Library)<lb/>
757-6366<lb/>
1989 - 1990<lb/>
SGA SPRING ELECTIONS<lb/>
for<lb/>
.PRESIDEN1<lb/>
.VICE-PRESIDENT<lb/>
.TREASURER<lb/>
.SECRETARY<lb/>
(b Hours Completed)<lb/>
REQUIREMENTS FOR NOMINATION;<lb/>
I - full-lime Student<lb/>
2- Hours Completed<lb/>
3- Previously Enrolled at ECU for<lb/>
Two Consecutive Semesters<lb/>
4- In Good Standing<lb/>
5- 2.0 GPA<lb/>
filing begins Friday,<lb/>
February 2mh thru Friday, March 3.<lb/>
Deadline For Filing is Friday, March 3 ai 4.00 p.m.<lb/>
SG,4 Office, Room 222<lb/>
Mendenhail Student Center<lb/>
Mandatory meeting of all candidates will<lb/>
be held Tuesday, March 14 at 5.I5pm,<lb/>
Room 242,<lb/>
Mendenhall Student Center<lb/>
V<lb/>
<pb facs="00058128_0004"/><lb/>
i<lb/>
THE EAST CAROLINIAN<lb/>
FEBRUARY 28,1989 3<lb/>
Storm causes extensive damage<lb/>
By BRAD BANNISTER<lb/>
Staff Writer<lb/>
Although the snow of the past<lb/>
weekend was heavy enough to<lb/>
j cancel ECU classes and temporar-<lb/>
ily close local schools and busi-<lb/>
nesses, the overall damage of the<lb/>
storm was not as extensive as that<lb/>
of the icestorm of the weekend<lb/>
before.<lb/>
On the ECU campus, the main<lb/>
effects of the snow storm were<lb/>
several fallen tree limbs and<lb/>
damage to certain university<lb/>
streets, said EastCarolina grounds<lb/>
superintendent Doug Caldwell.<lb/>
"Moisture got under the as-<lb/>
phalt and created potholes<lb/>
Caldwell said, "but the icestorm<lb/>
did more damage than the snow-<lb/>
storm<lb/>
The same was true at Green-<lb/>
ville's telephone company.<lb/>
According to Jackie Morris,<lb/>
the phonecompany'sdistrict com-<lb/>
mercial manager, there were "no<lb/>
significant damages" due to the<lb/>
snowstorm.<lb/>
The ice storm, on the other<lb/>
hand, caused approximately 400<lb/>
customers to lose their service. But,<lb/>
Morris said, repairs were com-<lb/>
pleted over the weekend.<lb/>
Roger Jones, director of elec-<lb/>
tric systems at the Greenville Utili-<lb/>
ties Commission, said that the<lb/>
snowstorm was damaging be-<lb/>
cause of the icestorm.<lb/>
"We probably wouldn't have<lb/>
had any trouble with the snow-<lb/>
storm if it hadn't been for the ic-<lb/>
estorm Jones said.<lb/>
The snow brought down tree<lb/>
limbs that had already been bro-<lb/>
ken or weakened by the ice, snap-<lb/>
ping power lines as they fell, Jones<lb/>
said.<lb/>
Jones estimated 'hat 5,000 to<lb/>
6,000 customers out of 52,000 ex-<lb/>
perienced at least one hour of<lb/>
power loss and that 1,000 to 2,000<lb/>
lost their power for more than 12<lb/>
hours. Maximum power loss was<lb/>
three to four days, Jones said.<lb/>
In addition to the electric<lb/>
company crew which worked 18<lb/>
to 20 hour days during the storm,<lb/>
the company received help from<lb/>
four crews from Fayetteville, two<lb/>
crews from Highpoint and two<lb/>
hired tree-trimming crews, Jones<lb/>
said.<lb/>
Jones added that thecompany<lb/>
hired additional workers to an-<lb/>
swer the more than 3,000 calls the<lb/>
electric company received during<lb/>
the storm.<lb/>
The Greenville cable televi-<lb/>
sion company spent eight days re-<lb/>
covering from the weather, said<lb/>
cable company general manager<lb/>
Tommy Edwards.<lb/>
"There were 9,000 subscrib-<lb/>
ers out at any given moment on<lb/>
Friday and Saturday Edwards<lb/>
said.<lb/>
The storms cost the cable<lb/>
company approximately $15,000<lb/>
to $17,000 dollars in damaged<lb/>
equipment, loss of service and<lb/>
workers pay, Edwards said.<lb/>
LUNCH SPECIAL<lb/>
MONSAT.<lb/>
11 AM -3 PM<lb/>
12-8 oz. Round<lb/>
Sirloin<lb/>
Potato Bar<lb/>
Sundae Bar<lb/>
$2.99<lb/>
Hct Bar and Salad Bar only<lb/>
all additional $1.99 with a meal<lb/>
 FREE DESSERT BAR<lb/>
r 1 withAll Steak Dinners<lb/>
I Daily Specials I TAKE-OUTS OKAY<lb/>
10 Discount on<lb/>
I Regular Priced<lb/>
Items<lb/>
With Student I.D.<lb/>
I 2903 E. 10th St. - 758-2712<lb/>
Speech on arms talks to be held<lb/>
StCLOUUrtL k<lb/>
By DAVID HERRING<lb/>
Assistant Newt Editor<lb/>
Political Science Professor<lb/>
Philip S. Gillette, of Old Domin-<lb/>
ion University, will lecture tomor-<lb/>
row at ECU on Soviet-American<lb/>
arms negotiations.<lb/>
Entitled "Arms Agreements:<lb/>
Too Little Too Lfte, or Too Much<lb/>
Too Soon?" the speech will be<lb/>
given at 7:30 p.m. in room 1031 of<lb/>
the General Classroom Building<lb/>
and is open tree of charge to the<lb/>
general public.<lb/>
 According to Dr. Mailffte M<lb/>
Speier's<lb/>
skeptical<lb/>
Continued from page 1<lb/>
Miranda warning, advising them<lb/>
of their legal rights. Under normal<lb/>
circumstances the report on a stu-<lb/>
dent's case would then be re-<lb/>
viewed by the attorney general,<lb/>
the public defender and Speier to<lb/>
decide what action should be taken<lb/>
next.<lb/>
In cases v lere action will be<lb/>
?taken, the students are notified<lb/>
through the mail that they must<lb/>
appear in front of a preliminary<lb/>
hearing. There they meet the<lb/>
public defender. At this stage they<lb/>
also are first familiarized with their<lb/>
rights as a student and asked to<lb/>
sign a copy of those rights after<lb/>
reading them.<lb/>
After a minimum of three<lb/>
davs, the students will appear be-<lb/>
fore the Honor Board. They are<lb/>
allowed to bring an unlimited<lb/>
number of material wimesses<lb/>
(those familiar with the act) and a<lb/>
limited number of character wit-<lb/>
nesses. An unlimited number of<lb/>
character witnesses may submit<lb/>
signed statements.<lb/>
At the board hearing, the<lb/>
students are once again asked if<lb/>
they understand their rights, if<lb/>
they respond yes, the hearing con-<lb/>
tinues. If not, the rights are ex-<lb/>
plamed again.<lb/>
Schatzman has said that<lb/>
White was misled before the hear-<lb/>
ing and was denied a chance to<lb/>
have material witnesses on his<lb/>
behalf. Speier said Monday that,<lb/>
according to the transcripts, White<lb/>
did have one material witness, a<lb/>
signed statement by another and<lb/>
the opportunity to present more<lb/>
witnesses.<lb/>
Allegations have also been<lb/>
raised that John Bateman and other<lb/>
Garrett Hall residents involved in<lb/>
the fracas invited the fight with<lb/>
White by shouting racial slurs from<lb/>
their rooms.<lb/>
None of the white students<lb/>
involved have admitted to shout-<lb/>
ing those slurs. Speier noted that,<lb/>
Iaccording to the transcripts, White<lb/>
and his witness said that racial<lb/>
slurs were yelled, but they were<lb/>
not able to identify the individual<lb/>
instigators of the slurs.<lb/>
Responding to the allega-<lb/>
tions Schatzman has made in the<lb/>
I incident, Speier said, "I have not<lb/>
seen any accusation in the news-<lb/>
papers or any letters from Mr.<lb/>
Schatzman that I believe are true<lb/>
Simon, coordinator of Interna-<lb/>
tional Studies at ECU, "We're at a<lb/>
critical stage in negotiations.<lb/>
Under the Reagan administration<lb/>
we signed the Intermediate-range<lb/>
Nuclear Force (INF) Treaty. The<lb/>
new Bush administration is study-<lb/>
ing options before entering nego-<lb/>
tiations of Strategic Arms Reduc-<lb/>
tion Talks (START). Gillette's talk<lb/>
will discuss domestic and inter-<lb/>
national factors affecting possible<lb/>
ouicojwes of future negotiations<lb/>
The speech is part of ECU's<lb/>
fifth annual Great Decisions se-<lb/>
ries, sponsored this year by the<lb/>
Office of International Studies.<lb/>
Three other speeches will be given<lb/>
in March and April focusing on<lb/>
political change in the People's<lb/>
Republic of China, the delicate<lb/>
situation in the Persian Gulf, and<lb/>
political conditions in the horn of<lb/>
Africa.<lb/>
For more information about<lb/>
the Great Decisions series contact<lb/>
Stephanie Evancho, Office of In-<lb/>
temational Studies, at 757-6769.<lb/>
MEDICAL SCHOOL<lb/>
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?Sim ai??? lonu n i ?w.<lb/>
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<pb facs="00058128_0005"/><lb/>
Stl?e Saat (Ear0limatt<lb/>
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Pete Fernald, c??- ???<lb/>
STEPHANIE FOLGOM, M?n ur<lb/>
James F.J. McKee, cr?for?fu.?rhjmj<lb/>
Tim Hampton, mm mm Brad Bannister, a tm<lb/>
KRISTENHALBERGpoEAtor JEFFPARKER, s??ff m,<lb/>
Chip Carter, ??-? tt Tom Furr, o?. m?<lb/>
Susan How ell, ?? m Debbie Stevens, cy<lb/>
Dean Waters, c??m??,t Stephanie Emory,at? suvrvi<lb/>
Stfphanie Singleton, a, tmio, Mac Clark, ?.?? M??,er<lb/>
February 28. 1 W<lb/>
OPINION<lb/>
Page 4<lb/>
Animals<lb/>
Mass destruction for our household needs<lb/>
Veal calves are put into small<lb/>
rrates at birth, so small that there's<lb/>
rarelv anv room for the animal to<lb/>
even turn around. They are fed an<lb/>
iron-poor diet, remaining anemic<lb/>
and on antibiotics all their lives in<lb/>
order to produce the type of meat<lb/>
their owners want.<lb/>
Wildlife animals aren't taken<lb/>
captive for merelv friendlv reasons<lb/>
an vmore. They're used for testing of<lb/>
all sorts ? evervthing from new<lb/>
vaccines to watching reactions to<lb/>
hairsprav and make-up in their<lb/>
eves.<lb/>
Activists against cruelty to ani-<lb/>
mals have complained for years<lb/>
about the horrible abuse of animals.<lb/>
Researchers and product testers<lb/>
cause animals the pain they hope to<lb/>
spare the individual human being<lb/>
from.<lb/>
Whether or not it's morally right<lb/>
to use rabbits, monkeys, mice, etc.<lb/>
for testing is a question receiving<lb/>
strong arguments on both sides, but<lb/>
even that isn' t the most urgent prob-<lb/>
lem at hand.<lb/>
What started out as experiments<lb/>
to save human lives has turned into<lb/>
mass destruction of wildlife crea-<lb/>
tures. No sense can be found in<lb/>
spraying household products in an<lb/>
animal's eyes in order to see how-<lb/>
much it takes before the animal goes<lb/>
blind. Many fur curriers are also at<lb/>
fault, since an approximated 50 per-<lb/>
cent of the animals they catch in<lb/>
traps are "trash animals" ? those<lb/>
which are caught by the indiscrimi-<lb/>
nate traps but are not needed for<lb/>
their fur.<lb/>
Whether it's for materialistic<lb/>
wants, food, product or medical<lb/>
research, animals are often treated<lb/>
unreasonably harsh for the outcome<lb/>
of society's comfort.<lb/>
An organization called SETA,<lb/>
Students for the Ethical Treatment<lb/>
of Amimals, has cropped up on<lb/>
numerous college campuses. The<lb/>
ECU chapter is holding its first<lb/>
meeting tonight, just months after<lb/>
UNC-Chapel Hill's SETA group<lb/>
stirred up controversy on the<lb/>
Chapel Hill campus in regards to<lb/>
their medical school's holding facil-<lb/>
ity.<lb/>
There is a difference between<lb/>
medical research and the mere tor-<lb/>
turing of animals; since people are<lb/>
higher up on the ladder of species<lb/>
the lesser animal's pain somehow<lb/>
seems unimportant to those looking<lb/>
for every avenue of product testing,<lb/>
whether all of the avenues are neces-<lb/>
sary or not.<lb/>
Organizations such as SETA are<lb/>
a start for the college campuses<lb/>
toward realizing the depth of cru-<lb/>
elty that goes into manv of the every-<lb/>
day products, cures, md food which<lb/>
are taken for granted. Education and<lb/>
returning hearing to the deaf ear<lb/>
may turn toward such problems is<lb/>
the key to a more humane society in<lb/>
the future.<lb/>
?'?<lb/>
 ???<lb/>
"llT ell <lb/>
H?Lp Srtfp<lb/>
AMIHAu<lb/>
-<lb/>
at -<lb/>
?<lb/>
<lb/>
'?<lb/>
No alternative in the bat ordeal<lb/>
To the editor:<lb/>
In response to Ann Bellis letter in<lb/>
last Thursday's editorial, I offer the<lb/>
following:<lb/>
Upon discovery of the first bat in<lb/>
iry room, every step was taken by the<lb/>
K.A. to remove it without harm. It<lb/>
was clinging so tightly that it look us<lb/>
half nn hour to get it off the ceiling.<lb/>
Imagine the amount of time that<lb/>
would have been involved had we<lb/>
continued in that manner.<lb/>
From that point on, Maintenance<lb/>
took on the task of removing over a<lb/>
thousand (not one-hundred) bats<lb/>
from within the walls of our suite.<lb/>
I'd also like to point out that the<lb/>
so-called "poison" referred to was<lb/>
merely roach and bee insecticide<lb/>
used not to kill, but to drive the bats<lb/>
out the outside holes.<lb/>
I did appreciate the suggestion<lb/>
of merely opening the windows to let<lb/>
the bats fly out, but be real. Anyone<lb/>
wi h a background in Biology should<lb/>
realize that they were roosting in our<lb/>
rooms due to the heat and would<lb/>
have paid little attention to an open<lb/>
window.<lb/>
I would also like to add that the<lb/>
whole ordeal was inconvenient, frus-<lb/>
trating, and disgusting. I say "dis-<lb/>
I gusting" not because I have an irra-<lb/>
tional fear of turning into a vampire<lb/>
but because there were hundreds of<lb/>
animals crawling, flying, and defe-<lb/>
cating all over my bed clothes and<lb/>
floors.<lb/>
If there had been five-hundred<lb/>
winged bunny rabbits flapping<lb/>
aro ind my room I would have felt<lb/>
the .ante way.<lb/>
hi closing I would like to put Ms.<lb/>
Bel.is'soverwraught mind to rest. At<lb/>
the sight of another bat in our suite,<lb/>
she will be the first person I will<lb/>
contact to get it out.<lb/>
Kathy Niblock<lb/>
Senior<lb/>
Psychology<lb/>
Three points<lb/>
bySGA<lb/>
To the editor:<lb/>
I am writing in reference to<lb/>
Thursday's editorial about the Stu-<lb/>
dent Government Association.<lb/>
While your points about a lack of<lb/>
student participation in Student<lb/>
Government may be true, I feel that<lb/>
you neglected to mention the biggest<lb/>
culprit for this lack of participation,<lb/>
The East Carolinian. I would like to<lb/>
point out three ways in which the<lb/>
student newspaper has been lax this<lb/>
year in regards to Student Govern-<lb/>
ment. These are lack of publicity of<lb/>
SG A events, lack of coverage of SGA<lb/>
meetings, and the misguided as-<lb/>
sumptions you have made in the last<lb/>
paragraph of Thursday's editorial.<lb/>
First of all, the lack of publicity of<lb/>
SGA events this year has been inex-<lb/>
cusable. How can students know<lb/>
about elections for SGA offices un-<lb/>
less your newspaper publicizes<lb/>
these events? As the official student<lb/>
newspaper for ECU, it is your rr<lb/>
sponsibility to make sure this infor-<lb/>
mation gets out to students. I believe<lb/>
the newspaper has failed with this<lb/>
responsibility.<lb/>
The newspaper has also failed in<lb/>
its responsibility to report on Stu-<lb/>
dent Government meetings. Report-<lb/>
ers from The East Carolinian have<lb/>
been present at every meeting this<lb/>
school year, yet articles on only a<lb/>
little over half the meetings ap-<lb/>
peared in the newspaper. Among<lb/>
the issues your newspaper has failed<lb/>
to cover include resolutions on cam-<lb/>
pus lighting and financial aid re-<lb/>
quirements for students. I do not<lb/>
think that so many earthshaking<lb/>
events happen at ECU that would<lb/>
exclude an article about the Stud, i ?<lb/>
Government meetings once a wet <lb/>
Before writing about the apat! <lb/>
students in regards to Student Go<lb/>
err.nent, look at your own newspa<lb/>
per's apathy at reporting SGA met<lb/>
ingb.<lb/>
Finallv, vour assumptions thai<lb/>
no-one in Student Government<lb/>
any more qualified than student<lb/>
currently serving on the legislate<lb/>
needs to be examined. Student Go1<lb/>
ernment representatives do not onh<lb/>
spend their time with SGA from 5<lb/>
p.m. on Mondays until appro<lb/>
mately 6.15. All legislators are r<lb/>
quired to serve on one of four stand<lb/>
ing committees which met at least<lb/>
once a week. In addition, legislat;<lb/>
must have knowledge of parlianv<lb/>
tary rules in order to be effectived<lb/>
ing debate. Rnallv, many legislal<lb/>
spend hours of research on topics<lb/>
be discussed during the SGA n<lb/>
ings. After hearing the amount<lb/>
work needed to be an effective K .<lb/>
lator, do you reallv believe that ai<lb/>
one can immediately be an effe'<lb/>
member of the legislature? I woi<lb/>
hope not.<lb/>
I hope that The East Carolmian<lb/>
will remedy the problems on pub'<lb/>
ity of SGA events, coverage of SC<lb/>
meetings, and the attitudes the new<lb/>
paper has towards the role of Studt I<lb/>
Government legislators. I do not<lb/>
lieve, however, that any impr<lb/>
ment willbeseeninthesituatior<lb/>
school year. After all, to parapru<lb/>
your own editorial, all a student h. s t<lb/>
to do is to read The East Carolii<lb/>
any Tuesday or Thursdav, and it<lb/>
soon become obvious that no<lb/>
there is much more qualified to w<lb/>
or edit the paper than anv other I<lb/>
dent on campus.<lb/>
Bob Land<lb/>
SeniorHist<lb/>
S<lb/>
Spectrum Rules<lb/>
In addition to the "Campus Forum" section of the paper,<lb/>
The East Carolinian features "The Campus Spectrum<lb/>
The columns are restricted only with regard to rules of<lb/>
grammar and decency. Persons submitting columns must be<lb/>
willing to accept byline credit for their efforts, as no entries<lb/>
from ghost writers will be published.<lb/>
Editor's Note:<lb/>
Clay Deanhardt was not the author of<lb/>
the letter to the editor on the satire<lb/>
page last Thursday. We apologize for<lb/>
any misunderstandings.<lb/>
Schatzman takes us back to the classroom<lb/>
Campus Spectrum<lb/>
By<lb/>
Dennis Schatzman<lb/>
I want to thank The East Carolinian for the<lb/>
extensive coverage it gave the state NAACP's in-<lb/>
volvement in the Teddy WhiteJohn Bateman, et. al.<lb/>
incident. The tone and slant of many of its articles,<lb/>
editorials and (heh, heh) cartoons, however, make it<lb/>
clear that the paper's management does not fully<lb/>
understand the internal and external dynamics of<lb/>
this whole issue. I suspect others do not understand<lb/>
either.<lb/>
Having been a professional journalist and jour-<lb/>
nalism instructor for over 16 years, I trust that The<lb/>
East Carolinian will honor professional courtesy<lb/>
and allow me asmuch space as is possible to respond<lb/>
to its (smile) attacks on me. Since this is a university,<lb/>
I will, instead, take the opportunity to take the read-<lb/>
ers back to the classroom. Today, I will teach a lesson<lb/>
on, as David Stockman, President Reagan's former<lb/>
budget director would say, "the way the world<lb/>
works<lb/>
As you know, I am a professional civil rights<lb/>
administrator. Based on my experiences and train-<lb/>
ing, I can state, without fear of debate to the contrary,<lb/>
that racism, sexism, anti-semitism and many other<lb/>
forms of discrimination, are on the rise. I am very-<lb/>
clear on what my duties and responsibilities are.<lb/>
Among those duties are to address major issues<lb/>
concerning racism and civil rights in North Carolina.<lb/>
Among the issues that concern Ihe NA ACP are<lb/>
the rising number of racist acts occurring on our<lb/>
sta te's high school and college campuses. The Teddy<lb/>
WhiteJohn Bateman incident is just one of many<lb/>
such incidents that have attracted our attention.<lb/>
Based on recent events, one could make a rea-<lb/>
sonable argument that asa civil rights administrator,<lb/>
I am pretty good at what I do. That is no accident. I<lb/>
take my responsibilties seriously and, therefore, try<lb/>
to stay on top of the "game<lb/>
Civil rights work often draws me into head-to-<lb/>
head confrontation with the power elite. When that<lb/>
happens, it's best for me that I prepare to go all four<lb/>
quarters and into overtime, if necessary. Like every-<lb/>
one else, I like to win. In civil rights work, the stakes<lb/>
are often so high that it is imperative that I MUST<lb/>
WIN!<lb/>
When I prepare to negotiate with the power elite<lb/>
(and ECU is an integral part of North Carolina's<lb/>
power elite), I take as longas it takes to prepare; I lake<lb/>
notes; I review documents; I talk to people on the<lb/>
telephone and do whatever it takes to get ready for<lb/>
what is in essence ? war. Since war is what negotia-<lb/>
tion is, you'd be smart to take whatever ammunition<lb/>
into the battle that will give your team the edge.<lb/>
The NAACP prides itself on understanding the<lb/>
dynamics of the war on racism and civil rights.<lb/>
When you find yourself in conflict, you should not<lb/>
come in ill-prepared.<lb/>
One of the essential requirements of preparation<lb/>
is understanding the playing field and who the<lb/>
players are. Do you have home field advantage, or<lb/>
do they? Who's the quarterback and how good is his<lb/>
arm? Can his blockers protect him well so he can stay<lb/>
in the pocket or are there weaknesses on the line? If<lb/>
there are, can the quarterback scramble? Can the<lb/>
receivers hold onto the ball when hit? Are the run-<lb/>
ning backs slashers Or are they power runners?<lb/>
These are the things you must know as you prepare<lb/>
your game plan.<lb/>
ECU is a state-related university that impacts<lb/>
greatly on over 20 counties in eastern North Caro-<lb/>
lina. It survives and prospers on what every other<lb/>
institution does ? money. This money comes<lb/>
largely from the General Assembly, grants it re-<lb/>
ceives for research and consulting, gifts from alumni<lb/>
and, lastly, student tuition. The chief executive off<lb/>
cer at any university is the president and chancellor.<lb/>
His function, first 2nd foremost, is to initiate and<lb/>
maintain activities which directly relate to money.<lb/>
Other matters, like student services, purchasing,<lb/>
physical plant, curriculum, etc. are supervise! by<lb/>
administrators and other "employees<lb/>
These employees are expected to take care of<lb/>
these matters so that the chancellor is free to interact<lb/>
with the General Assembly, big business, grant<lb/>
givers and influential alumni. Since early Septem-<lb/>
ber, when Teddy White walked into our office in<lb/>
Greensboro, the state NAACP has tried to resolve<lb/>
the issue with some of the university's designated<lb/>
employees. For various reasons, that technique has<lb/>
not worked. Other strategies had to be employed. It<lb/>
 is as simple as that.<lb/>
Therefore, we "pumped up the volume as you<lb/>
young people say. When the volume got so noisy<lb/>
that other people outside Greenville could hear it,<lb/>
the chanrellor felt the need to step in. As a result,<lb/>
there will now be a "re-evaluation" of the Teddy<lb/>
WhiteJohn Fateman incident as questions continue<lb/>
to swirl over how the tuation was handled by<lb/>
certain employees and students with certain judicial<lb/>
authority.<lb/>
The East Carolinian, much to my amusement,<lb/>
has questioned mv "tactics" used in bringing this<lb/>
whole affair to its present juncture. Among other<lb/>
things, the newspaper has accused me of "using" it<lb/>
to achieve my evil ends. It is a fact that the newspa-<lb/>
per, as well as the Greenville Daily Reflector, did<lb/>
publish every story on this issue (including all prc-<lb/>
NAACP stories) en the front page, "above the fold,<lb/>
below the masthead the most coveted news expo-<lb/>
sure of all. The story also led on all local television<lb/>
and radio news broadcasts. So if I have used the<lb/>
media, then I have done my job well. 1 came to ECU<lb/>
to do my job. I make no apologies for the "tactics" I<lb/>
used. My job is to be successful. In civil rights work,<lb/>
success is either winning or keeping from losing.<lb/>
Finally, 1 must not let the opportunity go by<lb/>
without getting to the heart of the matter. Unfortu-<lb/>
nately, many people, often subconsciously, have a<lb/>
predisposed perception of black people and other<lb/>
minorities. When someone like me comes along that<lb/>
shatters that perception, many people can't handle<lb/>
the anxiety that that often causes. For some, it's like<lb/>
seeing some black student with a black BMW.<lb/>
I hope I have used this space wisely to help<lb/>
maintain an atmosphere conducive for learning and<lb/>
the healthy exchange of ideas. 1 normally do not<lb/>
respond to the media: its pretty easy to let them<lb/>
respond to me.<lb/>
<lb/>
<pb facs="00058128_0006"/><lb/>
THE EAST CAROLINIAN<lb/>
FEBRUARY 28,1989 5<lb/>
Residents protest oil drilling<lb/>
MANTEO, N.C (AP) ?<lb/>
Exploratory drilling for natural gas<lb/>
35 miles off the Outer Banks would<lb/>
not endanger the environment,<lb/>
federal officials say.<lb/>
But many residents remained<lb/>
unconvinced as they left a public<lb/>
hearing Saturday on Mobil Oil's<lb/>
plans to drill an exploratory well<lb/>
near their picturesque islands.<lb/>
"I don't like how you throw<lb/>
around the term 'environmentally<lb/>
safe said Ricky Sheppard of<lb/>
Dare County. "When you refer to<lb/>
drilling muds - muds that carry<lb/>
heavy metals that eventually end<lb/>
up in our fish - as environmentally<lb/>
safe, that's an insult<lb/>
More than 100 people, includ-<lb/>
ing members of the N.C. Coastal<lb/>
Council and the National<lb/>
Audubon Society, drove across icy<lb/>
roads to attend a three-hour pub-<lb/>
lic hearing aimed at informing<lb/>
local residents about the oil com-<lb/>
pany's plans to explore for natu-<lb/>
ral gas off the Outer Banks begin-<lb/>
ning in 1990. Mobil Oil wants to<lb/>
drill on a large geologic feature<lb/>
known as the Norfolk Arch, about<lb/>
35 miles east of Salvo. The site is<lb/>
on the edge of the Continental<lb/>
Shelf in about 3,100 feet of water.<lb/>
Geologists think there may be<lb/>
5 trillion cubic feet of natural gas<lb/>
under the area, which would make<lb/>
it one of the largest known gas<lb/>
fields in the world. But before the<lb/>
officials from the U.S. Department<lb/>
of Interior could make their case,<lb/>
the environmental organization<lb/>
Greenpeace let them know the<lb/>
project isn't wanted by some resi-<lb/>
dents.<lb/>
When the federal officials<lb/>
arrived at the Manteo airport, a<lb/>
replica of an oil rig spewed smoke<lb/>
and droned the sounds of drilling.<lb/>
Banners on the coal black rig read:<lb/>
"Department of the Interior .<lb/>
Hands Off the Outer Banks" and<lb/>
"Save the Sea A pickup truck,<lb/>
carrying the rig, followed the fed-<lb/>
eral officials to a public meeting at<lb/>
Manteo High School.<lb/>
"The point we're trying to<lb/>
make  is that wherever you go,<lb/>
this (pollution) follows said<lb/>
Dorrie Smith of Greenpeace. The<lb/>
group drove home its point by<lb/>
amolifying the incessant sounds<lb/>
of a drill hitting rock, nearlv<lb/>
drowning out the voices of the<lb/>
officials from the Interior Depart-<lb/>
ment's Mineral Management Serv-<lb/>
ices during a news conference at<lb/>
the school.<lb/>
The agency is responsible for<lb/>
leasing and overseeing the devel-<lb/>
opment of offshore oil and gas<lb/>
reserves. Some Outer Banks resi-<lb/>
dents oppose the project because<lb/>
they fear it will pollute their wa-<lb/>
ters and spur industrial growth<lb/>
on the narrow string of islands off<lb/>
the N.C. coast.<lb/>
"Is there anything we can do<lb/>
or say as citizens to present facts<lb/>
or comments that would weigh in<lb/>
future considerations and affect<lb/>
the final decision on allowing this<lb/>
drilling?" Virginia Valpey asked<lb/>
the federal panel. "My perception<lb/>
now is that your minds are made<lb/>
up<lb/>
The officials denied that. But<lb/>
Bruce Weetman, Atlanta regional<lb/>
director of the mineral services<lb/>
agency, said that telling him "I<lb/>
don't like this" isn't reason enough<lb/>
to block the drilling.<lb/>
"It is prudent national policy<lb/>
to seek out and develop new<lb/>
sources of energy on the Outer<lb/>
Continental Shelf Weetman said.<lb/>
Thirty-two exploratory wells<lb/>
similar to the one proposed by<lb/>
Mobil have been safely drilled<lb/>
along the Atlantic seaboard,<lb/>
Weetman said.<lb/>
"The present facts show that,<lb/>
historically, exploratory well drill-<lb/>
ing is extremely safe Weetman<lb/>
said. "If you have information<lb/>
that is contrary, then present it to<lb/>
us<lb/>
Agency officials said that they<lb/>
expect Mobil Oil to present its plan'<lb/>
this spring to set up a drill 40 miles<lb/>
off the coast. Gov. Jim Martin will<lb/>
have 20 days to review the pro-<lb/>
posal.<lb/>
The panel of five men reas-<lb/>
sured the crowd several times that<lb/>
the exploratory project would be<lb/>
environmentally safe. The officials<lb/>
also said there is no need for the<lb/>
more detailed environmental<lb/>
impact study that local, state and<lb/>
national opponents have de-<lb/>
manded.<lb/>
Mobil has paid the federal<lb/>
government nearly $200 million<lb/>
for drilling rights off the Outer<lb/>
Banks. Between 1954 and 1984,<lb/>
the government has gotten a total<lb/>
of $84 billion for offshore leases.<lb/>
Make Up To $1000 in One Week<lb/>
Student Organizations, Frats, Sororities<lb/>
needed for 1 week Marketing project<lb/>
right on campus.<lb/>
Must be Organized and Motivated<lb/>
Call<lb/>
1-800-950-8472<lb/>
(Ext. 120)<lb/>
Loyola disallows gay speaker<lb/>
(CPS) ? Students at Loyola<lb/>
University of New Orleans will<lb/>
not be able to hear a program about<lb/>
gay men put on by a well-known<lb/>
professor because the Catholic<lb/>
Church, which runs Loyola, con-<lb/>
demns homosexuality.<lb/>
And any speakers who visit<lb/>
E. Martin Duberman, a widely "Homosexuality is against<lb/>
published author of scholarly Catholic doctrine Potts ex-<lb/>
books and articles ? to speak on lained ?We need both sides of<lb/>
campus about gay issues. an issie ,ike that for a balanced<lb/>
Wang, however, said he prcsentaaon<lb/>
couldn't extend an invitation for ? ?Wnen we present a contro-<lb/>
Duberman to speak because stu- versial subject, it is my duty to<lb/>
Ana any speaKers wnu visn dcnt government policy dictates inform other groups (who might<lb/>
the campus in the future to talk speakers who oppose church disagrec) like the Jesuits said<lb/>
about the subject will be preceded teachings must be balanced by faculty advisor Hepler. "I would<lb/>
or succeeded by someone offering spakers who support Catholic notif them M lhcy can prcscnt<lb/>
opposing view student doctrine, eithera debate format or<lb/>
in a separate presentation<lb/>
an<lb/>
government faculty advisor<lb/>
Robert Hepler has ruled.<lb/>
The controversy arose when a<lb/>
university employee asked stu-<lb/>
dent President Will Wang to in-<lb/>
vite someone ? it turned out to be<lb/>
Citv University of New York Prof.<lb/>
"We're not against having a<lb/>
speaker on this topic said Colin<lb/>
Potts, vice president of the Loyola<lb/>
Union. "But we need lead time,<lb/>
we need to see who fits within our<lb/>
budget. Speakers are selected a<lb/>
semester in advance<lb/>
their side and leave it at that.<lb/>
A year ago, the student gov-<lb/>
ernment presented a program on<lb/>
pornography as a debate before a<lb/>
standing-room-only crowd, Potts<lb/>
said.<lb/>
"While we hadn't planned on<lb/>
this kind of presentation (on<lb/>
homosexuality), it's not an idea to<lb/>
be turned away. But the request<lb/>
has to be make through the (Ideas<lb/>
and Issues) committee head said<lb/>
Potts.<lb/>
Any other campus group can<lb/>
bring a speaker to the school, Potts<lb/>
said, but the student government<lb/>
arranges most of the arts, film and<lb/>
music presentations on campus.<lb/>
The Loyola Union has re-<lb/>
ceived no letters or calls criticiz-<lb/>
ing its actions, said Potts. "There<lb/>
have been some letters in the<lb/>
(student) paper in favor of the<lb/>
policy. It's not that big deal on<lb/>
campus. No one's mad<lb/>
5<lb/>
A BEAUTIFUL PLACE<lb/>
?ALL NEW 2 BEDROOMS-<lb/>
UNIVERSITY<lb/>
APARTMENTS<lb/>
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/>
?Onsite laundry<lb/>
Contact J.T. or Tommy Williams<lb/>
756-7815 or 758-7436<lb/>
?AZALEA GARDENS-<lb/>
CLEAN AND QUIET one bedroom furnisheti<lb/>
apartments, energy efficient, free water and<lb/>
sewer, optional washers, dryers, cable TV.<lb/>
Couples or singles only. $215 a month. 6 month<lb/>
lease.<lb/>
MOBILE HOME RENTALS<lb/>
Couples or singles. Apartments and mobile<lb/>
homes in Azalea Gardens near Brook Valley<lb/>
Country Club.<lb/>
Contact J.T. or Tommy Williams<lb/>
756-7815<lb/>
; m o iiyki. tfU k'tfo lliW<lb/>
,m; rr?<lb/>
?J?ft11 <lb/>
FirrdOufWnirt<lb/>
Is All About<lb/>
Boost Alcohol Consciousness Concerning the<lb/>
Health of University Students<lb/>
WEDNESDAY, MARCH 1<lb/>
6 P.M.<lb/>
GENERAL CLASSROOM BUILDING<lb/>
Room 2018<lb/>
Organizational Meeting<lb/>
if you can't attend but want more information,<lb/>
Call 757-6793<lb/>
Office of Substance Abuse Prevention and Educaiton<lb/>
mii:<lb/>
ton<lb/>
Remember Your Orientation Experience?<lb/>
Join<lb/>
Preview<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/>
Become an<lb/>
Orientation Assistant<lb/>
and create a<lb/>
memorable experience<lb/>
for the<lb/>
New Freshmen.<lb/>
Pick up Application Packet:<lb/>
209 Whichard<lb/>
Deadline for completed Applications:<lb/>
March 3 at 4:00 p.m.<lb/>
<pb facs="00058128_0007"/><lb/>
THE EAST CAROLINIAN<lb/>
FEBRUARY 28. W<lb/>
Classifieds<lb/>
FOR RENT<lb/>
APARTMENT I OR RENT: Two blocks<lb/>
'rom campus. (One bedroom available<lb/>
until July). Fully furnished, walking dis-<lb/>
tance to campus and downtown, hard-<lb/>
wood floors, friendly neighbors. SI50<lb/>
month plus utilities 757 0412.<lb/>
EMALE ROOMMATE NEEDED: Non<lb/>
smoker to share 2 bedroom townhouse, 1<lb/>
1 2 baths. No deposit necessary Located<lb/>
in Williamsburg Manor Call imena be-<lb/>
tween 7 am5 p.m at 551 21 or after G<lb/>
p.m. &amp; during weekends at 756-7797.<lb/>
APARTMENT FOR RENT March 1st<lb/>
Georgetown Apartments Two bedroom,<lb/>
12 baths. Walking distance to campus<lb/>
f id downtown. Free cable. 830-1758<lb/>
l eave message<lb/>
TWO FEMALE ROOMMATES<lb/>
WANTED starting in May. Three bednn.<lb/>
. t at Eastbook SI 21.00 a month 13<lb/>
i tilities. New Carpet and New refigera-<lb/>
t -r. ECU Bus Sen .ice! Call now. 758-4924.<lb/>
bEVEULY MANOR APARTMENTS:<lb/>
Now leasing sp. cious 2 bedroom units<lb/>
with large living room and dining area<lb/>
New carpet, new wallpaper in kitchen<lb/>
j;id bath. Range and refrigerator pro-<lb/>
vided. Central heatair, coldhot water<lb/>
and basic cable TV. included in rent as<lb/>
low as $340.00 per month Call 746-SOvi<lb/>
evenings for appointment<lb/>
FOR RENT: 2 bedroom apartment in<lb/>
W lson Acres starting May 15-Aug 15.<lb/>
Option to take over lease for fall Call<lb/>
Marta at 752-6022.<lb/>
TOR SALE<lb/>
LSER PRINTER L'SERS HP and<lb/>
Apple laser printer oner cartridges can be<lb/>
reeded! Huge SS savings. Satisfaction<lb/>
guaranteed. For details call R ANDMONT<lb/>
at 1-800-332-3658.<lb/>
COUCH FOR SALE: Battan wood with<lb/>
pastel cushions. Good condition Price<lb/>
negotiable. Call 752 6443<lb/>
FOR SALS: 1979 Mazda. 4 speed, AC.<lb/>
81,0(X) nines. Asking $900.00. Call 752-<lb/>
65V<lb/>
FOR SALE: Ringgold Towers Runil 306<lb/>
fullv furnished. Takeover mortgage pay-<lb/>
ments Call 407-77S-8030 in the evenings.<lb/>
FOR SALE: Used sofa Average condi-<lb/>
tion. Call 752-6554.<lb/>
FOR SALE: Smith-Corona 2200 electric<lb/>
? - portable, cartridge ribbon and corrector<lb/>
type, typewriter with carrying case Like<lb/>
?f' new, used only two years. $195.00. Call<lb/>
756-9486 after 6 pm<lb/>
SKI KEYSTONE: 2 roundtrip tickets<lb/>
available from RDU to Denver, Co. De-<lb/>
part March 7th return March 10th, 1989<lb/>
Call loan at 756-9053 for details<lb/>
TOWNHOUSE FOR SALE: 24<lb/>
Wildwood Villas 3 bedrooms, 2 12<lb/>
baths. Great for college students. For more<lb/>
information call left Aldndge756 3500 or<lb/>
355-6700.<lb/>
LONG WEEKEND IN DC! 2 long trip air<lb/>
tickets Greenville to D.C Thurs March<lb/>
9 return Tues March 14 only SI7' each<lb/>
Call lim (703) 875 19Ht at woik or Debo<lb/>
rah (703) 979-3000or leave a message (301)<lb/>
341-1559 ?home<lb/>
FOR SAI F: Gs top table with 4 chairs<lb/>
$80.00, small table with 2 .hairs $50.00<lb/>
double bed with mattress and springs<lb/>
$75.00, green rediner $5000, new living<lb/>
r.v.ni suit, take over payments of S46 00<lb/>
month. Call 746-3513<lb/>
MOVING BACK TO NFW ERSE<lb/>
MUST SELL: All of my salt water fish<lb/>
andinvertabrales Call SMI U34 after 7:00<lb/>
p.m. or leave nitsage.<lb/>
SERVICES OFFERED<lb/>
PARTY: it you are having a party and<lb/>
need a D ! tor the best music available tor<lb/>
parties Dance, Top 40, &amp; Beach Call 355<lb/>
2781 and ask for Morgan<lb/>
WORD PROCESSING AND PHOTO-<lb/>
COPYING SFRVTCES: We otfer typing<lb/>
and photocopying services We also sell<lb/>
software and computer diskettes. 24<lb/>
hours in and out Guaranteed tvping on<lb/>
paper up to 20 hand written pages We<lb/>
repair computers and punters also ! ow-<lb/>
es! hourly rate in vn. SDF Professional<lb/>
Computer Services. 106 East 5th Street<lb/>
(beside Cubbies) Greenville, NC 752<lb/>
3694.<lb/>
NEED A PL: Hire the ELBO HI Call<lb/>
oarh and book for your loin ll or party.<lb/>
758-1700, ask for Dillon or leave a mes<lb/>
sage<lb/>
SOUND MIXTURES DJ SERVICE:<lb/>
Music tor al' occassJo.is March dates<lb/>
available call Bob at 72 49ir- Th' most<lb/>
musit variety with the best sound qualitv<lb/>
HI WANTED<lb/>
$10.000-S105,(XX)yr Now Hiring! 320<lb/>
Listings! (1) 805-687-6000 Ext. OJ-1166.<lb/>
BUODY'S AND BRODY'S FOR MEN:<lb/>
Are now accepting applications tor Cus-<lb/>
tomer Service Representatives and also<lb/>
Sales positions for the Spring semester.<lb/>
Sincere individuals with flexible srhed-<lb/>
ules should apply at: Brodv's, Carolina<lb/>
East Mall, M W, 2 4 p.m.<lb/>
HELP WANTED: Summer job, June-<lb/>
August, at Emerald Isle. Mechanically<lb/>
inclined individuals to operate jet ski<lb/>
rentals ("all 523 4798 in Kinston day or<lb/>
night<lb/>
NEW FNG1 AND BROTHER'SISTER<lb/>
CAMPS: (Mass) Mali kee Nac for Boys<lb/>
Danbee for Girls Counselor positions for<lb/>
Program Specialists: All team s; orts, es-<lb/>
pecially baseball, basketball, field hockey,<lb/>
s.? i a and vollev. I ill; 2 tennis openings.<lb/>
also archery, riflery and biking; other<lb/>
openings include performing Arts, Fine<lb/>
Arts, veailHHik, photcgTaphv, cooking,<lb/>
sewing, rollrsV.iting. rocketrv. ropes,<lb/>
camp craft; all waterfront activities<lb/>
(swimming, skiing, sailing, windsurfing,<lb/>
canoeingkavak) Inquire &amp; D Campir :j<lb/>
(Boys) 190 Linden Ave Glen Ridge, NJ<lb/>
07028; Action Camping (Girls) 263 Main<lb/>
Road Montville. N 07045. Phone (Bovs<lb/>
201 429 822, 'Girls) 201-316 6660<lb/>
A II EN I ION?HIRING! Government<lb/>
obs?your area Manv immediate open-<lb/>
ings without waiting list or test. S17,84(<lb/>
S69.485 Call 1-602 838 8885 Ext B 5285<lb/>
SOCCER CO ACTS NEEDED. Starting<lb/>
March 6th. Montiv -Thursday after 2:30<lb/>
p.m Pay star; at S00hour Call Pitt<lb/>
County Community Schools. 830 4240.<lb/>
NATIONAL MARKETING FIRM<lb/>
SEFKS: Ambitious, mature student to<lb/>
manage on campus promotions for top<lb/>
national companies this schiol year Flex-<lb/>
ible h. .ir- with earnings potential .o<lb/>
?2,5O0 Call Ltsanneor Rebecca at ! 800-<lb/>
592 2121<lb/>
FOREIGN STUDENTS: ob-Hunting<lb/>
Guide (Rev 1989). Send 519.95 tor the<lb/>
step bv-step guide IvvSoft International,<lb/>
PO Box 241090. Memphis, TN 38124.<lb/>
FEMALE RESIDENT COUNSELOR-<lb/>
Ltterested in those with human service<lb/>
background w ishing to gai valuable<lb/>
experience in the field No monetary<lb/>
compensation however room, utilities<lb/>
and phone provided Mary Smith REA1<lb/>
Crisis Center 758 1II 1 P<lb/>
OVERSFAS IOBS: Also Cruiseships.<lb/>
PERSONALS<lb/>
THE SNOWBALL FIGHT: Was great es-<lb/>
pecif'ly when thrown at room 321 Great<lb/>
TKE Formal. ?The Boys.<lb/>
IT'S COMING: TKE Ring Girl March 14,<lb/>
8 p.m at the Attic. For more info, call 757-<lb/>
3507.<lb/>
TO STAN THE MAN Congratulations<lb/>
on winning the Prestigeous No Morals<lb/>
Award. ?Explain that one. ?The Boys<lb/>
FE FE GOT NOT HAIR: Bnnkly got it<lb/>
broke, on Laney things got broke, but we<lb/>
all got stoked &amp; stroked ?"Rippin' once<lb/>
again TKE Formal 1989.<lb/>
CONGRATULATIONS: To the 1989 1FC<lb/>
Executive Board. President?Ray Mad-<lb/>
den, Executive Vice President?Clayton<lb/>
Williams, Administrative Vice Presi-<lb/>
dent?Tripp Roakes, Treasurer?Russell<lb/>
Lowe, Secretary? Cabell I awton<lb/>
THANKS: To everyone that has helped<lb/>
me to plan Greek Week. It's going to be the<lb/>
best one yet. ?Tripp<lb/>
CREEK WEEK IS COMING: Funky<lb/>
Nassau, Baby Buggy, Field Day, Mexican<lb/>
Stand Off, Tuf-of-War, Bed &amp; Tricycle<lb/>
Races, volleyball, raft race &amp; can man<lb/>
contest Apnl 9-16.<lb/>
GREEK WEEK: Is only 40 days a way-<lb/>
Get psyched. April 9-16.<lb/>
BELATED CONGRATS: To the new In<lb/>
terfraternity Council Exec, for 1989: Pres<lb/>
Ray Madden; Exec. VP Clayton Williams;<lb/>
Admin. VP Tripp Roakes; Treas. Russell<lb/>
Lowe; Sec. Cabell Lawton.<lb/>
FRATERNITY PRESIDENTS: Greek,<lb/>
Week Comm.?Wed. at 4 p.m "Presi-<lb/>
dents Meeting" at 5 p.m. (Substation).<lb/>
PIKA: Thanks again for another great big<lb/>
DISPLAY CLASSIFIED<lb/>
I HI PI KAPPS PRESEN1 I I TTI F SIS-<lb/>
TER RUSH: Monday and Tuesday, Feb-<lb/>
ruary 27th and 28th, H-11 ;m at the<lb/>
house it you die interested ta .is, we are<lb/>
interested in you! The Pi kappa Phi or<lb/>
gar.iation looks forward to seeing you<lb/>
there'<lb/>
WILLIAM WD IIMBO: 3 more days<lb/>
until Daytona! he amival Hotel will<lb/>
nevei forget us' Get ready to paaarty! -<lb/>
Nickster.<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/>
Ci!) for appointment Mon thru Sat. low<lb/>
Coal Termination to ?n an - ks of pregnancy<lb/>
1-800-433-2930<lb/>
thirst quencher. Looking forward to an-<lb/>
other social with you guys. ?Love, The<lb/>
Alpha Phi's.<lb/>
ANDI CALLOWAY: Congratulations'<lb/>
We know you are going to be an outstand-<lb/>
ing president. Good luck on your new<lb/>
office. ?Love, Alpha Phi.<lb/>
ALPHA PHI: We want to congratulate<lb/>
our new officers Good luck in the upcom-<lb/>
ing year. We love you &amp; support you all<lb/>
the way. ?Love, Your Sisters.<lb/>
PI KAPPS: Founder's Day has come and<lb/>
past. All the Pi Kapps had a blast First<lb/>
came the dinner, and then the ball Who<lb/>
was thr't girl roaming around the hall? The<lb/>
cordon bleu was simply divine And 18 J<lb/>
Proof started rocking at nine When ai<lb/>
was over and finished, when all was s.ud<lb/>
and done, Pi Kapps had rocked the<lb/>
Ramada and proved who was number<lb/>
one!<lb/>
CHI-O EXEC: Thanks for all your love<lb/>
and support. You're doing great! Love,<lb/>
Bitsy.<lb/>
PRINCE CHARMING: Thanks for mak<lb/>
ing my life so wonderful! Love, EJ.<lb/>
GREEKS: Wanna get banged?? ? 1 mean<lb/>
gonged ? It's time once again for the Sig<lb/>
Ep Gong Show, so polish up vour acts and<lb/>
stay tuned for more details.<lb/>
SIG EP TERRORIST: Z, you little menac-<lb/>
ing camel-rider, your actions will invoke<lb/>
the full WTath of the men from the Palace<lb/>
of Power. Front 1 louse ? Beware of repn<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<lb/>
AT 752-2865<lb/>
OUR RESUMES<lb/>
MAKE A<lb/>
DIFFERENCE<lb/>
. ? ? ? n "? "<lb/>
fast cents<lb/>
to FAST T!M?S<lb/>
ACCU ?<lb/>
E5COPY<lb/>
Tnl HfSUVl PtOPLl<lb/>
758-2400<lb/>
sals<lb/>
SIGMA PHI EPSILON: Congratulations<lb/>
on our fantastic Sweetheart Formal The<lb/>
weekend proved to be a blast as alwav s<lb/>
CLAY: Congratula.ions on Harvard' !<lb/>
knw von could do it Love ya, Susan<lb/>
KaPPA SIGMA: C ingratu'itions<lb/>
your victory at Win, Lose or Draw' Also -<lb/>
in response to your re-iueM to come to din<lb/>
ner at our house? Sine' You're all invited<lb/>
to come over for oar famous Spagctti<lb/>
Dinner on March 28. Love, Delta Zeta<lb/>
CONGRATULATIONS TO THE MY<lb/>
DEITA ZETA SISTERS: Darla Browr<lb/>
Rene'e Cundiff, Tracy Ford, Lon Gfl<lb/>
Kelli Green, Kathy Hornbv, Kellev Kane<lb/>
Suzanne Keen, Catherine Kbit, Heather<lb/>
Laird, Mary Ellen l.anham, Tamrm<lb/>
Pnesler, Melissa Pnida Nicole Smith<lb/>
Shelly Sotir, Kas Spiegland. MkhcJe Tat.<lb/>
Susan Weast, Kellv VVelh and Dav<lb/>
Wooten.<lb/>
KELLEY: Having you as mv hi' si- .<lb/>
really helped to make this year great<lb/>
You're the best' Love, Melinda<lb/>
SUZANNE KEEN: You've worked s.<lb/>
hard to be the best ? and you did it' I lo ?<lb/>
you! An<lb/>
DISPLAY CLASSIFIED<lb/>
HOUSE OF HATS<lb/>
for<lb/>
LADIES HATS AND<lb/>
ACCESSORIES<lb/>
(Latest Styles and<lb/>
Colors)<lb/>
403 Evans St.<lb/>
Greenville. NC 2783-1<lb/>
(Downtown Mail)758-3025<lb/>
ATTENTION! <lb/>
PANHELLENIC<lb/>
COUNCIL<lb/>
<lb/>
ANNOUNCES:<lb/>
FALL<lb/>
SORORITY<lb/>
RUSH :<lb/>
WILL BE HELD<lb/>
BEFORE<lb/>
CLASSES.<lb/>
Announcements<lb/>
CHFISTI AN FELLOWSHIP<lb/>
(Thristiar Fellowship will be held every<lb/>
Thurs at 6 p.m. in the Culture Ce iter.<lb/>
LQST2<lb/>
Something missing in vour life7 We've<lb/>
found it and we want to share it with you.<lb/>
Je.ikinr Art Auditorium EVERY Fri.<lb/>
night at 7:00<lb/>
CAMPUS CHALLENGE<lb/>
If you are challenged everyday with prob-<lb/>
lems that vou find hard to overcome, join<lb/>
us tor the uncompromised woid ot God<lb/>
Every Fri. night at 7:00 in the Jenkins Art<lb/>
Auditorium.<lb/>
TRAVEL COMMITTEF<lb/>
Hey you guys! Come join the fun on the<lb/>
Student Union Travel Committee's cruise<lb/>
to the BAHAMAS over Spring Break<lb/>
There will be dancing, swimming, relax-<lb/>
ing and tons of other things to do aboard<lb/>
ship. All transportation and "all you can<lb/>
eat" on the Carnival ship The ship will<lb/>
dock at Freeport and Nassau, so come on<lb/>
and shop until you drop in the world's<lb/>
biggest marketplace!<lb/>
CCF<lb/>
CCF would like to invite you to c ur bible<lb/>
study every Tuesday at 7 p.m. in Ra wl 130<lb/>
Bring your Bible and a friend as we study<lb/>
the book of Hebrews Call Jim at 752-7199<lb/>
if you need a ride or fui ther 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 pm 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 d?sses.<lb/>
Contact Lisa at Academic Counseling,<lb/>
Dept. of Athletics ? 757-6282 or 757-1677.<lb/>
ECU NAVIGATORS<lb/>
"night 730 the weekly get together of<lb/>
the Navigators, continues its strcik ot<lb/>
good Bible study eve y Thur 7:30 9 in<lb/>
Biologv 103. The non stop, no frills meet-<lb/>
ing is designed to help von develop a<lb/>
closer .valk with God In-flight refresh<lb/>
ments served. No ticket required; just<lb/>
reserve your time.<lb/>
ANIMAL RIGHTS<lb/>
ECU students for the Ethical Treatment of<lb/>
Animals (SETA) will hold its introductory<lb/>
mwtingonFebinGClOWOO.Alo<lb/>
minute video on primates used in imn.u<lb/>
nolegical studies will be shown All stu-<lb/>
dents desirous of a more equitable world<lb/>
for animals should attend.<lb/>
19S8 BUCCANEERS<lb/>
198S Buccaneers will be given away on a<lb/>
first come, first-serve basis starting Feb<lb/>
27 at 5 p m They wil' be given awav from<lb/>
the Buccaneer office or.ly. There's only a<lb/>
limited supplv and no more can be or<lb/>
dered. So come early to receive your copy.<lb/>
ATTNL ARISTJJD ENTS<lb/>
The Parents Da Weekend Committee<lb/>
needs a logo for 89. Any media or ap<lb/>
proach is accepted (except usage of the<lb/>
Pirate Mascot). Please turn in entries with<lb/>
3x5 card stating name, address &amp; phone<lb/>
 to 209 Whichard bv 5 p.m. on March 15.<lb/>
The winning entry will be awarded a $25<lb/>
cash prize Don't delay, enter toda For<lb/>
more info , contact Tonya Batiy (w)757-<lb/>
6611 ext. 210 or Ti) 830-8tS8<lb/>
EXPRESSIONS<lb/>
Expressions is now accepting poetry and<lb/>
short stories for publication m the April<lb/>
issue Articlescan be left at the office orthe<lb/>
Media Board secretary's office, located in<lb/>
the Publications Bldg. across from Joyner<lb/>
Library. The first issue for Spring semes-<lb/>
ter is expected to arrive in a few weeks.<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/>
PRESEASON SOFTBALL<lb/>
ft pre season softball tournament spon-<lb/>
sored bv CO Tankaid Co. (Miih i Lite)<lb/>
will hold its registration March 14 at 5:00<lb/>
pm in BIO 103 T-shirts, trophies and<lb/>
more will b awarded to participants<lb/>
Don't miss the big event!<lb/>
SWIM MliET<lb/>
Diown vour sorrows by signing up for<lb/>
this years intramural swim meet. This will<lb/>
be the onlv 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/>
look great'<lb/>
SOFTBALL<lb/>
Batter up! Intramural softball registration<lb/>
meeting will be held March 4 at 500p.m.<lb/>
in BIO 103 All men's and women's teams<lb/>
must send a representative.<lb/>
ACCOUNTINGOCJ ETY<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/>
FAMILY CHILD ASSOC.<lb/>
Family Child Assoc. will be having a<lb/>
meeting today at 6:00 p.m. in room 143,<lb/>
1 lome re. Bldg The guest speaker will be<lb/>
Nancy Scavo who is an Earlv Intervention<lb/>
Specialist with United Cerebal Palsy. All<lb/>
new members or friends are welcome.<lb/>
BCST HQNQR SOCIETY<lb/>
BCST I lonor Sic will meet this Wed. at<lb/>
5:30 in room 234 Old Joyner. Members<lb/>
will be given shooting assignments and<lb/>
deadlines for the show Please attend<lb/>
LIBS 1000<lb/>
2nd block classes begin Feb. 28th for T, Th.<lb/>
Begin March 1 for M, W.<lb/>
PHI BETA LAMBDA<lb/>
Jim Westmoreland from Career Planning<lb/>
St Placement at ECU will be speaking<lb/>
about career opportunities and advance-<lb/>
ment Feb 28 at .5:00 p.m in room 1013<lb/>
GCB Anyone who is interested may at-<lb/>
tend. All new members are welcome. PBL<lb/>
is the collegiate equivalent to FBLA.<lb/>
NOW MEETING<lb/>
The Greenville chapter of the National<lb/>
Org. for Women will hold its monthly<lb/>
meeting March 1 at 7 p.m. in room 305<lb/>
Joyner Library. The program will consist<lb/>
of videotapes and other presentations for<lb/>
Women's History Month. For more info<lb/>
call 756-1018.<lb/>
HELP FIGHT CANCER<lb/>
A 24-hour Run Against Cancer will be<lb/>
sponsored by Alpha Phi Omega, the co-ed<lb/>
National Fraternity, and the American<lb/>
Cancer Society on April 14th &amp; 15th at the<lb/>
ECU track. Contestants are not required<lb/>
to jog or walk the entire 24 hours, but<lb/>
instead will be taking rums with nine<lb/>
other team members for 1 2 hour periods.<lb/>
Find cut about entering a team or donat-<lb/>
ing moneymaterials. For more info call<lb/>
Rose Richards (752-2574) of the American<lb/>
Cancer Soc Bryan Haskins (756-9665) of<lb/>
Alpha Phi Omega or David Overton (830-<lb/>
6785) of Alpha Phi Omega.<lb/>
REGISTRATION FOR GC<lb/>
General College students should contact<lb/>
their advisers the week of March 20-24 to<lb/>
make arrangements for academic advis-<lb/>
ing for summer terms and fall semester,<lb/>
1989. Early registration will begin March<lb/>
27 and end March 31.<lb/>
CO-OP ED.<lb/>
Representatives of the Walt Disney World<lb/>
Co. will be on campus to recruit EC stu-<lb/>
dents for their College Program. A re-<lb/>
quired seminarpresentation will be con-<lb/>
ducted on March 15. Students from all ma-<lb/>
jors are invited to participate. Positions in<lb/>
guest relations, attractions, merchandis-<lb/>
ing, and food services, among others, are<lb/>
available. Contact the Office of Co op. Ed.<lb/>
in the GCB for details.<lb/>
BE A MARSHAL<lb/>
Any student interested in serving as a<lb/>
University Marshal for the 1989-90School<lb/>
Year may apply in room 214, Whichard<lb/>
Bldg. To be eligible a student must have a<lb/>
3 0 academic average. Deadline for appli-<lb/>
cations is March 14.<lb/>
LCU SKI CLUB<lb/>
ECU Ski Club will be holding its weekly<lb/>
meetings on Tuesday's at 9.30 p.m. in<lb/>
room 212 MSC. For info, call Tommy<lb/>
Lewis at 830-C137.<lb/>
FACULTY CLOSING<lb/>
Informal Recreation facilities will close on<lb/>
March 3 at 2.00 p.m. and remain closed<lb/>
through March 12. Regular hours will<lb/>
resume March 13. This includes all weight<lb/>
rooms, gymnasium and swimming pool<lb/>
areas.<lb/>
GRE<lb/>
PLEASE NOTE that the April 8 admini-<lb/>
stration of the Grduate Recoid Examina-<lb/>
tion will be the last time the General and<lb/>
Subjects examinations will be given until<lb/>
October. The General portion only will be<lb/>
give at the June 3 administration.<lb/>
BACCHUS<lb/>
BACCHUS (Boost Alcohol Consciousness<lb/>
Concerning the Health of University Stu-<lb/>
dents) is back! BACC11US is a peer group<lb/>
whos members are concerned with the<lb/>
promotion of responsible decisions about<lb/>
drinking. We will meet each Wed. at 6<lb/>
p.m. in 2018 GCB. Our 1st official meeting<lb/>
will be March 1st and the next meeting<lb/>
will be March i5. Call 757-6793 for more<lb/>
info.<lb/>
SUPPORT GROUP<lb/>
There will be a support group for adult<lb/>
children of alcoholics starting Feb. 28 at<lb/>
4:15 p.m. in rm 312 tCounseling Center<lb/>
Library, Wright Annex) Plans are to meet<lb/>
every Tues. at that time and location (ex-<lb/>
cept Spring Break) through April 17 For<lb/>
more info call David Susina 757-6973 or<lb/>
Rev. Dan Earnhardt 758-2030<lb/>
WOMEN'S STUDIES<lb/>
The new student org The Women's Stud-<lb/>
ies Alliance, will meet Feb 28 from 5 ?<lb/>
p.m in GCB 1027 All feminist students<lb/>
and faculty are welcome to attend For<lb/>
further info , call 757-6268<lb/>
PSE<lb/>
All families and friends of children with<lb/>
special .leeds and interested professienal-<lb/>
are invited to the annual meeting ot I'jr<lb/>
ents Supporting Parents (PSP) It will b.<lb/>
held March 2nd at 730 p m in room 110<lb/>
the Belk Bldg. Dr. Mike Sharpe of the<lb/>
Family Support Network is the featured<lb/>
speake and will be addressing the impor<lb/>
tance c parent support groups in N C<lb/>
Also to be introduced will be PSPs 1989<lb/>
90 new officers and the plans for proviu<lb/>
ing edu rational programs for parents ar. I<lb/>
professionals Refreshments will b<lb/>
served Free babysitting services will S<lb/>
offered during the meeting for those w h<lb/>
call Sandv Steele at 757-6921 or 355-311 ?<lb/>
by Feb. 28.<lb/>
PSICHI<lb/>
Psi Chi will have a short business meetin c<lb/>
onM.irch 1 at 4.00 in Psi Chi librarv (Rav.i<lb/>
302) All members are urged to attend<lb/>
MINORITY STUDENT OR-<lb/>
GANIZATION<lb/>
Sections for the office ot President Yi<lb/>
President, Trea urer and Secretary will be-<lb/>
held March 6 at 5 p.m Speight 129 Allpo<lb/>
tential candidates should plan to attend<lb/>
For mi re information regarding prop, r<lb/>
procedure for presentation, please contact<lb/>
Sheila Gardner at 758-3713<lb/>
INTER-VARSITY CHRISTIA?.<lb/>
EELLQWSHIi!<lb/>
New location is Biologv 103 Wed eve<lb/>
nings at 7 pm. Come out and make some<lb/>
new friends. New topics and new ideas lo<lb/>
be discussed. Habakkuk is coming in<lb/>
March.<lb/>
Read The East<lb/>
Carolinian. Every<lb/>
Tues. and Thurs.<lb/>
Read the Ea5t Carolinian<lb/>
CajJjU d&amp;<lb/>
<lb/>
<pb facs="00058128_0008"/><lb/>
N<lb/>
I<lb/>
THE EAST CAROLINIAN<lb/>
FEBRUARY 28.1999 7<lb/>
Ayatollah Khomeini wants to broaden ties<lb/>
with Soviet Union to battle 'devilish' West<lb/>
NICOSIA, Cyprus (AP) ?<lb/>
Ayatollah Ruhollah Khomeini told<lb/>
Soviet Foreign Minister Eduard<lb/>
Shevardnadze during an unusual<lb/>
QO-minute meeting that he wants<lb/>
strong ties with Moscow to help<lb/>
fight the "devilish" West.<lb/>
Also Sunday, Iranian legisla-<lb/>
tors put forward a bill calling for a<lb/>
vote on whether to break ties with<lb/>
Britain, theofficial Islamic Repub-<lb/>
lic News Agency reported. Last<lb/>
week, Britain pulled its diplomats<lb/>
out of Tehran to protest<lb/>
Khomeini's death decree for Brit-<lb/>
ish author Salman Rushdie.<lb/>
After the audience with<lb/>
Khomeini, Shevardnadze met<lb/>
Prime Minister Hussein Musavi<lb/>
and delivered an invitation for him<lb/>
to visit Moscow, according to<lb/>
1RNA. It said Shevardnadze did<lb/>
not ask Khomeini to withdraw his<lb/>
order for Moslem zealots to assas-<lb/>
sinate Rushdie, whose novel "The<lb/>
Satanic Verses" is considered blas-<lb/>
phemous by many Moslems.<lb/>
Britain reportedly had asked<lb/>
Shevardnadze to press Khomeini<lb/>
to give Rushdie a reprieve, but<lb/>
IRNA said, "There was no men-<lb/>
tion of the (Rushdie) affair in<lb/>
Shevardnadze, the highest rank-<lb/>
ing Soviet official to visit Iran since<lb/>
the 1979 Islamic revolution, met<lb/>
Khomeini two days after the Ira-<lb/>
nian spiritual leader declared that<lb/>
Iran does not need relations with<lb/>
the West.<lb/>
He has been widely con-<lb/>
demned in the West for issuing<lb/>
the death decree. Khomeini has in<lb/>
the past criticized Moscow for its<lb/>
officially atheist ideology, but<lb/>
Iranian officials have recently<lb/>
noted that the Soviet Union's 50<lb/>
million Moslems are being al-<lb/>
lowed greater religious freedoms<lb/>
under President Mikhail S. Gor-<lb/>
bachev.<lb/>
Iran's Cabinet declared Sun-<lb/>
day it is united behind Khomeini,<lb/>
Tehran Television reported. "Your<lb/>
childrenareunitedasasinglehand<lb/>
against the enemies of Islam it<lb/>
quoted Cabinet statement as say-<lb/>
ing in a dispatch monitored in Ni-<lb/>
cosia.<lb/>
The declaration appeared to<lb/>
be a signal that government lead-<lb/>
ers want it made clear that, though<lb/>
they may differ strongly on many<lb/>
policy mati  they are solidly<lb/>
behind Khomeini in the Rushdie<lb/>
a Moslem family in India, has been<lb/>
in hiding since Khomeini issued<lb/>
his execution order on Feb. 14.<lb/>
The English-language Tehran<lb/>
Times said Sunday that hostile<lb/>
relations with the West stemming<lb/>
from the Rushdie novel opened<lb/>
"all doors" to improving ties with<lb/>
Moscow. It said the two main irri-<lb/>
tants to better relations with<lb/>
Moscow - the Soviet supply of<lb/>
arms to Iran's enemy in the eight-<lb/>
year Iran-Iraq war and the Soviet<lb/>
military presence in Afghanistan -<lb/>
were now gone.<lb/>
IRNA said it was believed to<lb/>
be the first private meeting be-<lb/>
tween Iran's 88-vear-old revolu-<lb/>
tionary patriarch and a foreign<lb/>
minister. Tehran Television<lb/>
showed Khomeini, wearing a<lb/>
skullcap and robes with a blanket<lb/>
over his knees, talking o Shevard-<lb/>
nadze.<lb/>
IntramuraC-ecreationaC Services<lb/>
2nd Session Fitness Class Menu<lb/>
Guaranteed Calorie Free<lb/>
Aernutars:<lb/>
Ae,cs,LowImpact<lb/>
Toi?ng, Circuit<lb/>
Trai<lb/>
mirtg<lb/>
Supra Special<lb/>
SuPra Class<lb/>
$10 students<lb/>
$20 faculty,<lb/>
staff<lb/>
$15 students<lb/>
$25 faculty,<lb/>
staff<lb/>
Shevardnadze's speech affair. Rushdie, who wasbom into<lb/>
Applications from high school<lb/>
seniors to top colleges is down<lb/>
(CFS) ? The number of high<lb/>
school seniors applying to top<lb/>
colleges around the nation is down<lb/>
for the first time in years, most<lb/>
likely because of a swindling<lb/>
number of high school graduates<lb/>
and increasing college costs,<lb/>
admissions officers say.<lb/>
"Since this is happening to<lb/>
everyone, the best guess is that it's<lb/>
demographics said Michael<lb/>
Behnke, admissionsdirector of the<lb/>
Massachusetts Institute of Tech-<lb/>
nology, where applications are<lb/>
down 10 percent from a year ago.<lb/>
But some suspect that stu-<lb/>
dents and their families may be<lb/>
reacting to tuition increases that<lb/>
have consistently exceeded the<lb/>
nation's inflation rate throughout<lb/>
the 1960s. V?swWW? 5<lb/>
"I think there's a great possib-<lb/>
Htv that tuitions are a part of it<lb/>
said Linda Davis Taylor, admis-<lb/>
sions director of Amherst College,<lb/>
whre applications are off by 4<lb/>
percent from last year.<lb/>
"I question whether price is<lb/>
real issue argued David<lb/>
Merko witz of the American Coun-<lb/>
cil on Education. "It hasn't affected<lb/>
them before<lb/>
The number of high school<lb/>
seniors has dropped steadily from<lb/>
3 million in 1980 to 2.76 million in<lb/>
1988, and is expected to drop to<lb/>
2.44 million by 1992.<lb/>
An unexpected increase in the<lb/>
ranks of older students and higher<lb/>
percentages of high school stu-<lb/>
dents attending college helped<lb/>
offset an expected drop in college<lb/>
enrollment, however. To the sur-<lb/>
prise of many, college enrollments<lb/>
grew from 12.1 million in 1980 to<lb/>
12.5 million this year.<lb/>
Some college officials believe<lb/>
the drop in applications from next<lb/>
fall's freshman class is the first<lb/>
sign the long-expected decline in<lb/>
enrollment is about to begin.<lb/>
Harvard University spokes-<lb/>
man Peter Costa extimates a 5 to<lb/>
10 percent drop in applications,<lb/>
the first such decline in at least 20<lb/>
years. Brown University and other<lb/>
Ivy League schools report similar<lb/>
declines.<lb/>
Stanford University's fall<lb/>
applications have decreased 6<lb/>
percent, and the number of appli-<lb/>
cations sent to the University of<lb/>
California-Berkeley also has fallen.<lb/>
"I consider this a yellow light.<lb/>
We all kind of anticipated it said<lb/>
Bradley Quin, admissions direc-<lb/>
tor at Lafayette College in Penn-<lb/>
sylvania, where applications are<lb/>
down 5 percent. "I don't mean to<lb/>
imply that we're not concerned.<lb/>
This is a competitive business, and<lb/>
it's going to make it that much;<lb/>
harder to increase the quality of<lb/>
our classes<lb/>
Kay<lb/>
Continued from page 1<lb/>
ness are the cornerstones of suc-<lb/>
cess, stated Yow. She referred to a<lb/>
conversation with John Wooden,<lb/>
ex-head coach of UCLA, in which<lb/>
she queried, "Isn't it true if you<lb/>
want to be successful, you must be<lb/>
willingtopay the price?" To which<lb/>
he replied, "No. Kay, if you want<lb/>
to be successful you must 'be<lb/>
eager' to pay the price<lb/>
Yow continued, "Every team<lb/>
in the ACC wants to win the ACC<lb/>
tournament, but I want my team<lb/>
to have a burning desire to win the<lb/>
tournament<lb/>
"A lot of people don't like to<lb/>
be led, but if you can see leading<lb/>
as serving others ? then that is<lb/>
the key to success said Yow in<lb/>
herclosingremarks, tyingtogether<lb/>
the four ACES one needs to be-<lb/>
come a winner. "There is no T in<lb/>
the word 'team' or 'togetherness<lb/>
Teamwork takes sacrifices, suc-<lb/>
cess has a price<lb/>
R0TISSERIE CHICKEN<lb/>
' RIBS ? CRABS ? B ?'<lb/>
SALADS ? SANDWICHES<lb/>
DAILY LUNCH SPECIALS m specials<lb/>
$? CC INCLUDE<lb/>
ALL SPECIALS ??  g CHOICE OF<lb/>
n??JJvL<lb/>
12RrtisserieChic5-25 orcjspuds<lb/>
Rotisserie Chic Sand$425<lb/>
Adventure Through Different Countries<lb/>
With Our Selection Of 38 Beers 22 Wines<lb/>
 ASK ABOUT OUR BEER CLUBJ<lb/>
CI's Has Your Winter Getaway<lb/>
800 Sq. Ft. Inclosed Heated<lb/>
D1CK<lb/>
Call Us For Your<lb/>
To-Go Food<lb/>
355-3473<lb/>
MONTHURS. 11-10:30 103 ERONVILIE BLVD.<lb/>
FRI SAT 11-11 IN FRONT OF<lb/>
FRI5AT. 11-11 FVEREADY PLANT<lb/>
SUNDAY 1-10 THfe fcVttm"<lb/>
msv<lb/>
Try our daily drop-in specials at $1 students &amp; $2 faculty, staff.<lb/>
Howtoget<lb/>
tough college with<lb/>
money to spare:<lb/>
Z3B<lb/>
1. Buy a Macintosh.<lb/>
? fTry1<lb/>
2. Add a peripheral.<lb/>
? V I.H<lb/>
500s vOOi<lb/>
3. Get a nice, k check.<lb/>
Urn throw-h March ? when mihuv selected Macintosh, or Macintosh II computers, you'll et<lb/>
Ask tor details today where computers are sold on campus.<lb/>
Apple Pays Half<lb/>
E.C.U. Student Stores<lb/>
757-6731<lb/>
umirMiflimsamOmJtufisqfte AfpkRmlW mtmmfmmymmmmmtm pi ??-<lb/>
<pb facs="00058128_0009"/><lb/>
t<lb/>
THE EAST CAROLINIAN<lb/>
Features<lb/>
1EBRUARY 28, 1989 PAGE 8<lb/>
Jeff and Fresh Prince to play<lb/>
By DEANNA NEVGLOSKI<lb/>
Stiff Writer<lb/>
Dj jazzy Jeff &amp; The Fresh<lb/>
Prince, with special guest Rob<lb/>
Base, will perform Wednesday at<lb/>
the Goettage Memorial Field<lb/>
House on the Camp Lcjeune<lb/>
Marine Corps Base.<lb/>
The concert is in support of<lb/>
their latest LP, "He's the DJ, I'm<lb/>
The Rapper which spawned the<lb/>
hit single "Parents just Don't<lb/>
Understand<lb/>
jazzy Jeff, 23, and Fresh Prince,<lb/>
19, grew up in the neighboring<lb/>
Philadelphia towns of Southwest<lb/>
Philly and Winficld, respectively.<lb/>
Jazzy Jeff, born Jeff Towncs,<lb/>
started as a deejay before he de-<lb/>
cided to embark on a music ca-<lb/>
reer. "1 used to call mvself a bath-<lb/>
room deejay he recalls "because<lb/>
I would tag along to parties with<lb/>
older deejays and finally get my<lb/>
chance to go on when they went to<lb/>
the can<lb/>
Townes spent long hours in<lb/>
his basement teaching himself the<lb/>
techniques that distinguish his<lb/>
work today ? catching double<lb/>
beats, scratching two records at<lb/>
once and backspinning.<lb/>
He debuted his new skills at a<lb/>
party and instantly Townes was<lb/>
established as one of the top hip<lb/>
deejays in the city. But by January<lb/>
of 1986 he was bored. Then he met<lb/>
the Fresh Prince.<lb/>
The Fresh Prince, was born<lb/>
Will Smith, and wrote "poetry and<lb/>
little stories" from the time he was<lb/>
a kid. At 13 years old he started to<lb/>
rap, reasoning that "they weren't<lb/>
doing anything 1 couldn't do<lb/>
Smith kept up with the New<lb/>
York rap scene through purchased<lb/>
bootleg performance tapes of the<lb/>
Crash Crew and the Treacherous<lb/>
Three, respectively.<lb/>
The Fresh Prince met Jazzv<lb/>
Jeff at a neighborhood party and<lb/>
the two immediately clicked. By<lb/>
the end of the year, they released<lb/>
a single entitled "Gi rls Ain' t Noth-<lb/>
ing But Trouble following it with<lb/>
"Just One of Those Days" (the<lb/>
humorous ancestor of "Parents<lb/>
just Don't Understand").<lb/>
That summer they were in-<lb/>
vited to join the Def Jam Tour, also<lb/>
featuring LL Cool J Public En-<lb/>
emy and Whodini.<lb/>
Although their previous al-<lb/>
bum, Rock the House did fairly<lb/>
well, it wasn't until their Jive<lb/>
RCA Records double album "He's<lb/>
the Dj, I'm the Rapper that DJ<lb/>
Jazzy &amp; The Fresh Prince became<lb/>
household words. The LP's tirst<lb/>
single "Parents Just Don't Under-<lb/>
stand which is a comic tale of<lb/>
misadventure and the fear of<lb/>
shopping for clothes with one's<lb/>
mother, won the duo an award at<lb/>
the Grammys this past month.<lb/>
The second single "Nightmare<lb/>
On My Street was a vivid hip<lb/>
hop tribute to the scary "Night-<lb/>
mare on Elm Street" movie series.<lb/>
DJ Jazzy Jeff &amp; Fresh Prince<lb/>
will be touring extensively this<lb/>
year,but theduoshould havelittle<lb/>
trouble distinguishing themselves<lb/>
from other rap acts on the scene. "1<lb/>
don't understand groups who<lb/>
come on stage looking real mad<lb/>
says Fresh Prince "We just want to<lb/>
have fun<lb/>
Along for the tour ride with<lb/>
DJ Jazzy Jeff &amp; The Fresh Prince is<lb/>
Rob Base. Base has already scored<lb/>
big with hissingle "It Takes Two<lb/>
so the headliners are in good<lb/>
company.<lb/>
The concert i s being sponsored<lb/>
by Camp Lejeune's Special Serv-<lb/>
ices and will begin at 8 pm. Ad-<lb/>
vanced tickets will be on sale for<lb/>
$12 while the price increases to<lb/>
$16 at the door. For additional<lb/>
ticket information call 1-451-3535.<lb/>
The Fresh Prince and DJ Jazzy Jeff will perform Wednesday night<lb/>
in Jacksonville at the Goettage Memorial Fi Id House. Tickets<lb/>
are on sale now.<lb/>
High Water Band<lb/>
pays blues dues<lb/>
Karyn White leaves her back-up vocals for<lb/>
the spotlight and a Grammy nomination<lb/>
By LEE HIGHSMITH<lb/>
Stiff Writer<lb/>
The High Water Blues Band<lb/>
brought their show to the New<lb/>
Deli Saturday night. So I braved<lb/>
the slush and cold to go hear what<lb/>
the band calls "one of the most<lb/>
dynamic blues perf onnances that<lb/>
four white boys can offer<lb/>
High Water is a three-year-<lb/>
old band with four members.<lb/>
"The drummer is Tom Clark;<lb/>
we call him Dr. Tom. The-iead<lb/>
player is Fred Scott, we call him<lb/>
Rip. He named himself that, after<lb/>
Rip Van Winkle. It's a long story.<lb/>
The guitar player is Scott Scherr.<lb/>
I'm Rex Gass, the bass player<lb/>
Gass said.<lb/>
Their relationships go some-<lb/>
what farther back than the three<lb/>
years since High Water formed.<lb/>
Scott and Gass have worked to-<lb/>
gether for ten years.<lb/>
Gass has also worked in other<lb/>
bands with the other two mem-<lb/>
bers of High Water, Scherr and<lb/>
Clark. Gass and Clark are cur-<lb/>
rently membersof a top forrvcover<lb/>
band.<lb/>
For Saturday's performance,<lb/>
the audience got a special treat.<lb/>
The hand was joined by a friend,<lb/>
Wayne "The Pain" Pierce on har-<lb/>
monica.<lb/>
The background this band has<lb/>
See BLUES, page 9<lb/>
(AP) ? Karyn vVhite sang<lb/>
backgrounds, but never intended<lb/>
to settle for background singing.<lb/>
"I was in groups; I knew that<lb/>
would hep me write more songs<lb/>
and I wouldn't have to gc 100k for<lb/>
a band she says. "I knew I wanted<lb/>
to be a solo artist. I just basically<lb/>
did what I had to do until I could<lb/>
be on my own<lb/>
Now, at 23, she's in the fore-<lb/>
ground. Her debut LP, "Karvn<lb/>
White for which she co-wrote<lb/>
two songs, has given her two hit<lb/>
singles and a Grammy nomina-<lb/>
tion. She wrote "Tell ine Tomor-<lb/>
row" with Evan Rogers and Arnie<lb/>
Roman, and "Slow Down" with<lb/>
Steve Harvey and Daryle Sim-<lb/>
mons. The third single will be<lb/>
"Love Solid a duet jiyith Ba-<lb/>
byface.<lb/>
She says: "1 thought I'd love a<lb/>
record to be top-10 rhythm 'ri'<lb/>
blues and pop. I didn't aabout the<lb/>
Grammys. I guess the most excit-<lb/>
ing thing was being nominated.<lb/>
When you don't expect something,<lb/>
it's really great<lb/>
The Warner Brothers LP was<lb/>
No. 19 and climbing the Feb. 11<lb/>
Cashbox magazine pop chart.<lb/>
"The Way You Love Me a dance<lb/>
single, hit No. 5 on the pop chart<lb/>
Feb. 4, having already traveled<lb/>
the rhythm 'n' blues chart, and got<lb/>
White nominated for a Grammy<lb/>
for best female r and b vocal per-<lb/>
formance.<lb/>
"Superwoman a rhythm 'n'<lb/>
blues ballad, was No. 1 for three<lb/>
weeks on the r and b singles chart,<lb/>
beginning Jan. 21, and was climb-<lb/>
ing the pop chart, at No. 61, on<lb/>
Feb. 11.<lb/>
Eyen thoughshe's yojung.<lb/>
White has been.payiqg dues, rac-<lb/>
ing disappointments as well as<lb/>
triumphs.<lb/>
A year ago November she<lb/>
auditioned ? as a dancer ? for<lb/>
Mick Jagger's 1988 tour to Japan.<lb/>
'I came to New York. We went<lb/>
into a studio. He put on a Prince<lb/>
song. '1999 We just danced. I said<lb/>
to myself, 'When is this guv going<lb/>
to teii me to stop dancing? Docs he<lb/>
see what he needs to see?' I was<lb/>
getting tired. His endurance was<lb/>
up.<lb/>
"I didn't have to sing. He's<lb/>
heard my voice from 'Facts of<lb/>
Love He wanted a Tina Turner<lb/>
type, a wild performer. He said<lb/>
he'd let me know.<lb/>
"He auditioned everybody in<lb/>
the world for this gig. He didn't<lb/>
call me until July. I couldn't go<lb/>
because of my own album<lb/>
When she was in high school<lb/>
in Los Angeles, she was in a group<lb/>
calledLegacy.?rone girl and five<lb/>
guys she says, "they kicked me<lb/>
out. They said I didn't have a<lb/>
commercial sound Her favorite<lb/>
singers then were Gladys Knight,<lb/>
Diana Ross and Tina Turner.<lb/>
"I also auditioned for<lb/>
'Dreamgirls that kind of stuff. 1<lb/>
would always get down to the last<lb/>
three, but never got it. I went to<lb/>
op-cn calls. I was auditioning for a<lb/>
bunch of things but never getting<lb/>
anvthing.<lb/>
"My first official gig, the<lb/>
summer after I graduated high<lb/>
school, was going on our with<lb/>
O'Bryan. I auditioned for his<lb/>
manager, and him<lb/>
She was recommended to Jeff<lb/>
Lorber. "He was making a com-<lb/>
mercial rhythm 'n' blues-pop al-<lb/>
bum she says, "different for him.<lb/>
'Facts of Love' was the first single<lb/>
from it. It went to No. 26 on the<lb/>
pop charts. It said, 'Jeff Lorber<lb/>
Featuring Karyn White' on it<lb/>
White sang on three cuts ?<lb/>
one a duet with Michael Jeffries ?<lb/>
on fusion keyboaidist Lorber's<lb/>
1986 "Private Passion" album and<lb/>
toured with him three months. The<lb/>
"Facts of Love" hit proved very<lb/>
important for her.<lb/>
Boxleitner stars in a new NBC miniseries<lb/>
LOS ANGELES (AP) ?Bruce<lb/>
Boxleitner has another series in<lb/>
the works, but in the lull between<lb/>
jobs he's back in the saddle with<lb/>
no cameras turning.<lb/>
"I'm taking advantage of it to<lb/>
ride and hunt and play the ro-<lb/>
deos says Boxleitner, whose last<lb/>
series was "Scarecrow and Mrs.<lb/>
King" and whose next is a wild<lb/>
c?medy adventure called "The<lb/>
Road Raiders<lb/>
In the meantime, Boxleitner<lb/>
stars with Lindsay Wagner and<lb/>
Diahann Carroll in the two-part<lb/>
NBC miniseries "From the Dead<lb/>
of Night which will be televised<lb/>
Monday and Tuesday.<lb/>
During his time off he's going<lb/>
quail hunting in Georgia and will<lb/>
enter the cutting horse and team<lb/>
roping contest at the Ben Johnson<lb/>
Pro-Celebrity Rodeo in Phoenix,<lb/>
Ariz.<lb/>
At the presidential inaugura-<lb/>
tion Washington, Boxleitner was<lb/>
host of "A Salute To the First Lady"<lb/>
at the Kennedy Center and was a<lb/>
guest for dinner at the home of<lb/>
Vice President Dan Quayle.<lb/>
"I was up on stage in front of<lb/>
the National Symphony and I had<lb/>
to introduce the conductor, Msli-<lb/>
sla v Rostorpo vich he says. "I had<lb/>
to keep saying his name over and<lb/>
over again so I'd get it right<lb/>
Boxleitner, a Republican in an<lb/>
industry noted for its liberal activ-<lb/>
ism, says he found Washington to<lb/>
be an exciting place.<lb/>
"You don't have all the pho-<lb/>
ninees and tinsel you have here<lb/>
he bays, " and even when you do<lb/>
it's more important. In Washing-<lb/>
ton, the politicians are the starts.<lb/>
The Hollywood celebrities might<lb/>
get a tiny mention in the newspa-<lb/>
per, which is the way it should<lb/>
be<lb/>
"From the Dead of Night" is<lb/>
the first horror film for Boxleitner,<lb/>
who's more at home in the saddle.<lb/>
In his first scries, "How the Wes<lb/>
Was Won which starred James<lb/>
Arness, he played a fugitive forced<lb/>
to become a gunslinger.<lb/>
He co-starred with Kenny<lb/>
Rogers in thrje "Gambler" mov-<lb/>
ies as Billy Montana, a role he has<lb/>
described as "an airhead out<lb/>
West He later termed up again<lb/>
with Arness for a remake of "Red<lb/>
River<lb/>
He also starred briefly in the<lb/>
series "Bring 'Em Back Alive<lb/>
based loosely on animal trapper<lb/>
and adventurer Frank Buck, and<lb/>
most recently he spent four years<lb/>
co-starring with Kate Jackson in<lb/>
"Scarecrow and Mrs. King<lb/>
In "From the Dead of Night<lb/>
he says, Lindsay Wagner "carries<lb/>
the piece. I'm just there to help<lb/>
out. I'm her ex-boyfriend, and<lb/>
there's a triangle relationship be-<lb/>
tween Lindsay, Robin Thomas and<lb/>
myself. My character's always out<lb/>
the door when you need him. He's<lb/>
an anthropologist off to a dig.<lb/>
"But when strange things start<lb/>
happening to Lindsay, I'm theonly<lb/>
one who realizes something reall v<lb/>
is going on. People all around her<lb/>
are dying and then coming back<lb/>
as living dead. The producers<lb/>
don't want us to say zombies. It<lb/>
really isn't a zombie movie. It's a<lb/>
classic thriller<lb/>
Boxleitner recently completed<lb/>
the movie-pilot for a new series<lb/>
for CBS called "The Road Raid-<lb/>
ers It's a World War II comedy-<lb/>
adventure hecallsa "combination<lb/>
of 'One Hew Over the Cuckoo's<lb/>
Nest 'M-A-S-H 'The A-Team'<lb/>
and 'The Road Warriors<lb/>
"I feel like I'm more a part of<lb/>
this because I helped put it to-<lb/>
gether he says "I play a wonder-<lb/>
ful character called Charlie<lb/>
Rhodes. He's Scarecrow and Frank<lb/>
Buck rolled into one. When we<lb/>
first meet him he's running a sa-<lb/>
loon in Manila just before the<lb/>
Japanese invasion.<lb/>
"He's totally unpatriotic. He's<lb/>
out for himself. He's like<lb/>
Humphrey Bogart in 'Casablanca<lb/>
He's tough, rough-talking and<lb/>
always has a cigar stuck in his<lb/>
mouth. People will say I'm doing<lb/>
Don Johnson. I say I'mdoingClark<lb/>
Gable. Clark Gable is 'Boom<lb/>
Town<lb/>
Clyde Kusatsu, who was his<lb/>
right-hand man in "Bring 'Em<lb/>
Back Alive will be a regular in<lb/>
"The Road Raiders" as the villain<lb/>
and Rhodes' chief rival.<lb/>
'The 'Burbs' is a<lb/>
bad neighborhood<lb/>
ByJIMSHAMLIN<lb/>
Staff Writer<lb/>
What do a group of accom-<lb/>
plished actors, a talented director,<lb/>
and a support team of technicians<lb/>
do to have fun and still make<lb/>
money? They take a couple of<lb/>
months, several rolls of film, a<lb/>
mediocre budget, and an outra-<lb/>
geous script and create a film like<lb/>
"The 'Burbs<lb/>
Dana Olsen formerly wrote<lb/>
"It came form Hollywood" and<lb/>
"Going berserk A former staff<lb/>
writer for the comedy series<lb/>
"Laveme and Shirley Olsen's<lb/>
experience in the art of low com-<lb/>
edy shows in this script.<lb/>
Ray Peterson (Tom Hanks ?<lb/>
"Punchline") is spending his va-<lb/>
cation at home. Everything is quiet<lb/>
and relatively normal until two of<lb/>
his neighbors, Art Weingartner<lb/>
(Rick Duccomon ? "Die Hard")<lb/>
and Mark Rumsfieki (Bruce Dem<lb/>
? "1969"), call his attention to his<lb/>
next-door neighbors, the Klopeks.<lb/>
The only thing Ray knows is<lb/>
that they don't mow their lawn<lb/>
and are completely nocturnal. The<lb/>
eerie grinding noises and suspi-<lb/>
cious lights which emanate from<lb/>
their basement at night are noi-<lb/>
some, but Ray doesn't see this as<lb/>
being too abnormal.<lb/>
Later, when Ray sees them in<lb/>
their backyard digging long, deep<lb/>
pits, he begins to become a little<lb/>
more suspicious. He joins Art and<lb/>
Marc in spying on the Klopek<lb/>
house at night, and sees the hide-<lb/>
ous Hans Klopek (Courtney Gains<lb/>
? "Children of the Corn") in-<lb/>
sanely bashing a squidgy plastic<lb/>
bag into the garbage. The other<lb/>
members of the Klopek family,<lb/>
Uncle Ruben (Brother Theodore<lb/>
? 'The Hobbit") and Dr. Werner<lb/>
(Henry Gibson ? "Innerspace"),<lb/>
are equally creepy.<lb/>
Finally Ray's dog retrieves a<lb/>
human femur from the Klopeks'<lb/>
backyard. Believing that the bone<lb/>
belongs to a neighbor who is sus-<lb/>
piciously missing, Ray leads Art<lb/>
and Marc in a plot to infiltrate the<lb/>
Klopeks' house.<lb/>
Although all of the actors are<lb/>
experienced and have piayed<lb/>
sensational roles in the past, their<lb/>
See 'BURBS, page 9<lb/>
:<lb/>
Bruce D em, Tom Hanks and Rick Ducommun as Mark Rumsf ield,<lb/>
Ray Peterson and Art Weingartner respectively, star in the new<lb/>
movie "The 'Burbs<lb/>
The movie is the story of the trials and tribulations of an ordinary<lb/>
guy when some creepy neighbors move next-door, and people<lb/>
start disappearing.<lb/>
<lb/>
<pb facs="00058128_0010"/><lb/>
?<lb/>
Britny Fox hunts hits<lb/>
t,AF) "All our songs are<lb/>
positive savs "Dizzv" Dean<lb/>
Davidson, vocalist and rhythm<lb/>
guitarist of the band Britny Fox.<lb/>
"1 have a verv positive atti-<lb/>
tude. I've gone through a lot ot<lb/>
bad stuff and 1 came away from it<lb/>
w ith a positive approach toward<lb/>
life. 1 write about what 1 grew up<lb/>
with.<lb/>
"If you're willing to work for<lb/>
what) ou want, A merica gives you<lb/>
the opportunity to get it<lb/>
lead guitarist Michael Kelly<lb/>
Smithconcurs. If you listen, there<lb/>
is a message to our songs. But<lb/>
we're not a message band. To sum<lb/>
it up. Life is what you make it. If<lb/>
vou want something, you have to<lb/>
go out and work for it<lb/>
The band followed its own<lb/>
advice, and the results were terri-<lb/>
fic Britny Fox, out of Philadel-<lb/>
phia. i one of the hottest new<lb/>
heavy-metal bands. Its debut al-<lb/>
bum "Britny Fox debuted at No.<lb/>
45 on theCashbox magazine best-<lb/>
selling pop chart. On Feb. 4 it was<lb/>
still in the top 100 and, on the<lb/>
heavy-metal chart it was in the<lb/>
? p 20.<lb/>
Last fall, they toured with<lb/>
Poison.<lb/>
The band's unusual name was<lb/>
borrowed from a woman of three<lb/>
centuries ago. 'It's the name oi a<lb/>
girl who married into my family<lb/>
in the 17th century savs<lb/>
i idson. "1 looked at the name<lb/>
long ago on our family tree and<lb/>
though it would be a great name<lb/>
for a band. There's an electricity<lb/>
about the name, right from the<lb/>
-tart.<lb/>
That helped me to keep going<lb/>
and stick with it<lb/>
Two years ago, Davidson<lb/>
joined with Smith, a former<lb/>
member of Cinderella, bassist Billy<lb/>
( hi Ids and d ru mmer Tony Destra<lb/>
The tour worked at odd jobs,<lb/>
including painting houses, in<lb/>
order to subsidize the dream of<lb/>
being a working band, says<lb/>
Davidson, with a laugh, "I'd be<lb/>
slapping the paint on those houses<lb/>
and thinking, 'Yeah. Someday this<lb/>
is going to be me living here<lb/>
Meanwhile Bntnv Fox played th<lb/>
-t Coast club circuit eventualh<lb/>
igriihg with Columbia Records<lb/>
Just as everything seemed to<lb/>
be working, Destra was killed in a<lb/>
car accident.<lb/>
"I couldn't believe it says<lb/>
Davidson. "It took us about six<lb/>
months to recover. At that point,<lb/>
we had two choices: to give up or<lb/>
to continue. We decided if we gave<lb/>
up it would belike throwingaway<lb/>
everything Tony had worked for.<lb/>
So we decided to continue<lb/>
Smith adds, "What's sad is<lb/>
that he isn't here to see that wedid<lb/>
succeed<lb/>
"Yeah, but I believe he<lb/>
knows says Davidson. "I think<lb/>
he had a lot to do with our getting<lb/>
our present drummer, Johnny Dee.<lb/>
He's so much like Tony- He even<lb/>
has the same sense of humor<lb/>
The band entered the record-<lb/>
ing studio with determination,<lb/>
cutting songs written by<lb/>
Davidson.<lb/>
He savs: "I'm writing about<lb/>
everyday positve things. I write<lb/>
all the time, dav and night, about<lb/>
anything that catches my eye ?<lb/>
hooks, something that sounds like<lb/>
a song title. I've worked six years<lb/>
toward this album. Some of the<lb/>
songs are that old, and others I<lb/>
wrote just a year ago. We already<lb/>
have songs for our next record<lb/>
The band included a remake<lb/>
of a 1973 Slade Song, "Gudbuy T<lb/>
Jane<lb/>
"We plan to do a remake on<lb/>
every record. If we can't do the<lb/>
song justice, we won't do it. We're<lb/>
lucky in that these are bands we<lb/>
grew up listening to, so they fit<lb/>
our musical style Davidson says.<lb/>
Blues Band is<lb/>
a tight show<lb/>
Continued from page 8<lb/>
together is obvious on stage. They<lb/>
play with an ease and familiarity<lb/>
that increases the quality of their<lb/>
performance. Each member of the<lb/>
band has a distinct contribution to<lb/>
the whole sound, and that sound<lb/>
is sweet.<lb/>
Scott's vocals are earthy and<lb/>
mellow. He doesn't try to overdo<lb/>
the jam-rhythm on the guitar, as<lb/>
do so many other bands. Rather,<lb/>
he plays a passionate guitar with<lb/>
lots of smooth, funky riffs.<lb/>
His backup Scherr enhances<lb/>
the overall performance. Gass<lb/>
better way to portray the charac- played a strong bass and Clark set<lb/>
tors, all of whom are intentionally a good beat throughout.<lb/>
k,Burbs' has bad<lb/>
acting, good sfx<lb/>
Continued from page 8<lb/>
acting in this film is hideously<lb/>
overdone. Of course, there is no<lb/>
stereotypical.<lb/>
"The 'Burbs" is one of those<lb/>
comedies which is not meant to be<lb/>
taken seriously, although it's not<lb/>
as stupid as, for example, "Police<lb/>
Academy Still, it bears all the<lb/>
hallmarks of an idiotically silly<lb/>
film: the special effects are over-<lb/>
done, the cinematography is<lb/>
laughable, and the music is car-<lb/>
tooney.<lb/>
Don't expect to see the High<lb/>
Water Blues Band and just sit<lb/>
around with your beer. Everything<lb/>
they play is dancing music,<lb/>
whether it's you and your girl-<lb/>
friend or just a crowd of friends.<lb/>
They play a mixture of tunes,<lb/>
in the tradition of Chuck Berry,<lb/>
Muddy Waters, Howlin' Wolf and<lb/>
other blues greats. They even did<lb/>
alittlebitofElvis.Bytheendofthe<lb/>
As a member of the stupid night, I was worn out and craving<lb/>
comedy genre, "The 'Burbs" is donuts and water.<lb/>
excellent. For those who enjoy this The High Water Blues Band is<lb/>
sort of film, it's well worth seeing, an excellent band. If you missed<lb/>
For others who would ratherlaugh them Saturday night, don't lose<lb/>
with a film than at it, it's still a hope. The New Deli is reschedul-<lb/>
good movie for a rainy Saturday ing them. If you have the chance,<lb/>
afternoon. don't miss'em.<lb/>
RACK ROOM $H0?$<lb/>
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Exit, March 3-4 to find top-notch gradu-<lb/>
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There's more we'd like to tell you, more we<lb/>
could show you. Come to our JOB FAIR<lb/>
and discover how you can join one of<lb/>
America's foremost centers for biomedical<lb/>
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If you are unable to attend, please send<lb/>
your resume and transcripts to:<lb/>
Program Resources, Inc.<lb/>
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<pb facs="00058128_0011"/><lb/>
<lb/>
THE EAST CAROLINIAN<lb/>
Haw'is down Pirates<lb/>
East Carolina loses final game<lb/>
Sports<lb/>
FEBRUARY 28, 1989 page 10<lb/>
By KRISTEN HALBERG<lb/>
Sports Editor<lb/>
The Blizzard of '89 would put<lb/>
the freeze on the town of Green-<lb/>
ville for a couple of days, and<lb/>
postpone ECU'S final home game<lb/>
and final game of the season<lb/>
against UNC-Wilmington until 4<lb/>
p.m. Sunday. But, like the snow<lb/>
the weather dealt out to Green-<lb/>
ville residents, the Pirates were<lb/>
also frozen while shooting as the<lb/>
Scahawks of Wilmington pre-<lb/>
vailed over East Carolina 60-55.<lb/>
The loss for the Pirates moved<lb/>
Wilmington ahead in the rivalry<lb/>
between the two schools. They<lb/>
were previously tied at 15 in the<lb/>
series but the win for the<lb/>
Seahawks put them up 16 games<lb/>
to 15. The Pirates have not beaten<lb/>
the Hawks since Feb. 23, 1985<lb/>
when the two schools met in<lb/>
Minges Coliseum.<lb/>
ECU did not simplv give up.<lb/>
After a sluggish first half caught<lb/>
theriratesbehindintheballgame<lb/>
by 11 points at 22-33, East Caro-<lb/>
lina would go on a seven point<lb/>
scoring drive midway through the<lb/>
second half that would put them<lb/>
to within one towards regaining<lb/>
the load the Scahawks held all<lb/>
afternoon.<lb/>
"We weren't really alert in<lb/>
the first half ECU head coach<lb/>
MikeSteelesaid. 'That's how they<lb/>
got the 11 point lead<lb/>
ECU began to come alive af-<lb/>
ter a 15 foot jumper by Kenny<lb/>
Murphy with 3:45 into the second<lb/>
half forced a time out by the<lb/>
Hawks as the score closed to 38-<lb/>
49. But the time out would not<lb/>
slow the Pirates as they spent the<lb/>
next 11 minutes trying to close the<lb/>
Wilmington lead. The once quiet<lb/>
Jans in Minges Coliseum began to<lb/>
turn up the volume and after<lb/>
Robbie Carter fouled both Reed<lb/>
Lose and Gus Hill for the Pirates,<lb/>
the Ha wk lead decreased to within<lb/>
eight at 41-49.<lb/>
After UNC-W earned one<lb/>
point back on a foul to make the<lb/>
score 41-50, the Pirates would go<lb/>
on a seven point scoring stint<lb/>
which would bring their lead to<lb/>
within one, 51 -52, with 3:41 left to<lb/>
play.<lb/>
But, the shots just wouldn't<lb/>
fall for the Pirates. After ha ing a<lb/>
33 percent field goal percentage<lb/>
in the first half, the Cagers contin-<lb/>
ued to struggle in the second half<lb/>
only managing a 40 percent aver-<lb/>
age. "We had a chance to take the<lb/>
lead Steele said. "We just<lb/>
couldn't get the jump shot to fall<lb/>
After a series of missed jump-<lb/>
ers and missed free throw shots,<lb/>
the Pirates could not steal the lead<lb/>
from Wilmington. With 2:22 left<lb/>
to play in the game, the taste of<lb/>
victory would begin to slip away<lb/>
for the Pirates.<lb/>
Steele said the key to the game<lb/>
was the fact that East Carolina<lb/>
was 2-12 at the three-point pe-<lb/>
rimeter. "We just couldn't make<lb/>
any perimeter shots he said.<lb/>
Steele also explained that the<lb/>
team needed to give the ball to<lb/>
forward Blue Edwards more of-<lb/>
ten.<lb/>
UNC-W coach Robert<lb/>
McPherson commended the Pi-<lb/>
rates on the ball bame and said<lb/>
that his team was successful on<lb/>
trying to shut down Edwards.<lb/>
"ECU played exceptionally well<lb/>
McPherson said. "We did a good<lb/>
job on not letting Blue get on a<lb/>
roll<lb/>
Edwards was the high scorer<lb/>
and only player to score in double<lb/>
figures for the Pirates as he racked<lb/>
up 26 of ECU's 55 points for his<lb/>
team. He also had eight rebounds<lb/>
and no turnovers in the ball game.<lb/>
Stanley Love worked well off<lb/>
the boards as he grabbed seven<lb/>
rebounds for the Pirates and tal-<lb/>
lied five points.<lb/>
Kenny Murphy gave East<lb/>
Carolina an additional eight<lb/>
points and had five rebounds.<lb/>
UNC-W's Larry Houzer was<lb/>
the high-scorer for the Seahawks.<lb/>
He wrapped up 21 points and<lb/>
had nine rebounds in the game.<lb/>
Antonio Howard was the<lb/>
only other player from Wilming-<lb/>
ton to score in double figures as<lb/>
he had 19 points for the game. He<lb/>
also grabbed three rebounds for<lb/>
the Hawks.<lb/>
After ECU's only successful<lb/>
jump shot from three-point range,<lb/>
Edwards broke the ECU record in<lb/>
the second half for most points<lb/>
scored in a single season. He fin-<lb/>
ished out his career with Fast<lb/>
Carolina with 711 points surpass-<lb/>
ing Oliver Mack's 699 points in<lb/>
tne 1977-78 season.<lb/>
Edwards is also in the top 10<lb/>
in the ECU record books for most<lb/>
points scored in his career with<lb/>
1,115. He moved up to eighth in<lb/>
most assists in the season with 86.<lb/>
Edwards surpassed Curt<lb/>
-Vanderhorst'sl 983-84 record for-<lb/>
most steals on the season with 44.<lb/>
Vanderhorst had 43 steals.<lb/>
Rumors have also been float-<lb/>
ing that Edwards, one of the top<lb/>
basketball players in the Colonial<lb/>
Athletic Association, might have<lb/>
a chance at being CA A player of<lb/>
the year. Edwards however, isn't<lb/>
concerned with an individual<lb/>
award as such. "If 1 had a chance<lb/>
between the conference champi-<lb/>
onship and the player of the year,<lb/>
1 would take the conference cham-<lb/>
pionship Edwards said.<lb/>
Edwards reflected on his sea-<lb/>
son at East Carolina and said this<lb/>
season has "made my career a lot<lb/>
better. He Steele wanted me to<lb/>
be an overall leader Edwards<lb/>
explained, "and I think I have<lb/>
done that<lb/>
East Carolina travels to<lb/>
Hampton, Va. Saturday for the<lb/>
Colonial Athletic Association<lb/>
tour, tament. They are sixth seeded<lb/>
in the tournament and face Ameri-<lb/>
can University in the first round<lb/>
of competition.<lb/>
Pirates score 104 points<lb/>
Ladies pluck Hawks<lb/>
By CAROLYN JUSTICE<lb/>
Sports Writer<lb/>
East Carolina's Lady Pirates put<lb/>
on an offensive show Saturday<lb/>
night as they beat UNC-Wilming-<lb/>
ton 104-57 at Wilmington's Trask<lb/>
Coliseum.<lb/>
ECU's starters combined for 59<lb/>
points, while the bench poured in<lb/>
45 points as every Lady Pirate<lb/>
made a contribution to the ECU<lb/>
effort.<lb/>
It was the ninth time that ECU<lb/>
women's basketball team scored<lb/>
more than 100 points in a game.<lb/>
The last time was in 1982-83 as<lb/>
ECU defeated Western Kentuckv<lb/>
109-54.<lb/>
"We played gTeat said ECU<lb/>
head coach Pat Pierson. "It was a<lb/>
super team effort<lb/>
The win, the third consecutive<lb/>
for the Lady Pirates, boosted<lb/>
ECU's record to 14-10 overall and<lb/>
7-5 in the Colonial Athletic Asso-<lb/>
ciation play. The Lady Pirates<lb/>
swept the season series with the<lb/>
Lady Seahawks, as they defeated<lb/>
them earlier in the year at Minges.<lb/>
Three other Lady Pirates also<lb/>
scored in double figures, Irish<lb/>
Hamilton, Rose Miller and Toina<lb/>
Coley each tossed in 10 points.<lb/>
ECU combined to shoot 63 per-<lb/>
cent from the floor, one o( their<lb/>
best performances all year. "We<lb/>
just couldn't miss said Pierson,<lb/>
whose team hit 44 of 70 shots from<lb/>
the floor and 16 of 30 from the line.<lb/>
"We didn't seem to be slack at all<lb/>
and I was really proud of how<lb/>
well our bench performed and<lb/>
made such a gre.it contribution<lb/>
With a 47-32 lead at halftime,<lb/>
the second half was where ECU<lb/>
really poured it on, scoring 57<lb/>
points. In addition to shooting 63<lb/>
percent, while Wilmington shot<lb/>
only 31 percent, ECU out re-<lb/>
bounded the Lady Seahawks 50-<lb/>
39.<lb/>
Wilmington, who fell to 13-12<lb/>
and 3-9 in theAA, had only two<lb/>
An intense senior forward Blue Edwards leaps up and over two<lb/>
UNC-Wilmington players to lightly tap the ball in the basket<lb/>
(Photo by Mark Barber).<lb/>
Lady Gamecocks use<lb/>
inside game to win<lb/>
players in double figures as Gina<lb/>
Bennett and Rosalyn Flood each<lb/>
scored 10.<lb/>
ECU is now assured of a win-<lb/>
ning season, with their improve-<lb/>
ment over last year's 8-20 finish.<lb/>
Regular play in the CAA is fin-<lb/>
Grctta Savage, lead the ECU ished until the CAA tournament,<lb/>
scoringwith 17 points, while Sarah March 4-11, at Williamsburg<lb/>
Gray and Chris O'Connor each The Lady Pirates will finish out<lb/>
added 15. O'Connor was perfect their regular season at home on<lb/>
from the free throw line, shooting Monday against South Carolina<lb/>
5 of five, while Gray lead all re- and Saturdav, March 4 against<lb/>
bounders with 13. Appalachian State.<lb/>
GREENVILLE, N.C. ? Pat<lb/>
Picrson's East Carolina women's<lb/>
basketball squad ventured into the<lb/>
land of the giants Monday night -<lb/>
in more ways than one.<lb/>
The Lady Pirates fell to South<lb/>
Carolina's fourteenth-ranked<lb/>
Lady Gamecocks 84-59 in Minges<lb/>
Coliseum with much of that influ-<lb/>
enced by USC's front line of Beth<lb/>
Hunt and Shonna Banner.<lb/>
also had a lot to do with their<lb/>
shooting percentage of 60.0. Hunt<lb/>
waslOof 12fromth? .1.or, Banner<lb/>
was nine of 11 and for ? ard Martha<lb/>
Parker was four of six from the<lb/>
floor<lb/>
It was not a runaway from the<lb/>
beginning, however. East Caro-<lb/>
lina cameout and played the Lady<lb/>
Gamecocks tough. ECU had a 10-<lb/>
9 lead after eight minutes and it<lb/>
looked as if South Carolina would<lb/>
un-<lb/>
Hunt, a 6'1" sophomore,<lb/>
scored23pointsandgrabbedeight ose e,r SeCond straiSht Same-<lb/>
rebounds while Banner, a 6'3" But memories of their loss at Vir-<lb/>
junior, had 22 points and eight 8in!a I,och Saturday woke up the<lb/>
boards. That was the key for the d? Gamecocks. They bounced<lb/>
back and took an 11-10 lead using<lb/>
a tenacious man-to-man defense.<lb/>
Gretta Savage then put ECU<lb/>
ahead for the final time, 12-11,<lb/>
with 11:14 left in the first half on a<lb/>
10-foot jumper. Hunt then went to<lb/>
work for USC She hit a layup and<lb/>
then a seven footer, which she<lb/>
converted to three points on a free<lb/>
throw. USC was up 16-12 and<lb/>
never looked back.<lb/>
The Lady Gamecock lead<lb/>
exploded to 40-24 at halftime and<lb/>
Lady Gamecocks as they<lb/>
proved to 20-6 on the season.<lb/>
"We were able to go insiue<lb/>
really well tonight South Caro-<lb/>
lina head coach Nancy Wilson<lb/>
said. "Beth and Schonna did an<lb/>
excellent job<lb/>
East Carolina's front-line<lb/>
didn't go unnoticed either. Sarah<lb/>
Gray had 14 points and a game<lb/>
high nine rebounds while Gretta<lb/>
Savage also had 14 points. But the<lb/>
duo of Hunt and Banner was just<lb/>
too much for the Lady Pirates. South Carolina advanced that lead<lb/>
"We got beat by a real good quickly in the third quarter,<lb/>
team tonight ECU head coach See LADY PIRATES, page 12<lb/>
Pat Pierson said. "They really<lb/>
impressed me. They have a lot of ?- ?-? i t <lb/>
good athletes and have size and Ruggers prevail over bad weather<lb/>
quickness" " ww<lb/>
ECU forward Sandra Grace takes a jump shot from the top of<lb/>
the paint to give the Lady Pirates two more points (Photo by<lb/>
Angela Pridgen, ECU Phofolab).<lb/>
The play of USC's front-line<lb/>
ECU Rugby defeats Tarheels<lb/>
East Carolina Pirate Baseball has been striking out on foul weather, not on foul balls. The matchup<lb/>
on the deserted Harrington Field against George Washington was cancalled Saturday due to<lb/>
inclimate weather conditions (Photo by Gretchen Journigan, ECU Photolab).<lb/>
By STEVE ALLEN<lb/>
Sports Writer<lb/>
The East Carolina Rugby<lb/>
team used quickness, excellent<lb/>
defense and a lot of enthusiasm<lb/>
Saturday toovercomelotsof snow<lb/>
and defeat UNC-Chapel Hill, 20-<lb/>
3.<lb/>
The freezing weather didn't<lb/>
stop the Pirates in the first half as<lb/>
they jumped on the Heels right<lb/>
away. Showing no mercy, they<lb/>
got one score from Bob Tobin and<lb/>
Thomas Almon in the first five<lb/>
minutes, and another score from<lb/>
Doug Schrade later in the first<lb/>
halftotakeal4-101eadathalftime.<lb/>
The second half was quite dif-<lb/>
ferent, as the weather began to<lb/>
hamper the Pirates. "Everyone's<lb/>
hands were cold team captain<lb/>
Bob Tobin said. "The ball was<lb/>
slick, and it was hard to hold on<lb/>
to. After that, everything fell<lb/>
apart<lb/>
The Pirates didn't show any<lb/>
signs of falling apart. In fact, they<lb/>
played with more intensity.<lb/>
Team member Bob Eason felt<lb/>
the key to the second half was<lb/>
penalties. He said, "Penalties<lb/>
started slowing the game down.<lb/>
There were a lot of penalities in a<lb/>
row, and that slowed the game<lb/>
down a lot<lb/>
Eason himself had a score<lb/>
called back in the first half when<lb/>
the ball was called out of bounds,<lb/>
but the referee didn't notice the<lb/>
line judge's flag.<lb/>
Schrade; his second score of the<lb/>
game.<lb/>
East Carolina has a young<lb/>
rugby squad this year, but Bob<lb/>
Tobin said that didn't matter in<lb/>
this game. Tobin said East Caro-<lb/>
lina played well even as a voung<lb/>
team. He said, "We had an ad-<lb/>
vantage in this game because we<lb/>
were more experienced than<lb/>
UNC. We still have some things<lb/>
to work on, but this is onlv our<lb/>
first game<lb/>
Eason said under the circum-<lb/>
stances, the team plaved well.<lb/>
"Playing under those weather<lb/>
conditions, we executed real<lb/>
good he said. "We dominated<lb/>
for the first ten minutes, and then<lb/>
The only score for the Pirates Chapel Hill started coming on,<lb/>
in the second half came from Doug but we didn't let them catch up<lb/>
THE COLONIAL STANDINGS<lb/>
CONFERENCE<lb/>
W-L Pet.<lb/>
Richmond 13-1 .929<lb/>
George Mason 10-4 .714<lb/>
American 9-5 .643<lb/>
UNC-Wilmington 9-5 .643<lb/>
James Madison 6-8 .429<lb/>
East Carolina 6-8 .429<lb/>
William &amp; Mary 2-12 .143<lb/>
OVERALL<lb/>
g-L Ptt.<lb/>
19-8 .704<lb/>
16-10 .615<lb/>
17-9 .654<lb/>
14-13 .519<lb/>
15-13 .535<lb/>
14-13 .519<lb/>
6-21 .222<lb/>
Jones, new Cowboy owner, fires Landry<lb/>
after 29 years of head coaching at Dallas<lb/>
IRVING, Texas, (AP) ? Jerry<lb/>
Jones spent his first full day as<lb/>
owner of the Dallas Cowboys<lb/>
trying to live up to his pledge he<lb/>
would involve himself fully in<lb/>
the team's operations.<lb/>
Jones quickly set up his per-<lb/>
sonal office Sunday at the NFL<lb/>
team's headquarters at Valley<lb/>
Ranch, 25 miles northwest of Dal-<lb/>
las. He fielded calls from the<lb/>
media, chatted enthusiastically<lb/>
with players who wandered<lb/>
through and set about learning<lb/>
what he could about his new<lb/>
acquisition. Members of his staff<lb/>
scurried about learning the ropes<lb/>
in the vast complex.<lb/>
Attorneys also were meeting<lb/>
to iron out the final paperwork<lb/>
before the sale is submitted to the<lb/>
NFL office for approval.<lb/>
Jones' bid is subject to ap-<lb/>
proval from 21 of the 28 NFL<lb/>
owners.<lb/>
While Jones' family was being<lb/>
given a VIP tour of the facility,<lb/>
fired coach Tom Landry was in<lb/>
his office, emptying 29 years of<lb/>
his life into cardboard boxes.<lb/>
After two daysof speculation<lb/>
that H.R. "Bum" Bright was sell-<lb/>
ing the team to Jones and that<lb/>
Jones would bring in University<lb/>
of Miami's Jimmy Johnson as<lb/>
coach of the Cowboys, the 64-<lb/>
year-old Landry got the official<lb/>
word late Saturday afternoon. The<lb/>
Cowboys announced the sale at a<lb/>
news conference Saturday night.<lb/>
The sale price was an estimated<lb/>
$140 million.<lb/>
Throughout Friday and Sat-<lb/>
urday, Landry was ur ivailable<lb/>
for comment. He said Sunday he<lb/>
did not answer his telephone for<lb/>
two days because "I just didn't<lb/>
feel like talking<lb/>
Jones wasn't clear Saturday<lb/>
night on whether Landry would<lb/>
continue to be associated with the<lb/>
See LANDRY, page 12<lb/>
V<lb/>
<pb facs="00058128_0012"/><lb/>
THE EAST CAROLINIAN<lb/>
FEBRUARY 28.1989 11<lb/>
Tyson prevails as Bruno takes beating<lb/>
 - . . ? t r i " T??-?<lb/>
LAS VEGAS (AT)<lb/>
process of intimidation<lb/>
- The<lb/>
comes<lb/>
easy for Mike Tyson, both inside<lb/>
the ring and out.<lb/>
After pounding Britain's<lb/>
Frank Bruno into submission in<lb/>
the fifth round of a rusty but still<lb/>
devastating performance, the 22-<lb/>
 ear-old heavyweight champion<lb/>
scoffed at any pretenders to his<lb/>
crown.<lb/>
"How dare they challenge me,<lb/>
liese boxers with their primitive<lb/>
boxing-skills sniffed Tyson.<lb/>
"They're as good as dead<lb/>
Bruno dared to challenge Sat-<lb/>
urday night and escaped alive and<lb/>
upright, although he paid for it by<lb/>
taking a severe beating in the fi-<lb/>
nal seconds.<lb/>
In the process, though, he<lb/>
found a few chinks in the armor<lb/>
of the man thyy'call Iron Mike.<lb/>
Eight months out of the ring<lb/>
and a 40-pound weight loss took<lb/>
,i toll on the young champion,<lb/>
who. was wild and overanxious<lb/>
after sensing quick victory when<lb/>
he knocked Bruno down only 14<lb/>
seconds into the fight.<lb/>
"I made mistakes Tyson<lb/>
admitted. "I had a long layoff<lb/>
and 1 had the big weight loss, if<lb/>
you want excuses<lb/>
That Tyson was offering ex-<lb/>
cuses for a result most fighters<lb/>
would have been ecstatic with,<lb/>
may be a measure of the great-<lb/>
ness expected from the unde-<lb/>
fea ted a nd undispu ted champion.<lb/>
This is, after all, a fighter who<lb/>
dispatch the British challenger in<lb/>
even less time.<lb/>
"I was a little excited and I<lb/>
wanted to get the fight over with<lb/>
Tyson said of his wild headhunt-<lb/>
ing tactics. "I was just too anxious<lb/>
to take him out<lb/>
Tyson's anxiety almost<lb/>
proved disastrous when Bruno<lb/>
landed a huge left hook late in the<lb/>
first round that sent the cham-<lb/>
pion momentarily sideways. The<lb/>
punch, Tyson said later, was the<lb/>
hardest he had ever taken in a<lb/>
fight.<lb/>
"I fely my legs twitch he<lb/>
said.<lb/>
But Bruno, a 10-1 underdog,<lb/>
could not follow up on the punch<lb/>
needed only 91 seconds to stop an ancj Tyson again moved to the at<lb/>
undefeated Michael Spinksin his iacy rv the second round, the<lb/>
last fight. Most expected he would fjgnt had settled into a pattern of<lb/>
Bruno holding Tyson behind the<lb/>
neck and the champion breaking<lb/>
free on occasion to launch wild<lb/>
punches.<lb/>
The end was never too far<lb/>
from hand, however, and when<lb/>
Tyson landed a left hook to the<lb/>
body midway through the fifth<lb/>
round, Bruno was his. Tyson fol-<lb/>
lowed with a barrage of head<lb/>
punches and referee Richard<lb/>
Steele stopped the fight at 255 of<lb/>
the fifth round just as Bruno's<lb/>
trainer. George Lawless, was on<lb/>
the ring apron preparing to throw<lb/>
in the towel.<lb/>
"From the third round on, I<lb/>
knew I could break him Tyson<lb/>
said.<lb/>
"I knew it was only a matter<lb/>
of time<lb/>
Unlike his previous fights,<lb/>
when trainer Kevin Rooney<lb/>
would call punch combinations<lb/>
from the corner, Tyson seemed to<lb/>
be on his own in this one.<lb/>
Tyson fired Rooney after the<lb/>
Spinks fight because of comments<lb/>
Rooney made about his ex-wife,<lb/>
actress Robin Givens, and the<lb/>
champion had an inexperienced<lb/>
Aaron Snowell and longtime<lb/>
friend Jay Bright in the corner.<lb/>
Both appeared somewhat in<lb/>
awe of Tyson and offered little<lb/>
ring advice.<lb/>
"They said just what Kevin<lb/>
would have said, to work to the<lb/>
body Tyson said. "I'm just too<lb/>
stubborn to listen<lb/>
Rooney was in New York<lb/>
working with some amateur fight<lb/>
ers and didn't see the bout. Still,<lb/>
he criticized the direction given<lb/>
from the corner.<lb/>
"If Kevin Rooney was in there,<lb/>
itdoesn't go five rounds Rooney<lb/>
said.<lb/>
With Bruno safely out of the<lb/>
way, Tyson and his adviser, pro-<lb/>
moter Don King, talked of keep-<lb/>
ing the champion busy with a<lb/>
series of fights over the next year.<lb/>
Not expected to coach again<lb/>
Landry not bitter about being<lb/>
fired<lb/>
IRVING, Texas (AP) ? Tom<lb/>
Landry was relaxed, somehow as<lb/>
he cleaned out his desk.<lb/>
If he was bitter over being<lb/>
fired after 29 years as the Cow-<lb/>
boys' head coach he never showed<lb/>
it. The onl v emotion he displayed<lb/>
Sunday was a smile.<lb/>
He looked a little tired, like<lb/>
he had lost some sleep in the hectic<lb/>
last 48 hours.<lb/>
But he also looked like he was<lb/>
glad it's all over.<lb/>
In Landry's first interview<lb/>
since he was replaced by new<lb/>
owner Jerry Jones, he told The<lb/>
Associated Press he will proba-<lb/>
blv not coach again.<lb/>
"It would be hard, not being<lb/>
in the Cowboys' blue he said.<lb/>
Landry, 64, walked out of his<lb/>
office for the final time on Sun-<lb/>
da v, saying he wouldn't be<lb/>
around anymore.<lb/>
It left open the question of<lb/>
whether he wou Id get the $800,000<lb/>
remaining on his contract for this<lb/>
year.<lb/>
it wouldn't be fair to keep<lb/>
me around, hanging over every-<lb/>
bodv's shoulder he said.<lb/>
And even though he was the<lb/>
only coach the Cowboys had in<lb/>
their 29 years, Landry said,<lb/>
"People will forget me pretty<lb/>
quick<lb/>
Landry was fired after Ar-<lb/>
kansas oilman Jerry Jones bought<lb/>
the team.<lb/>
Jones and Tex Schramm, the<lb/>
headquarters in Valley Ranch, 25<lb/>
miles northwest of Dallas, where<lb/>
he was cleaning out his desk.<lb/>
Landry said he knew his ca-<lb/>
reer was finished when Jones was<lb/>
announced as the new owner.<lb/>
"No one had to tell me, I<lb/>
would have had to be pretty stu-<lb/>
pid not know when they got on<lb/>
the airplane to come see me<lb/>
Landry said.<lb/>
Though it was an emotional<lb/>
experience, Landry said: "I'm not<lb/>
upset over what happened. I've<lb/>
jonesana lex aenranun, mu -? , . .<lb/>
? , . ? , j i never been one to get that upset,<lb/>
Cowboys' preadent and genera ?J , a$ P<lb/>
manager, flew to Austin to tell ? J haw<lb/>
mdry he was being replaced by ?? , <lb/>
Miami Hurricanes head coach ?.u<lb/>
 , , get upset over it.<lb/>
J,mmy Johnson. ? g . id it . ht have<lb/>
Johnson was Jones roommate ?g had stepped down<lb/>
on Arkansas national champion- nuiM1Ml u?wK?foHan<lb/>
. irw i three years ago, but that he telt an<lb/>
shipteamn 1964. obligation to bring Dallas back to<lb/>
1 he AP interview took place &amp; g Jhc Cow.<lb/>
inLandrv s office at the Cowboys ownwrcj <lb/>
boys went 3-13 last year, the sec-<lb/>
ond worst season in their history.<lb/>
"I probably should have got-<lb/>
ten out, but I really enjoyed the<lb/>
challenge of bringing a team to<lb/>
that game. In fact, I probably en-<lb/>
joy the challenge of it more than<lb/>
the actual game he said.<lb/>
"I knew I was taking a chance,<lb/>
but sometimes it's not what you<lb/>
know as much as in this case, who<lb/>
you knew. And I didn't know<lb/>
Jerry Jones<lb/>
Landry said in a way he feels<lb/>
sorry for Schramm.<lb/>
"Tex has really showed a lot<lb/>
of emotion through this whole<lb/>
ordeal, and I guess that's under-<lb/>
standable when you've been<lb/>
around someone as long as we've<lb/>
been around each other. But Tex<lb/>
will probably have a harder time<lb/>
than I will, because it looks like<lb/>
he's going to have some hobbles<lb/>
(restrictions) out on him<lb/>
Terrapin allegations to focus<lb/>
on one student, not program<lb/>
ECU<lb/>
LIVE<lb/>
REMOTES<lb/>
? 23,6 7 p.m. y e<lb/>
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WASHINGTON (AP)<lb/>
Maryland's athletic director says<lb/>
an investigation into the univer-<lb/>
sity's alleged violation of NCAA<lb/>
rules will center on a former stu-<lb/>
dent, not the entire basketball<lb/>
program, according to a published<lb/>
report.<lb/>
The Washington Post re-<lb/>
ported today that Athletic Direc-<lb/>
tor Lew Perkins says the univer-<lb/>
sity's investigation into whether<lb/>
former Terrapins guard Rudy<lb/>
Archer received transportation<lb/>
from home to the university and<lb/>
to Prime George's Community<lb/>
College will only center on Archer.<lb/>
"It is a routine practice at an<lb/>
institution with potential NCAA<lb/>
violations to review all the facts<lb/>
and try to gather as much infor-<lb/>
mation we can the university's<lb/>
chief legal counsel Dennis Blumer<lb/>
told the newspaper. "We will<lb/>
follow the NCAA's lead and then<lb/>
make a confidential report to<lb/>
them<lb/>
Perkins could not say how<lb/>
long the in vestigation would take.<lb/>
On Monday, Maryland noti-<lb/>
fied the NCAA that "several<lb/>
members" of the basketball staff<lb/>
gave transportation to the 6-foot-<lb/>
1 Archer, who played two seasons<lb/>
at Allegany Community College<lb/>
before playing last season for<lb/>
Maryland.<lb/>
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<pb facs="00058128_0013"/><lb/>
12<lb/>
Tl IE EAST CAROLINIAN<lb/>
FEBRUARY 28, 1989<lb/>
Boggs' former lover sues<lb/>
WINTER HAVEN, Fla. (AP)<lb/>
? Even before practice, some of<lb/>
the players were talking about<lb/>
the storv. Then there wasa closed-<lb/>
door meeting where Wade Boggs<lb/>
apologized again. And then the<lb/>
Red Sox tried to go on with busi-<lb/>
ness as usual.<lb/>
But the topic of the day at<lb/>
Chain OLakes Park was anything<lb/>
but usual. On Wednesday, news<lb/>
organizations received copies of<lb/>
the first installment of a Penthouse<lb/>
magazine article based on the al-<lb/>
legations' of Boggs' former lover,<lb/>
Margo Adams.<lb/>
Adams details her four-year<lb/>
affair with Boggs, the alleged sex-<lb/>
ual likes and dislikes of Boston<lb/>
players and accuses Boggs of mak-<lb/>
ing racist remarks. Adams, suing<lb/>
Boggs for $12 million, is guaran-<lb/>
teed at least $100,000 from Pent-<lb/>
house for the story, with another<lb/>
$400,000 in bonus possibilities<lb/>
depending on sales.<lb/>
Boggs talked to reporters af-<lb/>
ter a three-hour workout, but did<lb/>
not answer questions. He said he<lb/>
had not seen the article and "to<lb/>
tell the truth I don't really know if<lb/>
1 want to read it<lb/>
"I've spoken with everybody<lb/>
that's involved and everything is<lb/>
fine the five-time American<lb/>
League batting champion said.<lb/>
"1 don't think it will have an<lb/>
effect on the team Boston man-<lb/>
ager Joe Morgan said. "You can<lb/>
tell the guys were not shook up. 11<lb/>
fine Gorman said. "He<lb/>
apologized and denied the state-<lb/>
ment<lb/>
attributed to him, saying he<lb/>
has the greatest respect for me.<lb/>
The general feeling in the club-<lb/>
house was 'Let's put this behind<lb/>
us, let's go out and play ball I<lb/>
haven't read the article, but you've<lb/>
got to remember she's the one<lb/>
saying things, not Boggs. He and<lb/>
1 get along very well<lb/>
In the storv, Adams said<lb/>
was not very disruptive today and Boggs made a racist remark abou t<lb/>
I hope it continues that way teammateimRice, wascxtremely<lb/>
"We're behind him and right jealousof New York Yankees first<lb/>
now it's his problem Morgan baseman Don Mattingly, and felt<lb/>
said. Red Sox pitcher Roger Clemens<lb/>
"If it affects the team, then it's acted like "Mr. Perfect<lb/>
my problem Adams also said Boggs be-<lb/>
Red Sox general manager Lou Hevcd lose Canseco of the<lb/>
Gorman, called a "bastard" by Oakland Athletics used steroids<lb/>
Boggs in the article, accepted an anci thought Hall of Famer Ted<lb/>
apology. Williams "was a guy that thinks<lb/>
"Wade went around to each he knows everything about hit-<lb/>
individual and everything ap- ting and doesn't<lb/>
peared<lb/>
Wood's Gamecock coaching start<lb/>
up in air, assistants want to stay<lb/>
COLUMBIA, S.C. (AP) ?<lb/>
South Carolina'sassistant coaches<lb/>
say they'd like to stay, but whether<lb/>
they'll get to or not rests in the<lb/>
hands of new Gamecock coach<lb/>
Sparky Woods.<lb/>
"1 like it here South Caro-<lb/>
lina assistant coach Tom McMa-l<lb/>
hon sud. And not only myself,<lb/>
but mv fa mil v. I hope I get a chance<lb/>
to stay<lb/>
Woods said at a news confer-<lb/>
ence Tuesday where he was in-<lb/>
troduced as the new head coach<lb/>
that he hopes to have his staff in<lb/>
place by the time South Carolina<lb/>
begins spring drills March 13.<lb/>
"We have great coaches on<lb/>
our staff (at Appalachian State),<lb/>
and I believe at least the bulk of<lb/>
them would come with me<lb/>
.Woods said.<lb/>
But I think Appalachian<lb/>
State would at least consider one<lb/>
or two of them for the head coach-<lb/>
ing position there<lb/>
Two of those coaches, assis-<lb/>
Lady Pirates<lb/>
pre ail<lb/>
Conanued from page 10<lb/>
"I think it will be a learning<lb/>
experience for us Pierson said.<lb/>
They are an outstanding team<lb/>
They have so many good players.<lb/>
Hunt reallv had the moves tonight<lb/>
and Banner was solid under-<lb/>
neath<lb/>
South Carolina'slead reached<lb/>
27, 61-34, with 12:36 left in the<lb/>
game. ECU whittled away at the<lb/>
lead and brought it to within 19,<lb/>
63-44 on Pam Williams' 18 footer.<lb/>
However, using their pressure<lb/>
defense, L'SC got the lead back up<lb/>
to 2U ind coasted ?hp rest of the<lb/>
way.<lb/>
Chris O'Connor had 10 points<lb/>
for the Lady Pirates and Irish<lb/>
Hamilton contributed six assists.<lb/>
Martha Parker, a pre-season<lb/>
All-America selection, also had 11<lb/>
points and three rebounds for<lb/>
South Carolina. Karen Middleton<lb/>
also added 10 points for the Lady<lb/>
Gamecocks.<lb/>
East Carolina finishes up their<lb/>
1988-89 regular season with a<lb/>
homecontest against Appalachian<lb/>
State on Saturday while South<lb/>
Carolina hosts DePaul in their<lb/>
?egular season finale on Wednes-<lb/>
day night.<lb/>
Landry fired<lb/>
by owner<lb/>
Continued from page 10<lb/>
club in some capacity. But Lan-<lb/>
dry said Sunday he is leaving the<lb/>
organization "because it wouldn't<lb/>
be fair to keep me around hang-<lb/>
ing over everybody's shoulder<lb/>
In his first interview since<lb/>
being sacked by Jones, Landry<lb/>
told The Associated Press he will<lb/>
never coach again.<lb/>
"I wouldn't think I would<lb/>
coach again because it would just<lb/>
be hard not being in the Cow-<lb/>
boys' blue he said. "People will<lb/>
forget me pretty quick<lb/>
He said he would address the<lb/>
Cowboys players at their mini-<lb/>
camp today.<lb/>
"It won't be an easy thing to<lb/>
do Landry said.<lb/>
Landry took over the Cow-<lb/>
boys when they were a ragged<lb/>
expansion team in 1960 and led<lb/>
them to the Super Bowl five times,<lb/>
winning two of them.<lb/>
tant head coach David Bibee and<lb/>
offensive coordinator Art Wilk-<lb/>
ms, have indicated they will inter-<lb/>
view for the Appalachian State<lb/>
job.<lb/>
Most oi the Gamecock assis-<lb/>
tants said they would wait to see<lb/>
what happens. But one who didn't<lb/>
wait is one of the newest mem-<lb/>
bers of the staff, Jacob Burney,<lb/>
who came to South Carolina in<lb/>
January from Mississippi State.<lb/>
Shealso graphically describes<lb/>
the sex lives of Boggs and several<lb/>
teammates she does not identify.<lb/>
She details incidents of three-<lb/>
somes involving unidentified<lb/>
Boston players and instances<lb/>
during spring training where<lb/>
players would have sex with girl-<lb/>
friends "down the hall from their<lb/>
wives or at a hotel down the<lb/>
street<lb/>
Boggs said he was not con-<lb/>
cerned about fan reaction.<lb/>
Bridgets<lb/>
finals<lb/>
Meredith Bridgers was the sole<lb/>
finalist for the ECU swim and dive<lb/>
team in the Independent Nation-<lb/>
als held over the weekend.<lb/>
Bridgers placed second in the<lb/>
100-yardbreaststrokeevent when<lb/>
she swam a 1:05.96.<lb/>
The swim meet, held at the Uni-<lb/>
versity of South Carolina in Co-<lb/>
lumbia, SO, saw the home team<lb/>
for the men come out with the<lb/>
victory. The Gamecocks won the<lb/>
meet while East Carolina, who<lb/>
scored 117 points, placed ninth<lb/>
out of ten teams.<lb/>
For the women, the Hurricanes<lb/>
oi Miami took the crown. The<lb/>
Pirates placed tenth out of 11 teams<lb/>
participating.<lb/>
AWMALjOFAMfAL<lb/>
Tar Landing Seafood<lb/>
Student Special<lb/>
6 oz. Sirloin with Shrimp<lb/>
fFried, Boiled, or Broiled)<lb/>
?jrived with French Fries or Baled Potato.<lb/>
Cole Slaw and Hushpuppies.<lb/>
2 Dinners ONLY $9.99<lb/>
105 Airport Road Present this Ad when paying<lb/>
758-0327 -Dine in ONLY-<lb/>
Banquet Facilities Available ?<lb/>
r<lb/>
Summer School<lb/>
and the<lb/>
Coast Discover<lb/>
UNCW.<lb/>
For more information write or call for<lb/>
1989 catalog:<lb/>
Summer School Director<lb/>
UNC Wilmington<lb/>
601 South College Road<lb/>
Wilmington, N.C. 28403-3297<lb/>
(919) 395-3540<lb/>
UI wasn't rubbing<lb/>
it in-1 just wanted<lb/>
Eddie to know<lb/>
the score of<lb/>
last night's game<lb/>
Go ahead and gloat. You can<lb/>
nib it in all the way to Chicago<lb/>
with KRS3 Long Distance Service.<lb/>
Besides, your best friend Eddie<lb/>
was the one who said your team<lb/>
could never win three straight.<lb/>
So give him a call. It costs a<lb/>
lot less than you think to let him<lb/>
know who's headed for the Playoffs.<lb/>
Reach out and touch someone ?<lb/>
If youd like to know more about<lb/>
AT&amp;T products and sen ices, like<lb/>
International Calling and the AT&amp;T<lb/>
Cud, call us at 1800 222 0300<lb/>
AT&amp;T<lb/>
The right choice.<lb/>
<pb facs="00058128_0014"/><lb/>
I<lb/>
f<lb/>
12<lb/>
THE EAST CAROLINIAN<lb/>
FEBRUARY 28,1989<lb/>
Boggs' former lover sues<lb/>
WINTER HAVEN, Fla. (AP) ter a three-hour workout, but did<lb/>
? Even before practice, some of not answer questions. He said he<lb/>
the players were talking about had not seen the article and "to<lb/>
the story. Then there wasa closed- tell the truth I don't really know if<lb/>
door meeting where Wade Boggs I want to read it"<lb/>
apologized again. And then the<lb/>
Red Sox tried to go on with busi-<lb/>
ness as usual.<lb/>
But the topic of the day at<lb/>
Chain Q Lakes Park was anything<lb/>
but usual. On Wednesday, news<lb/>
fine Gorman said. "He<lb/>
apologized and denied the state-<lb/>
ment<lb/>
attributed to him, saying he<lb/>
has the greatest respect for me.<lb/>
fve spoken with everybody The general feeling in the club-<lb/>
that's involved and everything is house was Tet's put this behind<lb/>
us, let's go out and play ball I<lb/>
haven't read the article, butyou've<lb/>
got to remember she's the one<lb/>
saying things, not Boggs. He and<lb/>
fine the five-time American<lb/>
League batting champion said.<lb/>
"I don't think it will have an<lb/>
effect on the team Boston man-<lb/>
organizations received copies of ager Joe Morgan said. "You can I get along very well<lb/>
the first installment of a Penthouse telltheguyswerenotshookup.lt m the story, Adams said<lb/>
magazine article based on the al- wasnot very disruptive today and Boggsmadea racist remark about<lb/>
legations' of Boggs' former lover, 1 hope it continues that way teammate Jim Rice, was extremely<lb/>
Margo Adams. "We're behind him and right jealousof New York Yankees first<lb/>
Adams details her four-year now it's his problem Morgan baseman Don Mattingly, and felt<lb/>
Red Sox pitcher Roger Clemens<lb/>
acted like "Mr. Perfect<lb/>
Adams also said Boggs be-<lb/>
lieved Jose Canseco of the<lb/>
Oakland Athletics used steroids<lb/>
said.<lb/>
affair with Boggs, the alleged sex<lb/>
ual likes and dislikes of Boston "If it affects the team, then it's<lb/>
players and accuses Boggs of mak- my problem<lb/>
ing racist remarks. Adams, suing Red Sox general manager Lou<lb/>
Boggs for $12 million, is guaran- Gorman, called a "bastard" by<lb/>
teed at least $100,000 from Pent- Boggs in the article, accepted an and thought Hall of Famer Ted<lb/>
house for the story, with another apology. Williams "was a guy that thinks<lb/>
$400,000 in bonus possibilities "Wade went around to each he knows everything about hit-<lb/>
depending on sales, individual and everything ap- ting and doesn't<lb/>
Boggs talked to reporters af- peared m ff<lb/>
Wood's Gamecock coaching stair<lb/>
up in air, assistants want to stay<lb/>
COLUMBIA S C (AP) ? tant head coach David Bibee and tants said they would wait to see<lb/>
SouthCarolina'sassistantcoaches offensive coordinator Art Wilk- whathappens.Butonewhodidn't<lb/>
savthev'd like to stay, but whether ins, have indicated they will inter- wait is one of the newest mem-<lb/>
thev'lfget to or not rests in the view for the Appalachian State bers of the staff, Jacob Bumey,<lb/>
hands of new Gamecock coach job. who came to South Carolina in<lb/>
Sparky Woods. Most of the Gamecock assis- January from Mississippi State.<lb/>
"1 like it here South Caro-I<lb/>
lina assistant coach Tom McMa-<lb/>
hon said. "And not only myself,<lb/>
but my family. I hope I get a chance I<lb/>
to stay<lb/>
YVoods said at a news confer-<lb/>
ence Tuesday where he was in-<lb/>
troduced as the new head coach<lb/>
that he hopes to have his staff in<lb/>
place by the time South Carolina<lb/>
begins spring drills March 13.<lb/>
"We have great coaches on<lb/>
our staff (at Appalachian State),<lb/>
and I believe at least the bulk of<lb/>
them would come with me<lb/>
.Woods said.<lb/>
"But I think Appalachian<lb/>
State would at least consider one<lb/>
or two of them for the head coach-<lb/>
ing position there<lb/>
Two of those coaches, assis-<lb/>
Shealso graphically describes<lb/>
the sex lives of Boggs and several<lb/>
teammates she does not identify.<lb/>
She details incidents of three-<lb/>
somes involving unidentified<lb/>
Boston players and instances<lb/>
during spring training where<lb/>
players would have sex with girl-<lb/>
friends "down the hall from their<lb/>
wives or at a hotel down the<lb/>
street<lb/>
Boggs said he was not con-<lb/>
cerned about fan reaction.<lb/>
Bridgers<lb/>
finals<lb/>
Meredith Bridgers was the sole<lb/>
finalist for the ECU swim and dive<lb/>
team in the Independent Nation-<lb/>
als held over the weekend.<lb/>
Bridgers placed second in the<lb/>
100-yard breaststroke event when<lb/>
she swam a 1:05.96.<lb/>
The swim meet, held at the Uni-<lb/>
versity of South Carolina in Co-<lb/>
lumbia, SC saw the home team<lb/>
for the men come out with the<lb/>
victory. The Gamecocks won the<lb/>
meet while East Carolina, who<lb/>
scored 117 points, placed ninth<lb/>
out of ten teams.<lb/>
For the women, the Hurricanes<lb/>
of Miami took the crown. The<lb/>
Pirates placed tenth out of 11 teams<lb/>
participating.<lb/>
P<lb/>
Tar Landing Seafood<lb/>
Student Special<lb/>
6 oz. Sirloin with Shrimp<lb/>
(Fried. Boiled, or Broiled)<lb/>
nerved with French Frie. or Baked Potato.<lb/>
Cole Slaw and Huahpuppiea.<lb/>
2 Dinners ONLY $9.99<lb/>
105 Airport Road Present this Ad when paying<lb/>
758-0327 ?Dine-in ONLY<lb/>
AWAtjOTAMEAL<lb/>
Banquet Facilities Available<lb/>
Summer School<lb/>
and the<lb/>
Coast Discover<lb/>
UNCW.<lb/>
For more information write or call for<lb/>
1989 catalog:<lb/>
Summer School Director<lb/>
UNC Wilmington<lb/>
601 South College Road<lb/>
Wilmington, N.C. 28403-3297<lb/>
?<lb/>
?<lb/>
Lady Pirates<lb/>
prevail<lb/>
Continued from page 10<lb/>
"I think it will be a learning<lb/>
experience for us Pierson said.<lb/>
"They are an outstanding team<lb/>
They have so many good players.<lb/>
Hunt really had the moves tonight<lb/>
and Banner was solid under-<lb/>
neath<lb/>
South Carolina's lead reached<lb/>
27, 61-34, with 12:36 left in the<lb/>
game. ECU whittled away at the<lb/>
lead and brought it to within 19,<lb/>
63-44 on Pam Williams' 18 footer.<lb/>
However, using their pressure<lb/>
defense, USC got the lead back up<lb/>
to 29 ind coasted ?Hp rest of the<lb/>
way.<lb/>
Chris O'Connor had 10 points<lb/>
for the Lady Pirates and Irish<lb/>
Hamilton contributed six assists.<lb/>
Martha Parker, a pre-season<lb/>
All-America selection, also had 11<lb/>
points and three rebounds for<lb/>
South Carolina. Karen Middleton<lb/>
also added 10 points for the Lady<lb/>
Gamecocks.<lb/>
East Carolina finishes up their<lb/>
1988-89 regular season with a<lb/>
home contest against Appalachian<lb/>
State on Saturday while South<lb/>
Carolina hosts DePaul in their<lb/>
5iegular season finale on Wednes-<lb/>
day night.<lb/>
Landry fired<lb/>
by owner<lb/>
Continued from page 10<lb/>
club in some capacity. But Lan-<lb/>
dry said Sunday he is leaving the<lb/>
organization "because it wouldn't<lb/>
be fair to keep me around hang-<lb/>
ing over everybody's shoulder<lb/>
In his first interview since<lb/>
being sacked by Jones, Landry<lb/>
told The Associated Press he will<lb/>
never coach again.<lb/>
"I wouldn't think I would<lb/>
coach again because it would just<lb/>
be hard not being in the Cow-<lb/>
boys' blue he said. "People will<lb/>
forget me pretty quick<lb/>
He said he would address the<lb/>
Cowboy players at their mini-<lb/>
camp today.<lb/>
"It won't be an easy thing to<lb/>
do Landry said.<lb/>
Landry took over the Cow-<lb/>
boys when they were a ragged<lb/>
expansion team in 10 and led<lb/>
them to the Super Bowl five times,<lb/>
winning two of them.<lb/>
W<lb/>
<lb/>
!SK<lb/>
-<lb/>
Go ahead and gloat. You can<lb/>
rub it in all the way to Chicago<lb/>
with AW Long Distance Service.<lb/>
Besides, your best friend Eddie<lb/>
was the one who said your team<lb/>
could never win three straight.<lb/>
So give him a call. It costs a<lb/>
lot less than you think to let him<lb/>
know who's headed for the Playoffs.<lb/>
Reach out and touch someone?<lb/>
If youd like to know more about<lb/>
AIST products and services, like<lb/>
international Calling and the AT&amp;T<lb/>
Card, call us at 1 800 222-0300.<lb/>
Alex Sum Univers<lb/>
AT&amp;T<lb/>
The right choice.<lb/>
<pb facs="00058128_0015"/>
</div></body></text></TEI>