<?xml version="1.0"?><TEI xmlns="http://www.tei-c.org/ns/1.0" xmlns:xsi="http://www.w3.org/2001/XMLSchema-instance" xsi:schemaLocation="http://www.tei-c.org/ns/1.0 http://digital.lib.ecu.edu/tei/xsd/tei_P5.xsd"><teiHeader><fileDesc><titleStmt><title></title><author></author><respStmt><resp>Text encoded by</resp><name>Digital Collections</name></respStmt></titleStmt><publicationStmt><distributor>East Carolina University. J. Y. Joyner Library</distributor><address><addrLine>Digital Collections</addrLine><addrLine>Joyner Library, East Carolina University</addrLine><addrLine>East Fifth Street, Greenville NC 27858-4353 USA</addrLine></address><date>2012</date></publicationStmt><sourceDesc><bibl></bibl></sourceDesc></fileDesc><encodingDesc><samplingDecl><p>All quotation marks retained as data.</p><p>All end-of-line hyphens have been removed, and the trailing part of a word has been joined to the preceding line.</p><p>All smart quotes have been converted into straight quotes.</p></samplingDecl><classDecl><taxonomy xml:id="LCSH"><bibl>Library of Congress Subject Headings</bibl></taxonomy></classDecl></encodingDesc><profileDesc><creation><date></date></creation><langUsage xml:lang="en-US"><language ident="en-US" usage="100">English</language></langUsage><textClass><keywords scheme="#LCSH"><list><item></item></list></keywords></textClass></profileDesc></teiHeader><text><body><div type="other">
<p rend="align(centerbold)">[This text is machine generated and may contain errors.]</p>
<pb facs="00058131_0001"/>
Kpw  .  ! - ?<lb/>
Editorial4<lb/>
Classified6<lb/>
Features7<lb/>
Cartoons10<lb/>
Li'l Clearly labeled Satire Page<lb/>
is just in time for St.Patrick's Day,<lb/>
E gets saved.<lb/>
Flip to page 9<lb/>
?JP?ff$S<lb/>
jats N.C. State. Pirate baseball<lb/>
tkes the Pack cry wolf with a<lb/>
ECU beats N.C. Sti<lb/>
makes the Pack cry<lb/>
5-3 W in Raleighwood.<lb/>
Catch the action on page 11.<lb/>
She i:aHt Carolinian<lb/>
Serving the East Carolina campus community since 1925.<lb/>
Vol. 63 No. 5"<lb/>
Thursday March 16, 1980<lb/>
Greenville, NC<lb/>
12 Pages<lb/>
Circulation 12,000<lb/>
Clement clean up completed<lb/>
BvBRAD BANNISTER<lb/>
S??f( vs ??<lb/>
Repairs on Clement Hall<lb/>
were completed over Spring<lb/>
Break and the sixth floor residents<lb/>
allowed to mov? back in Sunday<lb/>
after two fires gutted the .sixth<lb/>
floor n F b 25. According to<lb/>
sixth fl r residents however<lb/>
the smoke has not yet cleared.<lb/>
The sixth floor of Clement<lb/>
I lall was cleaned, deodorized and<lb/>
re ainted over spring break and<lb/>
-r social room where<lb/>
started was completely<lb/>
aid Carolyn Fulghum,<lb/>
ctorofhousine<lb/>
the six!<lb/>
the fire<lb/>
tie hail-<lb/>
ways ab ?ve the sixth floor were<lb/>
. i mpk h 1 w ipc ddow n shesaid.<lb/>
However, several sixth floor<lb/>
residents, who were allowed to<lb/>
move back in Sunday, are not<lb/>
satisfied at how the tire situation<lb/>
w. handled.<lb/>
Nara Boac a resident of<lb/>
Clemc rt - sixth floor said the resi-<lb/>
lents I the sixth floor?whom<lb/>
she calh the sixth floor survi-<lb/>
vors'?have received "much<lb/>
sympathy but no help<lb/>
: C L Boac said, repaired the<lb/>
rooms and hallwavs but refused<lb/>
to shoulder any of the personal<lb/>
expenses the residents acquired<lb/>
because oi the fire, such as hotel<lb/>
costs and damage to clothes and<lb/>
personal belongings.<lb/>
"They wouldn't even paint<lb/>
my room the same color Boac<lb/>
said.<lb/>
Sixth tloor resident, Danielle<lb/>
Davis, said she is planning to<lb/>
transfer because of the way the<lb/>
tire was handled. "1 refuse to<lb/>
support a school that does not<lb/>
support me she said.<lb/>
Carolyn Fulghum disagrees.<lb/>
"The University does not carry in-<lb/>
surance to replace personal prop-<lb/>
erty she said. But this is not<lb/>
unusual, she added. "Apartment<lb/>
complexes don't either<lb/>
Fulghum said that under the<lb/>
circumstances the University is<lb/>
willing to help in cases where<lb/>
losses are sufficient and the par-<lb/>
ents' homeowner's insurance will<lb/>
not cover the losses.<lb/>
Fulghum said she sent letters<lb/>
to the sixth tloor residents over<lb/>
Spring Break instructing them to<lb/>
check with their parents' home-<lb/>
owner's insurance policies to see<lb/>
if they covered the losses It the<lb/>
Computer network<lb/>
is dealt ACES<lb/>
Bv DAVID HERRING<lb/>
? .tar News I .<lb/>
ibl  v best kept secret<lb/>
. CU computing com-<lb/>
is the support service<lb/>
Academic Computing<lb/>
i ? ling to Ernie Marsh-<lb/>
ager of Academic<lb/>
ir g r v id - consultant<lb/>
iti rial support services<lb/>
a ulr staff and students<lb/>
arge<lb/>
rial supportsen<lb/>
d through a pro-<lb/>
A !ES Academic<lb/>
ucati nal Services<lb/>
hich hands on<lb/>
an<lb/>
i<lb/>
narl as 1 - isses are offered<lb/>
In addition I urse manuals that<lb/>
 ;? ided with the class, manu-<lb/>
btainedatAccucopyor<lb/>
K nk for the cost of reproduc-<lb/>
M . ib is to look at the needs<lb/>
: the academic community and<lb/>
then meet those needs Marsh-<lb/>
; in : : Wedo limit classes to<lb/>
. i 15 persons to give partici-<lb/>
pants hands-on experienceand let<lb/>
? ? pra rice what we're teach-<lb/>
? <lb/>
?V ES offers a number of<lb/>
mien mputer applications in<lb/>
word processing, database man-<lb/>
ment, graphics, communica-<lb/>
tions, text formatting, and research<lb/>
for 1PM compatibles, Macintosh<lb/>
and Apple He computers. Ac-<lb/>
cording to Marshbum, "Suppose<lb/>
vou had a document in MacWrite<lb/>
and needed to transfer it to some-<lb/>
one in Word Star. We could show<lb/>
you how to do it-or do it foryou<lb/>
Because of its waiting lisl<lb/>
ACES must prioritize who it ac-<lb/>
cepts in its classes. "We don't turn<lb/>
d wn students, but we give pref-<lb/>
erence to staff and faculty, then<lb/>
graduate students, and finall)<lb/>
undergraduate students said<lb/>
Marshbum, "This is done in hopes<lb/>
that the faculty members and<lb/>
graduate students will teach the<lb/>
undergraduate students, becom-<lb/>
ing an extension of our program.<lb/>
Marshbum plans to expand<lb/>
ACES to meet the needs of ECL<lb/>
In 1?S4 Academic Computing<lb/>
consisted of 21 terminals in one<lb/>
room in Austin and a staff oi one<lb/>
person.<lb/>
Today there are more than 500<lb/>
personal computers and terminals<lb/>
on campus Academic Comput<lb/>
ing is also constantl) adding no.<lb/>
classes and has recently added<lb/>
high powered graphics software<lb/>
u d a ! lewlett-Packard plotter<lb/>
They are presently working<lb/>
to set up a desktop publishing<lb/>
capability and to develop a se-<lb/>
quence ol courses to be used on a<lb/>
resume "1 trv to provide as much<lb/>
service as possible and assist us-<lb/>
ers in becomingasindependentas<lb/>
possible Marshbum stated, "11<lb/>
you need us, we'll be there<lb/>
Computers require onlv will-<lb/>
ingness and time he added. To<lb/>
register for an ACES seminar class<lb/>
call 757-6401.<lb/>
policies would not cover the<lb/>
losses or their parents had no<lb/>
policies, the students were in-<lb/>
structed to visit Linda Gould,<lb/>
coordinator of resident education<lb/>
in Clement.<lb/>
Gould, in turn, was to refer<lb/>
the students to the housing de-<lb/>
partment where they were to fill<lb/>
oul a list of their losses, Fulghum<lb/>
said. The housing department<lb/>
would then divide whether or not<lb/>
the I niversity should help com-<lb/>
pensate a student.<lb/>
Fulghum said what dissatified<lb/>
her about the tire situation was<lb/>
the method of alerting hearing<lb/>
impaired students ol tires. Right<lb/>
now, she said, students use a ,  y<lb/>
buddy system<lb/>
but tins system can be faulty when<lb/>
a student's partner is gone.<lb/>
We are considering a combi-   ?<lb/>
nation light nd sound stem With the clean up of the sixth floor of Clement dorm completed during spring break,<lb/>
that would help alert the hearing back into their rooms earlier this week since a Feb. 25 fire started in the floor's social<lb/>
impaired she said. Angela Pridgen?Photolab)<lb/>
?13 <lb/>
residents moved<lb/>
room. Photo bv<lb/>
Chancellor<lb/>
appoints<lb/>
committee<lb/>
By STEPHANIE FOLSOM<lb/>
Mjr.i :? 1  itoi<lb/>
<lb/>
'VV<lb/>
?<lb/>
pWWljl J.i  i?l!<lb/>
i?m. pw ??u<lb/>
According to the license tag, this vehicle is becoming rather fond of a certain educational institution.<lb/>
(Thoto by J.D. Whitmire? Photolab)<lb/>
A committee appointed by<lb/>
Chancellor Fakin to investigate the<lb/>
Teddy White case met for the first<lb/>
time Monday.<lb/>
Eakin decided to have the<lb/>
circumstances surrounding the<lb/>
case, which involved a tight be-<lb/>
tween black and white students at<lb/>
Garret dorm last April, further<lb/>
looked into. The fight resulted in<lb/>
the two-year suspension of a black<lb/>
student, Teddy White.<lb/>
The chancellor's decision<lb/>
came last month after meeting<lb/>
with NAACP executive director<lb/>
Dennis Schatzman, Greenville<lb/>
mayor Fd Carter, and other local<lb/>
black leaders.<lb/>
The committee's purpose is<lb/>
that oi "determining what actu-<lb/>
ally happened April 13 1988<lb/>
according to Ben Irons, universitv<lb/>
attorney. Irons said all of the rele-<lb/>
vant records will be made avail-<lb/>
able to the committee and they<lb/>
may interview any persons be-<lb/>
lieved to have knowledge oi the<lb/>
incident.<lb/>
In a March 12 article in The<lb/>
Dailv Reflector, Schatzman said<lb/>
he was concerned when told the<lb/>
committee "may interview anv<lb/>
persons believed to have knowl-<lb/>
edge of relevant facts He said<lb/>
that 'may' is not a strone word<lb/>
and he thinks "it should be man-<lb/>
datory' that the committee inter-<lb/>
view all people that were there<lb/>
Fakin said in a telephone inter-<lb/>
view vesterdav that he "in no way<lb/>
intends to limit" the committee.<lb/>
"My intention is that the commit-<lb/>
tee can do w hatever it feels neoes-<lb/>
Aycock dorm has been the scene of several drug arrests in recent months. On Tuesdav, The East sarv to determine the facts said<lb/>
Carolinian will run an exclusive article on the adminstration crackdown on drugs. (Photo bv J.D. Eakin.<lb/>
Whitmire?Photolab) See COMMITTEE, page 5<lb/>
<pb facs="00058131_0002"/><lb/>
<lb/>
S5JS5w!?'p"?t'tww5<lb/>
a?Sai?<lb/>
Editorial.<lb/>
<lb/>
Features?.??7<lb/>
Cartoons10<lb/>
I, !Wii? ? P?<lb/>
?IPPWPWPPiW?VfW"<lb/>
??<lb/>
141 Clearly labeled Satire Page<lb/>
is just in time for St.Patrick's Day,<lb/>
E gets saved.<lb/>
Flip to page 9<lb/>
??'?? ?IM!MJ:W'W .1,1.1 iiji.imimu, mi<lb/>
J(0<lb/>
5-3 W in Raleighwood.<lb/>
Catch the action on page 11.<lb/>
Wat iEaat Carolinian<lb/>
Serving the East Carolina campus community since 1925.<lb/>
Vol. 63 No. 57<lb/>
Thursday March 16,1989<lb/>
Greenville, NC<lb/>
12 Pages<lb/>
Circulation 12,000<lb/>
Clement clean up completed<lb/>
? i i. in.<lb/>
By BRAD BANNISTER<lb/>
Staff Writer<lb/>
Repairs on Clement Hall<lb/>
were completed over Spring<lb/>
Break and the sixth floor residents<lb/>
allowed to move back in Sunday-<lb/>
after two fires gutted the .sixth<lb/>
floor on Feb. 25. According to<lb/>
sixth floor residents, however,<lb/>
the smoke has not yet cleared.<lb/>
The sixth floor of Clement<lb/>
Hall was cleaned, deodorized and<lb/>
repainted over spring break and<lb/>
the sixth floor social room where<lb/>
the fire started was completely<lb/>
rebuilt, said Carolyn Fulghum,<lb/>
ECU director of housing. The hall-<lb/>
ways above the sixth floor were<lb/>
completely wiped down, she said.<lb/>
However, several sixth floor<lb/>
residents, who were allowed to<lb/>
move back in Sunday, are not<lb/>
satisfied at how the fire situation<lb/>
was handled.<lb/>
Nara Boac, a resident of<lb/>
Clement's sixth floor said the resi-<lb/>
dents of the sixth floor?whom<lb/>
she calls "the sixth floor survi-<lb/>
vors"?have received "much<lb/>
sympathy but no help<lb/>
ECU, Boac said, repaired the<lb/>
rooms and hallwavs but refused<lb/>
to shoulder any of the personal<lb/>
expenses the residents acquired<lb/>
because of the fire, such as hotel<lb/>
costs and damage to clothes and<lb/>
personal belongings.<lb/>
"They wouldn't even paint<lb/>
my room the same color Boac<lb/>
said.<lb/>
Sixth floor resident, Danielle<lb/>
Davis, said she is planning to<lb/>
transfer because of the way the<lb/>
fire was handled. "I refuse to<lb/>
support a school that does not<lb/>
support me she said.<lb/>
Carolyn Fulghum disagrees.<lb/>
"The University does not carry in-<lb/>
surance to replace personal prop-<lb/>
erty she said. But this is not<lb/>
unusual, she added. "Apartment<lb/>
complexes don't either<lb/>
Fulghum said that under the<lb/>
circumstances the University is<lb/>
willing to help in cases where<lb/>
losses are sufficient and the par-<lb/>
ents' homeowner's insurance will<lb/>
not cover the losses.<lb/>
Fulghum said she sent letters<lb/>
to the sixth floor residents over<lb/>
Spring Break instructing them to<lb/>
check with their parents' home-<lb/>
owner's insurance policies to see<lb/>
if they covered the losses. If the<lb/>
policies would not cover the<lb/>
losses or their parents had no<lb/>
policies, the students were in-<lb/>
structed to visit Linda Gould,<lb/>
coordinator of resident education<lb/>
in Clement.<lb/>
Gould, in turn, was to refer<lb/>
the students to the housing de-<lb/>
partment where they were to fill<lb/>
out a list of their losses, Fulghum<lb/>
said. The housing department<lb/>
would then decide whether or not<lb/>
the University should help com-<lb/>
pensate a student.<lb/>
Fulghum said what dissatified<lb/>
her about the fire situation was<lb/>
the method of alerting hearing<lb/>
impaired students of fires. Right<lb/>
now, she said, students use a<lb/>
buddy system<lb/>
but this system can be faulty when<lb/>
a student's partner is gone.<lb/>
"We are considering a combi-<lb/>
nation light and sound system With the clean up of the sixth floor of Clement dorm completed during spring break, residents moved<lb/>
that would help alert the hearing, back into their rooms earlier this week since a Feb. 25 fire started in the floor's social room. (Photo by<lb/>
impaired she said. Angela Pridgen?Photolab)<lb/>
Computer network<lb/>
is dealt ACES<lb/>
By DAVID HERRING<lb/>
A.slant Newt Editor<lb/>
Probably the best kept secret<lb/>
within the ECU computing com-<lb/>
munity is the support service<lb/>
called "Academic Computing<lb/>
which, according to Ernie Marsh-<lb/>
burn, manager of Academic<lb/>
Computing, provides consultant<lb/>
and educational support services<lb/>
to ECU faculty, staff, and students<lb/>
free of charge.<lb/>
The educational support serv-<lb/>
ices are offered through a pro-<lb/>
gram called ACES (Academic<lb/>
Computing Educational Services)<lb/>
through which hands on and<lb/>
seminar based classes are offered.<lb/>
In addi tion to course manuals that<lb/>
are provided with theclass, manu-<lb/>
als can be obtained at Accucopy or<lb/>
Kinko's for the cost of reproduc-<lb/>
tion.<lb/>
" My job is to look at the needs<lb/>
of the academic community and<lb/>
then meet those needs Marsh-<lb/>
burn said. "We do limit classes to<lb/>
10 to 15 persons to give partici-<lb/>
pants hands-on experience and let<lb/>
them practice what we're teach-<lb/>
ing<lb/>
ACES offers a number of<lb/>
microcomputer applications in<lb/>
word processing, database man-<lb/>
agement, graphics, communica-<lb/>
tions, text formatting, and research<lb/>
for IBM compatibles, Macintosh,<lb/>
and Apple He computers. Ac-<lb/>
cording to Marshburn, "Suppose<lb/>
you had a document in MacWrite<lb/>
and needed to transfer it to some-<lb/>
one in Word Star. We could show<lb/>
vou how to do it - or do it for vou<lb/>
Because of its waiting list,<lb/>
ACES must prioritize who it ac-<lb/>
cepts in its classes. "We don't turn<lb/>
down students, but we give pref-<lb/>
erence to staff and faculty, then<lb/>
graduate students, and finally<lb/>
undergraduate students said<lb/>
Marshburn, "This is done in hopes<lb/>
that the facultv members and<lb/>
graduate students will teach the<lb/>
undergraduate students, becom-<lb/>
ing an extension of our program<lb/>
Marshburn plans to expand<lb/>
ACES to meet the needs of ECU.<lb/>
In 1984 Academic Computing<lb/>
consisted of 21 terminals in one<lb/>
room in Austin and a staff of one<lb/>
person.<lb/>
Today there are more than 500<lb/>
persona I computers and terminals<lb/>
on campus. Academic Comput-<lb/>
ing is also constantly adding nou<lb/>
classes and has recently added<lb/>
high powered graphics software<lb/>
and a Hewlett-Packard plotter.<lb/>
They are presently working<lb/>
to set up a desktop publishing<lb/>
capability and to develop a se-<lb/>
quence of courses to be used on a<lb/>
resume. "1 try to provide as much<lb/>
service as possible and assist us-<lb/>
ers in becoming as independent ai<lb/>
possible Marshburn stated, "If<lb/>
you need us, we'll be there<lb/>
Computers require only will-<lb/>
ingness and time, he added. To<lb/>
register foran ACES seminarclass<lb/>
call 757-6401.<lb/>
Chancellor<lb/>
appoints<lb/>
committee<lb/>
By STEPHANIE FOLSOM<lb/>
Managing Editor<lb/>
According to the license tag, this vehicle is becoming rather fond of a certain educational institution.<lb/>
(Photo by J.D. Whitmire?Photolab)<lb/>
J&amp;i<lb/>
A committee appointed by<lb/>
Chancellor Eakin to investigate the<lb/>
Teddy White case met for the first<lb/>
time Monday.<lb/>
Eakin decided to have the<lb/>
circumstances surrounding the<lb/>
case, which involved a fight be-<lb/>
tween black and white students at<lb/>
Garret dorm last April, further<lb/>
looked into. The fight resulted in<lb/>
the two-year suspension of a black<lb/>
student, Teddy White.<lb/>
The chancellor's decision<lb/>
came last month after meeting<lb/>
with NAACP executive director<lb/>
Dennis Schatzman, Greenville<lb/>
mayor Ed Carter, and other local<lb/>
black leaders.<lb/>
The committee's purpose is<lb/>
that of "determining what actu-<lb/>
ally happened April 13, 1988<lb/>
according to Ben Irons, university<lb/>
attorney. Irons said all of the rele-<lb/>
vant records will be made avail-<lb/>
able to the committee and they<lb/>
may interview any persons be-<lb/>
lieved to have knowledge of the<lb/>
incident.<lb/>
In a March 12 article in The<lb/>
Daily Reflector, Schatzman said<lb/>
he was concerned when told the<lb/>
committee "may interview any<lb/>
persons believed to have knowl-<lb/>
edge of relevant facts He said<lb/>
that 'may' is not a strong word<lb/>
and he thinks "it should be man-<lb/>
datory that the committee inter-<lb/>
view all people that were there<lb/>
Eakin said in a telephone inter-<lb/>
view yesterday that he "in no way<lb/>
intends to limit" the committee.<lb/>
"My intention is that the commit-<lb/>
tee can do whatever it feels neces-<lb/>
Aycock dorm has been the scene of several drug arrests in recent months. On Tuesday, The East sary to determine the facts said<lb/>
Carolinian will run an exclusive article on the adminstration crackdown on drugs. (Photo by J.D. Eakin.<lb/>
Whitmire?Photolab) See COMMITTEE, page 5<lb/>
<pb facs="00058131_0003"/><lb/>
THE FAST CAROLINIAN<lb/>
MARCH 16,1989<lb/>
Using designer drugs at party<lb/>
I was at a party last night and some<lb/>
people were using designer and hallu-<lb/>
cinogenic drugs. What arc designer<lb/>
drugs and how dangerous are they?<lb/>
Designer drugs are not asglamor-<lb/>
ous as they appear to be. They are<lb/>
created by changing the structure of<lb/>
certain drugs. The use of designer<lb/>
drugs and hallucinogenic drugs has<lb/>
increased nationally, with some of the<lb/>
more commonly used drugs includ-<lb/>
ing ecstacy (MDMA) and LSD. Ec<lb/>
stacy, which was legal until 1985, is<lb/>
considered to be a hallucinogenic drug<lb/>
and is chemically related to ampheta-<lb/>
mines. It appears in a variety of forms<lb/>
such as powders and capsule. It is<lb/>
swallowed, inhaled, or used intrave-<lb/>
nously. The effects of designer drugs<lb/>
include:<lb/>
1) increased relaxation<lb/>
2) dry mouththroat<lb/>
3) nervousnesstension<lb/>
4) mood changes<lb/>
5) tolerance and dependence (it<lb/>
lakes more of the drug to get the same<lb/>
effect)<lb/>
6) amphetamine psychosis<lb/>
7) intensified heart problems<lb/>
8) long lasting effects on the brain.<lb/>
9) severe psychological and physi-<lb/>
cal burn out<lb/>
The fear many people have about<lb/>
designer drugs is the fear of the<lb/>
"unknown Researchers don't know<lb/>
a lot about the risks related to the use<lb/>
of designer drugs or other hallucino-<lb/>
genic drugs. They do know that hallu-<lb/>
cinogenic drugs alter sensation,<lb/>
moods, and consciousness. They may<lb/>
also distort hearing, touch, smell, taste<lb/>
and vision.<lb/>
LSD is a hallucinogenic drug. Ii<lb/>
docs not take a large amount of this<lb/>
drug to produce a high; if you had<lb/>
enough LSD to equal the size of an<lb/>
ln)?S<lb/>
G9IHUII<lb/>
By<lb/>
Mary Elesha-Adams<lb/>
aspirin it would be enough for 3,000<lb/>
people!<lb/>
The effects of LSD include some of<lb/>
the same effects for other hallucino-<lb/>
genic drugs and the following:<lb/>
1) increased pulse and heart rate<lb/>
2) increased blood pressure<lb/>
3) increased body temperature<lb/>
LSD is unpredictable and may<lb/>
cause:<lb/>
1) panic<lb/>
2) strong suicidal urges<lb/>
3) flashbacks<lb/>
4) genetic damage<lb/>
We can't tell you everything you<lb/>
need to know about designer and<lb/>
hallucinogenic drugs in this article. If<lb/>
you would like more information or<lb/>
need help with an alcohol or drug<lb/>
problem contact the Substance Abuse<lb/>
PRcvention and Education Program<lb/>
(303 Erwin) 757-6793.<lb/>
Health Column by: Sharon D.<lb/>
McDonald; Community Health In-<lb/>
tern<lb/>
The East Carolinian<lb/>
James F.J. McKee, Director oi Advertising<lb/>
Advertising Representatives<lb/>
Scott Makey ' Keith Pearce<lb/>
Phillip V. Cope AdamBlankonship<lb/>
Guy Harvey<lb/>
DISPLAY ADVERTISING<lb/>
Open Rate$4.95 Local Open Rate $4 75<lb/>
Frequency (Contracts)<lb/>
5 Insertions -11 I $4.55<lb/>
Official confiscates campus newspapers<lb/>
(CPS)?A New Jersey Insti<lb/>
tute of Technology official, anx-<lb/>
ious to impress a group of high<lb/>
school students thinking of en<lb/>
rolling at the school, confiscated<lb/>
copies of the school paper and<lb/>
kept them out of sight until the<lb/>
prospective freshman left campus.<lb/>
The Feb. 17 edition of Tine<lb/>
Vector, the student paper, re-<lb/>
ported that a student member had<lb/>
been assaulted and robbed near<lb/>
the Newark campus a few days<lb/>
earlier.<lb/>
Admissions Dean William<lb/>
Anderson, apparently worried the<lb/>
story would tarnish the visitors'<lb/>
view of NJ IT, ordered a student to<lb/>
take the papers from their display<lb/>
bins and store them in the admis-<lb/>
sions office.<lb/>
"It is hard to believe adminis-<lb/>
trators could be so unthinking and<lb/>
so ignorant of free press rights<lb/>
said Mark Goodman of the Stu-<lb/>
dent Press Law Center in Wash-<lb/>
ington, D.C.<lb/>
"We're looking for an apol-<lb/>
ogy and a guarantee it won't<lb/>
happen again said Michael<lb/>
Manna, The Vector's managing<lb/>
editor.<lb/>
"It was unfortunate. It<lb/>
shouldn't have happened. I'm<lb/>
going to do everything in my<lb/>
power to make sure this won't<lb/>
happeH again Dean of Student<lb/>
Services Constance Murray said.<lb/>
Anderson's action, Hanna<lb/>
maintained, was another example<lb/>
of NJIT officials downplaying<lb/>
campus crime, adding that if new<lb/>
students don't know crime is a<lb/>
problem on the Newark campus,<lb/>
thev could get hurt.<lb/>
"Being in Newark, we are<lb/>
aware of crime replied NJIT<lb/>
spokeswoman Arlene Gilbert, but<lb/>
she said NJIT has a lower crime<lb/>
than other New Jersey campuses<lb/>
and that it has improved its secu-<lb/>
rity recently.<lb/>
Vector Editor-in-Chief Mark<lb/>
Budzyn discovered the newspa-<lb/>
pers were missing from their bins,<lb/>
and when he asked about the<lb/>
papers at the school information<lb/>
desk, he was told the admissions<lb/>
office had taken them just before a<lb/>
Feb. 19 open house for visiting<lb/>
high school seniors.<lb/>
When he asked about the<lb/>
papers at the admissions office,<lb/>
Budzvn says he was stonewalled.<lb/>
Angered, Budzyn placed signs on<lb/>
the bins that said the papers were<lb/>
confiscated by the admissions<lb/>
office.<lb/>
The signs prompted the ad-<lb/>
missions office to turn the bins<lb/>
around so the visiting high school<lb/>
seniors didn't see them. Budzyn<lb/>
then put signs on the back of the<lb/>
bins as well.<lb/>
The newspapers were re-<lb/>
turned a few hours later, after the<lb/>
open bouse campus tours ended.<lb/>
Anderson, who didn't return<lb/>
College Press Service's calls, met<lb/>
with several Vector staffers Feb.<lb/>
21 to discuss the issue, and al-<lb/>
though he told them he "realized<lb/>
it was a bad judgment call, he<lb/>
didn't sound all that upset, Hanna<lb/>
said<lb/>
"He wants people to see the<lb/>
best of the institute Hanna said<lb/>
of Anderson. "He doesn't under-<lb/>
stand this is censt rship. Hedoesn't<lb/>
understand our responsibility to<lb/>
let people know<lb/>
NJIT President Saul Fenster<lb/>
"doesn't consider this lightly<lb/>
said school spokeswoman Phyllis<lb/>
Miller. "He wants to make sure i<lb/>
doesn't happen again<lb/>
Although the Student Press<lb/>
Law Center's Goodman thinks the<lb/>
paper's staff could sue, Hanna say<lb/>
The Vector staff is satisfied with<lb/>
Anderson's apology and the<lb/>
administration's guarantees that<lb/>
papers won't be confiscated again.<lb/>
Peeved game warden files $100,000 slander suit<lb/>
ELIZABETH CITY, N C.<lb/>
(AP) - A game warden whose<lb/>
blocked promotion has led to a<lb/>
political fight on the North Caro-<lb/>
lina Wildlife Resources Commis-<lb/>
sion has filed a $100,000 slander<lb/>
suit against one of the commis-<lb/>
sioners.<lb/>
The suit filed bv Terry Lee<lb/>
Watcrfield in Pasquotank County<lb/>
Superior Court accused Robert<lb/>
W. Hester of Hvde Countv of<lb/>
falsely saying that Waterfield de-<lb/>
liberately avoided arresting<lb/>
wealthy game violators.<lb/>
"In addition the suit<lb/>
charged, "the defendant (Hester)<lb/>
said that the Plaintiff (Waterfield)<lb/>
would not work in certain areas<lb/>
where politically and financially<lb/>
powerful people hunt<lb/>
In addition to $100,000 com-<lb/>
pensatory damages, the suit seeks<lb/>
"punitive damages in excess of<lb/>
$10,000 the Norfolk (Va.)<lb/>
Virginian-Pilot and Ledger-<lb/>
Star reported in today's editions.<lb/>
Hester, 48, and four other<lb/>
commissioners succeeded in<lb/>
overruling Waterfield's promo-<lb/>
tion from sergeant to lieutenant!<lb/>
after the advancement had beenl<lb/>
unanimously recommended by a<lb/>
Wildlife Commission selection!<lb/>
board.<lb/>
The suit seeks a jury trial. No<lb/>
trial date has been set.<lb/>
In July, Hester and four otherl<lb/>
Republicans on the 13-memberl<lb/>
Wildlife Commission won a 5-4f<lb/>
majority vote that blocked Water-<lb/>
field's promotion to lieutenant.<lb/>
Eugene Price, a Goldsboro<lb/>
newspaper editor who is chair-<lb/>
man of the commission, was ab-j<lb/>
sent and four other members ab-<lb/>
stained from voting when thel<lb/>
group sidetracked what would<lb/>
normally have been an automatic!<lb/>
promotion fo- Vaterficld.<lb/>
Advancement among gamej<lb/>
wardens has traditionally been<lb/>
recommended by a selection<lb/>
board from the career staff of the<lb/>
Wildlife Commission. On the<lb/>
basis of competitive examina-<lb/>
tions, Waterfield finished at the<lb/>
top of a list for promotion to lieu-j<lb/>
tenant. Until that vote, the in-<lb/>
house promotions were auto-<lb/>
matically approved by the full<lb/>
commission.<lb/>
After the oromotion was de-<lb/>
nied, Gov. Jim Martin issued a<lb/>
policy statement reiterating the<lb/>
promotions policy and asked<lb/>
Hester to resign. Hester has re-<lb/>
fused to step down, saying he did<lb/>
not know he acting counter to the<lb/>
governor's wishes.<lb/>
An administrative law judge legally and improperly" when it<lb/>
in Raleigh ruled earlier this year stopped Waterfield's promotion<lb/>
that the commission had acted "il-<lb/>
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<pb facs="00058131_0004"/><lb/>
THE EAST CAROLINIAN<lb/>
MARCH 16,1989 3<lb/>
Soviets expel U.S. spy suspect<lb/>
MOSCOW (AD ? The Sovi-<lb/>
ets today accused a U.S. military<lb/>
attacheof spyingand ordered him<lb/>
expelled, a move that follows<lb/>
Washington'sexpulsion last week<lb/>
ot a Soviet officer allegedly caught<lb/>
frying to buy commuter secrets.<lb/>
Soviet Foreign Ministry<lb/>
spokesman Gennady 1. Gerasimov<lb/>
said Army U Col. Daniel Francis<lb/>
Van Gundy 111, an assistant mili-<lb/>
tary attache at the U.S. Fmbassv in<lb/>
Moscow, had been given 48 hours<lb/>
to leave the country. Gerasimov<lb/>
said Van Gundy, who had been<lb/>
assigned to the embassy for about<lb/>
two years, the normal Moscow<lb/>
diplomatic tour, was declared<lb/>
unwelcome because he engaged<lb/>
in espionage.<lb/>
Van Gundy lives on the U.S.<lb/>
Embassy compound with his wife,<lb/>
Susan, and two of their three<lb/>
daughters. Flis expulsion follows<lb/>
the U.S. government's announce-<lb/>
ment Thursday that it had ordered<lb/>
Soviet Lt. Col. Yuri N. Pakhtusov<lb/>
to leave the United States.<lb/>
Gerasimov, at a hastily called<lb/>
briefing, charged that Van Gundy<lb/>
attempted "to enter a closed area,<lb/>
deliberately diverting from the<lb/>
officially permitted route,clandes-<lb/>
tinely photographed military sites<lb/>
and committed other gross viola-<lb/>
tions" of the rules of diplomatic<lb/>
conduct. U.S. Embassy spokesman<lb/>
Richard Gilbert rejected the So-<lb/>
viet charges against Van Gundy,<lb/>
saying they were "unwarranted,<lb/>
inappropriate, without justifica-<lb/>
tion and certainly in no way in<lb/>
keeping with the positive tone of<lb/>
the U.S -Soviet relationship<lb/>
Gilbert, the embassy press<lb/>
attache, denied the 42-year-old<lb/>
U.S. Army officer had engaged in<lb/>
activities inconsistent with his<lb/>
work as a diplomat and suggested<lb/>
the Soviet action was simply in<lb/>
retaliation for the U.S. expulsion<lb/>
of Pakhtusov. Gerasimov said,<lb/>
"The U.S. administration is reveal-<lb/>
ing its foreign policy, and we have<lb/>
this problem of spy mania<lb/>
He cited a recent Time maga-<lb/>
zine cover story on the 1987 Ma-<lb/>
rine spy scandal in Moscow and<lb/>
said there had been other attempts<lb/>
to incite fears of espionage by<lb/>
unnamed American leaders unin-<lb/>
terested in improving U.SSoviet<lb/>
relations. "We're not the ones who<lb/>
initiated this process Gerasimov<lb/>
said, tacitly acknowledging the<lb/>
connection between last week's<lb/>
incident and the expulsion of Van<lb/>
Gundv.<lb/>
Pakhtusov was accused of<lb/>
receiving sensitive information<lb/>
about how the U.S. government<lb/>
protects computer secrets. The<lb/>
State Department said he was<lb/>
caught in a six-month FBI probe<lb/>
after he approached an unidenti-<lb/>
fied American employee of a firm<lb/>
that deals in classified informa-<lb/>
tion.<lb/>
The Soviet government re-<lb/>
jected the charge and accused the<lb/>
United States of "a deliberate<lb/>
provocation against a Soviet di-<lb/>
olomatic official Pakhtusov, a<lb/>
military attache at the Soviet<lb/>
Fmbassv in Washington, was<lb/>
ordered home after the FBI said it<lb/>
caught him receiving sensitive<lb/>
information.<lb/>
Researchers find some strands of AIDS virus<lb/>
are increasingly resistant to AZT treatment<lb/>
NEW YORK (AP)?The find-<lb/>
ing that somestrandsof AIDS vi-<lb/>
rus are resistant to treatment by<lb/>
the most widely used anti-AlDS<lb/>
drug will not require any immedi-<lb/>
ate change in use of the drug, re-<lb/>
searchers said.<lb/>
A study by the drug's maker<lb/>
found that 11 patients with ad-<lb/>
vanced AIDS or AlDS-related<lb/>
complex, a related illness, were<lb/>
infected with virus strains only<lb/>
partly responsive to treatment<lb/>
with theanti-AIDS drug AZT. Five<lb/>
patients earned virus strains with<lb/>
"very marked reductions in sensi-<lb/>
tivitv" to the drug, according to a<lb/>
letter sent to doctors by the the the<lb/>
to treat AIDS virus infection. strains of infectious agents after<lb/>
"People who are on AZT and widespread use of a drug is com-<lb/>
arecurrently benefiting from AZT mon, doctors said. Many bacteria,<lb/>
should not panic and consider this for example, have become resis-<lb/>
a major setback said Dr. Anthony<lb/>
Fauci, director of the AIDS pro-<lb/>
gram at the National Institutes of<lb/>
Health, "just because one can iso-<lb/>
late a resistant strain from a pa-<lb/>
tient doesn't mean AZT is not ef-<lb/>
fective in combating most of the<lb/>
viral replication in the patient<lb/>
Preliminary results of the<lb/>
study were announced Tuesday<lb/>
in London. A full report of the<lb/>
study, by Brendan Larder and<lb/>
Graham Darby of Wellcome Re-<lb/>
search Laboratories in England<lb/>
manufacturer, Burroughs and Douglas Richman of the Uni-<lb/>
WellcomeCo. of Research Triangle versity of California, San Diego,<lb/>
Park, .C, AZT, also known as will be published soon in the jour-<lb/>
zidovudmeorRetrox ir, is the only nal Science.<lb/>
drugapproved in the United States The development of resistant<lb/>
National Condom Week<lb/>
protested at universities<lb/>
(CPS) -Condoms became a<lb/>
hot political isue at yel another<lb/>
campus Feb. 21.<lb/>
A senior state senator who<lb/>
helps control how much money<lb/>
public campuses get said a recent<lb/>
"condom dance" and lectureabout<lb/>
the "G spot" had turned the State<lb/>
University of New York at Albany<lb/>
into "a center of carnal knowl-<lb/>
edge<lb/>
A month earlier, administra-<lb/>
tors at knox College in Illinois de-<lb/>
cided to delay deli very to students<lb/>
of "condomgrams" intended to be<lb/>
used in ,m AIDS (acquired im-<lb/>
mune deficiency syndrome) pre-<lb/>
vention program.<lb/>
In tact, as about 650 campuses<lb/>
around the country tried to ob-<lb/>
serve National Condom Week, the<lb/>
little protective devices provoked<lb/>
struggles over the propriety of<lb/>
making them available to students<lb/>
at Michigan's Grand Valley State<lb/>
College, at Big Bend Community<lb/>
College in Orcgan and at the uni-<lb/>
versities of Utah and Nebraska-<lb/>
Lincoln, among other places.<lb/>
Thelate-Fcbruarveontroversv<lb/>
inNew York wascspecially heated<lb/>
because state Sen. James Dono-<lb/>
van, who blasted SUNY-Albanv's<lb/>
"Sexuality Week also chairs the<lb/>
state Senate's Education Commit-<lb/>
tee.<lb/>
Donovan called this week's<lb/>
activities an example of "terribly<lb/>
misplaced" campus spending.<lb/>
The dance, he charged,<lb/>
amounted to "four hours of sexu-<lb/>
ally explicit music<lb/>
But SUNY-Albany spokes-<lb/>
woman Christine McKnight said<lb/>
the events were less racy and less<lb/>
well-attended?only 38 people<lb/>
showed up for the Condom<lb/>
Dance?than Donovan imagined.<lb/>
The "G Spot" lecture was a<lb/>
weighty physiological exposition.<lb/>
The music was "regular" rock 'n'<lb/>
roll.<lb/>
Such struggles over condoms<lb/>
have become common. At Knox<lb/>
College in late January, for ex-<lb/>
ample, about 30 students protested<lb/>
officials' decision to delay the<lb/>
"condomgrams<lb/>
"The mailroom requires a<lb/>
return address so students don't<lb/>
recei ve harassing or upsetting mail<lb/>
without recourse to sender said<lb/>
Dean of Students Connie Sharp.<lb/>
"Some of the condomgrams were<lb/>
sent anonymously"<lb/>
The action came after a Sep-<lb/>
tember protest in which students<lb/>
at the University of Texas-Austin<lb/>
promised to "smuggle" condoms<lb/>
to the Southwest State campus.<lb/>
Yet at the University oi Ne-<lb/>
braska-Lincoln, housing director<lb/>
Doug Zatechka has refused to<lb/>
install condom machines .n the<lb/>
dorms, arguing condoms are best<lb/>
associations of two dorms voted<lb/>
Ian. 31 to install the machines.<lb/>
tant to penicillin and therefore<lb/>
must be treated with other antibi-<lb/>
otics.<lb/>
The Siime thing happened<lb/>
with genital herpes virus after the<lb/>
introduction of a drug to treat it,<lb/>
said Dr. Sandra Nusinoff<lb/>
Lehrman, head of the department<lb/>
of antimicrobial therapy at Bur-<lb/>
roughs Wellcome. In that case, the<lb/>
viruses that became resistant to<lb/>
the drug also became less able to<lb/>
cause disease, she said.<lb/>
"I would say these findings<lb/>
don't in themselves reouire that<lb/>
any alterations in patient therapy<lb/>
be made said Lehrman. "How-<lb/>
ever, the thing you have to stress<lb/>
is that decisions about the treat-<lb/>
ment oi HIV (the AIDS virus) really<lb/>
are joint decisions between a par-<lb/>
ticular physician and his patient<lb/>
Fauci said twonewanti-AIDS<lb/>
drugs are beginning human trials<lb/>
now, and the use of those drugs in<lb/>
combination with AZT should<lb/>
enable doctors to control any AZT-<lb/>
resistant strains of the human<lb/>
immune deficiency virus that<lb/>
causes AIDS. "You have other<lb/>
d rues that are al so effectiveaeainst<lb/>
the AIDS virus Fauci said. "You<lb/>
either switch or use a combination<lb/>
of drugs"<lb/>
The two new drugs - dide<lb/>
oxycytidine, or DDC, and dide-<lb/>
oxyinosine,or DD1 -areavailable<lb/>
at National Institutes of Health<lb/>
AIDS treatment centers across the<lb/>
countrv for patients whose infec-<lb/>
tion might become severely resis-<lb/>
tant to AZT, he said. Eventually<lb/>
those drugs might be used in<lb/>
combination with AZT or each<lb/>
other to treat resistant strains, he<lb/>
said.<lb/>
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?ije Eaat (Eaniltman<lb/>
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Dean Waters, mm Stephanie Emory,wt? s-m<lb/>
Stephanie Singleton, g &amp;-? Mac Clark, r???. M?r<lb/>
March 16,1989<lb/>
OPINION<lb/>
Page 4<lb/>
Sports<lb/>
Give credit where it's due<lb/>
The East Carolina basketball<lb/>
program is flying high. With the<lb/>
advancement to the semi-finals in<lb/>
the Colonial Athletic Association<lb/>
against George Mason, its 15-14 fin-<lb/>
ish for the season (a substantial in-<lb/>
crease over last year's 8-20 season)<lb/>
and decorated team member, Blue<lb/>
Edwards, earning the C AA player of<lb/>
the year award, the basketball pro-<lb/>
gram has earned the respect and fan<lb/>
support it greatly deserves.<lb/>
While the basketball program<lb/>
has earned the large support it re-<lb/>
ceived, many ECU sports, particu-<lb/>
larly the non-revenue sports, go un-<lb/>
recognized by the Pirate fans. But<lb/>
the East Carolina athletic programs<lb/>
that win year in and year out con-<lb/>
tinue to get the inadequate fan sup-<lb/>
port it needs and deserves.<lb/>
For examnle, the East Carolina<lb/>
swimming and diving program has<lb/>
consistently excelled in its sport and<lb/>
the men in this non-revenue pro-<lb/>
gram even went on to take the vic-<lb/>
tory in the Colonial Athletic Asso-<lb/>
ciation Championships after plac-<lb/>
ing second the year before. The<lb/>
women were just as competitive<lb/>
taking fourth this year and third the<lb/>
year before in the CAA champion-<lb/>
ships. And yet, few people outside<lb/>
the families of the swimmers give<lb/>
them the support they deserve.<lb/>
The same held true for the<lb/>
women's basketball program. The<lb/>
women finished their season at an<lb/>
impressive mark of 15-13 which was<lb/>
much improved over their 8-20 sea-<lb/>
son of last year. The women excelled<lb/>
as much as the men's basketball<lb/>
program, but the fan support for the<lb/>
Lady Pirates was not even a fourth<lb/>
of what it was for the men, yet it was<lb/>
equally deserved.<lb/>
Now, ECU faces the spring and<lb/>
all of the athletics it has to offer. But<lb/>
the major spring sport, baseball,<lb/>
which is 10-1 on the season thus far,<lb/>
has been getting very poor fan atten-<lb/>
dence. The baseball team is one,<lb/>
which, year after year, finishes the<lb/>
season with top honors.<lb/>
Softball and track, two other<lb/>
spring sports, consistentlv boast top<lb/>
athletes yet seldom see and hear fans<lb/>
to cheer them on.<lb/>
Football and basketball, the two<lb/>
main funded collegiate athletic pro-<lb/>
gram are consistently supported<lb/>
and further funded by the athletic<lb/>
department and the tans. But it is the<lb/>
non-revenue sports who suffer from<lb/>
lack of fan support. The very sports<lb/>
which consistently excel go unno-<lb/>
ticed yet deserve equal recognition.<lb/>
The success of ECU athletics<lb/>
does not lie in just the success of<lb/>
football and basketball. East Caro-<lb/>
lina is winning in most areas of ath-<lb/>
letics. The only thing missing is the<lb/>
support to give them the credit they<lb/>
deserve.<lb/>
Campus Specturm<lb/>
By<lb/>
Martin R. Helms<lb/>
and Lee Toler<lb/>
Last Monday, March 13, the Stu-<lb/>
dent Government Legislature held<lb/>
its weekly meeting. During the pe-<lb/>
riod of old business, a legislator<lb/>
asked for a Suspension of Rules in<lb/>
order to consider an appropriation<lb/>
bill. This motion, being in order and<lb/>
properly seconded passed, and de-<lb/>
bate began on the bill. Trouble began<lb/>
as well. Suspension of the Rules<lb/>
passed on the grounds that there was<lb/>
an urgency for hearing the bill March<lb/>
13, as opposed to following proce-<lb/>
dures and deciding the issue March<lb/>
20. Debators stated the funds were<lb/>
needed for registration of a confer-<lb/>
ence, but the legislation deadline was<lb/>
said to be the last week in March, a<lb/>
full week after the bill would have<lb/>
been decided following procedures.<lb/>
Suspending the rules was unneces-<lb/>
sary.<lb/>
The rules were suspended be-<lb/>
cause the group had submitted the<lb/>
request in the beginning of February,<lb/>
but Chairperson Cooperman claims<lb/>
the document was shuffled in with<lb/>
annual appropriation bills and<lb/>
"lost Had proper procedure been<lb/>
followed, the legislation would have<lb/>
been turned in to the Speaker, distrib-<lb/>
uted to the SGA Secretary and the<lb/>
Committee Chairperson, and any<lb/>
necessary copies for the body would<lb/>
have been made. Further, introduc-<lb/>
tion a week before discussion allows<lb/>
for legislators to research bills, and<lb/>
for students to express opinions to<lb/>
legislators.<lb/>
Prior to discussion of the legisla-<lb/>
tion being debated, the Appropria-<lb/>
tions Committee, under the direction<lb/>
of Chairperson Cooperman, dis-<lb/>
cussed the bill in committees,<lb/>
amended the bill, and voted. This is<lb/>
very improper. The committee may<lb/>
informally discuss the issue, but no<lb/>
amendments may be made, or votes<lb/>
taken.<lb/>
The original legislation was<lb/>
clouded by improper amendments<lb/>
written on the bill by the Appropria-<lb/>
tions committee, making the legisla-<lb/>
tion difficult to read and understand<lb/>
A motion to refer the bill to commit-<lb/>
tee was made and seconded, based<lb/>
on the fact that an immediate deci-<lb/>
sion was not required. The motion<lb/>
would have allowed proper proce-<lb/>
dures to be carried out, and careful<lb/>
consideration to be given to the<lb/>
group. But the push to blindly accept<lb/>
the Appropriations Committe report<lb/>
left many legislators confused. Fur-<lb/>
ther, the abuse of Previous Question,<lb/>
a formal call to end voting, stifled op-<lb/>
posing views, and railroaded the is-<lb/>
sue through the legislature. In one<lb/>
instance, Previous Question was<lb/>
called in First round affirmative<lb/>
debate, disallowing an opportunity<lb/>
for the opposition to voice their con-<lb/>
cerns.<lb/>
It is important to emphasize that<lb/>
wedon't stand against the fundingof<lb/>
this organization, but procedures<lb/>
and guidelines that were ignored and<lb/>
overlooked in this issue are impor-<lb/>
tant. The urgency to decide this issue<lb/>
before the next legislature meeting<lb/>
did not exist. Chairperson Cooper-<lb/>
man misinformed the Appropria-<lb/>
tionsCommittee concerning their au-<lb/>
thorization to take action, and<lb/>
wrongly introduced that informa-<lb/>
tion to the body. The legislature has<lb/>
an obligation to treat all groups fairlv<lb/>
and provide funding for those<lb/>
groups meeting criteria, but the legis-<lb/>
lators in the body have an obligation<lb/>
to the constituents to review action<lb/>
and make their own decision.<lb/>
East Carolina has one of the<lb/>
strongest Student Government Asso-<lb/>
ciations in the state of North Caro-<lb/>
lina. To maintain this distinction,<lb/>
order must prevail, procedures be<lb/>
followed, and the individuals elected<lb/>
by the students must be reliable,<lb/>
having the students best interests at<lb/>
heart. Students must observe and act,<lb/>
but do so properly. That is important<lb/>
in upholding theethicsof theStudent<lb/>
Government Association and the<lb/>
student body.<lb/>
All students are welcome to ob-<lb/>
serve the SGA legislature meeting<lb/>
every Monday, at 5:00 pm, in room<lb/>
221 Mendcnhall. The students, the<lb/>
voters, must stay interested and rep-<lb/>
resent ECU. Be informed.<lb/>
The East Carolinian welcomes let-<lb/>
ters expresseing all points of view<lb/>
Mail or drop them by our office in the<lb/>
Publications Building, across from<lb/>
the entrance to Joyner Library. For<lb/>
purposes of verification, all letters<lb/>
must include the name, major, clas-<lb/>
sification, address, phone numbe?<lb/>
and the signature of the, authojist.<lb/>
Letters are limited to 300 words or<lb/>
less'and will now be subject to ed-<lb/>
iting if longer. Letters must also be<lb/>
double-spaced, typed or neatly writ-<lb/>
ten.<lb/>
All letters are subject to editing for<lb/>
brevity, obscenity and libel, and no<lb/>
personal attacks will be permitted<lb/>
Students, faculty and staff writing<lb/>
letters for this page are reminded that<lb/>
they are limited to one every two<lb/>
weeks.<lb/>
The deadline for editorial material<lb/>
is 5 p.m. Friday for Tuesday papers<lb/>
and 5 p.m. Tuesday for Thursday edi-<lb/>
tions<lb/>
44<lb/>
Drug Czar" Bennet holds threat and promise<lb/>
By SCOTT MAXWELL<lb/>
Editorial Columnist<lb/>
It's time to burst a few bubbles.<lb/>
We spend so much time ranting about<lb/>
what a fantastic thing this democracy of<lb/>
ours is, that we tend to forget that we don't<lb/>
live in one. Nor, for that matter, were we<lb/>
ever meant to. The prevailing "wisdom" is<lb/>
that the semi-mystical Founding Fathers<lb/>
would have made America a democracy, if<lb/>
only it had been technologically feasible.<lb/>
Wrong.<lb/>
The Founding Fathers were smart. No<lb/>
matter what they thought about individu-<lb/>
als, they all realized that the mass of men,<lb/>
taken as a mass, was incapable of success-<lb/>
fully ruling itself. They realized that it<lb/>
would be stupid to subject public policy to<lb/>
too great an influence from public opinion.<lb/>
Most of us were taught year after year<lb/>
in grade school that the system of checks<lb/>
and balances they instituted was meant to<lb/>
prevent any one of the three branches of<lb/>
government from becoming more power-<lb/>
ful than any other. Rarely mentioned is that<lb/>
the form of the government itself was in-<lb/>
tended to prevent the public from gaining<lb/>
too great a control over the government.<lb/>
There are not three counterbalancing forces,<lb/>
but four.<lb/>
Television, the most massive of the<lb/>
mass media, is the vehicle by which this<lb/>
delicate balance is being upset. The govern-<lb/>
ment, once relatively sheltered from the<lb/>
gale-force winds of public opinion, now<lb/>
moves under the exacting scrutiny of the<lb/>
people.<lb/>
To be sure, this has advantages. But it<lb/>
poses its own dangers as well.<lb/>
The public, taken as a group, is not<lb/>
nearly well-informed enough to make most<lb/>
decisions that are made on the federal level.<lb/>
The public tends to think of its short-term<lb/>
welfare above all, even when short-term<lb/>
evil might lead to long-term good. When<lb/>
they were less directly in the spotlight,<lb/>
elected officials were more willing to make<lb/>
unpopular decisions.<lb/>
The public can now watch the govern-<lb/>
ment more closely than ever, but the gov-<lb/>
ernment has its eyes on the public as well.<lb/>
Congressmen routinely make their deci-<lb/>
sions based on the results of opinion polls,<lb/>
which only take a snapshot of public opin-<lb/>
ion and do not offer any other insight into<lb/>
the meritsof any particular course of action.<lb/>
As if this weren't bad enough, television ?<lb/>
and, to a lesser extent, the other media ?<lb/>
were used in the recent presidential election<lb/>
to manipulate public emotion without at-<lb/>
tempting tojnspire the public to think.<lb/>
But the most dangerous result of the<lb/>
new "mediarchy to coin a term, is the so-<lb/>
called war on drugs. Reagan managed to<lb/>
use television to convince the public that<lb/>
drugs were the country's single worst prob-<lb/>
lem. Now the public is pressuring federal<lb/>
and state legislatures to do anything ?<lb/>
anything ? to stop drug use. Nothing since<lb/>
McCarthy's anti-communism crusade has<lb/>
held such potential to damage Americans'<lb/>
rights.<lb/>
Earlier this week, in a move that sur-<lb/>
prised no one, former Secretary of Educa-<lb/>
tion William Bennett was confirmed as the<lb/>
nation's new "drug czar" ? the man whose<lb/>
job it is to win the war on drugs.<lb/>
However, even President Bush has<lb/>
been known to remark in passing that the<lb/>
drug war ? which, at one time, he spear-<lb/>
headed ? has so far been a losing battle.<lb/>
Doesn't this tell him anything?<lb/>
What Bush fails to understand, and<lb/>
what the public fails to understand, is that<lb/>
the war on drugs cannot be won at any<lb/>
reasonable cost. Any outcome except re-<lb/>
treat is doomed to be at best a Pyrrhic vic-<lb/>
tory. To combat the perception that loss is<lb/>
inevitable, supporters of the war on drugs<lb/>
propose ever-stronger penalties for users<lb/>
and pushers.<lb/>
Drug use is so widespread that, next to<lb/>
alcohol, marijuana is America's drug of<lb/>
choice. If, as many suggest, we attempted to<lb/>
put all drug users in jail, how could we<lb/>
possibly put fit them all in without packing<lb/>
them fifty per cell? For that matter, how<lb/>
many people would be left to guard them?<lb/>
As drug sanctions increase, so do deal-<lb/>
ers' profits. The opportunity for quick and<lb/>
easy profit is an enormous temptation to<lb/>
anyone, especially to poor people in large<lb/>
cities where supply and demand are both<lb/>
high. With the profit comes the necessity of<lb/>
protecting it, and the money to buy enough<lb/>
guns and muscle to do so. Hence the fright-<lb/>
ening increase in inner-city violence.<lb/>
Those who wanted to toughen drug<lb/>
laws in the first place then point to inner-<lb/>
city violence as one of the reasons for the<lb/>
need to stiffen penalties still further ? cir-<lb/>
cular reasoning at its finest.<lb/>
The increased profitsalso make i t easier<lb/>
to buy off border guards, customs officials<lb/>
and the like ? yet another self-defeating<lb/>
aspect of the drug war.<lb/>
In addition, it is ridiculous for the<lb/>
United States to demand that foreign gov-<lb/>
ernments, especially South American gov-<lb/>
ernments, crack down on drug producers in<lb/>
their countries. The government knows full<lb/>
well that these countries cannot afford to<lb/>
carry out such measures In addition,<lb/>
American demand for the drugs is in large<lb/>
part responsible for the growth of the drug<lb/>
trade in foreign countries ? and for its<lb/>
profitability.<lb/>
Finally, it is hypocritical for the United<lb/>
States government to ask that foreign gov-<lb/>
ernments should stop supplying the U.S.<lb/>
with drugs. At the same time it makes this<lb/>
claim, the government is protesting that,<lb/>
because of the principle of free trade, U.S.<lb/>
companies should be permitted to sell can-<lb/>
cer-causing tobacco products to China.<lb/>
A wise ruler knows what he cannot do.<lb/>
No ruler, no matter how wise, could possi-<lb/>
bly expect to stop drug use by increasing<lb/>
penalties. Speeding is another law which is<lb/>
often broken, occasionally with disastrous<lb/>
results ? but there is no call to put speeders<lb/>
to death, since the law would be unenforce-<lb/>
able. Laws which cannot be enforced un-<lb/>
dermine respect for the law generally and<lb/>
even seem almost laughable.<lb/>
But most of the results of the drug war<lb/>
have not been very funny. The right to<lb/>
protection from unreasonable search and<lb/>
seizure has been undermined, and the ex-<lb/>
clusionary rule is repeatedly targeted ?<lb/>
though, so far, it has remained relativelv<lb/>
unmolested.<lb/>
Are there no more pressing problems<lb/>
facing the nation? Is drug use truly the most<lb/>
important issue at hand? Is protecting the<lb/>
Bill of Rights not important enough to stand<lb/>
in the way of the drug war? Are the national<lb/>
debt, the trade deficit, racism, discrimina-<lb/>
tion, sexual equality under the law and the<lb/>
dismal public education system all less<lb/>
important than drugs? A majority of the<lb/>
public apparently thinks so.<lb/>
There is a faint ray of hope at the end of<lb/>
the tunnel. During his confirmation hear-<lb/>
ings, Bennett insisted that he understands<lb/>
that civil rights must take precedence over<lb/>
the demands of his new job.<lb/>
One hopes that he will demonstrate this<lb/>
understanding. More importantly, one<lb/>
hopes that he will demonstrate it in the face<lb/>
of the pressure he will undoubtedly face<lb/>
from vocal opponents of clearheaded re-<lb/>
straint and rational thinking.<lb/>
I<lb/>
V<lb/>
<pb facs="00058131_0006"/><lb/>
THE EAST CAROLINIAN<lb/>
MARCH 16,1989 5<lb/>
1<lb/>
Discovery has fuel valve problems<lb/>
Shuttle may come home ea<lb/>
rly<lb/>
CAPE CANAVERAL, Ha.<lb/>
(AP) ? Discovery's lights were<lb/>
dimmed and some computer<lb/>
screens were darkened today as<lb/>
engineers debated whether a<lb/>
hydrogen tank valve problem was<lb/>
serious enough to bring the five-<lb/>
man crew home a day early.<lb/>
Mission Control engineers<lb/>
September. There were no power with supercold liquid hydrogen, Astronauts James F. Buchli<lb/>
problems on that mission. is one of three that supplies Dis an( Robert C. Springer are Ma-<lb/>
Dittemore said Mission Con- covery's fuel cells, a type of gen- "ne colonels. Others in the crew<lb/>
trol believes it caused the valve to erator that combines hydrogen are Air Force Col. John E. Blaha,<lb/>
function properly by using only and oxygen to make electricity and and Dr. James M. Bagian, a physi-<lb/>
one heater in the tank instead of pure water. cian.<lb/>
Engineers studied the hydro-<lb/>
the usual two. This would slow<lb/>
the flow of cold hydrogen into the<lb/>
planned today to run a teston the generating system, reducing the<lb/>
hydrogen tank, which is part of build up of pressure against the<lb/>
the shuttle's electrical generating<lb/>
system, in hopes that they can coax<lb/>
itssticky valve into working prop-<lb/>
erly. The problem does not<lb/>
threaten the astronauts, but it<lb/>
could affect the length of the mis-<lb/>
sion.<lb/>
"We're optimistic that we'll<lb/>
come home on Saturday as<lb/>
planned flight director Ron Dit<lb/>
valve.<lb/>
In any case, Dittemore said a<lb/>
Friday landing was unlikely be-<lb/>
cause the weather forecast was<lb/>
poor for the prime landing site at<lb/>
Edwards Air Force Base, Calif. The<lb/>
forecast was better for Saturday,<lb/>
he said.<lb/>
Should engineers decide after<lb/>
the test that the hydrogen tank<lb/>
temore said Wednesday. He said cannot be used, "we could power<lb/>
thedecision will not be madeuntil down even more and then land on<lb/>
engineers turned on a heater in Saturday" to avoid Friday's fore-<lb/>
the tank and monitored the flow casted poor weather. The shuttle<lb/>
of hvdrogen through the valve. astronauts were assured there was<lb/>
Some engineers believe there n? safety concern, but they were<lb/>
is no reason to shorten the planned asked to conserve electricity,<lb/>
five-day mission, said Dittemore, The crew scurried around to<lb/>
because a similar erratic pattern<lb/>
was seen on the hydrogen tank<lb/>
turn off lights and computers not<lb/>
valve when Discovery flew<lb/>
in<lb/>
in use. The problem tank, filled<lb/>
If the tank cannot be used, it<lb/>
would cut supplies for the fuel cell gen &amp;&amp; problem all day Tuesday<lb/>
by a third. This would not give before deciding to test the prob-<lb/>
enough electrical power for five lem todaY Dv turning on one of<lb/>
days in space, plus the two days tw0 heaters and then closely<lb/>
kept in reserve for contingencies, monitoring pressures in a mani-<lb/>
For their second morning in fold that carries the hydrogen to<lb/>
space, the astronauts were busy the fad cell. With a proper pres-<lb/>
even before Mission Control gave sure response, Shaw said, the<lb/>
themaformal wakeupcall. We're heater could be left on, enabling<lb/>
r the mission to procede as planned,<lb/>
going to try to get a picture of the "There are no safety problems<lb/>
Sinaiarea Discovery commander associated with it and no electrical<lb/>
Michael L. Coats told Mission problems Mission Control told<lb/>
Control. the astronauts Tuesday. Despite a<lb/>
His sudden announcement dim cabin and a careful use of<lb/>
came 10 minutes before the offi- eiectrical power, the astronauts<lb/>
cial start of the crew's workday. kept t0 their schedule of conduct-<lb/>
The official wake up call was a full ? experiments and photograph-<lb/>
brass band rendition of the Ma-<lb/>
rine Corps Hymn played with<lb/>
gusto and volume.<lb/>
"We got two Marines stand-<lb/>
ing at attention up here joked<lb/>
Coats, a Navy captain. "What do<lb/>
we do now?"<lb/>
ing Earth targets.<lb/>
Riverbluff<lb/>
Apartments<lb/>
SUMMER SCHOOL SPECIAL!<lb/>
June &amp; July 12 Rent Special<lb/>
with the Signing of a 1 year lease<lb/>
April 1 through June 30.<lb/>
?Recently Renovated<lb/>
?Fully Carpeted<lb/>
?Large Pool<lb/>
?Free Cable<lb/>
?Bus Service1.5 miles from campus<lb/>
?Under New Management<lb/>
?On Site Management &amp; Maintainence<lb/>
10th Street Ext. to Riverbluff Rd.<lb/>
758-4015<lb/>
Communist party convenes to<lb/>
discuss growing food shortage<lb/>
MOSCOW (AP) ? President already nominated 100 of its two heads the party's commission on<lb/>
Mikhail S. Gorbachev convened officers, including most members agriculture, disagree on how to<lb/>
the Communist Party's top pol- of the ruling Politburo, to fill its resolve the crisis,<lb/>
icy-making body today for a spe- allotted 100 seats in the congress. The hottest item on the agenda<lb/>
cial meeting on the worsening food Their election was therefore was Gorbachev's desire to lease<lb/>
shortages that threaten to derail assured. Gorbachev was to make state-owned fields to farmers,<lb/>
his entire reform program. his report on agricultural policy makingthem"mastersoftheland"<lb/>
Tass, the official news agency, later in the day, with discussion of that, he says, will produce more<lb/>
said the 300-member Central the nation's pressing food supply<lb/>
Committee moved first to formally problems to continue on Thurs- because they can earn more. In<lb/>
elect its top leaders, including day, Tass said. several recent appearances, Li-<lb/>
Gorbachev, to the nation's new The shortages have weakened gachev has skipped lightly over<lb/>
parliament, the 2,250-seat Con- popular support for the Soviet leasing, and instead emphasized<lb/>
gress of People's Deputies. The leader's reform efforts. There have collective farming-the traditional<lb/>
party,oneof30organizarions with been strong signs in recent days system that has left Soviet con-<lb/>
the power to choose its own depu- that Gorbachev and his Politburo sumers standing in line for meat<lb/>
ties in the new parliament, had rival Yegor K. Ligachev, who and vegetables.<lb/>
Committee<lb/>
i<lb/>
Continued from page 1<lb/>
The committee, consisting of<lb/>
four black and four white mem-<lb/>
'fcetifl be charred by Dr. Jasper<lb/>
Register of the department of<lb/>
sociology and anthropology. Reg-<lb/>
ister would issue no comment<lb/>
saying that "the work of the<lb/>
committee is going to remain se-<lb/>
cret until I report to the chancel-<lb/>
lor The eight-member group<lb/>
should report to Eakin approxi-<lb/>
mately a month from now.<lb/>
Irons said, "The chancellor<lb/>
thought it was in the best interest<lb/>
of the university community to re-<lb/>
evaluate the situation and he feels<lb/>
the committee is the best way of<lb/>
doing that<lb/>
Other members of the commi t-<lb/>
tee include Dr. Velma Speight of Jeanette of the office of radiation<lb/>
the School of Education, DrJudy safety, Nancy Mize of the intra-<lb/>
Rollins of the School of HofheVl'mufal recreation services, and<lb/>
Economics, Dr. Charles Sullivan students Kelly Jones and Jarrod<lb/>
oi he English department, Marcus Moody.<lb/>
So what if there are<lb/>
more reasons not<lb/>
to<lb/>
Just Do It!<lb/>
then write about it<lb/>
in<lb/>
'The<lb/>
"East CaroCinian<lb/>
Now Accepting<lb/>
Applications<lb/>
ITS STILL NOT TOO LATE FOR NEXT FALL SEMESTER<lb/>
TO STUDY ABROAD!<lb/>
Docs a year of study In England. Scotland, Wales, Ireland, Belgium<lb/>
Mexico, Costa Rica, Argentina, Columbia, dominican Republic, The<lb/>
Ncatherlands. Finland, Sweden, Malta, Cyprus. Kenya, Korea, Thailand,<lb/>
or Hong Kong interest you?<lb/>
Sounds fantastic! But study abroad is too expensive? Or would be<lb/>
impossible because of lack of fluency in another language? Or would<lb/>
result in delaying graduation?<lb/>
The truth of the matter is that many institutions offer programs In<lb/>
English! Of course, if you do have sufficient fluency in another language,<lb/>
the choice of study sites is even greater!<lb/>
The cost? The cost of attending each participating institution in the<lb/>
INTERNATIONAL STUDENT EXCHANGE PROGRAM (!SEP) is precisely the<lb/>
same as attending ECU. and, in the vast majority of cases, the courses<lb/>
taken abroad transfer back to ECU and earn credit toward your degree. It<lb/>
is indeed true that, through ISEP, some of the finest universities in the<lb/>
WORLD are available at ECU prices.<lb/>
If you wish additional information about ISEP and the particular<lb/>
universities that form the ISEP network, please contact<lb/>
IMMEDIATELY:<lb/>
Dr. R. J. Hursey, Jr.<lb/>
ISEP Coordinator<lb/>
Office: 222 Austin<lb/>
Phone: Office 757-6418<lb/>
Home 756-0682<lb/>
Bora Bora<lb/>
Luauswifl<lb/>
burn you out.<lb/>
"Theme" restaurants tend to<lb/>
make you sit through an act just to<lb/>
get your meal.<lb/>
Not Annabelle's. We've got<lb/>
the delicious food and relaxed<lb/>
atmosphere you can feel<lb/>
comfortable with. It's the<lb/>
taste of American casual<lb/>
Come to Annabelle's.<lb/>
You'll love us for what<lb/>
we are. You'll love us<lb/>
for what we aren't.<lb/>
Apnabellc's<lb/>
V V RESTAURANT &amp; PUB,M<lb/>
The Plaza<lb/>
Greenville Blvd<lb/>
756-0315<lb/>
Mon-Thurs 11 30 AM - 11 00 PM<lb/>
Fri-Sat 11 30 AM - Midnight<lb/>
Sunday 12 Noon - 11 00 PM<lb/>
NOW ACCEPTING<lb/>
APPLICATIONS FOR THE<lb/>
1989-90<lb/>
ATTORNEY GENERAL<lb/>
AND PUBLIC DEFENDER<lb/>
These salaried positions offer<lb/>
an excellent opportunity to<lb/>
gain experience and leader-<lb/>
ship abilities that will benefit<lb/>
you throughout your life. At<lb/>
the same time, these positions<lb/>
will enable you to make valu-<lb/>
able contributions to East<lb/>
Carolina University. For addi-<lb/>
tional information and appli-<lb/>
cations, contact the Associate<lb/>
Dean of Student's Office in 209<lb/>
Whichard.<lb/>
ALL APPLICATIONS MUST BE TURNED IN BY<lb/>
Thursday, March 30th<lb/>
?an<lb/>
<pb facs="00058131_0007"/><lb/>
<lb/>
<lb/>
THE EAST CAROLINIAN<lb/>
MARCH 16,1989<lb/>
Classifieds<lb/>
FOR RENT<lb/>
APARTMENT FOR RENT: Two blocks<lb/>
from campus. (One bedroom available<lb/>
until July) Fully furnished, walking dis-<lb/>
tance to campus and downtown, hard-<lb/>
wood floors, friendly neighbors. $150<lb/>
month plus utilities. 757-0412.<lb/>
FEMALE ROOMMATE NEEDED:<lb/>
ASAP to share 3 bedroom apt. 1 3 rent is<lb/>
onlv $120.00 plus 13 utilities. Call 752-<lb/>
3678.<lb/>
FEMALE ROOMMATE NEEDED: Start-<lb/>
ing May 1st, to share 3 br. apartment, own<lb/>
room, $130 a month plus 1 4 utilities. One<lb/>
block from campus. Call 758-1610.<lb/>
FOR SALE<lb/>
FOR SALE; Ringgold Towers B-unit 306<lb/>
fully furnished. Take over mortgage pay-<lb/>
ments. Call 407-778-8030 in the evenings.<lb/>
TOWNHOUSE FOR SALE: 24<lb/>
Wildwood Villas. 3 bedrooms, 2 12<lb/>
baths. Great for college students. For more<lb/>
information call Jeff Aldridge 756-3500 or<lb/>
355-6700.<lb/>
CAR STEREO: Alpine, AMFM cass.<lb/>
Model 7163. $195.00. CaU 752-8576.<lb/>
CAN YOU BUY: Jeeps, Cars, 4 X4's seized<lb/>
in drug raids for under $100.00? Call for<lb/>
facts today. 602-837-3401. Ext. 711.<lb/>
SEGA VIDEO GAME SET FOR SALE:<lb/>
With 2 games, 2 control pads and 1 gun.<lb/>
Used only 1 time. $90.00. Call 756-4161<lb/>
after 9 p.m.<lb/>
1984 HONDA CR 250: Excellent cond. w<lb/>
extras $1100.00. Call 830-0327.<lb/>
"PK RIPPER BMX Bike. $285.00 nego-<lb/>
tiable. Call 830-0327.<lb/>
CONICO TOOL BOX: For full size pick-<lb/>
up truck. Never used, $60.00. Call 830-<lb/>
0327.<lb/>
TOWNHOUSE FOR SALE: Windy<lb/>
Ridge, 3 bedroom, 2 12 baths. Com-<lb/>
pletely remodeled. With initial down pay-<lb/>
ment of $4,000.00 and S402.00month or<lb/>
renting for $500.00month. Swimming<lb/>
pool, tennis courts, and clubhouse. Call<lb/>
756-1180 or 756-4747.<lb/>
FOR SALE: Sofa, good condition, asking<lb/>
$45.00. Call Phillip at 752-6554 anytime.<lb/>
FOR SALE: 30 gal. fish tank. All accesso-<lb/>
ries and fish included. $100.00. Call 758-<lb/>
8272.<lb/>
software and computer diskettes. 24<lb/>
hours in and out. Guaranteed typing on<lb/>
paper up to 20 hand written pages. We<lb/>
repair computers and printers also Low-<lb/>
est hourly rate in town. SDF Professional<lb/>
Computer Services, 106 East 5th Street<lb/>
(beside Cubbies) Greenville, NC 752-<lb/>
3694<lb/>
NEED A D.J Hire the ELBO D Call<lb/>
early and book for your formal or party.<lb/>
758-1700, ask for Dillon or leave a mes-<lb/>
sage.<lb/>
FOREIGN STUDENTS: Job-Hunting<lb/>
Guide (Rev. 1989). Send $19.95 for the<lb/>
step-by-step guide. IvySoft International,<lb/>
PO Box 241090, Memphis, TN 38124-1090<lb/>
PROFESSIONAL TYPING: If you have<lb/>
papers, resumes, thesis, etc. that need to<lb/>
be typed, please call 756-8934 between<lb/>
5.30-9:30 p.m. 16 years typing experience.<lb/>
Typing is done on computer with letter<lb/>
quality printer.<lb/>
HELP WANTED<lb/>
SERVICES OFFERED<lb/>
PARTY: If you are having a party and<lb/>
need a D.J. for the best music available for<lb/>
parties Dance, Top 40, &amp; Beach. Call 355-<lb/>
2781 and ask for Morgan.<lb/>
?WORD PROCESSING AND PHOTO-<lb/>
COPYING SERVICES: We offer typing<lb/>
and photocopying services. We also sell<lb/>
FEMALE RESIDENT COUNSELOR:<lb/>
Interested in those with human service<lb/>
background wishing to gain valuable<lb/>
experience in the field. No monetary<lb/>
compensation, however room, utilities<lb/>
and phone provided. Mary Smith REAL<lb/>
Crisis Center 758-HELP.<lb/>
OVERSEAS JOBS: Also eruiseships.<lb/>
S10,000-$l05,000 vr Now hiring! 320<lb/>
listings! (1) 805-687-6000. Ext. OJ-1166.<lb/>
HELP WANTED: Male?interested in<lb/>
yard work, weeding, transplanting small<lb/>
shrubs, etc. S4.00hr set your own<lb/>
time?call 756-2496.<lb/>
ARE YOU A COLLEGE STUDENT<lb/>
LOOKING FOR PART-TIME EMPLOY -<lb/>
ME NT Need a good solid respectable job<lb/>
to begin now and continue through the<lb/>
summer? Through Fall semester? And<lb/>
even through graduation? Brody's and<lb/>
Brodv's for Men are accepting applica-<lb/>
tions for dedicated, conscientious people<lb/>
who show enthusiasm to be a part of a<lb/>
quality retail environment. Apply with<lb/>
Brody's, Carolina East Mall, M-W, 2-4<lb/>
p.m.<lb/>
HELP WANTED: Secretarialaccounting<lb/>
position. Part-time. Great for an account-<lb/>
ing student. Call Sam's Lock &amp; Key from<lb/>
8:00 a.m. to 5:00 p m. 757-0075.<lb/>
COLLEGE REP WANTED: To distribute<lb/>
"Student Rate" subscription cards at this<lb/>
campus. Good income For information<lb/>
and application write to COLLEGIATE<lb/>
MARKETING SERVICES 251 Qenwood<lb/>
Dr. Moorcsville, NC 28115 (70) 664-<lb/>
4063<lb/>
HIGH SCHOOL AND COLLEGE STU-<lb/>
DENTS: Who enjoy cooking we have<lb/>
openings for cook's helpers and kitchen<lb/>
aids at children summer camp 10 thv cool<lb/>
mountains of North Carolina Experience<lb/>
not necessary, we will tram You receive<lb/>
room, meals, laundry, plus S900.00-<lb/>
51000.00 salary and trawl expenses. Non-<lb/>
smoking students write tor App bro-<lb/>
chure: Camp Pinewood 20203-1 N E 3<lb/>
Court. Miami, FL 33179.<lb/>
SUMMER CAMP COUNSELORS: Men<lb/>
&amp; Women?Generalists &amp; Specialists.<lb/>
Two overnight 8 week camps in New<lb/>
York's Adirondack Mountains have<lb/>
openings for tennis, waterfront (WSI,<lb/>
ALS, sailing skiing, small crafts), all team<lb/>
sports, gymnastics, artscrafts, pioneer-<lb/>
ing, music, photography, drama, dance,<lb/>
and nurses who love fun and children.<lb/>
Write: Professor Robert S. Gcrsten, Brant<lb/>
Lake Camp, 84 Leamington Street, Lido<lb/>
Beach, NY 11561.<lb/>
HELP WANTED: Part-time Children's<lb/>
Youth Director, salaried position. 15<lb/>
hours per week. Please apply in writing to<lb/>
Rev Bill Learv, Winterville Baptist<lb/>
Church, P.O. Box 434, Winterville, NC<lb/>
28590.<lb/>
ADDITIONAL STAFF NEEDED. For<lb/>
small country inn and restaurant in the<lb/>
delightfully different coastal town oi<lb/>
Beaufort, NC?knowledgeable wait<lb/>
people interested in learning more about<lb/>
wines and gourmet cuisine?chamber<lb/>
maids for our elegantly appointed<lb/>
suites?positions available in our profes-<lb/>
sional kitchen. Please call The Cedars" at<lb/>
(919) 728-7036 after 2 p.m<lb/>
ARE YOU A COLLEGE STUDENT<lb/>
LOOKING FOR Part-time employment,<lb/>
need a good solid respectable ob to begin<lb/>
now and continue through the Summer'<lb/>
Through Fall semester7 And even<lb/>
through graduation7 Brodv's and Brody's<lb/>
for Men are accepting applications for<lb/>
dedicated, conscientious people who<lb/>
show enthusiasm to be a part of a quality<lb/>
retail environment Apply with Brody's,<lb/>
Carolina Last Mall, M-W, 2-4 p m<lb/>
COACH: Experienced for L'SS Summer<lb/>
Swim Team. References required. Apply<lb/>
P.O Box 1301, Tarboro, NC 27886.<lb/>
onship. You did a great job. ?Love, Alpha<lb/>
Delta Pi.<lb/>
WE HOPE EVERYONE HAD A fun and<lb/>
safe Spring Break?now it's back to reali ty<lb/>
(studying!). ?Alpha Delta Pi.<lb/>
ALPHA SIGMA PHI PLEDGES: BE<lb/>
WARNED! The ball drops HARD!<lb/>
ALPHA SIGMA PHI BROTHERS AND<lb/>
LITTLE SISTERS: Get ready to party till<lb/>
you turn green! Tomorrow night?St.<lb/>
Patty's Day party! It's gonna be a blast!<lb/>
PERSONALS<lb/>
ATTENTION: Delta Zeta welcomes ev-<lb/>
eryone back from Spring Break The fun<lb/>
has just begun?get psyched for Easter<lb/>
weekend, Greek Week, Barefoot &amp; Sum-<lb/>
mer Time!<lb/>
DELTA ZETAS: All but Seniors watch<lb/>
your stride. Senior burn time is coming<lb/>
alive. We're not scared to bring you out.<lb/>
You cannot be spared?no matter your<lb/>
clout. Get in gear to right your wrongs.<lb/>
Dream Girl formal won't be long Love ya!<lb/>
?The Seniors.<lb/>
SIGMA BASKETBALL: Congratula-<lb/>
tions on being 1 in the tournament and<lb/>
especially in our hearts. ?Love, The Sig-<lb/>
mas.<lb/>
THE SIGMAS WOULD: Like to welcome<lb/>
everyone back to school after a fun and<lb/>
safe Spring Break.<lb/>
ALPHA DELTA PI BASKETBALL AND<lb/>
WATERPOLO TEAMS: You are the best<lb/>
and had a great season?too bad you<lb/>
didn't win another t-shirt. ?Love your<lb/>
sisters.<lb/>
CONGRATULATIONS TO THE SIG-<lb/>
MAS: On the Sorority Basketball Champi-<lb/>
ODE TO THE BLUE LAGOON: Listen,<lb/>
Fellow Alkies and you shall hear, of the<lb/>
splintering planks and the shrieks of fear.<lb/>
At the Blue Lagoon, Key West, Spring<lb/>
Break 89, All of us there had one hellava<lb/>
time.<lb/>
With Vaughn, Fat Pat, and the rest of the<lb/>
gang, None of us will quite ever be the<lb/>
same. With Concoctions like, 'Traffic<lb/>
Lights" and Cabbage Daquiris We were<lb/>
the roudiest group on the seven seas.<lb/>
Though our waitresses were Huge, and<lb/>
ugly and rude, Our ECU charm kept them<lb/>
in a Sybil-type mood. There was Tara<lb/>
from Foley's though, that did us so right,<lb/>
And comments like "You wanna make<lb/>
out or what?" from Loonies like Mike.<lb/>
We can't forget Clayton, who won Chug-<lb/>
off for Ole ECU, Or Johnson, who always<lb/>
had his arms around two. Here's to Lucas,<lb/>
who almost killed us on the hood of his<lb/>
car, And to Lee who can finally get into<lb/>
bars. (In Florida anyway).<lb/>
Hey Jerry, your hair looks fine so come out<lb/>
of the can, And Drew, thanks for bringing<lb/>
that "Hotel-on-Wheels Van To Gary,<lb/>
hey dude, thanks for that cigarette of lead,<lb/>
Without it, 108 Chris and I would proba-<lb/>
bly be dead. One more thing about that<lb/>
Gary, if you can think back, then do, Re-<lb/>
member, faces up on the beach looking<lb/>
out at you. (1 do).<lb/>
Hey Marc from Philly, great partying<lb/>
with you guy. Come back South sometime<lb/>
and give this campus a try Stcbo, hev<lb/>
buddy, thanks for taking your car, With<lb/>
out it, we wouldn t have gone very far<lb/>
And Brent, hev roomie, what can 1 say?<lb/>
Nobody else jogged every day (At 4:30<lb/>
a.m.).<lb/>
I think that covers the "original group<lb/>
except me, Hev1 Hey' So let's just put it<lb/>
like this then, O.K 7 Chris became<lb/>
Vaughn, and about that they're no bones.<lb/>
As for me, every girl I met thinks my name<lb/>
is Chris Jones.<lb/>
One more thing, and most important of<lb/>
all, Thank you Pat Moyc for returning mv<lb/>
calls<lb/>
SIG EPS: Spring Break is over' It's time to<lb/>
buckle down &amp; whoop some A An<lb/>
unprecented FIFTH Chancellor's Cup<lb/>
waits on the horizon. Good luck to Softball<lb/>
and indoor soccer.<lb/>
ADP1: Have a nice week Aren't we glad<lb/>
we're Greek. Can't wait to get together<lb/>
with you. Your secret sorority awaits you!<lb/>
SIP EP: Congratulations to the All-Cam-<lb/>
pus A-Team Watcrpolo Squad. Our built-<lb/>
m-innertubes came in handy<lb/>
MANLEY MAN, OLD MAN, SKIN<lb/>
MAN, RASTA MAN, DOUBLE-CUT<lb/>
MAN: We're all friends here, we know<lb/>
each other well enough so let's have a<lb/>
moment with Al Channa H again' Stomp,<lb/>
stomp, stomp1 Shades &amp; hats at nite, it's all<lb/>
crazy, it's insane That's not right 360s on<lb/>
the golf course, what are you thmkm'7<lb/>
1 ley Little Al, look out for the screen door<lb/>
&amp; that crazy wig?Bad Buzz! I lad a blast<lb/>
?Kim &amp; Michelle<lb/>
GONG SHOW UPDA If March 27th at<lb/>
8:30 is the time. The Attic is the place Get<lb/>
ready tor a wild evening ol fun and<lb/>
laughs.<lb/>
GREEKS: Since I know wc all spent our<lb/>
entire Spring Break engaged in our hard<lb/>
academic studies, win not take a break<lb/>
jnd come out to the Sig Ep Gong Show<lb/>
and see which fraternity or sorority has<lb/>
the right stuff to escape the dreaded<lb/>
CONG<lb/>
GONG SHOW RULES NOMORALSoi<lb/>
scruples allowed Get down and get dirty<lb/>
but don't get gonged<lb/>
SIGMA PHI FPSILOV Congratulations<lb/>
to A &amp; B team basketball on a tine season<lb/>
GREEKS: Who will capture she coveth I<lb/>
GOLDEN GONG this yeai Come out to<lb/>
the Attic on Mar 27 and i heet .our leant<lb/>
to VICTORY'<lb/>
DISPLAY CLASSIFIED DISPLAY CLASSIFIED<lb/>
ABORTION <lb/>
'Personal and Confidential Care"<lb/>
FREE Pregnancy<lb/>
Testing<lb/>
M-F 8:30-4 p.m.<lb/>
Sat. 10-1 p.m.<lb/>
Triangle Women's<lb/>
Health Center<lb/>
Call for appointment Mon thru Sat. law<lb/>
Cost Termination to 20 wrrks of pregnancy<lb/>
OUR RESUMES<lb/>
MAKE A<lb/>
DIFFERENCE<lb/>
1-800-433-2930<lb/>
p j ones<lb/>
?<lb/>
<lb/>
accu e<lb/>
??CORY<lb/>
758-2400<lb/>
ATTENTION:<lb/>
PANHELLEMC ANNOUNCES:<lb/>
FALL RUSH WILL BE HELD:<lb/>
AUGUST I9th - AUGUST 23rd<lb/>
THE EAST CAROLINIAN<lb/>
Subscription Form<lb/>
Name:<lb/>
Address:<lb/>
Date to Begin:<lb/>
Complimentary.<lb/>
Amount Paid: ?<lb/>
Individual<lb/>
Date to End:<lb/>
Business:<lb/>
.Date Paid:<lb/>
Rate?: Individual $2b pet yearBusiness S35 per -jr<lb/>
8etur? to: TkeEirt Carolinian PubUcsM nIHdj CU.Cn N  - M3S3<lb/>
.<lb/>
Announcements<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/>
F.C1I 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 830-0137.<lb/>
GEE<lb/>
PLEASE NOTE that the April 8 admini-<lb/>
stration of the Graduate Record 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/>
minority snaaag or-<lb/>
ganization<lb/>
Elections for the office of President, Vice<lb/>
President, Treasurer and Secretary will be<lb/>
held March 16 at 5 p.m. in Speight 129. All<lb/>
potential candidates should plan to at-<lb/>
tend. For more information regarding<lb/>
proper procedure for filing, please contact<lb/>
Sheila Gardner at 758-3713.<lb/>
MC ADMISSION TEST<lb/>
The new 1989 Medical College Admission<lb/>
Test (MCAT) applications have arrived<lb/>
in the Testing Center, Speight Bldg room<lb/>
105. The next test date is April 29. Appli-<lb/>
cations must be completed and post-<lb/>
marked no later than March 31.<lb/>
STRING QUARTET<lb/>
The Tokyo String Quartet will perform on<lb/>
March 16th at 8.00 p.m. in Wright Audito-<lb/>
rium. This event is co-sponsored by the<lb/>
School of Music and the Dept. of Univer-<lb/>
sity Unions. The scheduled program for<lb/>
this performance is: Quartet in C Minor,<lb/>
Op. 18, No. 4 by Beethoven, Quartet No. 3<lb/>
by Bartok?INTERMISSION?Quartet in<lb/>
G Major, Op. 161, D887 by Schubert. Tick-<lb/>
ets are now on sale and are available at the<lb/>
Central Ticket Office, MSC Office hours<lb/>
areMonFri 11 a.m. - 6p.m. The phone<lb/>
number is 757-6611, ext. 266.<lb/>
guest pianist, Karen Shaw, a member ot<lb/>
the Indiana ' iversity School of Music<lb/>
Faculty. The program for this powerful<lb/>
performance is scheduled to be: R1ENZ1<lb/>
OVERTURE by Wagner, CONCERTO in<lb/>
A Minor for Piano and Orchestra, Opus 16<lb/>
by Grieg, Karen Shaw, Piano, INTERMIS-<lb/>
SION, THE PLANETS by Hoist. The first<lb/>
portion of the concert will be conducted<lb/>
by Robert Hause and the second selection<lb/>
will be conducted by Gerhardt Zimmer-<lb/>
man. Tickets are not on sale at the Central<lb/>
Ticket Office, MSC, 757-6611, Ext. 266<lb/>
SEASON TICKETS<lb/>
Season tickets for the 1989-90 Performing<lb/>
Arts Series at ECU are now on sale. This<lb/>
outstanding season includes ITZHAK<lb/>
PERLMAN, THE NC DANCE THE-<lb/>
ATRE, SHALON '90. THE CANNES<lb/>
CHAMBER ORCHESTRA with RAN-<lb/>
SOM WILSON, THE NC.<lb/>
SHAKESPEARE FESTIVAL, CARMEN<lb/>
sung in English, DREAM GIRLS, and<lb/>
much more. Patrons are cautioned that<lb/>
initial season ticket sales are brisk. Al-<lb/>
though individual event tickets will goon<lb/>
sale 3 weeks prior to each event, it is<lb/>
highly possible that the scries will sell out<lb/>
in season sells Don't miss out on the best<lb/>
Performing Arts Series, order your tickets<lb/>
today. Tickets are on sale at the Central<lb/>
Ticket Office, MSC, 757-6611, Ext. 266.<lb/>
VISITINC, LECTURES<lb/>
The Honors Program, the Science and<lb/>
Math Ed. Center and Internationa Stud-<lb/>
ies will sponsor "A Day m the Life of a<lb/>
Park Ranger" March 28 (co-sponsored by<lb/>
the ECU Geology Dept) K Rod Cran-<lb/>
son?Science Dept, Lansing Community<lb/>
College, Lansing, Mi Science Educator,<lb/>
Summer Interpreter for the National Park<lb/>
Service, and author of "Crater Lake-<lb/>
Gem of the Cascades: The Geologic Story<lb/>
of Crater Lake National Park 7:30 p.m<lb/>
room 1026 GCB. "The National Park of<lb/>
New Zealand and Costa Rica" will be<lb/>
presented on April 4th (co-sponsored<lb/>
with the ECU English Dept.) Robert and<lb/>
Patricia Cahn?Environmental Journal-<lb/>
ists and Consultants, Lecsburg, VA Pulit-<lb/>
zer Prize 1969 and 1988 recipient of the<lb/>
Majory Stoncman Douglas Award 730<lb/>
p.m room 1031 GCB.<lb/>
SCEC<lb/>
Expressions is now accepting poetry and<lb/>
short stories for publication in the April<lb/>
issue. Articles can be left at the office or the<lb/>
Media Board Secretary's Office, located in<lb/>
the Publications Bldg. across from Joyner<lb/>
Library. Deadline for submissions is<lb/>
March 16.<lb/>
FRJFTTyjlENTS<lb/>
There will be 2 advising sessions for<lb/>
summerfall registrabon for PT students.<lb/>
Dates are March 22 &amp; 23 at 7 p.m. in the PT<lb/>
classroom (Belk Bldg). ALL Pre-PT<lb/>
students MUST attend one of these meet-<lb/>
ings<lb/>
BACKPACKING TRIP<lb/>
Register now through March 28 for a BP<lb/>
trip to the Uuharrie National Forest.<lb/>
Equip transportation and trail food, as<lb/>
well as instruction will be provided for a<lb/>
nominal fee. All faculty, staff and students<lb/>
are encouraged to register in 204 Memo-<lb/>
rial Gym. For additional info call 757-<lb/>
6387.<lb/>
APPLICATIONS FOR ROOMS<lb/>
The Methodist Student Center is now<lb/>
accepting applications for rooms for Fall<lb/>
1989. Call 758-2030 or come by 501 E. 5th<lb/>
St. for more info.<lb/>
EC. FRIENDS<lb/>
There will be a general membership meet-<lb/>
ing for all volunteers and officers in East<lb/>
Carolina Friends today at 7 p.m. in GCB<lb/>
1031. This meeting is very important and<lb/>
will include such business as nomina-<lb/>
tions, funding, and planning for next year.<lb/>
If because of work, class, or illness you<lb/>
cannot attend, call Dr. Mooney or a<lb/>
member of the Exec Council immedi-<lb/>
ately.<lb/>
SYMPHONY<lb/>
The ECU Symphony end the N.C Sym-<lb/>
phony will combine force for a concert on<lb/>
March 19th at 3:00 p.m. in Wright Aud.<lb/>
This matinee appearance will feature<lb/>
Meeting March 20th at 5:15 p.m. in<lb/>
Speight 104. Speaker from Special Olym-<lb/>
pics. Come help us prepare for Excep-<lb/>
tional Children's Week!<lb/>
FYPRFSSIONS<lb/>
TONIGHT<lb/>
Psi Chi will be held at 6:00 p.m. in the Psi<lb/>
Chi Library. Dr. Tacker will introduce<lb/>
"Quick Draw Psychology" and members<lb/>
will play the game. All members are urged<lb/>
to attend. Prizes will be awarded to win-<lb/>
ning team and pizza will be served to all.<lb/>
Please bring $1.00 donation.<lb/>
PUBLIC INFO.<lb/>
The League of Women Voters of Green-<lb/>
ville-Pitt County is sponsoring a public in-<lb/>
formational meeting about present and<lb/>
future solid waste mgmt. in Pitt County.<lb/>
The meeting will take place on March 21 at<lb/>
7:30 p.m. at the First Presbyterian Church<lb/>
in Greenville.<lb/>
IMPROVING STUDY SKILLS<lb/>
Learning how to improve your study<lb/>
skills for greater success in college. The<lb/>
following mini course and workshops can<lb/>
help you prepare for the added workload<lb/>
of college or help to increase your GPA.<lb/>
All sessions will be held in 313 Wright<lb/>
Bldg. March 20 &amp; 21?Test Taking?3-<lb/>
4:30 p.m.<lb/>
SJRA<lb/>
Filing dates for fall offices in SRA and<lb/>
House Council will begin March 20th.<lb/>
Elections will be held March 28th.<lb/>
PRE-PRO. HEALTH<lb/>
The Pre-Professional Health Alliance will<lb/>
meet today at 6:30 p.m. in 247 Menden-<lb/>
hall. All members are encouraged to at-<lb/>
tend.<lb/>
GOSPEL CHOIR<lb/>
The ECU Gospel Choir is very pleased to<lb/>
announce its 6th Anniversary. This is a<lb/>
special anniversary because it also marks<lb/>
our 10th year as a campus-recognized org.<lb/>
This occasion will be celebrated with a<lb/>
musical program to be held on March 19 at<lb/>
3:30 p.m. in the Hendrix Theatre. (The<lb/>
program had been scheduled for Feb. 26,<lb/>
but was postponed due to inclement<lb/>
weather). Many of the Gospel Choir<lb/>
Alumni will be performing. Admission<lb/>
for students and children-$1.00?adults-<lb/>
$2.00. Everyone is encouraged to come<lb/>
and enjoy an afternoon of inspirational<lb/>
music.<lb/>
GEE<lb/>
PLEASE NOTE that the April 8 admini-<lb/>
stration of the Graduate Record Exam will<lb/>
be the last time the General and Subjects<lb/>
exams will be given until Oct. The Gen oral<lb/>
portion only will be given at the June 3<lb/>
administration.<lb/>
EXTENDED DEADLINE<lb/>
The deadline to register for ECU's sum-<lb/>
mer study program in Ferrara, Italy has<lb/>
been extended to March 20. Students and<lb/>
non-students may apply. The program<lb/>
runs from May 10 to June 15 and features<lb/>
courses taught in English, Italian lan-<lb/>
guage study, and field trips. The cost is<lb/>
$2,480 for NC residents and $3280 for non-<lb/>
residents. For more info call Office of<lb/>
International Studies (757-6769) or Todd<lb/>
Savitt (551-2797).<lb/>
CO.REC VOLLEYBALL<lb/>
A registration meeting for Intramural<lb/>
sport co-rec volleyball will beheld March<lb/>
21 at 6 00 pm. in MG 102.<lb/>
INDOOR SOCCER<lb/>
A annual indoor soccer tournament will<lb/>
hold a registration meeting March 21 a<lb/>
7:00p.m. in MG 102. Anticipated sp :<lb/>
ship should provide great awards foi<lb/>
participating squads. Don't miss the<lb/>
meeting.<lb/>
SPORT DAY<lb/>
The annual Budweiser Sport Day will<lb/>
hold its registration March 28 at 5 00 p.m<lb/>
in BIO 103. Participants receive FREE<lb/>
shirts with trophies awarded to first<lb/>
through 4th place finishers. Don't m.<lb/>
action. This co-rec event is designed foi<lb/>
teams of 2 men and 2 women<lb/>
TENNIS MIX POUB1 ES<lb/>
A registration meeting tor intramural<lb/>
sport tennis mixed doubles will be held<lb/>
March 28 at 5:30 p m in IK I ;<lb/>
INTEND! I) MAIORS<lb/>
All General College si; j.  ha .e in-<lb/>
dicated a desire to major in Speech-Lan-<lb/>
guage and Auditor Path ilog) and have<lb/>
R Muzzarelli as their ad isor are to meet<lb/>
on March 22 at 5 00 p m. in BB 201 Advis<lb/>
ing for early registration will take place at<lb/>
that time Please prepare a tentative class<lb/>
schedule before the meeting<lb/>
PHI ALPHA THETA<lb/>
There will be a 1'hi Alpha I beta meeting<lb/>
on March 20th in the Todd Room at 1 p m.<lb/>
GIVE BLOOD<lb/>
Please give blood. Arnn KOTC will be<lb/>
having a Red Cross blood drive on March<lb/>
21 and 22 from 12 r p m at MSC Please<lb/>
give<lb/>
CAPSAND GOWNS<lb/>
Caps and Gowns should be picked up in<lb/>
the Student Stores March 14-16 These<lb/>
Keepsake gowns are yours to keep pra<lb/>
viding the graduation fee has been paid<lb/>
For those receiving the Masters Degree<lb/>
the.fee pays for your cap and gown, but<lb/>
there is an extra fee of SI 2.50 for vour<lb/>
hood. Announcements are available in the<lb/>
Student Store.<lb/>
IVCF<lb/>
is not but 1 labakkuk the<lb/>
 roducti ?i is! March<lb/>
md 28th Habakkuk  be shown in<lb/>
Wright Aud Admission is FREE!<lb/>
DANCE<lb/>
. <lb/>
Habakkuk is coming! Habakkuk himself<lb/>
17, 'Aes2fel<lb/>
I ost .i dance at<lb/>
the Methodist Stu lent ntci from9pjn<lb/>
until midnight Bring your own musk<lb/>
(cassettes) il you desire refreshments<lb/>
provided. Please, no alcohol Sponsored<lb/>
by Presbyterian and Methodist Campus<lb/>
Ministries v I :<lb/>
MOVIE<lb/>
Jesus Christ Superstar' will be shown at<lb/>
the Methodist Student Center (501 E 5th<lb/>
Si across from Garret! Dorm)March I9at<lb/>
8 pm Refreshments provided a discus<lb/>
sion will I ?? . I b Presbyte<lb/>
run and Methodistampus Ministries<lb/>
LOVE HAM<lb/>
Worship Cod this I lolv Week at a unique<lb/>
ser tee expressing our love and commit<lb/>
ment to serve each other and the world<lb/>
March 21, 5.15-6 15 p m. promptly, at the<lb/>
Baptist Student Union, 10th St, 1 block<lb/>
last of Wendy's. Sponsored ecumenically<lb/>
by the ECU Campus Ministries Assoc<lb/>
(758-2030).<lb/>
CAMPFIRE<lb/>
Sing eat s'mores and share good fellow-<lb/>
ship around a camphre, March 21 at 8:00<lb/>
in the Ampitheatre behind Fletcher Dorm<lb/>
(Weather permitting). Bring instruments,<lb/>
blankets, flashlights, dress warmly Spon-<lb/>
sored hv Westel (Methodist and Presbyte-<lb/>
rian Campus Ministries), 758-2030 or 752<lb/>
7240.<lb/>
MONEY. SEX &amp; POWER<lb/>
A Bible study which will explore these 3<lb/>
themes crucial to Christians seeking to<lb/>
live faithfully. Will meet Tuesdays, 4-5<lb/>
p m at the Methodist Student Center (501<lb/>
E 5th St, across from Gairett Dorm)<lb/>
Sponsored by Presbyterian Campus Min-<lb/>
istry. For further info call "Mike" at 752-<lb/>
7240<lb/>
CAMPUS CHALLENGE<lb/>
If you are challenged everyday with prob-<lb/>
lems that you find hard to overcome, join<lb/>
us for the uncompromised word of God.<lb/>
Every Fri. night at 7:00 in the Jenkins Art<lb/>
Auditorium.<lb/>
- <lb/>
Y<lb/>
<pb facs="00058131_0008"/><lb/>
<lb/>
i<lb/>
r<lb/>
1<lb/>
s<lb/>
i.<lb/>
i<lb/>
1<lb/>
t<lb/>
THE EASTCAROl INI AN<lb/>
Features<lb/>
MARCH 16, 1989 PAGE 7<lb/>
Dance show mediocre<lb/>
By JIM SHAM LIN<lb/>
Stiff Writer<lb/>
The East Carol in. i Dance Thea-<lb/>
ter opened its spring concert in<lb/>
McGinnis Theater last night with<lb/>
a dance entitled The Decline a<lb/>
series of vignettes which demon-<lb/>
strated the transition of dance from<lb/>
the waltz to the obscene gyrations<lb/>
or today. Each separate vignette<lb/>
demonstrated two dances from<lb/>
each period, one each for the upper<lb/>
and lower classes.<lb/>
"The Decline" included e!e<lb/>
ments of theater, from simple ac-<lb/>
tion to slapstick comedy. Although<lb/>
this did lit tie to enhance the dances,<lb/>
the audience seemed appreciative.<lb/>
The second dance, "Qctopod<lb/>
and the fourth, "Radiant Ener-<lb/>
gies were both choreographed<lb/>
by Patricia L. Weeks. Asone might<lb/>
expect, they were much the same.<lb/>
Each began with intense,<lb/>
minute action and combined the<lb/>
motions oi duets or trios to pro-<lb/>
duce surreal motions. Weeks'<lb/>
choreography utilized both the<lb/>
bodies of the dancers and the<lb/>
negative spaces around them to<lb/>
create a somewhat unsettling vis-<lb/>
ual effect.<lb/>
Ret ween Weeks' dances came<lb/>
"Interplay which looked like a<lb/>
home video of an aerobics class<lb/>
for people with no sense of direc-<lb/>
tion. The dancers carried the parts<lb/>
well, but the choreography was<lb/>
nothing short of pathetic.<lb/>
The only part of this dance<lb/>
which the audience seemed to like<lb/>
was the third movement, in which<lb/>
the performers wore masks on the<lb/>
back of their heads. Admittedly, it<lb/>
was interesting, but it was incon-<lb/>
gruous with the rest of the dance.<lb/>
The finale, "Beauty and the<lb/>
Beast was the least bizarre dance<lb/>
of the lot. As suggested by its title,<lb/>
the dance was a sort of parody of<lb/>
the fairy tale. Its choreography<lb/>
included both graceful, fluid flour-<lb/>
ishes and sharp motions which<lb/>
seemed almost brutal.<lb/>
Although "Beauty and the<lb/>
Beast" was a well-choreographed<lb/>
and well-performed dance, it is<lb/>
far too subdued to serve as a fi-<lb/>
nale: it lacked intensity.<lb/>
Although the content of the<lb/>
show was merely a cut above<lb/>
mediocrity, thedancers' perform-<lb/>
ance was outstanding. They exe-<lb/>
cuted the entire show without a<lb/>
single stumble or foot-squeak. This<lb/>
is more than can be said for Phila-<lb/>
danco, which supposed to be a<lb/>
professional group.<lb/>
In addition to their talent as<lb/>
dancers, last night's performer?<lb/>
demonstrated a showmanship<lb/>
unequaled by the two "profes-<lb/>
sional" dance companies who<lb/>
have recently appeared in Wright.<lb/>
Unlike last night's performers,<lb/>
dancers oi both the Ohio Ballet<lb/>
and Philadanco took several bows<lb/>
after each dance, forcing the audi-<lb/>
ence to applaud far longer than<lb/>
was merited.<lb/>
The concert will continue<lb/>
nightly through Sunday the lth.<lb/>
Five dancers rehearse for the East Carolinian Dance Theater's new show. They will be appearing<lb/>
in McGinnis theater for the next three days. (Photo by J.D. Whitmire)<lb/>
Author sick of murder<lb/>
 ? V5 HI?. <lb/>
The ECU varsity and junior varsity cheerleaders held their awards banquet at the Hilton Inn last<lb/>
night at 7. (Photo by J.D. Whitmire)<lb/>
NEW YORK (AP) ? Joe<lb/>
McGinniss says his new book,<lb/>
"Blind Faith is the last one he<lb/>
will write about a murder case.<lb/>
1 le's running out of empathy.<lb/>
"I think my capacity for em-<lb/>
pathy is over. There is nothing<lb/>
worse than a writer not feeling as<lb/>
sorrv as he should for the people<lb/>
who are hurting says McGin-<lb/>
niss, author of the best-selling<lb/>
"Fatal Vision about Jeffrey<lb/>
MacDonald, a Green Beret officer<lb/>
convicted of killing his pregnant<lb/>
wife and two small children.<lb/>
"Blind Faith" examines the<lb/>
case of a Toms River, N.J insur-<lb/>
ance salesman, RobertO. Marshall,<lb/>
deeply in debt from gambling<lb/>
losses and enamored oi the town<lb/>
Jezebel.<lb/>
So Marshall decides to hire a<lb/>
hit man to kill his wife, "the beau-<lb/>
tiful Maria" as he always called<lb/>
her, collect the $1.5 million in life<lb/>
insurance he had bought for her,<lb/>
then convince his three teen-age<lb/>
sons that they, too, could learn to<lb/>
love their new mother<lb/>
The book, already bought as a<lb/>
miniscries, is a compelling yarn<lb/>
that involves hints of corruption<lb/>
in New jersey, two imported hit<lb/>
men from Louisiana, forged in-<lb/>
surance policies and a town that<lb/>
within 24 hours after the murder<lb/>
turns its back on a pillar of the<lb/>
community, a leader in the coun-<lb/>
try club set, chairman oi United<lb/>
Way.<lb/>
"It was just the opposite of the<lb/>
MacDonald case McGinniss<lb/>
says. "All of MacDonald's friends<lb/>
rallied around, convinced he was<lb/>
innocent<lb/>
The MacDonald case proved<lb/>
a legal nightmare fur McGinniss.<lb/>
MacDonald sued and McGinniss<lb/>
agreed to pay $323,000 in an out-<lb/>
of-court settlement. However,<lb/>
following complicated litigation,<lb/>
MacDonald collected only $50,000<lb/>
Anguished AIDS<lb/>
victim wants love<lb/>
SOUTH ROXANA, 111. (AP)<lb/>
? A lonely yellow stick character.<lb/>
arms out hed, looks down at<lb/>
8-year-old as n Robertson from a<lb/>
poster in his kitchen.<lb/>
"I have AIDS the poster says.<lb/>
"Please hug me. 1 can't make you<lb/>
sick<lb/>
As if it were Jason speaking.<lb/>
ason suffers from AlDS-re-<lb/>
lated complex, ox ARC, a disease<lb/>
that often precedes the fatal full-<lb/>
blown acquired immune defi-<lb/>
ciency syndrome. At school, he<lb/>
was isolated in a trailer next door<lb/>
to the classroom, and his only real<lb/>
Coming<lb/>
This<lb/>
Weekend<lb/>
Thursday<lb/>
Susie's:<lb/>
The Beam<lb/>
New Deli:<lb/>
The Mood<lb/>
Attic:<lb/>
The Waxing Poetics<lb/>
Mendenhall:<lb/>
Punchline<lb/>
(through Sunday)<lb/>
Friday<lb/>
New Deli:<lb/>
Widespread Panic<lb/>
Attic:<lb/>
The Usuals<lb/>
Saturday<lb/>
New Deli:<lb/>
Roily Gray<lb/>
and<lb/>
Sunfire<lb/>
Attic:<lb/>
Sidewinder<lb/>
friend was a tattered doll named<lb/>
Mick.<lb/>
ason's story is similar to the<lb/>
plightoi Indiana's Ryan White, an<lb/>
AIDS victim shunned at school<lb/>
and forced to leave town.<lb/>
Jason is the only student in<lb/>
the school trailer.<lb/>
He has endured a lawsuit and<lb/>
a move from nearby Granite City<lb/>
to this tiny, Southern Illinois<lb/>
comnrmnity in search of peace.<lb/>
Phone alls playing funeral music<lb/>
and taunts added to the scorn.<lb/>
Now his mother, Tammie,<lb/>
father, Al, and 10-year-old sister,<lb/>
Melissa, are picking up the pieces<lb/>
after a struggle that turned neigh-<lb/>
bor against neighbor in a battle<lb/>
over Jason's future.<lb/>
Jason weighs only 46 pounds<lb/>
and stands about 4 feet tall. His<lb/>
most striking features are his big<lb/>
brown eyes. A quiet boy, he an-<lb/>
swers most questions with few<lb/>
words.<lb/>
"1 like good people Jason<lb/>
See CHILD, page 8<lb/>
A typical scene from last night's bikini contest at the Elbo. Aren't you sorry you missed it? (Photo<lb/>
by Thomas Walters)<lb/>
for himself, plus $92,000 in legal<lb/>
fees. A judge ordered that some of<lb/>
the money should go to the mother<lb/>
of his murdered wife as well as<lb/>
MacDonald's mother.<lb/>
McGinniss maintains that he,<lb/>
too, believed the Green Beret in-<lb/>
nocent until he started to examine<lb/>
the evidence. He then concluded,<lb/>
and let his book reflect, that<lb/>
MacDonald was indeed the man<lb/>
who wiped out his family.<lb/>
Except for the principals,<lb/>
McGinniss uses pseudonyms in<lb/>
"Blind Faith" for the other charac-<lb/>
ters, although the real names are<lb/>
all part oi the public record.<lb/>
Considered an ideal couple<lb/>
with three blond sons, the<lb/>
Marshal Is were tea singly called<lb/>
Ken and Barbie by their friends.<lb/>
McGinniss says he sort of<lb/>
stumbled onto thr book when a<lb/>
Toms River woman, a stranger to<lb/>
him, wTOte him a long letter shortly<lb/>
after the murder.<lb/>
"She had about 90 percent of<lb/>
it right two months after the<lb/>
murder he says. The letter was<lb/>
very compelling<lb/>
McGinniss says he doesn't<lb/>
know why Tie even read the letter.<lb/>
After "Fatal Vision" went on the<lb/>
air in 1984 as a two-part minisenes,<lb/>
he was deluged with letters from<lb/>
people asking him to write a book<lb/>
about some murder or the other.<lb/>
"I got hundreds of letters from<lb/>
people whose second cousin was<lb/>
murdered or from someone who<lb/>
was beaten up in a barroom brawl<lb/>
and they wanted me to write a<lb/>
book about it he says. "I was just<lb/>
throwing them away<lb/>
"What first interested me<lb/>
about the Marshall case was what<lb/>
kind oi a place was this where a<lb/>
guy who had lived there 20 years,<lb/>
this pillar of the community, was<lb/>
automatically presumed guilty by<lb/>
his friends within 24 hours oi the<lb/>
murder<lb/>
"1 was also interested in doing<lb/>
something about the social mores<lb/>
oi a town in the 80s, particularly a<lb/>
town that didn't have any kind of<lb/>
distinctive identity. It seemed to<lb/>
See AUTHOR, page 8<lb/>
TOP 13<lb/>
1) Llvis Costello ? "Spike"<lb/>
2) Guadalcanal Diary ? "Flip<lb/>
Flop"<lb/>
3) XTC ? "Oranges and Lem-<lb/>
ons"<lb/>
4) Thelonius Monster ?<lb/>
"Stormy Weather"<lb/>
5) The Dickies ?"Great<lb/>
Dick rations"<lb/>
6) The Connells ? "Fun and<lb/>
Games"<lb/>
7) Love Tractor? "Themes<lb/>
From Venus"<lb/>
8) Thrashing Doves ?<lb/>
"Trouble in the Home"<lb/>
9) Denim TV ? "Denim TV"<lb/>
10) Robyn Hitchcock and the<lb/>
Egyptians ? "Queen Elvis"<lb/>
11) Dharma Bums ? "Out<lb/>
Through the In Door"<lb/>
12) Fine Young Cannibals ?<lb/>
"The Raw &amp; the Cooked"<lb/>
13) Indigo Girls ? "Indigo<lb/>
Girls"<lb/>
What I did over Spring Break<lb/>
By CHIPPY BONEHEAD<lb/>
Staff Braaker<lb/>
Some people have fun dur-<lb/>
ing Spring Break. Some people<lb/>
go out of state, others go out of<lb/>
me country, some do lots of psy-<lb/>
choactive drugs.<lb/>
I am not one of these people.<lb/>
Journalists are perpetually<lb/>
broke. Money can't buy happi-<lb/>
ness, but it can do a he1! , a lot<lb/>
towards getting you out of<lb/>
Greenville, thus making you at<lb/>
least somewhat less depressed.<lb/>
Oh, sure, I was supposed to<lb/>
go somewhere. But since the guy<lb/>
giving me a ride home got so in-<lb/>
credibly wasted Thursday night<lb/>
(not naming any names, Timo-<lb/>
thy Charles "Earlvis" Hampton)<lb/>
I got stuck here.<lb/>
To relieve my boredom, I<lb/>
I" decided to rent some movies.<lb/>
I plundered through my<lb/>
coats, Jeans, bureau, sofa cush-<lb/>
ions and the drink machines in<lb/>
the dorms looking for chang .<lb/>
Three days of diligent searching<lb/>
yielded six dollars. 1 headed to<lb/>
the video store.<lb/>
Apparently, everyone in<lb/>
Greenville had rented the good<lb/>
videos the night before bre?k<lb/>
and forgotten to return therr I<lb/>
hope they kept them the wh<lb/>
week and ran up $30 fines.<lb/>
I wound up with "Polh -<lb/>
geistmwand"YoungGunstv <lb/>
truly repulsive movies. With ny<lb/>
last dollar, I purchased a two-li-<lb/>
ter Pepsi, the choice of a new<lb/>
generation of hopeless caffeine<lb/>
addicts.<lb/>
The next day, I vowed not to<lb/>
turn on the TV. My mom was<lb/>
right it does make your eye-<lb/>
balls fall out. I decided to spend<lb/>
the day listening to my Stevie<lb/>
Nicks collection.<lb/>
I figured, I'd listen to all the<lb/>
Fleet wood Mac Lps first then<lb/>
her solo albums in chronologi-<lb/>
cal order. I put the needle down<lb/>
on "Rumours<lb/>
It was then that the Second<lb/>
Great Blizzard of The Emerald<lb/>
City hit. Power lines, tree<lb/>
branches and small birds crashed<lb/>
to the street. Hours later,<lb/>
wrapped inthreeblankets, a coat<lb/>
and two pairs of socks, reading<lb/>
comic books by flashlight, I fig-<lb/>
ured God was trying to tell me<lb/>
something.<lb/>
The next morning, I called<lb/>
home collect from the pay phone.<lb/>
My parents had mercy on me<lb/>
and bought me a bus ticket home.<lb/>
After waiting two hours and fif-<lb/>
teen minutes for the bus to get in<lb/>
from Rocky Mount, I was on my<lb/>
way home.<lb/>
We were delayed only<lb/>
slightly in Wilson, when a lady<lb/>
got stuck in the bus's rest room<lb/>
and a blowtorch had to be found<lb/>
to cut her out. At six o' clock<lb/>
p.m I stepped out onto Boy Ian<lb/>
Avenue in Raleigh, I was home.<lb/>
Mnoonewjts there to irfck<lb/>
me up. Walking through the<lb/>
sleet, 1 made it to my brother's<lb/>
apartment, rangthedoorbell and<lb/>
passed out from hypothermia.<lb/>
Five hours later, he came<lb/>
home from work. He wrapped I<lb/>
me up in the astroturf welcome 1<lb/>
mat, and pinned a note on me I<lb/>
saying he was going out of town<lb/>
for the week and why d idn't I go<lb/>
stay at Mom's house.<lb/>
His roommate came home<lb/>
the next day and called the po-<lb/>
lice. I was arrested for trespass-<lb/>
ing, thawed out and given a cita-<lb/>
tion. They called my father to<lb/>
come get me. He was on his way<lb/>
to a conference in Miami to give<lb/>
a lecture on "Coaxial Fan Ducts<lb/>
'? A New Perspective and<lb/>
didn't have time to pick me up.<lb/>
Mom finally took time off<lb/>
from work to come get me. On<lb/>
the way home, I enjoyed new<lb/>
versions of her lectureson "Tim<lb/>
See BONEHEAD, page 8<lb/>
mm<lb/>
<pb facs="00058131_0009"/><lb/>
8<lb/>
THE EAST CAROLINIAN<lb/>
MARCH 16, liS?i<lb/>
<lb/>
Author's book reveals shock<lb/>
Continued from page 7<lb/>
be a town transformed by materi-<lb/>
alism<lb/>
"It was also a book about these<lb/>
three boys and how they coped<lb/>
when they learned their mother,<lb/>
truly beloved by them, was dead<lb/>
and then they heard their father is<lb/>
a suspect and then they see him<lb/>
convicted<lb/>
McGinniss' first book, "The<lb/>
Selling oi the President became<lb/>
a best seller 20 years ago when he<lb/>
was 26. The book chronicled how<lb/>
Richard Nixon defeated the late<lb/>
Hubert H. Humphrey.<lb/>
"The difference between illu-<lb/>
sion and reahtv has always been a<lb/>
theme oi mine McGinniss su s.<lb/>
"Here the illusion was Good<lb/>
Housekeeping come to lite Maria<lb/>
Knight that whole ideal, that she<lb/>
was an ornament attached to the<lb/>
husband, that her job was to give<lb/>
them a happy home. For that, she<lb/>
paid with her life"<lb/>
For the children ? 13. lb and<lb/>
17 at the time oi the murder ? it<lb/>
w as i.urv-tale hie of Mustangs and<lb/>
Jeeps swim meets and country<lb/>
club lunches with Mom and Dad.<lb/>
"This is not a story about their<lb/>
father McGinniss say s. I'm not<lb/>
interested inexploring thereccsses<lb/>
of his mind like 1 was with<lb/>
MacDonald I'm interested in the<lb/>
storv ot how these kids grappled<lb/>
with the worst sort of shock. There<lb/>
was a monster undei their bed<lb/>
and it was their father. And they<lb/>
had to look him in the eve and not<lb/>
blink. It stripped them oi every<lb/>
illusion they ever had<lb/>
The youngest box, lohn, still<lb/>
does not believe his father is guilt v.<lb/>
"When 1 talked to them lohn was<lb/>
still desperateh clinging likea little<lb/>
boy lost at sea to theonl) thing he<lb/>
had left McGinniss says.<lb/>
The other two, Chris and<lb/>
Robv. believe then lather had their<lb/>
mother killed a mother who put<lb/>
notes in their lunches, always<lb/>
kissed them goodbye, and fixed<lb/>
them pancakes tor breakfast even<lb/>
when they got up at 11 a.m. She<lb/>
was Super Mom They will not<lb/>
answer their fathei s letters nor<lb/>
speak to him<lb/>
"The) feel their father is al-<lb/>
ready dead says McGinniss.<lb/>
The father is on death row in<lb/>
Trenton,  awaiting the out-<lb/>
comeof appeals. He still proclaims<lb/>
his innocence, clinging to a story<lb/>
that he pulled into a secluded rest<lb/>
stop on the Jersey State Parkway<lb/>
to check on a leaking tire and<lb/>
someone hit him over the head<lb/>
and then shot Maria, leaving two<lb/>
bullet holes so close you could<lb/>
cover them with a 50-cent coin.<lb/>
Marshall claims he was robbed of<lb/>
his Atlantic City winnings and<lb/>
then staggered onto the highway<lb/>
to get help.<lb/>
McGinniss hints in the book<lb/>
that the prosecutor's office could<lb/>
have taken another tack which<lb/>
would have involved more people,<lb/>
but he won't say much more about<lb/>
it.<lb/>
Bonehead has bad Break<lb/>
RESERVE OFFICERS' TRAINING CORPS<lb/>
THE MORE YOU USE YOUR HEAD,<lb/>
THE MORE MONEY<lb/>
YOU CAN GET FOR COLLEGE.<lb/>
Up to $4000 a year Jus! enroll in Anny<lb/>
ROTC at college and ervi art-time in<lb/>
the Army Reserve I National Guard<lb/>
ARMY ROTC<lb/>
THE SMARTEST COLLEGE<lb/>
COURSE YOI CAN TAKE<lb/>
Contact: Cpt. Steve L. Jones<lb/>
(RawT Bldg.) 757 6967<lb/>
Continued from page 7<lb/>
off from work equals money that<lb/>
she can't afford to lose and<lb/>
"Why don't I get a job and<lb/>
"The least I could do while I was<lb/>
home is rake the back yard<lb/>
Once home, I fell into mv<lb/>
bed. I thought, If I can only get<lb/>
about ten hours' sleep, I might<lb/>
survive this week. My eyelids<lb/>
were heavy, and I was almost<lb/>
asleep when I felt something<lb/>
tickling the back of my neck. I<lb/>
brushed it onto the floor.<lb/>
I veiled. A roach approxi-<lb/>
mately five inches long and two<lb/>
inches wide had crawled into<lb/>
my coat pocket during my visit<lb/>
to the ultra-sanitary Raleigh<lb/>
Police Station. 1 slammed my<lb/>
volume of the Incredibly Useful,<lb/>
Yet Insanely Heavy Riverside<lb/>
Shakespeare on it. It shrugged<lb/>
off the blow and scuttled into<lb/>
the baseboard.<lb/>
I lay back down. 1 was going<lb/>
to be needing the rest. When<lb/>
Mom saw that roach, we were<lb/>
going to be up all night hunting<lb/>
it down.<lb/>
As God is my vvnaess, I'm<lb/>
never going to be poor again. It's<lb/>
just too aggravating.<lb/>
Child AIDS victim must move<lb/>
Continued from page 7<lb/>
says. "1 like to go places<lb/>
When he grows up. he says,<lb/>
he wants to be a police officer.<lb/>
Jason was born with hemo-<lb/>
philia, a condition in which the<lb/>
blood fails to clot properly. He<lb/>
also had stomach problems and a<lb/>
shortened esophagus?problems<lb/>
that were corrected bv surgery.<lb/>
But he underwent hundreds<lb/>
of blood transfusions, and at least<lb/>
oneof them involved tainted bloc d<lb/>
products that brought the deadly<lb/>
AIDS virusinto his body. In March<lb/>
1986, Jason was diagnosed with<lb/>
ARC.<lb/>
That was the beginning. K( v<lb/>
the familv, its former school dis-<lb/>
trict and neighbors wish they had<lb/>
done some things differently.<lb/>
Fearing he would endanger<lb/>
other children, his mother pulled<lb/>
him from kindergarten in Granite<lb/>
Citv and a district tutor taught<lb/>
himat homcunti! , i mbt rl987<lb/>
That's when the Robertsons<lb/>
and the school district agreed that<lb/>
Jason should be taught in a special<lb/>
trailer 50 feet from regular classes<lb/>
Jason started school 15 min-<lb/>
utes before the other students<lb/>
everyday and left 15 minutes later<lb/>
than they did. He was not allowed<lb/>
on the playground.<lb/>
School officials say they told<lb/>
Mrs Robertson that ason proba-<lb/>
bly would be placed in regular<lb/>
classes at the school of 750 in the<lb/>
fall of 1988 because his health had<lb/>
improved.<lb/>
But Mrs. Robertson contends<lb/>
the district made the offer only<lb/>
after the American Civil Liberties<lb/>
Union, at her request, filed a law-<lb/>
suit on Jason's behalf in April.<lb/>
On May 5, a federal judge<lb/>
ordered Jason back into regular<lb/>
classes. But the ruling touched off<lb/>
protests from parents in Granite<lb/>
Citv, a steel town of 36,800 across<lb/>
the Mississippi River from St.<lb/>
Louis.<lb/>
Angrv parents chanted, "Back<lb/>
to the trailer upon his arrival.<lb/>
Drew Callender, 29, says he<lb/>
got into the fight because of anger<lb/>
and fear for his children's safety.<lb/>
1 did say some foolish things<lb/>
He also founded an informal<lb/>
group of protesting parents called<lb/>
"SAVE the Society Ag linst Vi-<lb/>
rus Em ironment.<lb/>
'it's a fear ol not knowing<lb/>
he sax s.<lb/>
Mrs. Robertson says she got<lb/>
up to three telephone calls a da<lb/>
from protesters, threatening her<lb/>
and fason. People hurled epithets<lb/>
on the street. "I lome had become<lb/>
a uar cone, and 1 felt like 1 was<lb/>
dyiilg ins Her !de,r;es? S, : insist<lb/>
thene t?ie harass<lb/>
theR txrtsoi :an11and thev<lb/>
sathe tamihadai.unlisted<lb/>
phone i .uinbi ?It si l ?? mouth si! ou utId insta i ead? kept ol going<lb/>
her<lb/>
andgoing;anctnLshewouldn't<lb/>
have any? ?b)(n isa)s Maggie<lb/>
u? ? ? ?<lb/>
She just wouldn't stay out ol<lb/>
the IV and the newspaper and it<lb/>
just made ii mess she savs. "I<lb/>
don t think people should be har-<lb/>
assed but she asked for a lot of<lb/>
this stuff.<lb/>
Plaza Cinema<lb/>
Ilajta Shoirolntf Ctr. 756 OOH8<lb/>
NOW SHOwmn<lb/>
DANGEROUS LIAISONS<lb/>
ENDS THimsnAV<lb/>
THE FLY II<lb/>
BILL &amp; TED'S BIG<lb/>
ADVENTURE<lb/>
STARTS FRIDAY<lb/>
WALT DISNEY'S<lb/>
THE RESCUERS<lb/>
LEAN ON ME<lb/>
Ms. Rigsby, who lives with<lb/>
her 8-ycar-old granddaughter,<lb/>
says she would not want her to get<lb/>
near Jason She opposed his entry<lb/>
into regular classes. "It's too c r<lb/>
tagious, and I don tknov enough<lb/>
about it<lb/>
EPISCOPAL CAMPUS<lb/>
MINISTRY<lb/>
St. Paul's Episcopal Church<lb/>
401 E. 4th Street<lb/>
HOLY WEEK &amp; EASTEK DAY<lb/>
MARCH 12 26<lb/>
SCHECUI I OF SERVICES<lb/>
Palm Sunday - Celebration of Holy Eucharist-<lb/>
7:30 am<lb/>
9:00 am - Liturgy of the Palms &amp; Eucharist:<lb/>
begins in Parish Hall<lb/>
11:00 am<lb/>
Monday - Holy Eucharist 7:00 am; 12:10 pm<lb/>
Tuesday - Holy Eucharist 7:00 am; 12:10 pm<lb/>
Wednesday - Holy Eucharist 7:00 am; 12:10<lb/>
pm; 5:30 pm<lb/>
Episcopal Student Fellowship supper and pro<lb/>
gram follow 5:30 pm service<lb/>
Monday - Thursday Holy Eucharist<lb/>
7:30 - Last Supper, Stripping of Altar<lb/>
Good Friday 12:10 pm Good Friday Liturgy<lb/>
Tark "Theatre<lb/>
e.ds nuaanar<lb/>
PHYSICAL EVIDENCE<lb/>
STARTS FrtmAY<lb/>
TWINS<lb/>
(p<lb/>
<lb/>
m<lb/>
THIS SAINT PATRICK'S DAY . <lb/>
THURSDAY, MARCH 16<lb/>
Practice for the big day from 8 p.m. to 1 a.m. with our<lb/>
warm-up tent party and register to win a trip for two<lb/>
to Florida courtesy of American Airlines' U<lb/>
FRIDAY, MARCH 17 A A<lb/>
Our giant outdoor world takeover party starts at 4 p m<lb/>
with a live radio remote with WDLX.<lb/>
PLUS? The Amateurs" live rock and reggae ?<lb/>
 9 p.m. to midnight, S3 cover.<lb/>
It's all happening at the place to party this<lb/>
St Patrick's Day ? Darryl's Party Central!<lb/>
Across from East Carolina University at 800 East torn Street 752-1907<lb/>
Resei. it i ms and -T-ajor credit cards welcome 1989 GtlbertRob.nson. Inc<lb/>
capezio<lb/>
for dress or<lb/>
play. . .<lb/>
Whether it's ilrts black<lb/>
patents or canvas casuals<lb/>
RACK ROOM SHOES and<lb/>
CAPEZIO can offer you<lb/>
great savings.<lb/>
Dress shoes in black pat nl<lb/>
navy, bone, red or white<lb/>
leather.<lb/>
Reg. $49.99<lb/>
NOW $36<lb/>
Canvas casuals in white<lb/>
leather or canvas in white<lb/>
navy khaki or black.<lb/>
JReg. $22.99 to $35.9<lb/>
now$1697 - 26'<lb/>
RACK ROOM SHOES<lb/>
Greenville Buyers Market<lb/>
Memorial Drive<lb/>
?<lb/>
Chris Montgomery will perform at the Coffeehouse<lb/>
on<lb/>
March 17, 1989<lb/>
7:00 - 9:00 p.m<lb/>
Sponsored by ECU<lb/>
STUDENT UNION<lb/>
COFFEEHOUSE<lb/>
COMMITTEE<lb/>
<lb/>
<pb facs="00058131_0010"/><lb/>
IIII LA ARULlNlAtJJylAKailI28i9<lb/>
Overkill<lb/>
1 - B<lb/>
By Friedrich Orpheus<lb/>
I 36?" ???' r<lb/>
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Eve of Fire<lb/>
Bv Oelesbv<lb/>
You hotter believe it's<lb/>
Cartoonist Biography!<lb/>
Now, here's the Rik Elliott<lb/>
biography! Rik started working for<lb/>
1'ir.ite Comics in the Spring of 1(H<lb/>
w ith his infamous, often risque<lb/>
cartoon, Inside Joke. After finally<lb/>
running out of inside jokes, he has<lb/>
now begun a new strip, C,ambda<lb/>
Gambda Hey about the<lb/>
misadventures of two frat boys and ?<lb/>
cat. Crav, huh? And now . <lb/>
This is Rik, when in his<lb/>
two-dimensional form.<lb/>
I 111 l I U 11 W A LIFETIME IN THE MAKING<lb/>
Who or what influenced you in your comics work? Gary Larson,<lb/>
Bruce I hum, Bruce Willis, Bruno, and the small green fellows who<lb/>
live off the lint in my bellybutton. And well, just my experiences<lb/>
recieved from floating in an isolation tank.<lb/>
What is your greatest achievement? Recieving an Oscar (under my<lb/>
screen name Kate Hepburn)<lb/>
Greatest failure? Letting Jane Fonda take me to aerobics class after<lb/>
a dA of filming<lb/>
( areei ambitions: To maybe have one someday<lb/>
favorite books or works: I don't read, okay? I'm illiterate! So<lb/>
what? So hang me!<lb/>
favorite movies: Clockwork Orange, Altered States, Monty<lb/>
Python's I Ke Meaning of Life, It's A Wonderful Life, and Gone<lb/>
With The Wind. Really, I'm serious!<lb/>
Mission in Life: To explore strange new worlds, to seek out new life<lb/>
and new civilizations? to boldly go where no aids-infected man<lb/>
has gone before!<lb/>
Favorite wrestler: Randy "Macho Man" Savage. Actually, I like<lb/>
his babe, Elizabeth <lb/>
WE ARCN<lb/>
THE MASTERS WE AE<lb/>
OF POULR- K<lb/>
i i i ?w ! 3'IL<lb/>
ITS 5ERMN75.)<lb/>
furn-ons: Good looking sorority babes who won't go out with ith<lb/>
because they're having fun dating some other guv despite the fact<lb/>
I've vowed my eternal, unfaltering love.<lb/>
Turn-offs: Good looking sorority babes who won't go out with me<lb/>
because they're having fun dating some other guy despite the fact<lb/>
I've vowed my eternal, unfaltering love.<lb/>
Favorite music: Beatles, Mozart, Hank Williams Jr Prince, 1 he<lb/>
Dead Milkmen<lb/>
Everyone should be my friend because: I'm always broke. But if<lb/>
everyone was my friend, I could borrow a dollar from each person. I<lb/>
would say, "I'll pay you back as soon as I get paid They would<lb/>
say, "Oh, it's just a dollar, don't sweat it Then? I would be a<lb/>
rich man and write songs for Russian Jews.<lb/>
<pb facs="00058131_0011"/><lb/>
10<lb/>
? v ?<lb/>
THE EAST CAROLINIAN<lb/>
<lb/>
MARCH 16,1989<lb/>
The Li'l Satire Page<lb/>
Serving our freshman readers since Wednesday<lb/>
Hey, kiddies!<lb/>
Here's Big E's<lb/>
li'l column!<lb/>
Dear Big E,<lb/>
I am a freshman girl here at ole EC and the<lb/>
nly clothing I have to wear for St. Patty's day is<lb/>
d pair of green bikini underwear. E, how do I<lb/>
avoid being pinched?<lb/>
Signed, Freshman Superheroine<lb/>
Li'l Holiday!<lb/>
March 17 is St. Patrick's Day!<lb/>
St. Patrick was an Irish guy who asked God to<lb/>
get rid of all the snakes in Ireland a long time<lb/>
ago. God said, "Sure, dude All the snakes<lb/>
swam into the ocean and came over to the Tar<lb/>
River, where they hang out in trees waiting to<lb/>
drop on the heads of unsuspecting freshmen.<lb/>
Watch out, kids!<lb/>
Many countries celebrate St. Patrick's Day by<lb/>
wearing the color green. This is because green is<lb/>
the central frequency (FREE-KWEN-SEE) on<lb/>
the spectrum. Green helps block out certain<lb/>
light rays, while making others strong enough<lb/>
to grow potatoes, the major crop of Ireland.<lb/>
Other St. Patrick's Day customs (KUSS-<lb/>
TUMMS) include kissing people wearing green,<lb/>
pinching those who have limited amounts of<lb/>
green on, and breaking the kneecaps of those<lb/>
wearing no green.<lb/>
Teacher's note: Help freshmen increase their vocabulary<lb/>
with this article. Have them read the article aloud in class.Words<lb/>
above the third grade level have phonetic pronunciations in-<lb/>
cluded to help them.<lb/>
ut ?<lb/>
Li'l lunches<lb/>
This is the lunch schedule for those on the<lb/>
East Carolina meal plan next week.<lb/>
Monday ? Wholesome squares of card-<lb/>
board covered with stale cheese, topped with<lb/>
processed NutraPepperoni?, made up to re-<lb/>
semble pizza. Black-eyed ball bearings and<lb/>
mashed newsprint. Freshly squeezed bug juice.<lb/>
Tuesday ? 100 NutraSoy? burgers on<lb/>
soggy buns. Various chemical additives. Whole-<lb/>
some estrogen-activated milk. Peanut butter<lb/>
flavored Jell-O?.<lb/>
Wednesday ? Fried monosodium gluta-<lb/>
mate. String bean-okra casserole, with added<lb/>
liver flakes. Wholesome Listerine?-flavored<lb/>
milkshake. Three-day-old cake.<lb/>
Thursday ? DUKES OF HAZZARD DAY.<lb/>
Crawdad bisque, mule milk and grits. Whole-<lb/>
some boiled collard greens. Moonshine.<lb/>
Friday ? ST. PATRICK'S DAY. Green food<lb/>
coloring au gratin. Assorted wholesome green<lb/>
molds. Prestone?-flavored fruit juice.<lb/>
Saturday ? Cafeteria closed. Tough.<lb/>
All menus subject to change without any notice whatsoever,<lb/>
due to varying factors such as quarantine, crop availabilty, and<lb/>
presidential policy changes in the federal school lunch budget<lb/>
Dear Super Freshman,<lb/>
Green underwear. There is an advice line<lb/>
here, but we will avoid the obvious because the<lb/>
excessive use of what one "E-hater" called<lb/>
scatological language.<lb/>
E-Enemies rejoice! Just Ask Big E will no<lb/>
longer have crude tales of prostitutes, bed wet<lb/>
spots, green projectiles, bathroom stall toilet<lb/>
paper, bearded women or the host of sexually<lb/>
transmitted diseases. No more. From now until<lb/>
the year 2000, E will give only wholesome and<lb/>
inspirational advice to all the poor dejected<lb/>
people of ECU.<lb/>
Maybe I should explain. You see, over spring<lb/>
break, E was saved while watching little green<lb/>
bottles run down a conveyer belt.<lb/>
With eyes glued to bottles of denture adhe-<lb/>
sive, E sat there hating life and scheming to<lb/>
corrupt the minds of millions of freshmen with<lb/>
another raunchy E column ? when all of a<lb/>
sudden a short kid burst out of the cap machine<lb/>
and said "There will be no scatological language<lb/>
in hell<lb/>
So, dear little freshman, here is my whole-<lb/>
some advice: cut out a piece of green construc-<lb/>
tion paper and pin it to your shirt.<lb/>
Green Beer<lb/>
Dear Big Earle,<lb/>
Many of my future fraternity brothers are<lb/>
planning on drinking green beer on St. Patrick's<lb/>
day. Will it make me sick?<lb/>
Signed, Hopeful Freshman Pledge<lb/>
Dear Underage Misguided Future Frat Boy,<lb/>
Drinking green beer will cause you to break<lb/>
out in a green rash (except for some rare cases<lb/>
like Leonard Nimoy and Fred Quinn). Drinking<lb/>
beer is bad for you anyway, so this is a good time<lb/>
to quit.<lb/>
Instead of drinking green beer, why not listen<lb/>
to Big E's mom, Janet, and drink some Green<lb/>
Magma. According to the label, Green Magma is<lb/>
made from the dried juice of young barley<lb/>
plants with brown rice. It tastes better than<lb/>
Michelob Dry, and the best part is: it's good for<lb/>
you. STSSiitt O<lb/>
I ? <lb/>
Problem<lb/>
Dear Big E,<lb/>
I am a freshman who has a lot of problems<lb/>
and an eating disorder.<lb/>
Signed, Eater<lb/>
Dear Eater,<lb/>
You are a freshman who has a lot of problems<lb/>
and an eating problem. And there you are.<lb/>
Teen superstar Ralph Macchio (right) poses with two<lb/>
totally uninteresting people.<lb/>
Li'l superstar<lb/>
Teen superstar Ralph Macchio has starred in<lb/>
several motion pictures like "The Karate Kid<lb/>
"The Karate Kid II and "The Karate Kid Wigs<lb/>
Out and Kills Seventeen People By Accident<lb/>
Ralph was born a while ago, and grew up some-<lb/>
where.<lb/>
These days, Ralph has a hard time getting a<lb/>
job because he has absolutely no talent, even<lb/>
though that never stopped Samantha Fox.<lb/>
These days he can be seen as an extra in the New<lb/>
Kids on the Block video, "The Right Stuff<lb/>
where he plays the dancer who gets left behind<lb/>
all the time.<lb/>
Ralph says he has many hobbies. He enjoys<lb/>
standing in line at McEonakTs? while waiting<lb/>
for special orders, bleaching his teeth in Clo-<lb/>
rox?, and trading hair spray with best pal Steve<lb/>
Hale, former UNC basketball star.<lb/>
Li'l funny jokes<lb/>
Q: Why did the chicken cross the road7<lb/>
A: To get away from an axe-wielding Ronald<lb/>
McDonald who wanted to make Chicken<lb/>
McNuggets? out of him!<lb/>
Q: Why couldn't the man watch the televi-<lb/>
sion?<lb/>
A: Because it was a tape recorder!<lb/>
Q: Why did the man throw the clock out the<lb/>
window?<lb/>
A: Because he was a complete psychopath<lb/>
who thought aliens were trying to take over his<lb/>
body!<lb/>
Q: What's black and white and red all over?<lb/>
A: The Li'l Satire Page, and nuns with 17<lb/>
arrows sticking out of their bodies!<lb/>
Q: What's yellow and wears a mask?<lb/>
A: A shy frozen banana on its first date!<lb/>
Send your jokes and riddles in to The Li'l Satire Page and we<lb/>
will throw your envelopes and the stamps you wasted 25 cents on<lb/>
right out the window, where we hope it will hit someone on the<lb/>
head very hard, injuring and perhaps maiming them for life'<lb/>
?<lb/>
- - -<lb/>
<pb facs="00058131_0012"/><lb/>
I HI- I AST C AROl IN1AN<lb/>
Sports<lb/>
K( Hlh, 1989 PAGE 11<lb/>
Pirates now 10-1<lb/>
? ? ? -? W1"  ? ? TV M. v ? c<lb/>
Pirates prevail over Wolfpack as Jenkins picks up fourth win<lb/>
.iibr,v1Mmninnnvxir1Mkf(iim' nnd ha?? Atter an ECU error on State threatened the Pirate-bin Cauble eot the first run for the nine streal :<lb/>
By KRIS UN HA1 HI RG<lb/>
?v I ditoi<lb/>
Junior hurler Jonathan Jenkins<lb/>
k to the mound in relief Tues<lb/>
md picked up his fourth win<lb/>
ie season by defeating the<lb/>
fpackoi N C State.<lb/>
Behind the strong pitching ol<lb/>
kins and junior 1'im 1 angdon,<lb/>
defeated theirrivalN.C.State<lb/>
- in ten innings. 1 angdon<lb/>
ed four strong innings be-<lb/>
v ns nailed down his fourth<lb/>
The win pushed East Caro<lb/>
cord to 10-1 andgivesthem<lb/>
a three-game winning streak going<lb/>
into tins weekend's three-game<lb/>
scries with CAA nemesis lames<lb/>
Madison in 1 larrisonburg, Va.<lb/>
The Pirates were the first on<lb/>
the board when John Adams was<lb/>
brought home at the top ot the<lb/>
first inning. Adams singled and<lb/>
then moved to third after Tommy<lb/>
Easonsingled.Calvin Brown then<lb/>
hit a sacrifice fly ball to bring in<lb/>
Adams.<lb/>
The Wolfpack would not<lb/>
stand idle for long. In the bottom<lb/>
ot the second, with Steve Shepard<lb/>
on third and Paul Borawski on<lb/>
first, Borawski would steal sec-<lb/>
ond base. Alter an ECU error on<lb/>
the throw to second,Shepard came<lb/>
in for a Wolfpack score and tie it<lb/>
up, 1-1.<lb/>
F.C11 moved back ahead 3-1 in<lb/>
the fifth liming after scoring two<lb/>
runs. Eason drove both Ritchie<lb/>
and Adams, who were on second<lb/>
and third, on a double.<lb/>
But the Wolfpack would not<lb/>
give up. They would come back in<lb/>
the sixth to score two runs and tie<lb/>
the ball game back up, this time at<lb/>
3-3. After a single by Scott Snead,<lb/>
Borawski and Chris Woodfin came<lb/>
in tor the additional N.C. State<lb/>
scores.<lb/>
State threatened the Pirates in<lb/>
both the seventh and the ninth<lb/>
innings but ECU was able to hold<lb/>
off a Wolfpack threat to keep the<lb/>
score tied. Jenkins camein on the<lb/>
seventh after ' angdon allowed<lb/>
Gary Shingledecker to double. He<lb/>
then struck out the next two bat-<lb/>
ters to keep the Wolfpack from<lb/>
gaining the lead. Then after more<lb/>
close calls in the ninth, the game<lb/>
would move into additional in-<lb/>
nings.<lb/>
East Carolina would secure<lb/>
their victory in the tenth inning<lb/>
when thev scored two more runs<lb/>
to finalize the score. 5 3. Chris<lb/>
Cauble got the first run for the<lb/>
Pirates when afterht singled, was<lb/>
moved to second on a sacrifice fly<lb/>
by Eason and then able to score on<lb/>
a single to the center bv Brown.<lb/>
Brown was then moved to third<lb/>
alter a single bv John G.ist and,<lb/>
when Steve Godin hit a sacrifice<lb/>
fly, Brown wasable t i come home<lb/>
for ECU's final run.<lb/>
Adams was the leading hitter<lb/>
for East Carolina hitting t hree. Gast<lb/>
and Eason both had two hits<lb/>
apiece<lb/>
The loss by the Wolfpack not<lb/>
only dropped them to 7-3 for the<lb/>
season, but their four-game win-<lb/>
ECU Golf team takes top honors<lb/>
B) LORI MARTIN<lb/>
Sport) H ritei<lb/>
e Pirate golf team brought<lb/>
a trst place finish from the<lb/>
p Island Inter ollegiate and a<lb/>
p finishfrom t ihad-<lb/>
vmoss ttion Invitational<lb/>
ak.<lb/>
teams rs<lb/>
! m i 1 I invita<lb/>
I . ? : pp<lb/>
. . 11 ;an Co. Six pla rs<lb/>
ted 1 n the I<lb/>
: Oceai<lb/>
-<lb/>
?spue tin i<lb/>
 the ECU<lb/>
i i<lb/>
rs '?? on the i na-<lb/>
nlaved thai<lb/>
fourplayei sfinishinginthetoplO<lb/>
(it the tournament. The Pirates won<lb/>
b 3 ; strokesoverthesecond place<lb/>
team from Ball State University.<lb/>
East Carolina's John Magin-<lb/>
nes won the tournament shooting<lb/>
a three-round total oi 221 Finish-<lb/>
?  second was ECU's Jeff Craig<lb/>
with a 225 total. Co-captain for the<lb/>
Pirates I ec I a ies shot 228 for a<lb/>
fifth place tie with Ball State's Tony<lb/>
Sourries.o captain Paul Garcia<lb/>
finished ith a three day total of<lb/>
233 to takelOth place.<lb/>
ECU s first place finish earned<lb/>
them 10 points toward their dis-<lb/>
trict standing foi the NCAA tour-<lb/>
nament in June.<lb/>
In their first tournament of<lb/>
the week, the Pirates finished<lb/>
fourth out of 12 teams (70 golfers).<lb/>
The March6-7tournam nt held at<lb/>
ShadowmossPlantationGolfClub<lb/>
was played in poor weather con-<lb/>
ditions.<lb/>
Finishing in first place was<lb/>
the College of Charleston with a<lb/>
two-round total of 623 strokes,14<lb/>
ahead of the second place team<lb/>
from the I iniversityofSouthCaro-<lb/>
lina.Coastal Carolina placed third<lb/>
and E I finished fourth with a<lb/>
total score of 644.<lb/>
In the individual scores.<lb/>
ECU s I 'one. Hoey tied tor sixth<lb/>
place. Maginnes and Davies fin-<lb/>
ished 12th and 13th respectively.<lb/>
Softballers to host tournament<lb/>
. asl Cat lina - ftbal sitv, I c - liming- to con p te ag linsl A ignei (. o.<lb/>
be r sting tl H ida i n and Costal Carolina. logo.<lb/>
;? nal Softball ?urna- EC1 ytheir first match  unals of the invitational<lb/>
rcl 18-19 linst the Patriots of George willbc-plavedonSu' I ; ? ???' 4 pm<lb/>
 ;c ; . ??.i i. i i  . V kmi ,ii i i a.m. vji S iturda. e.amtart " ? ? ?' I ?peh teVtKe<lb/>
 Mason ' Mowing that game, the Lad v public.Come md support the<lb/>
r( rates will face UN( at 1 p.m. Ladv Pirate softball team.<lb/>
 h if Virginia, rhev will return to action at 4 p.m<lb/>
, ,3<lb/>
John Maginnes , shown practicing at the Coeenville Country<lb/>
Cluh, won first place at the Fripp Island Invitational (Photo b<lb/>
I ori Martin).<lb/>
ning stn at<lb/>
Pirates<lb/>
East arolinan turns to home-<lb/>
field action Tuesday, March 21<lb/>
when they face D i ! Ell ins<lb/>
Assistant<lb/>
coach hired<lb/>
(SID) -Tom McMah i<lb/>
has been nam d 1 fei ve<lb/>
dinator for the Ea ? ' ir Mna 1 ni-<lb/>
versitv football ' ?" ?? i<lb/>
Head Coach Bill ! ewis W li<lb/>
day. McMahon replaces N k<lb/>
Rapone, who left the tut<lb/>
Monday for an assistant coach -<lb/>
position at the University of Pitts<lb/>
burgh.<lb/>
McMahi ncomesl EasM am<lb/>
Una after serving as secondary<lb/>
coach at the Univ ity of S 'th<lb/>
Carolina for the past masons<lb/>
McMahon also served under<lb/>
lewis' staff at the I niversity of<lb/>
Wyoming for the 1979season i'he<lb/>
Chicago, 111. native, has also<lb/>
coached at Col ?tate I ni-<lb/>
versity (19i ' '8) and the Univc<lb/>
sity of New Mexico (1980 82) For<lb/>
two years, McMahon's Colorado<lb/>
State squads played against Le-<lb/>
wis' teams at Wyoming in the<lb/>
Western Athletic Conference.<lb/>
"It is a compliment to the fact<lb/>
that wehad good people that other<lb/>
people were attract i to but. as<lb/>
important, in every ase, we have<lb/>
been able to replace those with the<lb/>
same kind oi quality people. We<lb/>
have been able to put those tem-<lb/>
porary setbacks behind usand ur<lb/>
staff and football t im are pre-<lb/>
pared to move forward. We are<lb/>
excited about starting, si " .a - ??<lb/>
tice and we will mike every a<lb/>
tempt to stayon - h? dule Lew is<lb/>
said about I is i I sistant<lb/>
coach.<lb/>
JhehiringofMcNI h ???lo.v -<lb/>
one more staff p stk?to"hefill '<lb/>
Earlier Wednesda out de In<lb/>
hacker coach Don I - n<lb/>
the statt to become an as i<lb/>
coach on the University of N<lb/>
Carolina staff.<lb/>
Savage named to all-tournament team<lb/>
hv CHKIs Ml GEL<lb/>
 . East (, arohna 1 ady Pi-<lb/>
ratesbaskt than -can finished their<lb/>
season March 1 ' w "tha 71 -63 loss<lb/>
to lames Madison in the semi-fi-<lb/>
nals of the Colonial Athletic.Asso-<lb/>
ciation Tournament<lb/>
( atcher Mickey Ford<lb/>
Pirates play at home<lb/>
practices for the<lb/>
for the first time<lb/>
upcoming tournament as coach Sue Mc.Mannon supervises. The<lb/>
this season (Photo by JD. Whitmire, IXC Photolab).<lb/>
Sarah Gray<lb/>
The Lad" Pirates finished their<lb/>
season witha mark 15-13, which is<lb/>
an improvement from last year's<lb/>
mark oi 8-20.<lb/>
 Although the ! ad Piratesare<lb/>
finished playing the awards and<lb/>
honors are still coming in Gretta<lb/>
Savage, who tied a career-high<lb/>
v ith 26 points igamsl IML was<lb/>
? medtothcall tournament team<lb/>
k ivage and Sarah Gra were also<lb/>
- le ted to be on the C A Second<lb/>
1 cam. Freshman fonva Hargrov e<lb/>
was sClocted to be on theCAA .AT<lb/>
Rookie Team.<lb/>
Gray, who was the leader on<lb/>
the tloor all season tor the Lad)<lb/>
Pirates, finished the season with<lb/>
404 points, which was the most by<lb/>
an FCC player since !985-86and<lb/>
was onlv the second player to do<lb/>
so in the past five years. She also<lb/>
had 232 rebounds for the season<lb/>
which was the most by a Lady<lb/>
Pirate since 1984-85. (iray aver-<lb/>
aged nine rebounds per game, the<lb/>
first player in eight years to ac-<lb/>
complish that feat.<lb/>
Grayaveraged 14 4 points per<lb/>
gameandsh t .5.1 tr i the field<lb/>
tor the -i. ison Hd<lb/>
centageisthes <lb/>
the past six j ears i<lb/>
highest in He I hi<lb/>
Savage finisl I<lb/>
? thon the ECU all til<lb/>
shot list She tit<lb/>
blocks and her 29 bl<lb/>
ig ivr-<lb/>
ii.<lb/>
MXth<lb/>
- 1<lb/>
Smith leads women's track team in successful meet<lb/>
- ?? im tr i<lb/>
md ha 1 quit<lb/>
had six I i<lb/>
vas am ?<lb/>
n the 400 met(<lb/>
Mina i<lb/>
?led to<lb/>
her top t<lb/>
wa) tor<lb/>
. i snath<lb/>
r and 201<lb/>
?men s<lb/>
I NC-<lb/>
' irch<lb/>
ul day.<lb/>
inishes<lb/>
 e fin-<lb/>
the Pi-<lb/>
Smith<lb/>
I meter<lb/>
dash. Her times were 58.75 sec- In other running events, Hough finished fifth in the 300<lb/>
onds in the 400 meter and 25.1 Dorsey placed hsrt in the lOOmeter meter and Ann Mane finished<lb/>
seconds in the 200meter. She was dash, while teammate acobs fin- fourth in the 5000 meter.<lb/>
also a member of the 4x100 relay ished fourth. Dorsey's winning In track and field events,<lb/>
team which also placed first. Other time was 12.9 seconds. Katrina Cheryl Hopkins and Thalia Per-<lb/>
members of the relay team were Harvis finished fourth in the 100 son placed in the triple jump.<lb/>
oy Dorsey. Cheryl Hopkinsand meter hurdles with a timeof 17.10 Hopkins won the event with a<lb/>
Piane a obs<lb/>
fhe winning time seconds. In the long distance cate- jumpof35-feet-llandthree-quar-<lb/>
for the<lb/>
onols<lb/>
n lav team was<lb/>
49.2 sec-<lb/>
gone<lb/>
Kim Griffiths finished<lb/>
fourth in the 1500 meter race, Jen<lb/>
ter inches. Person finished third.<lb/>
ECU placed three women in<lb/>
the shot put. Susan Schram fin-<lb/>
ished first with a throw of 38-feet-<lb/>
11 and three-quarter inches, while<lb/>
Sarah Hickingbethan took third<lb/>
and lanie Rowe finished fourth.<lb/>
Lisa Shepard also placed for<lb/>
the Pirates. Shepard took third in<lb/>
the high jump with a leap oi five<lb/>
feet.<lb/>
Gretta Savage<lb/>
son was 10th best in E U histoi<lb/>
Edwards<lb/>
honored<lb/>
(SID) ? East Carol - ue<lb/>
Edwards, named the Coloi<lb/>
Athletic Association Player<lb/>
Year, has been selected to pai<lb/>
pate in the annual Portsnv uth<lb/>
Invitational Tournament. April 5-<lb/>
18, in Portsmouth, Va<lb/>
The PIT ranks as , i<lb/>
Spring practice gears up for ECU football<lb/>
(SID) ? New Past Carolina<lb/>
head football coach Bill Lewis will<lb/>
send his Tirate squad through<lb/>
spnng drills, beginning Saturday,<lb/>
March 18. ECU'S spring practice<lb/>
concludes on April ?? with the<lb/>
annual Purple-Gold intra-squad<lb/>
scrimmage in Ficklen Stadium<lb/>
Lewis, who was hired as<lb/>
ECU's football coach on Dec. 3,<lb/>
1988, will greet over 115 football<lb/>
players when the spring practice<lb/>
session begins. Lewis will send<lb/>
his Pirates through 20 practice<lb/>
sessions. Weekday sessions start<lb/>
at 3.30 p.m. and the Saturday<lb/>
workouts will commence around<lb/>
1 p.m.<lb/>
"This spring practice will be<lb/>
very important to us said Lewis.<lb/>
"We are building from the ground<lb/>
up. You have to have a base to<lb/>
start from. We will be teaching a<lb/>
lot of fundamentals because they<lb/>
are the key to any program. It will<lb/>
he a slow, patient process. When<lb/>
I m satisfied with that point, we'll<lb/>
move forward and add some<lb/>
things. Anytime you're in trasi-<lb/>
tion it's difficult. It is critical for us<lb/>
to have a good spring<lb/>
The Pirates return 44 letter-<lb/>
men from last year's 3-8 squad.<lb/>
Nine starters return on offense<lb/>
including senior quarterbacks<lb/>
Travis Hunter and Charlie Li-<lb/>
bretto. Lewis also welcomes back<lb/>
12 starters on defense including<lb/>
linebackers Joe Bright, Robert<lb/>
Jones, Brian McPhatter, James<lb/>
Singletary and Anthony Th-<lb/>
ompson.<lb/>
Both specialists, John Jett and<lb/>
Robb Imperato, also return for the<lb/>
Pirates.<lb/>
For seven of the nine full-time<lb/>
assistants and Lewis, it will be the<lb/>
first time that they have viewed<lb/>
the talent at East Carolina. Out-<lb/>
side linebacker coach Don Th-<lb/>
ompson and offensive line coach<lb/>
Steve Shankweiler are the coaches<lb/>
that served on Art Baker's staff<lb/>
last year.<lb/>
It will be important for the<lb/>
new staff to learn about the talent<lb/>
that they will have to work with<lb/>
during the next seiison.<lb/>
"This will be an evaluation of<lb/>
the talent we have said Lewis.<lb/>
"We (the new coaching staff)<lb/>
would rather form our opinions<lb/>
on the playing field than on film.<lb/>
In that respect, spring practice is<lb/>
important. I think the players are<lb/>
excited too because it will not take<lb/>
them long to progress and step to<lb/>
the front. The transition in coach-<lb/>
ing staffs gives any player in the<lb/>
program a chance<lb/>
The 1989 season will kick off<lb/>
on Sept. 9 at Ficklen Stadium<lb/>
against Bowling Green in a 7 p.m.<lb/>
start. The Pirates have five home<lb/>
games in 1989 with contests<lb/>
against Illinois State, Louisiana<lb/>
Tech, Virginia Tech and Temple<lb/>
coming at Ficklen Stadium.<lb/>
Blue Edwards<lb/>
most outstanding post-season alf-<lb/>
star classics with seniors fr m<lb/>
around the nation participating.<lb/>
Edwards finished hi- etuor<lb/>
year averaging 26.7 points h9<lb/>
reboundsand 3.2 assists pergarne.<lb/>
His scoring average was sixth in<lb/>
the latest NCAA statistics. 1 le was<lb/>
the CAA Player of the Week three<lb/>
times, led the league in scoring<lb/>
and also was nominated to the all-<lb/>
tournament team.<lb/>
?<lb/>
<pb facs="00058131_0013"/><lb/>
12<lb/>
THE EAST CAROLINIAN<lb/>
MARCH 16. 1989<lb/>
"Divers down" in the Bahamas<lb/>
?????????????????????????<lb/>
. ANNOUNCING THE 1990 ?<lb/>
ANNOUNCING THE 1990<lb/>
MISS NORTH CAROLINA USA and MISS NORTH CAROLINA<lb/>
TEEN USA PAGEANTS<lb/>
Over Spring Break ECU'S<lb/>
Coral Reef Dive Club sponsored<lb/>
another adventurous vacation,<lb/>
this time to the Bahamas. Twelve<lb/>
members of the club chartered a<lb/>
65' sailing vessel 'Pirates Lady"<lb/>
from Blackboard Cruises in Mi-<lb/>
ami.<lb/>
"We sailed rut of the To of<lb/>
Miami Saturday afternoon -nd<lb/>
reached Bimini island that night,<lb/>
Rob Moore, the vice president of praised itself on being Heming-<lb/>
the dive club, said. The next three way's hang out. It also happened<lb/>
days we had great weather and to be the place where Gary Hart<lb/>
dived nine times including three and Donna Rice were discovered<lb/>
night dives. heating up the dance floor. "At<lb/>
Wednesday the club sailed the "Angler" they had a coconut-<lb/>
into port at Bimini, a small island shucking contest. I don't know<lb/>
in the Bahamas. There they spent how, but I won it! The prize was<lb/>
the next three days on the island<lb/>
and "barhopped" to such places<lb/>
is The Complete Angler and The<lb/>
: nd of the World.<lb/>
End oi the World had sand<lb/>
floors and i he Complete Angler<lb/>
an album from the Native Calyp-<lb/>
sonians<lb/>
The bar The End of the World<lb/>
The trip included three meals<lb/>
a day and all the brew and spirits<lb/>
one could handle. "We ate conch<lb/>
fritters from conchs that were<lb/>
gathered duringoncof thedives<lb/>
Moore said. "Barney, the cook,<lb/>
made excellent dishes<lb/>
According to Moore, next<lb/>
year's trip should promise even<lb/>
moreexcitment. If you scuba dive<lb/>
and would like to participate in<lb/>
took pride in their floor was made next year's trip as well as dives off<lb/>
ofpure Bahamian sand rather than tne N.G coast including Gulf<lb/>
of concrete. Stream wreck dives, contact David<lb/>
Angel at 355-3545 or Rob Moore at<lb/>
830-3833.<lb/>
ECU trainers- a vital part of team<lb/>
NORTH CAROLINA S ONIV<lb/>
PRELIMINARY TO THE<lb/>
MISS TEEN USA<lb/>
MISS USA<lb/>
ar.d MISS UNIVERSE PAGEANTS<lb/>
NO PERFORMING TALENT RE1. BE<lb/>
' ?. . . ? Mh  - ?<lb/>
Sf. w . ? v iTm -<lb/>
!W0 I ? rani . ?? ? I ? ? .  ?<lb/>
md personality  v ,?  ?- -<lb/>
I Mm N rtti i' ? d ??- -<lb/>
 ?. ?. ? ?<lb/>
?? ' ' -<lb/>
THE 1990 MISS NORTH CAROLINA<lb/>
USAATEEN USA PAGEANTS<lb/>
co TEL AIR INTERESTS INC<lb/>
1755 N E 149 STREET<lb/>
MIAMI FL 33111 1099<lb/>
13051944 3261<lb/>
TEEN USA '919<lb/>
PLEASE SEND ME INFORMATION ON THE 1990 MISS NORTH CAROLINA USA<lb/>
TEEN USA PAGEANTS<lb/>
Bv TOE CORL1 V<lb/>
When one looks at the bench<lb/>
of any sports team, the least recog-<lb/>
nizable person is usually the team<lb/>
trainer. The trainer, however, is a<lb/>
vital part of a successful team.<lb/>
At East Carolina, the univer-<lb/>
sity is fortunate to have a capable<lb/>
ports medicine program that<lb/>
supplies trainers. According to<lb/>
Rod Compton, a certified athletic<lb/>
trainer and the head of the sports<lb/>
medicine department, the sports<lb/>
medicine department supplies<lb/>
trainers foi all 16 varsity sports.<lb/>
With only approximately 30 stu-<lb/>
1 ntseni died in sports medicine,<lb/>
 ke ps everyone busy.<lb/>
Aside from the time spent in<lb/>
class, a trainer also spends 12-15<lb/>
hours per week working without<lb/>
paw This means that in order to<lb/>
succeed, a trainer must be both<lb/>
motivated and dedicated.<lb/>
There art.1 three differc<lb/>
ru iev-<lb/>
i Isof student trainers in the sports<lb/>
medicine department. The entrv<lb/>
level is called the rookie stage.<lb/>
From there the student trainer goes<lb/>
on to become a curriculum trainer.<lb/>
In the third and final stage, one is<lb/>
a staff student.<lb/>
After graduation, a sports<lb/>
medicine major has a few choices<lb/>
to make about what todo. Mostgo<lb/>
to work at the high school level as<lb/>
a teacher or a full-time trainer,<lb/>
while some pursue their educa-<lb/>
tion and go to graduate school.<lb/>
Chris Smith, a curriculum<lb/>
trainer and a trainer for the foot-<lb/>
ball team, said that what inter-<lb/>
ested her about becoming a trainer<lb/>
was it combined her two favorite<lb/>
things. "1 always liked medicine<lb/>
and sports Smith said. "A coach<lb/>
in junior high suggested I com-<lb/>
bine the two, and here I am<lb/>
Being a trainer involves more<lb/>
than just the stereotypical idea that<lb/>
all thev do is tape ankles. Andy<lb/>
Brice, a staff student and a trainer<lb/>
for spring football, said, "We do<lb/>
more than what everyone thinks<lb/>
we do. We are responsible for<lb/>
preventative medicine and also<lb/>
habilitation. We d, the behind-<lb/>
the-scenes work to make sureeve-<lb/>
rything and everyone works the<lb/>
proper way<lb/>
Becoming a trainer is not for<lb/>
everyone. One has to wori hard in<lb/>
order to succeed. As Smite said,<lb/>
"It's a good program to get into,<lb/>
but you have to work. You can't<lb/>
just slide bv<lb/>
NAME<lb/>
ADDRESS<lb/>
? CIT<lb/>
 PHONE I<lb/>
<lb/>
KELLVSHEPPARD "A"<lb/>
MISS NORTH CAROLINA JL<lb/>
?<lb/>
IF THIS DOES NOT PERTAIN TO YOU PASS IT ON TO A FRIEND <lb/>
STATE<lb/>
BIRTH DATE<lb/>
ZIP<lb/>
????????????????????????<lb/>
McNeese to play in<lb/>
first NCAA tourney<lb/>
LAKE CHARLES, La. (AP) ?<lb/>
Despitea 16-13 record thisseason,<lb/>
the McNeese State Cowboys de-<lb/>
serve to be in the NCAA tourna-<lb/>
ment just as much as any of the<lb/>
other 63 teams in the held. Coach<lb/>
Steve l ? U h says.<lb/>
"It's a tn : lous challenge<lb/>
: rus V l( hsaid MondayWe<lb/>
illtn I '?- tru same tactics that<lb/>
we u - d to win the Southland Con-<lb/>
ference Tournament. It'sjustabig-<lb/>
ger hill to climb<lb/>
McNeese plays in its first<lb/>
CAA tournament game ever<lb/>
Thursday against fourth-ranked<lb/>
Illinois in an opening-round con-<lb/>
test at Indianapolis.<lb/>
Illinois was selected Sunday<lb/>
as the top seed in the Midwest re-<lb/>
gional. The other No. 1 seeds were<lb/>
third-ranked Georgetown in th<lb/>
East, second-ranked Oklahoma in<lb/>
the Southeast and top-ranked<lb/>
Arizona in the West.<lb/>
Georgetown, the Big Hast<lb/>
champion, opens Friday against<lb/>
Princeton at Providence. Later that<lb/>
day, Oklahoma will play East<lb/>
Tennessee State in Nashville, and<lb/>
top-ranked Arizona will be in<lb/>
Boise, Idaho on Thursday against<lb/>
Robert Morris.<lb/>
Welch has seen his share oi<lb/>
trouble since taking the helm at<lb/>
McNeese State last year.<lb/>
He inherited a program on<lb/>
probation and docked two schol-<lb/>
arships because oi recruiting vio-<lb/>
lations by his predecessor, Glenn<lb/>
Duhon. That probation ran its<lb/>
course and expired last month.<lb/>
"Our first five players are<lb/>
comparable to a lot of players, if<lb/>
we work hard. But we don't have<lb/>
the depth that other teams have,<lb/>
partly because we're only work-<lb/>
ing with 13 scholarships now he<lb/>
said.<lb/>
The lack of depth was never<lb/>
more apparent than the 12-game<lb/>
period during which point guard<lb/>
Terrv Griggley was sidelined with<lb/>
pulled abdominal muscles. The<lb/>
Cowboys lost seven of those<lb/>
games, six of them consecutively.<lb/>
Before Griggley's injury,<lb/>
McNeese almost always played<lb/>
man-to-man defense and worked<lb/>
patiently for the good shot. Even<lb/>
though he returned to health be-<lb/>
fore the Southland Conference<lb/>
Tournament, McNeese has gone<lb/>
almost exclusively to a zone or a<lb/>
triangle-and-two.<lb/>
Offensively, Griggley keeps<lb/>
the Cowboys patient and tries to<lb/>
work the ball inside to Anthony<lb/>
Pullard, 6-foot- 10-inches, or Mark<lb/>
Thompson, 6-foot-9-inches, who<lb/>
plavs the double post. If that's not<lb/>
there, the post men kick it out to 6-<lb/>
4 guard Michael Cutright, the<lb/>
team's leading scorer.<lb/>
Cutright averaged 20.1 points,<lb/>
Pullard 17.4 and Thompson 11.7.<lb/>
Griggley is an excellent ath-<lb/>
lete who started for Florida State's<lb/>
football team as a defensive back<lb/>
as a freshman in 1984. However,<lb/>
shoulder and knee injuries cut his<lb/>
football career short, and he trans-<lb/>
ferred to McNeese.<lb/>
.<lb/>
or<lb/>
Loe<lb/>
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in<lb/>
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Tuesday ? March 21, 1989<lb/>
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</div></body></text></TEI>