<?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">
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<pb facs="00058139_0001"/>
Editorial4<lb/>
Classified6<lb/>
Clearly Labeled Satire 10<lb/>
Comics11<lb/>
ECU takes on UNC-Wilmington<lb/>
in a triple-header this weekend.<lb/>
Catch the action on pagel2.<lb/>
Radio star Trey Bien says muy<lb/>
bien to The Cult's latest release.<lb/>
Check out page 8.<lb/>
(She itaat (fJarolinian<lb/>
Serving the East Carolina campus community since i1 <lb/>
 Ol. b 'o. s<lb/>
I hursdav April 13, 14N4<lb/>
Greenville, C<lb/>
ill' . s<lb/>
( irculation 12,000<lb/>
Coach Kay Yow to speak at commencement<lb/>
By Ml BOTI WO<lb/>
an<lb/>
 Olympic basketball<lb/>
md FCl graduate, will be<lb/>
r tor the 1989 com-<lb/>
? ceremony Gradu-<lb/>
i remonicsfbrSpringgradu-<lb/>
Ma f, 1989.<lb/>
.) member of the North<lb/>
a I lall of lame and the<lb/>
rts 1 lall of Fame, is<lb/>
 n as an inspirational<lb/>
1 motivational speaker. Weare men I ceremony will take place in<lb/>
ighted that Kav Yow one ot Minges coliseum. Because ol the<lb/>
wn distinguished graduates, limited seating arrangements<lb/>
has consented to deliver the com- 'here will be two ceremonies, one<lb/>
mencemenl address Chancellor held in the morning and one in the<lb/>
iftemoon.<lb/>
For the morning commence-<lb/>
stance, v(ui ma'<lb/>
I r Ri hard Fakin said.<lb/>
v. )i iginal graduation planare<lb/>
ment,beginningat9:15am people<lb/>
attaining their Masters degrees<lb/>
and graduates of the College of<lb/>
rts and Sciences receive their<lb/>
'rogramsat 10a.m. In the ease ot diplomas. Afternoon commcnce-<lb/>
inclementweaiherthecommence- ment, beginning at 1:30 p.m in-<lb/>
a follow s a band concert a! 9 15<lb/>
a m followed b procession forms<lb/>
at 9:45 and concluding with the<lb/>
distributing ol C mmencement<lb/>
volvcs granting Baccalaureate commencei ommittec, said<lb/>
Degrees in the Schools of Allied s niors mvd to be aware of tlu- how mat<lb/>
Health alternative mmencement plans, andifth<lb/>
Phrase two of the plans will Cradiiatmj -eniorshavebcenscnl<lb/>
go into action only if it rains, but ining the alternative<lb/>
hopefully the sun will shine and sights Kowesaid Ro we welcomes ? ? need i<lb/>
commencement will proceed as all futu<lb/>
originally planned Seniors tune<lb/>
in to your local TV and radio si i<lb/>
lions, nameh Kiss 102 or VVZMB,<lb/>
on May 5, to find out about weather<lb/>
conditions<lb/>
C.C. Rowc, chairman of the<lb/>
ij ii<lb/>
Hies<lb/>
?<lb/>
? lual 'S who have yet many ;<lb/>
the memo to pu k one gradual n<lb/>
I Whichard Build-<lb/>
? ii<lb/>
ire full i it in<lb/>
: tn inswer the<lb/>
ti us For in-<lb/>
-<lb/>
?i: . ? . ?<lb/>
prepare ? ? ?<lb/>
spring (i immi ncemei<lb/>
fa be it's not too early to go swimming after all  This furrv friend has the right idea but in the<lb/>
wrong temparures. (Photo b .P. Whitmire ? Photolab)<lb/>
Some students are more involved in class than others, while others are just more coi<lb/>
(Photo by LD. Whitmire - Photolab)<lb/>
Competency tests to be replaced by basic skills tests<lb/>
I S E en as critics are<lb/>
standardized tests with<lb/>
- ?; ore colleges sav they'll<lb/>
nn uir studentsto passeom-<lb/>
 test to take upper-level<lb/>
?? s or to graduate.<lb/>
Student at Texas public col-<lb/>
g s will have to pass basic skills<lb/>
in September. Indi-<lb/>
v idi lal s h ?ls, su h as Northern<lb/>
Kentu ky University and Metro-<lb/>
litan State College in Denver,<lb/>
ill start testing students next<lb/>
fall.<lb/>
?llegians and not a few<lb/>
trators seem to hate the<lb/>
a<lb/>
I .ecturer to speak<lb/>
on the history of<lb/>
medical quacks<lb/>
A humorous lecture-demon<lb/>
I listoryofQuakcery<lb/>
? ill be presented by<lb/>
it Thursday, April<lb/>
stration,<lb/>
in Medi<lb/>
iKa i<lb/>
13, a<lb/>
"Why aren't our grades an<lb/>
accurate relection of what we've<lb/>
learned asked Roger Adams, a<lb/>
Northern Kentucky student.<lb/>
"It doesn't bode well tor<lb/>
higher education said Sarah<lb/>
Slot kwell of Fairtest,a Massachu-<lb/>
setts test waU hdog group<lb/>
But, fueled by the six year-<lb/>
old s hool reform movement, the<lb/>
idea seems to be gaining speed.<lb/>
Florida, Tennessee and some col-<lb/>
leges in Georgia already make<lb/>
students take standardized tests<lb/>
that purport to measure what<lb/>
they've learned. A survey of 7<lb/>
colleges by the IVniver-based<lb/>
Education Commission of the<lb/>
Mates S) found that half ot the<lb/>
schools imposed some sort of as-<lb/>
sessment test.<lb/>
In recent years students at<lb/>
Wayne State and Northest Mis-<lb/>
souri State universities and the<lb/>
univeristies of South Dakota and<lb/>
Maryland have had to pass as-<lb/>
sessment test to gef their degrees<lb/>
or to take higher-level classes.<lb/>
"There hasn'f been a lot of<lb/>
positive reaction to assessment<lb/>
exams admitted Chris Paulson,<lb/>
an E S policy analyst.<lb/>
Critics argue such general<lb/>
tests often are "culturally biased<lb/>
that they more accuragely meas-<lb/>
ure how thoroughly students have<lb/>
adopted middle-class values than<lb/>
how much they have learned.<lb/>
"Blacks and 1 lispanics, quite<lb/>
frankly, get killed said Renee<lb/>
GArcia, testing coordinator at<lb/>
Miami-DadeCommunity College<lb/>
in Florida.<lb/>
1 ?Int more schools are impos-<lb/>
ing the tests, if only because poli-<lb/>
ticians see them as a way to guage<lb/>
how well colleges are educating<lb/>
students.<lb/>
The higher students score on<lb/>
the test, the better the schools must<lb/>
be doing at teaching.<lb/>
"We think it's important for<lb/>
institutions to set priorities and<lb/>
goals, and then be able to show<lb/>
how they are meeting those goals<lb/>
explained lames Rogers of the<lb/>
Southern Association of Coll .<lb/>
and Schools, one of seven regional<lb/>
accrediting agencies<lb/>
"These tests are great for poli<lb/>
ticians Garcia said. "They are<lb/>
something they can understand<lb/>
very easily<lb/>
Since 1983, with the release ot<lb/>
several reports bemoaning the<lb/>
state of American education, some<lb/>
reformers ? mostly notables tor<lb/>
mer U.S. Secretary of Education<lb/>
Wiliam Bennett regularly called<lb/>
tor schools to be more account<lb/>
able for their actions.<lb/>
Bennett annually displayed a<lb/>
"wall chart" of average Scholastic<lb/>
Aptitude Pest scores in the states<lb/>
saving their results reflected how<lb/>
good or bad the high schools in<lb/>
those states were.<lb/>
And college admissions offi-<lb/>
cers themselves, frustrated by the<lb/>
number of college freshmen la k-<lb/>
ing such kills, pressured high<lb/>
schools to make students take<lb/>
compete ncv tests before gradual<lb/>
ing.<lb/>
But the initial reform wave<lb/>
hasn't alwavs improved educa<lb/>
tion a half completed study re-<lb/>
leased March 28 il the San Fran-<lb/>
cisco convention of the American<lb/>
Education Research Association<lb/>
found<lb/>
"States have focused on more<lb/>
manageable reforms Rutgers<lb/>
University researcher William<lb/>
Firestone told the conference. "I<lb/>
mean reforms that weren't too<lb/>
expensive or complex. Most re-<lb/>
forms seemed to come out of a<lb/>
poilitical dealmaking process<lb/>
"Politicians are using the<lb/>
scores to make some critical deci<lb/>
sions" about funding Garcia said.<lb/>
s a result, "there's a lot of<lb/>
pressure on the teachers" to<lb/>
change their (lasses to teach stud<lb/>
nets how to do well on the tests<lb/>
not necessarily about thecourse's<lb/>
subject<lb/>
Nevertl<lb/>
are string  i<lb/>
high scl<lb/>
i he tests n ?<lb/>
r to a com<lb/>
charged I a rt? st'sSi<lb/>
Somcl ? . .<lb/>
re thev gel .<lb/>
1 lulbert, pn - lent of I<lb/>
Assoi<lb/>
 xas in Au . mal<lb/>
up for the 12 vi<lb/>
tion befoi g?<lb/>
All I exas olleg u -<lb/>
to passa three-part basic sk si -<lb/>
before thv can tak<lb/>
?. lasses fhev an lak<lb/>
many timesasthev v ai<lb/>
tmi will c<lb/>
Schoi<lb/>
ha e been mak .<lb/>
competence U sts<lb/>
oxer havt be<lb/>
In 11 nnesset<lb/>
freshman must pass ?<lb/>
See fESTS page 3<lb/>
l<lb/>
le lure will begin at 8p.m.<lb/>
in Room 244 of Mendenhall Stu-<lb/>
d i ter on the main campus<lb/>
and is tree and open to the public<lb/>
Featured speaker is I )r Le<lb/>
land Keller professor emeritus of<lb/>
bi 1( gy at Pittsburg State 1 Iniver<lb/>
Sty, ks He will explain some of<lb/>
the medical gadgets and potions<lb/>
of the 1800 and early 190O's,trac<lb/>
ing their origin, use, endorsement<lb/>
and ultimate outlawing.<lb/>
Widely noted for his humor<lb/>
ous presentations on medical<lb/>
i harlatans, Keller has assembled a<lb/>
private collection ol more than<lb/>
1,000 devices, some of which he<lb/>
demonstrates at his lectures.<lb/>
Keller's ECU presentation is<lb/>
sponsored by the campus chapter<lb/>
of Sigma Xi scientific research<lb/>
honor society.<lb/>
Women Administrators<lb/>
forum held on campus<lb/>
?<lb/>
You didn't dream it It was real. Maybe not this real, but winter did come back for a second (third,<lb/>
fourth) time around. (Photo by J.D. Whitmire ? Photolab)<lb/>
1I .r?? Bureau<lb/>
E 1 will host the 10th anni-<lb/>
versary spring forum ot Women<lb/>
Administrators in North Carolina<lb/>
Higher Education (WANCHE)<lb/>
une 1 2<lb/>
I he purpose ot WANCHE<lb/>
organized in 1977 under sponsor-<lb/>
ship ot the American Council on<lb/>
Education (ACE), is to increase<lb/>
tin- number of women in posi-<lb/>
tions of leadership in colleges and<lb/>
universities.<lb/>
The two dav program in-<lb/>
cludes addresses by Or. Cynthia<lb/>
yson, president of Mary Bald<lb/>
win College, Staunton, 'a . Or<lb/>
Patri ia Sullivan, vice president of<lb/>
academic at fairs at Texas Woman's<lb/>
I niversitv, Or. Marilyn Haring-<lb/>
Midore, dean of the School of<lb/>
Education, University off Massa-<lb/>
chusetts at Amherst,and Dr. Bettv<lb/>
Siegel, president of Kcnnesaw<lb/>
State i<lb/>
1 r i ielcn Grove dean ol<lb/>
ECU S hool of 1 lomc I . i n n i -<lb/>
will present a program or<lb/>
ing organizational chance x<lb/>
plaining four mod ? i<lb/>
c oaxum associate vice chancel<lb/>
lor tor a ademii affairs at a<lb/>
etteville State Universitv 'C<lb/>
will present a 10th war retrospec<lb/>
live for W WMF<lb/>
1 he organization uses Mak<lb/>
based networking involving<lb/>
women and men holding admin<lb/>
istrative position in higher educa<lb/>
tion 3nd women who aspire t,<lb/>
such roles It holds two formal<lb/>
meetings each year<lb/>
For reservations and registra<lb/>
turn information,contact Dr. Bots<lb/>
II. Harper director ot Coopera-<lb/>
tive Education, 1028 General<lb/>
Classroom Bldg , East Carolina<lb/>
University,Greenville T( US<lb/>
<pb facs="00058139_0002"/><lb/>
?:?: .Vtj?IlJll.?i<lb/>
 iiii.iiiiiiiiim.i iii<lb/>
? - ? ? ?  ??.<lb/>
Editorial?<lb/>
Clearly Labeled Satire10<lb/>
VOm?C8 ??????????????????????????????? ??Jt jl<lb/>
'???;<lb/>
msssi<lb/>
mzz<lb/>
Catch the action on pagel2.<lb/>
i ?<lb/>
M-llM.i.i.Hi.iiJMiMU'n?'<lb/>
BW"WIII.HHHII<lb/>
I<lb/>
Radio star Trey Bien fays muy<lb/>
Wen to He CitttVUtiease,<lb/>
Check out page 8.<lb/>
2Hte Saat Carolinian<lb/>
Serving the East Carolina campus community since 1925.<lb/>
Vol. 63 No. 65<lb/>
Thursday April 13,1989<lb/>
Greenville, NC<lb/>
14 Pages<lb/>
Circulation 12,000<lb/>
Coach Kay Yow to speak at commencement<lb/>
By CATE BOTTANNON<lb/>
Staff Writer<lb/>
Kay Yow, Olympic basketball<lb/>
coach and ECU graduate, will be<lb/>
the speaker for the 1989 com-<lb/>
mencement ceremony. Gradu-<lb/>
ation ceremonies for Spring gradu-<lb/>
ates will be May 6,1989.<lb/>
Yow, a member of the North<lb/>
Carolina Hall of Fame and the<lb/>
Women's Sports Hall of Fame, is<lb/>
widely known as an inspirational<lb/>
and motivational speaker. "Weare<lb/>
delighted that Kay Yow, one of<lb/>
our own distinguished graduates,<lb/>
has consented to deliver the com-<lb/>
mencement address Chancellor<lb/>
Dr. Richard Eakin said.<lb/>
Original graduation plans are<lb/>
as follows, a band concert at 9:15<lb/>
a.m. followed by procession forms<lb/>
at 9:45 and concluding with the<lb/>
distributing of Commencement<lb/>
Programs at 10 a.m. In the case of<lb/>
inclement weaiher the commence-<lb/>
ment ceremony will take place in<lb/>
Minges coliseum. Because of the<lb/>
limited seating arrangements<lb/>
there will be two ceremonies, one<lb/>
held in the morning and one in the<lb/>
afternoon.<lb/>
For the morning commence-<lb/>
ment, beginning at 9:15 am people<lb/>
attaining their Masters degrees<lb/>
and graduates of the College of<lb/>
Arts and Sciences receive their<lb/>
diplomas. Afternoon commence-<lb/>
ment, beginning at 1:30 p.m? in-<lb/>
volves granting Baccalaureate<lb/>
Degrees in the Schools of Allied<lb/>
Health.<lb/>
Phrase two of the plans will<lb/>
go into action only if it rains, but<lb/>
hopefully the sun will shine and<lb/>
commencement will proceed as<lb/>
originally planned. Seniors tune<lb/>
in to your local TV and radio sta-<lb/>
tions, namely Kiss 102 or WZMB,<lb/>
on May 5, to find out about weather<lb/>
conditions.<lb/>
C.C. Rowe, chairman of the<lb/>
commencement committee, said<lb/>
seniors need to be aware of the<lb/>
alternative commencement plans.<lb/>
Graduating seniors have been sent<lb/>
a memo explaining the alternative<lb/>
sights, Rowe said. Rowe welcomes<lb/>
all future graduates who have yet<lb/>
to receive the memo to pick one<lb/>
up at 111 or 211 Whichard Build-<lb/>
ing.<lb/>
These memos are full of in-<lb/>
formation and can answer the<lb/>
most minor of questions. For in-<lb/>
stance, you may be wondering<lb/>
how many guests you can invite<lb/>
and if they need passes. Guests do<lb/>
not need passes and however<lb/>
many people want to see you<lb/>
graduate are welcome.<lb/>
All seniors get on the ball and<lb/>
prepare yourself for ECU 1989,<lb/>
spring commencement?<lb/>
<lb/>
'???&amp; - ? ?? ; ???-? t<lb/>
m<lb/>
?4<lb/>
Maybe if s not too early to go swimming after all This furry friend has the right idea but in the<lb/>
wrong tempatures. (Photo by J.D. Whitmire ? Photolab)<lb/>
Some students are more involved in class than others, while others are just more conscious.<lb/>
(Photo by J.D. Whitmire ? Photolab)<lb/>
Competency tests to be replaced by basic skills tests<lb/>
(CPS) ? Even as critics are<lb/>
attacking s' ndardized tests with<lb/>
fervor, mc 2 colleges say they'll<lb/>
soon require students to pass com-<lb/>
petency test to take upper-level<lb/>
courses or to graduate.<lb/>
Student at Texas public col-<lb/>
leges will have to pass basic skills<lb/>
tests starting in September. Indi-<lb/>
vidual schools, such as Northern<lb/>
Kentucky University and Metro-<lb/>
politan State College in Denver,<lb/>
also will start testing students next<lb/>
fall.<lb/>
Collegians and not a few<lb/>
administrators seem to hate the<lb/>
idea.<lb/>
Lecturer to speak<lb/>
on the history of<lb/>
medical quacks<lb/>
ECUNtMtuMi<lb/>
A humorous lecture-demon-<lb/>
stration, "The History of Quakcery<lb/>
in Medicine will be presented by<lb/>
a Kansas scientist Thursday, April<lb/>
13, at ECU.<lb/>
The lecture will begin at 8 p.m.<lb/>
in Room 244 of Mendenhall Stu-<lb/>
dent Center on the main campus<lb/>
and is free and open to the public<lb/>
Featured speaker is Dr. Le-<lb/>
land Keller, professor emeritus of<lb/>
biology at Pittsburg State Uni ver-<lb/>
sty, Ks. He will explain some of<lb/>
the medical gadgets and potions<lb/>
of the 1800' and early 1900 trac-<lb/>
ing their origin, use, endorsement<lb/>
and ultimate outlawing.<lb/>
Widely noted for his humor-<lb/>
ous presentations on medical<lb/>
charlatans, Keller has assembled a<lb/>
private collection of more than<lb/>
1,000 devices, some of which he<lb/>
demonstrates at his lectures.<lb/>
Keller's ECU presentation ?<lb/>
sponsored by the campus chapter<lb/>
of Sigma )6 scientific research<lb/>
honor society.<lb/>
"Why aren't our grades an<lb/>
accurate relection of what we've<lb/>
learned asked Roger Adams, a<lb/>
Northern Kentucky student.<lb/>
"It doeWt bode well for<lb/>
higher education said Sarah<lb/>
Stockwell of Fairtest, a Massachu-<lb/>
setts test watchdog group.<lb/>
But, fueled by the six-year-<lb/>
old school reform movement, the<lb/>
idea seems to be gaining speed.<lb/>
Florida, Tennessee and some col-<lb/>
leges in Georgia already make<lb/>
students take standardized tests<lb/>
that purport to measure what<lb/>
they've learned. A survey of 367<lb/>
colleges by the Deniver-based<lb/>
Education Commission of the<lb/>
States (ECS) found that half of the<lb/>
schools imposed some sort of as-<lb/>
sessment test.<lb/>
In recent years students at<lb/>
Wayne State and Northest Mis-<lb/>
souri State universities and the<lb/>
uni veristies of South Dakota and<lb/>
Maryland have had to pass as-<lb/>
sessment test to get their degrees<lb/>
or to take higher-level classes.<lb/>
"There hasn't been a lot of<lb/>
positive reaction to assessment<lb/>
exams admitted Chris Paulson,<lb/>
an ECS policy analyst.<lb/>
Critics argue such general<lb/>
tests of ten are "culturally biased<lb/>
that they more accuragely meas-<lb/>
ure how thoroughly students have<lb/>
adopted middle-class values than<lb/>
how much they have learned.<lb/>
"Blacks and Hispanics, quite<lb/>
frankly, get killed said Renee<lb/>
GArcia, testing coordinator at<lb/>
Miami-Dade Community College<lb/>
in Florida.<lb/>
But more schools are impos-<lb/>
ing the tests, if only because poli-<lb/>
ticians see them as a way to guage<lb/>
how well colleges are educating<lb/>
students.<lb/>
The higher students score on<lb/>
the test, the better the schools mu st<lb/>
be doing at teaching.<lb/>
"We think if s important for<lb/>
institutions to set priorities and<lb/>
goals, and then be able to show<lb/>
how they are meeting those goals<lb/>
explained James Rogers of the<lb/>
Southern Association of Colleges<lb/>
and Schools, oneof seven regional<lb/>
accrediting agencies.<lb/>
"These tests are great for poli-<lb/>
ticians Garcia said. "They are<lb/>
something they can understand<lb/>
very easily<lb/>
Since 1983, with the release of<lb/>
several reports bemoaning the<lb/>
state of American education, some<lb/>
reformers ?mostly notabley for-<lb/>
mer US. Secretary of Education<lb/>
Wiliam Bennett?regularly called<lb/>
for schools to be more account-<lb/>
able for their actions.<lb/>
Bennett annually displayed a<lb/>
"wall chart" of average Scholastic<lb/>
Aptitude Test scores in the states,<lb/>
saying their results reflected how<lb/>
good or bad the high schools in<lb/>
those states were.<lb/>
And college admissions offi-<lb/>
cers themselves, frustrated by the<lb/>
number of college freshmen lack-<lb/>
ing such skills, pressured high<lb/>
schools to make students take<lb/>
competency tests before graduat-<lb/>
ing.<lb/>
But the initial reform wave<lb/>
hasn't always improved educa-<lb/>
tion, a half-completed study re-<lb/>
leased March 28 at the San Fran-<lb/>
cisco convention of the American<lb/>
Education Research Association<lb/>
found.<lb/>
"States have focused on more<lb/>
manageable reforms Rutgers<lb/>
University researcher William<lb/>
Firestone told the conference. "I<lb/>
mean reforms that weren't too<lb/>
expensive or complex. Most re-<lb/>
forms seemed to come out of a<lb/>
poilitical dealmaking process<lb/>
"Politicians are using the<lb/>
scores to make some critical deci-<lb/>
sions" about funding, Garcia said.<lb/>
As a result, "there's a lot of<lb/>
pressure on the teachers" to<lb/>
change their classes to teach stud-<lb/>
nets how to do well on the tests,<lb/>
not necessarily about the course's<lb/>
subject.<lb/>
Nevertheless, such reforms<lb/>
are string to spread up form the<lb/>
high school to the college level.<lb/>
The tests "are simplistic an-<lb/>
swer to a complicated problem<lb/>
charged Fairtesf s Stockewell.<lb/>
"Something needs to be done<lb/>
before they get here said Mike<lb/>
Hulbert, president of the Student's<lb/>
Association at the University of<lb/>
Texas in Austin. "You can't make<lb/>
up for the 12 years of poor educa-<lb/>
tion before college<lb/>
All Texas collegians will have<lb/>
to passa three-part basic skills test<lb/>
before thy can take upper-level<lb/>
classes. They can take the test as<lb/>
many times as they want, but each<lb/>
time will cost $24.<lb/>
School officals in states that<lb/>
have been making students take<lb/>
competency tests already, more-<lb/>
over, have become fans.<lb/>
In Tennessee, where entering<lb/>
freshman must pass a basic skills<lb/>
See TESTS, page 3, col. 1<lb/>
Women Administrators<lb/>
forum held on campus<lb/>
You didn't<lb/>
fourth) time<lb/>
it It was reaL Maybe not this real, b?t winter did come back for<lb/>
around. (Photo by I.D. Whitmire?Photolab)<lb/>
wttmmmwmm<lb/>
ECU will host the 10th anni-<lb/>
versary spring forum of Women<lb/>
Administrators in North Carolina<lb/>
Higher Education (WANCHE)<lb/>
June 1-2.<lb/>
The purpose of WANCHE,<lb/>
organized in 1977 under sponsor-<lb/>
ship of the American Council on<lb/>
Education (ACE), is to increase<lb/>
the number of women in posi-<lb/>
tions of leadership in colleges and<lb/>
universities.<lb/>
The two-day program in-<lb/>
cludes addresses by Dr. Cynthia<lb/>
Tyson, president of Mary Bald-<lb/>
win College, Staunton, Va Dr.<lb/>
Patricia Sullivan, vice president of<lb/>
academic affairs at Texas Woman's<lb/>
University, Dr. Marilyn Haring-<lb/>
Hidore, dean of the School of<lb/>
Education, University of Massa-<lb/>
chusetts at Amherst, and Dr. Betty<lb/>
of<lb/>
State College in Georgia.<lb/>
Dr. Helen Grove, dean o( the<lb/>
ECU School of Home Economics,<lb/>
will present a program on manag-<lb/>
ing organizational change, ex-<lb/>
plaining four models. Dr. Callie<lb/>
Coaxum, associate vice chancel-<lb/>
lor for academic affairs at Fay-<lb/>
etteville State University, N.C<lb/>
will present a 10th year retrospec-<lb/>
tive for WANCHE.<lb/>
The organization uses state-<lb/>
based networking involving<lb/>
women and men holding admin-<lb/>
istrative position in higher educa-<lb/>
tion and women who aspire to<lb/>
such roles. It holds two formal<lb/>
meetings each year.<lb/>
For reservations and registra<lb/>
tkn information, contact Dr. Betsy<lb/>
H. Harper director ot Coopera-<lb/>
tive Education, 1028 General<lb/>
Classroom Bldg East Carolina<lb/>
Imiversiry, Greenville, NC 27858.<lb/>
<lb/>
mm<lb/>
? ? ?? . a' ??-??- ?'?<lb/>
<pb facs="00058139_0003"/><lb/>
THE EAST CAROLINIAN<lb/>
APRIL 13,1989<lb/>
'Be realistic about weight loss'<lb/>
The fascination with a thin<lb/>
physique has become a preoccu-<lb/>
pation of most young men and<lb/>
women. Due to this situation,<lb/>
"Magical Alternatives better<lb/>
known as "Fad Diets are mo-<lb/>
nopolizing the market. The over-<lb/>
whelming desire to lose unwanted<lb/>
pounds in a short amount of time<lb/>
entices people. The producers of<lb/>
such "Magical Alternatives" count<lb/>
on our lack of good nutrition<lb/>
knowledge. They capitalize on our<lb/>
desires to fit into the societial mold.<lb/>
An enlightening fact, however, is<lb/>
that for many their enthusiasm<lb/>
with "Magical Alternatives" is<lb/>
short live they lose, they gain.<lb/>
The cruel fact is to lose weight<lb/>
one must consume fewer calories<lb/>
(energy input) than heshe uses<lb/>
(energy output). Consideration<lb/>
must be placed on life long nutri-<lb/>
tional goals. The key is to adopt an<lb/>
"Eating Plan" asopposed to going<lb/>
"On" a diet, which ultimately leads<lb/>
Health Column<lb/>
by<lb/>
Lvnne Dixon<lb/>
to the temptation of going "Off" a<lb/>
diet.<lb/>
The body weight is composed<lb/>
of approximately 60 percent fluid.<lb/>
"Fad Dieting, using severe calorie<lb/>
restriction, results in rapid weight<lb/>
reduction due to increased fluid<lb/>
loss. Another result of severe calo-<lb/>
ric restriction is that the body finds<lb/>
it easier to breakdown lean tissue<lb/>
(muscle) to fuel activity instead of<lb/>
fat. Out oi the need to survive, the<lb/>
body will conserve its energy<lb/>
requirements, thus protecting<lb/>
muscle and vital organs, by de-<lb/>
creasing the metabolic rate. There-<lb/>
fore fewer calories are needed to<lb/>
support bodily functions. Conse-<lb/>
quently, if old eating habits return<lb/>
faster weight gain results (the<lb/>
body's now operating at a slower<lb/>
metabolic rate).<lb/>
Weight reduction can be ac-<lb/>
complished without wreaking<lb/>
havoc by moderate reduction in<lb/>
calories consumed. A hard, fast<lb/>
rule to remember when calculat-<lb/>
ing an "Eating Plan" is that in<lb/>
order to lose one pound, you must<lb/>
deprive your body of 3500 calo-<lb/>
ries. This should be done by sub-<lb/>
stracting 500 to 1000 calories per<lb/>
day from your dietary intake.<lb/>
However, it is NOT RECOM-<lb/>
MENDED to consume less than<lb/>
1000 calories per day.<lb/>
Avoid skipping meals to re-<lb/>
duce calories. Small, but regularly<lb/>
scheduled meals arc best to re-<lb/>
duce hunger sensations, thus re-<lb/>
ducing the urge to cheat. One must<lb/>
remember to be realistic about<lb/>
weight loss. A slow, but steady<lb/>
weight loss reduces total body fat<lb/>
instead of reducing body fluids<lb/>
and lean tissue.<lb/>
Expert to speak on civil rights<lb/>
ECU Niwi Bwii v.<lb/>
One oi the country's leading<lb/>
experts on civil rights and the<lb/>
experiences of blacks in American<lb/>
politics will speak at ECU April<lb/>
13.<lb/>
Dr Charles V. Hamilton, a<lb/>
professor of government at Co-<lb/>
lumbia University will present the<lb/>
lecture "Dual Agenda: Social Poli-<lb/>
cies of Civil Rights Organizations,<lb/>
New Deal to the Present" at 7:30<lb/>
p.m. in Room 1031 of the General<lb/>
Classroom Building.The program,<lb/>
sponsored by the ECU Minority<lb/>
Presence Initiative Program and<lb/>
Department of Political Science, is<lb/>
free and open to the public.<lb/>
Hamilton, currently on leave<lb/>
from Columbia to teach at Smith<lb/>
College, is the author of five books,<lb/>
the best known oi which is "Black<lb/>
Power, co-authored withStokely<lb/>
Carmichael. His other works in-<lb/>
clude "The Black Experience in<lb/>
American Politics "The Bench<lb/>
and the Ballot "Southern Fed-<lb/>
eral judges and the right to Vote<lb/>
"The Black Preacher in America<lb/>
and "American Government<lb/>
Considered one of America's<lb/>
most distinguished black political<lb/>
scientist, Hamilton has received<lb/>
numerous academic honors in-<lb/>
cluding two awards for teaching<lb/>
excellence. He has taught at<lb/>
Roosevelt University, Lincoln<lb/>
University, Rutgers University,<lb/>
Tuskegee Institute, Albany State<lb/>
and Miles College.<lb/>
He received his BA degree<lb/>
from Roosevelt University, his law<lb/>
degree from Loyola Univeristy<lb/>
and his MA and PhD from the<lb/>
University of Chicago.<lb/>
The East Carolinian<lb/>
James FJ. McKce, Director of Advertising<lb/>
Advertising Representatives<lb/>
Scott Makey I Keith Pearce<lb/>
Phillip V. Cope Adam Blankenship<lb/>
Guy Harvey<lb/>
DISPLAY ADVERTISING<lb/>
Open Rate$4.95 Local Open Rate $4.75<lb/>
Bulk Rate (Contracts) Frequency (Contracts)<lb/>
100-199 col. inches$4.50 5 InsertionsW-li") <lb/>
200-299 col. inches$4.40<lb/>
300-399 col. inches$4.30<lb/>
400-499 col. inches$4.20<lb/>
500-599 col. inches$4.10<lb/>
600 and above$4.00<lb/>
Classified Display<lb/>
Open Rate$5.00<lb/>
Color Advertising<lb/>
One Color and black$90.00 (12-25) $4.20<lb/>
Two Color and black$155.00<lb/>
(12-25)  $4.50<lb/>
10 Inscrtions(4 -n )$4.50<lb/>
(12-251  $4.45<lb/>
15 lnsertions(4 -11')$4.45<lb/>
(12 -25 $440<lb/>
20 Insertions (4-11) $4.40<lb/>
(12-25 $4.35<lb/>
25 Insertions (4 -11 I $4.35<lb/>
BUSINESS HOURS:<lb/>
Monday-Friday<lb/>
10:00-5:00 p.m.<lb/>
PHONE:<lb/>
757-6366<lb/>
Satanic cult of Mexican smugglers<lb/>
kills student from Texas University<lb/>
MATAMOROS, Mexico (AP)<lb/>
? A satanic cult of drug smug-<lb/>
glers who sacrificed and appar-<lb/>
ently cannibalized humans<lb/>
slaughtered 12 people, including<lb/>
a U.S. college student on spring<lb/>
break, authorities sav.<lb/>
Five people were arrested in<lb/>
connection with the killings and<lb/>
on drug charges by Mexican Fed-<lb/>
eral Judicial Police, which found<lb/>
the dozen bodies in graves at a<lb/>
ranch ? just south of the U.S.<lb/>
border.<lb/>
Police said they planned to<lb/>
resume digging today at the Santa<lb/>
Elena Ranch, searching for two<lb/>
more bodies.<lb/>
"It was horrible Cameron<lb/>
County Sheriff Alex Perez told a<lb/>
news conference Tuesdav in the<lb/>
Texas border city of Brownsville.<lb/>
"It was like a human slaughter-<lb/>
house<lb/>
The suspects were U.S. and<lb/>
Mexican citizens, said Sheriff s Lt.<lb/>
George Gavito, who did not iden-<lb/>
tify them further.<lb/>
The dead included 21-vear-<lb/>
old University of Texas student<lb/>
Mark Kilroy, who vanished last<lb/>
month in Matamoros. Gavito said.<lb/>
Kilroy apparently was chosen<lb/>
at random by drug smugglers who<lb/>
had hoped human sacrifices<lb/>
would protect them from harm,<lb/>
Gavito said.<lb/>
Kilroy was grabbed after the<lb/>
cult members "were told to pick<lb/>
one Anglo male that particular<lb/>
night Gavito said.<lb/>
The cult had been involved in<lb/>
human sacrifices for about nine<lb/>
months, he said, and praved to the<lb/>
devil "so the police would not<lb/>
arrest them, so bullets would not<lb/>
kill them and so they could make<lb/>
more money<lb/>
Authorities found candlesand<lb/>
kettles full of body parts and ani-<lb/>
mal bones, said Oran Neck, chief<lb/>
U.S. Customs agent in<lb/>
Brownsville.<lb/>
Also found were bowls and a<lb/>
caldron from which brains, hearts<lb/>
and other organs of victims were<lb/>
eaten, Perez said.<lb/>
"They were cooking bodv<lb/>
parts in a big pot there on that<lb/>
ranchsaid Texas Attorney Gen-<lb/>
eral Jim Mattox.<lb/>
Felipe Flores, spokesman for<lb/>
the Mexican attorney general's<lb/>
office, said he knew nothing about<lb/>
reports of cannibalism. But he<lb/>
added that during the ritual kill-<lb/>
ings victims' brains were cut out<lb/>
and put on a fire, mixed with<lb/>
blood, herbs, rooster's feet, goat's<lb/>
heads andturtles.<lb/>
Maitox said investigators be-<lb/>
lieve the cult had 10 members.<lb/>
The Mexican attorney gen-<lb/>
eral's office said the voodoo-prac-<lb/>
ticing cult's leader, a Cuban-<lb/>
American, is believed to have fled<lb/>
into the United States. He is known<lb/>
as "Godfather" to the sect's mem-<lb/>
bers, officials said.<lb/>
Police reported finding the 12<lb/>
bodies in nine graves, Mattox said.<lb/>
Perez said the cult members<lb/>
removed some of the victims'<lb/>
vertebrae "to use them for neck-<lb/>
laces<lb/>
Authorities would not iden-<lb/>
tify the other victims, but said all<lb/>
were males.<lb/>
Some victims were shot in the<lb/>
head, and others appeared to ha ve<lb/>
been slain with machetes or<lb/>
sledgehammers, Neck said.<lb/>
The bodies ere found Tues-<lb/>
dav morning in a field about 20<lb/>
miles wet of Matamoros. Gavito<lb/>
said.<lb/>
Anthony Padilla, a photogra-<lb/>
pher with The Brownsville Her-<lb/>
ald, said he saw Kilroy'sbodyata<lb/>
Matamoros funeral home. 'There<lb/>
was nothing inside the skull<lb/>
Padilla said.<lb/>
In some forms of witchcraft,<lb/>
removal of the brain signifies a<lb/>
sacrifice of the- victim's soul.<lb/>
Padilla said Kilroy'slegs were<lb/>
cut oii at mid-calf and his spine<lb/>
was severed and twisted.<lb/>
Kilroy, a premedical student,<lb/>
vanished from a crowded Mata-<lb/>
moros street shortly after 2 a.m.<lb/>
on March 14 while drinking with<lb/>
a group oi friends in the city of<lb/>
180,000 just across the Rio Grande<lb/>
fromBrownsville.<lb/>
The 3-foot-deep grave con-<lb/>
taining his body was found after<lb/>
federal police alerted U.S. officials<lb/>
early Tuesdav they had obtained<lb/>
confessions from the suspects,<lb/>
officials said.<lb/>
At least one of the suspects<lb/>
admitted involvement in Kilroy's<lb/>
death, said Neck.<lb/>
Advertise<lb/>
in<lb/>
The East Carolinian<lb/>
757-6366<lb/>
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All Chains and Bracelets Are 14K Gold<lb/>
And Come With A Lifetine Guarantee<lb/>
ECU Students Receive An Additional 107c OFF<lb/>
14 KT. Bracelets ONLY<lb/>
7" Herringbone$14.95<lb/>
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7" Herringbone, engraved with I Love You. $29.95<lb/>
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7"Heringbone$109.95<lb/>
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14kt. adjustable cuff 11mm wide$212.95<lb/>
14kt. bangle$324.95<lb/>
T Heavy Nugget 11.5mm wide$634.95<lb/>
8" Heavy Nugget 15.5mm wide$1,134.95<lb/>
7" Nugget I.D$199.95<lb/>
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7" Two tone Heavy Link$574.95<lb/>
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18" Herringbone$35.00<lb/>
20" Herringbone$36.95<lb/>
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18" Herringbone, engraved with I Love You$74.95<lb/>
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20" Herringbone$161.95<lb/>
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20" Herringbone$189.95<lb/>
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18" Heringbone$215.95<lb/>
18" Herringbone$265.95<lb/>
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20" Wide Herringbone$309.95<lb/>
20" Wide Herringbone$349.95<lb/>
18" Heavy Link Figaro$479.95<lb/>
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18" Solid Rope$89.95<lb/>
20" Solid Rope$98.95<lb/>
18" Solid Rope$122.50<lb/>
18" Solid Silky Rope$278.00<lb/>
ALL 14KT. GOLD EARINGS NOW<lb/>
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CHARMS NOW REDUCED 30<lb/>
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and inspection<lb/>
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of America Certified<lb/>
Diamond Appraisals<lb/>
EXPERT JEWELRY REPAIR<lb/>
ONE DAY SERVICE<lb/>
<lb/>
<pb facs="00058139_0004"/><lb/>
H<lb/>
THE EAST CAROLINIAN<lb/>
APRIL 13,1989<lb/>
'Be realistic about weight loss'<lb/>
The fascination with a thin<lb/>
physique has become a preoccu-<lb/>
pation of most young men and<lb/>
women. Due to this situation,<lb/>
"Magical Alternatives better<lb/>
known as "Fad Diets are mo-<lb/>
nopolizing the market. The over-<lb/>
whelming desire to lose unwanted<lb/>
pounds in a short amount of time<lb/>
entices people. The producers of<lb/>
such "Magical Alternatives" count<lb/>
on our lack of good nutrition<lb/>
knowledge. They capitalize on our<lb/>
desires to fit into the socierial mold.<lb/>
An enlightening fact, however, is<lb/>
that for many their enthusiasm<lb/>
with "Magical Alternatives" is<lb/>
short live they lose, they gain.<lb/>
The cruel fact is to lose weight<lb/>
one must consume fewer calories<lb/>
(energy input) than heshe uses<lb/>
(energy output). Consideration<lb/>
must be placed on life long nutri-<lb/>
tional goals. The key is to adopt an<lb/>
"Eating Plan" as opposed to going<lb/>
"On" a diet, which ultimately leads<lb/>
Health Column<lb/>
by<lb/>
Lynne Dixon<lb/>
to the temptation of going "Off" a<lb/>
diet.<lb/>
The body weight is composed<lb/>
of approximately 60 percent fluid.<lb/>
"Fad Dieting, using severe calorie<lb/>
restriction, results in rapid weight<lb/>
reduction due to increased fluid<lb/>
loss. Another result of severe calo-<lb/>
rie restriction is that the body finds<lb/>
it easier to breakdown lean tissue<lb/>
(muscle) to fuel activity instead of<lb/>
fat. Out of the need to survive, the<lb/>
body will conserve its energy<lb/>
requirements, thus protecting<lb/>
muscle and vital organs, by de-<lb/>
creasing the metabolic rate. There-<lb/>
fore fewer calories are needed to<lb/>
support bodily functions. Conse-<lb/>
quently, if old eating habits return<lb/>
faster weight gain results (the<lb/>
body's now operating at a slower<lb/>
metabolic rate).<lb/>
Weight reduction can be ac-<lb/>
complished without wreaking<lb/>
havoc by moderate reduction in<lb/>
calories consumed. A hard, fast<lb/>
rule to remember when calculat-<lb/>
ing an "Eating Plan" is that in<lb/>
order to lose one pound, you must<lb/>
deprive your body of 3500 calo-<lb/>
ries. This should be done by sub-<lb/>
stracting 500 to 1000 calories per<lb/>
day from your dietary intake.<lb/>
However, it is NOT RECOM-<lb/>
MENDED to consume less than<lb/>
1000 calories per day.<lb/>
Avoid skipping meals to re-<lb/>
duce calories, small, but regularly<lb/>
scheduled meals are best to re-<lb/>
duce hunger sensations, thus re-<lb/>
ducing the urge to cheat. One must<lb/>
remember to be realistic about<lb/>
weight loss. A slow, but steady<lb/>
weight loss reduces total body fat<lb/>
instead of reducing body fluids<lb/>
and lean tissue.<lb/>
Expert to speak on civil rights<lb/>
The East Carolinian<lb/>
James F.J. McKee, Director of Advertising<lb/>
Advertising Representatives<lb/>
Scott Makey J. Keith Pearce<lb/>
Phillip V. Cope Adam Blankenship<lb/>
Guy Harvey<lb/>
DISPLAY ADVERTISING<lb/>
Open Rate$4.95 Local Open Rate$4.75<lb/>
Bulk Rate (Contracts) Frequency (Contracts)<lb/>
100-199 col. inches$4.50 5 Insertions(4lD<lb/>
200-299 col. inches$4.40<lb/>
300-399 col. inches$4.30<lb/>
400-499 col. inches$4.20<lb/>
500-599 col. inches$4.10<lb/>
600 and above$4.00<lb/>
Classified Display<lb/>
Open Rate$5.00<lb/>
Color Advertising<lb/>
One Color and black$90.00 (12-25")$4.20<lb/>
Two Color and black$155.00<lb/>
0225")$4.50<lb/>
10 Insertions(4in$4.50<lb/>
(1225")$4.45<lb/>
15 Insertions(4in$4.45<lb/>
(1225")$4.40<lb/>
20 Insertions (4in$4.40<lb/>
(1225")$4.35<lb/>
25 Insertions (4n )$4.35<lb/>
ECU Xiwi Buuau<lb/>
One of the country's leading<lb/>
experts on civil rights and the<lb/>
experiences of blacks in American<lb/>
politics will speak at ECU April<lb/>
13.<lb/>
Dr. Charles V. Hamilton, a<lb/>
professor of government at Co-<lb/>
lumbia University will present the<lb/>
lecture "Dual Agenda: Social Poli-<lb/>
cies of Civil Rights Organizations,<lb/>
New Deal to the Present" at 7:30<lb/>
p.m. in Room 1031 of the General<lb/>
Classroom Building. The program,<lb/>
sponsored by the ECU Minority<lb/>
Presence Initiative Program and<lb/>
Department of Political Science, is<lb/>
free and open to the public.<lb/>
Hamilton, currently on leave<lb/>
from Columbia to teach at Smith<lb/>
College, is the author of five books,<lb/>
the best known of which is "Black<lb/>
Power co-authored with Stokely<lb/>
Carmichael. His other works in-<lb/>
clude "The Black Experience in<lb/>
American Politics "The Bench<lb/>
and the Ballot "Southern Fed-<lb/>
eral Judges and the right to Vote<lb/>
"The Black Preacher in America<lb/>
and "American Government<lb/>
Considered one of America's<lb/>
most distinguished black political<lb/>
scientist, Hamilton has received<lb/>
numerous academic honors in-<lb/>
cluding two awards for teaching<lb/>
excellence. He has taught at<lb/>
Roosevelt University, Lincoln<lb/>
University, Rutgers University,<lb/>
Tuskegee Institute, Albany State<lb/>
and Miles College.<lb/>
He received his BA degree<lb/>
from Roosevelt University, his law<lb/>
degree from Loyola Univeristy<lb/>
and his MA and PhD from the<lb/>
University of Chicago.<lb/>
BUSINESS HOURS:<lb/>
Monday-Friday<lb/>
10:00-5:00 p.m.<lb/>
PHONE:<lb/>
757-6366<lb/>
Satanic cult of Mexican smugglers<lb/>
kills student from Texas University<lb/>
MATAMORUS, Mexico (AP)<lb/>
? A satanic cult of drug smug-<lb/>
glers who sacrificed and appar-<lb/>
ently cannibalized humans<lb/>
slaughtered 12 people, including<lb/>
a U.S. college student on spring<lb/>
break, authorities say.<lb/>
Five people were arrested in<lb/>
connection with the killings and<lb/>
on drug charges by Mexican Fed-<lb/>
eral Judicial Police, which found<lb/>
the dozen bodies in graves at a<lb/>
ranch ? just south of the U.S.<lb/>
border.<lb/>
Police said they planned to<lb/>
resume digging today at the Santa<lb/>
Elena Ranch, searching for two<lb/>
more bodies.<lb/>
"It was horrible Cameron<lb/>
County Sheriff Alex Perez told a<lb/>
news conference Tuesday in the<lb/>
Texas border city of Brownsville.<lb/>
"It was like a human slaughter-<lb/>
house<lb/>
The suspects were U.S. and<lb/>
Mexican citizens, said Sheriff's Lt.<lb/>
George Gavito, who did not iden-<lb/>
tify them further.<lb/>
The dead included 21-year-<lb/>
old University of Texas student<lb/>
Mark Kilroy, who vanished last<lb/>
month in Matamoros. Gavito said.<lb/>
Kilroy apparently was chosen<lb/>
at random by drug smugglers who<lb/>
had hoped human sacrifices<lb/>
would protect them from harm,<lb/>
Gavito said.<lb/>
Kilroy was grabbed after the<lb/>
cult members "were told to pick<lb/>
one Anglo male that particular<lb/>
night Gavito said.<lb/>
The cult had been involved in<lb/>
human sacrifices for about nine<lb/>
months, he said, and prayed to the<lb/>
devil "so the police would not<lb/>
arrest them, so bullets would not<lb/>
kill them and so they could make<lb/>
more money<lb/>
Authorities found candlesand<lb/>
kettles full of body parts and ani-<lb/>
mal bones, said Oran Neck, chief<lb/>
U.S. Customs agent in<lb/>
Brownsville.<lb/>
Also found were bowls and a<lb/>
caldron from which brains, hearts<lb/>
and other organs of victims were<lb/>
eaten, Perez said.<lb/>
"They were cooking body<lb/>
parts in a big pot there on that<lb/>
ranch'said Texas Attorney Gen-<lb/>
eral Jim Mattox.<lb/>
Felipe Flores, spokesman for<lb/>
the Mexican attorney general's<lb/>
office, said he knew nothing about<lb/>
reports of cannibalism. But he<lb/>
added that during the ritual kill-<lb/>
ings victims' brains were cut out<lb/>
and put on a fire, mixed with<lb/>
blood, herbs, rooster's feet, goat's<lb/>
heads andturtles.<lb/>
Maitox said investigators be-<lb/>
lieve the cult had 10 members.<lb/>
The Mexican attorney gen-<lb/>
eral's office said the voodoo-prac-<lb/>
ticing cult's leader, a Cuban-<lb/>
American, is believed to have fled<lb/>
into the United States. He is known<lb/>
as "Godfather" to the sect's mem-<lb/>
bers, officials said.<lb/>
Police reported finding the 12<lb/>
bodies in nine graves, Mattox said.<lb/>
Perez said the cult members<lb/>
removed some of the victims'<lb/>
vertebrae "to use them for neck-<lb/>
laces<lb/>
Authorities wpulcLjpt .iden-<lb/>
tify the other victims, but said all<lb/>
were males.<lb/>
Some victims were shot in the<lb/>
head, and others appeared to have<lb/>
been slain with machetes or<lb/>
sledgehammers, Neck said.<lb/>
The bodies vere found Tues-<lb/>
day morning in a field about 20<lb/>
miles west of Matamoros. Gavito<lb/>
said.<lb/>
Anthony Padilla, a photogra-<lb/>
pher with The Brownsville Her-<lb/>
ald, said he saw Kilroy's body at a<lb/>
Matamoros funeral home. 'There<lb/>
was nothing inside the skull<lb/>
Padilla said.<lb/>
In some forms of witchcraft,<lb/>
removal of the brain signifies a<lb/>
sacrifice of the victim's soul.<lb/>
Padilla said Kilroy's legs were<lb/>
cut off at mid-calf and his spine<lb/>
was severed and twisted.<lb/>
Kilroy, a premedical student,<lb/>
vanished from a crowded Mata-<lb/>
moros street shortly after 2 a.m.<lb/>
on March 14 while drinking with<lb/>
a group of friends in the city of<lb/>
180,000 just across the Rio Grande<lb/>
fromBrownsville.<lb/>
The 3-foot-deep grave con-<lb/>
taining his body was found after<lb/>
federal police alerted U.S. officials<lb/>
early Tuesday they had obtained<lb/>
confessions from the suspec<lb/>
officials said.<lb/>
At least one of the sus<lb/>
admitted involvement in Kilroy7<lb/>
death, said Neck.<lb/>
Tonight<lb/>
i<lb/>
ake It<lb/>
Mexican!<lb/>
Enjoy one of Chico's delicious<lb/>
Mexican Specialties<lb/>
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<pb facs="00058139_0005"/><lb/>
Tl IE EAST CAROLINIAN<lb/>
APRIL 13, 189 3<lb/>
Kappa Sigma put on probation at Mississippi S<lb/>
members caught playing outdoor nude volleyball<lb/>
(CPS) - Mississippi State Uni-<lb/>
versity has put its Kappa Sigma<lb/>
Fratemirs house on social proba-<lb/>
tion because several members<lb/>
outdoor nude<lb/>
avoi<lb/>
 a.m<lb/>
a me.<lb/>
? :v can't really laugh it of! "<lb/>
Kapp ! Sigma President Phil Atte-<lb/>
berrj tol I the MSU Reflector the<lb/>
student newspaper. Kappa Sigs<lb/>
are not trying to promote the<lb/>
Animal I louse' image<lb/>
"It was definitely the first<lb/>
incident of nude athletics at our<lb/>
house omplained Atteberry,<lb/>
v h ' I a unfair foi MSI to<lb/>
pui ' ie whole hi for the<lb/>
mo " icti is of a few.<lb/>
Rats<lb/>
 nts at two I niversity oi<lb/>
M ami residential i ollegessay rats<lb/>
in aded their comple Some<lb/>
ha u nted cei tain rooms tor<lb/>
?r exl<lb/>
lown up, the<lb/>
Miami 1 lurricane reported.<lb/>
Perhaps hoping to set a gcxd<lb/>
example tor coping with life's little<lb/>
difficulties, UM officials have<lb/>
remained reassuringly calm in<lb/>
assessing the gravity of the stu-<lb/>
dents' conflicts with their four-to-<lb/>
six-inch-long roommates:<lb/>
'We've had a few rats, veah<lb/>
allowed Rich Yovanovieh, hous-<lb/>
ing coordinator for one of the col-<lb/>
leges, but 1 wouldn't call it a<lb/>
problem<lb/>
Riots<lb/>
A bestselling t shirt in Palm<lb/>
Springs, Calif the spring break<lb/>
mecca that has become something<lb/>
? ?? .i police state as it tries to pre-<lb/>
vent a repeat of the terrible riots of<lb/>
1986: "Spring Break. Come on<lb/>
vacation, leave on probation<lb/>
Breakers<lb/>
State police in southern Indi-<lb/>
ana said they couldn'tset up speed<lb/>
I raps for students heading south<lb/>
along 1-65 this year because<lb/>
schools in the state scheduled their<lb/>
spring breaks at different times.<lb/>
"We don't have the overflow<lb/>
of students we used to when ev-<lb/>
eryone was out the same week-<lb/>
end sighed State Police Sgt.<lb/>
Marvin Jenkins, who added his<lb/>
troopers did make themselves<lb/>
visible at highway rest stops<lb/>
where, by the way, Anheuser-<lb/>
Bush sponsored "responsible<lb/>
drinking" get-togethers ? "just<lb/>
to let (the students) know we were<lb/>
out there<lb/>
Across the border, the Ken-<lb/>
tucky State Police didn't let a little<lb/>
thing like staggered spring breaks<lb/>
stop them from having 15 troop-<lb/>
ers work over time to write speed-<lb/>
ing tickets each weekend through<lb/>
March, Trooper Jackie Strode told<lb/>
the Indiana Dailv Student.<lb/>
Drunk<lb/>
Bv April 3, Davtona Beach<lb/>
police said they had arrested about<lb/>
300 people on the beach, mostly<lb/>
on drunk and disorderly charges,<lb/>
and had closed three hotels for<lb/>
violating terms of their lodging<lb/>
licenses by failing to replace miss-<lb/>
ing balcony railings or clean up<lb/>
vomit in their hallwavs.<lb/>
Five people had fallen off<lb/>
Florida balconies. One, Christo-<lb/>
pher Kominski, 22. of Burbank,<lb/>
111 died after overreaching to catch<lb/>
a frisbee thrown from the pool<lb/>
deck below.<lb/>
The "fun" continued back<lb/>
home,too. Three more dorm rooms<lb/>
were burglarized while Michigan<lb/>
Tech students were off on spring<lb/>
break, and an estimated $6,000<lb/>
worth of stereos, compact disks,<lb/>
di ?k players and televisions were<lb/>
stolen.<lb/>
1<lb/>
O'ROCKFELLERS IS PROUD TO PRESENT ONE OF<lb/>
VIRGINIA BEACH'S BEST BANDS<lb/>
FOR LOCALS ONLY<lb/>
THIS THURSDAY NTTE<lb/>
APRIL 13,1989<lb/>
COME EARLY AND BEAT THE CROWD<lb/>
SATURDAY MTE 180 PROOF<lb/>
Bowman Gray to conduct first lung transplant<lb/>
WINSTON <lb/>
tragk shootii<lb/>
en new hope to a<lb/>
 insti<lb/>
sur man C Irav Medi-<lb/>
cal Center to pei state s<lb/>
first single lung ti -<lb/>
( ih n Wooti ' ' I<lb/>
it executive, is still<lb/>
ndi-<lb/>
n after<lb/>
Sundav morning. VVooten who<lb/>
was ih abou<lb/>
months to livi Ibei fcri<lb/>
?<lb/>
redand ned<lb/>
?<lb/>
. . 'at<lb/>
day v<lb/>
rtii evera i<lb/>
?<lb/>
?<lb/>
? - Pat<lb/>
d dead eai<lb/>
ur ' ' ? im-<lb/>
lonal<lb/>
than the heart or kidneys and the<lb/>
tnxiy's rejection of thelungismuch<lb/>
more c immon than in heart trans-<lb/>
plants.<lb/>
Mills also said it is difficult to<lb/>
find healthy lungs for transplant<lb/>
purposes. 1 his operation is one<lb/>
that israpidl) developing Mills<lb/>
said. "There will be many more<lb/>
pie who we feel will be suit-<lb/>
le candidates for it. It really will<lb/>
be limited by the number of do-<lb/>
?rs<lb/>
Both ot Wooten's lungs were<lb/>
? h ted by a condition that strikes<lb/>
about one in 10.0W people. Doc-<lb/>
tors believe Wooten inhaled dust<lb/>
from old carbon lights while work<lb/>
ing years ago in a printer's shop.<lb/>
Onlv one lung was trans-<lb/>
planted, doctors said, because thai<lb/>
is all Wooten needs to live a rela-<lb/>
tively normal lifestyle. Bowman<lb/>
Cray doctors nave been working<lb/>
for two years to perfect the lung<lb/>
transplant procedure.<lb/>
Since 1983,only 62 such trans-<lb/>
plants ha ve been done world w ide<lb/>
Of that number, 35 patients are<lb/>
still alive.<lb/>
The first single-lung trans-<lb/>
plant was done in 1963, but the<lb/>
procedure wasdiscontinued years<lb/>
later because few transplant pa-<lb/>
tients left the hospital alive. Bow-<lb/>
man Gray doctorsare following a<lb/>
to hnique developed by Canadian<lb/>
di torsin whichomentum a fatty<lb/>
tissue taken from the patient's<lb/>
abdomen is wrapped around the<lb/>
site where the new lung joins the<lb/>
patient's existing airway.<lb/>
laisl ,1 'aiplina<lb/>
PTavnou<lb/>
sc<lb/>
presents<lb/>
lohn Pielmeier's<lb/>
AGNES OF GOD<lb/>
That night, murder was the least of the sins.<lb/>
April 14, 13. 17 &amp; IS<lb/>
8:13 p.m.<lb/>
McGinnis Theatre<lb/>
(. leneral Publit S 00<lb/>
11 L<lb/>
?? .  ??-<lb/>
CALL 757-6829<lb/>
RACK ROOM SHOES<lb/>
'<lb/>
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nt t<lb/>
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o ti wab senl? i i: his<lb/>
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i s a e. ta kiT,Carole<lb/>
lesday. "It<lb/>
has helped<lb/>
t'ive peo elped some<lb/>
;? nail this<lb/>
a Ii<lb/>
1 ues-<lb/>
 man ? ould<lb/>
k tors<lb/>
 said was<lb/>
- first single-lung trans-<lb/>
xiurc that is some-<lb/>
fn m othei trans-<lb/>
usually involve both<lb/>
md lungs.<lb/>
? only I6su h trans-<lb/>
trmedinthe<lb/>
ites a( cording to Bow-<lb/>
? rs Many patiei its<lb/>
ase often have<lb/>
rt and SO tl f '?'<lb/>
Have You Joined The Club Yet?<lb/>
What Club?<lb/>
Around The World Beer Club<lb/>
 Free Memberships<lb/>
All You Need To Do Is Complete Our<lb/>
List Of Beers And Get A T-Shirt<lb/>
And A FREE Case Of Beer<lb/>
What Kind Of Specials Does CJ's Have?<lb/>
MONDAY a?d.y, TUESDAY WEDNESDAY<lb/>
1.00 import CJ's Secretary Day Humpday Special<lb/>
'PLUS DAILY LUNCH SPECIALS<lb/>
60 Oz. Pitchers 350<lb/>
WE NOW HA VE THE COW<lb/>
6 Oz Ribeye Steak Sandwiches<lb/>
BRANDED SHOES<lb/>
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Memorial Drive<lb/>
TAKE AN EXTRA<lb/>
U<lb/>
Open<lb/>
Monday-Saturday 10-9<lb/>
Sundav 1-6<lb/>
OUR EVERYDAY LOW PRICE<lb/>
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I I<lb/>
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dan .<lb/>
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Remember Everything<lb/>
We Have Is TO GO<lb/>
355-3473<lb/>
CALL US<lb/>
Hours Of Operation<lb/>
MonThur. 11-10:30<lb/>
Fri &amp; Sat. 11-11<lb/>
Sunday 11-10<lb/>
&amp;<lb/>
Come And Relax<lb/>
And Get That Outdoor<lb/>
Dining Experience<lb/>
On Our Deck<lb/>
A Dinmg Alternative'<lb/>
We Are Located<lb/>
At 103 E. Greenville Blvd.<lb/>
In Front Of The<lb/>
Eveready Plant<lb/>
said<lb/>
? was healthy,<lb/>
cardiotlv r i ic surgeon Dr.<lb/>
p. Mills, .md so less exten-<lb/>
I low-<lb/>
Mills said, a lung transplant<lb/>
ore fragile<lb/>
Tests<lb/>
Continued from page 1<lb/>
r taki non- redit remedial<lb/>
? i Imi P. the test<lb/>
McGee SO<lb/>
Reprographics and<lb/>
Drafting Supply Co.<lb/>
jm<lb/>
i)tr<lb/>
i -ir?-<lb/>
I<lb/>
? "o- Av? &amp;<lb/>
sai<lb/>
Pete Consa ro the state B an<lb/>
of Reg i t<lb/>
r- iscd retention<lb/>
ng that those stu-<lb/>
"it has<lb/>
and vv ?<lb/>
dents are performing at least as<lb/>
well as those who needed no<lb/>
rem<lb/>
a , igi im, in place<lb/>
sin. 1984 has resulted in in<lb/>
tion<lb/>
nti rt I ommunica-<lb/>
uting skills in the<lb/>
curriculum, said Patrick Dallet<lb/>
of the Florida Postsecondar)<lb/>
Edu ation Planning Commission.<lb/>
Some beleive student in Ken-<lb/>
tucky will get used to the tests,<lb/>
too.<lb/>
"Reforms almost alwaj s start<lb/>
hard and tough because they're<lb/>
usually coming down on some-<lb/>
one, in this case students and<lb/>
teachers said fohn Good lad, a<lb/>
University of Washington educa-<lb/>
tion, at the San Francisco reform<lb/>
meeting m late March.<lb/>
"But then the soft and tender<lb/>
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ARE PROJECT DEADLINES<lb/>
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REMEMBER: "We move Jobs "<lb/>
. -wj ?<lb/>
<pb facs="00058139_0006"/><lb/>
THE EAST CAROLINIAN<lb/>
APRIL 13,1989 3<lb/>
Kappa Sigma put on probation at Mississippi S<lb/>
members caught playing outdoor nude volleyball<lb/>
(CPS) - Mississippi State Uni-<lb/>
versity has put its Kappa Sigma<lb/>
Fraternity house on social proba-<lb/>
tion because several members<lb/>
played in a 3 a.m outdoor nude<lb/>
volleyball game.<lb/>
"We can't really laugh it off<lb/>
Kappa Sigma President Phil Atte-<lb/>
berry told the MSU Reflector, the<lb/>
student newspaper. "Kappa Sigs<lb/>
are not trying to promote the<lb/>
'Animal Vlouse' image<lb/>
"It was definitely the first<lb/>
incident of nude athletics at our<lb/>
house' complained Atteberry,<lb/>
who felt it was unfair for MSU to<lb/>
punish the whole house for the<lb/>
independent actions of a few.<lb/>
Rats<lb/>
Students at two University of<lb/>
Miami residential colleges say rats<lb/>
have invaded their complex. Some<lb/>
have frequented certain rooms for<lb/>
as long as five days before exter-<lb/>
minators have shown up, the<lb/>
Miami Hurricane reported.<lb/>
Perhaps hoping to set a good<lb/>
example for coping with life'slittle<lb/>
difficulties, UM officials have<lb/>
remained reassuringly calm in<lb/>
assessing the gravity of the stu-<lb/>
dents' conflicts with their four-to-<lb/>
six-inch-long roommates:<lb/>
"We've had a few rats, yeah<lb/>
allowed Rich Yovanovich, hous-<lb/>
ing coordinator for one of the col-<lb/>
leges, "but 1 wouldn't call it a<lb/>
problem<lb/>
Riots<lb/>
A bestselling t-shirt in Palm<lb/>
Springs, Calif the spring break<lb/>
mecca that has become something<lb/>
of a police state as it tries to pre-<lb/>
vent a repeat of the terrible riots of<lb/>
1986: "Spring Break. Come on<lb/>
vacation, leave on probation<lb/>
Breakers<lb/>
State police in southern Indi-<lb/>
ana said they couldn't set up speed<lb/>
traps for students heading south<lb/>
along 1-65 this year because<lb/>
schools in the state scheduled their<lb/>
spring breaks at different times.<lb/>
"We don't have the overflow<lb/>
of students we used to when ev-<lb/>
eryone was out the same week-<lb/>
end sighed State Police Sgt.<lb/>
Marvin Jenkins, who added his<lb/>
troopers did make themselves<lb/>
visible at highway rest stops ?<lb/>
where, by the way, Anheuser-<lb/>
Bush sponsored "responsible<lb/>
drinking" get-togethers ? "just<lb/>
to let (the students) know we were<lb/>
out there<lb/>
Across the border, the Ken-<lb/>
tucky State Police didn't let a little<lb/>
thing like staggered spring breaks<lb/>
stop them from having 15 troop-<lb/>
ers work over time to write speed-<lb/>
ing tickets each weekend through<lb/>
March, Trooper Jackie Strode told<lb/>
the Indiana Daily Student.<lb/>
Drunk<lb/>
By April 3, Daytona Beach<lb/>
police said they had arrested about<lb/>
300 people on the beach, mostly<lb/>
on drunk and disorderly charges,<lb/>
and had closed three hotels for<lb/>
violating terms of their lodging<lb/>
licenses by failing to replace miss-<lb/>
ing balcony railings or clean up<lb/>
vomit in their hallways.<lb/>
Five people had fallen off<lb/>
Florida balconies. One, Christo-<lb/>
pher Kominski, 22, of Burbank,<lb/>
111, died after overreaching to catch<lb/>
a frisbee thrown from the pool<lb/>
deck below.<lb/>
The "fun" continued back<lb/>
home,too. Three more dorm rooms<lb/>
were burglarized while Michigan<lb/>
Tech students were off on spring<lb/>
break, and an estimated $6,000<lb/>
worth of stereos, compact disks,<lb/>
disk players and televisions were<lb/>
stolen.<lb/>
OROCKFELLERS IS PROUD TO PRESENT ONE OF<lb/>
VIRGINIA BEACH'S BEST BAND'S<lb/>
fOR LOCALS ONLY<lb/>
THIS THURSDAY NITE<lb/>
APRIL 13,1989<lb/>
COME EARLY AND BEAT THE CROWD<lb/>
SATURDAY NITE 180 PROOF<lb/>
TasI Carolina<lb/>
Playhouse<lb/>
Bowman Gray to conduct first lung transplant<lb/>
John Pielmeier's<lb/>
presents<lb/>
WINSTON-SALEM(AP) ? A<lb/>
tragic shooting death in Greens-<lb/>
boro has given new hope to a<lb/>
Winston-Salem man by allowing<lb/>
surgeons at Bowman Cray Medi-<lb/>
cal Center to perform the state's<lb/>
first single-lung transplant.<lb/>
Calvin Woo ten, a 63-year-old<lb/>
retired account executive, is still<lb/>
listed in critical but stable condi-<lb/>
tion after a lung transplant early<lb/>
Sunday morning. Wooten who<lb/>
was given only about three more<lb/>
months to live had been suffering<lb/>
from a rare condition for the past<lb/>
20 vears that scarred and inflamed<lb/>
his lungs.<lb/>
The lung donor was 26-year-<lb/>
old carpenter James Roger Pat-<lb/>
rick, who was shot Thursday while<lb/>
escorting several patrons from the<lb/>
Partners night club at 221 Summit<lb/>
Ave according to Patrick's wife.<lb/>
Carole Jones-Patrick. James Pat-<lb/>
rick, pronounced dead early Sat-<lb/>
urdav morning, had told his fam-<lb/>
ily that he wanted to donate his<lb/>
organs to others.<lb/>
Carol Jones-Patrick said her<lb/>
husband's heart was sent to Duke<lb/>
University Medical Center, his<lb/>
Uv-wabsent to Chicago, and his<lb/>
two lungs and kidneys were used<lb/>
was a giver, not a taker Carole<lb/>
Jones-Patrick said Tuesday. "It<lb/>
eases us to know that he has helped<lb/>
five people live. He helped some-<lb/>
one. Some good came from all this<lb/>
pain. To me, he is alive in all those<lb/>
people<lb/>
At a news conference Tues-<lb/>
day, Bowman Gray doctors would<lb/>
not identify the donor. Doctors<lb/>
announced what they said was<lb/>
the state's first single-lung trans-<lb/>
plant ? a procedure that is some-<lb/>
what different from other trans-<lb/>
plants that usually involve both<lb/>
the heart and lungs.<lb/>
Since 1983, only 16 such trans-<lb/>
plants have been performed in the<lb/>
United States, according to Bow-<lb/>
man Gray doctors. Many patients<lb/>
suffering lung disease often have<lb/>
damage to the heart and so they<lb/>
need both organs.<lb/>
Wooten's heart was healthy,<lb/>
said cardiothoracic surgeon Dr.<lb/>
Stephen Mills, and so less exten-<lb/>
sive surgery was required. How-<lb/>
ever, Mills said, a lung transplant<lb/>
is trickv because it is more fragile<lb/>
than the heart or kidneys and the<lb/>
body'srcjectionofthelungismuch<lb/>
more common than in heart trans-<lb/>
plants.<lb/>
Mills also said it is difficult to<lb/>
find healthy lungs for transplant<lb/>
purposes. This operation is one<lb/>
that is rapidly developing Mills<lb/>
said. "There will be many more<lb/>
poop! who we feel will be suit-<lb/>
able candidates for it. It really will<lb/>
be limited by the number of do-<lb/>
nors<lb/>
Both of Wooten's lungs were<lb/>
a f fectcd by a condition that strikes<lb/>
about one in 10,000 people. Doc-<lb/>
tors believe Wooten inhaled dust<lb/>
from old carbon lights while work-<lb/>
ing years ago in a printer's shop.<lb/>
Only one lung was trans-<lb/>
planted, doctors said, because that<lb/>
is all Wooten needs to live a rela-<lb/>
tively normal lifestyle. Bowman<lb/>
Gray doctors nave been working<lb/>
for two years to perfect the lung<lb/>
transplant procedure.<lb/>
Since 1983, only 62 such trans-<lb/>
plants have been done worldwide.<lb/>
Of that number, 35 patients are<lb/>
still alive.<lb/>
The first single-lung trans-<lb/>
plant was done in 1963, but the<lb/>
procedure wasdiscontinued years<lb/>
later because few transplant pa-<lb/>
tients left the hospital alive. Bow-<lb/>
man Gray doctors are following a<lb/>
technique developed by Canadian<lb/>
doctors in which omentum - a fatty<lb/>
tissue taken from the patient's<lb/>
abdomen is wrapped around the<lb/>
site where the new lung joins the<lb/>
patient's existing airway.<lb/>
Have You Joined The Club Yet?<lb/>
What Club?<lb/>
Around The World Beer Club<lb/>
VFree Memberships<lb/>
All You Need To Do Is Complete Our<lb/>
List Of Beers And Get A T-Shirt<lb/>
And A FREE Case Of Beer<lb/>
What Kind Of Specials Does CJ's Have?<lb/>
MONDAY -a TUESDAY  WEDNESDAY<lb/>
1.00 Import CJ's Secretary Day Humpday Special<lb/>
'PLUS DAILY LUNCH SPECIALS<lb/>
60 Oz. Pitchers 350<lb/>
WE NOW HA VE THE COW<lb/>
6 Oz. Ribeye Steak Sandwiches<lb/>
Remember Everything<lb/>
We Have Is TO GO<lb/>
355-3473<lb/>
CALL US<lb/>
Hours Of Operation<lb/>
MonThur. 11-10:30<lb/>
Fri. &amp; Sat. 11-11<lb/>
Sunday 11-10<lb/>
Come And Relax<lb/>
And Gat That Outdoor<lb/>
Dining Experience<lb/>
On Our Deck.<lb/>
"A Dining Alternative<lb/>
We Are Located<lb/>
At 103 E. Greenville Blvd.<lb/>
In Front Of The<lb/>
Eveready Plant<lb/>
Tests<lb/>
Continued from page 1<lb/>
test or take non-credit remedial<lb/>
courses before admission, the test<lb/>
has worked "tremendously said<lb/>
Pete Consacro of the state Board<lb/>
of Regents.<lb/>
"It has increased retention,<lb/>
and we're finding that those stu-<lb/>
dents are performing at least as<lb/>
well as those who needed no<lb/>
remediaiton at all<lb/>
The Floria program, in place<lb/>
since 1984, "has resulted in in-<lb/>
creased attention to communica-<lb/>
tions and computing skills in the<lb/>
curriculum said Patrick Dallet<lb/>
of the Florida Postsecondary<lb/>
Education Planning Commission.<lb/>
Some boleive student in Ken-<lb/>
tucky will get used to the tests,<lb/>
too.<lb/>
"Reforms almost always start<lb/>
off hard and tough because they're<lb/>
usually coming down on some-<lb/>
one, in this case students and<lb/>
teachers said John Goodlad, a<lb/>
University of Washington educa-<lb/>
tion, at the San Francisco reform<lb/>
meeting in late March.<lb/>
"But then the soft and tender<lb/>
side comes back on stage he said<lb/>
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s<lb/>
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2<lb/>
m<lb/>
s<lb/>
<lb/>
<pb facs="00058139_0007"/><lb/>
Qftlt iEaat (Eartfltman<lb/>
Pete Fernald, n, ? m ,?<lb/>
STEPFIANIE FOLSOM, MihT Ettar<lb/>
1 AMES F.J. MCKEE, Director of Advertising<lb/>
Tim Hampton, N??fj.<lb/>
CHRlsSlEC,EL,Spc?.5!J.<lb/>
G up Carter, r???r? r.<lb/>
Susan Hovvell, prod, m<lb/>
Dean Waters, cm w?-?rr<lb/>
Stepi ianie Singleton, c rj,?<lb/>
Brad Bannister, c ror<lb/>
Jeff Parker, sufr muor<lb/>
TOM FURR,Circl?fum Manager<lb/>
Debbie Stevens, $???<lb/>
Stephanie Emory r? .supem-<lb/>
Mac Clark, ru?b M??ug?T<lb/>
April 13, l?iSQ<lb/>
OPINION<lb/>
Page 4<lb/>
Alaska Spill<lb/>
What if guaranteeing that the<lb/>
Alaskan wilderness remained un-<lb/>
spoiled meant that we would all<lb/>
have to do without the benefits of<lb/>
oil: heating in many homes, trans-<lb/>
portation, electricity? It is certain<lb/>
that most would choose oil at the<lb/>
expense of ecology, albeit reluc-<lb/>
tantly.<lb/>
Fortunately, that is not the<lb/>
choice. It is this: we balance a reason-<lb/>
able risk of damaging the environ-<lb/>
ment against the larger ben,c; fs ? as<lb/>
we se c n ? of keeping tht com-<lb/>
forts to which we have grown accus-<lb/>
tomed.<lb/>
It can be argued that Exxon took<lb/>
reasonable precautions. It had a<lb/>
plan to deal with what was gener-<lb/>
ally thought to be a worst-case sce-<lb/>
nario of a two and a half million<lb/>
gallon spill. It was slow in mobili' -<lb/>
ing equipment to deal with the spiil<lb/>
that occurred, but was further de-<lb/>
layed by the Navy. Exxon did all it<lb/>
legally could to ensure that the<lb/>
tanker's captain, Joseph J. Hazel-<lb/>
wood, had no record of drunken-<lb/>
ness.<lb/>
Exxon's policies prohibit the<lb/>
consumption oi drugs and alcohol<lb/>
by any member of a tanker's crew<lb/>
while on ship. At least one employee<lb/>
had noticed that the captain had<lb/>
been intoxicated on board at least<lb/>
once before.<lb/>
Predictably, Congress is now<lb/>
besieged with proposals to tighten<lb/>
still further restrictions on drug and<lb/>
Evil Twins abound<lb/>
By SCOTT MAXWELL<lb/>
alcohol use for, as Bush put it,<lb/>
"people who are fulfilling impor-<lb/>
tant functions, like taking crude oil<lb/>
through straits These proposals<lb/>
would almost certainly have<lb/>
prevented this spill. But will they<lb/>
prevent others? Not likely.<lb/>
What would help is far more<lb/>
radical and more sensible, which is<lb/>
why it's far less likely to happen. It's<lb/>
simple: Exxon should train its em-<lb/>
ployees to report dangerous behav-<lb/>
ior to their superiors.<lb/>
The Captain Hazelwood should<lb/>
never have been drunk. But, given<lb/>
that he was, anyone who was aware<lb/>
of his inebriation should have re-<lb/>
ported it. The third mate, Gregory<lb/>
Cousins, should have refused to pi-<lb/>
lot the ship; he should have gotten in<lb/>
touch with Exxon corporation and<lb/>
made damn sure that they flew a re-<lb/>
sponsible pilot to the tanker and had<lb/>
Captain Hazelwood arrested.<lb/>
This does not apply only to<lb/>
Exxon. It applies to all businesses. In<lb/>
fact, the concept applies to everyone<lb/>
? we are all responsible.<lb/>
We're responsible in another<lb/>
way, too. Exxon's tankers wouldn't<lb/>
have been out there in the first place<lb/>
if there weren't such a demand for<lb/>
oil. What Exxon and its employees<lb/>
did to Alaska is unforgivable. But<lb/>
Exxon deserves only part of the<lb/>
blame. The rest lies with its custom-<lb/>
ers.<lb/>
? ??<lb/>
Editorial Columnist<lb/>
Is it just me, or does anybody else think<lb/>
that there must be two Lt. Col. Oliver<lb/>
Norths?<lb/>
The OUie North who testified at the<lb/>
Iran-contra hearings was asked to justify<lb/>
lying to the Congress. He replied forcefully<lb/>
that the United States must have covert op-<lb/>
erations. There were, he said, people whose<lb/>
very lives would be endangered if informa-<lb/>
tion about these covert operations was<lb/>
available to our enemies.<lb/>
The other Ollie North, I deduce, must<lb/>
be the evil twin of the first. This North at-<lb/>
tempted to have tens of thousands of pages<lb/>
of classified documents detailing covert<lb/>
operations introduced as evidence at his<lb/>
trial. Had this been allowed, the documents<lb/>
would have become a matter of public rec-<lb/>
ord and, therefore, "available to our ene-<lb/>
mies<lb/>
? ? ?<lb/>
Is it just me, or does anybody else think<lb/>
that there must be two George Bushes?<lb/>
One George Bush held a press confer-<lb/>
ence to discuss how the federal government<lb/>
would deal with the Alaskan oil spill. He<lb/>
said the accident was "a major tragedy" and<lb/>
that  as with other serious disasters, we<lb/>
must work together at all levels, public and<lb/>
private, to remedy the damage that's been<lb/>
done and to safeguard the precious envi-<lb/>
ronment for the future He also gave "top<lb/>
priority" to cleaning up the spill.<lb/>
George Bush's evil twin then took over<lb/>
the press conference, announcing that the<lb/>
federal government would send neither<lb/>
personnel nor equipment to help with the<lb/>
cleanup.<lb/>
The good George Bush later tried to<lb/>
send troops to the area. The evil twin<lb/>
thwarted that plan: he decided not to send<lb/>
in the troops; instead, he allowed Exxon to<lb/>
hire several hundred more workers. Not<lb/>
only that, the evil twin is allowing Exxon to<lb/>
write off the additional hirings, which<lb/>
means that the taxpayers end up paying for<lb/>
it anyway.<lb/>
For that matter, there appear to be two<lb/>
Prince William Sounds.<lb/>
One, according to Coast Guard Com-<lb/>
mandant Paul Yost, is so wide that "chil-<lb/>
dren could drive a tanker up through it<lb/>
Its evil twin is apparently too treacher-<lb/>
ous for a person who is trained in piloting<lb/>
tankers by a major multinational corpora-<lb/>
tion.<lb/>
? ? ?<lb/>
Or is it just me?<lb/>
The campaign issue of financial aid<lb/>
To the Editor:<lb/>
I read with interest the com-<lb/>
ments of the two candidates for presi-<lb/>
dent of the Student Government<lb/>
Association in your April 4, 1989,<lb/>
edition. Needless to say, I applaud<lb/>
the recognition given to the issue of<lb/>
financial aid on the part of both can<lb/>
didates. Their comments indicate an<lb/>
appreciation for the critical role that<lb/>
financial aid plavs in the lives of a<lb/>
great many ECU students. Indeed,<lb/>
approximately 43rr of the full-time<lb/>
undergraduate student bodv re-<lb/>
ceived some type of financial assis-<lb/>
tance totalling over Sib million last<lb/>
year. It is certain that without such<lb/>
assistance, many students would be<lb/>
unable to attend ECU. At the same<lb/>
time, I would like to respond to the<lb/>
issue raised by both candidates inso-<lb/>
far as the financial aid application<lb/>
process is concerned.<lb/>
First, both candidates were right<lb/>
on target in reference to the complex-<lb/>
ity of the process ? it is extremely<lb/>
bureaucratic, confusing, and cum-<lb/>
bersome! 1 can, without hesitation,<lb/>
state that there is not a group anv-<lb/>
where on campus that would wel-<lb/>
come a simplerprocess mj?ttihji"thc ?<lb/>
staff oi the aid'frf FH e. The application<lb/>
process which students are required<lb/>
to negotiate is not a creature of our<lb/>
making ? it has been established bv<lb/>
the Congress and regulated bv the<lb/>
United States Department of Educa-<lb/>
tion. Although we do attempt to keep<lb/>
the process as simple as possible (for<lb/>
example, we do not require anv type<lb/>
of "institutional" aid application as<lb/>
many schoolsdo), our ability to do so<lb/>
is severely limited by the federal<lb/>
requirements. Regrettable, based on<lb/>
developments currently underway<lb/>
in ' Vashington, it appears likely that<lb/>
the application process for the 1990-<lb/>
91 academic year will be even more<lb/>
confusing, fragmented, and complex<lb/>
(and time consuming) than the proc-<lb/>
ess now in place. Considering the<lb/>
impact that voting constituents can<lb/>
exert on the political process, I would<lb/>
urge all students who are concerned<lb/>
with the complexity of the financial<lb/>
aid process to become involved by<lb/>
expressing those concerns to their<lb/>
Congressional delegations.<lb/>
Second, I would take issue with<lb/>
the statement that "many students<lb/>
find out on the first day of class thai<lb/>
their applications have been denied<lb/>
Determination and notification that<lb/>
students are ineligible to receive fi-<lb/>
nancial aid is made quite quickly<lb/>
once processing is underway (typi-<lb/>
cally in mid-March). Indeed, deter-<lb/>
mination of ineligibility is one of the<lb/>
least time consuming components of<lb/>
the process. However, it is also true<lb/>
that some students do experience<lb/>
delays in the processing of their ap-<lb/>
plications and notification oi their<lb/>
awards. Such delays are caused bv<lb/>
anv number of variables<lb/>
Many students (approximately<lb/>
25-30) must document the infor-<lb/>
mation on their applications through<lb/>
a federally mandated process called<lb/>
"Verification This process, which<lb/>
requires the submission oi such in-<lb/>
formation as copies of federal income<lb/>
tax returns, Verification Forms, and<lb/>
other documents, must becarned out<lb/>
on a case-by-case basis and typically<lb/>
results in significant processing de-<lb/>
lays. Other students experience de-<lb/>
lays for a host ot reasons ranging<lb/>
from imcomplete applications to a<lb/>
need for financial aid transcripts<lb/>
from institutions previously at-<lb/>
tended.<lb/>
As far as processing delays are<lb/>
concerned, such delays do not occur<lb/>
primarily during the initial review of<lb/>
applications and mailing of follow-<lb/>
up requests to students, but in the<lb/>
area of award notification. 1 would be<lb/>
dishonest if I sidestepped this issue<lb/>
by failing to acknowledge the need<lb/>
for increased efficiency in this area<lb/>
Unfortunately, this office currently<lb/>
relies on essentially manual means to<lb/>
process financial aid applications.<lb/>
determine eligibility, and award ti<lb/>
nancial aid. That is. all applications<lb/>
are individually reviewed and aid<lb/>
awards are made bv hand C .n en the<lb/>
extreme complexity and paperwork<lb/>
involved in the aid process, it i sim-<lb/>
ple impossible to accomplish this<lb/>
process and notify all eligible appli-<lb/>
cants within the time frame available<lb/>
(mid-March to mid August). Never-<lb/>
theless, nearly 3000 students had<lb/>
been notified oi their eligibility prior<lb/>
to last Fall's registration. For that, I<lb/>
can only applaud the staff oi this<lb/>
office, espe'cially considering the<lb/>
demands under which they work.<lb/>
On a much more positive note, 1<lb/>
am extremely pleased to say that a<lb/>
significant improvement in the entire<lb/>
administrative efficiency of the fi-<lb/>
nancial aid process at this university<lb/>
is under way. This office, in conjunc-<lb/>
tion with the Student Data Rise sec-<lb/>
tion of Computing and Information<lb/>
Services, is currently in the process of<lb/>
developing and implementing an<lb/>
entirely new financial aid computer<lb/>
system. 'Fhis system will include<lb/>
automated tracking and processing<lb/>
oi applications, as well as computer<lb/>
packaging of financial aid awards.<lb/>
When fully implemented, this sys-<lb/>
tem will provide dramatic positive<lb/>
benefits for all student aid applicants<lb/>
served by this office. For example,<lb/>
computer packaging will allow this<lb/>
oii'wc to do in weeks what now takes<lb/>
months to accomplish. All of us in the<lb/>
aid office look forward to the comple-<lb/>
tion oi this move into the twentieth<lb/>
centurv. We will continue to seek<lb/>
ways to improve the service we pro<lb/>
vide to the students of FCU which,<lb/>
after all, is the reason d'etre oi this<lb/>
ottice.<lb/>
Ray Edwards<lb/>
Director<lb/>
Foreign<lb/>
languages<lb/>
To the Fditor:<lb/>
A recent antcle and headline in<lb/>
The Fast Carolinian creates the im-<lb/>
pression that I or the Department of<lb/>
Foreign Languages and I iterature-<lb/>
have endorsed the concept ot ex-<lb/>
panding our laboratory services b<lb/>
"adding foreign language tapes h<lb/>
the Mendenhall Music Listening<lb/>
Center and the Jovner Librarv Au-<lb/>
dioVisual Center<lb/>
The article further states that the<lb/>
bill to authorize this concept was<lb/>
"mandated bv Chancellor Fakin.<lb/>
I'rofessorGarv Ambert, Deanot Arts<lb/>
and Sciences and the director ot<lb/>
lovner Li bran Srvaking-torrrn seli<lb/>
and our department, I must point our<lb/>
that we have not received any uch<lb/>
"mandate" or suggestion from the<lb/>
chancellor, the Dean ot Arts and Sci-<lb/>
ences, or the director oi lovner Li-<lb/>
brary. We have not met or corre-<lb/>
sponded with Legislator Carol! or<lb/>
C.ilbert to discuss or plan tor the<lb/>
availability oi language tapes at the<lb/>
Music Listening Center.<lb/>
Our language lab facility was<lb/>
recently expanded and nKdernici<lb/>
with new equipment installed in<lb/>
Room 2003 oi the new General Class-<lb/>
room building. The new Tandberg<lb/>
recorders in that lab provide the<lb/>
unique capability for students to<lb/>
control their own individual tape,<lb/>
record their own voices, etc features<lb/>
which are essential to serious foreign<lb/>
language laboratory practice. Those<lb/>
activities would not be available to<lb/>
students using cassettes in the Music<lb/>
Listening Center or Jovner Library<lb/>
Our new lab is centrally located<lb/>
on campus and is open 42 hours per<lb/>
week, including evening hours<lb/>
(Mondav ? Thursday 7-9 p.m.)<lb/>
We do indeed look forward to<lb/>
"expanding our facilities but that<lb/>
expansion will likely involve com-<lb/>
puter and video equipment for Room<lb/>
2009 in our lab complex. Videos for<lb/>
language instruction and cultural<lb/>
enrichment could be made available<lb/>
for student use in that area, close- to<lb/>
the faculty and staff who work in our<lb/>
department.<lb/>
Garv J. Ambert<lb/>
Associate Professor of Spanish<lb/>
Director of Foreign language<lb/>
Laboratory<lb/>
<lb/>
<pb facs="00058139_0008"/><lb/>
<lb/>
t<lb/>
THE EAST CAROLINIAN<lb/>
APRIL 13.1989 5<lb/>
Environmental destruction<lb/>
Campus Spectrum<lb/>
By<lb/>
Craig Spitz<lb/>
Over 97.5 percent of Ameri-<lb/>
cans eat meat in one form or an-<lb/>
other. Today, most people are<lb/>
aware of the health problems as-<lb/>
sociated with excessive meat con-<lb/>
sumption. Few are concerned<lb/>
about ethical drawbacks of the<lb/>
practice, but at least the facts on<lb/>
that subject are rcadilv available<lb/>
to those brave enough to face<lb/>
them. And, of course, just about<lb/>
everyone knows of the hazards<lb/>
meat consumption causes to one's<lb/>
pocketbook. But few are aware of<lb/>
the environmental effects oi rais-<lb/>
ing animals for meat on the mas-<lb/>
sive scale presently employed in<lb/>
the U.S. The practice is extremely<lb/>
wasteful of food and land re-<lb/>
sources, and it is the root of such<lb/>
serious environmental problems<lb/>
as deforestation, the water short-<lb/>
age, and soil erosion.<lb/>
According to the U.S. Depart-<lb/>
ment of Agriculture, 950 million<lb/>
acres oi land are utilized for live-<lb/>
stock raising, while 444 million<lb/>
acres are used for growing crops.<lb/>
But since two-thirds oi the crops<lb/>
are sued to feed livestock, the total<lb/>
acreage used for livestock pur-<lb/>
poses comes to 1,243 million, or<lb/>
roughly 90 percent oi all agricul-<lb/>
tural land in the U.S. This land is<lb/>
largely wasted because raising<lb/>
animals for meat is far less pro-<lb/>
ductive in terms of food than the<lb/>
growing of crops. One acre used<lb/>
to raise beef yields about 110,000<lb/>
megacalories (one million calo-<lb/>
ries: abbreviated MCal), whereas<lb/>
that same acre could produce<lb/>
2,760,000 MCal of oats. No one<lb/>
can can dispute that livestock<lb/>
agriculture is vastly inefficient<lb/>
compared to plant food agricul-<lb/>
ture. But even if the resources<lb/>
were available to sustain this inef-<lb/>
ticicnt use oi land, there would<lb/>
till be manv other problems.<lb/>
v lonopolizing land the wav it<lb/>
does, livestock agriculture de-<lb/>
First Lady<lb/>
undergoing<lb/>
treatment<lb/>
serves most of the blame for de-<lb/>
forestation. Of the 70 million acres<lb/>
oi forestland cleared between<lb/>
1967 and 1975, 47 million were<lb/>
converted to grazing land, which,<lb/>
of course, prevents reforestation.<lb/>
And if the U.S. were not using950<lb/>
million acres for livestock it<lb/>
would be possible to grow forests<lb/>
on this land, thus eliminating the<lb/>
need to clear natural forests. Also,<lb/>
this reforestation would elimi-<lb/>
nate America's need to import<lb/>
wood and, thus, the economic<lb/>
incentive to destroy rain forests,<lb/>
which has proved overpowering<lb/>
to most South American coun-<lb/>
tries, would be gone. In other<lb/>
words, if the U.S. were not using<lb/>
so much land for livestock, there<lb/>
would not be a need to clear any<lb/>
more forests at all, anywhere!<lb/>
The shortage of water is an-<lb/>
other problem that can be traced<lb/>
to the meat industry. Of the 55.1<lb/>
cubic km of water used in the U S<lb/>
agriculture, according to the<lb/>
USD A, claims 221.8 or just over 40<lb/>
percent. But it is important to dis-<lb/>
tinguish consumptive uses and<lb/>
nonconsumptive ones. Con-<lb/>
sumptive uses evaporate the wa-<lb/>
ter, returning it to the hydrologi-<lb/>
cal cycle. Nonconsumptive uses<lb/>
keep the water available for fu-<lb/>
ture use. Only 147 cubic km of<lb/>
water are actually consumed in<lb/>
the U S but of this, 122 cubic km,<lb/>
or S3 percent, are consumed by<lb/>
agriculture. Eighty-five percent<lb/>
of the total agricultural use of<lb/>
water is for livestock. While one<lb/>
pound of beef has fewer calories<lb/>
than a pound of wheat, it requires<lb/>
forty to fifty times as much water<lb/>
to produce. With water tables<lb/>
continuing to fall at the alanming<lb/>
rate that they are, the U.S. cannot<lb/>
afford such an incredible waste of<lb/>
such a valuable resource for much<lb/>
longer.<lb/>
Another environmental<lb/>
problem that meat production<lb/>
contributes to in a big way is soil<lb/>
depletion. Now some soil erosion<lb/>
is natural, but this natural erosion<lb/>
should be balanced by soil forma-<lb/>
tion. The average rate of soil for-<lb/>
mation in the U.S. currently is 11 <lb/>
2 tons per acre per year. Unfortu-<lb/>
nately, the U.S. is losing its soil at<lb/>
the alarming rate of 12 tonsacre<lb/>
year. Both livestock agriculture is<lb/>
by far responsible for a greater<lb/>
amount. In particular, cattle<lb/>
ranching is the worst culprit. The<lb/>
grazing and trampling of cattle<lb/>
remove the protective vegetation<lb/>
covering of the soil which makes<lb/>
it susceptible to wind and water<lb/>
erosion. For each MCal of range-<lb/>
land beef produce, 800 pounds of<lb/>
soil arc lost. In comparison, each<lb/>
MCal of oats depletes only 5.2<lb/>
pounds of soil. When the topsoil<lb/>
of an area is gone, the land is vir-<lb/>
tually useless. Incidentally, the<lb/>
majority of land rendered useless<lb/>
for agricultural purposes<lb/>
throughout history was ruined by<lb/>
tope il depletion. If the U.S. were<lb/>
to adopt a vegetarian agricultural<lb/>
system, then enough land could<lb/>
be set aside to grow forests, which<lb/>
produce a great deal of soil, and<lb/>
the entire problem of soil deple-<lb/>
tion would be solved.<lb/>
This article is not meant to be<lb/>
a bad omen. It is meant to bear<lb/>
good news. The problems of food<lb/>
scarcity, deforestation, water<lb/>
depletion, and soil erosion, which<lb/>
sometimes seem overwhelming,<lb/>
do have a solution. The solution is<lb/>
certainly a humanly possible one,<lb/>
but one that will meet with a great<lb/>
deal of resistance. The situation is<lb/>
summed up in the saying, "We<lb/>
have met the enemy and he is us<lb/>
If these problems stamp us out<lb/>
before we do them, we know<lb/>
where the blame will lie. We<lb/>
humans will simply have to ask<lb/>
ourselves whether our craving for<lb/>
the taste of meat outweighs our<lb/>
desire to have a future.<lb/>
This Campus Spectrum is being<lb/>
reprinted due to a layout mistake in<lb/>
its last publication. We are sorry for<lb/>
any confusion.<lb/>
Forum<lb/>
Rules<lb/>
The East Carolinian wel-<lb/>
comes letters expressing all<lb/>
points of view. Mail or drop<lb/>
them by our office in the<lb/>
Publications Building, across<lb/>
from the entrance to Joyner<lb/>
Library.<lb/>
For purposes of verifica-<lb/>
tion, all letters must include<lb/>
the name, major, classifica-<lb/>
tion, address, phone num-<lb/>
ber and the signature of the<lb/>
author(s). Letters are limited<lb/>
to 300 words or less, double-<lb/>
spaced, typed or neatly<lb/>
printed. All letters are sub-<lb/>
ject to editing for brevity,<lb/>
obscenity and libel, and no<lb/>
personal attacks will be per-<lb/>
mitted.<lb/>
Students, faculty and<lb/>
staff writing letters for this<lb/>
page are reminded that they<lb/>
are limited to one every two<lb/>
weeks. The deadline for edi-<lb/>
torial material is 5 p.m. Fri-<lb/>
day for Tuesday papers and<lb/>
5 p.m. Tuesday for Thurs-<lb/>
day editions.<lb/>
Spectrum<lb/>
Rules<lb/>
In addition to the "Cam-<lb/>
1 pus Forum" section of the<lb/>
paper, The East Carolinian<lb/>
i features "The Campus Spec-<lb/>
trum This is an opinion<lb/>
I column by guest writers<lb/>
from the student bodv and<lb/>
faculty. The columns printed<lb/>
j in 'The Campus Spectrum"<lb/>
I will contain current topics<lb/>
of concern to the campus,<lb/>
community or nation.<lb/>
WHICHARDS BEACH<lb/>
GrRND opening<lb/>
OVER 14 MILE OF BEACH BATHING<lb/>
The Best Place<lb/>
for that<lb/>
Early Summer Tan<lb/>
GameroomSnackbar?Waterslide<lb/>
Parties Welcome!<lb/>
Location: WASHINGTON, N.C.<lb/>
For Details Call 946 0011<lb/>
IP<lb/>
50 OFF ON<lb/>
SUMMER<lb/>
MERCHANDISE<lb/>
We're Open Daily<lb/>
&amp; Sundays 1-6<lb/>
j- 1900 Dickinson Ave<lb/>
- Greenville<lb/>
a 830-0174<lb/>
;VUtt Our Budge<lb/>
Section v<lb/>
Tom Togs<lb/>
Factory Outle<lb/>
I<lb/>
fe. Nothing Over <lb/>
1900 Dickinson Ave Greenville<lb/>
830-0174<lb/>
Trocadero Tom Togs Fashions<lb/>
is Running a 50 off Sale<lb/>
Also!<lb/>
Conetoe<lb/>
j Hwy. 64 East<lb/>
Trocadero Tom<lb/>
Togs Fashions<lb/>
Memorial Drive<lb/>
J<lb/>
I Hillcrest Lanes<lb/>
Memorial Drive<lb/>
756-2020<lb/>
WASHINGTON (AD ? Bar-<lb/>
bara Bush is undergoing radioac-<lb/>
tive treatment to destroy her thy-<lb/>
roid gland because it is producing<lb/>
excess levels oi hormones, a con-<lb/>
dition that has irritated her eyes<lb/>
and caused her to lose 18 pounds<lb/>
in recent months.<lb/>
A White House statement said<lb/>
the procedure "has no significant<lb/>
side effects" and has been a stan-<lb/>
dard treatment for 40 years for<lb/>
people suffering with her condi-<lb/>
tion, known as Graves disease. It<lb/>
was to be administered today at<lb/>
Walter Reed Army Medical Cen<lb/>
ter.<lb/>
Once her thyroid gland has<lb/>
stopped operating, probably in<lb/>
two to three months, Mrs. Bush<lb/>
will have to take daily medication<lb/>
to maintain adequate hormone<lb/>
levels, according to her press sec-<lb/>
retary, Anna Perez.<lb/>
Mrs. Bush consulted doctors<lb/>
last month because of swell ing and<lb/>
irritation in her eyes, causing them<lb/>
to tear, and the sudden weight<lb/>
loss.<lb/>
For several weeks, Mrs. Bush<lb/>
has been treated with methima-<lb/>
zole, a drug that blocks produc-<lb/>
tion of excess hormones in the<lb/>
thvTOid, a butterfly-shaped gland<lb/>
in the neck.<lb/>
Ms. Terez said the use of drugs<lb/>
was an interim therapy and that<lb/>
the destruction of the thyroid<lb/>
through radiation was a more<lb/>
permanent treatment.<lb/>
"She's feeling great. She's<lb/>
feeling just fine Ms. Perez said.<lb/>
She said the first lady still was<lb/>
experiencing some problem with<lb/>
tears but that the condition was<lb/>
much improved.<lb/>
Wednesday's procedure, an<lb/>
alternative to surgery, was to be<lb/>
carried out with radioactive io-<lb/>
dine in an oral solution. Once<lb/>
ingested, it seeks out the thyroid<lb/>
and begins destroying it.<lb/>
Mrs. Bush was expected to be<lb/>
at the hospital for about two hours,<lb/>
including time for observation.<lb/>
Left untreated, Graves disease<lb/>
can be life threatening, but it gen-<lb/>
erally responds quickly to ther-<lb/>
apy.<lb/>
The disease is more apt to<lb/>
occur in older women.<lb/>
FREE<lb/>
GAME<lb/>
r<lb/>
i<lb/>
i<lb/>
i<lb/>
i<lb/>
BOWL ONE GAME &amp; RECEIVE J<lb/>
ANOTHER GAME FREE J<lb/>
WITH THIS COUPON. j<lb/>
Limit 1 Coupon Per Person. j<lb/>
yy<lb/>
Sharky's<lb/>
of Greenville<lb/>
Daily Specials<lb/>
Monday - $2.25 Margarita's<lb/>
Tuesday -$1.75 Bourbon<lb/>
Wednesday - $2.00 Kamikaze<lb/>
Thursday - $1.00 Imports &amp;<lb/>
 LADIES NITE selSSooVTwclve<lb/>
free admission<lb/>
Friday- $1.75<lb/>
Highballs<lb/>
Highballs<lb/>
Fireballs<lb/>
Saturday - $1.75<lb/>
$1.75<lb/>
Present This Ad At Door For<lb/>
FREE Membership<lb/>
Sharky's is a private club for members and<lb/>
21 year old guests. ,<lb/>
Located by Sports Pad on 5th Street<lb/>
ENTER THROUGH ALLEY<lb/>
APPLICATIONS<lb/>
ARE NOW BEING<lb/>
ACCEPTED<lb/>
FOR<lb/>
REFRIGERATOR<lb/>
AND<lb/>
MICROWAVE<lb/>
RENTALS<lb/>
DIRECTOR<lb/>
AND<lb/>
SGA COPIER<lb/>
MANAGER<lb/>
DEADLINE TO APPLY IS APRIL 14, 1989<lb/>
APPLY IN ROOM 222<lb/>
MENDENHALL STUDENT CENTLR<lb/>
<pb facs="00058139_0009"/><lb/>
THE EAST CAROLINIAN<lb/>
APRIL 13,1989<lb/>
<lb/>
Classifieds<lb/>
FOR RENT<lb/>
NEED TO SUBLEASE? Law students<lb/>
interested in subleasing furnished apart-<lb/>
ments for summer (May ? AugustV Want<lb/>
to make arrangements as soon as possible<lb/>
Call Bert Speicher at 355-3090.<lb/>
FOR RENT: 3 bedroom, 2 12 bath<lb/>
townhouse at Twin Oaks. Family man-<lb/>
aged ? $525 month Fireplace, Appli-<lb/>
ances. Paho. r ol Year's lease required.<lb/>
Opens Augusi .5, in hme for Fall semes-<lb/>
ter Call 752-2851<lb/>
APARTMENT AVAILABLE TO SUB-<lb/>
LEASE: Beginning after May 8. 2 bed-<lb/>
room, 112 bath Rent 5370mon. plus<lb/>
utilities. Close to campus Lease ends after<lb/>
2nd summer school session For details<lb/>
call 830-5138 ? ask for Trish, Susan or<lb/>
Tammv<lb/>
FEMALE ROOMMATE: To share 3 bed<lb/>
room apt. (on bus line) 1 ,3 rent ? 125.00<lb/>
? unities Available Mav 5th Nice people.<lb/>
Call 752-3678.<lb/>
STUDENTS WELCOMED! 4 months<lb/>
seasonal rentals availalbe. 1 lousing 4 to 12<lb/>
students each Call Seagate Realtv 441-<lb/>
3127.<lb/>
FEMALE: Non-smoker needed to share<lb/>
apartment with me and my 5 year old son.<lb/>
Private room in two bedroom, one bath<lb/>
duplex Fireplace, dishwasher Rent<lb/>
SI 10.00month in exchange for taking mv<lb/>
on to dav-careM-F mornings Call Vickv,<lb/>
732-0576 M?TH between 11-2 p.m.<lb/>
Available by May 1, 1989<lb/>
LEAVING FOR THE SUMMER: Need to<lb/>
find female roommate(s starting m Au-<lb/>
gust If interested please call 830-6912 ask<lb/>
for Carrie.<lb/>
FEMALE ROOMMATE NEEDED: First<lb/>
summer session to share 3 bedroom<lb/>
house, private bedroom, share bathroom<lb/>
with one person. SI75mo, 13 utilities.<lb/>
Call Pam 738-7142.<lb/>
ROOMMATE NEEDED: For Mav ? July<lb/>
13 rent &amp; utilities. Will have own lg.<lb/>
room ? 752-3886.<lb/>
2 ROOMMATES NEEDED: Female non<lb/>
smokers. Mav until Fall semester Own<lb/>
bedrooms Furnished. No pets. 2 blocks<lb/>
from campus. S133.00utilities. Call Jen-<lb/>
nifer (758-5362), Rana (758-8307t or<lb/>
Gretchen (752-9469)<lb/>
2 BR. 1 B. HOUSE: Available to sublease<lb/>
for the summer One block from campus,<lb/>
please call 738-0061 for more information.<lb/>
FEMALE ROOMMATE(S) NEEDED:<lb/>
For the summer months. 1 3 rent, 1 3<lb/>
utiltities. Call Becky at 758-1161<lb/>
FEMALE ROOMMATE NEEDED: For<lb/>
Fall semester to share a 3 bedroom house<lb/>
private bedroom, share bathrooqj ?u<lb/>
one person 5175.00 mo. 1 3 utilities. Call<lb/>
Pam 758-7142.<lb/>
ROOM IN SEDCEF1ELD TOWNES:<lb/>
Townhouses for sublet during the sum-<lb/>
mer Must be a non-smoker If interested<lb/>
or want more information contact 355-<lb/>
9183<lb/>
FEMALE NON-SMOKER: Needed to<lb/>
share 12 rent utilities in a 2 bed<lb/>
Townhouse aprox 2 miles from campus.<lb/>
Call 736-7797 or leave message.<lb/>
ROOM &amp; BOARD AVAILABLE: Near<lb/>
university, for female non-smoker ?<lb/>
work exchange. 757-1798.<lb/>
ROOMMATE NEEDED. For Fall &amp;<lb/>
Spring of '89 &amp; '90 ? Oakmont Apts. ? 2<lb/>
br, big kitchen ? 1 12 baths. Pool &amp;<lb/>
clubhouse. Rent S16000 a month. Call<lb/>
732-2151<lb/>
FEMALE ROOMMATE NEEDED: To<lb/>
share 2 Bd apt. Beginning May. Non-<lb/>
smoker, dean, studious. $165.00mo 1<lb/>
2 utilities. Available for sublease during<lb/>
summer mos Stratford Arms. 355-3081 ?<lb/>
Jennifer<lb/>
FOR RENT: 2 bedroom 1 12 bath<lb/>
townhouse available May 1st. $325.00<lb/>
moutilities Call Julie from 8 a.m. to 5<lb/>
p m. ? 551-2477 or Jamie evenings ? 758-<lb/>
1427<lb/>
FOR SALE<lb/>
?<lb/>
I<lb/>
I<lb/>
FOR SALE: 10 band stereo frequency<lb/>
equalizer with 1M expander spectrum<lb/>
analyzer. Like new $85 Call 752-3432 and<lb/>
ask for Dave<lb/>
RECLINERS FOR SALE: Brand new, no<lb/>
joke! Excellent prices' For more informa-<lb/>
tion, call Mike at 752-6823<lb/>
FOR SALE: 1086 Toyota MR2 Black, fully<lb/>
loaded with sunroof: Call 756-8720. Leave<lb/>
message.<lb/>
FOR SALE: Entertainment Center to fit<lb/>
Clement. White, or Greene dorms. Very<lb/>
spacious, includes shelves for a TV. large<lb/>
refrigerator, books, etc. Call today! 758-<lb/>
4507 Amv or Kathleen<lb/>
MOTORCYCLE FOR SALE: '85 Honda<lb/>
Nighthawk 450 cc Excellent condition,<lb/>
low milageplus 2 helmets for only<lb/>
SW.00Call Kevin ?758-5667 or 758-0710.<lb/>
GOVERNMENT HOMES: From S1.00.<lb/>
"U Repair" Also tax delinquent property<lb/>
Call 805-644-9533 Ext. 1052 for info.<lb/>
FOR SALE: Bed and dresser ? excellent<lb/>
condition ? S100 Reclining chair ? $20<lb/>
Call Leslie at 752-6219.<lb/>
CAN YOU BUY JEEPS, CARS, 4 X 4'S:<lb/>
Seized in drag raids for under SI 00.00?<lb/>
Call for facts today. 602-837-3401. Ext 711<lb/>
FOR SALE: Large dorm size refrigerator.<lb/>
S100.00 or best offer Gray carpet S60 00<lb/>
Both only used for 9 months Call 758-9204<lb/>
and ask for Mickelle<lb/>
SERVICES OFFERED<lb/>
WORD PROCESSING AND PHOTO-<lb/>
COPYING SERVICES: We offer typing<lb/>
and photocopying services We also sell<lb/>
software and computer diskettes 24<lb/>
hours in and out Guaranteed typing on<lb/>
paper up to 20 hand written pages We<lb/>
repair computers and printers also Low-<lb/>
est hourly rate in town SDF Professional<lb/>
Computer Services. 106 East 5th Street<lb/>
(boide Cubbies) Greenville, NC 72<lb/>
3694<lb/>
M ? F 1 p m. to 5 p.m. No phone calls<lb/>
please.<lb/>
LIFE GUARDS AND RENTAL ATTEN-<lb/>
DANTS NEEDED: Atlantic Beach area<lb/>
Memorial Day throuRh Labor Dav. Con<lb/>
tact Beach Bums Beach Service P O Box<lb/>
1342 Atlantic Beach, NC 28512<lb/>
TELEMARKETING: Good phone voice<lb/>
and outgoing personality helpful 9 - 2<lb/>
p.m. 5 -9 p.m. shifts weekdays, great dailv<lb/>
bonuses. Call Dottie 5 - 9 p.m. at 355-8910.<lb/>
SUMMER JOBS: Were you able to save<lb/>
the money you needed last summer? Can<lb/>
you relocate? Can vou handle money? Are<lb/>
vou independent? Interviews today at<lb/>
3:00 and 700 Rm B 04 Basement of Joyner<lb/>
Library.<lb/>
SECRETARY: Immediate opening for<lb/>
temporary Secretary, possibly leading<lb/>
into permanent position. Efficiet typing<lb/>
required. Attractive offices. Part-time or<lb/>
full time. Apply at First Executive Finan-<lb/>
cial Corporation. 310 Evans St Greenville.<lb/>
PERSONALS<lb/>
CHI?O'S: "Straight?up" now tell us<lb/>
who has the best socials There's nothin'<lb/>
better than when Chi?O and Alpha Sigs<lb/>
get together. Once again you guys proved<lb/>
vou know how to throw down! Thanks for<lb/>
Saturday night ? it was crusher! Love,<lb/>
The Alpha Sigs.<lb/>
ATTENTION ECU: Spring Break for<lb/>
Children's Hospital" ? The Eccentrics,<lb/>
The Bash, &amp; The Embers; at the Pitt<lb/>
Countv Fairgrounds Tickets only S5,<lb/>
advance; available ECU Central Ticket<lb/>
Office (Mendenhall) &amp; all fraternities.<lb/>
TO ALL THE SENIORS OF ALPHA<lb/>
DELTA PI: Kim Bailev, Kim Cauthen, Jan<lb/>
Copley, Robin Havekost, Lisa Parrott,<lb/>
Kirstin Peterson, Angie Smith, Kim<lb/>
Miller, Lisa Woodard ? We will miss you<lb/>
guvs! Love your sisters.<lb/>
CONGRATULATIONS TO TRIP<lb/>
ROAKES: For greek man of the year and<lb/>
SGA President ? we know you'll do a<lb/>
great job. Love, Alpha Delta Pi.<lb/>
WE HOPE EVERYONE HAS HAD FUN:<lb/>
At greek week so far, and will continue to<lb/>
have fun until the end ? Love Alpha<lb/>
Delta Pi.<lb/>
SIGMA NU: Thank you so much for<lb/>
painting our house! Y'all did a great job!<lb/>
Love, Delta Zeta.<lb/>
CONGRATULATIONS TO TRIPP<lb/>
ROAKES: The new SGA President. Good<lb/>
luck! Love, Delta Zeta.<lb/>
guys for tne dedication and hard work.<lb/>
PIKA.<lb/>
ALL CREEKS! The annual Phi Kappa Tau<lb/>
raft race party will begin Friday, April<lb/>
14th at 4 p m. The river is too high but we<lb/>
can still jam! Come out and hear the tunes<lb/>
of special guest Treble Maniax!<lb/>
BETA'S: Our thoughts and prayers are<lb/>
with you and Dave. With love, Alpha Xi<lb/>
Delta'<lb/>
TRIPP ROAKES: Congrats on SGA presi-<lb/>
dent. We were behind you all the way. The<lb/>
Sigmas.<lb/>
TKE: We had a great time Thursday night.<lb/>
Boxers and around the world we did go.<lb/>
Sigma and TKE always. Love, the Sigmas.<lb/>
PHI MU ALPHA: We loved the song ya<lb/>
sang, and hope ya have many more happy<lb/>
trails. The Sigmas.<lb/>
GREEK WEEK: Has been a blast even<lb/>
though it has a rough start. Hope every-<lb/>
one had fun and remember, we're all 1!<lb/>
The Sigmas.<lb/>
WILLIAM, JIM, &amp; KRISTIN: Camping<lb/>
this weekend was a lot of fun especially<lb/>
with the rain, wind, squating stump, &amp; the<lb/>
streaker from hell We must do it agains!<lb/>
Luv, Nicki.<lb/>
JIM: You're one special guy and I'm one<lb/>
lucky gal. Thank you. ? Nicki.<lb/>
NEWS FLASH: Iota class enters the estab-<lb/>
lishment. The pledges are pledges no<lb/>
more. These new brothers did it and did it<lb/>
wstyle. Alpha thru Theta extend con-<lb/>
gratulations to lota spring '89 pledg class<lb/>
of Pi Kappa Alpha.<lb/>
SCAVENGER HUNT RELOCATED<lb/>
LAND PARTY: Was a blast. Sincere love<lb/>
and thanks to the PIKA Lit Sisters from<lb/>
the brothers.<lb/>
HAPPY HOUR(S). The Fizz Thursday 9<lb/>
p.m. until Also, new pike happy hour at<lb/>
Grog's 9 ? 11 Wednesday. Come out one<lb/>
or both of these nights and see why Pi-K-<lb/>
A is "Chillin' on the mike<lb/>
GREEKS: TheSig Tau bash has been post-<lb/>
poned because of lack of sun. But come<lb/>
out next Monday ? it's guaranteed fun.<lb/>
The band will be raging, the pit will await<lb/>
and now the teams have some time to<lb/>
decide their fate.<lb/>
WILLIAM: Smile<lb/>
ster.<lb/>
I love you! ? Nick-<lb/>
GREEKS: Greek week is here and get<lb/>
ready for Pi Kapp field day It is going to<lb/>
be better than ever<lb/>
DAVID: Today you've turned 21 But,<lb/>
hey, the fun has just begun! We'll grab the<lb/>
liquor, mixer, and the brew and party the<lb/>
whole night through! ? We'll be getting<lb/>
"Buck Wild" in Greenville! Love, Audrey.<lb/>
JEFF: 1 lere's a couple of lines for a baby of<lb/>
mine: Just a few short days 'till you're 21<lb/>
Grab a bottle, we'll have some fun! Of<lb/>
course we'll have a party but remember,<lb/>
don't party too hardy 1 love you sweetie<lb/>
Happy Birthday ? Love Always, Kat<lb/>
ATTENTION: The Sheraton in Newbern<lb/>
is ready to rock with the Alpha Phis and<lb/>
their dates once again. So get psyched for<lb/>
formal weekend cuz it will definetly be<lb/>
unforgettable! Ladies ? don't forget<lb/>
those bikinis!<lb/>
THETA CHI: Would like to congratulate<lb/>
their new officers: President ? Mike<lb/>
Rosenblatt; V.P. ? Charles "Jug" Heath;<lb/>
Secretary ? Tim Peed; Treasurer ? Paul<lb/>
Jones; Pledge Marshall ? Buddy<lb/>
Seargent; Ass Pledge Marshall ? Bryant<lb/>
Powell; First Guard ? Lee Byerly; 2nd<lb/>
Guard ? Brian Mclntosh, Historian -<lb/>
Jordan Wrenn; Chaplain ? Allen Man<lb/>
ning, Librarian; Tim Gomez.<lb/>
THETA CHI'S SEE-SAW MANIA: Top<lb/>
ten moments. 10 ? The number of wrecks<lb/>
we caused? 9 ? Debbie's wonderful hot<lb/>
chocolate. 8 ? Alpha Phi's cookies &amp;<lb/>
hookies &amp; ? John ? Cheryl ? Cindy<lb/>
Busbn' Bottoms 6 ? Steve Laymon ?<lb/>
Marathon see-sawer. 5 ? Pfautz ? A now<lb/>
show. 4 ? Falermo put the bull horn<lb/>
away 3 ? Donald ? How was that waffle<lb/>
house? 2 ? PJ ? You look sick up there 1<lb/>
? Donald ? pledge of the week ? way to<lb/>
go!<lb/>
THETA CHI: Wishes to thank everyone<lb/>
who helped make see-saw mania for spe-<lb/>
cial Olympics a success Special thanks go<lb/>
out to Burger King, the Alpha Phi's, and<lb/>
you too Deb'<lb/>
AZD'S AND DATES: Even if our formal<lb/>
is at 1 lolidav Hell it's gonna be a blast (in<lb/>
case you couldn't tell!) With our garters<lb/>
and top hats we're gonna be set Pink<lb/>
Rose Ball '89 you will never forget! Here's<lb/>
to us, and those like us, Damn Few Left!<lb/>
SIG EPS: Thanks for a great time on<lb/>
Wednesday night ? AZD's and Sig Eps<lb/>
are always an awesome sight<lb/>
PHI TAU: Pre-downtown was too much<lb/>
fun and as always ? the pool was gTeat'<lb/>
Thanks, the AZD's<lb/>
CONGRATULATIONS: To Tripp<lb/>
Roakes on his SGA presidency! We're<lb/>
behind vou all the way' Love, the AZDs<lb/>
ECU: All-sing is gone, but it was such a<lb/>
blast! Everyone was great, from the first to<lb/>
the last! Congrats to the Alpha Sigs and<lb/>
the ZTA's too! Your acts were the best and<lb/>
original too! Thanks to everyone who<lb/>
came to the show ? we appreciate your<lb/>
support more than you know! Love, the<lb/>
AZD's.<lb/>
DISPLAY CLASSIFIED<lb/>
NEED A D.J Hire the ELBO DJ. Call<lb/>
eaily and honk for y? formal or.party<lb/>
758-1700 ask for Dillon or leave a mes<lb/>
fsaap<lb/>
( l<lb/>
Ion<lb/>
&amp;FW.PUUPFA AlSHVflmrFRS.<lb/>
Cabell Lawton ? Pre, Tvlor Riggs ? VP,<lb/>
If  I Pal WiMiEs ? Treasurer. Mike Davi -<lb/>
 ? ? rltJflRob Wooten ? Sarceanf Jt<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/>
WORD PROCESSING Reports. Resu<lb/>
mes, Laser Printing Rush iobs and reser-<lb/>
vations accepted Call 752-1933 before 5<lb/>
pm.<lb/>
CATERING SERVICE AVAILABLE:<lb/>
For private party, senior show &amp; gradu-<lb/>
ation party Make reservation in advance<lb/>
rrStaW, Rob Wooten ? Sargc<lb/>
arms. Kick tail like we know you will<lb/>
GREAT WORK: IMC award winner ?<lb/>
Kevin Plumb and the President's cup<lb/>
GREAT WORK: IMC award winner ?<lb/>
Kevin Plumb and the President's cup<lb/>
award recipient Tim Sheehee. Thanks<lb/>
TrianglAlRrfiej.<lb/>
Health Center<lb/>
Ci! for appointment Mon. thru Sat. Low<lb/>
Cost Trnnmauon to 20 week of pregnancy<lb/>
1-800-433-2930<lb/>
Now accepting<lb/>
application for<lb/>
The East Carolinian<lb/>
Circulation Manager.<lb/>
To apply for this position<lb/>
bring your resume to<lb/>
The East Carolinian<lb/>
Jocaled onlhe second floor of<lb/>
atfiWftpblication building across from<lb/>
Joyner Library.<lb/>
(Salary plus commision, no phone calls please)<lb/>
Call<lb/>
-1278.<lb/>
DISPLAY CLASSIFIED<lb/>
HELP WANTED<lb/>
RESIDENT COUNSELOR: Interested in<lb/>
those with human service background<lb/>
wishing to gain valuable experience in the<lb/>
held. No monetary compensation, how-<lb/>
ever room, utilities and phone provided<lb/>
Marv Smith REAL Crisis Center 758-<lb/>
HELP.<lb/>
HELP WANTED: Full or part-time desk<lb/>
clerk and relief audit positions available at<lb/>
the Ramada Inn. Some experience is pre-<lb/>
ferred. Apply in person at the front desk<lb/>
PIRATES LANDING<lb/>
remco east, inc.<lb/>
IS<lb/>
? r?j? P.O. Box 6026<lb/>
? V GrcenvUe, NC 27834<lb/>
919-758-6061<lb/>
REAL ESTATE MANAGEMENT<lb/>
ATTENTION:<lb/>
PANHELLENIC ANNOUNCES:<lb/>
Registration April 3rd-6th<lb/>
&amp; 10th-13th<lb/>
Student Stores<lb/>
Croatan<lb/>
Bottom of Hill<lb/>
10am - 3 pm<lb/>
Announcements<lb/>
CHRISTIAN FELLOWSHIP<lb/>
Christian Fellowship will be held every<lb/>
Thurs. at 6 p m. in the Culture Center.<lb/>
LOST?<lb/>
Something missing in your life? We've<lb/>
found it and we want to share it with you.<lb/>
Jenkins Art Auditorium. EVERY Fri.<lb/>
night at 7.00.<lb/>
CAMPUS CHALLENGE<lb/>
If vou are challenged everyday with prob-<lb/>
lems that you find hard to overcome, join<lb/>
us for the uncompromised word of Cod.<lb/>
Every Fri. night at 700 in the Jenkins Art<lb/>
Auditorium.<lb/>
???<lb/>
CCF would like to invite you to our bible<lb/>
study every Tuesday at 7 p.m. in Rawl 130.<lb/>
Bring your Bible and a friend as we study<lb/>
the book of Hebrews. Call Jim at 752-7199<lb/>
if you need a nde or further info.<lb/>
ART GALLERY<lb/>
Gallery Security Postion, must be quali-<lb/>
fied for university work study program.<lb/>
Flours: Mon. 2 p.m. to 5 p.m. Sat. 10 a.m. to<lb/>
5 pm. and additional hours during the<lb/>
week. (10 to 15 hours per week). If inter-<lb/>
ested, please call Connie ? 757-6665 or<lb/>
Lou Anne 757-6336.<lb/>
TUTORS NEEDED<lb/>
Tutors needed for all business classes.<lb/>
Contact Lisa at Academic Counseling,<lb/>
Dept. of Athletics ? 757-6282 or 757-1677.<lb/>
F,n I NAVIGATORS<lb/>
the Navigators, continues its streak of<lb/>
good Bible study every Thur 7:30-9 in<lb/>
Biology 103. The non-stop, no-frills meet-<lb/>
ing is designed to help you develop a<lb/>
closer walk with God. In-flight refresh-<lb/>
ments served. No ticket required; just<lb/>
reserve your time.<lb/>
HFI.P FIGHT CANCER<lb/>
A 24-hour Run Against Cancer will be<lb/>
sponsored by Alpha Phi Omega, the co-ed<lb/>
National Fraternity, and the American<lb/>
Cancer Society on April 14th St 15th at the<lb/>
ECU track. Contestants are not required<lb/>
to jog or walk the entire 24 hours, but<lb/>
instead will be taking turns with nine<lb/>
other team members for 1 2 hour periods.<lb/>
Find out about entering a team or donat-<lb/>
ing moneymaterials. For more info call<lb/>
Rose Richards (752-2574) of the American<lb/>
Cancer Soc, Bryan Haskins (756-9665) of<lb/>
Alpha Phi Omega or David Overton (830-<lb/>
6785) of Alpha Phi Omega.<lb/>
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 go on<lb/>
sale 3 weeks prior to each event, it is<lb/>
highly possible that the series 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/>
If your life has been affected, past or pres-<lb/>
ent, by having been raised in a home or<lb/>
environment where alcoholic and other<lb/>
dysfunctional behaviors were present,<lb/>
Here's Something You Should Know.<lb/>
Each Tues. at 4:30, in rm. 312 of the Coun-<lb/>
seling Center, there is a discussion and<lb/>
learning group meeting for those with<lb/>
common concerns. Newcomers are en-<lb/>
couraged to come at 4:15. Call 757-6793 for<lb/>
additional info.<lb/>
BALLOON RIDES<lb/>
Come join the Down East Balloon Society<lb/>
on April 15 from 4-7 p.m. at Vemon Park<lb/>
Mall (Kinston) for hot air balloon rides<lb/>
and help us raise funds for Children's<lb/>
Hospital of Eastern NC (weather permit-<lb/>
ting?rain date. April 29,4-7 p.m.). Watch<lb/>
the Children's Miracle Network Telethon<lb/>
on W1TN-7, June 3-4.<lb/>
WORLD RENOWN VIOLIN-<lb/>
IST NADTA SALERNO-SON-<lb/>
NENPERG<lb/>
World Renown Violinist Nadja Salemo-<lb/>
Sonnenberg will perform in Wright Audi-<lb/>
torium at 8pm on April 20th. 1 ler appear-<lb/>
ance will conclude the 1988-89 Perform-<lb/>
ing Arts Series at East Carolina Univer-<lb/>
sity. Her scheduled prOgram will in-<lb/>
clude. SONATA No. 2 in A Major, Op. 12,<lb/>
No. 2 by Beethoven, SONATA No. 2 ink D<lb/>
Major, Op. 94a by Prokofiev, Intermis-<lb/>
sion, SONATA No. 3 in D Minor, Op. 108<lb/>
by Brahms. Ms. Salerno-Sonnenberg will<lb/>
be acompanied by Sandra Rivers on the<lb/>
piano. Tickets for this "vent are now on<lb/>
sale, they can be purchased through the<lb/>
Central Ticket Office at Mendenhall Stu-<lb/>
dent Center by calling 757-6611, ext.266.<lb/>
Office hours are 11 am-6 pm, Monday<lb/>
through Friday.<lb/>
kr, "Flight 730 the weekly get-together of<lb/>
BjGjeffiS<lb/>
TheStudent Council for Exceptional Chil-<lb/>
dren is proud to present Ms. Wheelchair<lb/>
NC 1989 on Aprill3at8pm in the Nursing<lb/>
Bldg. Auditorium. She will be discussing<lb/>
current legislation on the rights of dis-<lb/>
abled persons as well as stories for her ex-<lb/>
periences. Everyone is welcome to attend!<lb/>
1989 BUCCANEERS<lb/>
The staff of the 1989 Buccaneer is looking<lb/>
for your photographs to go in the book. If<lb/>
you have taken pictures of your friends,<lb/>
Fall Break, Spring Break, Campus Activi-<lb/>
ties or anything dealing with East Caro-<lb/>
lina University, send them into the Bucca-<lb/>
neer Office to be used in the 1989 Bucca-<lb/>
neer. We need negatives, along with a<lb/>
photo and if your photo is chosen we will<lb/>
give you the photo credit in the book.<lb/>
Dealine for submission is April 10, so send<lb/>
them in soon. We are located on the sec-<lb/>
ond floor of the publications building in<lb/>
front of Joyner Library. Bring photo-<lb/>
graphs in and slide under door if no one is<lb/>
here. Remember: it's not your yearbook<lb/>
until you're in it.<lb/>
DC AREA SUMMER IOB<lb/>
Summer position available in the Wash-<lb/>
ington, DC, office of a North Carolina<lb/>
Congressman. Typing skills necessary<lb/>
and shorthand desirable. Local interview<lb/>
available. For further details contact: Ruth<lb/>
Petersen, Co-op, 2028 GCB, (757-6979) as<lb/>
soon as possible.<lb/>
SlGMAJa<lb/>
"The History of Quackery in Medicine"<lb/>
will be the subject of a presentation on<lb/>
April 13 at 8 p.m. by Dr. Leland Keller,<lb/>
Professor Emeritus of Biology of Pittsburg<lb/>
State University in Kansas. This program<lb/>
is a humorous look at the origins, use, and<lb/>
outlawing of some of the unbelievable<lb/>
medical gadgets and "snake oil" of the<lb/>
ISOO's and early 1900's, including demon<lb/>
strations and illustrations of some of the<lb/>
apparatur. Sponsored by the ECU Chap-<lb/>
ter of Sigma Xi, the talk will be held in<lb/>
Mendenhall 244 and is open to the public<lb/>
SUMMER INTERNSHIPS<lb/>
Bus. Admin Marketing or Economics<lb/>
majors needed for a variety of summer<lb/>
internships in logistics related positions<lb/>
with private industry. Location and pay<lb/>
vary. A resume is necessary to apply For<lb/>
a list of companies contact Ruth Petersen,<lb/>
Co-op, 2028 GCB (757-6979) for applica<lb/>
tion details.<lb/>
CO-OP<lb/>
Need a summer job? Call the Co-op office<lb/>
? 757-6979 ? to find out how we may<lb/>
help you locate a summer job in your<lb/>
home town or in Greenville.<lb/>
GOLDEN GIRLS<lb/>
ECUGolJen Girl (Dance line) auditions<lb/>
for 1989 to be held April 15th and 16th in<lb/>
the A.J. Fletcher Music Bldg Be there at 10<lb/>
a.m. dressed comfortably, ready to dance<lb/>
For more information call 7524369.<lb/>
STRATEGIES FOR STAN-<lb/>
DARDIZED TESTS<lb/>
Are you planning on taking GRE, LSAT,<lb/>
MAT, MEDCAT, or other standardized<lb/>
tests? This workship will cover basic info.<lb/>
about these test, test taking strategy and<lb/>
sample item. April 17 from 4-5 p.m. in 313<lb/>
Wright Bldg. If you are planning on taking<lb/>
the GRE for admission to grad school, this<lb/>
workship can help you prepare ? types of<lb/>
items , test taking strategy, scores and<lb/>
sample items will be discussed. April 18<lb/>
from 4-5 p.m. in 313 Wright Building.<lb/>
STRESS MANAGEMENT<lb/>
Do vou become increasingly "jittery" as<lb/>
finals approach, have trouble concentrat-<lb/>
ing while studying, avoid studying, or<lb/>
feel like studying won't help your test<lb/>
performance, because you'll go blank<lb/>
anyway? You're not alone and there is<lb/>
hope' This workshop will include relaxa-<lb/>
tion training, getting "psyched up" in a<lb/>
positive way for finals and strategies of<lb/>
preparation and test taking to reduce<lb/>
stress. April 17, 19, and 21 in room 329<lb/>
Wnght Bldg, 3-4 p.m. It is important to<lb/>
attend all three meetings We will be prac-<lb/>
ticing and building relaxation skills.<lb/>
PHI ALPHA THETA<lb/>
Dr Donald Sutherland of the University<lb/>
of Maryland will present a lecture on<lb/>
"Ten-or and Counter-TeiTor in the French<lb/>
Revolution at 3 p.m. April 14 in Brewster<lb/>
206 All interested persons are urged to<lb/>
attend Free.<lb/>
PHI ALPHA THETA<lb/>
There will be a meeting in the Todd rm at<lb/>
Brewster on April 17 at 12:45 p.m. Sec-<lb/>
tions will be held at this time All members<lb/>
please try to attend.<lb/>
SCEC<lb/>
Student Council for Exceptional Children<lb/>
meeting April 17 at 5:15 in Sp 103. Elec-<lb/>
tions will be held. Attendance is impor-<lb/>
tant<lb/>
PHYSICAL EDUCATION<lb/>
MAJORS CLUB<lb/>
To all HPERS faculty, staff, &amp; students:<lb/>
You are cordially invited to attend a<lb/>
plaque dedication ceremony in honor of<lb/>
Mrs. Gay Blocker. It will be held in the PI-<lb/>
<pb facs="00058139_0010"/><lb/>
I<lb/>
?<lb/>
THE EAST CAROLINIAN<lb/>
APRIL 13, 1989 7<lb/>
Announcements<lb/>
RATE CLUB on Aprill3 at 7 p.m. Refresh-<lb/>
ments will be served. This function is<lb/>
sponsored bv the Phvsical Education<lb/>
Mains Club of ECU We would appreci-<lb/>
ate vour attendance The dress for stu-<lb/>
dents is semi formal Thank you PEMC<lb/>
tficers.<lb/>
OMEGA PSI PHI<lb/>
The Omega Psi Phi Fraternity 4th annual<lb/>
All Crock Step Show" competition will<lb/>
be held April 13 at Sportsworld of Green-<lb/>
v ifie An after partv will immediately fol<lb/>
low the competition and door prizes will<lb/>
be given to luckv ticket holders All pro-<lb/>
ceeds will be used for our Achievement<lb/>
Week program<lb/>
N1ETHOP1ST STUDENT<lb/>
CENTER<lb/>
Tic Methodist Student Center is now<lb/>
lvxvpting application for Fall 1989 for<lb/>
rooms call 738-2(B0 or come bv 501 East<lb/>
Fifth Street tor more information There<lb/>
are a tow spaces loft for first session of<lb/>
Summer scruxil Apply now<lb/>
EAST CAROLINA FRIENDS<lb/>
There will bo a full membership mooting<lb/>
of East Carolina Friends on Tuesday.<lb/>
pnl 18, in biolog N102 from 7-830pm<lb/>
this is a verv important mooting which<lb/>
will include elections and final prepara-<lb/>
kms for Barefoot on the Mall Please call<lb/>
our gToup loaders if in case of work.<lb/>
rlass or illness you cannot attend<lb/>
FUTURE STUDENT TEACH-<lb/>
Opporrunities are now available for stu-<lb/>
dent teaching in Puobb Mexicao Teacher<lb/>
Education maors planning to student<lb/>
teach in the spring semester, 1990, are<lb/>
eligible to apply Applications are in the<lb/>
Office of Student Teaching, Speight 109,<lb/>
and the Office of International Studies,<lb/>
Genera! Qassroom 1002 Limited posi-<lb/>
tions arc available. Application deadline:<lb/>
April 21 For more info call Marianne<lb/>
! um (w) 57-r?271 or (b) 830-450.<lb/>
EMPLOYMENT<lb/>
Employment opportunities are available<lb/>
to student who are interested in becorn-<lb/>
ming PERSONAL CARE ATTENDANTS<lb/>
to students in wheelchairs, READERS,<lb/>
and TUTORS Past experience is desired<lb/>
but not required Applications will be<lb/>
tjVen for employment during the Sum-<lb/>
mer Session and Fal 1S9 and Spring Se-<lb/>
mester 199Q it intorostod contact: OF-<lb/>
FICE OF HANDICAPPED STUDENT<lb/>
SERVICES 111 Whkhard Annex East<lb/>
Carolina University Greenville NC<lb/>
27858-4353 PHONE: 919757-6799 or 757-<lb/>
t $81<lb/>
 .Sfl.fiXCtK SCREWING<lb/>
The Creative Living Confer, an adult da<lb/>
health care center operated bv the Ea'<lb/>
Carolina University School of Medicine, is<lb/>
offering a tree skin cancer screening on<lb/>
Thursday, Mas 4, from 1100 am until<lb/>
1 10 p m. Drs John ! lendnx and Cameron<lb/>
Smith will be providing this service at the<lb/>
Center, located at 2000 E. Sixth Street (St<lb/>
Jaies United Methodist Church) Any<lb/>
interested adult over the age of titv five is<lb/>
eligible for the screening, but registration<lb/>
will be limited. Call the Creative Living<lb/>
Center at 757-0303 to pre register for this<lb/>
free screening.<lb/>
So what if there are<lb/>
more reasons not<lb/>
to<lb/>
Just Do It!<lb/>
, then write about it<lb/>
in<lb/>
I Tfic<lb/>
'East Carolinian<lb/>
Now Accepting<lb/>
Applications.<lb/>
BACCHUS stands for Boost Alcohol<lb/>
Consciousness Concerning the I tealth of<lb/>
University Students. If you want to be<lb/>
involved in a group that promotes respon-<lb/>
sible decision-making regarding the use<lb/>
or nonuse of alcohol, this is it! We meet<lb/>
each Wednesday, at 6 p.m. in 305 Joyner<lb/>
Library We're beginning to make plans<lb/>
for Fail activities. Call 757-6793 for more<lb/>
info.<lb/>
CQIQR GUARD AUPITQNS<lb/>
Color Guard Auditions for the ECU<lb/>
Marching Pirates will be April 15, 29, and<lb/>
May t, 12 p.m4 p.m. Please pick one day!<lb/>
Flags are provided - rifles, bring your<lb/>
own.<lb/>
PUEUC SERVICE AN-<lb/>
NOUNCEMENT<lb/>
Are you a Pitt County resident, 60 years<lb/>
old or older and need a ride to your medi-<lb/>
cal appointment7 The Creative Living<lb/>
Center is offering transportation service<lb/>
to the elderly for medical appointments<lb/>
within Pitt county such as doctors, den-<lb/>
tists, dimes, therapies and the Health<lb/>
department. Arrangements for the service<lb/>
must be made at least 24 hours before the<lb/>
scheduled appointment Call the Creative<lb/>
Living Center 757-0303 to reserve your<lb/>
nde<lb/>
ECU LAW SOCIETY<lb/>
Our next meeting is Monday, April 17 at<lb/>
6:00 in GC 1019 There will be a social af<lb/>
terwards<lb/>
FITNESS INTRUCTOR TRY-<lb/>
OUTS<lb/>
Individuals interested in trying out for<lb/>
intramural recreational services fitness<lb/>
class instructors are encouraged to sign-<lb/>
up in 204 Memorial Gym. Try-outs will be<lb/>
held April 26. Up to seven individuals will<lb/>
be selected and hired. For additional in-<lb/>
formation contact Kathleen Hill in 204<lb/>
Memorial Gym or call 757-6387.<lb/>
PIRATE PIGSKIN SOFTBALL<lb/>
TOURNAMENT<lb/>
The third annual ECU IntramuralRental<lb/>
Tool Company softball slugfest will be<lb/>
held April 21-23 on the campus of ECU.<lb/>
There are no eligibility restrictions for the<lb/>
event. Men's and women's teams are en-<lb/>
couraged to enter. A $50 entry fee will be<lb/>
charged to pay for officials and equip-<lb/>
ment. For additional information call 757-<lb/>
6387 or drop by room 204 Memorial Gym.<lb/>
OVERSEAS DEVELOPMENT<lb/>
NETWORK<lb/>
The Overseas Development Network<lb/>
(ODN) is sponsoring a MASSIVE YARD<lb/>
SALE on Sat April 15 to help support a<lb/>
development project in Central America.<lb/>
Any used articles in good condition will<lb/>
be welcome donations. Please join us at<lb/>
the Catholic Newman Center, 953 E. 10th<lb/>
St from 8-11 a.m. For more information,<lb/>
call Marianne Exum (h) 830-9450 or (w)<lb/>
757-6271.<lb/>
PASSOVER<lb/>
Hillel, A Jewish Student Organization<lb/>
will be sponsoring a Passover Sedar. The<lb/>
Sedar will be on Thursday April 20th at<lb/>
700p.m It will be held at Congregation<lb/>
Boyt Shalom.<lb/>
PHYSICAL EDUCATION<lb/>
TEST<lb/>
MALPASS<lb/>
MUFFLER<lb/>
See US for all Your<lb/>
Automotive Needs<lb/>
2616 East 10th Street<lb/>
Greenville, NC 27834<lb/>
758-7676<lb/>
Wte developing<lb/>
big savings<lb/>
on soecial moments.<lb/>
uj.iii 1 3 <lb/>
Kodak Colorwatdr<lb/>
quality at special savings.<lb/>
,2Exp.H97 24Exp.387<lb/>
15Exp.259 36Ep.4"<lb/>
C-41 process for 110, 126, Disc, and 35mm full frame.<lb/>
Student Stores East Carolina University<lb/>
Come see for yourself<lb/>
The Physical Education Motor and Physi-<lb/>
cal Fitness Competency Test is scheduled<lb/>
as follows: Race: Minges Coliseum Time<lb/>
and Date. 10.00 am Wednesday, April 26,<lb/>
1989. A passing score on this teat is re-<lb/>
quired of all students prior to declaring<lb/>
physical education as a major. 1. Main-<lb/>
taining an average T-score of 45 on the six-<lb/>
item test battery. 2. Having a T-score of 45<lb/>
on the aerobics run. Any student with a<lb/>
medical condition that would contraindi-<lb/>
cate participation in the testing should<lb/>
contact Mike McCammon or Dr. Gay Is-<lb/>
rael at 757-6497. A detailed summary of<lb/>
the test components is available in the<lb/>
Human Performance Lab (Room 113,<lb/>
Minges)<lb/>
CAMPUS CRUSADE) OR<lb/>
CHRIST.<lb/>
Looking for fun, fellowship and hearing<lb/>
God's word? Come and check it out at<lb/>
"Prime Time" at Rawl room 130 - every<lb/>
Thursday at 7:30 p.m. We are looking<lb/>
forward to seeing you there. Refresh-<lb/>
ments served.<lb/>
PRE-PROFESSIONAL<lb/>
HEALTH ALLIANCE<lb/>
The Pre-PTofessional Health Alliance will<lb/>
hold a meeting Thursday April 13 at 6:30<lb/>
in 247 Mendenhall. All members are en-<lb/>
couraged to attend.<lb/>
The Stegmonds 12-12:45<lb/>
Upper Level 1-230<lb/>
?Magic Show 245-3:45<lb/>
?The ConneU 4-530<lb/>
And Lott MorFin<lb/>
Soap Opera Stars from Guiding Light<lb/>
Carnival Games ? Robotic Boxing ?<lb/>
Face Painter ? Caricaturist kj L<lb/>
mi0<lb/>
lir ON THE MALL<lb/>
8:15 ROCKY HORROR PICTURE SHOW<lb/>
WEDNESDAY, APRIL 19<lb/>
12:00 noon till6-00Pm<lb/>
No Alcohol or Coolers Allowed<lb/>
?to<lb/>
n<lb/>
50,000 DRIVERS A DAY TRUST<lb/>
THEIR CARS TO THE J-TEAM<lb/>
In 10 minutes with no appointment<lb/>
Here's what the J-Team can do for you:<lb/>
jiffy lube<lb/>
?Change your oil with a major brand!<lb/>
?Add a new oil filter!<lb/>
?Lubricate the chassis!<lb/>
?Check and fill transmission,<lb/>
differential, brake, power steering.<lb/>
window washer and battery fluids!<lb/>
?Check air filter!<lb/>
?Inflate tires!<lb/>
?Check wiper blades!<lb/>
?Vacuum the interior!<lb/>
?Wash your windows!<lb/>
PLUS FREE car wash<lb/>
with full service!<lb/>
AraerlC. F.Yorite $2.00 Off (with tWS ad)<lb/>
OH Change' T '<lb/>
126 Greenville Blvd. Phone: 756-2579 Hours: Mon. - Fri. 8 am - 6 pm Sat. til 5<lb/>
Student &amp; Faculty Savings<lb/>
At Overton's<lb/>
First Cut 99 &amp;b.<lb/>
Chuck Roast limit 2<lb/>
Heavy Western<lb/>
Shoulder  -Q<lb/>
Trout<lb/>
Fillets $l-49lb<lb/>
CLIP AND SflUE<lb/>
Heavy Western<lb/>
Whole N.Y. Strips<lb/>
cut into steaks free q)? JLlb.<lb/>
Richfood Eggs<lb/>
X-Large<lb/>
79C<lb/>
per<lb/>
dozen<lb/>
Fresh Ground Beef<lb/>
5ll9 lb.<lb/>
Charmin Tissue<lb/>
4 roll pkg<lb/>
limit 2<lb/>
89i<lb/>
5 lbs. or more<lb/>
I<lb/>
I<lb/>
I<lb/>
I<lb/>
I<lb/>
I<lb/>
I<lb/>
I<lb/>
I<lb/>
,rt<lb/>
<lb/>
cN<lb/>
<lb/>
?<lb/>
<lb/>
cs<lb/>
Now Hiring Delivery Drivers<lb/>
DOUGHBOY<lb/>
PIZZA ? SUBS ? WINGS<lb/>
1011 Charles Blvd. (Behind Krispy Kreme)<lb/>
O ?.<lb/>
'w<lb/>
COUPON<lb/>
3Q;M0.0.<lb/>
imm mtrn mm mm mmi ?BjUikW??<lb/>
I One Large Two Item Pizza I One Large Two Item Pizza<lb/>
? and Double Order of Wings j pQr Only<lb/>
I<lb/>
I<lb/>
I<lb/>
I<lb/>
I.<lb/>
I<lb/>
I<lb/>
I<lb/>
I<lb/>
I<lb/>
I<lb/>
<lb/>
I<lb/>
I<lb/>
For Only<lb/>
$9.99<lb/>
830-9400 FHEJ?1EIE.42(9J<lb/>
Two Lasagna Dinners<lb/>
For Only<lb/>
$4.25<lb/>
$7.99<lb/>
(Pinners Inc. Salad and Garlic Bread)<lb/>
FREE DELIVERY<lb/>
830-9400 Exp4-30-89j<lb/>
I<lb/>
I<lb/>
I<lb/>
Pick-up Only<lb/>
i 830-9400<lb/>
 Coupon Exp. 4-30-89<lb/>
r'FREE<lb/>
LUNCH SPECIALS<lb/>
(Mon-Fri l!K)0-200pm)<lb/>
Any Large Sub.<lb/>
2.99<lb/>
 Single Order Wings1.99<lb/>
 Any Dinner3.25<lb/>
 Small Sub, Side Order, Drink1.99<lb/>
I Buy one Spaghetti Dinnner and<lb/>
Receive Second Dinner Free<lb/>
Pick-up Only<lb/>
830-9400<lb/>
i<lb/>
i<lb/>
i<lb/>
i<lb/>
i<lb/>
i<lb/>
(Dinners Include Garlic Bread and Salad)<lb/>
Dine-in or Pick-up Only . Coupon Exp. 4-30-89<lb/>
Fresh Ground Beef<lb/>
Patties<lb/>
Pride of the Farm<lb/>
39S<lb/>
size 303 can<lb/>
Cut Green Beans or<lb/>
Whole Kernel Corn<lb/>
3 lhf ?- mnrP<lb/>
$1.39<lb/>
lb.<lb/>
Smithfield Bacon<lb/>
Regular only (?-1 -1 Q<lb/>
Folger's Instant Coffee<lb/>
8oz.Jar $2.9<lb/>
lb.<lb/>
Smoked Picnics<lb/>
Whole Only D? <lb/>
Crisp<lb/>
Celery<lb/>
59 2<lb/>
bunch<lb/>
Fresh Spareribs<lb/>
Green t f <lb/>
Cabbage ?ZC<lb/>
lb.<lb/>
Red or Golden<lb/>
Delicious<lb/>
5-7 lb. pkg<lb/>
4l49lb. Apples 3 lb. bag<lb/>
991<lb/>
Store Hours<lb/>
Open Sundays, 1 p.m. - 6 p.m.<lb/>
Monday-Saturday, 8 a.m. - 8 p.m.<lb/>
OVEBTON'a<lb/>
Prices Effective<lb/>
Wednesday April 12 - Saturday April 15,1989<lb/>
?jtf-v<lb/>
i<lb/>
<pb facs="00058139_0011"/><lb/>
<lb/>
THfc EASTC AROl INI AN<lb/>
Features<lb/>
APRIL H, 1W PACE 8<lb/>
New Cult album combines best of old Lps<lb/>
ByTREYBIEN<lb/>
S??ff KnUt<lb/>
It's been about a year and a<lb/>
half since The Cult's last album.<lb/>
Electric which showed an en-<lb/>
tirely different side of the band.<lb/>
Drummer Les Warner has left the<lb/>
band since the last album, and the<lb/>
band moved to LA. ? purport-<lb/>
edly to get a more "metal sound<lb/>
Sonic Temple their latest disc,<lb/>
lea ves no doubt that The Cult is on<lb/>
the way to becoming one of the<lb/>
biggest bands to explode from col-<lb/>
lege radio.<lb/>
"Sonic Temple" bears traces<lb/>
oi the harder "Electric" as well as<lb/>
the psychedelic "Love "Sonic<lb/>
Temple" is a disc for Cult lovers of<lb/>
all types, certain to capture even<lb/>
more fans with the release of the<lb/>
single tirewoman which de-<lb/>
buted at 27 on the album rock<lb/>
charts.<lb/>
Even though the original<lb/>
drummer, Les Warner, left the<lb/>
band, session drummer Mickey-<lb/>
Curry does a remarkably strong<lb/>
job pounding through the cuts<lb/>
with no problem. "New York<lb/>
City track number seven, even<lb/>
features guest vocals by Iggy Pop.<lb/>
One of the most diverse songs<lb/>
on the disc is "Edie which has a<lb/>
combination of violins that builds<lb/>
into a blistering Cult rhythm with<lb/>
Duffy on lead guitar. "Sonic<lb/>
Temple" also features more key-<lb/>
boards than the past discs. For<lb/>
example, "Sweet Soul Sister"<lb/>
opens with some eerie mystic-<lb/>
sounding keys thatblend perfectly<lb/>
with the lead guitar.<lb/>
"Soldier Blue" and "Auto-<lb/>
matic Blues" are the main drum-<lb/>
oriented cuts on the disc. "Soldier<lb/>
Blue" has one of the better break-<lb/>
neck drum beats on the disc. Both<lb/>
of these songs have a free-flow<lb/>
sound that appears to have no<lb/>
organization, but this is only be-<lb/>
cause the breaks and leads hap-<lb/>
pen so fast.<lb/>
"Sonic Temple" will satisfy<lb/>
even the most particular Cult lis-<lb/>
tener. It is full of strong cuts that<lb/>
showoffTheCult's unique sound.<lb/>
Billy Duffy's lead guitar licks get<lb/>
your attention during the first<lb/>
chords of the disc, and Ian Ast-<lb/>
bury's bone-jarring vocals lead<lb/>
you through thi<lb/>
Curry does a fii g in<lb/>
as drummer<lb/>
Putsimply Sonii fei<lb/>
brilliant. Possibly the rrw com-<lb/>
forting fact about this disc is th it<lb/>
The Cult, though on tin- i rge<lb/>
breaking big, haven't compro<lb/>
mised their sound in any<lb/>
"SonicTemple" will, nodoul I<lb/>
a long way ust rem<lb/>
vou heard them first " '<lb/>
Germany celebrates 40 years<lb/>
The weird Greenville weather has strange effects on people, as<lb/>
this photo shows. Perhaps she thinks she is the Squirrel Woman?<lb/>
(Photo by J.D. WTiitmire, ECU Photolab)<lb/>
BONN, West Germany (AP)<lb/>
?Historian Karl-Deitrich Bracher<lb/>
likes to compare West Germany<lb/>
to a young man just out of college,<lb/>
shaking of f protective parents and<lb/>
plunging headlong into a world<lb/>
full of opportunity and danger.<lb/>
Youthfully vibrant and eco-<lb/>
nomically strong, West Germany<lb/>
has let go of the apron strings of<lb/>
the United States, which gave it<lb/>
political guidance and physical<lb/>
nourishment in the first hard years<lb/>
of statehood founded on the ruins<lb/>
of the Third Reich.<lb/>
Now engaged in a flirtation<lb/>
with the Kremlin that its elders in<lb/>
the NATO alliance fear may be<lb/>
naive or dangerous courtship, the<lb/>
nation has been rebelling against<lb/>
the familial bounds of bloc diplo-<lb/>
macy and the burdens of a shared<lb/>
defense.<lb/>
From its ambivalent realtions<lb/>
with East Germany, a land of ideo-<lb/>
logical enemies and blood broth-<lb/>
ers, to the stubborn defensivcness<lb/>
exhibited during a recent scandal<lb/>
over hazardous exports, West<lb/>
Germany has lately shown itself<lb/>
to be a nation undergoing pro-<lb/>
found change.<lb/>
The occasional defiance of<lb/>
the NATO partner long viewed as<lb/>
the ideological twin oi the United<lb/>
States is seen by some as a phase in<lb/>
development that the nation will<lb/>
eventually grow out of.<lb/>
But as the 40th birthday of the<lb/>
Federal Republic of Germany<lb/>
approaches this spring, both West<lb/>
German and foreign observers are<lb/>
fretful that Bonn may be trying to<lb/>
chart its own course through<lb/>
changeable international waters<lb/>
without the experience and ma-<lb/>
turity needed to guide its deci-<lb/>
sions.<lb/>
At the center of those fears is<lb/>
the question of whether West<lb/>
Germany'scommitment to the 16-<lb/>
nation North Atlantic Treaty<lb/>
Organization is strong enough to<lb/>
temper its attraction to the East.<lb/>
Chancellor Helmut Kohl<lb/>
wants a decision on short-range<lb/>
missile replacements put off for<lb/>
two or three years so as not to<lb/>
anger the Kremlin ? or West<lb/>
Gcrmn voters ? amid the pro-<lb/>
vocative lure of arms control.<lb/>
West Germany's greater will-<lb/>
ingness to trust Soviet President<lb/>
Mikhail Gorbachev has been a<lb/>
worry to the Western alliance,<lb/>
which prefers to keep its nuclear<lb/>
options open until the Kremlin<lb/>
shows its sincerity by cutting<lb/>
conventional forces in Europe.<lb/>
More swayed bv the Kremlin<lb/>
overtures than other NATO<lb/>
members, West Germans ha vc al so<lb/>
put pressure on the leadership to<lb/>
reduce the number of low-level<lb/>
training flights and military war<lb/>
games conducted on their terri-<lb/>
tory? a sentiment that hasstirred<lb/>
an angry response in Washington<lb/>
and brought suggestions that Bonn<lb/>
pay a bigger share of the alliance<lb/>
costs.<lb/>
"We're seen as tremendously<lb/>
ungrateful, and that's at the heart<lb/>
of the trouble in our relations with<lb/>
the United States observes I lein-<lb/>
rich Vogel, director of the federal<lb/>
Institute for Eastern and Interna-<lb/>
tional StuCologne.<lb/>
Strains bet ween the tradition-<lb/>
ally close allies have become more<lb/>
visible since American officials<lb/>
accused West Germany compa-<lb/>
nies of helping Libya build a sus-<lb/>
pected poison gas plant. Kohl and<lb/>
others which initially reacted with<lb/>
disbelief and irritation at the U.S.<lb/>
claims, which investigators now<lb/>
admit appear to be grounded in<lb/>
truth.<lb/>
West Germans are increas-<lb/>
ingly willing to speak out against<lb/>
alliance policies, but historiansand<lb/>
officials who claim<lb/>
geron their nation'<lb/>
say the new tou him is ii<lb/>
way a rejection of the alii ?<lb/>
the democratic print i<lb/>
which West I<lb/>
founded.<lb/>
"The younger<lb/>
Germans is rebelli .<lb/>
establishment, voting f i<lb/>
tives, looking to makt<lb/>
the world, says Brat I<lb/>
the nation's rnosl prominent<lb/>
tonans.<lb/>
Refering to i h ?.<lb/>
growing appeal ami<lb/>
Germans, he says, "V hat we are<lb/>
seeing isa kind of emoti nter-<lb/>
est for a new situtatii<lb/>
looking Russian is a i ?n<lb/>
a sensation il tra I<lb/>
will wear off as i pie : iIizj<lb/>
basic situation bet East a<lb/>
West has not changi I<lb/>
Bracher md other h -<lb/>
such as Chris 1 la :ke i I <lb/>
burg German d?<lb/>
tie to 'A PO is th ?<lb/>
past 40 years have b<lb/>
stable and succesfu<lb/>
ever known.<lb/>
See WEST, page 9<lb/>
Coming<lb/>
This<lb/>
Week<lb/>
Thursday<lb/>
New Deli:<lb/>
The Mood<lb/>
Susie's:<lb/>
Brother X<lb/>
Mendenhall:<lb/>
U2 Rattle &amp; Hum<lb/>
(through Sunday)<lb/>
Friday<lb/>
Attic:<lb/>
The Back Doors<lb/>
New Deli:<lb/>
Valence<lb/>
Saturday<lb/>
Attic:<lb/>
Code Blue<lb/>
New Deli:<lb/>
The Boomers<lb/>
Sunday;<lb/>
Attic:<lb/>
The Rhythm Persuaders<lb/>
Monday:<lb/>
New Deli:<lb/>
Doctors of Hoyland<lb/>
(reader's theater<lb/>
? free admission<lb/>
? through Tuesday)<lb/>
Tuesday.<lb/>
Susie's:<lb/>
Bud Brothers<lb/>
Wednesday;<lb/>
Attic:<lb/>
Comedy Zone<lb/>
New Deli:<lb/>
Open Mike Night<lb/>
Susie's:<lb/>
Free Beer<lb/>
Dewey decimal<lb/>
system working<lb/>
ALBANY, N.Y. (AD ? When<lb/>
Melvil Dewey envisioned how a<lb/>
librarv should be organized more<lb/>
than a century ago, he couldn't<lb/>
have guessed how his system<lb/>
would be tested in the future.<lb/>
He could hardly have fore-<lb/>
seen in 1873, for example, the<lb/>
invention of computers, or the<lb/>
spread of AIDS and advancements<lb/>
in medical science such diseases<lb/>
engender.<lb/>
Or the high-speed, low-cost<lb/>
printing presses that turn out so<lb/>
very many books each year. Since<lb/>
1979, over a million volumes have<lb/>
been assigned Dewey Decimal<lb/>
numbers.<lb/>
And with the publication this<lb/>
year of the 20th edition of Dewey's<lb/>
revolutionary system ? the first<lb/>
complete update in a decade ?<lb/>
just about the only constants of<lb/>
the Dewey Decimal Classification<lb/>
are its basic structure and its<lb/>
publisher, Albany's Forest Press.<lb/>
But that, after all, was Dewey's<lb/>
vision. The strength and popular-<lb/>
ity of the system lie in its adapta-<lb/>
bility.<lb/>
From a slant toward subjects<lb/>
a white, middle-class American<lb/>
male in the 19th centry might study<lb/>
? European literature, the Bible<lb/>
and classical philosophy, Ro-<lb/>
mance and Germanic languages,<lb/>
the natural sciences and history ?<lb/>
the system has assimilated other<lb/>
literatures and cultures to become<lb/>
the most popular method of or-<lb/>
ganizing libraries in the world.<lb/>
See DEWEY, page 9<lb/>
Another side effect of this wiggy weather is the abundance of mud everywhere. And it seems to<lb/>
have inspired these folks to hold an impromptu mud wrestling bout. (Photo by J.D. Whitmire,<lb/>
ECU Photolab)<lb/>
Pickin' the Bones<lb/>
1) Raunch Hands ? "Payday"<lb/>
2) Mojo Nixon &amp; Skid Roper<lb/>
? "Root Hog or Die"<lb/>
3) The Dickies ? "Second<lb/>
Coming"<lb/>
Robyn Hitchcock ? "Queen<lb/>
Elvis"<lb/>
4) Thelonius Monster ?<lb/>
"Stormy Weather"<lb/>
5) drivin' 'n' cryin' ?<lb/>
"Mystery Road"<lb/>
6) The Connels ? "Fun and<lb/>
Games"<lb/>
7) XTC ? "Oranges and<lb/>
Lemons"<lb/>
Four Who Dared ? "Kids<lb/>
With Dynamite"<lb/>
8) Run Westy Run ? "Run<lb/>
Westy Run"<lb/>
Green on Red ? "Here<lb/>
Comes the Snakes"<lb/>
9) The Cowpokes ? "Zamfir<lb/>
Ain't No Guru"<lb/>
10) Swamp Zombies ?<lb/>
"Fink"<lb/>
11) Goo Goo Dolls ? "Jed"<lb/>
12) Lyres 1983 ? "Lef s Have<lb/>
a Parry"<lb/>
13) The Crowd ? "Big Fish<lb/>
Stories"<lb/>
Bonehead wages fine war<lb/>
By CHIPPY BONEHEAD<lb/>
Staff Bibliophile<lb/>
You know, I've been threat-<lb/>
ening to slam the school library<lb/>
for some lime now. They've fi-<lb/>
nally pissed me off beyond be-<lb/>
lief.<lb/>
I went to the cashier's office<lb/>
a full two weeks before registra-<lb/>
tion. My purpose was to find out<lb/>
if I had any library fines or tick-<lb/>
ets so I could pay them before<lb/>
getting tagged come registration.<lb/>
They said, "Oh, no Mr. Bone-<lb/>
head. You are clear. You may<lb/>
resgister at any time, secure in<lb/>
the knowledge that you will not<lb/>
suffer the embarrassment of ha v-<lb/>
ing the terminal operators turn<lb/>
you away from that all-impor-<lb/>
tant class you need to graduate<lb/>
from this hell-hole of a school<lb/>
I went home, happy and<lb/>
pleased that I was so responsible<lb/>
that I was thinking of these things<lb/>
in advance. Registartion day<lb/>
came. I turned in my schedule<lb/>
form. She typed in my social<lb/>
security number<lb/>
The computer started blink-<lb/>
ing "Tagged by Joyner Library<lb/>
In an embarassed rage, I stalked<lb/>
across campus to find out what<lb/>
this madness was.<lb/>
At the desk, a most un-<lb/>
friendly librarian told mc I had a<lb/>
book out from 1987, and that all<lb/>
attempts to mail me a notice had<lb/>
failed. I explained that I did move<lb/>
quite a lot.<lb/>
I asked why they hadn't<lb/>
tagged me at the beginning of<lb/>
last semester, or why this didn't<lb/>
show up on the cashier's com-<lb/>
puter two weeks ago. She told<lb/>
mc in a rather snotty voice that<lb/>
they hadn't "gotten around to<lb/>
it" until last week.<lb/>
When 1 asked what I could<lb/>
do, since I had no idea where the<lb/>
book might be, she told me,<lb/>
"Nothing. We have no assurance<lb/>
you will return the book<lb/>
1 calmly asked if there were<lb/>
not some method of paying for<lb/>
the book, or was she just being<lb/>
obtuse to aggravate me. Before<lb/>
she burst into tears she said that<lb/>
I owed $22, and that I could pay<lb/>
one of the other librarians.<lb/>
She ran off and I paid the li-<lb/>
brarian. I vowed never to use the<lb/>
library again.<lb/>
Then last week, a professor<lb/>
who shall remain nameless be-<lb/>
cause he can still affect my grade,<lb/>
insisted that I do a book report,<lb/>
complete with Xeroxed ex-<lb/>
amples of other book reviews<lb/>
from such magazines as New<lb/>
York Review of Books.<lb/>
Knowing that I didn't have<lb/>
the cash to purchase such a thing,<lb/>
I broke my vow and headed for<lb/>
that literar)' den of iniquity. My<lb/>
pal, the Slackster, and I used the<lb/>
InfoTrac computer to look for<lb/>
reviews.<lb/>
The computer neglected to<lb/>
have a section for reviews of<lb/>
short stories, the item we were<lb/>
searching for. It had reviews of<lb/>
biological surveys, reviews of en-<lb/>
tomological hygiene, reviews of<lb/>
every play Bill Shakespeare had<lb/>
ever written, but no short sto-<lb/>
ries.<lb/>
We decided to ask a librar-<lb/>
ian. The first one we asked<lb/>
couldn't be torn away from his<lb/>
homework. The next one kept<lb/>
giving us directions to Shepard<lb/>
Memorial Library over on Evans<lb/>
Street.<lb/>
The next one deigned to<lb/>
speak with us. She told us to go<lb/>
up this flight of stairs, to the left,<lb/>
press the button in the secret<lb/>
panel, say the password, go<lb/>
down two flights and look on<lb/>
the third shelf from the botti<lb/>
Two hours later, in .i de-<lb/>
serted section oi the librar<lb/>
I'm sure 75 of the rapes on I<lb/>
campusoccur in, we found a one<lb/>
-paragraph review of The (<lb/>
lected Works of Nathaniel I la<lb/>
thorne arguably the most boi<lb/>
ing writer in the history of<lb/>
world. 1 looked at Slack in de<lb/>
spair.<lb/>
Later that afternoon, at-<lb/>
the paramedics revived us, we<lb/>
headed home. Apparently<lb/>
were suffering from a comn<lb/>
ailment on this campus, l&amp;n i<lb/>
anus fastfltus, or a complete lack<lb/>
of library social graces, which<lb/>
inflamed librarians.<lb/>
I mean it this time. I'm never<lb/>
going back in there. And you<lb/>
know, 1 advise all not to either<lb/>
We pay their salaries, (in tact, on<lb/>
this campus, whose sala<lb/>
don't we pay?) and the least the<lb/>
could do is be merciful with us<lb/>
ignorant college kids.<lb/>
After all, what good will all<lb/>
those Library Science skills do<lb/>
us anyway? After we get out of<lb/>
here, we'll never write another<lb/>
paper on Hawthorne. So, until<lb/>
next time, may the hangovers r<lb/>
gentle, but the buzzes intense.<lb/>
<lb/>
<pb facs="00058139_0012"/><lb/>
<lb/>
I<lb/>
THE EAST CAROLINIAN<lb/>
APRIL 13.1989 9<lb/>
East Germany lags behind West<lb/>
BERLIN, (AD?That quarter<lb/>
of Germany claimed by the Sovi-<lb/>
ets after World War II today boasts<lb/>
the best economy the East bloc has<lb/>
to offer, but East Germans still<lb/>
look wistfully to the West.<lb/>
They could brag about the<lb/>
cleaner shops run by kinder clerks<lb/>
than their ideological comrades in<lb/>
the Soviet Union can claim. They<lb/>
could compare the foodsand cloth-<lb/>
ing available here with the con-<lb/>
sumer's sorry lot in Romania or<lb/>
Bulgaria.<lb/>
But television, tourism and<lb/>
trade have drawn the compara-<lb/>
tive glances of East Germans to<lb/>
the West, and impressed upon<lb/>
them how much less they have<lb/>
achieved in 40 years of statehood<lb/>
than their West German brothers.<lb/>
Nowhere is the contrast be-<lb/>
tween capitalism and socialism,<lb/>
West and East, have and have not,<lb/>
so stark as in the divided city of<lb/>
Berlin.<lb/>
The bright lights and buzzing<lb/>
commerce of the Western sector<lb/>
fade abruptly beyond the graffiti-<lb/>
splashed Berlin Wall that has stood<lb/>
as a symbol of restriciton since its<lb/>
erection in 1961.<lb/>
DAN'S<lb/>
rome Shop With Us in 89<lb/>
VINTAGE c KM MINI<lb/>
JLVVLLRY. COLLLC IAIU rs<lb/>
AND FURNITURE<lb/>
212 East htthSt<lb/>
Crcvnvillc, NC<lb/>
919 7S2 17S0<lb/>
Dewey Decimal System is being modified one more time<lb/>
Continued from page 8<lb/>
Familiar to most grade school<lb/>
children, the Dewey Decimal sys-<lb/>
tem is used to organize libraries so<lb/>
books can be found easilv. And<lb/>
reports written, languages<lb/>
learned, curiosity quenched.<lb/>
A book is assigned a number<lb/>
to the let t of the decimal, placi ng i t<lb/>
in a general category. To the right<lb/>
of the decimal, it is assigned<lb/>
numbers that describe the paticu-<lb/>
lar book. By adding or subtracting<lb/>
numbers, a person can find other<lb/>
books on more specific or general<lb/>
topics. New books can be squeezed<lb/>
into the library's catalog in the<lb/>
same way.<lb/>
The system is sophisticated<lb/>
enough to catalog millions of vol-<lb/>
umes and simple enough for a<lb/>
child to quickly learn. So simple<lb/>
and sophisticated, in fact, that its<lb/>
editor, John Comaromi, says it will<lb/>
"stand for all time<lb/>
Comaromi is head of the<lb/>
Decimal Classification Division at<lb/>
the Library of Congress in Wash-<lb/>
ington, D.C where the Dewey<lb/>
numbers are actually assigned.<lb/>
Translated into 34 languages,<lb/>
from German to Gujarati, the<lb/>
Dewey system is now used in 95<lb/>
percent of the world's libraries.<lb/>
It stands in near-constant tran-<lb/>
sition, with differences in the two<lb/>
most recent editions illustrating<lb/>
its changing face.<lb/>
For example, work began on<lb/>
the 19th edition in 1972. When it<lb/>
was published, in 1979, crack co-<lb/>
caine was unknown and there was<lb/>
little published about drugs in<lb/>
general. But as the next decade<lb/>
passed, information piled up and<lb/>
social attitudes changed, pro-<lb/>
mpting major changes in the 20th<lb/>
edition. AIDS had the same effect,<lb/>
with its impact on epidemiology,<lb/>
biochemistry, even sociology,<lb/>
Comaroi says.<lb/>
The rapid rise of computer<lb/>
technology even prompted a sepa-<lb/>
rate, between-editions edition.<lb/>
"We have this tension be-<lb/>
tween stability in libraries and then<lb/>
advancement and progress for<lb/>
people using the classification as<lb/>
the window into knowledge, to<lb/>
the whole world of knowledge<lb/>
Comaromi says. "If it's going to be<lb/>
a window into knowledge, it's got<lb/>
to be current<lb/>
That's the sole purpose of<lb/>
Forest Press?keeping the Dewey<lb/>
in line with what's being pub-<lb/>
lished, says excecutive director<lb/>
Peter Paulson.<lb/>
Paulson, like Melvil Dewey,<lb/>
West Germany is 40<lb/>
Continued from page 8<lb/>
"If German history was<lb/>
marked bv schisms and catastro-<lb/>
phes before 1949, since then it has<lb/>
certainly been characterized by<lb/>
exceptional continuity and stabil-<lb/>
ity Hacke observes.<lb/>
The 40 vears prior to West<lb/>
Germany's founding in 1949 saw<lb/>
the fall of the Prussian monarchy,<lb/>
two world wars, the ill-fated<lb/>
Weimar Republic, the Nazi dicta-<lb/>
torship and four years of Allied<lb/>
occupation.<lb/>
Haunting every change in<lb/>
West Germany's course today is<lb/>
the Nazi specter and the anxious<lb/>
watch from all sides for any signs<lb/>
that history could be repeating<lb/>
itself.<lb/>
Economic chaos and a politi-<lb/>
cal inferiority complex following<lb/>
the World War I defeat fueled the<lb/>
nseof national socialism and Adolf<lb/>
Hi tier's dictatorship, leading to the<lb/>
collapse in 1933 of the Weimar<lb/>
Republic, Germany's first, short-<lb/>
lived democracy.<lb/>
"The changes occurring now<lb/>
are not anything that can be com-<lb/>
pared seriously to the anti-demo-<lb/>
cratic movements of the Weimar<lb/>
Republic Bracher contends, He<lb/>
notes that despite 8.5 unemploy-<lb/>
ment, West Germany has one of<lb/>
the world's strongest economies.<lb/>
Nationalist sentiments have<lb/>
been stirred by the influx of for-<lb/>
eign workers, needed because of<lb/>
the declining birthrate among J<lb/>
West Germans and a shortage of<lb/>
willing hands for manual labor<lb/>
jobs. But the legacy of Adolf Hitler<lb/>
and the Holocaust prevents any-<lb/>
broad resurgence of ethnic hostil-<lb/>
ity, Bracher says.<lb/>
While officials and academics<lb/>
downplay the significance of the<lb/>
government's rebalancing of pol-<lb/>
icy toward East and West, stu-<lb/>
dents and young workers who will<lb/>
be tomorrow's opinion-makers<lb/>
appear to give the changes more<lb/>
weight than their current leaders.<lb/>
Students such as Arne Poep-<lb/>
pel, an 18-year-old at Bonn's<lb/>
Beethoven Academy, retain a<lb/>
healthy skepticism over the likeli-<lb/>
hood of overnight disarmament<lb/>
progress or full mending of the<lb/>
East-West fences.<lb/>
But they see the arms issue as<lb/>
one over which frontline states<lb/>
such as West Germany should<lb/>
have a louder voice in the NATO<lb/>
alliance.<lb/>
"America is far a way from the<lb/>
territory where a war would be<lb/>
likely to break out Poeppel says.<lb/>
"It's clear why Germans want to<lb/>
goaheadmorequicklywithdisar-<lb/>
mament while the USA hangs<lb/>
back. The short-range missies<lb/>
don't fall on American heads<lb/>
Opinion polls taken over the<lb/>
past six months show that 75 per-<lb/>
cent of West Germans favor re-<lb/>
moval of all nuclear weapons from<lb/>
Europe, and that most see no seri-<lb/>
ous threat to their security from<lb/>
the Soviet-led East bloc.<lb/>
Arms control and environ-<lb/>
mental concern have drawn many<lb/>
younger voters to the left-of-cen-<lb/>
ter opposition Social Democratic<lb/>
Party and the far-left Greens.<lb/>
The political swing has<lb/>
prompted Kohl's traditionally<lb/>
conservative Christian Demo<lb/>
craric Union to take a serious in-<lb/>
terest in the economic and politi-<lb/>
cal overtures of the new Kremlin.<lb/>
But that trend itself has<lb/>
spawned a resurgence on the right<lb/>
illustrated by the recent success ol<lb/>
the Republicans party in Berlin<lb/>
legislative elections and public<lb/>
rallies by na tionalist and neo-Nazi<lb/>
groups.<lb/>
The ultra-right Republicans,<lb/>
who campaigned on a platform<lb/>
that included a call to oust for-<lb/>
eigners from Berlin, will send two<lb/>
representatives to the national<lb/>
Parliament next year ? the first<lb/>
far-right membership in the Bun-<lb/>
destag since 1953.<lb/>
The Republicans' surprising<lb/>
appeal among voters has encour-<lb/>
aged more visible activity among<lb/>
other right-wing radicals, includ-<lb/>
ing the estimated 1,500 neo-Nazis<lb/>
in West Germany. About 1,000<lb/>
members of the National Demo-<lb/>
cratic Party rallied in the city of<lb/>
Rahden in February, drawing four<lb/>
times as many protesters, and the<lb/>
inflammatory calls of neo-Nazi<lb/>
Michael Kuehnen prompted the<lb/>
Bonn government to outlaw his<lb/>
Nationale Sammlung organiza-<lb/>
tion.<lb/>
Kohl, in a recent speech kick-<lb/>
ing off observances of the 40th<lb/>
aniversary that will culminate on<lb/>
the May 24 founding date, attrib-<lb/>
uted West Germany's economic<lb/>
and political stability to the secu-<lb/>
rity it enjoys within the NATO<lb/>
alliance.<lb/>
East Carolina Coins &amp; Pawn<lb/>
INSTANT CASH LOANS<lb/>
v<lb/>
752-0322<lb/>
CORNER OF 10th &amp; DICKINSON<lb/>
?DIAMONDS<lb/>
?BICYCLES<lb/>
?TELEVISIONS<lb/>
?GUNS<lb/>
?JEWELRY<lb/>
?GUITARS<lb/>
?DORM<lb/>
REFRIGERATORS<lb/>
?CAMERAS<lb/>
?STEREOS<lb/>
?VCR'S<lb/>
GREENVILLE<lb/>
FALL RUSH<lb/>
is your<lb/>
SfOW<lb/>
to<lb/>
SORORITY LIFE<lb/>
REGISTER FOR SORORITY<lb/>
RUSH<lb/>
Monday-Thursday, 10 am-3 pm<lb/>
April 3-6 and April 10-13<lb/>
Croatan ? Student Supply ? Bottom of Hill<lb/>
$15.00 Fee<lb/>
RUSH INFORMATION NIGHT<lb/>
Monday, April 3 at 6 pm<lb/>
Wright Auditorium<lb/>
Rush is scheduled before classes begin in the<lb/>
Jail: August 19-23<lb/>
REGISTRATION DEADLINE<lb/>
August 10, 1989<lb/>
Call 757-4235 if any questions<lb/>
is a former director of the New<lb/>
York State Library, one of the first<lb/>
libraries to adopt the system.<lb/>
Dewey developed his system<lb/>
in 1873 whilea studentat Amherst<lb/>
College in Massachusetts and<lb/>
worked on it the rest of his life.<lb/>
In 1911,after resigning hispost<lb/>
and moving to Lake Placid, N.Y<lb/>
he founded Forest Press, housing<lb/>
it at the Lake Placid Club. In the<lb/>
early 1970s, the press moved to<lb/>
Albany, and earlier this year it<lb/>
was purchased by private infor-<lb/>
mation-systems giant OCLC of<lb/>
Dublin, Ohio.<lb/>
Plaza Cinema<lb/>
Plaza Shoimtriu Ctr. 75fi OOKH<lb/>
NQW SHQWWG<lb/>
m THE RESCUERS<lb/>
-G- 7:00<lb/>
Summer Positionsl<lb/>
now available for:<lb/>
CHANCES ARE<lb/>
-PG-<lb/>
-PG-<lb/>
LEAN ON ME<lb/>
9:00<lb/>
7:10-9:15<lb/>
THE DREAM TEAM<lb/>
t- 7:00-9:15<lb/>
layout artists<lb/>
typesetters<lb/>
copy editor<lb/>
assistant news editor<lb/>
sports editor<lb/>
assistant sports editor<lb/>
Tark Theatre<lb/>
NOW SHOWING<lb/>
$1.50 ALL TIMES<lb/>
MISSISSIPPI BURNING<lb/>
R 7:00 &amp; 9:00<lb/>
Apply in person at The East Carolinian<lb/>
no phone calls please<lb/>
SEAN HAYES<lb/>
will perform Friday April 14, 1989<lb/>
From 7:00 - 9:00 p.m.<lb/>
In The Coffeehouse<lb/>
FREE ADMISSION<lb/>
&amp;<lb/>
REFRESHMENTS<lb/>
'Sponsored by ECU<lb/>
COFFEEHOUSE<lb/>
COMMITTEE<lb/>
mttrnx. ou' ro ?vt ?ou<lb/>
I .very Sunday ll:(M)a.m . 3:(X)p.m<lb/>
The NewTaste<lb/>
Of Greenville<lb/>
JAZZ BRUNCH AT CHARLEVOS<lb/>
"Oh what a brunch<lb/>
"And the five piece jazz Iand is<lb/>
so enjoyable"<lb/>
"You should see the spread-<lb/>
there s tender carved Ixvf. fresh<lb/>
scafcxxl. pastas and fresh salads<lb/>
()h. and those made-to-ordcr<lb/>
omelettes and crepes"<lb/>
"There's such a selection of deli-<lb/>
cious fcxxls- and the deserts are<lb/>
just fabulous"<lb/>
"It sure is nice to have a satisfying<lb/>
dining alternative"<lb/>
Sundays at CM AUl.l.NOs-<lb/>
 .no the brunch alon with a<lb/>
touch of live jazz music from<lb/>
Spiral Join us.<lb/>
You' Peto"Ti,rg A'ts Se"e<lb/>
O'lii Discoo"i Ca'd<lb/>
M WAN I hU<lb/>
X HILTON INN<lb/>
GREENVILLE<lb/>
207 S.W Grvenville lilvd ' Cirvvnvillc. NC 27854 ? (H!))v"iK)<lb/>
<pb facs="00058139_0013"/><lb/>
EMRAID CITY, 146. A STRANGE<lb/>
ANP PQUERfUL EVIL HAS TAKfrl TO<lb/>
DESTROYING OUR FAlRHQMS<lb/>
r Rfitius All<lb/>
gM.<lb/>
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Brought to you by: Jeff Parker ? Paul Friedrich ? Tom Gurganus 'Micah Harris ? Richard Haselrig Steve Reid Rik Elliott Special thanks to Alan Cm<lb/>
mics<lb/>
<lb/>
<pb facs="00058139_0014"/><lb/>
I<lb/>
f<lb/>
THE EAST CAROLINIAN<lb/>
APRIL 13.1989 11<lb/>
<lb/>
i<lb/>
The Clearly Labeled <lb/>
(SsuroSflsiflasi<lb/>
?ftSs?'<lb/>
Quote o' the week:<lb/>
"Don't start up witn<lb/>
ME<lb/>
? Edgar Locssin<lb/>
Big E advises on matters of etiquette<lb/>
C?J Var Bit?ev. Vis. how do we nicely tell Sie<lb/>
Big E is arrested on charges of Impersonating a Bard. To see why, read the column.<lb/>
Contests abound in area<lb/>
GREENVILLE, NC (BP) ? In<lb/>
response to the controversial Gold-<lb/>
fish Swallowing Contest being<lb/>
held at the Elbo Room bar in<lb/>
downtown Greenville, other<lb/>
nightclubs have scheduled simi-<lb/>
lar contests for this weekend.<lb/>
The Attic will be havinga Shad<lb/>
swallowing Contest. This will tie<lb/>
in with this weekend's Grifton<lb/>
Shad testi val. The shad, a member<lb/>
ot the herring family, isa salt water<lb/>
fish which swims upstream to<lb/>
spawn  much like the more cele-<lb/>
brated salmon.<lb/>
The shad to be used in the<lb/>
contest will be of the more corn-<lb/>
iron Hickory Shad. The shad usu-<lb/>
allv run about one pound The<lb/>
winner of the Shad Swallowing<lb/>
contest will be determined by tlu<lb/>
amount ot live shad anv one con<lb/>
testant is able to consume<lb/>
?e"Ncv Deli 1i sponsor an<lb/>
Octopi Swallowing Contest Sat-<lb/>
urday night. The Octopus, a<lb/>
member of the mollusk familv<lb/>
has a bulbous head, eight legs and<lb/>
is verv big and disgusting.<lb/>
The winner ot thiscontest will<lb/>
be the contestant who manages to<lb/>
touch a raw, live octopus without<lb/>
vomiting profusely.<lb/>
Grog will sponsor a Clam<lb/>
Swallowing Contest. Clams, an<lb/>
other member of the mollusk<lb/>
family, are not nearly so disgust-<lb/>
ing as octopi, and are the basic<lb/>
unit of money tor certain prirrv<lb/>
tive cultures.<lb/>
It is not known whether clams<lb/>
actuall) have legb, as has been<lb/>
long rumored. The winner of this<lb/>
contest will be the person who can<lb/>
swallow th. most clams, shell and<lb/>
all.<lb/>
Rafier'swill sponsor a Sponge<lb/>
Swallowing C"pntest 3 be sponge,<lb/>
a member of the family Porifera,<lb/>
can be purchased at around four<lb/>
for a dollar at any grocery store.<lb/>
The winner ot the Sponge<lb/>
SwallowingContest will be deter-<lb/>
mined by the number of sponges a<lb/>
contestant ingests. Contestants<lb/>
will be disqualified if they die<lb/>
painfully when the sponges en-<lb/>
large as they absorb the fluids pres-<lb/>
ent in the digestive system.<lb/>
Perhaps the most grueling test<lb/>
will be held at The Sports Pad, a<lb/>
manly sort of bar. Friday night<lb/>
Lhey will hold the Freshman Swal-<lb/>
lowing Contest, wherein contest-<lb/>
ants will compete to see how many<lb/>
freshmen they can swallow whole<lb/>
in one sitting.<lb/>
Not to be outdone, Rio The<lb/>
Club will hold a Fly Swallowing<lb/>
Contest, open to female only.<lb/>
Scantily clad female contestants<lb/>
will race to see who can cOffiSume<lb/>
the most fly juices in one night.<lb/>
This contest has the highest pro-<lb/>
jected turn-out of the weekend.<lb/>
Dear Biggy,<lb/>
People who purposely forget<lb/>
to screw the cap on the tube of<lb/>
toothpaste are repulsive and<lb/>
should drown in a huge vat of<lb/>
Crest. There is nothing more dis-<lb/>
gusting than to enter a stranger's<lb/>
bathroom and witness the capless<lb/>
tube just lying there on the nasty<lb/>
sink like a oozing banana. But, I'll<lb/>
tell you, what really triggers my<lb/>
gag button is when dangling hairs<lb/>
get all trapped in the semi-crusted<lb/>
ooze.<lb/>
E, how do these curs brush<lb/>
their teeth with such nastiness?<lb/>
Signed, Plague Meister<lb/>
Ye Crusty Crest,<lb/>
Prithee, Plaque Knave, hear<lb/>
me out. Thy problem must needs<lb/>
warrant The Earls' attention.<lb/>
Unknit thy fettered brow ? 'tis<lb/>
but a paste. And the hairs but<lb/>
strands, combed yet not reap'd,<lb/>
upon thy vessel of a sink. Thy<lb/>
contempt dost reek of insecuri-<lb/>
ties, harbored in the mind of inso-<lb/>
lent youth ? mayhap a youth that<lb/>
has naught consummated t' earn<lb/>
his manhood? Thou should'st<lb/>
keep thyself from the toiletries of<lb/>
strangers, anyway.<lb/>
Vis, how do we nicely tell<lb/>
Quinny he has to put the seat down<lb/>
and get the other seat off the rack?<lb/>
Signed, Two Roommates of<lb/>
Quinn<lb/>
Signed, just Wondering<lb/>
Hark, loaf of Wonder,<lb/>
I don't know  well, guess I<lb/>
better go. (Alarums. Exeunt.)<lb/>
ffmsfc Ask<lb/>
E<lb/>
Hark, ye Two Gentlemen of<lb/>
Corona, 'twould seem a most<lb/>
wretched villain to commit such<lb/>
base deeds! The uncharitable cur<lb/>
must be told, and 'twere well it<lb/>
were done quickly. Woe is he who<lb/>
must wipeth eye with so foul a<lb/>
garment! Here is thy remedy: go<lb/>
to his bed and commit drudgeries<lb/>
and defecations upon his sheets;<lb/>
when Quinn tries to round his<lb/>
little life with a sleep, he will a<lb/>
lesson have learned. Tis what The<lb/>
Earl calls The Bed Trick.<lb/>
Sheet<lb/>
Seat<lb/>
The Satire Page That<lb/>
WaSIl' t: The Inside Story<lb/>
Originally, the Loyal Readers of the Clearly Labelled<lb/>
Satire Page were to have enjoyed a Comics Page take-off.<lb/>
However, due to a confusion of deadlines and such, only<lb/>
one of the comic artists who were aware that they were<lb/>
supposed to do this actually turned in a satire version of<lb/>
their strip on time: Paul Friedrich. (What follows below<lb/>
is overflow from the actual Comics Page, not Satire Page<lb/>
stuff. Jeez!)<lb/>
Earl o' Vis,<lb/>
Me and my roommate were<lb/>
so desperate for a third roommate<lb/>
to share our house with us that we<lb/>
took in this guy, Quinn, to help<lb/>
pay rent. Quinn was pretty cool at<lb/>
first ? he cleaned up after himself<lb/>
and wasn't too much of a slob ?<lb/>
but recently his bathroom etiquette<lb/>
has  well  gone to pot.<lb/>
Quinn never puts the toilet<lb/>
seat down and I and my room-<lb/>
mate Bcthy are getting pretty tired<lb/>
of being rudely surprised when<lb/>
we go to sit down.<lb/>
Another thing Quinn does in<lb/>
the bathroom is always leave his<lb/>
underwear hanging on the towel<lb/>
rack. I realized this the other day<lb/>
when I got soap in my eyes and<lb/>
blindly reached for what I thought<lb/>
was a towel.<lb/>
Overkill<lb/>
Dear Earl,<lb/>
Once again the question arises:<lb/>
how do you tear more than one<lb/>
sheetata time from the toilet paper<lb/>
dispensersincampusbathrooms?<lb/>
Signed, Sheetless<lb/>
Yea Fair Sheets,<lb/>
Good morrow, lad. I know<lb/>
how 'tis to have one's arse sheets<lb/>
untimely ripped. In faith, a noble-<lb/>
man could bring his own sheets,<lb/>
but 'twould cost many ducats,<lb/>
even gratis. Upon yon dispenser<lb/>
'tis a small plastic protrusion<lb/>
which impedes the rotation.<lb/>
Whack upon't, 'til either you or it<lb/>
breaks. And damn'd be him that<lb/>
first cries, "Hold, enough<lb/>
Euphemism<lb/>
Dearest E,<lb/>
Why do they call bathrooms<lb/>
in England water closets or W<lb/>
C's?<lb/>
'N'<lb/>
SUCH<lb/>
Tequila toast o the<lb/>
week:<lb/>
"I wish you joy of the<lb/>
worm<lb/>
? Bill Shakespeare<lb/>
Song quote o' the<lb/>
week:<lb/>
"I wanna be your<lb/>
dog<lb/>
? Iggy Pop and The<lb/>
Stooges<lb/>
<lb/>
Clay Deanhardt quote<lb/>
o the week:<lb/>
"No, really, we're not<lb/>
dating any more  re-<lb/>
ally <lb/>
? Clay Deanhardt<lb/>
Bv Friedrich<lb/>
The Avatar<lb/>
arris and Ha<lb/>
' t M 0K. TTf<lb/>
 ? ? a C?ASS?V.<lb/>
?.  -A5" AC T<lb/>
'?HM.MT?D THE<lb/>
?????- . Vt" 50UCW<lb/>
rt ; ' c- u?&amp;<lb/>
i? DSTAlUED A<lb/>
7N SAMPLE y<lb/>
oenrrry ha :<lb/>
UUOCD HE 50 fAR<lb/>
the corJ5flTF NC"<lb/>
ja$h:NC'1DK DC, L88 AD<lb/>
AND! TRUST 100 REAUtS<lb/>
THE DANCC I'M IN HERE<lb/>
SINCE THE fVUT: CAt<lb/>
SHIF T fROfl MY KATHEK'5<lb/>
Dlaix, l CCkji P 5? ???uit<lb/>
tCf b'EPPtnAon<lb/>
lUtNANSOU<lb/>
,NSOt THE CONSULATE'S<lb/>
WTELLIGEHCE CENTER<lb/>
I<lb/>
ff PRNCSSS, I HOPE- YOU<lb/>
RiALZL "E P&amp;iSOHAL<lb/>
JEDPASDY I'VE PLACED<lb/>
mvseltw 6Y using<lb/>
the. consulate's copute:p.<lb/>
TO 0Q1AIN THIS INFCfVlAVON fOR Ou<lb/>
Orpheus<lb/>
, An RlGHTfUuKT<lb/>
, J3RD Of THE<lb/>
Of HOMELESS<lb/>
COMICS<lb/>
CHARACTERS y,<lb/>
i MslD AL.SO J<lb/>
THE PALADIN <lb/>
OF THE BOOK A.<lb/>
OFWEDCAD, V<lb/>
(Hi MBCROM- ?<lb/>
mcoH. i was<lb/>
DEPOSED BY<lb/>
EL espfcmcs<lb/>
A&amp;CH-ENETAY<lb/>
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THE PeTRlFIED AZTEC nAA<lb/>
VJMO BARTERED THE<lb/>
BOOK TO DEMONS<lb/>
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1A) 00 UHDER5TAN0 THAT I COOLON T<lb/>
W5K YOU TELLING ANYONE DON T<lb/>
yOU. hACV ANO STOP JWTAA<lb/>
AAlftOYlUG GUf&amp;UNGJ AAi?P<lb/>
to supc yrxM WWD Pipe So<lb/>
ACRE'S MO USB TRYING- TO<lb/>
SCAEAH<lb/>
Harris and Gurganus<lb/>
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SsaA<lb/>
TuCOM IMPtlSOMfD. I SSfflBSSSie<lb/>
tammDBLGCCiM3D xgtr OREUS<lb/>
WHO RECOVERED THE COOK Ht AGREED<lb/>
TO DOOW-E CROSS 7THEM AW ??TVW<lb/>
TOME WITH ITS POWER <lb/>
r ir-?r<lb/>
,w WEEK tTie<lb/>
FINAL'eFISODC Qf THE<lb/>
YEAR.<lb/>
MAV0E FOREVER.<lb/>
OON'T MISS ITU!<lb/>
ax:<lb/>
 .?ENTS CAN OHW<lb/>
EMTER THE OUTSIDE.<lb/>
UORLD THROUGHTUt<lb/>
PURE irfctMAriOH<lb/>
OF MBN. YOU MUST<lb/>
CONCEVTRATg<lb/>
TW?<lb/>
Pirate<lb/>
COMICS<lb/>
iPf-i?i Taun ? SdFSr?Tffr srfve ne<lb/>
<pb facs="00058139_0015"/><lb/>
;<lb/>
<lb/>
rHE EAST CARCH INI AN<lb/>
Sports<lb/>
APRIL 13, 1989 PAGE 12<lb/>
Winnina streak ends<lb/>
Errors plague Pirates in loss<lb/>
By CHRIS SIEGEL<lb/>
Sports I iiiHr<lb/>
In ,1 game plagued by errors,<lb/>
ECU dropped its t i rst game in over<lb/>
three weeks. The Pirates lost a hard<lb/>
fought struggle to Virginia, 3-2.<lb/>
The loss brought to end the Pi-<lb/>
rates 15 game winning streak, the<lb/>
longest in school history.<lb/>
ECU made four miseues in<lb/>
the field that led to two unearned<lb/>
runs, which was the deciding fac-<lb/>
tor in the Virginia win. Virginia<lb/>
also got a solid pitching perform-<lb/>
ance from Keith Seikr. Seiler<lb/>
pitched a complete game, giving<lb/>
up only two runs on five hits. I le<lb/>
struck out 10 while only walking<lb/>
one.<lb/>
Sophoi ?nsation lohn<lb/>
White took hi irst loss oi the<lb/>
season coming in relief. White<lb/>
pitched ton' ? gs, giving up<lb/>
two hits and striking out five.<lb/>
White gave up no earned runs,<lb/>
but two unearned runs scored<lb/>
while he was on the mound. The<lb/>
two unearned runs pushed the<lb/>
score to 3-2, and collared White<lb/>
with the loss. White now has a 6-1<lb/>
record on the season, and since<lb/>
the runs were unearned, White<lb/>
still has a 0.00 ERA.<lb/>
One bright spot for the Pirates<lb/>
was their continued power from<lb/>
the plate. Of the five hits the Pi-<lb/>
rates collected against the Cava-<lb/>
liers, two oi them were round trip-<lb/>
the bottom of the eighth. The Pi-<lb/>
rates tried to come back, but could<lb/>
only come up with one run in the<lb/>
top of the ninth to make the final<lb/>
score 3-2.<lb/>
With the loss, the series be-<lb/>
tween the two schools became<lb/>
even closer. ECU still holds a slight<lb/>
lead over the Cavaliers, 13-11.<lb/>
Virginia also beat the Pirates in<lb/>
1988,6-5.<lb/>
The loss moved the Pirates to<lb/>
25-3 on the season. ECU will be<lb/>
back in action this weekend in a<lb/>
series with rival UNC-Wilming-<lb/>
pers. Freshman Tommy Eason hit ton. The three-game series with<lb/>
a solo shot for the Pirates and John<lb/>
Cast collected his seventh home<lb/>
run oi the season. That pushes the<lb/>
team total to 31 home runs.<lb/>
Virginia started the scoring<lb/>
bv putting a run up in the first<lb/>
the Seaha wks will be for the league<lb/>
championship. ECU enters the<lb/>
weekend series with an 11-1 mark<lb/>
in the CAA, while the Seahawks<lb/>
are 12-0. Whoever wins two of the<lb/>
three games this weekend will be<lb/>
But in Wednes-<lb/>
U the game, as they<lb/>
inning. ECU came back to tie the theCAA regular season champion<lb/>
score by pushing a run across in and the first seed in the CA A tour-<lb/>
the eighth, but Virginia took the nament to be held at Wilmington<lb/>
lead for good by talking two in on May 12-15.<lb/>
In earlier action, Steve Godin hauls this one in as teammate Kevin Riggs watches,<lb/>
day's action against Virginia, the fielding wasn't quite as easy. Four errors cost EC<lb/>
were defeated bv the Cavaliers, 3-2 (Photo by J.D. Whitmire, ECU Photo Lab).<lb/>
Battle of North Carolina<lb/>
ECU battles Seahawks for title<lb/>
By CHRIS SIEGEL<lb/>
Sport Fditor<lb/>
Graduate assistant Dean Ehehalt prepares the field for the Pirates in a game played at Harrington<lb/>
Field this season. The fieU and the Pirates will be ready for the Seahawks who invade Greenville<lb/>
this weekend (Photo bv J.D. Whitmire, ECU Photo Lab).<lb/>
East Carolina squares off<lb/>
against UNC-Wilmington this<lb/>
weekend and the three-game se-<lb/>
ries will hold more than just the<lb/>
usual rivalry. The Pirates and<lb/>
Seahawks will be meeting for the<lb/>
Colonial Athletic Association<lb/>
regular season title.<lb/>
The Pirates enter the week-<lb/>
end action with a 11-1 mark in the<lb/>
CAA and a record of 25-2 overall.<lb/>
While Wilmington enters the cru-<lb/>
cial series with an unblemished<lb/>
12-0 mark in conference and an<lb/>
overall record oi 20-9. Hie team<lb/>
that wins two oi the three games<lb/>
will be the regular season cham-<lb/>
pion oi the CAA and will be the<lb/>
first seed in theCAATournament.<lb/>
ECU enters this weekend lead-<lb/>
ing the CAA in both batting and<lb/>
pitching. The Pirates have a team<lb/>
batting average of .299, which is a<lb/>
full 20 points higher than James<lb/>
Madison. ECU has also shelled<lb/>
opposition pitchers for 29 home<lb/>
runs, which leads the conference<lb/>
Calvin Brown and John Gast lead<lb/>
the Pirates in the dinger category,<lb/>
hitting nine and six home runs<lb/>
repectivelv. To go with all that<lb/>
power, Brown is second in the<lb/>
CAA in batting average hitting<lb/>
.407 for the season and leads the<lb/>
league in runs batted in, knocking<lb/>
in 36. The Pirates have four other<lb/>
hitters in the top 19 in batting in<lb/>
the CAA.<lb/>
In pitching, the Pirates claim<lb/>
the best ERA in the conference.<lb/>
The Pirate team ERA is a dazzling<lb/>
2.29, more than a point and a halt<lb/>
better than James Madison. Jon-<lb/>
athan Jenkins leads theconference<lb/>
in ERA and wins : i per-<lb/>
fect 8-0 mark and a .43 ERA. ohn<lb/>
White and Jake Jacol are in<lb/>
the top five in victories with marks<lb/>
oi 6-0 and 5-0 repe' bs<lb/>
and 1 mi Langdon rank sixth ai<lb/>
11 thin ERA<lb/>
ECL has faced i fi igainsl the<lb/>
Seahawks 54 times in Pirate base<lb/>
ball historv Wilmington holds a<lb/>
slight advatnj ? r the I<lb/>
with a record oi 29-25. In their last<lb/>
meeting, the Pi rati byascore<lb/>
ot 4. In th<lb/>
1988, Wilmington kr kedoffi<lb/>
Pirates V 5<lb/>
1 he gar<lb/>
Saturday and Sui<lb/>
will sec the Piratt sand<lb/>
square of! in a doublcheader be-<lb/>
ginning at 6 p.m. and Sunday v<lb/>
be a single g inn<lb/>
The games v<lb/>
1 larrington Field.<lb/>
Ex-ECU Coach Odom and ACC look to recruit<lb/>
(AP) - - Wake Forest basket-<lb/>
ball coach Dave Odom has just<lb/>
one grant to give, and he wants to<lb/>
make sure if he's going to use it,<lb/>
that he'll get that one blue-chip<lb/>
athlete that could help him right<lb/>
away.<lb/>
1 have giv en some thought to<lb/>
recruiting Odom said, "but right<lb/>
now my major c: rteem is the play-<lb/>
ers who are on the team. After<lb/>
evaluating them, 1 feel very good.<lb/>
I don't think we have to rush out<lb/>
and sign someone just to fill the<lb/>
15th spot on the roster.<lb/>
"But that's not to say 1<lb/>
wouldn't take a backup point<lb/>
guard, if 1 can find one, or a 6-10<lb/>
center who would help us inside<lb/>
he said.<lb/>
Everyone in the Atlantic Coast<lb/>
Conference, and across the nation<lb/>
as well, will be looking for that<lb/>
special player today as the NCAA<lb/>
opens its spring signing period.<lb/>
Odom said he knows of Tim<lb/>
Shaw, the 6-foot-4 guard from<lb/>
South View High School in Hope<lb/>
Mills who had been offered a grant<lb/>
by Bob Staak, the former Wake<lb/>
Forest coach. Odom said that he<lb/>
wanted to look into the situation<lb/>
before deciding on Shaw.<lb/>
North Carolina coach Dean<lb/>
Smith, who has signed two play-<lb/>
ers and received a commitment<lb/>
from a third, says he wants as<lb/>
many as three more players. He is<lb/>
concentrating on the frontcourt,<lb/>
and the object of his attention is<lb/>
Kevin Sal vadori, a 6-11 center from<lb/>
Pittsburgh.<lb/>
Salvadori is the son of Al Sal-<lb/>
vadori, who played at South Caro-<lb/>
lina from 1965-67. He helped Scion<lb/>
LaSalle High School to a 32-6 rec-<lb/>
ord in 1988 and the state Class 3-A<lb/>
championship, but drew only<lb/>
meager recruiting interest in tne<lb/>
fall because he is underdeveloped.<lb/>
1 le weighs only 200 pounds and<lb/>
has just turned 17.<lb/>
Salvadori didn't turn a lot of<lb/>
heaps, according to Seton LaSalle<lb/>
athletic director Chuck Rutter,<lb/>
See RECRUITING, page 13<lb/>
Pirate's Booty<lb/>
The Olympic Games:<lb/>
Amateurs or Pros?<lb/>
Bv CHRIS SIEGEL<lb/>
ti Editor<lb/>
This ruling has now opened the<lb/>
door to making the Olympics<lb/>
nothing but another arena for<lb/>
professional athletes to show their<lb/>
? stuff<lb/>
On Friday, April 7, theOlym- Through the years, the Olym-<lb/>
pic Games underwent a change pics have been oneof the last major<lb/>
that could bring the end to ama- events in which US amateur ath-<lb/>
teur status of the Games. The in- letes could compete. Now these<lb/>
temational basketball federation, athletes will be taking a back seat<lb/>
FIBA, mled m favor of allowing to professionals once again. Bas-<lb/>
professional basketball players to ketball may not be the first sport<lb/>
participate in all of its tourna- to allow pros in, but it is one of the<lb/>
ments, including the Olympics most noticeable. Tennis, an Olym-<lb/>
and the World Championships. pic exhibition sport, also allows<lb/>
After years of crying about professionals to compete,<lb/>
having to compete against coun- I don't deny the fact that the<lb/>
tries who plav athletes of a profes- competition we have been com-<lb/>
sional level, the United States will peting against in recent years is<lb/>
nowbeable to play itsbestplayers tough. In fact I'd go as far to say<lb/>
in the Olympics. No longer will that we have been competing<lb/>
.ve be limited to just college ath- against professionals for years. But<lb/>
letes. The NBA will be able to the nature of the Olympics, from<lb/>
supply its best players to assure<lb/>
the United States a huge advan-<lb/>
tage over the rest of the competi-<lb/>
tion.<lb/>
What does the ruling mean in<lb/>
the United States perspective, was<lb/>
for it to be an amateur competi-<lb/>
tion. This ruling endangers not<lb/>
onlv the reputation but the integ-<lb/>
rity of one of the world's most<lb/>
terms of Olvmpic competition? It respected athletic competitions,<lb/>
means t' z losses that the United There is some hope. At least<lb/>
States sfered against the Soviet the NBA is not all excited over the<lb/>
Union in 1972 and 1988 won't be ruling. In a survey done by the<lb/>
repeated. Dave Gavitt, veteran Associated Press, 63 percent of<lb/>
coach and president of the USA NBA players surveyed favored<lb/>
Amateur Basketball Association, open eligibilty and only 58 per-<lb/>
summed it up best when he said, CCnt said they would be willing to<lb/>
"Inallmyyearsofcoachingldon't piav. tWo of those noticably ab-<lb/>
think I've guaranteed many wins, sent from the list of players in<lb/>
but I feel safe with this one favor were Isiah Thomas and Larry<lb/>
The ruling opens up a very Bird,<lb/>
touchy question ? are the Olym- Many of the NBA All-Stars<lb/>
pics for professionalsor amateurs? WCre willing to compete in Barce-<lb/>
The nature of the Olympics was to 0na in 1992. With a possible start-<lb/>
pit the best amateur athletes from ing lineup of Karl Malone of Utah,<lb/>
around the world in competition. Charles Barkley of Philadelphia,<lb/>
Patrick Ewingof New York, Magic<lb/>
Johnson of the Los Angeles Lak-<lb/>
ers and Clyde Drexler of Portland,<lb/>
what would be the use of the<lb/>
competition showing up? The<lb/>
United States, for the most part,<lb/>
has dominated w orld competition<lb/>
with its college players, why<lb/>
bother completely humiliating the<lb/>
rest of the world by using profes-<lb/>
sionals?<lb/>
The 1988 loss to the Soviet<lb/>
Union was not necessarily due to<lb/>
a lower level of talent. I believe the<lb/>
Soviets were fired-up and were<lb/>
on a roll which made it difficult<lb/>
for the Americans to stop them.<lb/>
There has also been some discus-<lb/>
sion that Olympic coach John Th-<lb/>
ompson was out-coached. What-<lb/>
ever the case, there is no doubt in<lb/>
my mind the United States had<lb/>
superior athletes. Just take a look<lb/>
at the members of the team Th-<lb/>
ompson took to Seoul. Players<lb/>
such as J.R. Reid, "Bimbo" Coles,<lb/>
and Charles Smith (who was the<lb/>
Big East Player of the Year) were<lb/>
on the 1988 team. Players like that<lb/>
will be NBA stars and there is no<lb/>
doubt that they have more basket-<lb/>
ball talent than 90 percent of the<lb/>
international players they compete<lb/>
against.<lb/>
Recent history proves that the<lb/>
Americans have dominated the<lb/>
world in basketball. They have<lb/>
done it for years without the aid of<lb/>
professional players, why no w has<lb/>
it become so important to include<lb/>
the pros? Does losing one gold<lb/>
medal make that much of a differ-<lb/>
ence that it costs the amateur ath-<lb/>
letes their chance to compete?<lb/>
Another factor the FIBA needs<lb/>
to realize is that this ruling now<lb/>
opens up all events to profession-<lb/>
als. With baseball now being part<lb/>
oi the Olympics, are we going to<lb/>
take our Major League Baseball<lb/>
All-Stars to compete? Are the<lb/>
National Hockey League stars, like<lb/>
Wayne Gretzky, going to be able<lb/>
to compete? What about all the<lb/>
professional skiers and ice skat-<lb/>
ers? The United States has done<lb/>
well in Olympic competition with<lb/>
its amateurs and has set an ex<lb/>
ample for the rest of the world<lb/>
While they may use athletes con-j<lb/>
sidered to be pros in our eyes, we!<lb/>
have continually fielded teams<lb/>
with amateur athletes. Now wej<lb/>
are doing just what the rest of the<lb/>
world has been doing and what<lb/>
we have been complaining about.<lb/>
I want to see the United States<lb/>
win gold medals just as much as<lb/>
everyone else, but I would like to<lb/>
see us stick to our initial goal of<lb/>
doing it with amateurs. I hope<lb/>
that the ruling is limi ted to basket-<lb/>
ball and that the rest of the Olym-<lb/>
pic Games be saved for amateurs.<lb/>
I hope also that if the United States<lb/>
finds it easy-going in world com-<lb/>
petition in basketball, that the FIBA<lb/>
considers reversing their decision.<lb/>
There are many different ways<lb/>
that this ruling could possibly<lb/>
effect the Olympics. I pray that the<lb/>
one fear some people have does<lb/>
not come true ? that the Olym-<lb/>
pics become just another profes-<lb/>
sional showcase. Let's keep the<lb/>
Olympics what it should be ? an<lb/>
athletic competition in the spirit<lb/>
of good will among all the coun-<lb/>
tries of the world.<lb/>
? UL<lb/>
Sophomore John Maginnes led the Pirates to an 11th place finish in<lb/>
the Tar Heel Intercollegiate tournament. The team will travel to Hot<lb/>
Springs, VA, this weekend to try to defend their CAA title (Photo<lb/>
by Lori Martin).<lb/>
ECU Golfers<lb/>
third straight<lb/>
The Pirate golfers had their<lb/>
third disappointing finish this<lb/>
season with an 11 th place stand-<lb/>
ing in the Tar Heel Invitational<lb/>
April 8-9.<lb/>
The team took 11 th place out<lb/>
of the 14 teams participating in the<lb/>
tournament. With a two-round<lb/>
total of 781, the Pirates finished 32<lb/>
strokes over the first place team<lb/>
from Duke University.<lb/>
NCSU came in second with a<lb/>
total of 738, and UNC-CH rallied<lb/>
for a third place finish with a 739<lb/>
total.<lb/>
In the individual standings,<lb/>
ECU'S John McGinnis led the Pi-<lb/>
rates with a two-day score of 152.<lb/>
Shooting 158, Francis Vaughn, Tee<lb/>
Davies and Greg Powell tied for<lb/>
second place in the team scores.<lb/>
Duke's John Karcher won the<lb/>
?o for<lb/>
CAA title<lb/>
tourney with a score oi 1;<lb/>
The Pirate golfers play their<lb/>
last tournament of the season April<lb/>
13-1 The team will travel to Hot<lb/>
Springs. Va. to defend their title as<lb/>
two-time Colonial Athletic Asso-<lb/>
ciation conference champions.<lb/>
'Wo had one bad finish at<lb/>
Duke, and after that we lost alot of<lb/>
confidence Coach Hal Morrison<lb/>
said.<lb/>
According to Morrison,<lb/>
McGinnes and Davies have suf-<lb/>
fered back injuries which have<lb/>
effected their games; however,<lb/>
both golfers will be playing in the<lb/>
conference tournament this week-<lb/>
end.<lb/>
Morrison said the Pirates'<lb/>
toughest competition will come<lb/>
from the University of Richmond.<lb/>
Y<lb/>
<pb facs="00058139_0016"/><lb/>
I<lb/>
THE EAST CAROLINIAN<lb/>
APRIL 13,1989 13<lb/>
i<lb/>
Odds against them<lb/>
Lady Pirates to face<lb/>
The Lady Pirate's tennis sea-<lb/>
son is coming to a close. Today the<lb/>
ladies are in Harrisonburg, VA to<lb/>
compete in the CAA tournament.<lb/>
There they will be up against such<lb/>
opposition as William and Mary<lb/>
and Richmond University.<lb/>
Assistant coach Lynn Gorski<lb/>
said, "Our big focus at'the confer-<lb/>
ence will be on our doubles teams.<lb/>
I expect them to be highly com-<lb/>
tough competition<lb/>
petitivc, with a strong perform-<lb/>
ance coming from the team of Ellen<lb/>
Harrcll and Susan Mattocks<lb/>
Gorski continued, "1 would<lb/>
like to sec the girls go out and do<lb/>
their best and 1 want them to enjoy<lb/>
themselves. Since this will be the<lb/>
last vcar for Hollv Murrav, Susan<lb/>
Mattocks, and Ellen Harrell, 1 want<lb/>
them to leave on a good note, and<lb/>
I want our returninc olavers to<lb/>
acquire some valuable experience<lb/>
for next year<lb/>
Reflecting on this season, the<lb/>
girls have had some bad breaks,<lb/>
being hindered constantly by poor<lb/>
weather. Gorski continued, "It has<lb/>
been a hard season, contributed to<lb/>
by the lack of time for develop-<lb/>
ment. I was impressed though by<lb/>
how hard the team worked, and<lb/>
the way our doubles teams have<lb/>
pulled together<lb/>
Despite theoddsagainst them,<lb/>
the Lady Pirates played the best<lb/>
they could, winning some strong<lb/>
games. Although they accepted a<lb/>
few losses, the ladies did give some<lb/>
strong opposition, showing their<lb/>
true fighting Pirate spirit, v ? . wish<lb/>
them luck this weekend at t) econ-<lb/>
ference.<lb/>
ACC recruiting<lb/>
Continued from page 12<lb/>
until he averaged 18 points, 11<lb/>
rebounds and 12 blocks a last<lb/>
season. He helped the team to a<lb/>
26-7 record and the Western Penn-<lb/>
sylvania regional championship.<lb/>
South Carolina, North Caro-<lb/>
lina State, Nevada-Las Vegas,<lb/>
Temple and Texas are recruiting<lb/>
Salvadori, Rutter said, but Salva-<lb/>
dor! isn't close to making a deci- <lb/>
sion.<lb/>
"The poor kid's head is spin-<lb/>
ning Rutter said. "He and his<lb/>
family are trying to sort out things<lb/>
and see what's best for him. 1<lb/>
talked to him (Monday), and he<lb/>
said he was not ready to get down<lb/>
and commit<lb/>
The Tar Heels and Virginia<lb/>
are in the final decision of George<lb/>
Lynch, a 6-7 forward from<lb/>
Roanoke, Va via Flint Hill Prep<lb/>
School in Oakton, Va. Lynch vis-<lb/>
ited North Carolina last weekend<lb/>
and is scheduled to visit Virginia<lb/>
this weekend.<lb/>
North Carolina is also look-<lb/>
ing at Douglas Edwards, a 6-9<lb/>
forward from Miami. N.C. State<lb/>
remains in the hunt for Edwards,<lb/>
along with Louisville, Florida, and<lb/>
Florida State. Edwards will proba-<lb/>
bly not make his decision until<lb/>
May, according to Shakey Ro-<lb/>
driguez, his high school coach.<lb/>
N.C. State signed five players<lb/>
in the fall, and hasone grant left. If<lb/>
it misses on Edwards, it might<lb/>
land CraigTyson, a6-4 guard from<lb/>
Baltimore, Md. The Wolfpack did<lb/>
lose 6-3 Jerome McDuffie of<lb/>
Barnwell, S.C, who committed to<lb/>
Jacksonville and followed in his<lb/>
brother's footsteps.<lb/>
Clemson received two com-<lb/>
mitments Tuesday, signing Larry<lb/>
McCloud, a 7-foot center from<lb/>
Anderson Junior College in An-<lb/>
derson, S.C, and Sean Lastinger, a<lb/>
6-1 point guard from high school<lb/>
in Atlanta.<lb/>
Virginia hopes to sign 6-4<lb/>
wing guard Chris Havlicek of<lb/>
Dedham. Mass and 6-1 point<lb/>
guard Doug Smith of Fayetteville,<lb/>
Term today. Both committed last<lb/>
week, giving the Cavaliers five<lb/>
players.<lb/>
The Cavaliers landed Shawn<lb/>
Wilson, a 6-10 forward fromNash-<lb/>
ville, Tenn in the fall, and will<lb/>
have 6-2 Terry Kirby next season.<lb/>
Kirby has signed a football grant<lb/>
but says that he wants to play<lb/>
basketball in college also.<lb/>
Virginia also has a commit-<lb/>
ment from Cornel Parker, a 6-7<lb/>
forward from Norfolk, Va but he<lb/>
is still attempting to meet the<lb/>
NCAA's minimum academic stan-<lb/>
dards. He has not made 700 on the<lb/>
college board examination in six<lb/>
tries and has only two attempts<lb/>
left.<lb/>
Duke and Georgia Tech are<lb/>
the only ACC teams that are not<lb/>
expected to sign any players. They<lb/>
finished their recruiting in the fall.<lb/>
Goes down swingine<lb/>
Rose Jr. makes pro debut<lb/>
DURHAM (AP) ? Pete Rose<lb/>
Jr. says he doesn't plan on living<lb/>
off his father's career as he tours<lb/>
the Carolina League.<lb/>
"My dad is not going to play.<lb/>
It's me out there he told The<lb/>
News and Observer of Raleigh.<lb/>
That's the way I want it, from<lb/>
here on out, the rest of my career<lb/>
Rose is playing for the Freder-<lb/>
ick Keys of the Carolina League,<lb/>
who began their season last week<lb/>
against the Durham Bulls.<lb/>
The older Rose hustled his<lb/>
way to a major-league record 4,256<lb/>
hits and now manages the Cincin-<lb/>
nati Reds. When he hit the single<lb/>
that put him ahead of Tv Cobb on<lb/>
the all-time hit list, first out of the<lb/>
dugout was a 15-year-old batbov<lb/>
for the Reds - Pete Rose jr.<lb/>
"That was a great moment for<lb/>
me and my dad Rose said. "I<lb/>
can't describe it<lb/>
It's a record that he'll never<lb/>
chase, he said Sunday.<lb/>
"I'm never going tobreak that<lb/>
record; it's too many damn hits<lb/>
Rose said smiling.<lb/>
To save himself further prob-<lb/>
lems with being compared with<lb/>
his father, he aked for uniform<lb/>
No. 21, not the No. 14 that his<lb/>
father made famous.<lb/>
"The Orioles tried to give No.<lb/>
14 to me, but ! didn't want it he<lb/>
said. "I'm not my dad. I'm a hus-<lb/>
tler, and I'm going to give 110<lb/>
percent, but I want to have my<lb/>
own identity<lb/>
As the son oi a legend, Rose<lb/>
gets more than his share of heck-<lb/>
ling.<lb/>
"I've been hearing it since I've<lb/>
been a Little League piaver Rose<lb/>
said. "But I just try to thrive on it<lb/>
Rose was drafted in the 12th<lb/>
round last year bv the Baltimore<lb/>
Orioles out of high school in Cin-<lb/>
cinnati. He was expected to be<lb/>
drafted earlier, but teams passed<lb/>
on the vounger Rose because thev<lb/>
assumed that the Reds were going<lb/>
to make the pick.<lb/>
When Rose couldn't reach an<lb/>
agreement with Baltimore, he<lb/>
played American Legion baseball<lb/>
and helped lead his team to the<lb/>
national championship. He signed<lb/>
with the Orioles Sept. 1 and went<lb/>
to the instructional league during<lb/>
the winter.<lb/>
Prior to Sundav's debut, Rose<lb/>
admitted being nervous.<lb/>
"Yes, mv stomach hurts. Mv<lb/>
knees are shaking. My first at-bat,<lb/>
I'll probably drop the at. But it's<lb/>
going to be fun.<lb/>
"I'm just going to play hard<lb/>
and trv and hit the ball where it's<lb/>
J<lb/>
pitched. When I don't have fun<lb/>
playing, I'll get out of the game<lb/>
Rose didn't drop his bat. The<lb/>
score book reads "K a swinging<lb/>
strikeout, one of 21 outs in a per-<lb/>
fect game thrown by Durham<lb/>
right-hander Dennis Burlingame.<lb/>
Support<lb/>
Pirate<lb/>
Athletics<lb/>
A BEAUTIFUL PLACE<lb/>
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UNIVERSITY<lb/>
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2899 E. 5th Street<lb/>
(Ask us about our special rates to change leases, and<lb/>
discounts for April rentals)<lb/>
?Located near ECU<lb/>
?Near major Shopping Centers<lb/>
?ECU Bus Service<lb/>
?Onsite laundry<lb/>
Contact J.T. or Tommy Williams<lb/>
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apartments, energy efficient, free water and<lb/>
sewer, optional washers, dryers, cable TV.<lb/>
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MOBILE HOME RENTALS<lb/>
Couples or singles. Apartments and mobile<lb/>
homes in Azalea Gardens near Brook Valley<lb/>
Country Club.<lb/>
Contact J.T. or Tommy Williams<lb/>
756-7815<lb/>
ECU track and ESPN<lb/>
Pirates to air on national TV<lb/>
(SID) ? The East Carolina<lb/>
Pirate track team will make an<lb/>
appearance on national television<lb/>
April 22 when they run in the<lb/>
Tampa Gatorade Track and Field<lb/>
Invitational. ECU will run the400-<lb/>
meter relay against a field that<lb/>
will include teams from Florida<lb/>
State, Florida, Miami (Fla.) and<lb/>
George Mason.<lb/>
The meet will be televised live<lb/>
from 7:30 p.m. to 9 p.m. on ESPN<lb/>
and is part of a Florida state-spon-<lb/>
sored series of meets.<lb/>
The meet will be run in Pepin-<lb/>
Rood Stadium in Tampa, on the<lb/>
same track where All-American<lb/>
Eugene McNeill set his school-<lb/>
record in the 200-meter dash. That<lb/>
time of 20.35 seconds is a Peppin-<lb/>
Rood Stadium as well. McNeill,<lb/>
ECU will travel to Knoxville,<lb/>
Tenn April 14 and 15 for the<lb/>
Dogwood Relays. There, the Pi-<lb/>
rates will run three relay events,<lb/>
intermediate hurdles and 100<lb/>
meters.<lb/>
Brian Irvin, Jon Lee and Kelvin<lb/>
Wrighton will run for the Pirates.<lb/>
Irvin and McNeill will run 200<lb/>
meters, Lee will run the 400-meter<lb/>
dash and Wrighton will sprint in<lb/>
the 100-meter dash, and the four<lb/>
will team together in the relay<lb/>
event.<lb/>
One side note to the upcom-<lb/>
ing Tampa meet, former Pirate Lee<lb/>
McNeill, Eugene's older brother<lb/>
and former ECU All-American,<lb/>
will run unattached in the 100 me-<lb/>
ters.<lb/>
Bo names Fisher coach <lb/>
ANN ARBOR, Mich. (AP) ?<lb/>
America's favorite nobody is the<lb/>
Michigan somebody now.<lb/>
Steve Fisher, a little-known<lb/>
assistant who won the NCAA<lb/>
basketball championship one<lb/>
week earlier, won the Wolverines<lb/>
coaching job Monday on a perma-<lb/>
nent basis.<lb/>
"I went from someone who<lb/>
very few people knew, and even<lb/>
those who knew me, very few<lb/>
knew me well, to one who every-<lb/>
body in America felt they knew<lb/>
Fisher said. "For that, I'm tremen-<lb/>
dously indebted to our players<lb/>
The 44-year-old Fisher took<lb/>
over the team March 15 when<lb/>
Michigan athletic director Bo<lb/>
Schembechler angrily banned Bill<lb/>
Frieder from coaching the team<lb/>
after Frieder accepted a job with<lb/>
Arizona State.<lb/>
The talented Wolverines had<lb/>
finished third in the Big Ten. They<lb/>
responded to the tumultuous situ-<lb/>
ation by winning all six tourna-<lb/>
ment games, including an 80-79<lb/>
overtime victory over Seton Hall<lb/>
for the title in Seattle.<lb/>
"I went to all of those games<lb/>
Schembechler said at a news con-<lb/>
ference Monday during which he<lb/>
confirmed Fisher's appointment.<lb/>
"I watched him operate. I was very<lb/>
much impressed. That was an<lb/>
entirely different team.<lb/>
"They got into tough situ-<lb/>
ations. In past times, those players<lb/>
just wouldn't have responded the<lb/>
way they did<lb/>
"1 know we'll give Bo the kind<lb/>
of program Michigan can be proud<lb/>
of Fisher said. "We will stress<lb/>
winning on the floor. An NCAA<lb/>
title may never happen again, but<lb/>
it won't be from lack of effort<lb/>
Terms of the contract weren't<lb/>
disclosed, but Fisher is expected<lb/>
to receive a one-year contract,<lb/>
which is standard for all Michigan<lb/>
coaches. Fisher probably will be<lb/>
paid about $85,000 a year, but an<lb/>
expected shoe contract worth<lb/>
about $100,000 plus money from<lb/>
basketball campsand radio shows<lb/>
could push Fisher's income to an<lb/>
estimated $450,000 annually.<lb/>
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USE YOUR STUDENT DISCOUNT<lb/>
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An<lb/>
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the<lb/>
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nominies include: "Straight Up-Best Choreography<lb/>
?Parents Just Bon't Understand- Best RapSoul<lb/>
"The Dentist- Best Soundtrack<lb/>
The Right Stuff- Best Male Vocalist<lb/>
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<pb facs="00058139_0017"/><lb/>
!<lb/>
f<lb/>
14<lb/>
TT IE EAST CAROLINIAN<lb/>
APRIL 13,1089<lb/>
Former Seahawk coach makes push<lb/>
Pro football may come to the Carolinas?<lb/>
M ' 1J  , . ?. iiU t-l i ? mv 1 Tf" . ? . ? . . i .  - lw. 1k' w?? ?rvi ja-v r- l I w 1<lb/>
CHARLOTTE (AP) - Mike<lb/>
McCormack sat in the stands at a<lb/>
sold-out Charlotte Hornets bas-<lb/>
ketball game and became con-<lb/>
vinced that the Carolinas will also<lb/>
support an NFL team.<lb/>
"The fans were screaming and<lb/>
nw wife turned to me and shouted<lb/>
'This sounds like Seattle the<lb/>
former Seahawks coach and ex-<lb/>
ecutive said prior to his announce-<lb/>
ment Tuesday that he will join<lb/>
forces with South Carolina busi-<lb/>
nessman lerry Richardson in his<lb/>
bid to bring professional football<lb/>
to the Carolinas.<lb/>
"Jerry showed me the demo-<lb/>
grapnicsof the area and 1 was very<lb/>
impressed McCormack said.<lb/>
1 m enthused. 1 think if wedoour<lb/>
Basketball<lb/>
recruit<lb/>
signed<lb/>
homework, it's very possible that<lb/>
we'll get an NFL franchise<lb/>
McCormack said the NFL<lb/>
"could not find a better expansion<lb/>
market or a more ideal ownership<lb/>
group tor an expansion team.<lb/>
The NBAs Hornets, in their<lb/>
first season, are leading the league<lb/>
in attendance by selling out game<lb/>
after game at the new 23,500-seat<lb/>
CharlotteColiseum. Hornets prin-<lb/>
cipal owner George Shinn also is<lb/>
trving to bring an NFL team to the<lb/>
Charlotte area.<lb/>
Richardson, who played for<lb/>
the NFL's Baltimore Colts, is a<lb/>
native of Raleigh and currently<lb/>
livesinSpartanburg,S.C. He heads<lb/>
TW Services, Inc one of the na-<lb/>
tion's largest food service compa-<lb/>
nies.<lb/>
He said McCormack ? a vet-<lb/>
eran of 32 years in the NFL as a<lb/>
Hall of Fame player, coach and<lb/>
team president ? will be active in<lb/>
all aspects of developing the plan<lb/>
to acquire a franchise. The plan<lb/>
includes the design and construc-<lb/>
tion of a 65,000-seat football sta-<lb/>
dium somewhere in the Charlotte<lb/>
vicinity.<lb/>
"(McCormack) will send a<lb/>
strong signal to the management<lb/>
and ownership of the NFL that we<lb/>
are committed to providing them<lb/>
with every reason to select our<lb/>
market as the first choice among<lb/>
the many national markets com-<lb/>
peting for a franchise Richardson<lb/>
said.<lb/>
THE<lb/>
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Heading for the beach<lb/>
Men to play in Azalea Classic<lb/>
(SID) ? Taro knight, a 6-3<lb/>
point guard from Tarboro, NX <lb/>
has signed a national letter of in-<lb/>
tent to play men's basketball at<lb/>
Fast Carolina University, an-<lb/>
nounced Pirate head coach Mike<lb/>
Steele Wednesday.<lb/>
Knight played last season at<lb/>
Chowan Junior College, where he<lb/>
averaged 7.4 points, 2.1 rebounds<lb/>
and 6.1 assists per game for the<lb/>
Braves. He also shot 4b percent<lb/>
from the floor and 66percent from<lb/>
the free throw line.<lb/>
Knight signed with the Uni-<lb/>
versity of Tennessee after gradu-<lb/>
ating "from Tarboro High in 1987,<lb/>
but never practiced with theVols.<lb/>
As a senior at Tarboro High,<lb/>
knight averaged 19.4 points and<lb/>
5.1 rebounds per game.<lb/>
He was a two-time All-Fast<lb/>
selection in North Carolina and<lb/>
was a two-time Tar-Roanoke 3A<lb/>
A! 1 -Conference choice. Fie also<lb/>
lettered in football at Tarboro<lb/>
High.<lb/>
Knight played just one season<lb/>
at Chowan Junior College and has<lb/>
three years eligibility remaining<lb/>
at East Carolina.<lb/>
The men's tennis team ac-<lb/>
cepted a defeat against James<lb/>
Madison on Saturday, 5-2, and to<lb/>
the University of Virginia, 9-0 on<lb/>
Sundav.<lb/>
In part, the team's losses were<lb/>
contributed toby the weather. Two<lb/>
of the games against James Madi-<lb/>
son were completed outside, but<lb/>
the next five were moved to inside<lb/>
courts.<lb/>
On these factors, Coach Bill<lb/>
Moore commented, "The men<lb/>
were playing well, winning both<lb/>
of the single matches outside, but<lb/>
once the games moved indoors,<lb/>
things changed. The tempos of the<lb/>
games were increased by the fast-<lb/>
paced courts, and James Madison<lb/>
was able to adapt being used to<lb/>
their home courts Moore contin-<lb/>
ued, "In both our matches, against<lb/>
James Madison and the Univer-<lb/>
sity of Va the men were quite<lb/>
competative. Jon McLamb and<lb/>
Andre Morcau,both had good per-<lb/>
formances each day<lb/>
On Friday the men travel to<lb/>
Wilmington to compete in the<lb/>
Azalea Tennis Classic. The tour-<lb/>
nament, which will last through<lb/>
Sunday, will consist of teams from<lb/>
UNC-Wilmington, UNC-Greens-<lb/>
boro and Furman. Moore said, "1<lb/>
expect the team to do well, we<lb/>
defeated most of the teams earlier<lb/>
in the season<lb/>
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<pb facs="00058139_0018"/>
</div></body></text></TEI>