<?xml version="1.0"?><TEI xmlns="http://www.tei-c.org/ns/1.0" xmlns:xsi="http://www.w3.org/2001/XMLSchema-instance" xsi:schemaLocation="http://www.tei-c.org/ns/1.0 http://digital.lib.ecu.edu/tei/xsd/tei_P5.xsd"><teiHeader><fileDesc><titleStmt><title></title><author></author><respStmt><resp>Text encoded by</resp><name>Digital Collections</name></respStmt></titleStmt><publicationStmt><distributor>East Carolina University. J. Y. Joyner Library</distributor><address><addrLine>Digital Collections</addrLine><addrLine>Joyner Library, East Carolina University</addrLine><addrLine>East Fifth Street, Greenville NC 27858-4353 USA</addrLine></address><date>2012</date></publicationStmt><sourceDesc><bibl></bibl></sourceDesc></fileDesc><encodingDesc><samplingDecl><p>All quotation marks retained as data.</p><p>All end-of-line hyphens have been removed, and the trailing part of a word has been joined to the preceding line.</p><p>All smart quotes have been converted into straight quotes.</p></samplingDecl><classDecl><taxonomy xml:id="LCSH"><bibl>Library of Congress Subject Headings</bibl></taxonomy></classDecl></encodingDesc><profileDesc><creation><date></date></creation><langUsage xml:lang="en-US"><language ident="en-US" usage="100">English</language></langUsage><textClass><keywords scheme="#LCSH"><list><item></item></list></keywords></textClass></profileDesc></teiHeader><text><body><div type="other">
<p rend="align(centerbold)">[This text is machine generated and may contain errors.]</p>
<pb facs="00058198_0001"/>
Sire ?ubI (ftamltntan<lb/>
tnmunitif . int r 'V <lb/>
Vol fJ I<lb/>
s.l.n I cImu.hs J ' )l'H<lb/>
i.tthamlm.i<lb/>
( 11. ul.itiMn ; (MK)<lb/>
I' ie? s<lb/>
Senate hopeful visits PCMH neonatal unit<lb/>
H Sjm.inth.i I hompon<lb/>
Pitt schools<lb/>
participate<lb/>
in weather<lb/>
awareness<lb/>
li t ? ?<lb/>
I<lb/>
It 1 1' ? ?' ? ??.??????? ? In U<lb/>
   <lb/>
Med School<lb/>
1 lbjoins national honor society<lb/>
H in<lb/>
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?<lb/>
.<lb/>
1<lb/>
JBP<lb/>
" ? ?,  ?<lb/>
Campus service assists student job-hunters<lb/>
 Brother<lb/>
. i<lb/>
Inside<lb/>
teaching Fallows<lb/>
SETA constitution<lb/>
passed by SGA<lb/>
 s.im.intli.i 1 hompson<lb/>
?  rilr<lb/>
? I ' . ? ? ? '  ?<lb/>
 . . . . , . , . , , '??? ? r' '<lb/>
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. ?? , t. t- fhe croup<lb/>
? ,i Approval ol thru<lb/>
hfufion hi iii- the i .<lb/>
? . ? ?? . - <lb/>
? polifica41 achvi<lb/>
 1 for .111 mvrstH1<lb/>
 ? i ti ifies con<lb/>
? ;rii  (? HTA wB<lb/>
nth t.Min.l innocent t i'I<lb/>
? I ??. I'u' .in m psfig.il' '<lb/>
rnev  m r,tl I ? - vens<lb/>
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?  Mnlr. '<lb/>
? ? ?. ? till questiin<lb/>
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I .IIHtl -r I that tl .  ?<lb/>
w.is in fho pi<lb/>
<lb/>
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animal 1 andr -aid rhis w<lb/>
, l.issih SF i'A ,is .) sex i,i<lb/>
<lb/>
nt he S iA funded I anitn ? I<lb/>
1'hc biaw- o1 th $<lb/>
? nrnrion staff th.it a<lb/>
I ? m ? ??<lb/>
not h- funded h rhe ? <lb/>
( Mtier mi ? <lb/>
said tit thi . ? nfenf v<lb/>
l MO. r '<lb/>
ambit ak, MVHPs that M ! I<lb/>
hum ? I itip<lb/>
Editorial<lb/>
Classit eds  6<lb/>
State and Nation  8<lb/>
Features<lb/>
T1<lb/>
Sports<lb/>
14<lb/>
The Fntprtamer<lb/>
? ?<lb/>
<pb facs="00058198_0002"/><lb/>
(Bift uBt (Saraltman<lb/>
Serving the 'Last Carolina campus community since 1925<lb/>
Vol. 64 No. 15<lb/>
Tuesday, February 27,1990<lb/>
Greenville, North Carolina<lb/>
Circulation 12,000<lb/>
18 Pages<lb/>
Senate hopeful visits PCMH neonatal unit<lb/>
By Samantha Thompson<lb/>
Mail Writer<lb/>
Thirteenth District Attorney<lb/>
Michael Easley, I domocratu<lb/>
hopeful against Jessie Helms in<lb/>
the U S nate race in ll'l(). met<lb/>
with the Pitt County Memorial<lb/>
Hospital president and toured the<lb/>
neonatal unit Monday afternoon<lb/>
fasley's two brother. Oft<lb/>
ItHdy and Kevin fiasley. are in<lb/>
volved in neonatal care at Pitt<lb/>
County Memorial Hospital. After<lb/>
a meeting with hospital president<lb/>
Dave McRae, Bfloy toured the<lb/>
neonatal unit with his brother! 10<lb/>
learn moreabnut prenatal earrand<lb/>
infant mortality<lb/>
"Norm Carolina has the high<lb/>
est infant mortality rate in the<lb/>
country, and we need to learn more<lb/>
on this issue Easley naid Trent<lb/>
tal rare is the biggest problem m<lb/>
this area<lb/>
THeeott Isextremely high for<lb/>
premature babies lor I three<lb/>
pound, premature babv. it COSti<lb/>
1360,000 to care for rhe larger the<lb/>
baby, the less it costs<lb/>
Easley also said ttted rug prob<lb/>
lem is responsible for some ot the<lb/>
Pitt schools<lb/>
participate<lb/>
in weather<lb/>
awareness<lb/>
By Ginnv Robbins<lb/>
 auUVtrilcr <lb/>
infant mortality "People need to<lb/>
understand how serious the drug<lb/>
problem is Easley said. "Thee are<lb/>
.tod iost for cocaine babies is seri-<lb/>
ous<lb/>
Beetey, 19, said his main is-<lb/>
sues during the campaign will<lb/>
include infant mortality and the<lb/>
drug issue, concerning education<lb/>
and treatment for those addicted<lb/>
In his campaign, Easley has<lb/>
planned the strategy to let people<lb/>
know his politics bv getting his<lb/>
name out in Eastern North Caro-<lb/>
lina, yet he wants recognition us-<lb/>
ing his policies, not his name<lb/>
The Southport, North Caro-<lb/>
lina native is known in the 13th<lb/>
Judicial District (Brunswick,<lb/>
Bladen and Columbus counties)<lb/>
for his work combating drug traf-<lb/>
ficking in North Carolina.<lb/>
"The drug dealers arc trying<lb/>
to control the government in this<lb/>
country Easley said. "It is an<lb/>
indication that we need to fight<lb/>
back<lb/>
Easley has testified twice be-<lb/>
fore subcommittees of the U.S.<lb/>
Senate Foreign RclationsCommit-<lb/>
teeregardingdrug trafficking from<lb/>
South America.<lb/>
In his district, Easley and his<lb/>
staff have one of the highest drug<lb/>
prosecution and conviction rates<lb/>
in the state.<lb/>
In January of this year, a man<lb/>
was sentenced to prison for plot-<lb/>
ting to kill Easlcy's family, Easley<lb/>
and two law enforcement officers.<lb/>
Easley said that he had put Lloyd<lb/>
Strickland in jail in 1987 for drug<lb/>
trafficking and Strickland later<lb/>
contracted a man to kill him<lb/>
i<lb/>
vn<lb/>
The week ol Icb 25 to March<lb/>
3 has been proclaimed Severe<lb/>
Weather Awareness Week in<lb/>
North (arotini bv i .ov fim Mar<lb/>
tin<lb/>
The IChOOll In Pitt t ounty ire<lb/>
planning to participate in a state<lb/>
wide tofliado drill to test their<lb/>
preparedness in ease ol lUCfl an<lb/>
emergency The drill is set to be<lb/>
executed on Wednesday, to com<lb/>
cide with the recently proi laimed<lb/>
Severe Weather Awareness Week<lb/>
The drill will test the prepared<lb/>
ness of students as well as school<lb/>
personnel'<lb/>
According to Philip Williams.<lb/>
WNCTTV meteorologist, severe<lb/>
weather for the area begins In<lb/>
March and continues through<lb/>
June, leaving the door open lor<lb/>
several kinds ot severe weather<lb/>
One type ot levere we.u Met<lb/>
that is ol special concern to people<lb/>
in this area is the tornado. The Pitt<lb/>
County area has seen its share of I<lb/>
tornado's destructive winds. In<lb/>
eluding the tornado that hit Pitt<lb/>
County on March 28,1984, leaving<lb/>
eight people kc,i and several<lb/>
Sip Wrathcr, page 2<lb/>
District Attorney and US Senate hopeful Michael Easly discusses the ntgh infant mortality rate in North Carolina with his brothers Drs.<lb/>
Sandy (I) and Kevin (R) I asly at I'm County Memorial I lospital (Photo by Angela Pridgen ? ECU Photo Lab)<lb/>
Campus service assists student job-hunters<lb/>
By Kimbcrly Brothers<lb/>
SIM VV, ?!<lb/>
The ECU Career Planning and<lb/>
Placement Service otters job hunt<lb/>
tug assistance to students who are<lb/>
graduating to the world ol work<lb/>
and to those who are looking tor<lb/>
summer and part-time jobs<lb/>
The service's main concern is<lb/>
helping graduating seniors make<lb/>
the difficult "transition rromedu<lb/>
cation to work" said Purney lames,<lb/>
director of the office, Students ot<lb/>
other classifications can also re<lb/>
ccive assistance in finding sum<lb/>
mer or part-tune jobs as well.<lb/>
The service helps alleviate the<lb/>
extra tune the )ob-findmg process<lb/>
I.ikes bv having contacts with<lb/>
potential employers as well as<lb/>
having students prepare a resume<lb/>
and recommendations ahead of<lb/>
rime<lb/>
I lowever, much of the work<lb/>
m finding . oh has to be done by<lb/>
Students. The career office only<lb/>
gives students suggestions and<lb/>
direction by "working with them<lb/>
and making them aware- ol the<lb/>
career opportunities that.ire avail-<lb/>
able lames continued.<lb/>
According to lames. Career<lb/>
Planning.md Placement's services<lb/>
are "effective for those who choose<lb/>
to use it The office registers 60<lb/>
percent of the seniors each year,<lb/>
and work wift 300to400alumni a<lb/>
year who come back to be assisted<lb/>
with i job change.<lb/>
Also, it a student is interested<lb/>
in finding employment in another<lb/>
location, such as Williamsburg,<lb/>
Va the career office will direct<lb/>
them to a Career Planning and<lb/>
Placement facility In that area<lb/>
Counseling, an information<lb/>
library containing occupational<lb/>
literature, resume workshops and<lb/>
interviewing tips are services the<lb/>
office makes available to students.<lb/>
To obtain this information and<lb/>
assistance, students must register<lb/>
with the service by filling out a<lb/>
registration packet. For seniors, the<lb/>
service suggests registering early<lb/>
their last academic year. Those who<lb/>
do not begin the job search until<lb/>
now or wait until they graduate<lb/>
may "miss a lot of opportunities<lb/>
said James.<lb/>
After registering, a student's<lb/>
file, including a resume and rec-<lb/>
ommendations, can be sent to<lb/>
prospective employers that call the<lb/>
Placement off ice. Studentscan also<lb/>
request that the information be sent<lb/>
to other prospective employers if<lb/>
they provide the service with an<lb/>
employers name and address .<lb/>
Workshop dates and job list-<lb/>
ings are mailed to students upon<lb/>
registration. This way the career<lb/>
office keeps them informed of the<lb/>
opportunities.<lb/>
Only registered students are<lb/>
eligible to have interviews with<lb/>
the recruiters who come to ECU<lb/>
between October and April. The<lb/>
employers also contact the career<lb/>
office when looking for students<lb/>
to fill I particular job opening,<lb/>
James stated.<lb/>
New companies come to ECU<lb/>
to recruit students every year, just<lb/>
as some recruiters stop coming to<lb/>
the campus each year, said James.<lb/>
James added that this year,<lb/>
the service is "having the same<lb/>
amount of recruiting as last year,<lb/>
but the job offers are coming a<lb/>
little slower because the economy<lb/>
is uncertain right now<lb/>
The career office "would like<lb/>
to encourage people to take ad-<lb/>
vantage of (its) services said<lb/>
James. "Let (the office) assist them<lb/>
in trying to make the transition<lb/>
from education to work<lb/>
At the University of North<lb/>
Carolina at Chapel Hill, Easley<lb/>
received his Bachelor of Arts de-<lb/>
gree in Political Science in 1972. In<lb/>
1976, he earned a law degree at<lb/>
NorthCarolinaCentral University<lb/>
of Law.<lb/>
Easly's wife, Mary, is also an<lb/>
attorney.They haveonechild who<lb/>
is four-years-old.<lb/>
Med School<lb/>
joins national<lb/>
honor society<lb/>
By Susan Jernigan<lb/>
Staff Writer<lb/>
The FCU School of Medicine's<lb/>
new honor society inducted 16<lb/>
students, three residents and one<lb/>
faculty member into Alpha Omega<lb/>
Alpha, the nation's only medical<lb/>
honor society on Feb. 27.<lb/>
AOA at epted the ECU School<lb/>
of Medicine as an affiliate in Janu-<lb/>
ary of this year.<lb/>
Comparable to the Phi Beta<lb/>
Kappa honor society at the bacca-<lb/>
laureate level, AOA was organ-<lb/>
ized bv a student at the University<lb/>
(if Illinois College ot Medicine to<lb/>
promote professional responsibil-<lb/>
ity and academic integrity.<lb/>
Leo Hemkot! national presi-<lb/>
dent ot AOA will present the new<lb/>
charter to Dr. lames A. Hallock,<lb/>
dean ot the School ot Medicine.<lb/>
Hallock and a committee of<lb/>
six ECU faculty, who are members<lb/>
of AOA, petitioned the honor soci-<lb/>
ety for a charter at FCU last year.<lb/>
The proposal was coordinated by<lb/>
Dr. James 1 Mathis, chairman and<lb/>
professor ot psychiatric medicine.<lb/>
According to Mathis the bene-<lb/>
fits of being an AOA member in-<lb/>
clude being distinguished as a<lb/>
persondevoted to academic excel-<lb/>
lence and having the opportunity<lb/>
to receive national scholarships.<lb/>
Mathis also said all students will<lb/>
profit from programs sponsored<lb/>
by the society.<lb/>
"AOA helps medical students<lb/>
by opening doors for them said<lb/>
Mathis.<lb/>
Each student-run chapter<lb/>
elects membersas students, gradu-<lb/>
ates or faculty of affiliated schools.<lb/>
The medical students are<lb/>
elected from the third and fourth-<lb/>
vear classes. However, the mem-<lb/>
bers chosen from each class can-<lb/>
not exceed In percent of the num-<lb/>
ber expected to graduate.<lb/>
The ECU'S chapter of AOA<lb/>
has been designated as "Delta of<lb/>
North Carolina<lb/>
SETA constitution<lb/>
passed by SGA<lb/>
Teaching Fellows<lb/>
Front row: (L to R) Teresa Freman (Fr), Pamela Moore (Soph), Teresa Mullen (Soph), Donna Woods<lb/>
(Soph.) Back row. (L to R) Betsy Miller (Fresh), State Rep Howard Chapin, Susan Hu (Soph). Keith<lb/>
Webb (Jr.), Jada Tew (Soph(Photo by Angela Phdoan ? ECU Photo Lab)<lb/>
By Samantha Thompson<lb/>
Suff Writer<lb/>
The Constitution of the Stu-<lb/>
dents for the Ethical Treatment of<lb/>
Animals(SETA) was finally passed<lb/>
through the Student Government<lb/>
Associationin Monday afternoon's<lb/>
meeting.<lb/>
l.ast semester the group was<lb/>
denied approval of their<lb/>
constitution because the legisla-<lb/>
ture was not sure if the group was<lb/>
socially or politically active. The<lb/>
body motioned for an investiga-<lb/>
tion of the group's activities con-<lb/>
cerning a stolen video. SETA was<lb/>
recently found innocent of all<lb/>
charges followingan investigation<lb/>
by Attorney General Brian Stevens.<lb/>
Some members of the legisla-<lb/>
ture opposed Monday's approval<lb/>
of the constitution, still question-<lb/>
ing whether the group is a social<lb/>
action group. Speaker of the House<lb/>
Bob Landry temporarily stepped<lb/>
down as speaker to debate the<lb/>
issue.<lb/>
Landry said that the "key to<lb/>
the whole issue" was in the pre-<lb/>
amble of the SETA'S constitution.<lb/>
Landry referred to the statement<lb/>
 how individual humans can<lb/>
change their actions to benefi t other<lb/>
animals Landry said this would<lb/>
classify SETA as a social action<lb/>
group, and therefore they should<lb/>
not be SGA funded, Landry said.<lb/>
The bylaws of the SGA<lb/>
constitution state that a social or<lb/>
political action organization can-<lb/>
not be funded by the SGA.<lb/>
Other members of the body<lb/>
said that the group's intent was to<lb/>
educate the public, since the pre-<lb/>
amble also states that SETA "is a<lb/>
humane education organization<lb/>
See SGA, page 7<lb/>
Inside<lb/>
Editorial4<lb/>
Budget cuts ?<lb/>
they're bad, but they<lb/>
could be worse<lb/>
Classifieds6<lb/>
State and Nation8<lb/>
Ortega loses elec-<lb/>
tions in Nicaragua<lb/>
Features11<lb/>
Are you a chronic<lb/>
comma-splicer, or are<lb/>
your modifiers dangling?<lb/>
Check out the Writing<lb/>
Center.<lb/>
Sports14<lb/>
Pirates steal double-<lb/>
header from Virgina's<lb/>
Cavaliers<lb/>
The Entertainer<lb/>
Special monthly<lb/>
insert<lb/>
<pb facs="00058198_0003"/><lb/>
?<lb/>
2 The East Carolinian, February 27,1990<lb/>
ECU Briefs<lb/>
Greenvile and ECU set to host N.C.<lb/>
Special Olympics in 1991 and 1992<lb/>
AMondav news conference to announce plans for the 1991 and<lb/>
1992 North Carolina Special Olympics was held at the Willis Building<lb/>
(Regional Development Institute' at ECU At the news conference,<lb/>
Dave Lennox, the executive director ol the Special Olympics, along<lb/>
with ECUofficialsandGreenville Mayoi uu lonkmsdiscussed why<lb/>
Greenville was chosen as the site foi the games ami the economic<lb/>
impact the games will have on the city ol Greenville. Hie Summer<lb/>
Games will involve more than 2,000 athletes, 500 coaches and ,IXX)<lb/>
volunteers and isoneol the largest annual athletic competitions held in<lb/>
North Carolina.<lb/>
ECU Nursing School offers screening<lb/>
ECU nursmg student ad i.uulh w ill be doing health screening .it<lb/>
the two restaurant locations ol Wend s ol Greenville Free blood<lb/>
pressure tests height and w enlit anah sis ision s nening. health risk<lb/>
appraisals, counseling and othei information will be provided b<lb/>
nurses from I 1 a m. to 2 p m on I uesday ad Wednesday I he restau-<lb/>
rants have agreed todonate o percent v t their sales during those hours<lb/>
to the School ot Nursmg<lb/>
HSL shows off high-tech simulators<lb/>
Computers, interactive video machines and related high tech de-<lb/>
vices will be demonstrated lucsda) and Wednesday from 2 to 5 p.m.<lb/>
at the ECU Health Sciences 1 ibran in the Brod) Medical Sciences<lb/>
Building. The event is being held to acquaint students faculty and<lb/>
health professionals with the wide array ol computer software and<lb/>
high-technology equipment being used in the library At2p.m Mr I eo<lb/>
Waivers, assistant professor ol medicine at E( 1 . will discuss how<lb/>
medical instructors combine intera tive ideoand computer programs<lb/>
to simulate real lite work experien? e in the i lassroom.<lb/>
National Campus Clips<lb/>
USC passes policy on homosexuals<lb/>
On Feb. 7, the Student Senate at the 1 niversity of South Carolina<lb/>
passed a resolution that gives homosexuals the same rights as other<lb/>
minorities Ibis will make a statement that I S is against discrimina-<lb/>
tion based on sexual orientation said Vlanish Shrivastava, a Senate<lb/>
Minority Affairs i ommittec nun er I he resolution actually extends<lb/>
the Student Senate's equal opportunity (lauseconcerning minorities to<lb/>
all people regardless ol sexual tendero ies 1 S President lames l fold-<lb/>
erman and the ISC board ol rrustees are to study the resolution for<lb/>
final approval.<lb/>
ASU arrests Batman on drug charges<lb/>
On Feb. 13, Boonc police officers arrested Dr George Alexander<lb/>
Batman ran English kx tuter.it Appalachian State! niversity on drug<lb/>
charges. The charges follow an undeft ov cr i<lb/>
Avery county law enforcement offi ials ai<lb/>
selling oi marijuana, batman who re eived a do toral degree from the<lb/>
University of SouthC arolina, start J t k lung, at ASI in 1987. batman,<lb/>
who has been placed under a $20  secured bond, will go to district<lb/>
court-chi March 5, and ould ha furtl r disciplinary<lb/>
with the university.<lb/>
Greenville considers zoning issues<lb/>
eration b Watauga and<lb/>
iiu hide possession and<lb/>
actions to deal<lb/>
Forum discusses wages at UNC-CH<lb/>
A forum including graduate students, state legislators and univer<lb/>
sitv administrators discussed raising .?: iduate teaching assistants'<lb/>
wagesatl NC-( 11 last ruesday 1 ? tipends are among the lowest<lb/>
in the country, and it is not enough to live in Chapel I hll, said C indy<lb/>
Hahamovitch, the president ofradtiate Students United. "Low<lb/>
stipends and lackol benefits proli ?ng the time it takes to earn a degree<lb/>
she said A speech and communications graduate student, Sibby<lb/>
Anderson stated the graduate students teach many courses and have a<lb/>
lot of responsibilities at UN( c 11 Provost Dennis O'Connor said the<lb/>
university was gome, through a financial t risis ami that the Committee<lb/>
on Instructional Personnel made the de isions on how much money to<lb/>
put into professors'salaries nd I As.<lb/>
Compiled bv Valerie "ouloumbadjian<lb/>
By Elizabeth Moore<lb/>
Staff Writer<lb/>
A large crowd at I'uesdav s<lb/>
Planning and Zoning Commissu mi<lb/>
meeting applauded when I eroy<lb/>
Cherry withdrew his request to<lb/>
reone two tracts of land<lb/>
Cherry, owner of Pitt Proper<lb/>
ties Inc withdrew his request to<lb/>
reone one tract ol land located of!<lb/>
the northern right-of way of<lb/>
County I lome Road and the other<lb/>
tract west ot Camelot subdivision<lb/>
no south of the Ranter's Walk<lb/>
development.<lb/>
The origin.il request was to<lb/>
rezone more than 38 acres from<lb/>
residential and agricultural zon<lb/>
mg to single family and high<lb/>
density residential<lb/>
Residents of Camelot v heirs<lb/>
Oaks and Planter's Walk subdri i<lb/>
sions opposed the request saying<lb/>
that re zoning would allow devel<lb/>
opment of approximately 300<lb/>
homes in an area which could not<lb/>
accommodate that amount of<lb/>
growth.<lb/>
Cherry withdrew his request<lb/>
Weather<lb/>
others) muted 1 hctornadocai ved<lb/>
a path of destruction from Ayden<lb/>
to Simpson<lb/>
According to Williams, in svl<lb/>
the area faced 24 tornadoes, twi e<lb/>
the normal a erage Pitt . ounty<lb/>
was under wat hjusta few months<lb/>
ago. while ohnston County hail a<lb/>
tornado watt h and warning only<lb/>
last week<lb/>
Williams stresses the impor<lb/>
tanceof the public's awareness (?t<lb/>
the significant difference betw een<lb/>
a weather watch and a weather<lb/>
warning 1 or example, a tornado<lb/>
watch means the possibility ol a<lb/>
tornado exists, that is. weather<lb/>
conditionsare such that they could<lb/>
spawn a tornado. 'About 40 per<lb/>
centol watt hesaren't needed.but<lb/>
it's better to be sate than sorry<lb/>
Williams says<lb/>
A tomado warning on the<lb/>
other hand, is issued when a tor<lb/>
rrado ha been spotted by die<lb/>
public or when one is wdu a ted on<lb/>
radar<lb/>
I here are several signs to look<lb/>
tot in the event ol a coming tor<lb/>
nado. Williams said Main<lb/>
people's ears may pop vine to the<lb/>
rapid pressure change, and many<lb/>
mas hear what resembles the<lb/>
sound ot a tram approaching.<lb/>
According to Williams, 'hail is a<lb/>
pretty good sign ol a tornado<lb/>
approaching<lb/>
According to Williams the<lb/>
biggest mi sci incept ion ot tornado<lb/>
whin Commission Chairman<lb/>
Steve blades suggested th.it his<lb/>
request be re submitted as a<lb/>
planned unit development which<lb/>
would give the otv more control<lb/>
m future development ol the area<lb/>
I he i ommission also ap<lb/>
proved a preliminary plat ot an<lb/>
apartment complex south ol<lb/>
rezone a 1.37-acre tract in the Bell's<lb/>
fork area from Office and Institu-<lb/>
tional (O&amp;I) to Commercial Shop<lb/>
ping (CSV<lb/>
Bruce Frve, chairman ot the<lb/>
subcommittee studying the med i<lb/>
cal district, recommended that<lb/>
therebenorezoningof any land in<lb/>
that area until an outlying ol tu<lb/>
Brownlea Drive and north ol tuns plans can bo submitted by<lb/>
I ourth Street 1 his would enable Pittountv Memorial 1 lospital.<lb/>
Wesley Commons developers to An amendment request by<lb/>
begin construction Eileen and Howard Shokler al<lb/>
The proposed thoroughfare lowing "bed and breakfast inns'<lb/>
plan as it affe ts Brownlea 1 Hive to bo placed in residential neigh<lb/>
was an issue atl.ii ked In Mu hael borhoods was accepted<lb/>
i able, president ol the I Iniversity<lb/>
Neighborhood Association He<lb/>
said the thoroughfare would ere<lb/>
ate unwanted noise and trattu in<lb/>
the neighborhood and become a<lb/>
safety hazard to the students of<lb/>
Wahl oates i al 5 hool<lb/>
It w as ot ommended that the<lb/>
hoard approve the preliminary<lb/>
plat, but refrain from making a<lb/>
de ision on the proposed<lb/>
brow nlea ! )rive extension<lb/>
The commission denied a<lb/>
request by I 'on Southeiland to<lb/>
t ontinued from page l<lb/>
The bed and breakfast inns<lb/>
meet the requirements ol the<lb/>
commission and would appear<lb/>
before the board ol Adjustment to<lb/>
receive a special use permit.<lb/>
In other busines th?- plai<lb/>
ning board a cepted preliminary<lb/>
plats in ommunity Squan n<lb/>
South Square onN.l I ligh wa .<lb/>
11 A preliminary plat of <lb/>
ney Square was i<lb/>
developers to n<lb/>
play ground<lb/>
Ihe commissi n lenied i<lb/>
quests by Spruill ti rez mi<lb/>
aero tr,n t oi land south ol<lb/>
tonsburgRoad from Ml ? I '?'<lb/>
? It de lined to n i : '<lb/>
tract from Ml: " ? ? M I<lb/>
? 29 acre tra I from MS I '?'<lb/>
4<lb/>
I he: I ? '<lb/>
trom I onn Hemb I<lb/>
approxima<lb/>
.<lb/>
medicaldistn<lb/>
northeast<lb/>
le have is opening tin<lb/>
indow s ot a lioie-e t<lb/>
equalize the pie- sun i reated bv<lb/>
ihe coming tornado Williams<lb/>
stresses not to open windows in<lb/>
. i ? ! i tornado because ot the<lb/>
dangei in getting lose to win<lb/>
dow -  Iu h . ould shatter under<lb/>
the ton e ot the w inds<lb/>
I ipsto remember are to get to<lb/>
the l( west level ot a building, lie<lb/>
? i . ? ? Iraw y ?ur knees up<lb/>
undei vou andov er the ba( k ol<lb/>
v our head w ith youi hands.<lb/>
I ornadi ies are not theonly tl i<lb/>
pose.i bv se ere weather accord<lb/>
ing to Williams 1 here are also<lb/>
i ere thunderstorms William<lb/>
said that thunderstorms can pro<lb/>
ducegustsof wind over 100 mile<lb/>
per hour I here are, en an a i r<lb/>
age. 50 thunderstorm day<lb/>
North i an lina<lb/>
She<lb/>
Sa0t<lb/>
'Direc tor of Ad i v rt ising<lb/>
James KJ. McKee<lb/>
Advertising $($presentat<lb/>
11 fes<lb/>
(Earaltman<lb/>
(iuy J. Harvey<lb/>
Shay Sitiinger<lb/>
Adam T. Hlankenship<lb/>
Phillip V.ope<lb/>
kellev O'Connor<lb/>
m<lb/>
per column inch<lb/>
National Rate$5.75<lb/>
Open Rate$4.95<lb/>
Local Open Rate$4.75<lb/>
Hulk &amp; Frequtno Contract<lb/>
Discounts Available<lb/>
 business Hours:<lb/>
Phone:  . . .<lb/>
londa - l-rida<lb/>
757-6366 10:00-5:00 pm<lb/>
'Buyer's<lb/>
UUl<lb/>
ide<lb/>
Crime Report<lb/>
ECU Safety officers assist Greenville<lb/>
police officers in hit and run incident<lb/>
February 22<lb/>
1205- Officers removed three bicy Ies from the railing ol Aycock<lb/>
Residence Hall at the request of the dorm director.<lb/>
2344- Officer issued two slate nations tor underage possession of<lb/>
alcohol.<lb/>
FeJ?ryary 23<lb/>
0358- Officers dispatched to Ay ock in reference to an unknown<lb/>
distubance that turned out to be a female trespasser.<lb/>
1611- Officer responded to ones Resident e I tail in reference to a<lb/>
reported larceny from a vehicle.<lb/>
1938- Officer responded to Fletcher Residence I all in reference to<lb/>
a subject stuck in the elevator. Subject treed from theelevalor.<lb/>
22- Officers responded to C iarrett Residen e I lall in reference to<lb/>
a subject reported to be in possession ol a knife.<lb/>
February 24<lb/>
0142- Officers assisted Greenville Police Department officer on<lb/>
Fifth &amp; larding on hit and run that resulted in a power outage of the<lb/>
same location.<lb/>
0206- An injured non-student .it Tyler Residence Hall was trans-<lb/>
ported to Pitt Community Memorial I lospital by a rescue unit.<lb/>
072- Officer responded to a breaking and entering of an auto at<lb/>
Belk Residence Hall.<lb/>
1341 - Officer responded east ot Sott Residence fall in reference to<lb/>
a hit and run reported<lb/>
1936-Officers responded to the area ot I harIes HI vd and adjoining<lb/>
campus property in reference to a suspicious male and female in the<lb/>
area. Subjects were gone upon arrival.<lb/>
2020-Officer responded toMendenhall Student enter in reference<lb/>
toa water leak in the ceil ingot the billiard room Cause by clogged drain<lb/>
in the Snack Bar<lb/>
Eebniary 23<lb/>
0333- Officers checked out at Fletcher Residence Hall in reference<lb/>
to two unescorted males One subject was banned for second degree<lb/>
trespassing and the other subject received a campus citation.<lb/>
2000- Officer served a criminal summons on a student in Jones<lb/>
Residence Hall for writing worthless checks<lb/>
2040- Officers assisted a rescue unit with a subject at Memorial<lb/>
Gym. The student had hurt his arm and was transported by rescue to<lb/>
PCMH emergency room.<lb/>
The Crime Report is taken from official ECU Public Safety logs<lb/>
NEWS VVRI II RS<lb/>
MEETING<lb/>
TODAY<lb/>
at 5:00<lb/>
at<lb/>
THE EAST<lb/>
CAROLINIAN<lb/>
EMPLOYERS<lb/>
ARE TALKING<lb/>
ABOUT US.<lb/>
Here is what just one busi-<lb/>
ness leader had to sav about<lb/>
civilian career opportunities foi<lb/>
Army alumni:<lb/>
tf<lb/>
Military experience<lb/>
provides many bene-<lb/>
fits for. .graduates<lb/>
that ultimately make:<lb/>
them worthwhile candidates for<lb/>
industrv. I encourage employers<lb/>
to seriously consider.<lb/>
and to employ these<lb/>
yountf people .is we<lb/>
do at Honeywell.<lb/>
W<lb/>
I )r. James J. Reiner<lb/>
Chairman and Chief Executive<lb/>
Officer Honeywell<lb/>
Today, more than evei<lb/>
before, employers are looking foi<lb/>
the skills and personal qualities<lb/>
brought to the marketplace by<lb/>
Army-trained individuals.<lb/>
So, let the Army help you<lb/>
put power in your resume. For<lb/>
more information, see vour local<lb/>
Army Recruiter today.<lb/>
SFC Don W. Wood<lb/>
756-9695<lb/>
ARMY.<lb/>
BE ALL YOU CAN BE.<lb/>
Army756-9695<lb/>
Bacchus757-6793<lb/>
Best Used Tires830-9579<lb/>
Carolina Pregnancy Center355-3473<lb/>
Carolina TelephoneI-800-682-5670<lb/>
Catholic Newman Center757-3760<lb/>
Central Book &amp; News756-7177<lb/>
Council Travel286-4664<lb/>
Dapper Dan's752-1750<lb/>
tosdick's756-2011<lb/>
Gordon's Golf &amp; Ski756-1003<lb/>
Hair Loft355-5980<lb/>
Hillcrest756-2020<lb/>
ITG355-5075<lb/>
Kingston Place758-5393<lb/>
Kroger756-7051<lb/>
Lori's756-6846<lb/>
Mad Hatter758-2306<lb/>
Marsh's355-6080<lb/>
McBudget758-9834<lb/>
New Image Weight Loss756-9558<lb/>
Overton's Sports355-7600<lb/>
Parrot Canvas752-8435<lb/>
Rack Room355-2519<lb/>
Raleigh Women's Health832-0535<lb/>
Real Crisis758-0080<lb/>
Research Information1-800-331-0222<lb/>
Ringgold Towers752-2865<lb/>
SGA757-4726<lb/>
School Of Medicine551-2980<lb/>
Sharky's757-3658<lb/>
Southern Eyes355-7695<lb/>
Student Union757-4715<lb/>
Suntana756-9180<lb/>
Travel Associates756-8240<lb/>
Triangle Women's Health1-800-433-2930<lb/>
f<lb/>
I<lb/>
<pb facs="00058198_0004"/><lb/>
1<lb/>
The hast Carolinian, February 27,1990 3<lb/>
?<lb/>
ECU Faculty Senate discusses enrollment drop<lb/>
By av Ha vert v<lb/>
Stall Writer<lb/>
Ik u'ot tht? mm crsil .iti' 11ini!<lb/>
pnlicationsto ! i 1 till from<lb/>
? and graduate student admissions V,IK' university rhese meetings<lb/>
I t-vpoi t thai total cnrollmenl will s,unv '( l "s diverse program of<lb/>
increase for fall IWO. according ferings and the possibilities lor<lb/>
t.( m :? I- i,?? ??i il 111 academic achievement.<lb/>
cv.1 si a uit Senate con  ' awn.<lb/>
verted for its sixth meeting of the Eaktn also reiterated EC1 s Vice chancellor foT Academk<lb/>
academic year on Feb 20. plan to increase standards foi flairs, Di Marlenc Springer re<lb/>
Chancellor Richard R. Eakin admission to th nrhool even ported on ECU's search for a li<lb/>
reported on the Feb 9 meeting ol though there is ,i det line in appli brary dire tor and a dean for the<lb/>
the Board of Governors At the ??'s To be successful, we need SchoolofArts<lb/>
meeting, I V system presidenl to redouble our efforts to recruit Springet Is reported that a<lb/>
 D Spangler stated that a sys quality students task foreeshottld be established to<lb/>
lr.m  . I I III r lliv-io; irivi?tl li'ok .it till' 'l Pl'i 'I t II 111 t li's of<lb/>
is ni uiilr pl.inniiii; I'ltort was ,v l rcprvMni.iuvi s?in vimi i i<lb/>
,??, i , i ,   (11  ( 1  atoma iii nlr.ul!tion?il liuirnts .il Ml<lb/>
neeucu to injure tho Nstrni s In in, sunoiiiiiiini, s nH?i i ins<lb/>
  , ,  nut Hitrktm R liiih nil( r?nm? I lir n r i h.UH rllor lx'llt' is tll.lt<lb/>
lure sin i i'ss in ,u ,kii 'Hid s I hr I O .mil l Mirn.im. i.ui n.n.in.ii . n i n<lb/>
universities comprising I N will borotodrawstuden! lotheGreen<lb/>
he required fo rev iew and possi<lb/>
b! revise iheir missions in order<lb/>
to insure that the l nivcrsity ol<lb/>
Ntrth arolina will be positioned<lb/>
ti' deal uitli the new challenges<lb/>
t,u nilhit;heredni .ition.it thei lose<lb/>
ol this , enturv and the beginning<lb/>
ol the 21 sicnttirv, .).ordinc to<lb/>
! .iklll<lb/>
Eakin also annoum ed th.it<lb/>
E I has been awarded $<lb/>
forcampuslighfjngimpi ents<lb/>
and .i lotal ol $h00,0fKl tir i apital<lb/>
impriemeiits repairs anil rcno<lb/>
vations tins is M percent ol the<lb/>
total budgeted for the entire sys<lb/>
tern<lb/>
Spangler also mended<lb/>
II f.M its lie; ? men! in <lb/>
? idnatu mi rate ol fo tball pla<lb/>
ers This e.ir 62 percent ?'<lb/>
1983 freshman football i la<lb/>
dted undei the six ear plan<lb/>
? ii i reported on tl<lb/>
lecreas. I i lications t, ' rl<lb/>
( ir, 'Im.i unu ersitii : re.)<lb/>
ted in the i<lb/>
traditional applu ants ba an k<lb/>
the shai p rv.ltii lion in tht -<lb/>
i ii lina fn ?m lW9 to lw i hi<lb/>
di litv in the muni i<lb/>
,? i i i i i'? s will pel<lb/>
through lv,ul whi n<lb/>
? ? ? ,th t ' eradnati<lb/>
at 18-year old campus residents<lb/>
An example would be a change in<lb/>
business office hours to accommo-<lb/>
date those students who work If<lb/>
ereated this task force would .id<lb/>
vise the administration of any<lb/>
changes thai should be imple-<lb/>
mented to aid nontradttional stu<lb/>
dents<lb/>
Dr. John C. Moskop reported<lb/>
to the Faculty Senate on the Fac<lb/>
ultv Assembly meeting held on<lb/>
Feb. 16. At this meeting Spangler<lb/>
reported that N.C. high school<lb/>
students were enrolling in more<lb/>
math, science and Fnglish courses<lb/>
because of stricter admissions stan<lb/>
dards of universities.<lb/>
Dr. Pat Bizzaro, director ol<lb/>
Writing Across the Curriculum,<lb/>
reported hiscommithv'sfindings<lb/>
The Writing Across the (urn- u<lb/>
lum (WA( I committee began<lb/>
studying It U students' writing<lb/>
abilities m 1986. bv 1987 the Writ<lb/>
ing (enter Steering Committci<lb/>
found that "over a four year pe<lb/>
nod. nearly 40 percent of all in<lb/>
coming treshmen were unable to<lb/>
See Faculty, page 7<lb/>
LONDON ?"$510<lb/>
AMSTERDAMsss<lb/>
BERLIN578<lb/>
ROME630<lb/>
TOKYO74?<lb/>
CARACAS450<lb/>
RIOS60<lb/>
Cousteau member speaks<lb/>
, ?<lb/>
? ? n<lb/>
ti<lb/>
? al<lb/>
ii<lb/>
? i ?<lb/>
v<lb/>
 I tilth St.<lb/>
,rc? n illc N( 2785H<lb/>
757- (.it<lb/>
' -I'l'ii<lb/>
Newman<lb/>
(latholic Student ('enter<lb/>
1 KM Hi:(;iNS: SPECIAL ASH WEDNESDAY M SS,<lb/>
Feb. 2Sth at 5:30 pm Biology Bldg. Km 103<lb/>
I or More Information about programs, sponsored l the Newman<lb/>
(outer, call or n isit the center. New man is open to ;?ll students<lb/>
rinih from S:3(l am - 11 :M pm<lb/>
11. Paul aeth, ('hapiain and anipus Minister<lb/>
Didn't?)uGet<lb/>
The Mess<lb/>
IntroducingMessageLineu From CarolinaTelcphone.<lb/>
Hiere in .1 better wa) &amp; gel the messa! Messa&amp;'l im list s computerized equipmenl al<lb/>
our central office to turn your telephone into a 24 houi a da personal messafS center lor as<lb/>
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To order MessaiH'l-ine or get more information. ;tll I HtMI-682 5670 VbullGet I he Message!<lb/>
Oops, We goofed! The CJ'a Restaurant advertisement in<lb/>
the Feb. 22, 1990 issue of The F.ast Carolinian was to have<lb/>
expiration dates on both eoupons for 3-1Ml.<lb/>
Sorry for anv inconvenience!<lb/>
Ta?es not included Restrictions apply One<lb/>
3s available WorKStuoV Abfoaa<lb/>
programs Int1 Student ID' EURAILPASSES<lb/>
ISSUED ON THE SPOTt<lb/>
FREE Student Travel Catalogl<lb/>
Council Travel<lb/>
703 N.nth Street Soite B2<lb/>
Durham NC 27705<lb/>
919-286-4664<lb/>
Gordon's Golf &amp; Ski Shop<lb/>
End of the Season Ski Sale!<lb/>
Ski A?par,l30 - 50 OFF<lb/>
(Includes jackets, suits, powder pants, stretch pants, ski sweaters<lb/>
All Warm - lps50 MFF<lb/>
(ladies &amp; Men's)<lb/>
AH Ski A Boots20 - 40' OFF<lb/>
(Nordics, Salomon, Rossignol, K2 Dynastar, Head)<lb/>
Skvr T-Necks$ 16.95<lb/>
(All Colors available)<lb/>
756-1003<lb/>
Mon - Thors 10 - 7 pm<lb/>
I ri. 10-9pm<lb/>
Sat. - 6 pm<lb/>
Give the Gifl of 1 itc<lb/>
The ECU School of Medicine is holding its<lb/>
Spring Blood Drive on<lb/>
Mon March 12 from 1 - 6 pm .<lb/>
On the 2nd floor of the Brod Building<lb/>
Donors as well as volunteers to help<lb/>
with the blood drive are needed<lb/>
To Make a Donor appointmenl or<lb/>
to volunteer to help please<lb/>
call 551-2980<lb/>
???:?:<lb/>
Moeogiml ino SSS<lb/>
lm1UUUU!IUUIIU ???<lb/>
United<lb/>
.System<lb/>
Carotna Telephone<lb/>
r<lb/>
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i<lb/>
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355-6680<lb/>
 15 off any Swimwear<lb/>
l must present coupon expires March 15, 1990<lb/>
Im ib tmm MB MB OB mm bb ?? ?? ?? ?? ?? ?? ?? ?? ?? mm mm ??? ?"? "?" ,mm mm mm<lb/>
i<lb/>
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i<lb/>
j<lb/>
<pb facs="00058198_0005"/><lb/>
I<lb/>
(She Safit Olaroltntan<lb/>
David Herring, General Manager<lb/>
Low Martin, Editor<lb/>
James F.J. McKee, Director of Advertising<lb/>
Joseph L. Jenkins Jr Noes Etfttor<lb/>
Adam Cornelius, Asst. News Editor<lb/>
Caroline Cusick, Features Editor<lb/>
John Tucker, Asst. feature Editor<lb/>
Miciiaei Martin, Sport Editor<lb/>
Thomas H. Barry VI, Asst. Sport Editor<lb/>
Carrie Armstrong, Entertainment Editor<lb/>
Scott Maxwell, Satire Editor<lb/>
Pi IONG LUONG, Credit Manager<lb/>
Stuart Rosner, Business Manager<lb/>
Pamela Cope, Ad Tech Supervisor<lb/>
MATTHEW RiCHTER, Circulation Manager<lb/>
TRACY WEED, Production Manager<lb/>
STEVE REID, Staff Illustrator<lb/>
CHARLES Willinc.HAM, Darkroom Technician<lb/>
BETH LUITON, Secretary<lb/>
The Last Carolinian has been serving the East Carolina campus community since 1925, with primary emphasis on in<lb/>
formation most directly affecting ECU students. It is published twice weekly, with a circulation of 12,000. The East<lb/>
Carolinian reserves the right to refuse or discontinue any advertisements that discriminate on the basis of age, sex,<lb/>
creed or national origin The East Carolinian welcomes letters expressing all points of view. For purposes of decency<lb/>
and brevity, The East Carolinian reserves the right to edit any letter for publication. Letters should he sent to The Hast<lb/>
Carolinian. Publications Bide . ECU. Greenville, NC, 2784; or call us at (919) 757-6366.<lb/>
Opinion<lb/>
Page 4, Tuesday, February 27,1990<lb/>
The budget cuts could be worse<lb/>
Well, there may not be an edition of<lb/>
The East Carolinian on Thursday. Why? Be-<lb/>
cause we all will be at home with pneumo-<lb/>
nia after working all day in sub zero tem-<lb/>
peratures. Like many buildings on campus,<lb/>
The Publications Building has suffered front<lb/>
those all-too-familiar budget cuts.<lb/>
AsChancellor Eakin announced sev-<lb/>
eral weeks ago, one route to reducing costs<lb/>
is to turndown thermostats in the buildings<lb/>
across campus. With the unseasonably warm<lb/>
weather, we haven't felt that cutback until<lb/>
now. With thecold weather returning, over-<lb/>
coats in the classrooms were apopular sight<lb/>
yesterday.<lb/>
In addition to utility conservation,<lb/>
ECU has seen, and will continue to experi-<lb/>
ence, a hiring freeze and a 5 percent across-<lb/>
the-board reduction in operating budgets<lb/>
? office and classroom supplies, communi-<lb/>
cation and equipment.<lb/>
But compared to some ot the other<lb/>
universities in the UNC System, East Caro-<lb/>
lina doesn't have it so bad. NC. State has<lb/>
reported a number of faculty layoffs. NCSU,<lb/>
North Carolina's largest university, has even<lb/>
been forced to cancel certain sections of<lb/>
classes. Since these cutbacks were initiated<lb/>
at the beginning of the semester, State's li-<lb/>
brary has suffered, too. Two entrances to the<lb/>
library were recently closed, and a hiring<lb/>
freeze for library workers has forced the<lb/>
university to reduce library hours<lb/>
UNC -Chapel 1 fill has been affected,<lb/>
but apparently not as badly as State. Like<lb/>
ECU, Carolina has cut back in supplies and<lb/>
turned down thermostats.<lb/>
Nc economic cuts could be condu-<lb/>
cive to a quality educational system. But it's<lb/>
not as bad as it could be. For now, let s keep<lb/>
hoping that the UNC System universities<lb/>
will be able to cope with the cutbacks, and<lb/>
that the only chill is in the classrooms, not in<lb/>
the quality oi our education.<lb/>
3WD6-tT CVT$ 410.<lb/>
Nuclear industry's darkest side<lb/>
By Nathaniel Mead<lb/>
Fditori.il Columnist<lb/>
When people speak of<lb/>
radiation's harmful effects, they're<lb/>
usually referring to the effects ot<lb/>
ionizing radiation, such asgamma<lb/>
ravs, which carry so much energy<lb/>
that they can rip electrons from<lb/>
atoms and molecules, converting<lb/>
them to charged ions. As the most<lb/>
prominent aspect of nuclear fall-<lb/>
out, gamma ras are ionizing<lb/>
radiation of very high energy and<lb/>
deep penetrating ability Such<lb/>
strong terms ol radiation can be<lb/>
quite destructive to living cells.<lb/>
sometimes causing cancer, birth<lb/>
defects, and other serious prob-<lb/>
lems.<lb/>
Most people assume that<lb/>
radiation's hazards are a matter ol<lb/>
dosage - that only high doses ot<lb/>
ionizing radiation will harm liv-<lb/>
ing systems. But oven low doses<lb/>
of ionizing radiation can be detri-<lb/>
mental as long as enough time is<lb/>
allowed tor exposure. In other<lb/>
weirds, the dosage is cumulative<lb/>
and the damage depends on the<lb/>
amount ot radiation interacting<lb/>
with living tissue over time. ohn<lb/>
V Gorman, M.D Ph.D. (in nu-<lb/>
clear-physical chemistry), Profes-<lb/>
sor Emeritusol Medical Physicsat<lb/>
the University of California, says<lb/>
that the longer the radiation expo-<lb/>
sure, the smaller the dose needed<lb/>
to do damage. His conclusions<lb/>
are confirmed by research recently<lb/>
completed at the Canadian Atomic<lb/>
Energy Laboratories.<lb/>
From 1965 to 1972, Gofman<lb/>
served as associate director of the<lb/>
Lawrence l.ivermore Radiation<lb/>
Laboratory, where he conducted<lb/>
research on cancer and chrome<lb/>
somes until the Atomic Energy<lb/>
Commission ended his work The<lb/>
reason: Gofman had argued at an<lb/>
AFC meeting that the estimates<lb/>
on the cancer risks oi radiation<lb/>
exposure had been underesti-<lb/>
mated bv tenfold. Since his depar-<lb/>
ture from the AFC, Gofman has<lb/>
lectured nationwide on the many<lb/>
dangers cf nuclear power dan-<lb/>
gers which he believes are clearly<lb/>
on the rise<lb/>
This view seems right on tar-<lb/>
get. Mounting evidence indicates<lb/>
that nuclear power "mishaps" all<lb/>
over the I Inited States arc having<lb/>
lethal effects, most of which have<lb/>
been difficult to assess For ex-<lb/>
ample, in the summer of 1982, an<lb/>
intense cloud ol radiation was<lb/>
released from the Pilgrim reactor<lb/>
at Plymouth Massachusetts This<lb/>
event was subsequently linked<lb/>
with high leukemia rates among<lb/>
inhabitants ot the five towns<lb/>
around the Plymouth plant<lb/>
Compared to the state leukemia<lb/>
rates these towns showed a 79<lb/>
percent higher rate tor males and<lb/>
59percent higher rate tor females.<lb/>
The same study found that<lb/>
infant deaths per 1 ,iKK) live births<lb/>
had increased significantly as well<lb/>
within a vear of the accident the<lb/>
largest increase ir17 years Other<lb/>
rtjCarchtSuggestwhe possibility<lb/>
oi similar consequences tor areas<lb/>
surrounding other nuclear power<lb/>
plants and atomic bomb-testing<lb/>
sites in the United States, Nobel<lb/>
Prize winner Pr Linus Pauling<lb/>
has forecast that the testing of<lb/>
nuclear weapons  will ulti-<lb/>
mately produce about one million<lb/>
seriously defective children and<lb/>
about two million embryonic and<lb/>
neonatal detects<lb/>
Many people seem to shrug<lb/>
off Chernobvl and Three Mile Is-<lb/>
land as mere flukes, unlikely to<lb/>
occur again in the near future. But<lb/>
there is good reason to think oth-<lb/>
erwise. Since Three Mile Island.<lb/>
more than 23,000 nuclear power<lb/>
"mishaps" have been recorded,<lb/>
though most have gone unpub-<lb/>
licized. In 1986, there were more<lb/>
than 3,000 reported incidents<lb/>
up 24 percent since !gs4. The<lb/>
West c ierman weekly Der Spiegel,<lb/>
which had published 4S of the<lb/>
more than 250 secret nuclear re i<lb/>
tor accident reports compiled I .<lb/>
the International Atomi Encrj<lb/>
Agency, offered this chilling i<lb/>
elusion Humanity has beei<lb/>
ting on a powderkegas a result<lb/>
reliance on the 'peaceful' ti-<lb/>
the atom<lb/>
I re ently inter iew ed<lb/>
Gofman on the subje t of rad<lb/>
the gas that is seeping into An i<lb/>
Can homes Pid he s4 e ra I<lb/>
maji r publii health hazai I<lb/>
answer wasastounding the ???. I<lb/>
radon issue is being ? I by I<lb/>
government and i .<lb/>
to "deflect" publi attenti - I<lb/>
the more serious pr. f<lb/>
nuclear waste disposal, Iran :<lb/>
tation ot radioa live ma<lb/>
management ol nu lear :<lb/>
plants, food irradiation ai d<lb/>
contro ersial nut lea r i<lb/>
Gofman sees nuclear powi I<lb/>
dangerous and indeed sui : i!<lb/>
way to till the energj I<lb/>
wonder he has achievi<lb/>
guiar distinction of being br u<lb/>
"beyond the pale ot re ?<lb/>
communication" bv th<lb/>
power industry<lb/>
In the wake of the i<lb/>
nightmare at Chernobyl<lb/>
1986, radioactive gases u i<lb/>
tides were released o i<lb/>
of several weeks, forming<lb/>
which dritted over most ot I<lb/>
northern hemisphere<lb/>
high levels oi radioactivity<lb/>
European countries and evi i<lb/>
the United States and apan<lb/>
world was suddenly shako:<lb/>
the bittersweet realization<lb/>
nuclearpoweranywhereisii I<lb/>
nuclear power every where (<lb/>
nohvl-contaminated clouds I<lb/>
down radioactive parti les ?.<lb/>
then either affected humans h<lb/>
animals directly or entered the soil<lb/>
hence the food chain Alth<lb/>
widespread monitoring of radi<lb/>
activity took place in the m<lb/>
that followed, few standards w i <lb/>
See Nuclear, page 5<lb/>
To the Editor<lb/>
Romanian protester suffers under Ceausescu regime<lb/>
. To the editor:<lb/>
There have been repeated<lb/>
demonstrations in Romania<lb/>
against the Ceausescu regime, but<lb/>
the world learned hardly anything<lb/>
about it. The protests were bru-<lb/>
tally suppressed. The correspon-<lb/>
dent met a man who participated<lb/>
in the unrest in Western Romania<lb/>
in 1987:<lb/>
Karoly Bikfalvi, 26, arrested<lb/>
in 1987 after the student demon-<lb/>
strations in Brasov. Sentenced to<lb/>
25 years in jail. Released on Dec<lb/>
27,1989. Special marks: Morbidly<lb/>
thin, left arm and left leg burned.<lb/>
right index finger roughly sewn<lb/>
together, incisors are missing.<lb/>
Possessions: 50 Lei (about 6 dol-<lb/>
lars). The clothes he is wearing<lb/>
don't belong to him. Address:<lb/>
none, unemployed. Condition:<lb/>
Suffers from panic-stricken spells<lb/>
of fear.<lb/>
Karoly Bikfalvi started crying<lb/>
during the conversation in Sibiu<lb/>
because he is finally allowed to<lb/>
speak Hungarian and because he<lb/>
still is able to after so many years.<lb/>
Fie had come to the University of<lb/>
Brasov from an orphanage, stud-<lb/>
ied architecture there, and helped<lb/>
organize the demonstrations in<lb/>
1987. Almost no news of theevents<lb/>
in Brasov in 1987 trickled through.<lb/>
The world didn't know that the<lb/>
planned rebellion was intended to<lb/>
take place with the help of stu-<lb/>
dents and workers in five cities: in<lb/>
Brasov, Temcsvar, Cluj, Tirgu<lb/>
Mures and jassy. The police suc-<lb/>
ceeded in stopping the rebellion in<lb/>
the other four cities before it really<lb/>
got started.<lb/>
But in Brasov the security<lb/>
forces were no match for the<lb/>
roughly 3(XX) demonstrators. Then<lb/>
the troops of the notorious Securi-<lb/>
tate came and shot into the crowd.<lb/>
About 380 people were arrested.<lb/>
The Hungarian Ferenc Tolnay, a<lb/>
student from Cluj, was shot to<lb/>
death.<lb/>
Says Karoly Bikfalvi: "Then the<lb/>
tortures started. They put cotton<lb/>
wool that had been drained in gas<lb/>
onto my arm and leg and burned<lb/>
them They slammed an iron door<lb/>
onto my finger which almost tore<lb/>
off two limbs. The finger was<lb/>
roughly sewn together. They<lb/>
started to pull out all our teeth.<lb/>
They didn't let us sleep.<lb/>
"It continued like that until<lb/>
they put together a phony indict-<lb/>
ment which stated that we formed<lb/>
a conspiracy against the country<lb/>
of Romania and that we were<lb/>
going to add the northeastern part<lb/>
of Romania to Hungary. But<lb/>
a mong the 3M a rrested there were<lb/>
only six Hungarians; everybody<lb/>
else was Romanian. We didn't<lb/>
have anv political intentions at<lb/>
all, we only didn't want to be<lb/>
hungry any more and we w.v ted<lb/>
something to wear<lb/>
That was a dream in Roma-<lb/>
nia which was impossible to reach.<lb/>
The scho.ai ship for the students<lb/>
consisted of 800 Lei (about 80<lb/>
dollars), but 300 went for food<lb/>
and with the remaining money<lb/>
the professors had to be bribed to<lb/>
pass theexams. During the breaks,<lb/>
many students earned some<lb/>
pocket-money by unloading rail-<lb/>
road cars so that they would get<lb/>
along. After the tortures the sen-<lb/>
tencing was announced: 25 years<lb/>
of tough jail.<lb/>
The Council for the National<lb/>
Salvation in Bucharest decided<lb/>
on Dec. 23 to tree all political pris-<lb/>
oners. But the prison guards in<lb/>
Aiud near Sibiu still believed in<lb/>
the turn of events. The prisoners<lb/>
were freed by the army only on<lb/>
Dec. 27. The guards fled.<lb/>
Now Karoly Bikfalvi wanders<lb/>
around Sibiu, and he is scared. His<lb/>
former friends still are afraid to<lb/>
help him. He doesn't want to res-<lb/>
ume his studies. He doesn't even<lb/>
know if this would be possible at<lb/>
all. But he doesn't want to any-<lb/>
way. He wants to get a job to get<lb/>
his own home after being in an<lb/>
orphanage, dorm and jail. He also<lb/>
doesn't know if he will find work,<lb/>
and he doesn't dare to look for<lb/>
any. In his ID-card there are the<lb/>
letters "BK" which mark him as a<lb/>
particularly dangerous political<lb/>
prisoner. Karoly only knows one<lb/>
thing. Fornowhecan'tanddoesn't<lb/>
want to live in Romania, regard-<lb/>
less of what the developments are<lb/>
going to be. He can't stand the<lb/>
panic-stricken fear any more. He<lb/>
wants to go to Hungary.<lb/>
Buthedoesn'tdaretogo there<lb/>
on a relief convoy, because the<lb/>
people might get into trouble at a<lb/>
check-point because of him. He<lb/>
doesn't have the money for going<lb/>
by tram I le is afraid to cross the<lb/>
border illegally, and he is con-<lb/>
cerned it he isgoing to be accepted<lb/>
at all. But he is going to try any-<lb/>
way.<lb/>
Markus Fuchs<lb/>
Student looks<lb/>
for compassion<lb/>
in journalism<lb/>
To the editor<lb/>
"Earn BIG BUCKS and be the<lb/>
talk oi the town  Last Thursday<lb/>
I noticed this ad in your paper for<lb/>
a new cartoonist.<lb/>
In fall 1985, a new comic strip<lb/>
appeared in The East Carolinian.<lb/>
The artists had their objectives<lb/>
clearly in mind  popularity, beer,<lb/>
monev and sex.<lb/>
The strip was by art students<lb/>
for art students. Totally different<lb/>
collage, clip art, mixed media. The<lb/>
humor was oblique. Characters<lb/>
were unpredictable (tender yet<lb/>
cruel). Violence, disease an<lb/>
mental illness were presented in a<lb/>
crowd pleasing, light-hearted<lb/>
manner.and sex wassubtlv wovei<lb/>
in to give tang.<lb/>
People loved it or hated it s<lb/>
true-blue artists, the cartoonists<lb/>
naturally viewed both praise and<lb/>
persecution as favorable respon si<lb/>
to their strip specifically tailored<lb/>
to offend sensibilities<lb/>
Time passed  one artist got<lb/>
bored ami quit the strip. The other<lb/>
pursued it zealously until he<lb/>
graduated. A year later, this one<lb/>
got saved, (vou know he ac-<lb/>
cepted lesusas his Lord and u<lb/>
lor), and feels a great deal of re<lb/>
morse about making light of such<lb/>
serious issues.<lb/>
To anyone 1 offended with my<lb/>
comic strip, 1 admit  I was blind<lb/>
 1 am sorry. I look back on what<lb/>
1 did for The East Carolinian the<lb/>
same way 1 look on many things 1<lb/>
see in The East Carolinian today<lb/>
and ask where's the compassion1<lb/>
Where's the love?<lb/>
David Lee Cherry<lb/>
Graduate Student ?<lb/>
Art Department<lb/>
<pb facs="00058198_0006"/><lb/>
r<lb/>
The East Carolinian, February 27,1990 5<lb/>
Working on a personal level enhances the job<lb/>
By Dinah Eng<lb/>
 t.anncll News Service<lb/>
If a woman's crowning glory<lb/>
is her hair there's no treasure more<lb/>
valued than a hk hairdresser.<lb/>
Mine is named Jennifer Mal-<lb/>
irtowski, and I'd fly anywhere to<lb/>
have her i ut m hair As a matter<lb/>
ot tact, that's what I do.<lb/>
Jennifer works in a Rochester<lb/>
Hills, Mich salon lor the live<lb/>
vears I lu ed in I Vtroit. she sham-<lb/>
pooed, cut anil blow-dried my<lb/>
hair Each time she moved to a<lb/>
new salon. I moved with her.<lb/>
I onl) go to someone tor hair<lb/>
cuts four or five times a sear, but<lb/>
there's something shghtlv nerve-<lb/>
racking about letting a stranger<lb/>
Nuclear<lb/>
,<lb/>
Continued from page 4<lb/>
in place to govern the timing of<lb/>
restrictions to be applied to the<lb/>
sales,md i onsumptionoflivestock<lb/>
and vegetable produce Asa re-<lb/>
sult, unknown quantities of the<lb/>
American food supply may have<lb/>
been affex ted.<lb/>
Most ot us have assumed that<lb/>
tangible health effects from the<lb/>
Chernobyl fallout were confined<lb/>
to the Ukraine, Scandinavia and<lb/>
central and southern Europe,<lb/>
where the fallout was heaviest,<lb/>
with diminishing impact relative<lb/>
to distance from the plant But<lb/>
some resean It suggests a differ-<lb/>
ent picture 1 rnest Sternglass,<lb/>
Professor Emeritus of Radiologi-<lb/>
cal Physics at the University of<lb/>
Pittsburgh, told me this past week-<lb/>
end thai its effects also extended<lb/>
to the I Inited States, a possibility<lb/>
that has been considered ex-<lb/>
Iremel) remote until now.<lb/>
Sternglass has long argued<lb/>
thai verj low doses of radiation<lb/>
can destroy cell membranes and<lb/>
cripple hormonal and immune<lb/>
system functions, and that low<lb/>
d ?Ses of fallout can do almost as<lb/>
muchharm vci time as substan<lb/>
liallv gnatd uosCSRb,pJor&amp; that<lb/>
the high doses of fallout that hit<lb/>
Poland caused a largedrop in birth<lb/>
rates prompted Stcrnglass's con-<lb/>
cern tor the I Inited States. I ie ex-<lb/>
amined the American vital statis-<lb/>
tics to check for impa tsfrom what<lb/>
most considered to be inconse-<lb/>
quential residual radiation from<lb/>
the v Ihemobj 1 a i ident.<lb/>
Sternglass found that there<lb/>
were at least forte thousand more<lb/>
human deaths than normal in the<lb/>
I Inited States in the eight months<lb/>
after the arrival of the v "hernohyl<lb/>
cloud. Most of the increase in<lb/>
mortality was linked with a rise in<lb/>
lethal infectious diseases, proba-<lb/>
bly reflecting a decline in the<lb/>
strength of immunity, particu-<lb/>
larly among older people, whose<lb/>
health simply could not withstand<lb/>
the effects of the fallout. In addi-<lb/>
tion, there was a highly significant<lb/>
drop in live births, especially on<lb/>
the west coast and in New Eng-<lb/>
land . where rainfall brought down<lb/>
the fallout which concentrated in<lb/>
thedairs products I'his was asso-<lb/>
ciated with a large rise in miscar-<lb/>
riages and spontaneous abortions<lb/>
which caused the birth rate to<lb/>
plummet<lb/>
Sternglass has also been tol-<lb/>
lowing the problem of nuclear<lb/>
fallout from other sources. Con-<lb/>
trary to popular belief, routine<lb/>
releases of radioactive materials<lb/>
from nuclear power plants are an<lb/>
ecological reality, hesays. If this is<lb/>
true, thentheentire American food<lb/>
supply is gradually becoming<lb/>
radioactive. Such contamination<lb/>
is surely grounds tor widespread<lb/>
and justified anxiety and for<lb/>
systematH ally shutting down and<lb/>
sealing oft every nuclear power<lb/>
plant before the fallout extends to<lb/>
ever) inch of I S farmland.<lb/>
S tar the ominous warnings<lb/>
ot Gofrnan and Sternglass have<lb/>
fallen on deal ears I low long can<lb/>
weaftord to ignore the bold voices<lb/>
of independent scientists who re-<lb/>
gard nuclear power as a menace<lb/>
to global survival?! Inlesswestop<lb/>
the growth of the nuclear indus-<lb/>
try, we may facing public health<lb/>
tragedies that make Chernobyl<lb/>
pale bv comparison.<lb/>
look for THjrt two of "Nuclear<lb/>
Wiiu!ry(iurkcl snic" mThurtday's<lb/>
edition of The fast Carolinian<lb/>
take scissors to your tresses. Sure,<lb/>
bad haircuts do grow out, but you<lb/>
can only wear a hat for so long<lb/>
before people start to wonder.<lb/>
Three years ago, 1 moved to<lb/>
Washington, DC,and tried to find<lb/>
a new stylist. Honestly, 1 did.<lb/>
1 tried Kathv, who laughed<lb/>
when I brought her a set of in-<lb/>
structions that Jennifer had writ<lb/>
ten on how to duplicate her cut.<lb/>
The cut wasn't bad, but Kathy's<lb/>
skill with a curling iron left a lot to<lb/>
be desired.<lb/>
There was Glen, who fussed<lb/>
over me for an hour, gave me a<lb/>
great cut and a bill three times<lb/>
higher than I thought his work<lb/>
was worth. And, of course, there<lb/>
was Patricia, who asked me sev-<lb/>
eral times that hour, "But wouldn't<lb/>
vou like to try something differ<lb/>
ent?"<lb/>
Every other cut, I found my-<lb/>
self going back to Detroit for an<lb/>
appointment with lenmter I'd tell<lb/>
myself I was going to visit friends,<lb/>
which I did, but I finally had to<lb/>
admit I was timing my visits<lb/>
around mv haircuts.<lb/>
What's so special about Jen-<lb/>
nifer? Lots of things She gives a<lb/>
terrific haircut, ves.but more than<lb/>
that, she makes me feel tern tic<lb/>
You know the cliche that<lb/>
women tell everything to their<lb/>
hairdressers? Well it's true ? if<lb/>
vou go to one whose personality<lb/>
and energy clicks with yours.<lb/>
Going to see lennifer is like<lb/>
visiting a best friend, venting to a<lb/>
therapist and going to a fairy god-<lb/>
mother who makes you feel beau-<lb/>
tiful when vou turn around and<lb/>
look m the mirror 1 ler secret?<lb/>
"I love what I do shesavs. "1<lb/>
really like working with hair, and<lb/>
serving a client means more than a<lb/>
cut and a blow dry. I love to make<lb/>
people feel good about them-<lb/>
selves<lb/>
With this stvlist. that means<lb/>
remembering what's going on in<lb/>
her clients'livesand caring enough<lb/>
to ask. It means listening from the<lb/>
heart, and responding in ways that<lb/>
remind people that they are not<lb/>
their hair, or clothes, or resume.<lb/>
I ler enthusiasm for life, and open-<lb/>
ness to ov echo in the way she<lb/>
works.<lb/>
While wedo not seeeach other<lb/>
that of ten, our hour conversations<lb/>
in the salon are always about the<lb/>
important people in our lives. I<lb/>
hear about her daughter Jonna's<lb/>
progress in school, her husband<lb/>
Jeffrey's fishing trips and her own<lb/>
path of personal growth<lb/>
She hears about mv sisters in<lb/>
Houston, the friends I'm visiting<lb/>
in Detroit and the friends back<lb/>
home in Washington. And because<lb/>
she has a perceptive ear, I always<lb/>
value her impressions.<lb/>
One visit, she said tome, "You<lb/>
know, 1 think vou need a real va-<lb/>
cation. I've been dome, your hair<lb/>
for six years, and you always go to<lb/>
visit your friends or your family,<lb/>
but you never go anywhere just<lb/>
for you. Why don't you go some-<lb/>
where new, and have your friends<lb/>
meet you there?"<lb/>
She was right, and sometime<lb/>
this year, I'm going to do just that.<lb/>
There are so many people we<lb/>
meetinbusinessrelationshipswho<lb/>
are never more than bodies we<lb/>
pay for a service. What a pleasure-<lb/>
it is to deal with someone who<lb/>
bridges that financial transaction<lb/>
with caring about us as fellowhu-<lb/>
man beings.<lb/>
We have the opportunity<lb/>
every day to meet people in ways<lb/>
that make common interactions<lb/>
special. It doesn't takea lot of time.<lb/>
All it takes is sharing wh we arc.<lb/>
After all, when you meet<lb/>
someone like Jennifer, you know<lb/>
it's a relationship that's not hair<lb/>
today, gone tomorrow.<lb/>
Wapynj' 1W USA TOOAIlAppIri Mlip<lb/>
Don't forget<lb/>
Recycle<lb/>
Carolinian<lb/>
RAPE<lb/>
IS FOR<lb/>
REAL<lb/>
REAL<lb/>
IS FOR<lb/>
HELP<lb/>
758-HELP<lb/>
?'<lb/>
ffeMf<lb/>
<lb/>
COLLEGE HILL PIZZA PARLOR<lb/>
D OP?A<lb/>
yjv Tuesday, February 27th w <lb/>
through<lb/>
Friday, March 16th<lb/>
FREE Pizza Giveaway to Every<lb/>
15th Customer<lb/>
FREE Drink Refills<lb/>
CANTEEN<lb/>
College Hill Dining Hall<lb/>
8pm til 12 Midnight<lb/>
(Monday - Thursday, Friday til 10pm)<lb/>
Eat In Fine Dining Atmosphere,<lb/>
Relaxing, Socializing, Music<lb/>
Take Out Phone Ahead (757-4233)<lb/>
Quick Take Out Service<lb/>
East Carolina<lb/>
Dining<lb/>
Service<lb/>
Whole 14 inch, Thick Crust<lb/>
1) Cheese<lb/>
2) Each Additional Toppings<lb/>
3) Deluxe (pepperoni, sausage,<lb/>
mushrooms, green peppers,<lb/>
black olives)<lb/>
Cheese<lb/>
Onions<lb/>
Mushroom<lb/>
Choice of Toppings<lb/>
Pepperoni Italian Sausage<lb/>
Hamburger Green Peppers<lb/>
Black Olives<lb/>
Use Your MEAL CARD:<lb/>
Points, Bonus or Cash<lb/>
Garden Salad<lb/>
20 ounce Drink<lb/>
Six Pack of Drinks<lb/>
<pb facs="00058198_0007"/><lb/>
uUje ?aat (Earnlinian<lb/>
Page 6<lb/>
Classifieds<lb/>
February 27, 2990<lb/>
FOR RENT<lb/>
I OK KIN I: One bedroom in su room<lb/>
house shored with two other male stu<lb/>
dents Kent is 55 (X1 per month phishare<lb/>
ot utilities Call i) 7.1s 4280<lb/>
ROOMMATf NEEDED: ro share 2 BR<lb/>
rownhouse $96.25 and 1 4 utilities Call<lb/>
Curtis or av at 830 ? 124<lb/>
APARTMENT FOR RENT: This summer<lb/>
Tar River Estates About 5120 a month<lb/>
rent vail David (704) 825 $507<lb/>
FOR SALE<lb/>
SF SWIM WEAR: Lori's Intimate<lb/>
Apparel Carolina East Centre 15 ott with<lb/>
this ad!<lb/>
is I 1 I Rl E YOU CAN BIA ItFPS FOR<lb/>
$44 through the i S Government 'Get the<lb/>
facts today! Call 1 708-742-1142 Ext. 5271<lb/>
A<lb/>
I OK si E: King sized bed mattress box<lb/>
DISPLAi CLASSIFIEDS<lb/>
The Suntana<lb/>
5 Visil Plan $15<lb/>
10 Visit Plan$25<lb/>
15 Visit Plan $30<lb/>
Wolfe Tanning System<lb/>
756-9180<lb/>
Coupon Good Thru 3-31-90<lb/>
3212 S. Memorial Dr.<lb/>
spring irame and no head board ;0i'<lb/>
Phone no J55 $184<lb/>
FORSAII Set of Apex I togan Persimmon<lb/>
Woods l. V 1 and 5 Bard) used only 6<lb/>
months old S275 price negotiable Call<lb/>
Ka at '57 1882<lb/>
FOR SAl I.Nikon AIS I'okm.i 28 70mm<lb/>
vHim I 2.8 5100.00 Sears 135mm F2.8<lb/>
S3 - OOand AlhmarSO 200mm zoom I- ' "<lb/>
530.00 Call Garret) at 931 7409 ot 757<lb/>
6994<lb/>
SERVICES OFFERED<lb/>
PIRATE RIDE! PIRATI RIDE! Students<lb/>
don't forget to use Pirati Ride Sun fburs<lb/>
8 pm 12 15 am rhe n ute now includes<lb/>
sla anil I mstead 1 krms For more infor<lb/>
mation call 757 4726<lb/>
WORD PROCESSING ANH PHOTO-<lb/>
COPYING SERVK is We i ffer typing<lb/>
and photocopying services We also sell<lb/>
softwares ? computers 24 hours in and<lb/>
out Guaranteed typing on paper up to 20<lb/>
hand written pages SDF Professional<lb/>
Computer Services 106 E 5th St (beside<lb/>
Cubbie's) Greenville N( 752 $694<lb/>
Ot PI NDABl E, PROI ESSION l<lb/>
ItPISI w stated the art word process<lb/>
ing equipment and laser punter i all<lb/>
Bronda after 6:00 pm 756 1837 or leave<lb/>
DISPLAY Cl Assn II )s<lb/>
WAKI N" BAkt In Negril, lamaica1<lb/>
()ne beaut it ul week starting al S469 i V"<lb/>
1 lot days and reggae nights This (np<lb/>
will sell out so Call Sun Splash Fours<lb/>
at I 800 426 7710<lb/>
IKi Wlsl PAR. Avanetv packofout 12<lb/>
best selling name brand condoms lust<lb/>
56.79tax Rushed first class mail' all<lb/>
s all I Icalthwisetoorder i S(H "?; 43(X)<lb/>
HELP WANTED<lb/>
MODI I s: It you would hC torn. d?<lb/>
Promotions Modeling gencv. il w f<lb/>
ageiu ? needs m all ?? and female; of i<lb/>
ages Also need dancei for prival<lb/>
parties c, ; . . 14 toset U n<lb/>
v lew<lb/>
NEW I NCI VND BROTHER S1ST1<lb/>
CAMPS - MASSACHUSETTS Mai<lb/>
Kee-Nai tor Boys Danbei foi Girl<lb/>
Counseloi  sitii ns foi Pr .?.? im Sp<lb/>
cialists UTean ports, peaalh Bas<lb/>
ball Basketball, Field Hockey, Softbal<lb/>
Soccer and Vollevball 2 - tennis opei<lb/>
ils rchery. Rifflery. V ?' ?<lb/>
rts Fine Art- ,<lb/>
(.amp (.rat Ml Waterfront Activith<lb/>
(Swimming Skiin  Sailing ?'? u<lb/>
tng anoe Kayal . . Mai<lb/>
Kee Nac (Bov len Cl<lb/>
ABORTION<lb/>
Free Pregnancy<lb/>
Testing<lb/>
M-F 8:30 - 4:00 p.m.<lb/>
Sat. 10 - 1 p.m.<lb/>
Triangle Women's<lb/>
Health Center<lb/>
VISA<lb/>
1-800-433-2930<lb/>
FREE j<lb/>
PREGNANCY<lb/>
TESTING<lb/>
while noli wait<lb/>
Free &amp; Confidential<lb/>
Services &amp; Counseling<lb/>
Carolina Pregnancy Center<lb/>
757-0003<lb/>
HIE. 3rd St.<lb/>
The Lee Building<lb/>
Greenville. NC<lb/>
Hours<lb/>
M-F 9 am-5 pm<lb/>
IKI IM so HIRIM<lb/>
GOVERNMEN1 iB<lb/>
DISPLAY CLASSIFI1 US<lb/>
RESEARCH WHWMATWN<lb/>
I; trQ0Si t'f,rJf c' ?nto'imtion :n U 3<lb/>
m s.iKiects<lb/>
c-w 800 351 0222<lb/>
fifparch in'ofition<lb/>
list<lb/>
sns National Marketing Firm seeks<lb/>
mature student to manage on campus pro<lb/>
motions tor top companies this sv hool year<lb/>
Flexible hours with earnings potential to<lb/>
j2 ?(X1 per semester Must be organized<lb/>
hardworking, and mont) motivateall<lb/>
Michelcor cnny at (800) 592 2121<lb/>
IMF t III OF RAi I K.ll PARKS AND<lb/>
Rl v Rl ATION: Department is seeking en<lb/>
thusiastic hardworking individuals tor<lb/>
summei employ ment Positions include pi ? tl<lb/>
managers lifeguards, camp counselors<lb/>
nature athletic, arts, and lake personnel<lb/>
: irl maintenance and therapeutic progr ims<lb/>
itn 'ii I deadline Man h '?' Coi<lb/>
tact 2401 Wade Avenue Raleigh, N 27602<lb/>
"? ne8 II 6641 I!? MFH<lb/>
MEN'S SPE IA1 II STORE: IS looking for<lb/>
il ire motivated, individuals with an inter<lb/>
est in fasl and the desire to sell quality<lb/>
tl ing Good beginning salary and store<lb/>
wide discount Apply in person Brody'sThe<lb/>
I'laza. Monday Wednesday ITO 400 pm<lb/>
BRODY'SrArey i a college student in need<lb/>
? ! extr i spending money ' Brady's a, ,Vpt<lb/>
ing applications for part time s.iles .ismm<lb/>
ates and customer service representatives<lb/>
who u  rk flexible! u Apply in per<lb/>
son Brody ? rhi Plaza Monday Wednes<lb/>
d.iv 1 oil lOOp.m<lb/>
PERSONALS<lb/>
LOSl I ? n ali it-pred mi intiy jray ?<lb/>
' ' : est ind pat ind hai - She<lb/>
still has a scar on her stomach f i n ?<lb/>
wasspayed Lastseeninthi vi<lb/>
MilIK ??; ? ' i<lb/>
: isk foi i i id<lb/>
SIGMA PIrThanks tor tl<lb/>
K VPPA SICS: I. all wl o <lb/>
;ht,l . was thai asighl ??? ??<lb/>
and this is sure not a icsl so d<lb/>
CONRATL'I lns s(.m<lb/>
??? ners M si Sj iriti d Chaptei HEYKA<lb/>
Greer, Artemis Award Kelh Greei Pi<lb/>
k.ipp.Alph i( Hitstai d ' ? '?'? n in<lb/>
Award Collr.nM. i ; lid ?'? resoproud<lb/>
of you! I "v e the Sigmas<lb/>
DANA ft f M I I M BLAIR<lb/>
MATHEWS Youbi Ihdid inexcj llenj ob<lb/>
planningthi ilcntim <lb/>
a blast! Love the Sigmas<lb/>
ALPHA SIGS ND KAPPA SICS ?'??<lb/>
had a great time party lowntowi<lb/>
tvle! rhanks again' Love thi tgmas<lb/>
io mt nun i r n r ni vssr mm r<lb/>
llappv sw,<lb/>
vr h.n ' to<lb/>
wr even i<lb/>
new .pai i i<lb/>
l DN Wll si i<lb/>
hopi innoi<lb/>
?. . ? ? , i<lb/>
?<lb/>
neauingl - ? . ?. I I isa ill I reta?<lb/>
ing Spring Bi<lb/>
PAIG1 rHORTON IK ?PE YOU<lb/>
LEARN1 D YOUR 1 ESSON ANI<lb/>
i ! ! I  ND ED i 1 ? HIS IS<lb/>
. i ? <lb/>
DELTA SIGS A<lb/>
 :??: I lluva j<lb/>
rhanks : ?<lb/>
Itl I S ;  ?<lb/>
I HKs v, ii <lb/>
Missy menl '?'? nChiOi<lb/>
1 is i RAWFORD .  ?<lb/>
 1 pi i ' A<lb/>
DISPLAY Cl ASSI1 II ns<lb/>
DISPLAY1 ASSI1 II ns<lb/>
I Elegant Nails<lb/>
? bv<lb/>
No Image Wcighl Con rol Cci . i<lb/>
;2 ('lifton Si Suite ?"<lb/>
Greenville, Nt 27858<lb/>
Wanda Mtincj Special $25. - Key $40.<lb/>
Phone 756-9558<lb/>
SI v<lb/>
i1S<lb/>
UNIVERSITY<lb/>
APARTMENTS<lb/>
? Located Near ft I<lb/>
Near Major Shopping enters<lb/>
? I Cl Bus Service<lb/>
? (insiii- Laundry<lb/>
Ml unml . -<lb/>
756-7815 ur 758-7436<lb/>
? VI f V I. Vkl'l Vv ?<lb/>
S S. ? l: . ? , r1 - i n r-j<lb/>
 ? ' " i .? rajc<lb/>
mi<lb/>
McBndger<lb/>
Office<lb/>
Furniture<lb/>
We Have:<lb/>
? Desks ? Chairs<lb/>
? Files ? Sales<lb/>
? Computer ? Storage<lb/>
Furniture Cabinets<lb/>
We Buy, Sell, Trade. A Lease<lb/>
mr<lb/>
- 2 9834<lb/>
RINHCOinTOWF KS,<lb/>
Now rakii g I c<lb/>
1990 Efficiency<lb/>
Irm  ('all<lb/>
W IN II W Ml <lb/>
 u 1 ION (iR Bit; s( Kl1 N <lb/>
IMI s R sC I'PTO $1,400 IN<lb/>
11 s1 1" II X1! S!<lb/>
Ohjectht: 1 limit aisi i<lb/>
Commitment: Minimal<lb/>
Moiuv: 1vaisi V1.4IMI<lb/>
L"st: ,o lnv istiiu nt<lb/>
t a in p us organizations, cluls. tl ats.<lb/>
sor unties t .II )( M al 1Mill<lb/>
?H2-0528 1R00) ?5i.s4-?exl 1"<lb/>
We really made up foi V ai -<lb/>
it again real s.nin' Love- Ow<lb/>
PI KAPPA Al PHA ' ?<lb/>
unknown, but we will be r?<lb/>
and partv the night away1 I<lb/>
(fmegas<lb/>
AOPI: Congratulations to thi I<lb/>
new sisters-Catherini ' in<lb/>
Connelly Elizabeth Fn emai<lb/>
lamie I lii kson (ana i lollai I<lb/>
Ihlenfi-ld, Andrea I evirv n,Carey<lb/>
I aura 1 uQuire Mk hi ? m kard<lb/>
i. ige Vngi a ?lit1 e, Jennil<lb/>
Mi liss a Spain Stcj hann ? ? <lb/>
Winget, and I i.i'  VV' i h) ' Wi<lb/>
AOPI AN!) KAPPA SIC<lb/>
Mu's and th- bi thei I r thi<lb/>
v. rid party Itwj real .e. thi<lb/>
? ?<lb/>
HI FRIENDS fhanl :<lb/>
SIGMA PI'S rhisisa<lb/>
wanted to thank vou guvs foi tl<lb/>
i . ? ? ? ? Wfl<lb/>
personally to our h n ?<lb/>
I ? r. Daanksso n uch! I' ? i '? i<lb/>
l PHA (MK RON PI A .<lb/>
ngral ;?? I lizabeth Freemai I ? i<lb/>
  ? <lb/>
r: Weai ? : I I of v<lb/>
.  ?? rs of A( M"i<lb/>
TO Nil I MHD( III l P!l '<lb/>
' ?? ?: : '<lb/>
"? ? ? idtnpt! ?'<lb/>
<lb/>
? ?<lb/>
?: ? : . ? ? ?<lb/>
? ??<lb/>
taken hasitaxi<lb/>
1 . ?. .?<lb/>
?.<lb/>
th ?<lb/>
OPi s<lb/>
s(.1 s<lb/>
?<lb/>
' <lb/>
nispi . c i ssii ii ns<lb/>
PARROTT CANVAS CO. i<lb/>
Large Selection ol Bookbags,<lb/>
1 r,i el Bags &amp; v c ess, iries<lb/>
V e Repair<lb/>
Mis V ;?.??. si<lb/>
?a2 <lb/>
BEST I SKI)nRES<lb/>
Ik ks sai .f.SS  &amp;<lb/>
Ml. SL s .<lb/>
WHITE 1 &amp; s 1 :? walls<lb/>
' ? '?Si<lb/>
LOOK FOR lilt Rtl) AWHI11- SIGN<lb/>
Announcements<lb/>
( AM PUS CHRISTIAN I LL-<lb/>
LOWSHIP<lb/>
. ??. ?? . . ? ??  . every  I<lb/>
t at7pn : I ? 2 M? ndenhall<lb/>
lowship. For i remf all 752 7199<lb/>
WES2FEL<lb/>
Wes2fel is i I hristian fellowship which<lb/>
wi ill students and is sponsored<lb/>
jointly bv the Presbyterian and Methodist<lb/>
Campus Ministries Come to the Method-<lb/>
ist Student Center (501 i 5th across from<lb/>
(larretl dorm I this Wednesday nighl at 5<lb/>
p m and every Wednesday mht tor a<lb/>
delicious all-you-can-eat home cooked<lb/>
meal is; 25) with a short program after<lb/>
wards Signed tor thi' hearing impaired<lb/>
( all 5t 2030 more information<lb/>
IMI'ROVINC. K)L'R STLDY<lb/>
SKILLS<lb/>
Learning how to improve your study skills<lb/>
 grater success in college Hie following<lb/>
mini course and workshops' an help pre<lb/>
pan1 for the added workload al college or<lb/>
help to increase your grade point average<lb/>
All sessions will be held in 13 Wright<lb/>
Building February 26, Monday and 27.<lb/>
Tuesday rime Management J-4:30p.m<lb/>
You may attend all the topi sessions or<lb/>
eh'?!se the ones the ones where vou need<lb/>
the most miprov etnent<lb/>
NEWMAN CATHOLIC STL-<lb/>
DENT CENTER<lb/>
Announcing a Wednesday night dinner<lb/>
special! Fun. fellowship and all the home<lb/>
ooking you can eat It ali starts al 3fl<lb/>
p m C ome Bring a friend<lb/>
EXPRESSIONS MAGAZINE<lb/>
E pressions is now a eptu g fiction and<lb/>
mm fit tion pro ? .  irl les and po<lb/>
etry for review tor the pril issue Dead<lb/>
line tor all submissi March 2 al<lb/>
5 OOp m rhe office is located in the Tub<lb/>
lications Bldg across from oyner Li<lb/>
brarv<lb/>
COOPERATIVE EDUCA-<lb/>
TION<lb/>
All majors are encouraged to attend a<lb/>
summer s.iles internship seminar on a<lb/>
college agent program to be held Wed<lb/>
nesday, February 28 al I pm in re n<lb/>
1032, General Classroom Building ! earn<lb/>
how vou can pin the No 1 s.iles force in<lb/>
industry with the most admired life<lb/>
insurance company in America<lb/>
COOPERATIVE EDUCA-<lb/>
TION.<lb/>
Representatives of the Walt Pisnev<lb/>
World c ollege Program will be on cam-<lb/>
pus recruiting students to work in<lb/>
(Iriando Spring Semester A required<lb/>
presentation will be held on March I 5 at<lb/>
7:30 pm m General Classroom Huid<lb/>
ing Room 1031 and interviews will be<lb/>
s, heduled on March lt For more infor<lb/>
mation and application materials, con<lb/>
tactooperatjve Education 2028 Gen<lb/>
oral Classroom Building<lb/>
'OLD1ES-GOLD1ES<lb/>
DANCE<lb/>
ECU District 97, SF.WC will be spon<lb/>
soring an "Oldie Coldies' Dance onsot<lb/>
dav M<lb/>
Mam i a : . ? <lb/>
Sch ol f Med 1-247<lb/>
mem ber of thi ' list rii I '7<lb/>
Boa: ,i E uti. e v ommittee<lb/>
GAMMA BETA PHI<lb/>
At ntionall membei  hi mosl highh<lb/>
  ? ? Mat 9 p.m'in<lb/>
enk ins Au lil I .en it you've<lb/>
missed the first tw meetii  makesure<lb/>
it tl ere are still plenty ot<lb/>
opp rl  ibi ?: lean pomts Ticket sales,<lb/>
state project ind the national com en<lb/>
bon will be discussed Inductions are<lb/>
coming up so, m!<lb/>
GAMMA BETA PHI<lb/>
fhi<lb/>
Auditorium Officers will meet at 8 M)<lb/>
pm<lb/>
THREATS TO THE GLOBAL<lb/>
OCEAN<lb/>
! 'av id Brown from the i oust, au So iet<lb/>
will present a slide and lecture series on<lb/>
Tue, Fob 2S it 8:00 pm in Hendrix<lb/>
Theatre Free admission<lb/>
AMNESTY INT'L<lb/>
Amnesty hapter402of( Ireenv ilie will<lb/>
p m al St. Paul's I piscopalhun I<lb/>
ir ?'? ime to attend and help<lb/>
for i  ; i tical prisoner in 1 ugns<lb/>
PHI SIGMA PI<lb/>
there ?ill be no dinnei meeting<lb/>
Meet instead in our usual riS'in<lb/>
HAVE A SALE SPRING BREAK<lb/>
Sign a pledge to have a safe Spring Break<lb/>
Don't drink and drive and. ordon'tgetina<lb/>
car with anyone who has been drinking On<lb/>
Wednesday February 28, 10 a m. 2p m m<lb/>
t:ont of the Student Store, take the pledge<lb/>
and registei to win a 19911'I v mouth laser Rs<lb/>
turbo Each II Ih pledger will receive a Safe<lb/>
Spring Break Button, while supplies last<lb/>
Sponsored b BACC 1IUS and the Division<lb/>
ot student 11 DiningSerivces<lb/>
NEWMAN CATHOLIC STU-<lb/>
DENT CENTER<lb/>
The Newman Catholic student Center<lb/>
wishes to announce a special Ash Wednes<lb/>
iav Sorv ice, February 2S, at 5 W p m in the<lb/>
Biology Building, Room 103. For further<lb/>
information call 757 1991<lb/>
STUDY IN CHINA<lb/>
rhe ECU Office of International Studies<lb/>
announces the opportunity to spend a se-<lb/>
mester in China' The program is admini<lb/>
Stered by Wake Forest University and the<lb/>
deadline tor application is March it 1990 It<lb/>
vou are interested in learning the Chinese<lb/>
language and culture first hand, consider<lb/>
spending the fall semester at Beijing Foreign<lb/>
1 anguages Normal College in China Class<lb/>
will be taught in English with a select group<lb/>
a, c<lb/>
idem ' - ? , i hinese<lb/>
' ? ? pital than in the<lb/>
?. - - I very ?pci<lb/>
? ?? ? ' idi - ts  i i ?<lb/>
msandwei<lb/>
in I thi ty and country frei<lb/>
u ships mav no availal<lb/>
pted parl pants. EC! would lil<lb/>
? o students tor this<lb/>
p top by 1002<lb/>
General Cla Idmg for further<lb/>
information and ipplication materials or<lb/>
call M ? . it 757 -c<lb/>
UNIVERSITY STUDENT<lb/>
MARSHALS<lb/>
Arc, studi ?; interested in sen ingasaUni<lb/>
versity Mai ?: i I i (hi I - I 1991 school<lb/>
year may bta ipj itii ? ? 211<lb/>
'A hi u I ? - idi t be classified as a<lb/>
lunioi bv thi endof S rmg semesd r<lb/>
and ha e a 0 a idi : . v erage to be<lb/>
eligible Return completed application to<lb/>
211 Whichardby March 15<lb/>
ECU SCHOOL Ol MUSIC<lb/>
EVENTS FEB. 27 - MARCH 12<lb/>
Young Artist Competition Finals Feb 28<lb/>
7:00p m Ri tchei falHall free)Don<lb/>
Pasquale byDonizetb performed by Na<lb/>
tional Opera Company with E I Sym<lb/>
phonyOMarch 1 8:00p.m RetcherRecital<lb/>
Hall free); lert Skillen . trombone, unior<lb/>
Recital Hall (March I2,9:00p.m Retchet<lb/>
Recital HalL free) DIAI 7574370 FOR THE<lb/>
S I II N  v ? M SU S RlORDED<lb/>
CAI ENDAROFEV ENTS<lb/>
NC TEACHING FELLOWS<lb/>
All Fast Carolina reaching Fellows will<lb/>
t on I ebruary 26, al pn<lb/>
M<lb/>
? ,   j . .<lb/>
REGISTRATION FOR GJ V<lb/>
I RAJ C QJ 1 EGJ STL DEN is<lb/>
?<lb/>
the wis-k of Mai<lb/>
tsfora<lb/>
I ?rh Ri gistratn<lb/>
end March :<lb/>
? ? ? '<lb/>
PHI SIGMA PI<lb/>
(emember there will be a dinnei<lb/>
on the 27th Meet instead ii<lb/>
rixm in GC i<lb/>
EARL CAROUNA CHil D<lb/>
HOOD CLUB EC)2<lb/>
Attention all (EC i2 members Vn -<lb/>
fei  g restless and I '<lb/>
vou dow n ' ello:re  our i<lb/>
Wednesday February 28 at ? : '<lb/>
;ht and get ena fei ?<lb/>
?  :est and Will show us ho? '<lb/>
exercise and energize You veil! I<lb/>
really great time' Also please brine<lb/>
tor I shirtssweatshirts? We hop I<lb/>
you there'<lb/>
I AMBDA Al PHA<lb/>
Ur Hal Daniel, Ph U IVpt of pc?d<lb/>
Language and Auditory Pathology w<lb/>
speak about his tiNMun interests in hi.<lb/>
man evolution and biological ant! I <lb/>
Ogy Tuesday February 2 4 I p.l<lb/>
302 Ketreshments will be served WI<lb/>
Anthropologv majors minors or anyone<lb/>
that is interested in learning more are CM<lb/>
diallv inv ited to attend<lb/>
<pb facs="00058198_0008"/><lb/>
The Fast Carolinian, February 27, 1940 7<lb/>
SGA<lb/>
Continued from page 1<lb/>
w ith the purposed informing the<lb/>
ECU ommunih and to an extent<lb/>
general publu about the is<lb/>
sues m nl mg animals (both<lb/>
human and non human)<lb/>
s debate ended the bod)<lb/>
?; i ?'? Sf- i Vs? onstitution if1<lb/>
" lunded organization<lb/>
! itoi Mart) Helms mo<lb/>
. ip a salary increase<lb/>
resolution w hn h failed during the<lb/>
ns( ommittee meet<lb/>
? i. ! lelms s.iul he<lb/>
? .I ,t valid argu<lb/>
) the resolution<lb/>
iture floor<lb/>
vi .i-a whole needs to<lb/>
ic so that ever)<lb/>
- ? i tin' issue ,nd<lb/>
 as deteated In i<lb/>
.onkl have<lb/>
introduced .? salary increase rats<lb/>
iih: the S( .A president's income to<lb/>
$ 00a month the SGA treasurer s<lb/>
tc $200 and the Speaker ol the<lb/>
legislature s to $200<lb/>
In other business, both tho<lb/>
i onstitution and the$l ,074 appro<lb/>
pnatii n to 1 earn Semper Fi passed<lb/>
by a voice vote fhe neworganiza<lb/>
tion plans t isitlocal injured war<lb/>
veterans hold leadershipand map<lb/>
reading i lasses, and goon expedi<lb/>
tions<lb/>
i )ne member ol the legislature<lb/>
suggested that theS i should not<lb/>
fund the group's request for office<lb/>
supplies<lb/>
In debate, I egislator fhomas<lb/>
Walters said lhe sav in tht-ir<lb/>
constitution that thev want to lv<lb/>
leaders and to be a leader, you<lb/>
have to be organized You need<lb/>
office supplies to be organized<lb/>
Faculty<lb/>
In addition to office supplies,<lb/>
the funds will cover costs for a first<lb/>
aid kit,compasses,canteens, maps<lb/>
and advertising<lb/>
I he constitution for the Com<lb/>
municationsBroadcasting I lonor<lb/>
Society also passed bv consent<lb/>
The $720 appropriation to the<lb/>
nm Cadet Association passed<lb/>
K consent Legislator Barbara<lb/>
I amh said the 55 members plan to<lb/>
use a portion oi the appropriated<lb/>
money for a banquet.<lb/>
I amb also said that campus<lb/>
organizations need to contact ei<lb/>
tlier her or 1 egislator Alan I'ho<lb/>
mas alter spring break tor annual<lb/>
appropriation requests<lb/>
I egislator Michael 1 ladle<lb/>
asked that all E U groups that<lb/>
have not had their constitution<lb/>
hiannually reviewed contact him<lb/>
as soon as possible<lb/>
C ontinued from page <lb/>
minimal writing coming students are unsatisfac to better writing skills I his is<lb/>
in placement essays torv that writing skills among done In requiring more writing<lb/>
rollment in man graduating E U students assignments in all classes ol de<lb/>
omposi are unsatisfactory and that the partments.<lb/>
 was that program is supported b faculty, Five new members were<lb/>
?' I gradu students and the administration elected as Faculty Senate officers<lb/>
in business pr Patricia 1 Anderson, JoAnn<lb/>
? ? that thev rhecommitteeisrectmmend ones Dr Gree Givens, Pt Steve<lb/>
ted in<lb/>
that the (Faculty) Senate fhomas,andEnnis hesfangwen<lb/>
d i,<lb/>
efforts to develop multi unanimoush elected to til! tin<lb/>
irvand 1 I ral mi positi i<lb/>
suchas<lb/>
V i itine V ress tin<lb/>
? ? iilum and that a suppcirl alondarsfor the 12ai I<lb/>
ten for WA( be built is .oon 19Q. academu vears wen<lb/>
asnossiblcintothcWritine enter passed af tin- meeting fTi<lb/>
th il the program can begin as<lb/>
irh as tall 1"<lb/>
alendar allows t:<lb/>
?rim<lb/>
semester to beem on Ian II m<lb/>
fheWA( program is designed stead of Ian s<lb/>
Asst. News Editor<lb/>
A working knowledge of Pagemaker for the Macintosh is a must.<lb/>
Deadline for applications is 5:00 p.m. on March 12<lb/>
SGA ELECTIONS<lb/>
For The Offices Of:<lb/>
President<lb/>
Vice - President<lb/>
Secretary<lb/>
Treasurer<lb/>
Filing Dates<lb/>
February 23 -<lb/>
March 2, 1990<lb/>
For Information Call SGA Office<lb/>
Mendenhall Student Center<lb/>
757-4726<lb/>
ADVtRUStD llfM POLICY 1 ai h .it these aUve'Tised items is lequired to be readily available to' sale o ea n .? I ? ?? ??; '<lb/>
as spei if? j'iy noted m this ail It we do run uul ol di advertised item we will utt?-r you ,uu I ho r .1 a in pat r ?<lb/>
 ?? available 'ttie. ling The same savings ui a idineheck which will entiile ?? (O pu'thase (he advert ? I '? ? it tint<lb/>
advertised me withir. 30 days Only .me vendor OupOfl will be accepted pet left pun ' asei)<lb/>
Jeno's 7 7Q<lb/>
Pizzast7 I v<lb/>
FROZEN JENOS PIZZA ROLLS 6-OZ<lb/>
BUY ONE<lb/>
Kroger get one<lb/>
Sandwich Bread 2l40?t FREE!<lb/>
N ui OH WATER m. <lb/>
Star Kist Chunk CQC<lb/>
Light Tuna 6 5 J w<lb/>
Sealtest 2 $9<lb/>
Lowfat Milk a ??<lb/>
   ??  ?. . ? <lb/>
 RETURNABLE BOTTLE CAFFEINE FREE PEPS' 0 a<lb/>
Caffeine Free Diet Pepsi, IJ U rk<lb/>
Diet Pepsi or Pepsi Cobau, U U Y"<lb/>
? N ET PEPSM5 PA   ?'?<lb/>
California fiQC<lb/>
Head Lettuce En vv<lb/>
HI ICE MILK OH<lb/>
Breyer's<lb/>
Ice Cream<lb/>
V? Gallon<lb/>
KROGER GRADfc A<lb/>
18 CT si 39<lb/>
?KROGtR COUPON" ? <lb/>
I<lb/>
I<lb/>
??"? :i<lb/>
I<lb/>
I<lb/>
l<lb/>
I<lb/>
I<lb/>
I<lb/>
I<lb/>
l<lb/>
AS A0VERTISE0 ON TV<lb/>
Fresh<lb/>
Strawberries<lb/>
Quart<lb/>
T<lb/>
REGULARLY<lb/>
$1.99 QT.<lb/>
44 CT MEDIUM OR 33-CT LARGE<lb/>
Comforts Elastic<lb/>
Leg Diapers<lb/>
LIMIT 1 PKG WITH COUPON<lb/>
LIMIT ON? COUPON PER FAMIY<lb/>
IN THE DELI PASTRY SHOPPE<lb/>
Deli Fresh<lb/>
Pepperoni Pizza<lb/>
12 inch 2lUz.<lb/>
C0UMM G000 SUH Kl ftS'T MAMN t?<lb/>
su?jfCT to ?rwic?u stati ? i0C?i i??is<lb/>
2J<lb/>
For<lb/>
REGULARLY (3 29EAO<lb/>
<lb/>
<pb facs="00058198_0009"/><lb/>
The East Carolinian, February 27,1990 7<lb/>
SGA<lb/>
Continued from page 1<lb/>
with the purpose of informing the<lb/>
ECU community, and to an extent<lb/>
the general public, about the is-<lb/>
sues involving animals (both<lb/>
human and non-human)<lb/>
As debate ended, the body<lb/>
approved SFTA'sconstitution asa<lb/>
SGA funded organization.<lb/>
legislator Marty Helms mo-<lb/>
tioned to bring up a salary increase<lb/>
resolution, which failed during the<lb/>
Appropriations Committee meet-<lb/>
ing on Monday. Helms said he<lb/>
thought there was a valid argu-<lb/>
ment for discussing the resolution<lb/>
on the legislature floor.<lb/>
"The body as a whole needs to<lb/>
consider this issue so that every<lb/>
legislator can know the issue and<lb/>
hear the statistics<lb/>
The motion was defeated by a<lb/>
23-20 vote.<lb/>
The resolution would have<lb/>
introduced a salary increase rais-<lb/>
ing the SG A president's income to<lb/>
$300 a month, the SG A treasurer's<lb/>
to $200 and the Speaker of the<lb/>
legislature's to $200.<lb/>
In other business, both the<lb/>
constitution and the $1,074 appro-<lb/>
priation to Team Semper Fi passed<lb/>
by a voice vote. The new organiza-<lb/>
tion plans to visit local injured war<lb/>
veterans, hold leadership and map<lb/>
reading classes, and go on expedi-<lb/>
tions.<lb/>
One member of the legislature<lb/>
suggested that theSGA should not<lb/>
fund the group's request for office<lb/>
supplies.<lb/>
In debate, Legislator Thomas<lb/>
Walters said: "They say in their<lb/>
constitution that they want to be<lb/>
leaders, and to be a leader, you<lb/>
have to be organized. You need<lb/>
office supplies to be organized<lb/>
Faculty<lb/>
In addition to office supplies,<lb/>
the funds will cover costs for a first<lb/>
aid kit,compasses,canteens, maps<lb/>
and advertising.<lb/>
The constitution for the Com-<lb/>
municationsBroadcasting Honor<lb/>
Society also passed by consent.<lb/>
The $720 appropriation to the<lb/>
Army Cadet Association passed<lb/>
by consent. Legislator Barbara<lb/>
Lamb said the 55 members plan to<lb/>
use a portion of the appropriated<lb/>
money for a banquet.<lb/>
Lamb also said that campus<lb/>
organizations need to contact ei-<lb/>
ther her or Legislator Alan Tho<lb/>
mas after spring break for annua<lb/>
appropriation requests<lb/>
Legislator Michael Hadley<lb/>
asked that all ECU groups that<lb/>
have not had their constitution<lb/>
biannually reviewed contact him<lb/>
as soon as possible.<lb/>
Continued from page 3<lb/>
demonstrate minimal writing<lb/>
Competencies in placement essays<lb/>
written prior to enrollment in<lb/>
English 1100, freshman composi-<lb/>
tion Another finding was that<lb/>
"82 percent of recent ECU gradu-<lb/>
ates working locally in business<lb/>
and industry indicated that they<lb/>
had not been instructed fan writing<lb/>
since freshman composition, and<lb/>
that mOM same graduate spend<lb/>
23 percent of their work time writ-<lb/>
mi; and 17 percent reading the<lb/>
writing of others<lb/>
WAC's conclusions are in-<lb/>
cluded in a report that states<lb/>
"writing skills among many in-<lb/>
coming students are unsatisfac-<lb/>
tory, that writing skills among<lb/>
many graduating ECU students<lb/>
arc unsatisfactory, and that the<lb/>
program is supported by faculty,<lb/>
students and the administration<lb/>
Thecommittee is recommend-<lb/>
ing that "the (Faculty) Senate<lb/>
support efforts to develop multi-<lb/>
disciplinary and multicultural ini-<lb/>
tiative, such as Writing Across the<lb/>
Curriculum, and that a support<lb/>
system for WAC be built as soon<lb/>
as possible in to the Writing Center<lb/>
so that the program can begin as<lb/>
early as fall 1990<lb/>
The WAC program isdcsigned<lb/>
to better writing skills. This is<lb/>
done by requiring more writing<lb/>
assignments in all classes of de-<lb/>
partments.<lb/>
Five new members were<lb/>
elected as Faculty Senate officers.<lb/>
Dr. Patricia ). Anderson, Jo Ann<lb/>
Jones, Dr. Greg Givens, Dr. Steve<lb/>
Thomas, and EnnisChcstang were<lb/>
unanimously elected to fill the<lb/>
positions.<lb/>
The calendars for the 1992 and<lb/>
1993 academic years were also<lb/>
passed at the meeting. The new<lb/>
calendar allows the 1993 spring<lb/>
semester to begin on Jan. 11, in-<lb/>
stead of Jan. 8.<lb/>
ftljc Cast tooJt<lb/>
Is now accepting application<lb/>
Asst. News E<lb/>
A working knowledge of Pagemaker for th<lb/>
Deadline for applications is 5:00<lb/>
? i ?<lb/>
? 11.<lb/>
!H?<lb/>
i<lb/>
SGA ELEC1<lb/>
For The Offices Of:<lb/>
President<lb/>
Vice - President<lb/>
Secretary<lb/>
Treasurer<lb/>
Filing Dates:<lb/>
February 23 -<lb/>
March 2, 1990<lb/>
For Information Call SGA Office:<lb/>
Mendenhall Student Center<lb/>
757-4726<lb/>
7?-rSr<lb/>
JENO'S PIZZA ROLLS 6-0Z. . . 99C<lb/>
BUY ONE-<lb/>
GET ONE<lb/>
 Loaf'FREE!<lb/>
Star-Kist Chunk CQC<lb/>
Light Tuna6.5.02 wv<lb/>
DUKE'S MAYONNAISE 32 OZ $109<lb/>
Sealtest2 $09<lb/>
Lowfat Milkg ?<lb/>
KROGER BUTTERMILK GALLON $1.99<lb/>
NONRETURNABLE BOTTLE. CAFFEINE FREE PEPSI f A<lb/>
Caffeine Free Diet Pepsi, U LI rj<lb/>
Diet Pepsi or Pepsi Cola21.trUU r'<lb/>
DIET PEPSI OR CAFFEINE FREE dIeT PEPSI 15-PAK 12-OZ. CANS $3.29<lb/>
California CQC<lb/>
Head LettuceEach Vv<lb/>
LIGHT ICE MILK OR<lb/>
IN THE DELI-PASTRY SHOPPE<lb/>
Deli Fresh<lb/>
Pepperoni Pizza<lb/>
12-Inch 28hz.<lb/>
For<lb/>
REGULARLY . . . 3? EACH<lb/>
<pb facs="00058198_0010"/><lb/>
dJIrg Sagt (Earfllfnfan<lb/>
State and Nation<lb/>
Chamorro defeats Ortega<lb/>
in Nicaragua elections<lb/>
February 27, 1990<lb/>
MAN M .1 Nicaragua(AP)<lb/>
Violeta lirr H ?s dehamorro<lb/>
publisher ot the nation s opposi<lb/>
tion newspaper led .1 14-party<lb/>
coalition to victor) over Sandin<lb/>
ist.i niledespitc political inexperi<lb/>
ence and a broken knee<lb/>
fheNicaraguan people have<lb/>
shown that thej want to live in<lb/>
democracy in peace and in free<lb/>
dom Mrs Chamorro tokj more<lb/>
than 1 ,000 cheering supporters at<lb/>
her election headquarters Mon<lb/>
day<lb/>
?s a girl, Violeta Barrios<lb/>
wanted to learn to type and be a<lb/>
secretary when she grew up In<lb/>
stead, she married a man who<lb/>
became one ot Nicaragua s rcvo<lb/>
lutionary heroes He was assassi-<lb/>
nated in 1978<lb/>
Mrs Chamorro 60, ran for<lb/>
president with gusto and .1 com<lb/>
mon tout h i ler t v 0 mam<lb/>
strengths v ere her martyred hus-<lb/>
band and her lack ot alignment<lb/>
with am one political partv 1 hat<lb/>
was ? ? ? : ? quality her .1 <lb/>
candidate foi the disparah<lb/>
tra nous I mted National ppo<lb/>
sition a i oaiition ol 14 pai ti<lb/>
know n as I i )<lb/>
"he memory ot Pedro loaquin<lb/>
Chamorro has been uvJ by il<lb/>
sides 1 p b Mrs hai ? n<lb/>
tour hildren, two ot w hom -up<lb/>
portrtega<lb/>
Mv father's enemies are<lb/>
within i t<lb/>
? ' Mr-<lb/>
Chamorro seldestdauehtei i. Liu<lb/>
dia I he phrase was used in<lb/>
Sandinista campaign graffiti<lb/>
throughout Ni? aragua<lb/>
Mrs (hamorro s late hus-<lb/>
band, whose father started what is<lb/>
today Nicaragua s sole opposi tion<lb/>
newspaper. La Prensa, was shot<lb/>
dow n byassassinsin anuary b's<lb/>
1 hesla) ing, believed to have been<lb/>
ordered by dictator Anastasio<lb/>
So mo za, ignited tin' popular re-<lb/>
volt that brought the Sandinistas<lb/>
to power in luiv 1979<lb/>
M rs ? hamorro, w ho still<lb/>
publishes .j Prensa, became a<lb/>
member ol the junta that tooko er<lb/>
from Somoza but quit after nine<lb/>
months She hils hitter memories<lb/>
ot what she 1 onsiders the Sandin<lb/>
istas betrayal of her husband's<lb/>
democratic goalsand her own faith<lb/>
m the revolution<lb/>
"I'm not praising Somoza s<lb/>
government it was hi ruble But<lb/>
the threats that 1 ve had !iom the<lb/>
Sandinistas 1 ne ertfo ?ught they<lb/>
would repav mo in that wav she<lb/>
said<lb/>
i ler pain as a w idow, stroiu;<lb/>
u hgunis ? 010. u tions and loy alt<lb/>
ii 1 . hamorro s memory she<lb/>
pay s weekly isits t. - his grave to<lb/>
leave fresh (lowers made her a<lb/>
s mh 1 ot dissatisfai tion with the<lb/>
imist.is but there have been<lb/>
many draw ba ks<lb/>
Even after months (it earn<lb/>
paigning she stumbled over<lb/>
hes and made bafflingblun<lb/>
dels I .ist vear. iliiniK a trip to<lb/>
Europe she was asked about<lb/>
1 i Ys government program<lb/>
It s a secret she replied<lb/>
I he "Sandinistas have tried to<lb/>
paint Mrshamorro as empU<lb/>
headed A pro-government news-<lb/>
paper runs a daily 1 olumn w here<lb/>
nearly every ioke portrays her as<lb/>
slow wit ted.<lb/>
Perhaps responding to this.<lb/>
Mrshamorro told a rally early<lb/>
in the campaign, 1 am not .1<lb/>
dummy<lb/>
( me ot her top advisers is her<lb/>
eldest son. Pedro loaquin<lb/>
1 hamorro. who returned from<lb/>
exile in Miami, w here he had been<lb/>
a director ot the 1: S backed<lb/>
( ontra rebels who tried to topple<lb/>
Ortega's government b tone<lb/>
The son feared his mother<lb/>
would be manipulated b vice<lb/>
presulenti.il candidate Virgilio<lb/>
( iodov and top aide Mind ? e<lb/>
sar tw' strong w illed p hli ians<lb/>
Mrshamorro has plaved the<lb/>
roleof presidential candidate with<lb/>
gusto She broke her 1 - ec in<lb/>
a fall Dec. il and was hampered<lb/>
during the campaign by a as!<lb/>
she campaigned from a wheel<lb/>
chair under a sun tent set up in the<lb/>
back ol a pickup tru k<lb/>
Beaming smiles al peasants<lb/>
Dona Violeta was familiar nd<lb/>
borly . ailing people<lb/>
: ipito" and 'mamita<lb/>
I tr to help. tod( ?good things<lb/>
for the countrv Mrs , hamorro<lb/>
said I ,im a hal - am<lb/>
Bush calls Kohl meeting 'frank'<lb/>
Talks allay fears of reunification<lb/>
WASHINGTON<lb/>
President I .? ? ; ;sh and West<lb/>
(lerm in han ellor I lelmut Kohl<lb/>
followii  ? traordinaril frank<lb/>
talksat ampDavid sa) the -? I<lb/>
has nothing to tear from a united<lb/>
(ermanv and promise it w ill<lb/>
tethered to the Western military<lb/>
alliance<lb/>
Emerging Sunda from I<lb/>
days ol talks at the presidential<lb/>
retreat bush and Kohl sought to<lb/>
allay tears from Mos ? I Wai<lb/>
saw to I 1 mdon that the I <lb/>
manys are mar. hing to th iltai<lb/>
too rapidly<lb/>
Bush said they shared a<lb/>
common belief that a unified<lb/>
Germany should remain a full<lb/>
member ol the orth Atlantic<lb/>
I reaty (rganization, in hiding<lb/>
participahon in its military struc<lb/>
hire but with "a special milit.tr <lb/>
status tor tin  rritor) ol what is<lb/>
now East (iermanv<lb/>
Kohl, w ithoul mentioning<lb/>
NATO by name, said, " 1 he alli-<lb/>
ance ol tree democracies in Eu<lb/>
rope and North America areol<lb/>
fundamental importance for p 1 ?<lb/>
and security. This is true now. This<lb/>
will be true in the future "<lb/>
Kohl also ruled out a Warsaw-<lb/>
Pa. ! connet tion for the new,er<lb/>
many, sa) ing "A united( Iermanv<lb/>
cannot belong to twodifferent pact<lb/>
systems " 1 le added We w ill<lb/>
have transition situations which<lb/>
w ill ha e to bt 111 'g ? :<lb/>
1 hi vs ?. ;? '  -<lb/>
trooi '  : : : 1 ? ? ?:ram<lb/>
w hl ll hi I . ?:?:?.<lb/>
tions Mai 18 tl it in ? ? ? ted<lb/>
ti 1 sped the union ? I 1 it and<lb/>
West Germanv Kohl reiterated<lb/>
that a neutral (iermanv is out ol<lb/>
the question<lb/>
Neutralism w ould be a ver<lb/>
false solution, said Kohl, adding<lb/>
that his country learned that les-<lb/>
sen diehard wav after World War<lb/>
1. I he isolation ol the Weimar<lb/>
Republic was followed by the ter-<lb/>
rorand militarism ol 1 litler s Third<lb/>
Reich<lb/>
Poland, decimated by the<lb/>
See Talks, page 10<lb/>
Transplanting bone marrow<lb/>
to marrow transplants can save Mves but with 20,000 different types of bone marrow I ; a good<lb/>
 - c crucial. A national registry program has enrolled 87.000 volunteers but has shortages from m 1 .<lb/>
groups.<lb/>
1 Donor selection<lb/>
.ire three typos of transp I<lb/>
Auto logo us<lb/>
Use. patient .? mai ro<lb/>
r -? 1 removed bef. ? . Itienl marrow<lb/>
? Syngenic<lb/>
i Co from a lenl il twin To<lb/>
?4 j- . date " has ost<lb/>
. successful<lb/>
2 Preparation<lb/>
ft<lb/>
J Allogenic<lb/>
? Comes from a sibling, parent<lb/>
? or matched donor This is tfie<lb/>
- most common<lb/>
Inside a bone<lb/>
Cross section<lb/>
-?; j Compact<lb/>
bone tissue<lb/>
Marrow region<lb/>
?.<lb/>
:<lb/>
Spongy bone tissue<lb/>
Spongy tissue contains many cavities<lb/>
filled with marrow Bone marrow produces<lb/>
three types of blood eels leukocytes<lb/>
(infection- fighting white blood cells),<lb/>
erythrocyte (oxygen-carrymg red blood<lb/>
cells); and platelets or thrombocytes<lb/>
(clotting cells)<lb/>
The patient's marrow must be destroyed to keep the<lb/>
immune system from rejecting the new ma're I ? ?<lb/>
or other cancer is involved, chemotherapy is a so given.<lb/>
3 Aspiration of the marrow<lb/>
Under gene- i 11 ? tl a a, a qu<lb/>
of blood-di'uted mai ???<lb/>
?oved from the donor's<lb/>
pelvic bone with a syringe<lb/>
The marrow is then processed<lb/>
through stamiess-steei screens<lb/>
to break up particles and remov<lb/>
: iod and ant; coagulants<lb/>
4 Infusion<lb/>
Through a catheter, the marrow is injected<lb/>
into the patient's blood stream. Marrow<lb/>
cells m grate to cavt'es in bones<lb/>
5 Supportive care<lb/>
Because two to six weeks may<lb/>
pass before the marrow begins<lb/>
producing blood cells, patients<lb/>
need transfusions of white blood<lb/>
cells to prevent infection.<lb/>
Transfusions of red blood ceils<lb/>
and platelets are also needed to<lb/>
prevent anemia and bleeding<lb/>
Because preparation for the<lb/>
transplant often causes nausea<lb/>
and vomiting, intravenous feeding<lb/>
may be required<lb/>
Rapid growth in West, South<lb/>
Here's how the U.S. population will shift by 2010<lb/>
244i22.0<lb/>
20.6 18.0<lb/>
i<lb/>
20.6<lb/>
23.7C<lb/>
j Midwest<lb/>
i ?. - -<lb/>
West<lb/>
Northeast<lb/>
43"0<lb/>
<lb/>
1988 2010<lb/>
Scur ?- en is Bureau<lb/>
34.4 36.4<lb/>
<lb/>
South<lb/>
<lb/>
 - ?? u ?<lb/>
Ethnic scholarship<lb/>
receives SBI attention<lb/>
GREENSBORO (AP) -Well<lb/>
into the second semester, students<lb/>
at some predominantly black i nl<lb/>
1  1 ,  . . , 11.<lb/>
state are avvaitn I<lb/>
dollar to help them p i for the<lb/>
? I year<lb/>
! heState Bureau ollnvi<lb/>
ticn has begun cxamii<lb/>
matter at the request i-( ' I<lb/>
1 lampton, distrn t att rn I 1<lb/>
Rockingham andaswell coun-<lb/>
ties, but neither Hampton nor<lb/>
Curtis Ellis the SBI supervisor for<lb/>
financial crimes, would dis ussthe<lb/>
probe<lb/>
i ast j ear, Eliz ibeth V noha<lb/>
i ea .1aswell County 1 il ???; -<lb/>
enth had returned I hei<lb/>
? ? .?. not 1 anceyv ille afti r 28<lb/>
years in Philadelphia, set uj a $7<lb/>
million endowment<lb/>
rhe B I. I ea Memorial S I<lb/>
arship Foundation, named tor<lb/>
Lea's mother, set up$ 18,00 four-<lb/>
year scholarships to pay for tui-<lb/>
tion, books, room anvi h 11 I For<lb/>
the recipients I ea, it seeme I ;<lb/>
returned home a wealth<lb/>
and was putting !u r nchi I 1<lb/>
gi ?od deed: helping 1 ?ung I<lb/>
scholars attend collegi in hopes<lb/>
that somedax one ol them n<lb/>
help discover a cure for cancer,<lb/>
the Ween ?? ? ; . ? ? ? re<lb/>
ported Sunday<lb/>
Last Ink she and the<lb/>
foundation's directors, man) of<lb/>
them prominent citizens of<lb/>
Caswell County and some Pied<lb/>
mont 1 ities, held a $4,000 banquet<lb/>
forthe -1; scholarship winnersand<lb/>
their families in all, the students<lb/>
were to receive $250,000 worth ol<lb/>
?her education<lb/>
Lea, a sharecropper's dauj<lb/>
ter ind f rmer waitn ;? I is vet I<lb/>
d m her philanthi<lb/>
pr impting some to p n I 1<lb/>
they'll cover tuition bills 1 ?<lb/>
never exp ted I ? Othei<lb/>
.ire skeptical.<lb/>
no infi irn iti 1 tl it<lb/>
?  ? ids me I ? ? ? . ?<lb/>
the existerw e of the monev at any<lb/>
point in this thing, savs Wavne<lb/>
Crumwell, a Reidsville lawyer<lb/>
retained briefly last sumnv 1<lb/>
the t la tion f 01 il ad ice<lb/>
itser ?.er puzzlii<lb/>
1 ea has refused todiv u<lb/>
source of the I indal 1<lb/>
I has 11 ted that I i-uj<lb/>
on the scholarship mone is an<lb/>
internal matter that will K<lb/>
rected Most of the foundat<lb/>
board members have stepped<lb/>
d ?? n, however Lea still sen<lb/>
chiel executive officer<lb/>
: '? : 1 n 1; . nald<lb/>
Fuller, a i ancev ville veterinai 11<lb/>
and torn rTi wn1 iun il n<lb/>
? ? : . lid not<lb/>
no-shovs scholarships Phursdaj<lb/>
sa ingit w asan internal matt 1<lb/>
In an mten iew Saturday in<lb/>
Fuller s waiting room, 1 eainsisted<lb/>
the commitments will be honored<lb/>
soon but declined to specif) the<lb/>
1 aus ror the dela<lb/>
"I think it sa matter of straight-<lb/>
ening out some things, internal<lb/>
affairs she said.<lb/>
1 he foundation is a ue.<lb/>
Lea insisted 'We recommittedto<lb/>
the children.<lb/>
Soviets<lb/>
protest<lb/>
party<lb/>
Ml S ' '?'?<lb/>
omtnou<lb/>
:??? ?<lb/>
d. mi ?cra tivisi<lb/>
thchundredt nl<lb/>
than KlSovictcil lema<lb/>
end ti '1 me party'<lb/>
1 he r.illn s Sui la inj<lb/>
ted in scope in I<lb/>
nists 71 y r rul<lb/>
?? rs in the 11 I I<lb/>
minded r publii<lb/>
appan ripped th<lb/>
nist ?'<lb/>
jontv rhe da 1 ?<lb/>
wide elect ii<lb/>
republic Mold<lb/>
? serii f ofl<lb/>
last week that exti<lb/>
? ?<lb/>
low in soi<lb/>
I<lb/>
?<lb/>
1 who ?? .<lb/>
. <lb/>
alonj?<lb/>
peop<lb/>
ice and<lb/>
: ' ?<lb/>
" . -<lb/>
-<lb/>
proaches 1<lb/>
17,000 p ind<lb/>
try troop 1<lb/>
-<lb/>
ail . : . <lb/>
?<lb/>
. ? : '<lb/>
nist 1 ?'<lb/>
neenni<lb/>
not set :<lb/>
to thwart ? it<lb/>
lar st<lb/>
demi cra .<lb/>
Dei 11 :<lb/>
?  refin<lb/>
? ? - . ularelec<lb/>
dent to the estal<lb/>
See Protests pace ?'<lb/>
Camp Lejune expands facilities<lb/>
While the need for budget 1 uts<lb/>
has led to plans for the losure ol<lb/>
some military bases around the<lb/>
country, Pentagon planners have<lb/>
their sights aimed at expanding<lb/>
several Northarolina facilities<lb/>
"With the new weapons s <lb/>
terns we have fielded in the 60s,<lb/>
71 isand si's, we need morespace<lb/>
said Marine (brps It Col Bruce<lb/>
Reed, projei t officer for a proposed<lb/>
(. amp I ejeune expansion.<lb/>
I hecampison the verged an<lb/>
expansion that will nearly double<lb/>
the operations area ol the mslow<lb/>
( ount) base And Fort Bragg is in<lb/>
line tor a new medical center.<lb/>
It the Army follows its land<lb/>
a quisition wish list tor the future.<lb/>
the Army post near Fayetteville<lb/>
could someday swell to more than<lb/>
twice its current size, TheNewsand<lb/>
? ol Raleigh reported Sun<lb/>
da<lb/>
1 he Pentagon budget tor '<lb/>
'oiv'l fiscal year in ludes -<lb/>
million tor mihtarv construchon<lb/>
protects at five ol the state s six<lb/>
bases. Fhe proposed I amp<lb/>
1 ejeune expansion should have<lb/>
the most immediate and dramatic<lb/>
impact Reed said the p:<lb/>
would .dd 41,0 res to the<lb/>
1 It' OOOacresoriginall) purchased<lb/>
tor the base in 19 <lb/>
The Marines have 10 times ,?s<lb/>
many wheeled and tracked ve<lb/>
hides as in the 1940s and the new<lb/>
train as you fight" doctrine re-<lb/>
quires Marines to train under held<lb/>
conditions, facing an opposing<lb/>
force m something approximat-<lb/>
ing the actual Space a battle would<lb/>
require. The Marine Corps' East<lb/>
i oast - ? ?<lb/>
me ha;<lb/>
.<lb/>
rtotra ? ? ? ?<lb/>
es of tl<lb/>
ville<lb/>
rhe ex pa 1 - I sa id<lb/>
w ould relieve t!<lb/>
would mean big sa 1 ngs in ti<lb/>
funds Mai ? <lb/>
ti<lb/>
Army ra<lb/>
 leorgia tor trail 1<lb/>
1 he expai<lb/>
as the i Ireater Sand - '<lb/>
lies w est of Camp<lb/>
tween U.S 17 and (<lb/>
Onslow Count bout ;<lb/>
acres is International Pap r I<lb/>
timberland rherestisprivat<lb/>
m.A includes 3 residences<lb/>
See 1 ejunc page 0<lb/>
Martin plans to discuss prisons<lb/>
SourC8 0' Arnold D Rubin Bone Ma'row T-anspa'aio Resoarcr- Keporl. National Cancer Instituto. '986<lb/>
C"r s LaPanta. GNS<lb/>
RALEIGH (AP) Gov. Iim<lb/>
Martin plans to meet this week<lb/>
with advisers and legislators to<lb/>
make plans for a special legisla-<lb/>
tive session for March 6he intends<lb/>
to call to address the state's<lb/>
crowded prisons.<lb/>
Martin will meet with the<lb/>
Council of State today to get its<lb/>
advice and then meet with legisla-<lb/>
tive leaders over lunch to discuss<lb/>
specific topics for the session, the<lb/>
(; reensboro News &amp; Record reported<lb/>
Sunday<lb/>
The Special session, the third<lb/>
Martin has called since he entered<lb/>
office in 1985, will deal with wav s<lb/>
to increase the limit on the num-<lb/>
ber of inmates w ho can be kept in<lb/>
the state's prisons, Tim Tinman.<lb/>
Martin's communications direc<lb/>
tor, sud Saturday<lb/>
Martin will also ask the legis-<lb/>
lature to consider passing a con<lb/>
stitutional amendment that would<lb/>
limit the options prisoners can<lb/>
choose in sentencing Now, con-<lb/>
victs can choose to take a active<lb/>
prison term and avoid a stricter<lb/>
parole and probation that would<lb/>
ease crowding.<lb/>
Some convicts choose prison<lb/>
hoping to get early release becaus<lb/>
of crowded conditions 1 he pro<lb/>
posed constitutional amendment<lb/>
would put a stop to that<lb/>
David Prather, Martin s dk p<lb/>
utv communuationsdirevtor,said<lb/>
the governor's call to borrow $&amp;Q<lb/>
million to add space for 9 500 more<lb/>
convicts won't be brought up in<lb/>
the special session Prather said<lb/>
more work is needed on the pro-<lb/>
posal<lb/>
Pittman said Martin had been<lb/>
considering a special session to<lb/>
deal with prison, crowding for<lb/>
See Prisons, page 1<lb/>
xlvt me tummunitv m a total IM<lb/>
<pb facs="00058198_0011"/><lb/>
<lb/>
The Fast Carolinian, February 27, 1990 9<lb/>
Bush meets with governors to discuss education issues<lb/>
 - this rountrv is j'ointr to chanee comes in (determining) wh<lb/>
P<lb/>
WASHINGTON (AD ?<lb/>
"residentleorge Hush is meeting<lb/>
with the nation's governors to<lb/>
promote the future of our kids<lb/>
bv discussing the state leaders'<lb/>
revisions to his goals for U.S.<lb/>
schools to meet bv the vear 2(X)<lb/>
1 eaders of the National Go<lb/>
ernors Association predicted an<lb/>
amicable meeting Monday since<lb/>
they made only minor changes in<lb/>
Push's six goals Their proposal to<lb/>
give education a share of any<lb/>
s,i ings in defense spending was<lb/>
ited to a resolution one gov-<lb/>
ernor said was so bland no one<lb/>
i ould obje t<lb/>
1 expect lull well tor the presi-<lb/>
dent to endorse what the gover<lb/>
nors have approved NGA Chair-<lb/>
man ferry Brans tad of Iowa said<lb/>
after the group approved the<lb/>
changes on Sunday<lb/>
loiter, at a dinner for the gov-<lb/>
ernors at the White House, Bush<lb/>
toasted them and "our commit<lb/>
ment to work together toward <lb/>
an American education system<lb/>
that is second to none<lb/>
"We came together not as<lb/>
Republicans and Democrats, not<lb/>
as partisan competitors, but as<lb/>
fellow chief executives with our<lb/>
hearts and minds focused on a<lb/>
single goal: the future of our kids<lb/>
the future of our country said<lb/>
Bush<lb/>
Branstad said, "We all expect<lb/>
that there's a lot of work ahead of<lb/>
us<lb/>
Push outlined the six goals in<lb/>
his State (if the Union address last<lb/>
month. The governors spent two<lb/>
days tinkering with the language<lb/>
before they approved the goals<lb/>
and added a list of objectives tor<lb/>
attaining them<lb/>
The goals call for giving poor<lb/>
youngsters preschool services that<lb/>
include nutrition and health<lb/>
screeningand making sure Amen<lb/>
can students are competent in<lb/>
math, science, English, history and<lb/>
geography.<lb/>
Attached to the goals is a<lb/>
document seeking a commitment<lb/>
"to provide at least one year of<lb/>
preschool for all disadvantage<lb/>
children It also said, "federal<lb/>
funds should target those students<lb/>
most in need of assistance due to<lb/>
economic disadvantage or risk of<lb/>
academic failure<lb/>
The resolution on defense<lb/>
Savings called ott the president<lb/>
"to dedicate the peace dividend in<lb/>
a balanced manner among the<lb/>
federal budget deficit, education"<lb/>
and other domestic programs.<lb/>
New Jersey Cov. lames Horio<lb/>
said the language "is so general<lb/>
ized, I don't know how anybody<lb/>
can be unhappy with that<lb/>
The governors rejected a pro-<lb/>
posal by Democratic Cov Roy<lb/>
Romer of Colorado urging the<lb/>
president to "direct substantial<lb/>
federal resources from defense to<lb/>
educational needs and other pro-<lb/>
ductivity investments<lb/>
Richard (. Darman, the White<lb/>
House budget director, gave the<lb/>
governors no promises and said<lb/>
anv defense1 savings would he less<lb/>
than many .ire predk ting<lb/>
DelawareGov Michael( .istle<lb/>
won adoption of a resolution call-<lb/>
ing on the governors to publicize<lb/>
the goals within their states<lb/>
"I don't believe the inert<lb/>
announcement of these goals bv<lb/>
the president or the governors irr<lb/>
this country is going to change<lb/>
education as dramatically as we'd<lb/>
like it to Castle said "It's only<lb/>
going to happen if we now carry<lb/>
the word out<lb/>
Education leaders generally<lb/>
favored the goals, although some<lb/>
complained there was no clear<lb/>
resolution of funding or how stu-<lb/>
dents' achievement would be as-<lb/>
sessed.<lb/>
"The goals are good ones<lb/>
They give us something to work<lb/>
for said Keith Ceiger, president<lb/>
of the National Education Asso-<lb/>
ciation. "The difficult task now<lb/>
luinmnnniiniiiHUi<lb/>
comes in (determining) who's<lb/>
responsible tor implementing<lb/>
them, how we're going to put<lb/>
together a long range plan on the<lb/>
federal role, the state role and the<lb/>
local role "<lb/>
Timothy Dyer, the new presi<lb/>
dent of the National Association<lb/>
of Secondary School Principals,<lb/>
said, "America's governors receive<lb/>
an A-plus for rhetoric, but fail<lb/>
economics. Their goals are lofty,<lb/>
patriotic, nobleand certainly what<lb/>
we all would like I lowever, with-<lb/>
out resources they are merely<lb/>
wishes.<lb/>
Protests<lb/>
svchciogv Today, survey ot 657 adults<lb/>
Sam Ward GNS<lb/>
Commission allows<lb/>
S&amp;L to convert into<lb/>
commercial bank<lb/>
K AI IK. 11 (AP) I he State<lb/>
Banking ? ommission's decision<lb/>
this week on w helher to allow a<lb/>
Monroe savings and loan to con<lb/>
vert to a commercial bank mav<lb/>
encourage other thrifts to seek<lb/>
iffimcn ial bank l barters, indus<lb/>
tr observers say.<lb/>
Some experts tear that it too<lb/>
many S&amp;Ls convert to banks,<lb/>
V -rth Carolina's banking system<lb/>
could become less inclined to<lb/>
pursue the business el making<lb/>
home mortgages, a tradition in<lb/>
the (.Vl industry What 9 more.<lb/>
Some bankers say, some 5&amp;1 are<lb/>
not tit to become banks because<lb/>
they don't have enough capital or<lb/>
adequate management skills to<lb/>
run a common ial bank. The News<lb/>
ind ? er ol Raleigh reported<lb/>
Sunday<lb/>
Many far Heel thrifts have<lb/>
dabbled in commercial lending<lb/>
and suffered huge losses as a re<lb/>
suit Meanwhile,themost suc ess<lb/>
ful S&amp;l s have stink to the tradi<lb/>
tionally Niter, albeit less profit-<lb/>
able business ot making home<lb/>
mortgages<lb/>
It you are going to consoli-<lb/>
date the bankingsystem, then you<lb/>
are gi ?ing to have to set aside part<lb/>
ot that system to provide capital<lb/>
ton onsumers said im Brovhill,<lb/>
secretary ot the states Depart-<lb/>
ment of Economic andommu-<lb/>
mtv Development His depart-<lb/>
ment oversees the Hankingonv<lb/>
missJon<lb/>
brovhill said he is concerned<lb/>
th.it banks, whn h tvpn ally arc-<lb/>
owned bv shareholders, may be<lb/>
more interested in turninga profit<lb/>
than providing affordable mort-<lb/>
gages<lb/>
sense, certainly with an emphasis<lb/>
on housing finance said I had<lb/>
Woodard, president of the N.C<lb/>
1 eague ot Savings Institutions<lb/>
At issue before the banking<lb/>
commission isan application from<lb/>
American Commercial Savings<lb/>
Hank, a 32(Hi million asset S&amp;l.<lb/>
based near C harlotte. that wants<lb/>
to become a commercial bank<lb/>
Some commission members have<lb/>
scoffed at the application, saying<lb/>
American Commercial's reserves<lb/>
to cover potential loan kisses are<lb/>
too small and its strategy ot at-<lb/>
tracting high-yield deposits too<lb/>
risks to quality as a bank<lb/>
Hut American Commercial<lb/>
officials say they will change some<lb/>
ot their strategies if the commis<lb/>
sion approves the application. The<lb/>
commission heard testimony on<lb/>
Amencan'sapplication last month<lb/>
and plans to announce its decision<lb/>
Wednesday.<lb/>
William (Iraham, state bank<lb/>
mg commissioner, has said he<lb/>
favors approval Some commis<lb/>
sion members suggested, how-<lb/>
ever, that the General Assembly<lb/>
should take a closer look at letting<lb/>
SitLs convert to banks and set up<lb/>
policies cm which, to base such<lb/>
decisions. Others said they tear<lb/>
the loss (if an industry devoted<lb/>
solely to home mortgages.<lb/>
The N.C. Bankers Association<lb/>
is opposed to American<lb/>
Commercial's application because<lb/>
the trade group believes the S&amp;l.<lb/>
does not meet bank standards The<lb/>
group says it docs not want to<lb/>
discourage other S&amp;l 9 trom ap-<lb/>
plying for bank charters, however.<lb/>
vate property and creation ot a<lb/>
multiparty system. One demon<lb/>
strator charged that the Sunday<lb/>
morning broadcast ot a Polish<lb/>
science fk tionfilmcalled "TheSex<lb/>
Mission" with nudity rare on<lb/>
Soviet IV was a deliberate at-<lb/>
tempt to entice people to stav<lb/>
home<lb/>
the protests were planned<lb/>
alter a successful 1 eb 4 pro de<lb/>
mocracv rail) in Mos ow in which<lb/>
about 200,000 people demanded<lb/>
the Communist Part) give up its<lb/>
monopoly on power. Party lead<lb/>
ers voted to di so shortly after<lb/>
ward, but the d. when the<lb/>
Communists must compete with<lb/>
other parties for the right to run<lb/>
the country appears tar oft to main<lb/>
Soviets I he Communists, with<lb/>
their long-established omnipres-<lb/>
ent patronage system still firmly<lb/>
control the government and econ-<lb/>
omy nearly everywhere<lb/>
Reports from police, local<lb/>
activists inters iewed by telephone<lb/>
and state run media indicated as<lb/>
many as 276 000 people took part<lb/>
in protest rallies m v cities out<lb/>
Side MoKOM . trom Het-<lb/>
ropavlovsk Kamchatk) in the<lb/>
Soviet Far East to I eningrad on<lb/>
the Baltic Sea coast<lb/>
In MOSCOW, red. blue and<lb/>
white flags olzarist Russia Hut<lb/>
tered alone, with red and black<lb/>
Continued from page 8<lb/>
flags of anarchists and the skv<lb/>
blue cross on a white background<lb/>
ot the Memorial Society, which is<lb/>
dedicated to remembering Stalin's<lb/>
victims<lb/>
Speakers urged demonstra<lb/>
tors to endorse progressive candi<lb/>
dates running in March I parlia<lb/>
mentary elo turns in the Russian<lb/>
federation and demanded the<lb/>
ouster ot members ol the ruling<lb/>
1'ohthuro and iuiiH il ot Minis<lb/>
tors, as well as M iBchiel Vladimir<lb/>
A. krvui hkov.<lb/>
(in Saturday, 1 ithuanian vot-<lb/>
ers appeared to have chosen Hie<lb/>
country's tirst legislature not<lb/>
dominated bv C ommunists 1 n-<lb/>
otticial returns showed that of the<lb/>
90 races decided, candidates en-<lb/>
dorsed bv the Sajudis reform<lb/>
movement took 71 seats and non-<lb/>
Saiudis candidates took 18, said<lb/>
Rita 1 apkus, head ot the Sajudis<lb/>
information agen v<lb/>
Moldavians voted Sunday in<lb/>
their tirst tree elections under<lb/>
Soviet rule .md expressed hopes<lb/>
their new Parliament would be<lb/>
able to win greater sovereignty<lb/>
Item MOSCOW .<lb/>
nr&amp;e &amp;at CatoUniatx<lb/>
Long hours  Low pay<lb/>
Great Experience!<lb/>
Apply in person at the<lb/>
Publications Building<lb/>
UUUIHIHIimg<lb/>
miiiiiimiiwiiirm<lb/>
EPISCOPAL STUDENT FELLOWSHIP<lb/>
ST. PAUL'S<lb/>
EPISCOPAL<lb/>
CHURCH<lb/>
401 II. 4th St.<lb/>
I IMLNS( HKDULK<lb/>
Ash Wednesday February 2H Holy Eucharist Imposition ot Ashes<lb/>
7:(K)am 10:00 am 5:30pm<lb/>
Supix-r tor college student and program follow 5:30 pm service<lb/>
Sundays<lb/>
7.30am;9:00am; 11:00amHorj Eucharist<lb/>
Monday Tuesday Thursday t riday<lb/>
5:30 Evening Prayer<lb/>
Wednesdays 5:30pm - Hol Eucharist<lb/>
6: JO pm Students join parish lor supper<lb/>
7:00 pin Students join parish tor program<lb/>
Program and discussions on Video Series<lb/>
Questions ol Faith<lb/>
Match 14 Who's Got the Truth?<lb/>
March 21 How Do We Kiehi the Wrong<lb/>
March 2s What Gives You Faith '<lb/>
?pril 4 What Happens A tier Death '<lb/>
! RACK ROOM SHOES<lb/>
Prisons<lb/>
Continued from page 8<lb/>
several weeks<lb/>
It has nothing to do with the<lb/>
events ol last week' Pittmansaid.<lb/>
"It's much more important than<lb/>
any press conference related<lb/>
events<lb/>
Because ol a seriesol lawsuits,<lb/>
all but 1 I ot the state's 90 prisons<lb/>
have court ordered limits on the<lb/>
number ot inmates they can take,<lb/>
said David (.uth. spokesman tor<lb/>
the Department ot Corrections.<lb/>
Lifting the limit would mean the<lb/>
state could use newly built facili-<lb/>
ties to house moreinmatesinstead<lb/>
ot giving current inmates more<lb/>
space<lb/>
The legislature voted last year<lb/>
to spend $7l million to expand<lb/>
prisons to make room for an addi-<lb/>
tional 610 inmates Many ot those<lb/>
beds will be available in March.<lb/>
Under state law, when the<lb/>
prison population reaches 17,640,<lb/>
an emergency is declared requir-<lb/>
ing the early release ot some in-<lb/>
mates who are eligible tor parole.<lb/>
I<lb/>
I<lb/>
I<lb/>
I<lb/>
I<lb/>
I<lb/>
I<lb/>
I<lb/>
I<lb/>
I<lb/>
I<lb/>
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GREENVILLE BUYERS MARKET - MEMORIAL DRIVE<lb/>
10<lb/>
TAKE AN<lb/>
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Must present coupon at time of purchase<lb/>
Not valid with any other offer.<lb/>
Famous brand shoes at affordable prices<lb/>
I<lb/>
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I<lb/>
I<lb/>
I<lb/>
I<lb/>
I<lb/>
I<lb/>
I<lb/>
"Noil have to assure tin- pub<lb/>
1( that it has available an ample<lb/>
quantity ol long term money" for<lb/>
home mortgages, he said. "Under<lb/>
the market driven system, you<lb/>
don't have those assurances "<lb/>
I ,ist year, roughly halt the<lb/>
mortgages made in the nation<lb/>
wen- Closed bv savings and loans.<lb/>
That portion is about the same in<lb/>
Northarolma, despite the pros<lb/>
ence o? some Of the nation's larg-<lb/>
est mortgage companies<lb/>
With such a big business m<lb/>
home loans, some -&amp;l advocates<lb/>
doubt the mortgage business will<lb/>
be in jeopardy even it SitLs eon-<lb/>
vert to banks<lb/>
Those S&amp;l s that change their<lb/>
charters will continue to be com-<lb/>
munity financial institutions and<lb/>
serve the community in a total<lb/>
sggtfy presents<lb/>
4 Wednesday<lb/>
WZMB<lb/>
Progressive<lb/>
Dance Night<lb/>
LADIES FREE (til 10:30)<lb/>
MANY DRINK SPECIALS AVAILABLE !<lb/>
OVERTOILS SPORTS CENTER<lb/>
INVITES YOU TO PREVIEW<lb/>
OUR SUMMER APPAREL<lb/>
1998SWIMWEAR ARRIVING DAILY<lb/>
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 MEN'S FASHION APPAREL<lb/>
THE AQUA GEAR COLLECTION ?<lb/>
I.<lb/>
tons<lb/>
111 Red Banks Road. Greenville<lb/>
355-5783<lb/>
N.C. Wildlife Agent<lb/>
frfr<lb/>
OJjift<lb/>
Your Complete Sporting Goods Store<lb/>
? hm?miay THRl lRll)AYn0 7 1?MSATlkI)AY.S TObPM<lb/>
<pb facs="00058198_0012"/><lb/>
I lu I .1 .i C aioli ian I I<lb/>
Helms rivals campaign on UNCG campus<lb/>
1 S S( nati h<lb/>
Easle and I I'<lb/>
agreed m .1 forum<lb/>
spending should !?<lb/>
Harve ? i<lb/>
the hotli If ? anil lb<lb/>
drugs<lb/>
1 ask and<lb/>
a candidates foi<lb/>
W ,?s pal t Ot tl<lb/>
the state fed<lb/>
Derm i it<lb/>
North n<lb/>
rhonias ,i (i<lb/>
from 1 !?<lb/>
thatdi ?<lb/>
tegn '<lb/>
<lb/>
IiKi forum was campaigning in phanl He said the money could eastern swing since he entered the<lb/>
i i 1 n illi- satuula "he three be better used to improve health Senate race He said 10 years of a<lb/>
I K'iihx rats want to be then party s care and sin hedm attonprogram Republican administration have<lb/>
left a more divided country and<lb/>
?<lb/>
?<lb/>
nominee to challenge Republii an ,ls ' llli Start<lb/>
Sen lesse Helms Easley said the federal go Helms has done little for average<lb/>
Faslev said he would supporl em men I is treating toba ? o farm North arolinians<lb/>
continued tin.m, ing though al a l'rs and ,n tobacco industry un<lb/>
: level than the Bush admini fairl)<lb/>
stration has recommended, foi 'If we would commit as much<lb/>
n i irch on the Strateeii Defense resources and as much energy to<lb/>
I think it's time to ask tin'<lb/>
questionantt said "Are we as<lb/>
.i so ictv better off?<lb/>
re we better off bci aut e<lb/>
R l l i, W OMI N'S Hf M I H<lb/>
()k(, Wi l IONS<lb/>
Abortions from 13 to 18 weel litional cost Pi<lb/>
Test, Birth Control, and Problem Pn Counseling<lb/>
lor furthei Information, i all 7<lb/>
(toll free numhei 1 800 "<lb/>
weekdays I iem ra ia l!<lb/>
LOW COS HOk IIONS UPTO 12TH WEKK OF PKK(iN<lb/>
?a ii iwmmummmm<lb/>
?<lb/>
tiative but lie opposes am<lb/>
lediate de isuns on depkn better on solving someol the ill<lb/>
t of the Star Wars defense gal drug problems I-aslo nd<lb/>
em because noneof it hasbeen ' homas said ot tobacco <lb/>
tested Iongassomobod ivantstobu it<lb/>
I want to see the Stealth ' think they ought to be allowed to<lb/>
. ? nber perform and pass the tests produce i I<lb/>
?' I it has not passed before I'd Cantt a formei C'harlott<lb/>
to mnd it he said mayoi addressed a Saturdav<lb/>
ma i ailed the Stealth h" ?kfasl meeting ol h<lb/>
Ihedrugwar then we'd be mm h tnere ,m. homeless people sleej<lb/>
Lejune<lb/>
several<lb/>
Reed said I<lb/>
wasexi<lb/>
siori<lb/>
met and . mid<lb/>
land in Oil<lb/>
In the i rlhei<lb/>
tan' ?<lb/>
opei<lb/>
hou<lb/>
art<lb/>
misfin<lb/>
d lose<lb/>
impn<lb/>
Talks<lb/>
I ontinui d I ige H<lb/>
pn<lb/>
nn<lb/>
? il ?<lb/>
1 !?<lb/>
1 1 ? ? 1 ?ba loneil<lb/>
ol<lb/>
rh i<lb/>
 iermanv i<lb/>
1 nit. '<lb/>
Bntai<lb/>
nvc n<lb/>
to lead ?<lb/>
in our t ns and street<lb/>
Mr .? e Is fter ofl lun drug<lb/>
permeate our societv? I'm hen<lb/>
to tellon it hasn't gotti n h fti ;<lb/>
it s gotti n "in ol balani e Wi<lb/>
need a senator win cares about<lb/>
people<lb/>
 mtt in isted that Hi In<lb/>
running without a popul i<lb/>
<lb/>
tvl a $6(X1 million pink ele Count) Democrats in his first dean president can be beatei<lb/>
( ontinued from page s<lb/>
lones Counh residents re live easements on another ? whichcovers almost 146,0fflacn<lb/>
k<lb/>
l n ,t a three ear hattl<lb/>
nst a i her i Point Mann<lb/>
I lie - i im ilsi i ni ? .I ?<lb/>
needs to acquire another 139 ?.<lb/>
icres It ol Ned lot.<lb/>
. ?- ir Station expansion pro elbow room to train infantry, Korl Bragg spokesman, said the<lb/>
is hen Us al and i ongres<lb/>
tonal opposition ton ed thi go<lb/>
i ? ? di I a plan foi in N.<lb/>
larruird trainii fai <lb/>
i i r Oa k rove<lb/>
' I irines had hi ipeil to<lb/>
 ? rougl<lb/>
? ? ? iti battleti<lb/>
In nrfield itel<lb/>
ai mor ami aw crews h ieeth(<lb/>
 I ?ei I'mN'i 1"S'<lb/>
figures m the ? iAO report do not<lb/>
represent plans forai quiring i<lb/>
the fodi r.ilieneral ccoui lim land<lb/>
i )ffi e listed I orl Hi iggai ng I ?<lb/>
rnu basi that need additional 1 he rmv told u I rgcl<lb/>
trainmj I hi lavotti il ? hether the land i<lb/>
: t was ranked 11 tl 11 ?? loreet iboul fhi budei I In<lb/>
Balloons For All Occasions<lb/>
? ? ? i , rid ,<lb/>
?  ' ' idditn ?nal<lb/>
( I I l M M IK<lb/>
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bud like your roommates<lb/>
a whole lot better if they didn't<lb/>
show up or) your phone bill.<lb/>
! lnu ailedim ago Atxh i .illt 11. ()r was that .Vte?<lb/>
I mi swc.ii it. S rting ml k ??nini.ik's iseas'wtai you get l 7 . i. '<lb/>
t ause iih ii. you t an .ill gel yt mr l ?vdistance charges listed sc ?araiel;<lb/>
 ?ii share ihr sanie phi ixj numlvr Aiui it cxstsy(xi nothing.<lb/>
To find ii more about tlie fav Tr(AktncrSenice,u I 800 222 0300 ext. 600<lb/>
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The right choice.<lb/>
? ?r?i<lb/>
<pb facs="00058198_0013"/><lb/>
Pave 11<lb/>
She ?aat (Earolinianj<lb/>
Features<lb/>
February 27,1990<lb/>
Writing center helps<lb/>
students improve skills<lb/>
Grammar hotline solves literary dilemmas<lb/>
H foe Hoist<lb/>
siatl W nli'i<lb/>
?, en o i lock at night fou've l l<lb/>
? for tomorrow's class at nini inthemori<lb/>
d vou're stuck Whatisa ? <lb/>
ilutation ir w heredes th<lb/>
? m in treen illc! 'Then ?o<lb/>
hen vou an gel help II<lb/>
immar I lotlme.<lb/>
? - right a( iramm ir H<lb/>
alls have con<lb/>
. i : Northarolina Di '?'<lb/>
t ntei said that we ha<lb/>
ts and faculty call als ? .<lb/>
m all over the v it call tochevl<lb/>
? ? uments are corn I<lb/>
. Vsigned b thi Enj<lb/>
, impus the Writn  I ?<lb/>
? ? tensive '??? ork I<lb/>
? ? ideas I his is a non f i<lb/>
 ritingentei not th? ?<lb/>
ni times known b We ai<lb/>
 be healed ; ki<lb/>
xnesses we show the develi .<lb/>
? ideas<lb/>
1 he Writing Center is not only con erned<lb/>
ret her or not a student s pap r is gra<lb/>
rect, Allen states Students whi ;<lb/>
eit, but have no idea ol a topi oi<lb/>
ne in also. The goal ot the pi<lb/>
tuients to develop their own styli<lb/>
11 w hen the re omfortahh .vritn<lb/>
I J with the lesser problems ot grai<lb/>
i. and the like<lb/>
rhe majority of th<lb/>
 itingenter are freshmen, <lb/>
adle about 6,000 students in the fall m d "<lb/>
H?? 4 '?" Istudenl in ? prii<lb/>
; ? gram in the fall, the Writingenter received<lb/>
positive response rate from the freshmen that<lb/>
 ? , ,i the center Required to go to the Writing<lb/>
( ? ntei b theii professors, the students overwhelm<lb/>
supported the Writing entei even though<lb/>
? attendance did not give them an) credithours.<lb/>
? ' m said that theii writing had improved, that<lb/>
?. vouldret ommend the Writingenter to friends,<lb/>
? , t  (he would return even though not re-<lb/>
red i pressed Allen<lb/>
n important aspect of theWntingCenter is the<lb/>
I, lonalismof the tutors involved Atthepres<lb/>
?in. there are fort) tutors working, all ol which<lb/>
ire graduate students in the English department<lb/>
i i? i. lates Hiese tutors have gone through a<lb/>
 in tea hing composition and they receive a<lb/>
of training through workshops that they<lb/>
I thi oughout the y ai<lb/>
 to Mien, the tutors serve as readers<lb/>
Lv . J( ih students to a better<lb/>
 : purpose m w i itmg papei s<lb/>
 : sts to illow students to make<lb/>
? . ? ?  ?? tutor put it. V edo<lb/>
ident edit them or answer<lb/>
?<lb/>
?<lb/>
are <lb/>
. ? ?<lb/>
? Writing C enter<lb/>
ft i students In<lb/>
ps to tt a h basil<lb/>
ster, the i enter<lb/>
? ind the differ<lb/>
I ?? : nd<lb/>
 ? ish<lb/>
then thi<lb/>
Pans a lecture' m the Eng<lb/>
?r located m the General - I<lb/>
Lexicon<lb/>
Mushrooming<lb/>
I i ai insect; B. resin I<lb/>
ous substance cot 1<lb/>
onous fiber; !) bonehead 1<lb/>
.  mi , A unbeliel I<lb/>
? istaken ider.tity; C to I<lb/>
hly handle; I a sting I<lb/>
1 Mefandous A wicked, I<lb/>
villianous, B unmention j<lb/>
able; vagrant; D. potent <lb/>
4 Nobble A o stammer; I<lb/>
B to bother nudity; D I<lb/>
to stun I<lb/>
5 Palamate: A Web <lb/>
? rj; B sense of taste. C I<lb/>
? rritorial ownership; D j<lb/>
tired<lb/>
ainture A painting; B<lb/>
iss container; C. fast<lb/>
pa e; D s huh! of coins<lb/>
7 hjtwak A hit harder.<lb/>
B jib rung; C an outcast; <lb/>
I) t la; pole rope<lb/>
8 Precatie A to pray; B<lb/>
des ription; C verb tense;<lb/>
) moody<lb/>
c Propitious: A to tall<lb/>
upon, B stuffy; C billed<lb/>
mammal; D proprietar)<lb/>
10 Scholiast: A common<lb/>
tator; B scholarly essay; -<lb/>
ahotb?tty;D. leather shoe<lb/>
-Compiled by John Tucker<lb/>
irtn ? ? ' ps graduate assistant Sonya Cranford in the writing<lb/>
sr0, m Bu ij, , ,oto by J D Whitmire - ECU Photo t ab)<lb/>
Movie shows the<lb/>
struggles of single<lb/>
parent families<lb/>
Cochran ? , n Costner tails into a passionate affair with Miryea (Madeleine Stow-  I<lb/>
liburon (Anthony Quinn), setting the stage tor ??Revenge a Rastar Production ot a I<lb/>
?. ? ? ?? i by Columbia Pictures<lb/>
'Revenge' offers average plot<lb/>
with excessive violence and sex<lb/>
 Kvmle) Edet<lb/>
. i.il to ! he t asl Carolinian<lb/>
his ad van s, and "<lb/>
steam  ? e affair<lb/>
I non findii<lb/>
?<lb/>
Inia : - ition in weekend rendezvousbetween his<lb/>
Mi kco md falling in love with friend and his wife l"ibe y'<lb/>
somebod fe Phis is the basis his "revenge Hen the m<lb/>
of ihe n . vie Revenge" by reaches its climax with mi<lb/>
Columbia ? tu res, starring Kevin brutal violence<lb/>
( ostner .nthon Quinn and ribej and his men beat <lb/>
Madeleini Sti we. chran and leave him for dead, and<lb/>
Quinn plays liburon. a Miryea is sent off to a brothel<lb/>
wealthy, affluent Mexican politi- Cochran survives, however and<lb/>
. ?<lb/>
suit i?<lb/>
cal supporter<lb/>
who is indebted to seeksout Miryeaand his revenge<lb/>
-ettin and i ti<lb/>
:? ' : I<lb/>
iri-<lb/>
? re<lb/>
li ? ind<lb/>
iltK<lb/>
an American a fighter pilot on Rbey<lb/>
named ochran, who is played by 'The story line for "Revenge"<lb/>
Costner, foi saving his life. Hbu comes from a novella by Jim Har<lb/>
ron in itos t. Ochran to visit him, rison titled "Legendsoi the Fall,<lb/>
to repay his debt. first published in Esquire maga-<lb/>
( ochran tails in love with zineinl979.<lb/>
ribev's wife Miryea, played by rhe director. lon Scott, is<lb/>
Madeleine Stowe. Unhappy with best known for his work with the<lb/>
her marriagi Miryea encourages box-office successes 'Top Cun<lb/>
M<lb/>
mm ie<lb/>
I the<lb/>
?<lb/>
? ? ?<lb/>
flick becausi I '? is<lb/>
w eak and seen i : ' ? ?<lb/>
(Hill ' ?:<lb/>
sex and iolence, si i this is n ?! a<lb/>
tilm tor the easilv offended.<lb/>
Sitting o)i a Fence<lb/>
H lulie Manning<lb/>
Special lo 1 hf 1 a-t arolinian<lb/>
Jhis is the year for exploring<lb/>
family relationsl ; rst there<lb/>
? letaim i<lb/>
1 11 i N'o v<lb/>
? tin! daugl<lb/>
Tou<lb/>
niuel Clld<lb/>
lup in<lb/>
esthe<lb/>
!<lb/>
? her daughter, enny,<lb/>
played by rrini Alvarado.<lb/>
ie shows a relationship of<lb/>
Iworking mother doing the<lb/>
I he i m for her daughter<lb/>
? uthandouts" fromherrich<lb/>
tat1<lb/>
Both Stella and enny are<lb/>
Uiresand content with their life together<lb/>
Productions, until their vacation in Honda<lb/>
 i j where Stella embarrasses her<lb/>
m a sm ill I n who daughter in a bar.<lb/>
L.sadaugh Bette Midler portraysStella as<lb/>
.  . ? a warm-hearted person with only<lb/>
; . n playshcrlife one thing standing in her way<lb/>
icnd ? I Itephen Collins pride Because of her pride she<lb/>
the young doctor Stella allows Jenny a chance at a better<lb/>
life<lb/>
"Stella not only explores the<lb/>
motherdaughter relationship,<lb/>
Spring Break tradition continues<lb/>
Bv John Tucker<lb/>
Assistant Features Editor<lb/>
an<lb/>
attair with.<lb/>
I! iiuvb<lb/>
Stellaat the bar when she works but also shows a representation of<lb/>
ibartender When she becomes a one parent family and how a<lb/>
tephei fferstomarry mother and daughter can be best<lb/>
her but Stella refuses believing friends<lb/>
su. is not COOd h f( r hnn<lb/>
5tclla is a p small town girl, Although it is slow at times,<lb/>
Stephen isa wealthy, soon to be "SteBa" isagpod movie, like most<lb/>
d ?:tor moving to New York recent movies, H has us tender<lb/>
As the years go by w? watch moments, so be prepared.<lb/>
Yes kiddies, it's that tune of<lb/>
the year again.<lb/>
Next week, most of us. as eol-<lb/>
lege students, will be invoked in<lb/>
one ot the nation's craziest phe-<lb/>
nomena Spring break 1990.<lb/>
We'll be trading those burley<lb/>
jackets sweaters, lorn; pants and<lb/>
boots tor shorts, bare feet, no shirt<lb/>
ancl sunglasses<lb/>
No KMvr.tr will we be worry-<lb/>
ing about classes, tests, pipers.<lb/>
and the normal drudgeriesof day-<lb/>
to-day universit) life.<lb/>
Instead, we 11 be soaking up<lb/>
the sun. running down the beach<lb/>
halt naked all daw staying up all<lb/>
night drinking as much alcohol as<lb/>
we can get our hands on, Mi<lb/>
chasing every member ol the<lb/>
opposite sex that catches our eve<lb/>
At least once we'll be watch-<lb/>
ing or competing in that bellvflop<lb/>
contest, the wet t-shirt contest, the<lb/>
best leg contest, the banana-eat-<lb/>
ing contest, or some other kind of<lb/>
ridiculous contest where we can<lb/>
display some basic bufoonery.<lb/>
Excess, that's the name of the<lb/>
game, and a college student on<lb/>
spring break definitely knows how<lb/>
to play it<lb/>
Personally, I'm making that<lb/>
common exodus from gunkville,<lb/>
N.  to that college-student<lb/>
packed sunshine state ot Honda<lb/>
First to West Palm Beach tor a<lb/>
weekend, then to the Florida Ke s<lb/>
the spring break hot spot for 1990,<lb/>
during the week. That place is<lb/>
going to be crawling with ballistic<lb/>
college students. Then to<lb/>
Gainsville for the last weekend<lb/>
It should be a relaxing vaca<lb/>
rion. Yeah, right.<lb/>
Picture this, you're laying on<lb/>
the beach slowly recovering from<lb/>
all that booze you choked down<lb/>
the night before. As you sip on<lb/>
your beer, the most beautiful<lb/>
blondte) in the world walks up to<lb/>
vou and says, "hi That's all vou<lb/>
need.<lb/>
After blowing fifty million<lb/>
bucks that day at a bar and almost<lb/>
winning the beer slugging contest<lb/>
trying to show off, you exchange<lb/>
phone numbers and make plans<lb/>
to meet again.<lb/>
As you stumble home you<lb/>
revel in your good fortune.<lb/>
Yes, you are the first one of<lb/>
your friends to line up that hot<lb/>
date. Vou get homi n ta 1<lb/>
your hotel room bt d '?? rt VOU<lb/>
crash into oblivion<lb/>
Thenextday isai<lb/>
was all a beer mirage II vasn I a<lb/>
beautiful blond ' and our<lb/>
friends laugh at you and give you<lb/>
acompletedesc nptionof the holo-<lb/>
caust you lo.ed the previous day.<lb/>
So what do you do? I hrow<lb/>
away the phone number, go out<lb/>
,nd get some beer and start all<lb/>
Over and do it ac.au<lb/>
Bui serioush<lb/>
K h<lb/>
In ,1s<lb/>
craz as you can but don t get in<lb/>
trouble. 1 speciath in Daytona<lb/>
Push it to the limit live on the<lb/>
edge, but don't go overboard and<lb/>
fall in.<lb/>
Relax and enjo the total lack<lb/>
of responsibility miJ don't even<lb/>
think about the loads of stutt vou<lb/>
have to do when you get back lo<lb/>
school And at all COStS, have tun,<lb/>
after all you only live once.<lb/>
In a couple ot years vou 11 be<lb/>
sitting behind your disk or driv-<lb/>
ing to work and something will<lb/>
click. You'll remember some stu-<lb/>
pid thing you did on spring break,<lb/>
and no matter how stupid it was,<lb/>
you'll wish you were young<lb/>
enough to do it again<lb/>
<pb facs="00058198_0014"/><lb/>
12 The East Carolinian, February 27, 1990<lb/>
Faculty Profile<lb/>
ECU music professor excels<lb/>
as jazz performer and teacher<lb/>
By Joan Taylor<lb/>
Special to the Fast Carolinian<lb/>
Pr Paul Tardif, keyboard professor at ECU'S school of music since<lb/>
1U7I. teaches classical piano and jazz improvisation.<lb/>
Tardif said he would like to sec the jazz art form fostered in this<lb/>
region Recently, Carroll Dashiell, bassist, pined the school of music<lb/>
faculty. It is hoped that with an extra voice for jazz, a guest performer<lb/>
series can be established at the student center. Tardif said. "With an<lb/>
increase m communication between performers, the enthusiasts and<lb/>
the media, the jazz profile would expand in this region<lb/>
I ocally, lardit leads a jazz quartet, partially composed of students,<lb/>
u hich is featured monthly in a jazz format .it Greenville's Fizz Restau-<lb/>
rant 1 hisensemble will play an evening of Tardif'soriginal musical the<lb/>
Art Center in Chapel Hill on March IS.<lb/>
lardil and ScimaGokcen, cellist, are performing the Rachmaninof I<lb/>
Concerto for cello and piano at St. Marv'sCoIlegc in Raleigh. March 19.<lb/>
In the tall ot 1989, lardit performed for President Bush's inaugura<lb/>
tion and tor NBCs Christmas in Washington which was filmed at the<lb/>
Kenned) Center in Washington. D.C. lardit also played the . hick<lb/>
Corea piano concerto with the Charlotte Symphony. Continuing with<lb/>
Kis performances in Washington, D.C, lardit gave a piano recital at the<lb/>
National Art Gallery and performed a concert with Gokcen at the<lb/>
Phillip i ollcction.<lb/>
lardil said one event he enjoyed more than cithers was pertorming<lb/>
in ordan with some of the members of the Detroit 5) mphony who are<lb/>
know n as 1 Vtroit Chamber Placers.<lb/>
Bits and pieces<lb/>
College students help needy<lb/>
American college students are spending their spring breaks help<lb/>
ing the need) rather than vacationing in Florida They are repairing<lb/>
homes, working on farms and assisting in nursing homes. Projects<lb/>
scheduled in March Boston College students will work in hospitals in<lb/>
Haiti; Notre Dame students will help in day-care centers and nursing<lb/>
homes in eastern Kentuck and West Virginia<lb/>
Beanbags regain popularity<lb/>
Beanbag chairs ,ire making a comeback The nation's major bean-<lb/>
bag maker.old Medal of Richmond, a . produced a million of the<lb/>
seats hi p'sw I hat is four times the amount the company made tour<lb/>
years ago Kids are using them in front ol video games fop selling<lb/>
colors rci bright blue and magenta.<lb/>
Taxpayers filing returns earlier<lb/>
U.S. taxpayers are tiling their returns earlier than in pre ious years.<lb/>
The Internal Revenue Service has received 2" million returns, an<lb/>
increase ol 4 2 percenl over the 1989 tax sewn Electronic filing<lb/>
available) ationw ide tor the tirst time is fueling the rush, RS officials<lb/>
a<lb/>
Consumers buv more videos<lb/>
 ideo sales are skyrocketing Industry experts predict consumers<lb/>
will spend SI 5 billion on videos m 1990, an increase of 24 percent from<lb/>
1989. One company, Blockbuster Video, opened 2.2 new stores a day<lb/>
and racked up$600 million in 1989<lb/>
Driving laws decrease fatalities<lb/>
Efforts to heighten the awareness of problems caused by drunk<lb/>
drivers are having an effect, reports the National Highway lYaffic<lb/>
Safety Administration. Raising the mini mum drinking age has red need<lb/>
by 12-13 percent the involvement in fatal crashes of drivers under<lb/>
years of age Schools have helped increase awareness too.<lb/>
Frozen dinners made healthier<lb/>
l omp.mies are introducing healthy frozen dinners and entrees<lb/>
The dinners serve controlled amounts of fat, cholesterol and sodium<lb/>
Three prodm t hues already in supermarkets are Campbells Le Menu<lb/>
I ightStj leonAgra s 1 lealthy Choice and Stouffer's Right Course<lb/>
Company makes new variety<lb/>
of chocolates for older palates<lb/>
Mars Inc. is launching an upscale line ol chocolates aimed at adults.<lb/>
I here are so en arieties in the new line, called Sussande Fine Choco-<lb/>
lates The candies come in rich-looking packages and include ingredi-<lb/>
ents meant to please older palates: truffles, pralines, dark chocolate.<lb/>
Price, around 89 cents to SI each<lb/>
Car dealers use gimmicks to sell<lb/>
1 uxury ar dealers arc trying a new technique to sell their vehicles<lb/>
1 hev are placing second-hand vehicles in showrooms with the new<lb/>
models Example at a Lexus dealership near Mount Clemens. Mich<lb/>
buyers can stv a second-hand $128,000 Rolls Royce Corniche perched<lb/>
next to a new $35,000 Lexus LS400<lb/>
Liquor makers change products<lb/>
Health concerns .ire toning liquor manufacturers to change their<lb/>
products Seagram, known for its gin and whiskey, has upped its wine<lb/>
cooler prodm tion. It also has plunged into the orange juice and soda<lb/>
market In 1989, the plant shipped 5 million cases of distilled spirits and<lb/>
2 million cases oi wine coolers.<lb/>
More women use estrogen<lb/>
Researchers question values of drug<lb/>
The use ot estrogen to replace hormones lost after menopause is<lb/>
increasing, federal data indicates In 180, 14 million women used the<lb/>
drug In 1989, 31 million women filled prescriptions for the drug. Bv<lb/>
2010, 4"i million women will be in the 50-to-8()age group and may use<lb/>
the drug. Researchers are re-evaluating the use of estrogen pills to<lb/>
replace hormones lost after menopause. Studies indicate that women<lb/>
who take pun estrogen cut their risks of heart attack and stroke by half.<lb/>
However, women who take estrogen for a long time have higher breast-<lb/>
cancer rates. Also, scientists admit they still do not know a lot about<lb/>
hormone therapv.<lb/>
'Liquid Sound' revives '60s sound<lb/>
By Kerry Nester<lb/>
Staff Writer<lb/>
After overcoming some tech-<lb/>
nical problems with their equip<lb/>
ment Friday night. "Liquid<lb/>
Sound" proved to everyone at the<lb/>
New Deli that it was well worth<lb/>
the wait.<lb/>
They started playing at about<lb/>
11 p.m and the Deli immediately<lb/>
changed its atmosphere to one of<lb/>
happiness, tilled withdancingand<lb/>
laughter.<lb/>
Playing both cover songs and<lb/>
originals, liquid Sound carried<lb/>
every song to its musical limits<lb/>
blending the sounds of the instru-<lb/>
ments together in almost perfect<lb/>
timing.<lb/>
live members makeup the<lb/>
band. They are Cito Giulini on<lb/>
guitar and vocals, Steve Fink on<lb/>
keyboards, on Bricker on bass<lb/>
guitar. Da veStokeson drums, and<lb/>
Paige Dunlapon percussions and<lb/>
vocals.<lb/>
"San Fransisco style bands like<lb/>
the Grateful Dead and the ferry<lb/>
Garcia Band have had an influ-<lb/>
ence on our musicCiuhni said.<lb/>
And this was much to the delight<lb/>
of the crowd at the Deli<lb/>
Kurt Lieberman, of Pitt Com-<lb/>
munity College said, "they're kil<lb/>
ler man, jammin no doubt<lb/>
Opening the show with an<lb/>
original song, "Modem Dav Pi-<lb/>
rates Liquid Sound then played<lb/>
several Grateful Dead classics such<lb/>
as "Boxof Rain "Crazy Fingers<lb/>
"Fire on the Mountain" and "Ber-<lb/>
tha <lb/>
Also included in the show was<lb/>
Neil Young's "Are You Ready for<lb/>
the Country the lerry Garcia<lb/>
Hand's "The I larder 1 hev Come<lb/>
and many more originals off their<lb/>
Theater program<lb/>
plans for summer<lb/>
The 1990 season of the Fast<lb/>
(Carolina Summer I heatreisbrim<lb/>
mine with some ol New York<lb/>
theaters biggest and longest run<lb/>
ning hits "line ot this season's<lb/>
shows are currentlv enjoying sue<lb/>
cessful runs on Broadway and Of I<lb/>
Broadway<lb/>
This coming summer marks<lb/>
the return of the big Broadway<lb/>
musical to the Summer Theatre<lb/>
stage with the opening produc-<lb/>
tion, 'Gypsy "Gypsy" will be<lb/>
followed b) .i new comedy, "The<lb/>
Cocktail I lour (pending availa-<lb/>
bility) the Pulitzer Prize winning<lb/>
'Driving Miss Daisy and the<lb/>
sensational Ott Broadway musi-<lb/>
cal hit, "Nunsense<lb/>
The opening musical,<lb/>
"Gypsy, runs ink 2 7andisbased<lb/>
on the memoirs ot Gypsy Rose<lb/>
Lee The show boasts a powerful<lb/>
score tilled with some of niusnal<lb/>
theater's most unforgettable<lb/>
songs. Tunes like "Let Me Inter<lb/>
tain You "Everything's bming<lb/>
I lp Roses and "You( lotta ' let A<lb/>
Gimmick" helped to make<lb/>
"Gypsy" an American musical<lb/>
legend<lb/>
"TheCocktail I lour" will play<lb/>
lulv-14 1 his new comedy by A<lb/>
K Gumey lr was praised during<lb/>
its recent New i ork production as<lb/>
the author's best play fohn, a<lb/>
budding playwright, returns to the<lb/>
homeot his stuffy parents seeking<lb/>
approval of a new play he has<lb/>
written about them, "he action of<lb/>
the plav takes place during the<lb/>
COCktail hour, and as the inhlbi<lb/>
tions fly out the window, recrimi<lb/>
See Summer, page 13<lb/>
The Mad Hatter is busy waxing his<lb/>
surf board for Spring Break '90<lb/>
Before you go on your surfing safari be sure to<lb/>
have your car checked at<lb/>
MAD HATTER MUFFLER &amp; BRAKES<lb/>
For A Funfilled &amp; Safe Trip<lb/>
? FREE Muffler &amp; Brake Inspection<lb/>
9fft'l t.it<lb/>
nhfutftn v<lb/>
Special<lb/>
Olympics<lb/>
Mad Hatter Proudly Donates<lb/>
$2. of Every Purchases to the<lb/>
(ireenvillePitt County<lb/>
Special Olympics<lb/>
758-2306<lb/>
 10 C Students Discounts On Services I<lb/>
- Not valid with other coupons Specials ? Excluding Suie Inipeaions ?<lb/>
? , . ? - U Haul Rentals "<lb/>
? Located at Greenville Car Care Center ?<lb/>
soon to be released album, "( Kil to<lb/>
Lunch<lb/>
"The album should lie out<lb/>
M.iv hrst (,mlini s.nd It will in-<lb/>
clude "Out to Lunch "Modern<lb/>
Dav Pirates "Wheels t Thun<lb/>
der "I'avin "Pride" and "Wh<lb/>
Are Yourvinv.<lb/>
For those still interested in the<lb/>
davs of Woodstock and dance<lb/>
music. Liquid Sound is.i nice way<lb/>
lo imagine yoursell back in tin-<lb/>
late 60s and early is<lb/>
The rowds ot people that the<lb/>
band attrai I are somewhat ? <lb/>
 ,il ot those days As one stu<lb/>
putit, It seas) togetcaughtup i<lb/>
this environment and forgt t wi<lb/>
worries I hc reawesorro<lb/>
"he Hand is playing tin h<lb/>
circuit fromharlottesville <lb/>
to harleston, And with t ?<lb/>
release of their first album and t<lb/>
many bootleg tapes recorded i<lb/>
their orti erts, the ? in sun<lb/>
make themselves known to mai ?<lb/>
more t.ms<lb/>
SWIMWEAR!<lb/>
Lori's Intimate Apparel<lb/>
Carolina Fast Centre<lb/>
756-6846<lb/>
For a Deal<lb/>
See Personals<lb/>
ni ks<lb/>
Mon - Thurs 10 6<lb/>
Fri 10 ()<lb/>
Si 10 6<lb/>
<lb/>
mm<lb/>
A <lb/>
,Fosdickfs<lb/>
v; Kphrimrv<lb/>
.)<lb/>
February<lb/>
Special<lb/>
s,<lb/>
2 Shrimp Dinners For<lb/>
1 Low Price<lb/>
Small Shrimp Platters $7.50<lb/>
Regular Shrimp Platters $9.50<lb/>
Large Shrimp Platters $11.50<lb/>
Dine In or Take Out<lb/>
Good Onh Mon - Thurs<lb/>
Expires March . 1990<lb/>
FOSDICKS<lb/>
X890 SEAFOOD<lb/>
-n<lb/>
auJ b. tvans bt.<lb/>
Call 756-2011<lb/>
Sharky's<lb/>
of Greenville<lb/>
Located h Sports Pad on5th Street<lb/>
Enter through lle<lb/>
Thurs.<lb/>
Import Night Z<lb/>
n<lb/>
Tues.<lb/>
2 For<lb/>
Tuesday<lb/>
Sun.<lb/>
Domestics<lb/>
$1.00<lb/>
Sharky's is a private club for members and<lb/>
21 years old guests.<lb/>
(<lb/>
?FREE SHARKY'S MEMBERSHIP1.<lb/>
LWnh TliisjCounon<lb/>
I<lb/>
<pb facs="00058198_0015"/><lb/>
The Eastarolinian, I ebruarv 27, 1490 13<lb/>
Wright Auditorium hosts<lb/>
musical comedy 'Kismet'<lb/>
Itl Sews Ri<lb/>
J ? ? " i -it in i tit i i? 1111ii <lb/>
, I In the musii al<lb/>
? Hi'i'tul hocttir Mai " '<lb/>
 ? ?' ? h tiiinr, the torn I "<lb/>
?? 3 I m version the music.il introdm<lb/>
har.ieters ueh j Oi<lb/>
 ortl istispn Kh.i in md the Prino ?<lb/>
is iken trom "<lb/>
I tor "I ite<lb/>
 ? ? ; ?<lb/>
ill . -1 I i 1 II, 11<lb/>
ind .er<lb/>
well<lb/>
trtheast ha<lb/>
 o prod in<lb/>
il the.i<lb/>
Environmentalists celebrate twenty<lb/>
vears of conservation and progress<lb/>
Summer<lb/>
the.it<lb/>
? Ml ' ?<lb/>
i<lb/>
i<lb/>
m 4<lb/>
j 11 n 11<lb/>
pusyesti<lb/>
??? i:<lb/>
TWA GETAWAY PRESENTS<lb/>
THE BIGGEST SALE OF THE 90's<lb/>
Never before and probably<lb/>
never again,<lb/>
$150 off<lb/>
per person<lb/>
$300 off<lb/>
per couple<lb/>
We're starting off the decade in a big way, with savings ol up f W; off<lb/>
brochure prices. Just make your reservations and pay in full tor the<lb/>
land and anv TWA published airtare by March 1 1990, and you save<lb/>
$150 per person off anv Getaway Vacation to Europe, Egypl and Israel.<lb/>
This otter is valid for travel from April 1 through November 1, and<lb/>
must be used with a TWA published airfare Don I miss what will<lb/>
probably be the Biggest Sale of the u" s. Call UG TRAVEL today<lb/>
and choose trom 89 great Getaway Vacations<lb/>
Royal Madrid7 days from 128<lb/>
London Theater Week7 days trom '148<lb/>
Paris Rendevous7 days from 278<lb/>
TWA Getaway' Vacations<lb/>
GREECE<lb/>
10 days with<lb/>
Greek Isles Cruise from<lb/>
698<lb/>
?At! transfers taxes baggage nand ngandt'ps m Jdec For ail prices 'ea<lb/>
doub'6 occupancy tof travel rcn Aon i tnrougri f.ct rbc i p? es are i ?-<lb/>
availably, and vary by departure date Cancei'atioi -J iarges r d ?-? l I ?P( ? A -<lb/>
'?q?a Airfare not included Prices reflect sae ds '<lb/>
8<lb/>
3 r<lb/>
TRAVEL CENTER<lb/>
OPEN<lb/>
Monday thru Friday<lb/>
9 AM To 54.M.<lb/>
The Plaza ? Greenville<lb/>
355-5075<lb/>
CLOSED<lb/>
Saturday &amp;<lb/>
Sunday<lb/>
?<lb/>
Health Days At<lb/>
Wendy's<lb/>
ome join Wendy's and the Eastarolina University<lb/>
Senior Community Health Nursing Students<lb/>
February 27 ck Zb<lb/>
The students will be conducting a i leaith Ian<lb/>
from 11:00 a.m. to 2:00 p.m. each day<lb/>
Wendy's will donate 10' I of our sales during<lb/>
these hours to the<lb/>
ECU School of Nursing<lb/>
<lb/>
M,?l ? - ; '<lb/>
? ' ? ?<lb/>
meld ii : ?'?<lb/>
ir.Th ei i ? ; t ? ?<lb/>
? iturd.i<lb/>
f o r ma no 11 ? I ? l <lb/>
 ?  ' I . II"  : : ' la I '<lb/>
,i rn until 4 '??i p m an<lb/>
.  of the m Room 108 ol the M - h<lb/>
ne musi atre Arts Centei n the E<lb/>
? ? ? , ? . i ' I ? I 11 ?<lb/>
. . k 2 28 this zany Individual ti kel m.i<lb/>
? raising purchased beginning I ??<lb/>
fivenuns each of the foul -t s n iusi<lb/>
? ? ? ite or<lb/>
-<lb/>
i informs<lb/>
plications arc<lb/>
m 'ing atepted<lb/>
i ii ho p? sition ol<lb/>
Assistant News<lb/>
 ditor. Apply in the<lb/>
rubli( atuMis<lb/>
Come enjoy lunch with us, learn more a! out<lb/>
your health, and help<lb/>
the ECU Nursing Department raise money tor<lb/>
their program.<lb/>
5fe<lb/>
F<lb/>
buildin?<lb/>
?uaft<lb/>
? U&amp;a<lb/>
 ii??nuiij j<lb/>
<pb facs="00058198_0016"/><lb/>
The East Carolinian, February 27,1990 13<lb/>
Wright Auditorium hosts<lb/>
musical comedy 'Kismet'<lb/>
I i l News Hunin<lb/>
I he i lassie Ameri an musical<lb/>
corned) Kismet" will be per<lb/>
formed al E t I eb 28 in Wright<lb/>
Auditorium beginning at 8 p.rn<lb/>
l hi' performance by the touring<lb/>
 mpan tpcra Northeast is pre<lb/>
ntt) i ,i special added attrac<lb/>
lion to the b'Su lo Performing<lb/>
11 S ri it K U.<lb/>
l he show s rnusk features<lb/>
fveral w ell know n songs<lb/>
Stronger in Paradise And rhis<lb/>
Is M Beloved and Baubles,<lb/>
 mgles and Beads ' and arc<lb/>
td on w orks b the Russian<lb/>
osei Moxandei Borodin and<lb/>
? igmal i impositions<lb/>
I iirimiMi al version isagi ntle<lb/>
humorous adaptation ol an v.u<lb/>
? ?? w .i iolent i torian melo-<lb/>
drama set in I7ih century<lb/>
Baghdad In the musical "Kismet<lb/>
the vengeful beggar I lajj is trans<lb/>
formed into .i down at-the heels<lb/>
poet looking tor his next meal In<lb/>
changing the tone o( the dramatk<lb/>
version, the musical introduces<lb/>
new characters, such .is Omar<lb/>
Khayyam and the Princesses ol<lb/>
Ab.ibu rhc title of the play and<lb/>
mush .il is taken from tin 1 urkish<lb/>
word for "fate<lb/>
I he first produi lion opened<lb/>
in I os Angeles in August 1953,<lb/>
and starred Alfred I rake, I toretta<lb/>
Morrow and loan Diener 1 ater,<lb/>
"Kismet" moved to Broadway<lb/>
where it swept the Ion) Awards<lb/>
in 1954 A tilm version with<lb/>
1 toward Keel, Ann Bl) th I Mores<lb/>
Gra and Vic Damone followed<lb/>
shorth after, along with no less<lb/>
than seven album recordings ol<lb/>
the score Kismet" hasbeenseen<lb/>
.ill over the world, in original<lb/>
English, and in Spanish and Ger-<lb/>
man translations .is well.<lb/>
1 "he Opera Northeast lias<lb/>
performed a variety of produc-<lb/>
tions in the fields of opera, oper<lb/>
etta and American musical thea-<lb/>
ter since their founding li years<lb/>
ago fheir "Kismet" production<lb/>
won rases from the Nework Posl<lb/>
I ritic who termed it, "truly an<lb/>
Arabian Night's dream "<lb/>
rickets to "Kismet" arc $20<lb/>
each for the general public,$17.50<lb/>
foi faculty and staff and SI"1 for<lb/>
students and youth. Pickets are<lb/>
availablcatthcECUCentral Rckct<lb/>
()ffice, telephone757 4788ortoll-<lb/>
free 1 BOO E l AR rS. Phone<lb/>
orders may be charged to major<lb/>
i i e?ht i ards<lb/>
Environmentalists celebrate twenty<lb/>
years of conservation and progress<lb/>
in the tow n ol leorge, Wash (No<lb/>
kidding<lb/>
I ick Clark hasagreed to serve<lb/>
host ol iIk festii al's music,<lb/>
win. h will b broadcast by satel<lb/>
lite to vast s? r ens so! up in shop<lb/>
le said he still was negotiat<lb/>
inc v ith p i formers but among<lb/>
those w ho have promised to take<lb/>
part an actressbill Shepherd,<lb/>
sing i - V illie Nelson and ohn<lb/>
v ougai Mellon amp and jazz<lb/>
pianist Mn hel Petruc iani<lb/>
ih oiv epl is that ever) day<lb/>
vou would have exhibits in the<lb/>
morning peoi le i an w .ilk<lb/>
1 OKki M'1 Inthetall grass-roots explosion ol activity<lb/>
W. then-Sen.Gaylord Nelson as it did in 1970<lb/>
jested offhandedly inaspeech rwocnHrelyseparatenationa<lb/>
- ittle that Americans hold a organizations have arisen to plan a<lb/>
, h-in to promote concern for activities for Earth Day 1990 and<lb/>
iii land and water forEarth Week which leads up to<lb/>
By the tune 1 gol back to il rhey are called Earth Day 20 ping centers across the country<lb/>
Washington my phone was ring Foundation and Earth Day 1990, Furia Mi<lb/>
ofl the hook Nelson said and Nelson is honorary chairman<lb/>
recently of both<lb/>
elsons teach-in, dubbed Hopefully we've got a pretty<lb/>
Earth Day counted .V million friendly competition going here,<lb/>
parti ipantsal ralliesand i ampus said Edward I uria due. torol the<lb/>
musu festivals and launched the Earth Day 20 Foundation<lb/>
v ? , m environmental move rhe centerpiece ol Furia's<lb/>
men! campaign is a week ol environ<lb/>
Its 20th anniversary celebra mental exhibit- lectures and pel<lb/>
planned tot ptil 22 and formanccs b rock country an<lb/>
ntended to inject new life into the jazz musicians rhe festival will through uria said I hen w<lb/>
vement aftei the punishing be held in a natural amphitheater would n ? into the entertain<lb/>
leagan years, promises to be a at the side of the Columbia Gorge menl n<lb/>
htly chaotic free-for-all with?<lb/>
more commith es organizers and<lb/>
sponsors than anyone can count<lb/>
I here is mtu h to i elebrate In<lb/>
th. foll twing Earth l ay<lb/>
Eon'i ,s treated the ln iron<lb/>
ntal ProtOi lion gen y and the<lb/>
? ? nal i h. ani and Atmos<lb/>
Administration and passed<lb/>
v lean Watei Act, a tougher<lb/>
an ii ? t the Endangered<lb/>
. ies .i and other landmark<lb/>
11 ion<lb/>
1 hen times grew bleak<lb/>
Ronald Reagan s secretary ol<lb/>
tl e interior, lames Watt, fought to<lb/>
? p western lands to develop<lb/>
ment, over en ironmentalists<lb/>
ti mis l r Administrator<lb/>
nne Burford presided over sub<lb/>
stantial cuts in the agency's<lb/>
budget and the White House<lb/>
Count il on Environmental Qual<lb/>
it wascut from 50 people to eight.<lb/>
("v ol Reagan s most quoted<lb/>
. i ironmcntal opinions was that<lb/>
n - s produce pollution.<lb/>
The 1980s were the most sell<lb/>
indulgent decade thiscountry has<lb/>
seen this century And it knew<lb/>
said ieorge Schaller, a<lb/>
Ildlife biologist with Wildlife<lb/>
I mservation International in<lb/>
New York<lb/>
there 5 much more interest<lb/>
mU( h more understand mi, mtK h<lb/>
morcconcern now than there was<lb/>
th. n in 1970, said Nelson the<lb/>
t, nner senator and governor ol<lb/>
Wisconsin now with the Wilder<lb/>
ness So? iety in Washington, D (<lb/>
1 he anniversary observance,<lb/>
Nelson said, will succeed "as a<lb/>
Hundreds of little 'ice heads formed around the fountain on central<lb/>
campus yesterday as a result of the cold weather we've been having<lb/>
lately But don't worry Spring Break and warm weather are just<lb/>
around the corner (PhotObyJ D Whitmue 1 CU Photo I abi<lb/>
Summer<lb/>
Continued from page t2<lb/>
TWA GETAWAY PRESENTS<lb/>
THE BIGGEST SALE OF THE 90's<lb/>
Never before and probably<lb/>
never again,<lb/>
$150 off<lb/>
per person<lb/>
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We're starting off the decade in a big way, with savings of up to 55 off<lb/>
brochure prices, just make your reservations and pay in full for the<lb/>
land and any TWA published airfare by March 15, 1990, and you save<lb/>
$150 per person off any Getaway Vacation to Europe, Egypt and Israel.<lb/>
This offer is valid for travel from April 1 through November 1, and<lb/>
must be used with a TWA published airfare. Don't miss what will<lb/>
probably be the Biggest Sale of the 90s. Call UG TRAVEL today<lb/>
and choose from 89 great Getaway Vacations.<lb/>
Royal Madrid7 days from 128<lb/>
London Theater Weeki days from s148<lb/>
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TWA Getaway" Vacations<lb/>
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?All transfers, taxes, baggage handi ng and t-ps included Fo? all prices Matured u- ces are per person<lb/>
double occupancy for travel from April 1 though November 1 Prices are suo.ee to Change, surchecges,<lb/>
availability, and vary by departure date Cancellation charges and resect ons app y Advance booking s<lb/>
required Airfare not included Prices reflect sale discount<lb/>
d the Hast Carolina University<lb/>
 Health Nursing Students<lb/>
February 27 &amp; 28<lb/>
nations tl about the room, rheir<lb/>
cocktail hour reveals a hilarious<lb/>
and poignant porti ittol this purl<lb/>
t.mn al t.muh<lb/>
rhe season s third production,<lb/>
Driving Miss Daisy, will run<lb/>
Ink 1" 21 This compelling play<lb/>
won its Mlanta born author,<lb/>
MfredUhry.thePulitieTPriiefbf<lb/>
Drama it traces the twenty-five<lb/>
year relationship between an eld-<lb/>
erh widow and her chauffeur. The<lb/>
Summer fneatre is one of the first<lb/>
North Caroline theaters to pros<lb/>
enl this nationally acclaimed hit<lb/>
play.<lb/>
rhe final production of the<lb/>
season is the long running musi-<lb/>
cal hit. "Nunsense Playing the<lb/>
week of inly 23-28, this zany<lb/>
musical focuses on I fund raising<lb/>
show being presented by five nuns<lb/>
From the Ordei ofthel ittle Sisters<lb/>
of Hoboken. rheshow is packed<lb/>
tull ol tuneful songs and 'nun<lb/>
stop slapstick comedy.<lb/>
Season tickets .ire currentlj<lb/>
on sale to previous subscribers<lb/>
through Feb 28, with season tick<lb/>
ots to the general public begin<lb/>
ning March Season ticket prices<lb/>
begin .it $38 for Monday nights<lb/>
end WednesdaySaturday mati<lb/>
nees, or $45 tor the Tuesday<lb/>
through Saturday evening per<lb/>
fbrrnances. The Box Office is open<lb/>
Monday through Friday from 10<lb/>
a.m. until 4:30 p.m. and is located<lb/>
in Room 108 of the Messkk The<lb/>
atre Arts Center on the ECU cam<lb/>
pus.<lb/>
Individual tickets may be<lb/>
purchased beginning June 18 for<lb/>
each of the four shows. The musi<lb/>
cals are prii ed .it ST1 lor evening<lb/>
perfoi n am es and $12 tor the<lb/>
matini. s I he plays are priced at<lb/>
$2foi i venings and $10 for mati-<lb/>
nees (ECI fa ulty and st.iit will<lb/>
receive a spet ial di? ount rate on<lb/>
individual tickets.)Call the Sum-<lb/>
mer rheatre box Office at (919)<lb/>
757-6829 tor tickets or informa-<lb/>
tion<lb/>
Applications are<lb/>
now being accepted<lb/>
for the position of<lb/>
Assistant News<lb/>
Editor. Apply in the<lb/>
publications<lb/>
building<lb/>
The students will be conducting a 1 lealth Fair<lb/>
from 11:00 a.m. to 2:00 p.m. each day<lb/>
Wendy's will donate 10 of our sales during<lb/>
these hours to the<lb/>
ECU School of Nursing<lb/>
Come enjoy lunch with us, learn more about<lb/>
your health, and help<lb/>
the ECU Nursing Department raise money for<lb/>
their program.<lb/>
?HH?mlWi<lb/>
I-  i ? ? i I ? ? W ?.?W?ll1?lll<lb/>
? w<lb/>
<pb facs="00058198_0017"/><lb/>
gin iEaat (Earolfman<lb/>
Page 4<lb/>
Sports<lb/>
February 27,1990<lb/>
Seahawks<lb/>
even score<lb/>
with ECU<lb/>
Bv Lisa Spiridopoulos<lb/>
Sljtt Writer<lb/>
The ever present rivalry be-<lb/>
tween ECl and UNC W was once<lb/>
againcx ident on Saturday in rrask<lb/>
Coliseum The Pirates didn't play<lb/>
the way thev would have liked tor<lb/>
their last regular season game The<lb/>
Seahawks captured the win in<lb/>
treat ol 5 159 fans, 86-57<lb/>
We didn't deserve to win the<lb/>
game, said head coach Mike<lb/>
Steele. We couldn't complete the<lb/>
plays, it was frustrating, we got<lb/>
the ball to inside people for easy<lb/>
five-footers and they wouldn't<lb/>
fall<lb/>
The I 'i rates shot 4a percent tor<lb/>
the game 117of 40)and could only<lb/>
hit eight buckets in the first halt,<lb/>
lor almost nine minutes m<lb/>
the second half the Pirates onlv<lb/>
scorer was senior c.us Mill. Ik'<lb/>
scored 1 1 straight points to keep<lb/>
I INC V from pulling away late in<lb/>
the came. 1 hll finished with Pen<lb/>
thcnight.im hiding 11 pointsfrom<lb/>
the free throw line.<lb/>
1 heSeahaw ksshol 63 percent<lb/>
from the field and hit seven three<lb/>
pointers ingh me, them their third<lb/>
win in the CAA 1 he were led by<lb/>
Adam Porter with 18 and Bran<lb/>
non 1 ancaster w ith 16<lb/>
 c had a good 40 minutes,<lb/>
said I NC W head coach Robert<lb/>
McPherson, in his last home game<lb/>
as coach for theSeahaw ks Allot<lb/>
our ball club play ed real well. We<lb/>
had a tremendous debt to repay<lb/>
tonight ,nd i think we did that<lb/>
Earlier in the season ECU de-<lb/>
feated UNC-W 72-56 in front of<lb/>
h 500 fans at Minges.<lb/>
We remember what it fell to<lb/>
be beaten so bad in .reeiu llleand<lb/>
tve didn't want that to happen<lb/>
again said 1 an aster.<lb/>
It took the Pirates two mm<lb/>
utesti get on the scoreboard, Reed<lb/>
1 ose 110 points) broke the ice with<lb/>
a pump take and a short jumper.<lb/>
On their next trip down Lose<lb/>
added another deme off a tip-in<lb/>
giving the Pirates a two point<lb/>
Sec I NC W, page IS<lb/>
Pirates take pair<lb/>
from Virginia in<lb/>
double-header<lb/>
By Frank Reyes<lb/>
st.it I Writer<lb/>
The FCU baseball team swept a a three game series with the Virginia Cavaliers over the weekend at Mar<lb/>
nngton Field The undefeated Pirates (6 0) look to St Augustine Wednesday (Photo by Garrett Killian<lb/>
 CU Photo i ab )<lb/>
Bridgets seeks championship<lb/>
By Frank Reyes<lb/>
St.ilt Writer<lb/>
 hile most people are sleep<lb/>
ing at five in the morning ECl 's<lb/>
1cuhth Bridgers is pra ti ing her<lb/>
swimming techniques tor the<lb/>
National Collegiate Mhletic As<lb/>
sociation Swimming Champion<lb/>
ships in Austin 1 cxas<lb/>
Bridgers will compete in this<lb/>
swimming spe t.u Icon Man h 15<lb/>
17 She qualified b setting a<lb/>
record time for the 100 meter<lb/>
breastroke event ol 1:03 17 in the<lb/>
Colonial Athletic Association<lb/>
Swimming i. hampionship. set<lb/>
ring the record time was a dream<lb/>
come true for Bridgers.<lb/>
1 hat record was the greatest<lb/>
goal I ever accomplished bridg-<lb/>
ers said ! worked very hard for<lb/>
it. '<lb/>
I lead coach Rick Kobe said<lb/>
that this rei ord may ne er be<lb/>
broken by am one I lovvev ei Bi<lb/>
idgers insisted that the <lb/>
Swimming, lournament was a<lb/>
warm up event to her next swim-<lb/>
mine, meet the C A A Champi<lb/>
onship.<lb/>
"Althoughit s going to be very<lb/>
expensive tor me to go there<lb/>
( Austin  i m very excited ah ut<lb/>
it she said Mv main goal toT<lb/>
this event is to place in the top 16.<lb/>
I know 1 can do it<lb/>
All ol this recognition as a<lb/>
superstar sw immer real!) start' d<lb/>
fi e ears ago during her sopho<lb/>
mere vear at South Mecklenburg<lb/>
1 ligh School inharlotte, N In<lb/>
that year, Bridgers' swimming<lb/>
team won the A state hampion<lb/>
ship<lb/>
Surprisingly, she was not sure<lb/>
it she wanted to compete on a<lb/>
college i ompetitive level.<lb/>
I knew I could swim on a<lb/>
college level Bridgers said. 'I<lb/>
Hist didn't know it I really had the<lb/>
commitment<lb/>
Pun in; her senior ear at high<lb/>
school that commitment soon<lb/>
developed into realitv when she<lb/>
f ?und out EC I needed a sw im-<lb/>
mer for the breastroke event<lb/>
Although she chose EC I Bridg<lb/>
ers ???. as hea ily ret rui ted bhio<lb/>
State and t. lolumbia I niversity.<lb/>
Su hdedication to swimming<lb/>
in ludes a vigorous and manda<lb/>
ton training program It is not<lb/>
uncommon tor bridgers to start<lb/>
her sw imming routines at five in<lb/>
the moming at Minges Aquatic<lb/>
( enter at E I<lb/>
In addition, she lilts weights<lb/>
three times a w eek and ha<lb/>
ming exercises in the afternoon as<lb/>
well Although she gets tired ol<lb/>
the student athlete routine Brid<lb/>
i i s has n i regrets<lb/>
1 en though I mtwo to three<lb/>
. ? .? ? bi hind m graduation, I<lb/>
a i ept it. she insists "Bui its<lb/>
worth it<lb/>
I ? Igei ils i ??? i n the last<lb/>
veai ?tn-i aptam award sh  i<lb/>
chosen bv her teammates, not by<lb/>
Ki be She s.ud, i really got a ' I<lb/>
of support from my teammate- It<lb/>
gave me i ontidence in mvself.<lb/>
However, Bridgers views<lb/>
swimningasa tram sport. It reallv<lb/>
bothers her when the media sees<lb/>
the sport as an individual e ent.<lb/>
"People just don't understand<lb/>
that it doesn't matter what <lb/>
vou ' sw immei i come in<lb/>
ersmaintained 'It'sa team s i<lb/>
she feels -he v an really help<lb/>
her teammates when thev have<lb/>
personal problems. Bridgers is<lb/>
alway there to lend an ear to help<lb/>
a friend<lb/>
Swimming competitions are<lb/>
special times tor bridgers It's like<lb/>
going into an exam, being pre-<lb/>
pared mentally she said "You<lb/>
are not just battling a clock, but<lb/>
See Bridgers, page 15<lb/>
The EC'J Pirates swept their second double header gam. tl<lb/>
season by defeating the V irginia avaliers 5- 5 and 2-1 Saturday after<lb/>
noon m (in vn ille<lb/>
( avalier starting pi t? her Keith Seller (6-3,5 79 ERA last season<lb/>
canned by the Pirates in thi first inning With two outs. Tommy Ea<lb/>
singled CalvinBi ?? followed with a walk. John Cist (.545,1 HR this<lb/>
seasoio responded with a three run homerun over the left field fci<lb/>
giving EC! a 3-0 lead<lb/>
But theavaliers i ame ba k w ith two runs in the third innii<lb/>
center fielderhris Kughn ? last ?? ison) singled in the runs I<lb/>
Virginia. 1 he Pirate . ? is sliced ; 2<lb/>
EC 1 (Inn n sponded to the, all. scoring two more runs in the third<lb/>
inning, making thi r rhe runs imi hen ohn Rig<lb/>
l(iinnn Eason belt menu<lb/>
Pirate starting pitcher Pirn Langdon, who gave up only tv<lb/>
while striking out nine  in t Mount Olive last week, held Virginia I<lb/>
only four hitsand thi i nl : id ichdai<lb/>
w i pli tbed with 1 n I ?? ?<lb/>
Langdon had a j : tn isl eek for us Overtoi i I H<lb/>
drew a touj i i I I lay and i ; nded well<lb/>
ECl scati her I tsoi id thi I I  three at bats. One hil ??? i<lb/>
solo homerun Overtoi ly Fa n bats third in thi lineup becaus<lb/>
gets the job ? :<lb/>
1 he nun ' ' tr 1 ittmg lin up is generally )<lb/>
best hitter. Overton pointed I I  ; ? ? ' ?' '<lb/>
former<lb/>
? ? ? . ? ? I id manage I i i ther rui the Piraf<lb/>
held If tl ivalierstoa lory<lb/>
I h- : I lid t tour errors during t ?<lb/>
(. K'erton said the cold ? eathei nditioi ma therea nfoi<lb/>
the misjud<lb/>
rhi rginia 11 I i ? I ? ist yeai 2 in Charlol<lb/>
. . A is. ? '<lb/>
; ? . . ? . ? ? ? header featured a thi llii g<lb/>
 u ton for tl ECl Pir il<lb/>
 niorpiU her Jon itha<lb/>
. <lb/>
Lady Pirates avenge<lb/>
loss to UNC-W, 85-62<lb/>
By David Reichell<lb/>
st.itt riter<lb/>
Moffitt's 10 points.<lb/>
"(hir kuis were ready to play<lb/>
after playing s ? p ?orly down there<lb/>
The I .uv Pirates got revenge<lb/>
igainst the lady Seahawks of<lb/>
i Wilmington by defeating<lb/>
thi m s ? 62 Saturday night in<lb/>
Minges - oliseum I he I ady Pi<lb/>
:at.  lost to the I ady Seahawks<lb/>
earlier this season in I rask Coli-<lb/>
seum<lb/>
ECU impro ed their rev ord to<lb/>
I" 7 (8 4 in the AA) and I (<lb/>
Wilmington dropped their record<lb/>
to9 IJ (2 10 in the AA)<lb/>
Ihel ,d Pirates had balanced<lb/>
scoring with four players in double<lb/>
figures. Senior Irish I la mi I ton had<lb/>
17 points to lead the I dv Hues<lb/>
hmior Sarah iray had 16 points<lb/>
followed by sophomore Tonya<lb/>
Hargroves' n points and junior<lb/>
Kenneya Wilson's lOpoints.<lb/>
I he I ,dv Seahawks were led<lb/>
by t ?rward rressa Reese who had<lb/>
25 points, and venter Alexia<lb/>
(UNC -V I, <lb/>
'at Pierson<lb/>
saul "I'm pleased with our per-<lb/>
formance and am happy with the<lb/>
si oring margin after losing to them<lb/>
earlier this year<lb/>
The I tdv Pirates came out<lb/>
firing only trailing after Wilming-<lb/>
ton hit the first pointsol thegame.<lb/>
Atter that the 1 d Pirates went to<lb/>
23 to five run to lead by 16 points<lb/>
with 8:29 to play in the tirst half.<lb/>
The l.adv Seahawks tried to<lb/>
get hack into the game by closing<lb/>
out the halt with a I 5 to eight run<lb/>
to trail by nine .it the half.<lb/>
"1 thought we shot well,espe-<lb/>
cially early in the first halt The<lb/>
I .k Pirates shot 43 percent tor<lb/>
the halt but hit well from the out-<lb/>
side<lb/>
Their perimeter game threw<lb/>
usoff We were not read v to guard<lb/>
See I m. Pirates, page 17<lb/>
games and has an earned run a vi i ?? ??  ?? pu<lb/>
masterpiece against Virginia I retiring .??<lb/>
ip truck out ? ? ???? ' '? hitti r B 'bby Ri<lb/>
thn ? ? mi nkms was pr idol performai igainst<lb/>
M adrenalim was really i .? enkn aid It felt gn it<lb/>
lenkinsalsosaid that he u I ted il itpit .??????<lb/>
this Atlantuoast C onferem I<lb/>
"We knew thev wei rtkn aid :<lb/>
we were reallv not intimidated, by them at<lb/>
iheonh irginia run i first baseman Mike I inder 264<lb/>
4 HR last season) smashed a I n rui ii thi nd inning i r<lb/>
that, Jenkins settli Id ?? i and allowed no runs during the game.<lb/>
1 he Pirates scored both runs on RBI singles by Eason and Adams<lb/>
EC I managed onK three hits against starting pitcher l"odd Ruy ik<lb/>
See sw eep. page 1"<lb/>
Lawrence continues<lb/>
to excel in diving<lb/>
Freshman takes fifth in CAA<lb/>
Freshman diver Matt Lawrence broke the ECU three meter diving<lb/>
record this season with 432 points on 11 dives against the Tarheels<lb/>
of UNC CH (Photo by Garrett Killian ? ECU Photo Lab)<lb/>
White leads sluggers to their sixth win<lb/>
By Frank Reyes<lb/>
Staff Writer<lb/>
I he EC I Pirates remained<lb/>
undefeated in six games by beat-<lb/>
ing the Virginia Cavaliers 8-2 tor<lb/>
the third straight game over the<lb/>
weekend series in Greenville.<lb/>
I he (avaliers scored m the<lb/>
first inning when lead oft hitter<lb/>
Bobby Rivell singled and stole<lb/>
eennd base. With tvvoouts,clean<lb/>
up hitter Mike lander (.264, 4 MR<lb/>
last year) got the RBI single, gh<lb/>
ing Virginia a quick lead. 1-0.<lb/>
While the Pirate sluggers went<lb/>
silent in three consecutive innings,<lb/>
Virginia's Rivell had an excellent<lb/>
game against ECU. He had a triple.<lb/>
two singles, a walk, and two sto-<lb/>
len bases.<lb/>
Pirate starting pitcher ohn<lb/>
White (8-1, 1.89 ERA last season)<lb/>
gave up onlv six hits to Virginia.<lb/>
Although he fell behind a lot in his<lb/>
count, he gave up only one run<lb/>
ECU scored a run in the fourth<lb/>
inning when John (ast lined an<lb/>
KBI double, making the- score 1-1.<lb/>
After the fifth inning, the Pi-<lb/>
rates extended the lead 2 I. Des-<lb/>
ignated hitter Tom Move reached<lb/>
first base on a throwing error.<lb/>
Tommv Yarborough followed<lb/>
with a bunt single. With men on<lb/>
first and second, ECU converted a<lb/>
double steal, putting runners on<lb/>
second and third base Pirate<lb/>
Kevin Kiggs responded with a<lb/>
sacrifice fly, giving the ECU Pi-<lb/>
rates the lead.<lb/>
The sixth inning belonged to<lb/>
the Pirates once again The team<lb/>
scored four runs, making the score<lb/>
b-2. With bases loaded and no<lb/>
outs, Moye knocked in RBI with a<lb/>
sacrifice fly. Thanks to another<lb/>
throwing error by Virginia's Scott<lb/>
Malone, the Pirates were able to<lb/>
capitalize for two more runs.<lb/>
With the Pirates ahead, ECU<lb/>
See White, page lb<lb/>
ByLisa Spiridopoulos<lb/>
Staff Writer<lb/>
In only his tirst vear at EC<lb/>
freshman Matt I awrence has al-<lb/>
ready broken two-long standing<lb/>
diving records in the three meter<lb/>
de.e '<lb/>
1 lisscoreol 281 brokethe 1I<lb/>
EC l recordon the three meter, foi<lb/>
six dives Ibis record, set at the<lb/>
dual meet against the L niversitv<lb/>
ol Nortl Carolina, was also his<lb/>
best s .re ol the season I lisother<lb/>
record, the EC I freshman record,<lb/>
was set also on the three meter,<lb/>
u ith a score et 4 $2 for 11 di es.<lb/>
" This was probable the best<lb/>
season of m life, said ! awrence<lb/>
"1 stayed healthy all year and my<lb/>
scores really showed it.<lb/>
At tirst Ididn t know it Id be<lb/>
one of the better do ers or the K'st<lb/>
or what, but I just wanted to par<lb/>
ticipate in all the meets over the<lb/>
season he added<lb/>
Not onlv did he participate in<lb/>
every meet this season, but he<lb/>
placed either first or second in all<lb/>
of them Lawrence also placed<lb/>
fifth in the CAA in both the one<lb/>
and three meter dive.<lb/>
"I le had an excellent season<lb/>
sjid ECU diving coach John Rose<lb/>
"Matt is very talented, he has a<lb/>
great attitude and is a big asset to<lb/>
our team '<lb/>
Lawrence hails from<lb/>
Marlboro, New fersey. where since<lb/>
the age of nine, he has been diving<lb/>
competitivelv<lb/>
K e.an do ing ' '<lb/>
: MC A but 'was ? ? ?<lb/>
so he joined an AA I uni<lb/>
pic team in New ersey "In th.<lb/>
four years 1 really learned m ?-?<lb/>
my basic techniques hi<lb/>
1984 started a tour u jtinl<lb/>
for I aw rente he competed in tl<lb/>
U. S. Diving Nationals four years<lb/>
in a row Two of those vears<lb/>
was named an All-American<lb/>
both the one and three meter do i -<lb/>
s a junior in high sch ?. 1<lb/>
went to de.e tor . lordan Spen i i<lb/>
at Columbia University in e.<lb/>
Virk. "He had a smaller team<lb/>
than mv AAL team. ' said 1 aw<lb/>
rence. "It was better tor me<lb/>
needed more diving and c no<lb/>
traied attention, mere one n<lb/>
to help me prepare tor college<lb/>
That year 1 awrence compi I<lb/>
m w hat he has deemed his most<lb/>
memorable competition We? ks<lb/>
before he was to due in states he<lb/>
broke his hand. "1 was m a cast<lb/>
with a broken hand and 1 reallv<lb/>
didn't think 1 was going to be able<lb/>
to due he explains<lb/>
Before the competition 1 aw<lb/>
rence got a water-proof cast put<lb/>
on and was ready to dive "No<lb/>
body could believe I was diving<lb/>
he said. "It was reallv something<lb/>
to see, 1 was supposed to be doing<lb/>
something so smooth and grace-<lb/>
ful and yet 1 had this big cast on<lb/>
my arm The cast proved not to<lb/>
damper his performance as he<lb/>
placed second in the state<lb/>
See Lawrence, page lb<lb/>
<pb facs="00058198_0018"/><lb/>
The East Carolinian, February 27,1990 15<lb/>
Sports Briefs<lb/>
McEnroe fizzels out at Volvo tourney<lb/>
ohn McEnroe has withdrawn from next week's Volvo Tennis<lb/>
ndoor tournament in Memphis, and he feels he does not deserve to<lb/>
n present the United States in the Davis Cup match next month against<lb/>
 zei hoslovakia. Reasons: injury and fatigue. Top seed McEnroe lost to<lb/>
Richie Reneberg 6-7 (5-7), 6-3, 6-3 Wednesday in the F.bel U.S. Pro<lb/>
Baseball owners offer new base salary<lb/>
Players union chief Donald Fehrsaid the owners'latest proposal on<lb/>
irbitration, the sticking point in baseball negotiations, would increase<lb/>
inimum salary from $68,000 to $85,000 in the first year of a four-<lb/>
i contract Also, it would increase the yearly contribution to the<lb/>
- benefit plan from $39 million to $42 million.<lb/>
Lendl, Becker advance in tourney<lb/>
Kan 1 endl and Boris Becker advanced to the quarterfinals of the<lb/>
lurnamenl at Stuttgart, West (iermany Thursday, but not with<lb/>
ing first Lendl, ranked No. 1 in the world,beat C ioran Prpic<lb/>
osl i ? ia 7 5, 6 -4 Becker, the Wimbledon and US Open cham<lb/>
i had to win the last three games to beat Soviet Alexander Yolko<lb/>
Moe edges Bryan to win giant slalom<lb/>
m Moe won the riant slalom bv eieht hundrethsof a second<lb/>
Goodson wins 1990 shoot out<lb/>
S MpincSki Championships at Crested Butte,Colo. He had a<lb/>
? in time ol 2 18 10. Nate Bryan ol Vail, Colo who suffered a<lb/>
.sion in a tall .it the finish line came in sc ond<lb/>
Navratilova scores impressive victory<lb/>
i.i Navratilova scored an impressive vi torySunda). beating<lb/>
arrison6 1,6-0 in the finalsol the Virginia Slims ol Washington<lb/>
tilova won the tournament for the record 10th time Navratilova<lb/>
irrison defeated Ann 1 lenricksson and Dinky van Rensburg 6 0,<lb/>
tl ie doubles final.<lb/>
NFL television contract up for grabs<lb/>
t works are vying for fall's prime time 1 I 1 V contract AB<lb/>
? : Football" is the 14th highest rated program m tar mis<lb/>
? ! 1U says it will fight to keep its 20-year-old franchise<lb/>
? ?. ingNFI talks an announcement could conn.1 this<lb/>
? . rk tecutives declined official comment<lb/>
Kiitin wins and loses NASCAR race<lb/>
' rl Martin won the Pontiac Excitement 400 NAS AR race Sun<lb/>
en lost almost all his winnings Martin won $59,150, but was<lb/>
: S40,(KXI tor using an illegal carburetor spacer on his engine<lb/>
ho finished 1 02 secondsahead of Pale Earnhardt'sChevrolet<lb/>
also forfeited 4' points in the Winston Cup standings, drop<lb/>
from sixth to 13th place.<lb/>
ML set to play in foreign countries<lb/>
i ret 1 L exhibition games u ill be pla ed in foreign countries on<lb/>
 eekoud oi Aug. 4 5. the Kansas Cit) Chiefs and the I os Angeles<lb/>
tms in ermaiu ; the i.os Angeles Raiders and New Orleans Saints<lb/>
II M,n at 1 ondon's Wembley Stadium; and the Denver Broncoslikel)<lb/>
I plav Seattle Seahawks in rokyo.<lb/>
Anonymous lady wins record for bet<lb/>
man who has requested to remain anonymous, won<lb/>
0,482.40 Saturday on a 2 pick-six bet at Remington Park in<lb/>
!r?i( in rheamount is thought to bea North American record<lb/>
ked the winners of the third through eighth races m which no<lb/>
S.C. State player suspended for fight<lb/>
Rick) Byrd a senior guard on the South Carolina State basketball<lb/>
im was suspended from the team tor striking teammate Chris 1 elix<lb/>
ftei the Bulldog's victory Saturday against North Carolina A&amp; 1 Felix<lb/>
? .1 hit his head on the locker room floor and was hsftd in serious<lb/>
tion Sunday at Moses 11.Cone Memorial 1 lospital in Greensboro<lb/>
By Jeannette Roth<lb/>
IRS<lb/>
It sbasketball feverinMinges<lb/>
Coliseum and Memorial Gymna-<lb/>
sium as play-oft action tills the<lb/>
air I ma Keck intramural prog<lb/>
nostuator, has thrown her money<lb/>
down on the following teams to<lb/>
meet head to head in the divi-<lb/>
sional championships.<lb/>
? Women's Gold division:<lb/>
Ain't it Funky Enough vs. Our<lb/>
Prerogative<lb/>
?Men's Gold division: I'd<lb/>
Rather Be Ballin' vs. The Fellows<lb/>
?Men's Purple division lav<lb/>
hawks vs. I loopstCTS<lb/>
?Fraternity Purple division<lb/>
Sigma Phi Epsilon vs. Pi Kappa<lb/>
Alpha<lb/>
I ook tor another repc it per<lb/>
tormance bv The Fellows (will<lb/>
these guvs ever graduate?). 1 he<lb/>
Fellows recruit players yearly<lb/>
better than m.mv college teams<lb/>
Always a thre.it in the men's inde-<lb/>
pendent division, these r.uvs not<lb/>
only win, but dominate their con-<lb/>
tests on defense and offense.<lb/>
?NIKE 3 Point Take Halftime<lb/>
in Minges.<lb/>
As the Pirates ended their<lb/>
home game schedule on a high<lb/>
note beating the Richmond Spi-<lb/>
ders, several Fast Carolinians felt<lb/>
their own kind of high providing<lb/>
the halftime festivities of the final<lb/>
around m the 1990 Nike 3-Point<lb/>
Shoot Out competition.<lb/>
inetv eight participants<lb/>
headed into the first round of ac-<lb/>
tion given a chance to pop in as<lb/>
many three point baskets a pos-<lb/>
sible from several different loca-<lb/>
tions in a matter of 1 mm and 15<lb/>
seconds. Ot these 98, 16 headed<lb/>
into the second round of play.<lb/>
Shane Wells, Mark tones, Neil<lb/>
Raine, Kevin Anderson, Marcus<lb/>
Goodson, Blair Nuckol, Brett<lb/>
Schecter, Darrell Griffin, Bob<lb/>
1 hirda, Trenton Britt, lohn Vestal,<lb/>
Randy Evans, Eddie Jordon, David<lb/>
Crow ell, Tripp Little and Mike<lb/>
Kehoe each received Nike shirts<lb/>
and socks for their first round<lb/>
performances. Shane Wells set an<lb/>
ECU record scoring 20 points out<lb/>
ot a possible 30 in the first round t<lb/>
lead the other competitors.<lb/>
In round two, these 16 poised<lb/>
themselves for a battle that would<lb/>
knock out all but four Brett<lb/>
Schecter came out on top with 13<lb/>
points followed by Shane Wells<lb/>
and Marcus Goodson each with<lb/>
12 points. Neil Raines rounded<lb/>
out the final four spots with a 10<lb/>
point performance In addition to<lb/>
their previous Nike awards, these<lb/>
four received Nike shoes and<lb/>
shortsandachancetocompetefor<lb/>
the championship during the<lb/>
halftime of the Richmond contest.<lb/>
Defending champion, Shane<lb/>
Wells once again put on a strong<lb/>
performance, scoring 12 points in<lb/>
a one minute period Brett Schecter<lb/>
,wk Neil Raines scored high as<lb/>
well with 10 point each. However,<lb/>
these' hot shots were stopped by-<lb/>
Marcus Goodson who waited to<lb/>
put on his 3 point finesse in the<lb/>
final round of play with 14 points<lb/>
and walk away with a Nike warm-<lb/>
up suit, tote bag and the 1990<lb/>
championship<lb/>
UNC-W<lb/>
advantage five minutes into the<lb/>
game.<lb/>
ECU was able to keep their<lb/>
lead after Steve Richardson (8<lb/>
points) entered the game and<lb/>
hanged in a quick three-pointer<lb/>
but; however, their last lead for<lb/>
the ame 1 he Seahav ks an<lb/>
swered ba k with a three bj I'01<lb/>
ter giving them a two point lead<lb/>
Major Wiggins, who reeled of!<lb/>
eightpointsforl N W increased<lb/>
their lead tosix with<lb/>
to plav until the hall<lb/>
worked our insidi ut I<lb/>
noted I ancaster<lb/>
I he Pirates cut the dt<lb/>
I two oft a tip inbv lettrev Whitakcr<lb/>
But again theSeahaw kscame right<lb/>
back with I ancaster hitting U ?.<lb/>
three pointers And. at the hall<lb/>
E( I found themselves entering<lb/>
the locker room down by eight<lb/>
I till said. "We had mental<lb/>
breakdowns, I don't know how or<lb/>
win they happened We proba<lb/>
hlv didn't talk enough on defense<lb/>
but when we did UNC-W still<lb/>
executed well. They were hi it most<lb/>
ot theniehtand that's really tough<lb/>
uniites<lb/>
? realK<lb/>
it<lb/>
Continued from page 14<lb/>
minute to plav in the game. The<lb/>
were forced to foul and Porter hit<lb/>
tour straight foul shots before<lb/>
Stanley Love could give the Pi-<lb/>
rates a bucket off a tip-in with 09<lb/>
left to plav. That was their last<lb/>
point and last chance at pulling<lb/>
out .i victory<lb/>
The loss dropped the Pirates<lb/>
to 6-8 in theCAA and 1 3-17 over<lb/>
all I'hev will have a week to pre<lb/>
pare for their first round match<lb/>
up with (leorge Mason in the (A <lb/>
tournament in Richmond Virginia<lb/>
he game w ill be Saturday at w 00<lb/>
n m in the Richmond Coliseum<lb/>
ECU has lost three times to<lb/>
GMU this vcar and are looking for<lb/>
an upset as they did last yeai in<lb/>
the first round against American<lb/>
I Iniversity.<lb/>
"Weneed to figureouthow to<lb/>
get ready for Mason because<lb/>
they've beaten us three times<lb/>
said Steele.<lb/>
The Hair Loft<lb/>
 Get a quick Tan Without Burning in Our<lb/>
Brand New Tanning Bed<lb/>
(Wolff Bellanum "S" Lamps)<lb/>
$4 per visit $35 for 10 visits<lb/>
Wei Cuts - $8.00<lb/>
Perms - S33.00<lb/>
Walk Ins Welcome<lb/>
I12S. Mill St.<lb/>
Wintervillc.NC 28590<lb/>
Mon - Fn 10am - hpm<lb/>
Sat uam - 1pm<lb/>
evenings hy appointment<lb/>
(across from Dixie Queen)<lb/>
only 3 miles south of Carolina East Mall 355-598G<lb/>
Its A Whole Mew Ball Game!<lb/>
ONE WITH ONE<lb/>
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i<lb/>
i<lb/>
i<lb/>
27 IK Memorial Dr.<lb/>
I<lb/>
I<lb/>
I<lb/>
J<lb/>
56 2020<lb/>
In the Locker<lb/>
Top NBA prospect'??- B B<lb/>
Top canrj dates for the<lb/>
National Basketbally s <lb/>
Association lottery among thi3 year's ? ? seniors, nclude sZfij<lb/>
vS <lb/>
NameHeightPosition College<lb/>
Dwayne Schintzius7 - 2CFlorida<lb/>
Feltoi Spencer7 - 0CLouisville<lb/>
- Coleman6-9FSyracuse<lb/>
?'?nons6-6Fl.aSalle<lb/>
 ams6 - 10FSt John's<lb/>
A ? Kessler6-11FGeorgia<lb/>
I ,? ne Hill6 9FXavier (Ohio)<lb/>
 ? B .rton6-7FMinnesota<lb/>
Cednc Cebalios6-7FCal State- FuHerton<lb/>
A- thony Bonner6-7FSt. Louis<lb/>
Gerald Glass6-5F -GMississippi<lb/>
Loy Vaught6-9FMichigan<lb/>
Terry Mills6- 10FMichigan<lb/>
Trevor Wilson6-8FUCLA<lb/>
Hank Gathers6- 7FLoyola Marymount<lb/>
Gary Payton6-3GOregon State<lb/>
Kendall Gill6-4GIllinois<lb/>
Rumeal Robinson6-2GMichigan<lb/>
Brian Oliver6 4GGeorgia Tech<lb/>
Bo Kimble6-5GLoyola Marymount<lb/>
Keith Smith6-4GCalifornia<lb/>
Kevin Pritchard6-3GKansas<lb/>
Boo Harvey5-11GSt John's<lb/>
Bimbo Coles6 - 1GVirginia Tech<lb/>
Stephen Thompson6 4GSyracuse<lb/>
Travis Mays6-2GTexas<lb/>
Steve BarrJo6-6GIllinois<lb/>
Source 'iN'ji <lb/>
Brenda Giannan, Gannetl News Se'V'Q<lb/>
Read The East Carolinan<lb/>
in the road<lb/>
rhines only got worse tor the<lb/>
Pirates as the) fought an up-hill<lb/>
battle the entire second halt The<lb/>
closest they could get to the<lb/>
Seahawks was five I osestolethc<lb/>
ball and Ike Copeland ? 10 points)<lb/>
finished the play ofl with a lay up<lb/>
rhen I ose was able to hit tor<lb/>
himseli with a short leaner.<lb/>
E U wont to the line2? times<lb/>
in the second half, 11 ol thosetimes<lb/>
being from I lill. At the 952 mark<lb/>
1 lill wont up strong, got fouled by<lb/>
Wiggins and then completed the<lb/>
three-point play. I his looked to<lb/>
be a turning point for the Pirates<lb/>
but it only started a dry spell.<lb/>
Richardson added two points but<lb/>
the rest ol the s urine, came from<lb/>
I till until the two minute mark<lb/>
Porter, who scored I"1 second<lb/>
half points, siid, "We staved in-<lb/>
tense and focused He had a<lb/>
completegame with seven assists,<lb/>
seven ol nine free throws, three,<lb/>
three-pointers and only one turn-<lb/>
over.<lb/>
The Pirates tried to pick the<lb/>
Seahawks full-court but a mistake<lb/>
left Bryan Withers alone at halt<lb/>
i ourt where he promptly took the<lb/>
ball in for the jam.opelandsaid,<lb/>
"I think we played hard, but we<lb/>
had some mental mistakes and<lb/>
breakdowns in defense and things<lb/>
really started to go their way<lb/>
ECU was able toget to within<lb/>
10 but that came with under a<lb/>
Bridgers<lb/>
Continued from page 14<lb/>
against other people<lb/>
As a leisure systems studies<lb/>
major (research management),<lb/>
Bridgers said she did not want to<lb/>
make a career out of swimming.<lb/>
But she would like to work with<lb/>
kids. Even it Bridgers does not<lb/>
swim professionally, she will<lb/>
always love the sport<lb/>
But tor now, Meredith Bridg-<lb/>
ers will put her vears ot training,<lb/>
long hours of practice, and dedi-<lb/>
cation tousein the ultimate swim-<lb/>
ming spectacle: the NCAA Cham-<lb/>
pionship in Austin, Texas.<lb/>
N ? E ? T<lb/>
WORKS<lb/>
SWIMWEAR<lb/>
save1 o off<lb/>
? Hobie<lb/>
? Body Glove<lb/>
? Ocean Pacific<lb/>
? Citrus<lb/>
? Daffy<lb/>
Bring this ad in for $10 off any swimsuit in stock.<lb/>
Offer expires March 30, 1990<lb/>
Carolina East Mall<lb/>
0W00A<lb/>
<pb facs="00058198_0019"/><lb/>
lb I he last Carolinian, February 27, 1990<lb/>
Wolverines look to Final Four<lb/>
battei reached base as the Pirates dumped Virginia Saturday tor their sixth win ot the<lb/>
iPhoto by Garrett Killian CU Photo I ab)<lb/>
White<lb/>
Continued from page 14<lb/>
kvei ' bullpen bringing in With two outs in tin- last in against the Virginia Cavaliers,<lb/>
erekman to pitch the last ning, Davis got Cavalier Brian<lb/>
i ntortunatelv Berekman Niskey out on a flyball to end the fhe next game for the Pirates<lb/>
d b a line drive forcing game will be against St. Augustine's<lb/>
him out of the game He pitched when they play a double-header<lb/>
I Ih- Pirates Phis weekend sweep gave the .m Wrni'sLn at 2 p.m .it II.u<lb/>
Pirates an overall record ol I" II rington Field<lb/>
to .<lb/>
I m Kven I a is<lb/>
NAIA schools discuss bie chart<lb/>
would officially apply lo tin<lb/>
&amp; ge<lb/>
BOILING SPRINGS, N.C would officially apply lo Ihe Oneconccrnisthedwindling<lb/>
r ? ?? College N( V A for Division 11 status b number of teams in Division I ol<lb/>
and tin schools in the luh I theNAIAplayingfoothall'Fchols<lb/>
? ference are Our trustees have idiwuh "ml  ? worth looking into to<lb/>
? . V A Divi voted to make the move to vhat's best for our memboi<lb/>
?avs tN( A) Division II if the confer<lb/>
tit directors met in ena goes Fish said "here's a<lb/>
lanuars I uss leaving the consensus (around the SA i to do<lb/>
s. ? ttion ol Interol this<lb/>
iNAIA) and Palk ol league a hools jump<lb/>
institutions It's best to keep vour<lb/>
options open, both long term and<lb/>
shot t lot in<lb/>
SA member I enoir Rh ne<lb/>
alread matntainsdual status i ith<lb/>
ing to the NCAA has gained lhr NAIA and the N'( lh<lb/>
I head football momentum now that the SA isa ll'hl Director Keith Ochs sud his<lb/>
? eti directors functioningail-sportsconference<lb/>
 hih-I is oli imiti'K oushine 11<lb/>
P1<lb/>
March I 2 with<lb/>
itions from theii n<lb/>
ols<lb/>
; ?? ire favorable<lb/>
nd not just .i football league .i- it ,n"<lb/>
. as before 189 SA( c ommi ?<lb/>
Ki.iiK tliht now a? re put<lb/>
 n<lb/>
ague schcHils ton position<lb/>
sioro r ! oug E hols said the con ,m ?ll1 the plusses and minuses<lb/>
together hs said It s one ol<lb/>
those things where each school<lb/>
fi ? nee had horn in .in explora<lb/>
w ill t.iki up the matter in 1.i<lb/>
It snot ,i new item he said has to make up their minds Wen<lb/>
?final p ilfromthepresi National affiliation has been for it, but I've got no indication it<lb/>
.tints i?<lb/>
I<lb/>
A( schools t.ilkrd .ils'iit tora nimiN-rol eai<lb/>
Sec Bulldogs, page 17<lb/>
IICCHUI Sile Sprint Breit<lb/>
Cruue Control 90 Pleo??<lb/>
PLEDGE TO HAVE A<lb/>
SAFE SPRING BREAK<lb/>
Sign up Wednesday,<lb/>
Februar) 28, 1990<lb/>
10:00am 2:00pm<lb/>
In Front of Student Store<lb/>
lake the (ruisc Control<lb/>
Pledge and take a chance at<lb/>
winning a 1991<lb/>
Plymouth Laser RS 1 urho!<lb/>
Each 5th pledger v ill<lb/>
receive either a<lb/>
Sale Spring Break<lb/>
button, cup, or t-shirrt,<lb/>
while supplies last<lb/>
Take the Cruise Control Pledge<lb/>
For a Sale Spring Break 90<lb/>
S. 9Br?<lb/>
S?, <lb/>
? - ate . '<lb/>
A jreai.<lb/>
l IV iff<lb/>
B, KJdinga<lb/>
w. in <lb/>
??? I<lb/>
?<lb/>
( ' A<lb/>
? ?? , , eat ben i ,<lb/>
i .???? ??<lb/>
L .? ?. ?  fMBA H<lb/>
,?.? ,? ine , - n Set  '<lb/>
Sponsored on Campus by: BA.C.CH.I .S.<lb/>
Division of Student Life Dining Services<lb/>
Pepsi Cola Bottlers of Greenville<lb/>
By 1 ce Creek<lb/>
Gannett News Service<lb/>
I Ins gol such rii hon last<lb/>
February sore, most ol it was<lb/>
angry we couldn't resist doing<lb/>
it again<lb/>
So USA TODAY'S Karen l<lb/>
Ion John Bannon and Steve<lb/>
Wieberg pul Iheir heads together,<lb/>
slammed some fists on tables<lb/>
traded insults .mil emerged with<lb/>
this A tournament look ol<lb/>
vln s in, who has work to do and<lb/>
w ho had bettei learn how to .pell<lb/>
Nil<lb/>
li your team isn't w here on<lb/>
u ant don't worry. I he selei tion<lb/>
i ommittee rarelv consults us<lb/>
? TOI RIM MI I I t K KS<lb/>
(26)<lb/>
Mi. higan (l(' 5) I Wending<lb/>
national i hampion still might jell<lb/>
for anothet strong run<lb/>
I kikel 22 5) I m.il I out team<lb/>
three ol the list tour years<lb/>
c lemson (21-5) Rgers hue tlio<lb/>
talent to win the A(<lb/>
i ieorgia Yi lo I" 4) National<lb/>
title t.o orite it it were ? ' n I<lb/>
game ? ieoi getown I I Front<lb/>
line not dominating nisi .nvtulh<lb/>
good<lb/>
t i mnct tieut (23 1) Just wai t<lb/>
until tli. gel s( inn' tout nament<lb/>
mileage ? n them<lb/>
S Mi use( I" 5)! herins ?<lb/>
couldn't shoot straight til n il<lb/>
with the lead<lb/>
Missouri (25-2)Touu<lb/>
nil- tough players, a tournament<lb/>
favorite<lb/>
Kansas 126 ?) Mira les mi-<lb/>
mis I ianny .till don't hit many<lb/>
sour notes<lb/>
( k lahonvt (20 1) I he arro<lb/>
gance distorts the picture, but still<lb/>
11 ontender<lb/>
Purduel 19 5) Will take more<lb/>
gcxid shot than any team in the<lb/>
tout nament<lb/>
Mi higan State (21 5) Spar<lb/>
tans' host team; it e  hut Magt<lb/>
i - missing<lb/>
Minne iota (I7 . ? ? i I" .i<lb/>
v iii igi?. .it least th.it gi i( d again<lb/>
Illinois( h) t A inves<lb/>
tigation might afti 11 the lllini.<lb/>
Indiana (Ifi ') C)verachie<lb/>
? i eat l but plav ing ont i Ihe<lb/>
bubble lately<lb/>
UNLVi 2 I) Ink call this<lb/>
ti am i me i t his I<lb/>
I ouisv ille (20-ti Has the<lb/>
ability to throw in .i i hinki i game<lb/>
now and tin n<lb/>
1 aSalli : ' I he I 11 tin<lb/>
might i toumaminl express<lb/>
this time<lb/>
riOhi ' .tands<lb/>
foi tout nament I v ? ? I lill and<lb/>
ton '<lb/>
i ' i . . ?  ? ?' ? ! ' I ' i in<lb/>
 ear.<lb/>
An oi i  ?' i tavoi<lb/>
I hut ero.it dopt ? :<lb/>
111 up<lb/>
-<lb/>
intiful<lb/>
Iawrence<lb/>
talent<lb/>
Ark.ins,is (22-4) Earln<lb/>
stumbles probably osl trw i<lb/>
No.l seeding<lb/>
Loyola Mary mount<lb/>
the i ommittee has i ? i<lb/>
humor, it would pail I' i<lb/>
Westhead's runnin I ions ??.<lb/>
Totearril's w alkin Prin el<lb/>
I igcrs<lb/>
New Mi'vii o Stati<lb/>
Host team sin e the 74 Fina<lb/>
outfit<lb/>
St lohn ! i .i<lb/>
d"? I. the .treti l<lb/>
. Ml s rHERI<lb/>
SW Mis ouri ?tati<lb/>
VVi n nine in i<lb/>
North (<lb/>
I look, handle it poorh I<lb/>
only slightly better but til<lb/>
the frontline to make it tou<lb/>
Kansas Stati 15-11<lb/>
homa State 11 J 10) ! hi I<lb/>
pla? i team in the Big i ight<lb/>
bid I he fifth pla e team i<lb/>
bubbk' K State has fourl<lb/>
but Oklahoma it it I isthei i<lb/>
? IX'cisi mi ttmi<lb/>
th, s meet in first n ?und ? it l<lb/>
I . u ,<lb/>
i alifomia I ? i<lb/>
is ,i i ing linn' to  nt i. ?? i ?<lb/>
n icnt biol<lb/>
UCLA (16-7) fasl<lb/>
v, ,i. onto the bubble<lb/>
( leorgia ? Is ?<lb/>
.last 11 ? ludii<lb/>
i : - ? mill<lb/>
See WOKerines, paei I<lb/>
(. ontinui'd ti uni<lb/>
I awreni e realizes that livit<lb/>
 is not the most populai port in<lb/>
hir.h s. hoolbut said, "1 help d<lb/>
vs ith giving diving a name<lb/>
always hear ol football and I<lb/>
ball and on ne it heat<lb/>
ming and diving I think I hi<lb/>
in bi inging in someol the reci ?gni<lb/>
tion<lb/>
While attending Ri hud<lb/>
Kimble's diving camp I awrence<lb/>
saw wh.it he hoped to do with<lb/>
diving kmblo s.so.n Bruce, was<lb/>
IW Ti<lb/>
l I,<lb/>
w ithout i<lb/>
tiiin<lb/>
a ,mt !<lb/>
? 111.1 n<lb/>
was like thi?<lb/>
? ? .it least two varsity i<lb/>
? ? ?<lb/>
i<lb/>
Lawrence 1 ? it d<lb/>
tationsfot justasasport irt<lb/>
lwrence and said Next year he It's just talent i I<lb/>
should detiniteh  I t the something ven : ?<lb/>
NCAA Dt I impi "It's kind i t liki li<lb/>
hips H vi u he missed orwalking, I justhavi I I<lb/>
dds.<lb/>
Lawrence<lb/>
of Arabia<lb/>
Wednesday Feb. 28, 1990<lb/>
loies Screen at S pm in Hendrix I heat re<lb/>
! KJ2? Admission w Valid ECU ID or Faculty, Staff Film Pass<lb/>
The Cousteau Societj<lb/>
"Threats to the Global Ocean"<lb/>
Fuesday, Feb. 27. Hendrix Theatre, 8 pm<lb/>
FREE Lecture<lb/>
Sponsored h Studeni 1 nion Forum Committee<lb/>
What's Up???<lb/>
Call 757-6004<lb/>
lor the fastest information on campus entertainment<lb/>
Fred Steck<lb/>
STUDENT UNION<lb/>
<pb facs="00058198_0020"/><lb/>
lb The East Carolinian, February 27,1990<lb/>
Wolverines look to Final Four<lb/>
AnothtM Phate batter reached base as the Pirates dumped Virginia Saturday for their sixth win of the<lb/>
season J'hoto by Garrett Killian ? ECU Photo Lab)<lb/>
White<lb/>
Continued from page 14<lb/>
wont to tho bullpen, bringing in With two outs in the last m-<lb/>
Brien Berckman to pitch the List nmg, Davis got Cavalier Brian<lb/>
inning I Infortunately, Berckman Niskey out on a flyball to end the<lb/>
got nailed by a line drive, forcing game.<lb/>
him out ol the game I le pitched<lb/>
to onl) two batters. I ho Pirates This-weekend sweep gave the<lb/>
Hun biouoht m i)wen Davis. Pirates an overall record ol 16-11<lb/>
against tho Virginia Cavaliers.<lb/>
The next game for the Pirates<lb/>
will In' against St. Augustine's<lb/>
when they play a double-header<lb/>
on Wednesday atp.m. at Har-<lb/>
rington Field.<lb/>
NAIA schools discuss big change<lb/>
BOIl ING SPRINGS, N.C.<lb/>
(AP) (lardncr Webb College<lb/>
and the othei m en schools in the<lb/>
South Ulantic Conference are<lb/>
considering joining NCAA Divi<lb/>
sion II, aoa h says.<lb/>
S U athletic directors met in<lb/>
January to discuss leaving tho<lb/>
National Association ol Intercol<lb/>
legiatc Athletics (NAIA) and<lb/>
Wood) i ishardner Webb Ath<lb/>
leti Director and head football<lb/>
coach, niuI the athletic directors<lb/>
w ill meet again March I 2 w ith<lb/>
recommendations from thoir re<lb/>
spective schools<lb/>
It tho reports are favorable,<lb/>
presidents ol the league schools<lb/>
will take up the matter in May<lb/>
(nce final approval from thepresi<lb/>
dents is given, the SAC schools<lb/>
i<lb/>
would officially apply to the<lb/>
NCAA tor Division M status b<lb/>
lulv I.<lb/>
"Our trustees have already<lb/>
voted to make the move to<lb/>
(NCAA) Pi vision II if the confer-<lb/>
ence goes Fish said. There's a<lb/>
consensus (around the SAC) to do<lb/>
this<lb/>
Talk ol league schools jump<lb/>
ing to the NCAA has gained<lb/>
momentum now that the SAC! isa<lb/>
tmn Honing all-sports conference,<lb/>
and not ust a football league, as it<lb/>
was before 1989. SAC Commis<lb/>
sioner Poug Echols said the con<lb/>
ference had boon in an explora-<lb/>
tory position.<lb/>
Its not a now item he said.<lb/>
"National affiliation has boon<lb/>
talked about for a number of years.<lb/>
"One concern is thed wind ling<lb/>
number of teams in Division I of<lb/>
tho NA1 Apia ying football Echols<lb/>
said. "It's worth looking into to<lb/>
sec what's bost for our member<lb/>
institutions. It's bost to keep your<lb/>
options open, both long-term and<lb/>
short-term<lb/>
SAC member Lenoir-Rhyne<lb/>
already maintainsdual status with<lb/>
the NAIA and the NCAA. Ath<lb/>
letic Director Keith Ochs said his<lb/>
school is definitely pushing, the<lb/>
move<lb/>
"Really right now we're put<lb/>
ting all tho plusses and minuses<lb/>
together Ochs said. "It's one ol<lb/>
those things where each sehtnil<lb/>
has to make up their minds. We're<lb/>
for it, but I've got no indication it<lb/>
See Bulldogs, page 17<lb/>
BDCCHUS Site Sprini Brut<lb/>
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'o' a eet<lb/>
So ng Brea? :s a g'ea! 'ime to feia anc get aay r ?o ,r enrj?  ?? ist<lb/>
tfi ng o you' mind is a fagedy NoDcd- p as on gelling - in Jenl<lb/>
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r ' i.<lb/>
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When the vacaft<lb/>
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even one o' two d"nhs iMect iOv frying ?<lb/>
? Drmtung d'jgs and d"vng don ? ?<lb/>
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Loo tor the PLYMOUTH BACCHUS Weicome Centers r Daytca Be.i " Fl<lb/>
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90 aci'vties at the Colorado destination resons o' VJ atfambd r I i A rnei P v<lb/>
Sponsored on Campus by: BA.C.C.H.D.S.<lb/>
Division of Student Life Dining Services<lb/>
Pepsi Cola Bottlers of Greenville<lb/>
By Lee Creek<lb/>
Gannett News Service<lb/>
This got such reaction List<lb/>
February ? sure, most of it was<lb/>
angry we couldn't resist doing<lb/>
it again.<lb/>
So USA TODAY Karen AI<lb/>
len, ohn Bannon and Steve<lb/>
Wieberg put their heads together,<lb/>
slammed some fists on tables<lb/>
traded insults and emerged with<lb/>
this NCAA tournament look of<lb/>
who's in, who has work to do and<lb/>
who had better learn how to spell<lb/>
NIT.<lb/>
Il your team isn't where you<lb/>
want, don't worry. The selection<lb/>
committee rarely consults us<lb/>
?TOURNAMENT LCX KS<lb/>
(26)<lb/>
Michigan (19-5) Defending<lb/>
national champion still might jell<lb/>
for another strong run<lb/>
I hike(22-5) Final Four team<lb/>
three of the last four years.<lb/>
Clemson (21 -5) Tigers have the<lb/>
talent to win the ACC.<lb/>
(iet irgia Tech (19-4) Natima 1<lb/>
title favorite if it were a .in-t<lb/>
game. ? leorgetown (2o 4) Froht-<lb/>
line not dominating just awtullv<lb/>
(id.<lb/>
Connecticut(23-4) lust .v.ut<lb/>
until they get some tournament<lb/>
mileage on them.<lb/>
Syracuse! l9-5)Thegangthai<lb/>
couldn't shoot straight still greal<lb/>
with the lead.<lb/>
Missouri (25-2)Toughsched-<lb/>
Lawrence<lb/>
ule, tough plavers, a tournament<lb/>
favorite.<lb/>
Kansas (2b2) Miracles mi-<lb/>
nus Danny still don't hit many<lb/>
sour notes.<lb/>
Oklahoma (20I he arro-<lb/>
gance distorts the picture, hut still<lb/>
a contender<lb/>
Purdue (19-5) Will take more<lb/>
good shots than any team in the<lb/>
tournament<lb/>
Michigan State (21-51 Spar<lb/>
tans' best team since 79,but Magic<lb/>
is missing.<lb/>
Minnesota (17 6)Sweet 16a<lb/>
year ago, at least thai good again<lb/>
Illinois (19 (. NCAA inves-<lb/>
tigation might .ittt c t the lllini.<lb/>
Indian.) (16 7)Ker.nhiev-<lb/>
ers early, but playing onto the<lb/>
bubble lately<lb/>
-UNLV(22 4) lark calls this<lb/>
team one ol his best<lb/>
Louisville (20 6) Has the<lb/>
ability to throw in a clunker game<lb/>
now and then<lb/>
LaSalle (23-1) The ITram<lb/>
might be a tournament express<lb/>
this time.<lb/>
Xavier(Ohio)(21-2) I stands<lb/>
tor tournament, Tyrone 11 ill and<lb/>
tough<lb/>
(Oregon State 11" 4) i lary<lb/>
Payton could be the plaj er ol the<lb/>
year.<lb/>
Arizona (17 r Not a favor-<lb/>
ite, but great depth espe tally ny<lb/>
front.<lb/>
LSI (21 ;? t uuthful in on-<lb/>
sistencv, balanced b bountiful<lb/>
falent.<lb/>
- Arkansas (22-4) Earlier<lb/>
stumbles probably cost the 1 tog i<lb/>
No.l seeding.<lb/>
 Loyola Marvmount (20 i It<lb/>
the committee has a sense ol<lb/>
humor, it would pair Pa<lb/>
Westhead's runnin Lionsagaii ?<lb/>
Pete Carnl's walkin Princetoi<lb/>
Tigers.<lb/>
- New Mexico State (20-3<lb/>
Best team since the 74 I inal t our<lb/>
outfit<lb/>
St.John's (21 7) Easy ro I<lb/>
down the stretch<lb/>
?ALMOST fTIERE (15)<lb/>
SW Missouri State 2(i<lb/>
Won nine in row<lb/>
North Carolina (17-10) lb<lb/>
Heels handle it poorly; shoot<lb/>
only slightly better but still h<lb/>
the frontline to make it tough<lb/>
Kansas State (15-11), I kla<lb/>
homa State (14-10) The fourth<lb/>
place team in the Big Eight ;ets a<lb/>
bid The fifth-place team ison tl ?<lb/>
bubble. K State has fourth tv<lb/>
butt )klahoma State has the. as<lb/>
schedule Decision time<lb/>
they meet in firsl round ol th I<lb/>
Eight tournament<lb/>
(aIifomia(19-6)Thirt) ;<lb/>
is a long tune- to wait for a toun<lb/>
n.en! bid<lb/>
UCLA (16-7) Fast playing its<lb/>
wa . onto the bubble<lb/>
( ,? trgia (Is 1 las won nini<lb/>
ol its last 11, including at I<lb/>
lexas (18  and 11. mi ?<lb/>
Sec Wolverines, page 17<lb/>
Continued from page 1 1<lb/>
Lawrence realizes that di ing<lb/>
was not the most popular sport in<lb/>
high sehool but said, "I helped out<lb/>
with giving diving a name You<lb/>
always hear of football and base<lb/>
ball and you never hear ol sw im<lb/>
mingand diving. 1 think I helped<lb/>
m bringing in some of the recogni<lb/>
turn<lb/>
While attending Richard<lb/>
Kimbie's diving camp Lawrence<lb/>
saw what he hoped to .i with<lb/>
diving. Kmjble'sscji, Brucy. was<lb/>
an Olympi medalist and Law-<lb/>
rence said I was able to dive and<lb/>
work out with Brut c He was like<lb/>
a robot, he could hit the water<lb/>
without a splash nine out ol 10<lb/>
times. I wish I could have dives as<lb/>
(ompatible as him<lb/>
Rose has high expectations for<lb/>
Lawrence and said. "Next year he<lb/>
should definitely qualify tor the<lb/>
NCAA Division I Zone Champi-<lb/>
onships This vcar he missed<lb/>
ones bv uist 28 points. .<lb/>
t. s ?? ? ? IJ ? -<lb/>
I aw rence also has set j<lb/>
tor himself and hopes to betti I<lb/>
this years outing. "1 want to break<lb/>
.it least two varsity recordsand<lb/>
to Zones he said<lb/>
Lawrence looks at diving i<lb/>
justasa sport. "It's an art he said<lb/>
"It's ust talent and ej.ue and il<lb/>
something very special to me<lb/>
It's kind of like driving i<lb/>
or walking, I iist have to do it.<lb/>
adds. , ,<lb/>
awrence<lb/>
Arabia<lb/>
nesday Feb. 28, 1990<lb/>
Movies Screen ul 8 pm iri Hendrix Theatre<lb/>
FREE Admission Valid ECU II) or Faculty, Staff Film Pass<lb/>
The Cousteau Society<lb/>
"Threats to the Global Ocean'<lb/>
Tuesday, Feb. 27. Hendrix Theatre, 8 pm<lb/>
FREE Lecture<lb/>
<pb facs="00058198_0021"/><lb/>
The East Carolinian, February 27, 1990 17<lb/>
Former NCSU player accepted payments<lb/>
i lakes control in the piant as the Lady Pirates<lb/>
? ihawks of UNC Wilmington Saturday niqht<lb/>
an ECU Photo I ab)<lb/>
Lady Pirates<lb/>
RALEIGH (AP) North<lb/>
Carolina State has informed the<lb/>
NCAA, the Atlantic Coast Con<lb/>
ference and the chief deputy state<lb/>
attorney general of an allegation<lb/>
that basketball plaver Charles<lb/>
ha?. kteford accepted cash pay<lb/>
ments m 1987-88, the school's<lb/>
counsel savs.<lb/>
NCSU counsel Becky French<lb/>
told Raleigh's The Naes and Ob<lb/>
sewer on Friday that Wolfpack<lb/>
("oach im Valvano notified school<lb/>
administrators after a television<lb/>
crew from ABC Sports inter-<lb/>
viewed him about the allegations<lb/>
this week<lb/>
The newspaper reported that<lb/>
Shackleford allegedly received<lb/>
$65,000 from a man posing as a<lb/>
sports agent, making him ineli-<lb/>
gible to play under the National<lb/>
Collegiate Athletic Association's<lb/>
rules<lb/>
Shackleford, who left NCSU<lb/>
alter the lqvs season, plays for the<lb/>
New lersev Nets. The Kinston<lb/>
native, a 6-foot-l I forward, was a<lb/>
second-round choice and the 32nd<lb/>
overall pick in the 1988 National<lb/>
Basketball Association draft.<lb/>
Ms French said N.C State had<lb/>
no evidence that the allegation was<lb/>
true<lb/>
"1 have asked im about this<lb/>
Continued from page It<lb/>
she said in an interview with the<lb/>
newspaper, "l'mconvmced Coach<lb/>
Valvano had no prior knowledge<lb/>
about this. We just spent a vear<lb/>
investigating these tvpesot things<lb/>
and we did not uncover anything<lb/>
about this in our investigation.<lb/>
"I'm not saying it didn't hap<lb/>
pen Chancellor (Larry) Monteith<lb/>
is taking this very seriously. So am<lb/>
1 and Coach Valvano That's why<lb/>
we contacted theA A and the<lb/>
ACC"<lb/>
Neither Shackleford nor Val-<lb/>
vano could be reached for com<lb/>
ment.<lb/>
An ACC official who asked<lb/>
not to be identified said Shackle-<lb/>
ford is alleged to have received<lb/>
payments without the knowledge<lb/>
of NCSU or Valvano He said a<lb/>
third party alleged I arranged the<lb/>
contact between Shackleford and<lb/>
the source ot the payments<lb/>
The newspaper said the pay-<lb/>
ments were described as a retainer<lb/>
tor possible future revenue thai<lb/>
DAI III<lb/>
I AfV<lb/>
could be raised by Shackleford for<lb/>
endorsementsot basketball shxs,<lb/>
posters, T-shirts and collector<lb/>
cards.<lb/>
An SBI agent said Friday that<lb/>
he had received allegations in<lb/>
November about a player receiv<lb/>
mg payments and, after making a<lb/>
preliminary inquiry, notified C.<lb/>
Colin Willoughbv r , the Wake<lb/>
County district attorney.<lb/>
Theagent, William Dowdy lr.<lb/>
chief investigator tor the agency,<lb/>
said he had not found enough<lb/>
information to merit an SBI inves-<lb/>
tigation.<lb/>
An ABC network reporter and<lb/>
camera crew came to Valvano s<lb/>
office Wednesday and asked for<lb/>
comment, Ms French said<lb/>
"Inn was asked it he was<lb/>
aware that two money transfers<lb/>
had been made by a person to<lb/>
Shackleford during the 1987-88<lb/>
season Ms. French said. "Jim<lb/>
asked him tor backup informa-<lb/>
tion. The journalist implied he had<lb/>
it, but that he only wanted a com-<lb/>
ment on it<lb/>
"We were not told any times,<lb/>
dates or amounts The only thing<lb/>
he said was that it was the 1987-88<lb/>
season<lb/>
The coach has said he will<lb/>
question those ot Shackleford's<lb/>
teammates who still playing for<lb/>
the Wolfpack about theallegation,<lb/>
she said, adding th.it the school<lb/>
would check its records<lb/>
S David Berst, NCAA assis-<lb/>
tant executive director tor enforce-<lb/>
ment, declined comment when<lb/>
called .it his home in the Kansas<lb/>
( itv area<lb/>
Monteith said the school had<lb/>
called the AA about the matter<lb/>
but referred further questions to<lb/>
Ms French<lb/>
Andrew .more of the state<lb/>
Attorney General's office con-<lb/>
firmed that he had been contacted<lb/>
by Ms French but declined to<lb/>
comment further<lb/>
in<lb/>
il :?<lb/>
. n<lb/>
? outside shoot<lb/>
u h Mai tin c tins<lb/>
ond half<lb/>
hots from the inside<lb/>
I i,srnilton and liar<lb/>
i liked the way wccontroled<lb/>
the boards tonight Pterson said<lb/>
1 (. I outrebounded Wilmington<lb/>
64 to 16 (iRr grabbed 14 boards,<lb/>
Hargrove 13 and junior Sandra<lb/>
?adingtru charge tor (Irace grabbed eight<lb/>
.Hi<lb/>
he 1 ad Bucs steadly in-<lb/>
ed then ? ??! to ; po nts<lb/>
iwkstned<lb/>
Ins was the last conference<lb/>
game tor the Lady Pirates. They<lb/>
are currentl) second in the c <lb/>
and would most likely face the<lb/>
uttn lead last placed Lady Seahawksagain<lb/>
late in the halt but in the tournament<lb/>
II id back to 'I think if we play ECU again<lb/>
? K fji ilrrargin we have to take better advantage<lb/>
ot oui easv opportunities to<lb/>
score hristoph said<lb/>
To get ready for the tourna-<lb/>
ment ECU plays at Appalachain<lb/>
state Wednesday and at home tor<lb/>
the tirst regular game against<lb/>
UNC Charlotte.<lb/>
These two non conference<lb/>
games will get us ready for the<lb/>
tournaments. Both teams are real<lb/>
strong and will be y,y'J tests for<lb/>
our girls. 1'ierson said.<lb/>
The C AA tournamtenl is set<lb/>
tor March 8-10al the University ol<lb/>
Richmond<lb/>
,t, m fi i ' 'ofi rfiW? -<lb/>
. 'iMMi  i iiI),linn<lb/>
1<lb/>
Udvi<lb/>
 i .i s?i into tfa ;???'<lb/>
Start off four 9faut 'year<lb/>
'Kyht 'Bii 'I'Lutimj its!<lb/>
?Buy ? Sett ? 'Trade<lb/>
ill Evans St. Mail<lb/>
Downtown<lb/>
There's plenty of FREE<lb/>
parking at our rvar<lb/>
entrance off of<lb/>
P Cotanche r?'<lb/>
rW<lb/>
KINGSTON<lb/>
? PLACE<lb/>
DON'T WAIT!<lb/>
Kingston Place Will Guarantee Apartment Space<lb/>
For School Year 1990-91 For Those<lb/>
Who Sign Up Now !<lb/>
Call 758-5393<lb/>
AFFORDABLE, LUXURIOUS<lb/>
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BUILT SPECIFICALLY FOR ECU<lb/>
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REENV1LLE,S. U1 It<lb/>
? t ! is e ? to take under<lb/>
1 Idegi ranks,<lb/>
ue should pa) for those<lb/>
ivei to finish theii education<lb/>
? ? '<lb/>
; - ? i 1 latficld<lb/>
You i ant makeaguvgoba k<lb/>
 but the NF1 should K<lb/>
iti I i naytn 10 vears ot<lb/>
i. ? vears from the time a player<lb/>
?  hisareer to pay tor his<lb/>
:? ition, 1 latfield said<lb/>
.<lb/>
a(<lb/>
v as i ni<lb/>
th<lb/>
i. tul<lb/>
It th<lb/>
am<lb/>
i me Atlantic<lb/>
, oa? hesonhand<lb/>
Ireenville touch<lb/>
I oree, where the<lb/>
 . ral ot the<lb/>
? .red<lb/>
. ? 111 take<lb/>
The NFL recently announced<lb/>
it would begin accepting juniors<lb/>
for its annual draft. Until this vear.<lb/>
the Nil had maintained a policy<lb/>
against accepting unden lassmen,<lb/>
unlike major league baseball or<lb/>
? NBA.<lb/>
North C arolina coach Mack<lb/>
Brown said he was disappointed<lb/>
but not surprised that the NFL<lb/>
i hanged its policy.<lb/>
1 think we all knew our time<lb/>
wascoming Brown said base-<lb/>
ball has done it tor vears Basket-<lb/>
ball has done it for years. (ur day<lb/>
was coming We didn't know<lb/>
when and we didn't know where,<lb/>
or legall) what could happen or<lb/>
what time it could happen<lb/>
"It puts more pressure on the<lb/>
student athlete and the family<lb/>
about his education: When do I<lb/>
honest evaluation ot what's best<lb/>
tor him. and In some eases you<lb/>
mav not know Brown said. "You<lb/>
don't how know fast he could play<lb/>
with that particular team, because<lb/>
you're not sure ot their situation<lb/>
with linebacker or offensive line<lb/>
"It obviously puts more pros<lb/>
sure on us in regard to agents<lb/>
because agents will now start<lb/>
looking at freshmen and sopho-<lb/>
mores more than they have in the<lb/>
past because of the possibilit) for<lb/>
them to move earl v.<lb/>
Brown said the mine would<lb/>
also put more pressure on college<lb/>
coaching staffs from a recruiting<lb/>
standpoint, "because you may not<lb/>
know until the vnA ot a year that<lb/>
you needed to recruit a linebacker<lb/>
two vears earlier because you've<lb/>
The East Carolina University<lb/>
Student Union Forum Committee<lb/>
presents<lb/>
n carh . I think the should<lb/>
find a way to pa tor the rest ol<lb/>
their s, hooling, I latfield said<lb/>
Wolverines<lb/>
get out? IV I get a degree?' got one leaving<lb/>
"They come into the coach's "So it changes our lives he<lb/>
office and you trv to give him an said<lb/>
Continued from page 14<lb/>
Split regi ilar season mi el<lb/>
hut I lou ?ton also hasa split<lb/>
? Arkansas and a seven game<lb/>
winning streak<lb/>
II- M V V I ? igue has<lb/>
th i indidati 5<lb/>
I.e in<lb/>
? !u<lb/>
(i rexas 11 Pas :?? - ind olo<lb/>
? ido State I19 7<lb/>
Alabama Birmingham 119<lb/>
t at Kansa - BY1 md Xavier<lb/>
Alabama' IH H North aro-<lb/>
lina win doesn't look as big as u first-round win in the ACC<lb/>
did in December temple (15-9) If Owls don't<lb/>
?ON THE BUBBLE (9) get the Atlantic 10 automatic.<lb/>
last Tennessee State (22-6) thov'reoneot those maybe teams.<lb/>
1 he best little unknown team Providence I l-q Victories<lb/>
Notre Dame 114 9) Big win vs. Georgetown and Syracuse,but<lb/>
at buzzer at Syracuse helped a soft schedule.<lb/>
- Ohio State t 13-10) Buckeyes<lb/>
New t Means (16-9) Won 11 coming on after rough start.<lb/>
ol 12 and lost to Memphis State Memphis State (16-9) Tigers<lb/>
and Ohio state: or Louisiana took big step with win against<lb/>
Tech (18-5). Louisville.<lb/>
Virginia (15-8) Might need a<lb/>
THE COUSTEAU<lb/>
gCgjyijftl X99Q USA TODAYJA&amp;k Grihp<lb/>
Bulldogs<lb/>
Continued from page 16<lb/>
th. other (SA hools will be<lb/>
rhe SA had sough! to be<lb/>
cornea separate NAIA district in<lb/>
itself for athletn pavott purposes<lb/>
but had gotten littleconsideration.<lb/>
I he biggest headache tor the SAC<lb/>
has been that conference mem<lb/>
Sweep<lb/>
hers are located in three ot the 31 man in the league, that cuts across<lb/>
existing NAIA districts. three districts<lb/>
The NAIA office in Kansas<lb/>
"We ve had a problem with Citv, Mo had no official state-<lb/>
national redistricting (in the ment to make Friday on the pos-<lb/>
NA1A) Ochs said. "We haven't sible SAC exit, but a spokesman<lb/>
gotten a speedy response With said the NAIA was aware of the<lb/>
Presbyterian and (arson-New- situation.<lb/>
Continued from page 14<lb/>
David Owen Brown<lb/>
Cousteau Team Member<lb/>
"Threat To The<lb/>
Global Ocean"<lb/>
Tuesday, February 27, 1990<lb/>
Hendrix Theatre - 8pm<lb/>
Admission Free<lb/>
1 5 to ERA last seasto<lb/>
I1 stored the winning run<lb/>
agamst relic! pitcher Doug Johns<lb/>
With Riggsonsecond bisrepre-<lb/>
senting the winning run. Adams<lb/>
lined a game winning single to<lb/>
win the game I I<lb/>
In the game ECU was also ord. made no excuses for losing<lb/>
credited with three stolen bases the sweep to ECU.<lb/>
The double-header loss sent<lb/>
the Virginia Cavaliers to an 0-2 "E Carolina has a great<lb/>
overall record this season. Cava- background in baseball, Worn-<lb/>
her head coach Dennis Womack, ack sa.d. "We just got beat by a<lb/>
who has a 228-199-2 overall rec- g?od CAVn today<lb/>
Another meaningful event sponsored by the Student Union<lb/>
Making Fun Things Happen at ECU.<lb/>
<pb facs="00058198_0022"/><lb/>
AOVEflTIStO ITfM POUCY Frf. h of these advertised .terns Is required to be<lb/>
re Klilv ? f'1 il,l' '? sate m earh Kroqer Store except as speCrtiCWV noted<lb/>
,? iht! ad H we do run out 0 m Ktvorttead 'tern we will offer you your<lb/>
, how e of .) . ompatabte itaW when tvatat)te reflet tmo the same savings<lb/>
Of t .am. he, l. wh? h will entitle you to purchase the advertised Hem at<lb/>
the advertised price withm 30 days Only one vendor coupon will he<lb/>
.1, i epted per item pun hased<lb/>
I 0PYRIGH1 1980 TH? KROGER CO lUMS AND PRICES GOOD<lb/>
NDA MR S THROUGH SATURDAY MARCH 3 1990 IN<lb/>
M(7 yy( RESERVI rMI RIGHT TO HWIT OUANTITIES<lb/>
?. t SOI D rO Dl A; r RS<lb/>
Marilyn Smith Your Greenville<lb/>
Kroger Store Manager,<lb/>
Wants You To Know <lb/>
"You don't have to give up convenience<lb/>
to get low Prices.<lb/>
And More I<lb/>
Mlw. ? 7<lb/>
The Kroger Pharmacy<lb/>
When you bring a prescription into your Kroger Pharmacy the<lb/>
person you hand it to is a professional pharmacist, not a helper<lb/>
or clerk. You get all the benefits of the most modern<lb/>
pharmaceutical methods, plus old fashioned one on-one<lb/>
service. Bring your Kroger Pharmacist your prescrpitons, your<lb/>
questions and your trust. <lb/>
Charles Carter, Jenni Smart b Susan Sitterson, your<lb/>
Greenville Kroger Pharmacists, invite you to come and<lb/>
compare our everyday low prices.<lb/>
Pharmacy Hours: Mori. Sat. 9am Til 9pm<lb/>
Sunday 9am Til 6pm<lb/>
O <lb/>
ji<lb/>
Fresh Seafood<lb/>
many fresh varieties to choose from, scallops, shrimp, trout,<lb/>
i mahi and flounder . . . plus delicious seafood salads and, of<lb/>
se, live Maine Lobster. It's a seafood festival. . . and it's<lb/>
ing for you at your Kroger Seafood Shoppe1 Stop by and let<lb/>
seafood clerk, help you with your selections.<lb/>
Post Office<lb/>
Your friendly Greenville<lb/>
Kroger, offers you a<lb/>
complete Post Office.<lb/>
From Rental Boxes to<lb/>
Postage Stamps, we have<lb/>
your complete Postal<lb/>
Services.<lb/>
POSTAGE<lb/>
STAMPS<lb/>
AT POST<lb/>
OFFICE<lb/>
PRICES<lb/>
US. MAIL<lb/>
Fresh-Cut Flowers<lb/>
We have beautiful fresh cut flowers, healthy long-lasting foliage<lb/>
and gorgeous flowering plants from all over the world. Visit or call<lb/>
the Kroger Floral Shoppe and let Kay Hunter assist you in making<lb/>
your selections.<lb/>
Deli-Pastry Shoppe<lb/>
Let The Deli Do It! It's so much easier to let us do your cooking<lb/>
and baking for. Head clerk Ada Williams and her Deli-Pastry Shoppe<lb/>
team prepare excellent meats, pastries, salads and side dishes<lb/>
everyday. So the next time you're expecting company for lunch or<lb/>
dinner or just don't feel like cooking, come to Kroger.<lb/>
- fA'W y <lb/>
Assorted Colors<lb/>
Fresh Cut Carnations<lb/>
3 $1<lb/>
0 Stems ??<lb/>
Video Rentals<lb/>
No matter what type of movies you like, you'll find more than<lb/>
enough to suit your taste in our video library of over 750 titles. Our<lb/>
stock is continually being updated so that you can have the variety<lb/>
you want.<lb/>
MONDAY. TUESDAY h WEDNESDAY<lb/>
Movie<lb/>
Rentals<lb/>
2 $3<lb/>
THURSDAY FRIDAY SATURDAY h SUNDAY MOVIE RENTALS<lb/>
CHILDREN S TITLES EACH 99C<lb/>
FOR $1 99<lb/>
<pb facs="00058198_0023"/><lb/>
<pb facs="00058198_0024"/><lb/>
ENTERTAINER<lb/>
<pb facs="00058198_0025"/><lb/>
Contents<lb/>
Scat singers2<lb/>
Substance abuse2<lb/>
Surf's up3<lb/>
March Calendar of Events4&amp;5<lb/>
New restaurant6<lb/>
'Blue Leaves6<lb/>
Arts council7<lb/>
Rock band7<lb/>
Hungary8<lb/>
Opera<lb/>
.8<lb/>
IfU 'Entertainer<lb/>
Editor: Carrie Armstrong<lb/>
Art Director: Steve Reid<lb/>
Advertising Director: James F.J. McKee<lb/>
Darkroom Technician: Charles Willingham<lb/>
Contributing Writers: Hamilton Holloway,<lb/>
Mary Anne Ullery, John Tucker, Shannon<lb/>
Buckley, Matt King and Hope Carter<lb/>
The Entertainer is an arts and entertain-<lb/>
ment supplement to The East Carolinian pub-<lb/>
lished the last week of the month. The Enter-<lb/>
tainer welcomes all comments and story ideas.<lb/>
Address correspondence to Entertainment<lb/>
Editor, The East Carolinian, Publications Bldg<lb/>
East Carolina University, Greenville, N.C.<lb/>
27834, or call us at 757-6366.<lb/>
Scat singers perform<lb/>
lively blends of music<lb/>
By Hamilton Holloway<lb/>
Special to The East Carolinian<lb/>
When Bach wrote his "Well-Tempered<lb/>
Clavichord he meant for it to be played by an<lb/>
orchestra, not sung in scat syllables that imitate<lb/>
instrumental sounds. But this is just what a<lb/>
group of studio singers tried in Paris 28 years<lb/>
ago.<lb/>
Today the Swingle Singers are hailed as<lb/>
masters of scat singing, and they perform a<lb/>
lively blend of music, ranging from Bach to<lb/>
Berio and from Berlin to the Beatles. On March<lb/>
16 at 8 p.m the Swingle Singers will present<lb/>
their singing style in Wright Auditorium.<lb/>
Ward Swingle formed the original French<lb/>
group in 12. The following year, with the<lb/>
relcaseof Bach'sCreatest Hits, theSwingleSing-<lb/>
ers won their first of five Grammy Awards.<lb/>
During the next 10 years, the Swingle Singers<lb/>
produced other recordings of a similar vein:<lb/>
Baroque composers, Mozart, 19th century ro-<lb/>
mantic and Spanish composers, Christmas Car-<lb/>
ols and a happy collaboration with the Modern<lb/>
Jazz Quartet.<lb/>
In 1973, the French group disbanded and<lb/>
Ward Swingle moved to Fngland. Soon after,<lb/>
Swingle formed the present group, which is<lb/>
made up of conservatory-trained English sing-<lb/>
ers.<lb/>
Now the Swingle Singers are in demand by<lb/>
orchestras across the world. In December of<lb/>
1987, they performed Ravel's L'enfant et lesSor-<lb/>
tileoe with the Houston Symphony Orchestra.<lb/>
Their orchestral pops repertoire has brought<lb/>
invitations to many prestigious American ven-<lb/>
ues including the Kennedy Center, Grant Park<lb/>
and Lincoln Center. They have performed their<lb/>
new orchestral Beatles selections with the Lon-<lb/>
don Svmphony Orchestra and the Royal Phil-<lb/>
harmonic Orchestra at London's Barbican Con-<lb/>
cert Hall.<lb/>
In the field of modern musK. Pierre Boulez<lb/>
conducted the Swingle Singers on the only re-<lb/>
corded version of Luciano Bono's composition.<lb/>
Sinfonia. In June 1988, they performed this work<lb/>
with the New York Philharmonic Orchestra. In<lb/>
1986 they premiered Mazeoecul. by Aio Cor-<lb/>
ghi, in Italy and in 1987 recorded his new work,<lb/>
Piovanna.<lb/>
The Swingle Singers' faZZ arrangements<lb/>
have brought them successful engagements at<lb/>
The Village Gate in New York and RonnieScott s<lb/>
Jazz Club in London. They are also in constant<lb/>
demand for jazz festivals throughout Europe.<lb/>
"The blend of the I Swingle Si ngers' voices is<lb/>
extremely important, like threading of fine fab-<lb/>
ric said Donna Dease, assistant professor of<lb/>
voice at the ECU School of Music. "It is phe-<lb/>
nomenal to listen to music such as Bach when the<lb/>
voice is treated as an instrument Dease also<lb/>
said the straight tone singing and close harmo-<lb/>
nies are extremely hard to achieve, and that the<lb/>
King's Singers is the only other group that com<lb/>
pares to the Swingle Singers<lb/>
Tickets for this event go on sale Feb 26,atthe<lb/>
Central Ticket Office in Mendenhall. lor more<lb/>
information call (919) 757-4788, or toll-tree, I<lb/>
8(X)-ECU-ARTS, 11 a.m. 6 p.m. Advance ticket<lb/>
pricesare$15fbrthepublic,$12fdr ECU faculty<lb/>
staff and $8 for ECU students and youth (high<lb/>
school age or younger). All tickets at the door<lb/>
will be $15.<lb/>
Len Bias' mother speaks<lb/>
about substance abuse<lb/>
By Carrie Armstrong<lb/>
Entertainment Editor<lb/>
When Len Bias, the University of Maryland<lb/>
basketball star, died of a drug overdose in une<lb/>
1986, the whole country felt the loss of this<lb/>
talented, young player who had been dratted by<lb/>
the Boston Celtics only two days before his<lb/>
death.<lb/>
Bias' mother Lonise P. Bias turned her per-<lb/>
sonal loss into a mission to help others. She<lb/>
launched a career touring the country address-<lb/>
ing drug and alcohol-related issues when she<lb/>
was asked to make comments at her son's<lb/>
memorial service.The TV and radio coverage of<lb/>
theevent was well received, and Mrs. Biasbogan<lb/>
to get numerous requests to appear on TV and<lb/>
radio programs. After appearing on the 700<lb/>
Club, her career was launched. She now travels<lb/>
across the country approximately six months<lb/>
out of the year doing three to five presentations<lb/>
a week.<lb/>
Through her lectures, Mrs Bias challenges<lb/>
young people and adults to wage war against<lb/>
substance abuse. She addresses the issueol peer<lb/>
pressure and reminds parents and adults thai<lb/>
thev are the real role models in today's SO it K<lb/>
Mrs. Bias has appeared on numerous televi-<lb/>
sion programs including Dr. Robert Si huler.<lb/>
Salley Jesse Rafael, The CBS Morning News and<lb/>
the 700 Club. She has also lectured before main<lb/>
community and church organizations, milit.irv ,<lb/>
university and private and public institutions<lb/>
throughout the nation<lb/>
Lonise Bias will give.i lecture on March 12 at<lb/>
8 p.m. in Hendrix Theatre. This event, which is<lb/>
taking place the dav after students return trom<lb/>
Spring Break, is free and is sponsored by the<lb/>
Student Union Forum Committee.<lb/>
Tf re Entertainer March 1990<lb/>
<pb facs="00058198_0026"/><lb/>
Surf's up!<lb/>
Bv John Tucker<lb/>
Assistant Features I ditor<lb/>
Ah, surfing. There's nothing like it. Only a surfer knows the feeling.<lb/>
I he sensation you get when you take off ona wave and it's just you, a board<lb/>
11 i the water rising to meet you, is a I must impossible to explain.<lb/>
When you're out on the water, there is nothing. N'o responsibilities, erne<lb/>
ares or otherwise. Your mind is blank. Everything around you at that moment<lb/>
i- yours, and that's enough.<lb/>
Picture this. You wake up in the early morning, just after the sun is starting<lb/>
to rise over the water. Before you even see the beach you know there are waves.<lb/>
! he sound of the pounding surf lets vou know its going to be a good day.<lb/>
You arrive to find thatyou were right. Linesof waves steadily peak and break<lb/>
perfectly down the desolate beach eventually fading out of sight.<lb/>
As you start to paddle out, you feel a rush or a "stoke" as your eye scans tor<lb/>
a spot were the waves are particularly of your liking You paddle out slowly<lb/>
reaching that spot just outside of the break, where vou pull up your board and<lb/>
wait tor the exact wave vou want.<lb/>
Your mind wanders as you sit there soaking up the morning sun. A feeling<lb/>
ot total relaxation overcomes vou as you aimlessly float on the refreshing water.<lb/>
Suddenly vou snap out ot it, as a wave slowly reveals itself to you on the tip<lb/>
iU the horizon. It's your wave, and you know it.<lb/>
You lav down on the board and start to paddle, slowlv making your way to<lb/>
the magu p? rtion of the wave known as "the peak Then as the peak catches up,<lb/>
vou paddle faster catching the wave at that crucial moment iist before it begins<lb/>
to break.<lb/>
Precariously your body balances itsell on a board whose width is smaller<lb/>
than your waist. You bust down the face of the wave. Behind vou is the desola-<lb/>
tion of nonuseable white water, in front ot vou is a perfect wall of water, rising<lb/>
to meet vou as vou carve into its unique energy.<lb/>
The Wind rushes through your wet hair as you're traveling at high speeds<lb/>
over the smooth tace. Finally you hit the lip and pull out of the dwindling mass<lb/>
ot water<lb/>
You ha vt'just mastered one of the ocean's most beauti tul phenomenas. This<lb/>
phenomena, often as destructive as it is beautiful, is known to all as a wave. But<lb/>
to surfers, the wave is a representation of life in itself<lb/>
Every time a surfer goes out the waves, the water, the weather or even their<lb/>
mood is different. Maybe this is why surfersare addicted to their jbmmmhm<lb/>
habit.<lb/>
I, myself,am what they call a fair-weather surfer Sticking to<lb/>
warm and lazy summer days, when the waves are up, and the<lb/>
Betty's are swarming the beachfront.<lb/>
Other surfers are a little more hardcore, freezing their butts<lb/>
off to catch a few waves I know arc just months away. But they<lb/>
know the feeling, and they love it. That's why they're crazy<lb/>
enough to do it. Hell, I've done it before when I've been itching<lb/>
for waves.<lb/>
That's a good way to describe it. Surfing's like a deep-down<lb/>
itch, right at the edge of you're soul, and every once in a while,<lb/>
its gotta be scratched.<lb/>
But enough of this, Spring Break is right around the corner.<lb/>
Time to hit the beaches fellas. Surf's up, let's catch that rush.<lb/>
?The Entertainer is<lb/>
V totally recyclable!<lb/>
Do you long for excitement and<lb/>
adventure? Become an<lb/>
entertainment writer!<lb/>
Call 757-6366 or come by<lb/>
The East Carolinian<lb/>
for more information.<lb/>
Spring<lb/>
90<lb/>
4 SURFSH<lb/>
15 Off Any Swimwear<lb/>
I must present coupon Expires: March 31, 1990j<lb/>
r<lb/>
i<lb/>
i<lb/>
i<lb/>
The Entertainer March 1991 3<lb/>
<pb facs="00058198_0027"/><lb/>
MARCH 1990<lb/>
fflK5 Calendar of Events<lb/>
?I m?. r?j' 'O KM ??,<lb/>
SUNDAY<lb/>
MONDAY<lb/>
TUESDAY<lb/>
WEDNESDAY<lb/>
THURSDAY<lb/>
National Opera Co.<lb/>
w ECU Symphony<lb/>
Orchestra 8 00 Don<lb/>
Pasquale<lb/>
by Donizetti<lb/>
FRIDAY<lb/>
Residence Halls<lb/>
Close- Spring Break<lb/>
Begins - 6:00 pm<lb/>
8<lb/>
SPRING BREAK<lb/>
11<lb/>
Residence<lb/>
Halls Open<lb/>
1:00pm<lb/>
18<lb/>
LETHAL WEAPON II<lb/>
Hendrix Theatre 8:00pm<lb/>
12<lb/>
Classes Resume<lb/>
Susan Paxton, violin<lb/>
Junior Recital, 7.00<lb/>
13<lb/>
Paul Stewart, piano<lb/>
Guest Artist Recital,<lb/>
815<lb/>
ID. cards<lb/>
14 made,<lb/>
2:30 - 3:30pm<lb/>
Mendenhall<lb/>
WOMEN ON THE EDGE OF<lb/>
A NERVOUS BREAKDOWN<lb/>
Hendrix Theatre 8 00 pm<lb/>
Friend? of School ot Music<lb/>
"Scholarship Showcase<lb/>
Recital 7 00<lb/>
15<lb/>
LETHAL WEAPON II<lb/>
?? . ? heatre 8 Oi pm<lb/>
16<lb/>
LETHAL WEAPON II<lb/>
Hendrix fheatre 8 00pm<lb/>
19<lb/>
Student Composer's<lb/>
Concert, 8:15<lb/>
20<lb/>
Dedra Tart, piano<lb/>
Graduate Recital, 7:00<lb/>
Selma Gokcen, cello<lb/>
Paul Tardif, piano<lb/>
Faculty Recital. 8:15<lb/>
25<lb/>
BLACK RAIN<lb/>
8:00 pm<lb/>
Hendrix Theatre<lb/>
Wind Ensemble<lb/>
Concert, 3:15<lb/>
Wright Auditorium<lb/>
26<lb/>
Michelle Dunn, flute<lb/>
Rudy McNeil, flute<lb/>
Junior Recital, 7:00<lb/>
Russell Sledge,<lb/>
percussion Senior<lb/>
Recital, 9:00<lb/>
21<lb/>
ID. cards made.<lb/>
2:30- 3:30pm<lb/>
Mendenhall<lb/>
Joel Mauger, guitar<lb/>
Junior Recital. 7:00<lb/>
22<lb/>
Performing Art Senes<lb/>
SWINGLE SINGERS<lb/>
8:00pm<lb/>
Wright Auditorium<lb/>
ticket into. 757-4788<lb/>
23<lb/>
Brass Chamber Music<lb/>
Concert, 9.00<lb/>
27<lb/>
Phi Mu Alpha Pledge<lb/>
Recital, 7:00<lb/>
LESS THAN ZERO<lb/>
Hendrix Theatre<lb/>
8 00 pm<lb/>
28 ID cards made.<lb/>
2 30 - 3.30pm Mendenhall<lb/>
rraygl - Adventure Film<lb/>
HUNGARIAN<lb/>
HOMECOMING<lb/>
8.00 pm Hendrix Theatre<lb/>
Theme Dinner: 6:30 pm<lb/>
BLACK RAIN<lb/>
8:00 pm<lb/>
I lendrix Theatre<lb/>
Steel Band Workshop.<lb/>
All Day<lb/>
Elite Mannette. clinician<lb/>
Fof into 757-6566<lb/>
March 22 - 23<lb/>
BLACK RAIN<lb/>
8:00 pin<lb/>
I lendrix Theatre<lb/>
Lori McLellan, voice<lb/>
Chris Dunn, trumpet<lb/>
Senior Recital, 7:00<lb/>
29<lb/>
STEEL MAGNOLIAS<lb/>
8.00pm<lb/>
Hendrix Theatre<lb/>
SATURDAY<lb/>
10<lb/>
17<lb/>
LETHAL WEAPON II<lb/>
Hendrix theatre 8 00pm<lb/>
St. Patrick's Day<lb/>
Bngette Cooper, voice<lb/>
Senior Recital. 8:00<lb/>
24<lb/>
BLACK RAIN<lb/>
8:00 pm<lb/>
Hendrix Theatre<lb/>
Katherine Jetter. cello<lb/>
Senior Recital, 7:00<lb/>
30<lb/>
STEEL MAGNOLIAS<lb/>
8.00pm<lb/>
Hendrix Theatre<lb/>
The North Carolina<lb/>
Percussive Arts<lb/>
Society "Day of<lb/>
Percussion All Day<lb/>
tor into 757-6566<lb/>
Jonathan Sitton, piano<lb/>
Junior Recital, 7:00<lb/>
31<lb/>
STEEL MAGNOLIAS<lb/>
8:00pm<lb/>
Hendrix Theatre<lb/>
Todd Brewer.<lb/>
euphonium<lb/>
Senior Recital. 3 15<lb/>
joAnne Brandt, flute<lb/>
Grace Oh. voice<lb/>
Senior Recital, 7 00<lb/>
<pb facs="00058198_0028"/><lb/>
New restaurant<lb/>
takes you back<lb/>
to the fifties era<lb/>
 Shannon Bui klc<lb/>
H :<lb/>
nil i<lb/>
Shabop s, a '50s diner recently opened in Greenville is hjl of oldies memonbilia ? mc J<lb/>
waitresses in pony tails and poodle skirts (Photo by Garret Ktllian ? EC J Photo I at<lb/>
'Blue Leaves' opens in March<lb/>
- ?<lb/>
pun h<lb/>
 ,<lb/>
: " I Pitl "<lb/>
inepk - - ?? "? nbilia<lb/>
rr Sw ? i ind<lb/>
I with hot pink ai II<lb/>
By Hope Carter<lb/>
Staff Writer<lb/>
The East Carolina Play-<lb/>
house production of "The<lb/>
House of Blue Leaves" empha-<lb/>
sizes a theme everyone can re-<lb/>
late to ? dreams.<lb/>
"The play isabout hanging<lb/>
on to dreams and is written<lb/>
almost as if it were a dream<lb/>
says Donn Youngstrum, a<lb/>
newcomer to East Carolina's<lb/>
faculty and the director of 'The<lb/>
House of Blue Leaves Smoke<lb/>
from a small explosion paired<lb/>
with lighting manipulation<lb/>
enhances the dream-like qual-<lb/>
ity projected by the set. The<lb/>
actors appear in contempo-<lb/>
rary, realistic dress.<lb/>
Rehearsals are underway<lb/>
for the March 21 opening at<lb/>
McGinnis Theatre. The main<lb/>
charai ters include Artie,<lb/>
played by Greg Watkins;<lb/>
Bunny, played by Kate Erwm;<lb/>
Bananas, played by Ann Bean;<lb/>
Ronnie, played by Paul Lom-<lb/>
bards Corrinna, played by<lb/>
Tara Ridgley; Billy, played by<lb/>
Bray Culpcpper; and Little<lb/>
Nun, played by Robin Oram<lb/>
Smith. Kim Patterson, Gabn-<lb/>
elle Schwartz, Joseph Horst,<lb/>
and Thomas Barry also appear<lb/>
in the play.<lb/>
"The House of Blue<lb/>
Leaves" showcases one<lb/>
person's natural drive toward<lb/>
an aspiration. "Most people, I<lb/>
think, make compromises as<lb/>
they get older Youngstrum<lb/>
said. "W'eallhangon ttJr?.anv<lb/>
and I think you an find that<lb/>
through literature "<lb/>
Within the production.<lb/>
Artie, one of the mam charac-<lb/>
ters, says, "I'm no longer a<lb/>
voung talent Artie is fifty,<lb/>
works in a zoo and has a dream<lb/>
of becoming a star. Young-<lb/>
strum said: "He meets a<lb/>
woman who forces him to start<lb/>
to take steps toward realizing<lb/>
that dream and in the process<lb/>
the dream is destroyed. I think<lb/>
that's the tragedy. If the dream<lb/>
could have been left on the<lb/>
shelf as it were, Artie could<lb/>
always refer to it and have that<lb/>
dream.<lb/>
"With my career as an ac-<lb/>
tor, I reached a point where I<lb/>
just wasn't going out and audi-<lb/>
tioning anymore Young-<lb/>
strum said. 'To face that was<lb/>
difficult, but once I did face it.<lb/>
then an enormous weight was<lb/>
lifted off my shoulders<lb/>
Youngstrum graduated<lb/>
from the American Academy<lb/>
of Dramatic Arts West in<lb/>
Pasadena, Calif then received<lb/>
his master's of fine arts in di-<lb/>
recting at Brooklyn College. He<lb/>
appeared in six off-Broadway<lb/>
productions when he worked<lb/>
with a classical repcratory<lb/>
company in New York.<lb/>
Youngstrum worked in<lb/>
ECU's studio theater produc-<lb/>
tion of "Antigone" and ap-<lb/>
peared in "Danton's Death"<lb/>
here last fall 'The House of<lb/>
Blue Leaves i- i inj "<lb/>
? - ? mainsta. : '  it I<lb/>
Tickets tcr Th Housi<lb/>
Blu may I pui<lb/>
chased from th- ?? ffi e in<lb/>
the lobbv of McGinnis Theatre<lb/>
or bv phoning (919) 757 68i ?<lb/>
tfi ib<lb/>
irti<lb/>
Set l itties. page 8<lb/>
mm mm mm,<lb/>
i<lb/>
<lb/>
7<lb/>
(2nd Annual Show)<lb/>
The New Greenville Warehouse. Greenville. North Carolina<lb/>
Thursday and Friday, March 1 &amp; 2<lb/>
12:00 noon until 9:00 pm<lb/>
Saturday, March 3<lb/>
10:00 am until 9:00 pm<lb/>
Sunday, March 4<lb/>
1:00 pm until 6:00 pm<lb/>
Sponsored By Pitt - Greenville<lb/>
Chamber of Commerce<lb/>
M)2 S. Green Si.<lb/>
Greenville. NC 27834<lb/>
(919)752-4101<lb/>
?<lb/>
i he Entertainer March 1990<lb/>
<pb facs="00058198_0029"/><lb/>
t<lb/>
itel<lb/>
ton and<lb/>
?<lb/>
:<lb/>
Arts council supports local groups<lb/>
Bv Carrie Armstrong<lb/>
F nfert.nnment Fditor<lb/>
( .reem ilk is the home of all tvpesoi<lb/>
aftistk groups, many oJ wrhicri are<lb/>
sponsored or co-sponsored by the Pill<lb/>
( .r??? iv. ilk rfs t i Mini il<lb/>
rhrough donations and state fund<lb/>
mg. the arts Louncil h'lps with m.i: .<lb/>
different events throughout thi corn<lb/>
mumtv. Howevef s mettmes it still iust<lb/>
is ru ?1 enough<lb/>
Eileen  an 11 lutcn, presidi nl ith<lb/>
board ot direv tors, said the art incil<lb/>
is trying I get back on its lei I finan<lb/>
dairy "We resuff ringfi ma lot of the<lb/>
problem- tt :? ti'T " miatioris m<lb/>
the area have experienced suh .1<lb/>
chmcultyingettingstateai .tid-<lb/>
ing<lb/>
Since we aid in providing art- a<lb/>
tivities tor a broad spectrum of the<lb/>
comrrumitv and providing them as in-<lb/>
expensive!) a- v. e can, '? tend to<lb/>
spend a lot of money on pn igrams mrith-<lb/>
, nit Liktnga L  t rrune. I ir said<lb/>
Van Houten said "tie ot the arts<lb/>
Cininol's major roles m the cummuntK<lb/>
is to support small, emeruiny arts<lb/>
groups or start-up groups Once a<lb/>
pn Ei gets underway, they often pro<lb/>
 idc performani es tor the arts council.<lb/>
She said the Pittjreenvillc .Arts(?un-<lb/>
cil also gets information trom the state<lb/>
and other arts councils on traveling art<lb/>
groups thai tour throughout the N (<lb/>
Van Houten said, Wc are always<lb/>
interested in groups that would desen ?<lb/>
i -ur support and our funding The arts<lb/>
? ksl ra groupol people will-<lb/>
? ? ikethefundsdesignatedtotheni<lb/>
ind use them for the best interest of the<lb/>
group, wisely and efficiently The<lb/>
group also has to meet the standards set<lb/>
bv the State ArtsounciL<lb/>
"We have Ir meet all the rules and<lb/>
regulations lot the State Arts ouncil it<lb/>
we are to get any state funding and we<lb/>
have to be able to account tor any<lb/>
monev that we receive said Van<lb/>
I fi'Uten<lb/>
An exampk of a local group sup<lb/>
ported bv the Pi ft 1' r- ? milk ArtsCoun-<lb/>
cil is the Smiles and Fr wns Playhouse,<lb/>
a theater workshop tor children smiles<lb/>
and Frowns involves children perrorm-<lb/>
ing for child ret: Adult icoacti them and<lb/>
help them 1 (press the appropriate<lb/>
emotions togoaBong with the particular<lb/>
part they are playing. So the children<lb/>
plav an active role in everything that<lb/>
goes on within the Playhouse Smiles<lb/>
and Frowns has done a number or per-<lb/>
formances in Creenvilk as well as<lb/>
Avden<lb/>
Another group supporteei bv the<lb/>
Pitt-Greenville Vrts Council is the Tar<lb/>
Root ommunity Hand, which is an<lb/>
enormous band that plavs at different<lb/>
events in the community.<lb/>
We've done a lot ot dungs coop-<lb/>
erativelv within the communitv with<lb/>
other groups Van Houten said.<lb/>
"Then ?, in many peopk who do not see<lb/>
our behind-the-scenes work and sup-<lb/>
port because we don't really demand<lb/>
thatanvbodvlookatus So manv times<lb/>
the arts council is actively taking part in<lb/>
events even though their name mav not<lb/>
be a highlight<lb/>
Dunne; March, the arts council will<lb/>
be sponsoring an art show at the Encore<lb/>
Art Calkrv that features Afro-Ameri-<lb/>
can artists.<lb/>
"Our purpose is to take art out into<lb/>
the community as much as possible, to<lb/>
get a rt m t where pen ple live day to day<lb/>
si 1 they can be exposed to art forms that<lb/>
they otherwise would not get the op-<lb/>
portunity to see Van Houten said.<lb/>
Van Houten describes art forms<lb/>
sponsored bv the council as "any kind<lb/>
of expression ? it can be theater, a quiIt,<lb/>
creative writing anv kind or creative<lb/>
expression is what we deal with<lb/>
A museum is a place where people<lb/>
are encouraged to come, and our pur-<lb/>
pose is the other way around, we rrv to<lb/>
bring the art to the people where ever<lb/>
they are to their schools, to the park<lb/>
on Sundays, to bank lobbies, to where<lb/>
ever we are able to go said Van<lb/>
Houten<lb/>
The Pitt-Greenville Arts Council is<lb/>
verv active and always looking for new<lb/>
and different artistic groups. They also<lb/>
welcome anvone who is interested m<lb/>
vohrn teen ng for the council. For further<lb/>
information call the Pitt-Greenville Arts<lb/>
Council at 7?7-17ss<lb/>
New rock band creates<lb/>
its own musical statement<lb/>
'Broaden 'Jon<lb/>
'Horizons.<lb/>
r<lb/>
Bv Matt Kini;<lb/>
Start Writer<lb/>
??- n Rebels fell feet firs; on I<lb/>
of pi " ire musi back in earh SH with ll<lb/>
f their first ful ngtl<lb/>
Her.<lb/>
 not exactly m nedfoi<lb/>
progressive mu Ontai 1 la<lb/>
the band nd said<lb/>
- I ? : : : ? ? <lb/>
- i indpei  rdingtol M h tn 1<lb/>
tie<lb/>
: ive US II I I I ? ? ? ?'<lb/>
???; . Let's go Bad 1 l I us I<lb/>
. k to Vietnam and 'finish what we started rhe<lb/>
title track Surfin on Heroin tells of the thrill of<lb/>
raised exponentially by a teaspoonfull oi<lb/>
? - - ;slike Hell beginsat Home showed<lb/>
. ? ?? - larker side of suburbun life rhrowall<lb/>
these poignant lyrics together withthreecordsand<lb/>
. i hoursol recording time, and a g( od album<lb/>
Is the result<lb/>
Weil it s possible the Rebels wen not satis-<lb/>
fied Atter they toured for a year the) made some<lb/>
changes in the band and went back to the studio<lb/>
with a vengeance Ihe result is their second I.I<lb/>
which is tastefully untitled<lb/>
1 ounding vocalisl Mick) DeSadestand drum-<lb/>
mer Pave MiA hire along with new bassist and<lb/>
e.uitar virtuoso, Spike and lefter Dee, have cre-<lb/>
ated an album that reflects their natural progres<lb/>
sion of maturit andtalenl rhe lyrics are likelv to<lb/>
malu you laugh whik they inspire you to<lb/>
identif) with the n ? ssage<lb/>
td track 'Behind Bars talks ab ill<lb/>
.1 . ?se best friend is his gun. You<lb/>
11 1 there tl ?isgling his best fr 1 1;<lb/>
and ? I him behind bars rhemusicis<lb/>
is ? . f sound,garnished with the nght<lb/>
1gi tarh flights the trad<lb/>
Mi in : - iki i Morrisonescji 11 - ? I<lb/>
: ? n front I the band KISS n tl<lb/>
 - ?? ?. I taknl<lb/>
. zz) isor? I th?se la kadaisical<lb/>
; ? atures somegood vocal hai<lb/>
nizn I tempt tou to smg along from the<lb/>
el irth song on the album is a slow<lb/>
life and disappuntmenl<lb/>
Go in - cverLast), asks, is life like a<lb/>
Mix ? ? In zen in the rain, it doesn't take tears<lb/>
in I 111 rhe song spirals around the<lb/>
men. ryofa ?? .? rhcbcstthingaboutthis<lb/>
somt hat predictable spiral is the wa) it ends<lb/>
: 1 scendo of reverbs and waawaa pedals<lb/>
Ihe t rsl side concludes with a 52 second<lb/>
thrashing that ends with the phrase, "you<lb/>
must be real stupid<lb/>
Side two bounces from the start with<lb/>
"Wild Eyed IXirhn an ode to a sexier-than<lb/>
irl who is chronicall) aware ol her own<lb/>
tender 1 harms "I lotta Axe? is a song set to<lb/>
the music ol Ihe 'V ild Wood Flower" (moreor<lb/>
. ss ibout a mad ax murderer rhe third song<lb/>
See Rock band, page 8<lb/>
'Jieacftte 'Entertainer!<lb/>
rZZ&amp;tt<lb/>
MARCH ENTERTAINMENT<lb/>
THE NEW DELI<lb/>
Fri. lbth PRESENTS: Fri. 23rd<lb/>
The Mood<lb/>
Crystal Sky<lb/>
Sat. 17th<lb/>
Bad Hob &amp; The<lb/>
Rockin I lorses<lb/>
Thurs. 22nd<lb/>
Rat Duo lets<lb/>
Hours<lb/>
Mor : lam - n<lb/>
I ucs I lam ? I ?<lb/>
Wed I lam - larr.<lb/>
; ? s ; lam ???-<lb/>
Fi 11 im - lam<lb/>
21 Don - lam<lb/>
? ? mdN ??? ?<lb/>
 ai lam<lb/>
Sat. 24th<lb/>
The Stegmonds<lb/>
Fri 30th &amp; Sat. 31st<lb/>
Mr. Potato Ihwd<lb/>
Every Tuesday &amp;<lb/>
Wednesday Open<lb/>
MicNite<lb/>
758 - 0080<lb/>
513 CoUnchc Si<lb/>
(located across from L HF<lb/>
Tn ? Entertaine R M A HO I 1CKH)<lb/>
<pb facs="00058198_0030"/><lb/>
Travel film series<lb/>
presents an inside<lb/>
look at Hungary<lb/>
lo i ungsram factory, which<lb/>
By Hamilton Holloway rnanufacturesmany of the light<lb/>
Special to rhe East Carolinian bulbsusedinthcl nited States,<lb/>
Fromthebcautiful Danube various new methods in farm<lb/>
to old Roman baths to modem ?ng and daring horse shows<lb/>
factories, Hungary is a country portra) present-day life in<lb/>
mixed with tradition and Hungary<lb/>
, hanee theme dinixr featui mg<lb/>
On March 28 at 8 p.m ECl foodsol the regions visited in<lb/>
rravel-Adventure Film series the film will begin at 6 Wp.m<lb/>
will present "Hungarian in the Mendenhall Student<lb/>
Homecoming a feature Center multi-purpose room<lb/>
length travel documentary rickets for the dinner are $8.5<lb/>
til in and must be bought two busi<lb/>
rhefitm will show various nessdays prior to the even!<lb/>
aspects of tin- Hungarian cut rickets tor the film are $4<lb/>
ture that have weathered for the public and E I fa<lb/>
through 2000 years of history, ultystaff. ECl students can<lb/>
and how the new has blended pkrk up one free film ticket<lb/>
with theold when a valid ECl ID. is pre<lb/>
Historical places visited sented at the Central Hcket<lb/>
include Roman ruins a 14th Office rickets for the dinner<lb/>
century palace, spas and baths and the film will go on sale<lb/>
In Budapest, the Herend Force March 5, at the Central Hcket<lb/>
lain Works and the Hungarian Office, Mendenhall Student<lb/>
"lins. Center, lor further informa<lb/>
ihis r Che. en<lb/>
ibih.i that c an be h<lb/>
I CU Photo i ab<lb/>
Fifties<lb/>
?"<lb/>
! ot man interesting pieces ot men i<lb/>
d 50 dinei ; Photo by Garret Killian<lb/>
c ontinued from page t<lb/>
P<lb/>
I ho evtremelv modern<lb/>
(ton call iv'W 757-4788<lb/>
Opera company<lb/>
sines in English<lb/>
Shabop's menu features sandwiches Shabop'soffersa new Shabop's success, the<lb/>
breakfast, lunch and dinner variety of desserts which the) owners have begun looking<lb/>
items named after '50s person call ' rechnicolor Finale One intoother possible locations I i<lb/>
alities such as the Elizabeth dessert is called an I Love Lucy the diner such as Wilson and<lb/>
I.nlor "a golden breast ot described as a "nutty delight New Horn ccording to<lb/>
grilled chicken" and i une pecan j Swartz, the owners arc trying<lb/>
( leaver which is "a homemade "Business is double what I to keep their business in the<lb/>
chicken salad sandwich that expected it to be Swartz said small towns of Eastern North<lb/>
even the bca would come However, "we haven't had as Carolina because most of these<lb/>
running home for In addition main student as I towns do not have a wide vari<lb/>
to tho appetizers, salad and expected As a result ot the ety of restuarants<lb/>
Rock band<lb/>
Continued from page<lb/>
lhose ideal have been<lb/>
earned on throughout the past<lb/>
42 vears and toda the have<lb/>
Bv Mary Anne Ullery<lb/>
Staft Writer<lb/>
A bunch ot people sing expanded to touring in b<lb/>
ing in a language I can't under states Members are chosen<lb/>
stand It we wire playing fromnationwideauditionsand<lb/>
leopardy, the question would some singers come from as far<lb/>
be "What is opera Well, tor as Vienna and South Africa<lb/>
all ol you who use this as an Iheopera DonPasquale<lb/>
excuse tor not attending an by Donizetti is taken from the<lb/>
opera production, vou'll soon ancient tradition old man<lb/>
be eating vour words' On takesvoungwife Inthiscas<lb/>
March I at 8 pan. at the A.) theyoung woman really wants<lb/>
Fletcher Recital Mall, the a to marry his nephew ami she<lb/>
tional Opera Company will be becomes shrew towards the<lb/>
performing "Don Pasquale in old man fnis opera's intera<lb/>
English. tion ot characters, witt lines<lb/>
rhis National Opera Com and spirited songs creates a<lb/>
pain goes back 42 years to superb storvline and makes for<lb/>
1948, when it was founded b anaction packed opera<lb/>
A I Fletcher, an attorney and<lb/>
businessman. I lis mam objec- So, it you are one ot those<lb/>
live then was to renew the in people who use the Italian<lb/>
terest in opera as a valid and senpt excuse, you can't use it<lb/>
entertaining art form, and the on March I. Go ahead and see<lb/>
best way to do that in the what professional, toll cos-<lb/>
l nited States was to translate turned opera is about 1 he<lb/>
operas mto English. event is tree to the public<lb/>
deal with a subject that adolescent promiscuity and a strange deja vu in the singer's<lb/>
Dr Ruth might be close to Side destructive life with drugs lhe vokcandthemusicisarranged<lb/>
two goes through two more album ends with a razor sharp so its texture vanes as needed<lb/>
songs that deal with the darker cover ol Science Fiction rhe Forgotten Rebels'second<lb/>
side ot our times, "Evelyn Double Feature LP sets the stage for many great<lb/>
Dick and Don't Die Alone From first to last, the al things to come, while being a<lb/>
Respectively, they address bum is strong There is a powerful opus in itself<lb/>
KAYHW K NAVUW BANRA1 BANRAY It N UY KWR HW I(U rtgj<lb/>
Spring Break Rav Ban<lb/>
-1 Sale!<lb/>
y-?<lb/>
The IMaa<lb/>
Green ille, NC <lb/>
iwph 7695 -<lb/>
Hours:<lb/>
Mon -Sat 10-9<lb/>
Sunday 1 - 6<lb/>
j$45.00) <lb/>
x Expires 3-J-9A j f<lb/>
Located in the Front Entrance <lb/>
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<pb facs="00058198_0031"/>
</div></body></text></TEI>