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<pb facs="00058206_0001"/>
?lj? ?uBt (ftarulmtan<lb/>
Sewing the 'Last Carolina campus community since 1925<lb/>
Vol. 64 No. 23<lb/>
Tuesday April 3, 19<lb/>
Greenville, North Carolina<lb/>
Circulation 12,000<lb/>
12 Pages<lb/>
Thomas wins<lb/>
SGA election<lb/>
by default<lb/>
By Samantha Thompson<lb/>
Staff Writer<lb/>
Student(Uu ernmenl Associa-<lb/>
tion presidential candidate Allen<lb/>
Thjomaswill become the new S( ,<lb/>
president by default, alter chal-<lb/>
lenger Robin Andrews was dis-<lb/>
qualified from the race Monday<lb/>
night<lb/>
Elections Committee Chair-<lb/>
man kellv ones eliminated An-<lb/>
drews from the race when An-<lb/>
drew stalled to turn in her expense<lb/>
report for the run ofl election that<lb/>
was to be held Wednesday.<lb/>
?s stated in article 12 ot the<lb/>
SGA Elections Rules, both regular<lb/>
elections and run ofl elections are<lb/>
considered separateand eat h i an<lb/>
didate must submit expense re-<lb/>
ports tor each election two days<lb/>
prior to the election ones said<lb/>
thatat 5:00p m. Monday, Andrews<lb/>
had not turned in the report and<lb/>
was disqualified.<lb/>
Upset b the decision, An<lb/>
drews said she was never told<lb/>
when the run-off election was to<lb/>
be held, and she read in the elec-<lb/>
tions niles thai two weeks must<lb/>
elapse between the firs! election<lb/>
and therun-oH election.<lb/>
According to (ones, that rule<lb/>
was a typing mistake Election<lb/>
c ommittee members, whoarealso<lb/>
SGA members, told lones that it<lb/>
was a mistake and that it was<lb/>
amended by the legislature dur-<lb/>
ingtheFeb. 12.1990SGA meeting.<lb/>
After she was informed that<lb/>
she had been disqualified. An<lb/>
drews told lones that since she<lb/>
had no expenditures tor the run-<lb/>
ott election, she thought she didn't<lb/>
have to turn in a report After we<lb/>
counted the ballots on Monday,<lb/>
she sent six representatives and I<lb/>
told them to tell her she had to<lb/>
report her expenditures lones<lb/>
said. "Shesaid the) didn t tell her<lb/>
It she had an questions,<lb/>
ones said, she could have called<lb/>
me. lor the first time, all the rules<lb/>
were followed to a lit may look<lb/>
like we picked people out spe iti<lb/>
cally, but we didn t 1 wish it had<lb/>
happened some other way The<lb/>
Other candidates, ailed all the time<lb/>
to make sure the were following<lb/>
the rules<lb/>
Andrews contacted Attorney<lb/>
General Brian Stevens Monday<lb/>
night in an attempt to have him<lb/>
resolve the discn pern ies<lb/>
Stevens said that Andrews<lb/>
could appeal to the ele lions re-<lb/>
view board.<lb/>
Thomas and Andrew s were to<lb/>
be the two Candida Ies in the run-<lb/>
See Election, page 2<lb/>
ECU School of Medicine<lb/>
establishes new degree<lb/>
LCL News Bureau<lb/>
ECU has received approval to<lb/>
establish an undergraduate degree<lb/>
in "cytotechnology, a response to<lb/>
the deepening shortage ot these<lb/>
medical laboratory professionals<lb/>
in the I nited States.<lb/>
Cytotechnologists are trained<lb/>
to obtain and process human cel-<lb/>
lular specimens in a medical set-<lb/>
ting, according to Dr. Susan I.<lb/>
Smith, chair ol the EC U Depart-<lb/>
ment of Clinical 1 aboratory Sci-<lb/>
ence, which will otter the new<lb/>
program, from these specimens<lb/>
they can determine the presence<lb/>
ol diseasessu hascancer. A famil-<lb/>
iar specimen analyzed by a cy-<lb/>
totechnologist, said Smith, is the<lb/>
"pap smear" used to detect and<lb/>
diagnose various conditions in<lb/>
women.<lb/>
The new program is a joint<lb/>
undertaking with the Department<lb/>
ot clinical Pathology and Diag-<lb/>
nostic Medumeot the E( Jk hool<lb/>
oi Medicine. C limed training,<lb/>
concentrated in the fourth year of<lb/>
the program, will beoffered at I'itt<lb/>
County Memorial Hospital.<lb/>
The first students are expected<lb/>
tii graduate from the program fol-<lb/>
lowing the spring semester ot 1992,<lb/>
earning a bachelor ot science de-<lb/>
gree1 in clinical laboratory science.<lb/>
I he program will eventually<lb/>
graduate up to six students per<lb/>
year.<lb/>
Smith said the new offering<lb/>
See Cyto, page 2<lb/>
vleteorologist Ben Pringle of WITN-TV discusses safety tips for<lb/>
residence halls during severe weather with a group of Tyler<lb/>
residents (Photo by Garrett Killian ? ECU Photo Lab)<lb/>
Fresh fruit and various free prizes were among the many extras to be found Monday at one of the COW Week information booths The week-<lb/>
long activities aim to increase awareness of health issues facing students today (Photo by J.D. Whitmire ? ECU Photo Lab)<lb/>
Wellness Week to increase awareness<lb/>
By Sarah Martin<lb/>
Staff Writer<lb/>
The week of April 2-6 has been<lb/>
designated Creatively Organizing<lb/>
Wellness Week or "COW Week"<lb/>
bv the Student Health and Well-<lb/>
ness Committee.<lb/>
The purpose ot Wellness<lb/>
Week is to increasecampusaware-<lb/>
ness oi the importance of positive<lb/>
lifestyle choices tor the quality of<lb/>
an individual's lite said Suzanne<lb/>
Kellerman,an ECU 1 lealth Educa-<lb/>
tor. "By increasing visibility of and<lb/>
participation in campus wide<lb/>
wellness activities, the Student<lb/>
Health and Wellness Committee<lb/>
hopes to promote the concept ot<lb/>
wellness to the entire university<lb/>
community inorder to bring about<lb/>
positive lifestyle changes<lb/>
Main activities are planned<lb/>
forCOW Week such asa Wellness<lb/>
Walk, A Beach Volleyball Tourna-<lb/>
ment, the Health Fair and a special<lb/>
night at the Comedy one.<lb/>
The Wellness Walk, named<lb/>
"The Stampede was the first<lb/>
event of the week and was held<lb/>
Monday afternoon at 12:15 on the<lb/>
mall (in front of the Student Health<lb/>
Center). l"he walk included Chan-<lb/>
cellor Richard Fakin and other<lb/>
FCL celebrities. The walk was ap-<lb/>
proximately 1.5 mi Ies and tree door<lb/>
pnes, tree tood and free sun vi-<lb/>
sors were given away.<lb/>
The Volleyball Tournament,<lb/>
also known as "A Moo-ving Expe-<lb/>
rience isplannedfor Tuesday on<lb/>
Tyler Beach from 3 p.m. to 8 p.m.<lb/>
Teams are needed to sign up. Each<lb/>
team will solicit pledges based on<lb/>
their total points accumulated. All<lb/>
proceeds will go to the REAL Cri-<lb/>
sis Center. There will be a band,<lb/>
free refreshments, and door prizes.<lb/>
To sign up, call IRS at 757-6443Of<lb/>
go bv 204 Memorial Gym.<lb/>
The Health Fair, named "The<lb/>
Round-Up will be held from 11<lb/>
a.m. to 5:30 p.m. on Wednesday at<lb/>
Memorial Gym. Students and fac-<lb/>
ulty will be able to have their bloixi<lb/>
pressure screened, be tested for<lb/>
glaucoma, have their blood sugar<lb/>
levels, height and weight, and fit-<lb/>
ness level all performed for free.<lb/>
Yourcholesterol level will be tested<lb/>
for a small fee. There will be fit-<lb/>
nessdomonstrations, free food and<lb/>
door prizes.<lb/>
The week will wrap up at the<lb/>
Comedy Zoneat the Attic Wednes-<lb/>
day evening starting at 9 p.m. The<lb/>
first (K people will receive dnnk<lb/>
huggers. The comedians will be<lb/>
Max Bocelli and Scott Steehn Half<lb/>
of the proceeds will go to theStu-<lb/>
dent Health and Wellness Com-<lb/>
mittee. Admission is $2230 for<lb/>
members and $3230 for guests be-<lb/>
fore 9 p.m S3. O for members and<lb/>
$4.50 for non-members after p m.<lb/>
Wellness booths will also be<lb/>
located around the campus Mon-<lb/>
day through Thursday. There will<lb/>
be free information available on<lb/>
healthy eating, sexually transmit-<lb/>
ted diseases, safer sex, AIDS, fit-<lb/>
ness and cancer detection tech-<lb/>
niques.<lb/>
Treatment may protect cancer patients<lb/>
ECU News Bureau<lb/>
Molecules normally found in<lb/>
the body but now generated in test<lb/>
tubes may serve to protect cancer<lb/>
patients from the undesirable side<lb/>
effects of radiation and chemother-<lb/>
apy, according to scientists at the<lb/>
ECU School of Medicine. Their<lb/>
research may eventually permit<lb/>
phvsicians to give cancer patients<lb/>
more potent therapy.<lb/>
Through a recent $660,000<lb/>
grant from the National Cancer<lb/>
Institute, Dr. Charles J. Kovacs,<lb/>
ECU professor of radiation oncol-<lb/>
ogy, joins researchers at a number<lb/>
of other institutions in a national<lb/>
program to define better ways to<lb/>
use these "biological response<lb/>
modifiers" for cancer treatment.<lb/>
"Here at ECU we are concen-<lb/>
trating on developing better ways<lb/>
in the laboratory to improve the<lb/>
clinical treatment of cancer said<lb/>
Kovacs, who directs the ECU divi-<lb/>
sion ot radiation biology and on-<lb/>
cology. "Our goal is to provide a<lb/>
strong data base on how these<lb/>
molecules can be added to a<lb/>
patient's treatment to increase the<lb/>
killingetfectsot both radiation and<lb/>
chemotherapy on tumor cells,<lb/>
while reducing the harmful side<lb/>
effects of these1 treatments<lb/>
Kovacs sud that a major prob-<lb/>
lem in treating cancerous tissue<lb/>
with radiation or chemotherapy is<lb/>
the difficulty of protecting the<lb/>
surroundingnormal tissues. At the<lb/>
high dose often required to kill all<lb/>
of the tumor cells, both chemo-<lb/>
therapy and radiotherapy can<lb/>
destroy normal blood cell produc-<lb/>
tion, which maintains the body's<lb/>
immune system and is vital for<lb/>
life.<lb/>
The biological molecules being<lb/>
studied by ECU researchers are<lb/>
known as monokines and cytoki-<lb/>
nes. They are part of a naturally-<lb/>
occurring network in the body<lb/>
responsible for regulating bloixi<lb/>
cell production.<lb/>
Kovacs said that he and his<lb/>
team are particularly interested in<lb/>
the category of monokines and<lb/>
cytokines that stimulate white<lb/>
blood cell production in the bone<lb/>
marrow. Through genetic engi-<lb/>
neering, these molecules can be<lb/>
produced in large quantities by<lb/>
human, animal and plant cells<lb/>
grown in laboratories.<lb/>
"The manner in which these<lb/>
cytokines interact with each other<lb/>
to stimulate blood cell production<lb/>
is not completely understood<lb/>
Kovacs explained. "Understand-<lb/>
ing how these molecules stimulate<lb/>
immature and mature blood cells<lb/>
is among the major goals of our<lb/>
studies. At the same time, we will<lb/>
concentrate on how these cytoki-<lb/>
nes can be administrated to pa-<lb/>
tients during cancer treatment<lb/>
Kovacs noted that because the<lb/>
See Cancer, page 7<lb/>
Senate candidate visits ECU<lb/>
By Donna Hayes<lb/>
Staff Writer<lb/>
Democratic Senate candidate<lb/>
R.P. "Bo" Thomas used his first<lb/>
official visit to ECU to discuss his<lb/>
position on the environment and<lb/>
to criticize Republican Senator<lb/>
Jesse Helms.<lb/>
Speaking to a group on Thurs-<lb/>
day at Mendenhall Student Cen-<lb/>
ter, Thomas said the current politi-<lb/>
cal leadership in North Carolina<lb/>
fails to address clean air and wa-<lb/>
ter. "The lack of concern has de-<lb/>
stroyed the Tar River he added.<lb/>
"Jesse Helms thinks clean air<lb/>
is something everyone has Tho-<lb/>
mas said "Bring him home in<lb/>
November and give him his big<lb/>
pension<lb/>
Thomas supports the Clean<lb/>
Air Amendment currently before<lb/>
Congress, and he added that the<lb/>
Amendment is crucial to reducing<lb/>
those emissions that cause acid<lb/>
rain. The Amendment will also<lb/>
help control toxic air pollutants<lb/>
that are hazardous to human<lb/>
health.<lb/>
Thomas said Helms opposes<lb/>
the Clean Air Amendment because<lb/>
it "requires polluterstodo the right<lb/>
thing<lb/>
At a news conference in<lb/>
Raleigh in early March, Thomas<lb/>
said: "1 just think Jesse serves the<lb/>
banks, serves the polluters <lb/>
serves the oil producers He has<lb/>
served the monied people so long<lb/>
that he's just got in the habit of<lb/>
voting against the little man. His<lb/>
heart has hardened<lb/>
After his speech at ECU, Tho-<lb/>
mas responded to questions from<lb/>
the audience. He said that he<lb/>
supports alternative energy<lb/>
sources, in particular wind and<lb/>
solar power, and he opposes the<lb/>
construction of more nuclear reac-<lb/>
tors.<lb/>
Thomas also said that the<lb/>
people should return to conserva-<lb/>
See Bo, page 7<lb/>
Inside<lb/>
Editorial4<lb/>
Has college athletics<lb/>
overshadowed a good<lb/>
education?<lb/>
Classifieds6<lb/>
Personals, For Sale.<lb/>
Help Wanted, For Rent<lb/>
and Services Rendered<lb/>
State and Nation8<lb/>
London's anti-tax<lb/>
protest turns into riot;<lb/>
civilians and police are<lb/>
hospitalized<lb/>
Features9<lb/>
Tennessee profes-<lb/>
sor speaks to students<lb/>
about colonial literature<lb/>
Sports11<lb/>
UNLV crushes Duke<lb/>
in NCAA Championship<lb/>
J<lb/>
<pb facs="00058206_0002"/><lb/>
2 The East Carolinian, April 3,1990<lb/>
ECU Briefs<lb/>
Alumni sponsor basesball evening<lb/>
KINSTON The Greene, I enoir and Wayne county chapters of the<lb/>
ECU Alumni Association are hosting "Wednesday in the Park an<lb/>
evening of minor league baseball action in kinston on May 23 at b p.m.<lb/>
at Grainger Stadium, 4lX) East Grainger Ave.<lb/>
A picnic spread of hamburgers, hot dogs, french fries and ice cream<lb/>
will be available from b p.m. until game time, when the Kinston Indians<lb/>
take on the Prince William Cannons.<lb/>
The $7.50 per person includes the picnic and game ticket. All ECU<lb/>
alumni, family members and friends are invited to attend.<lb/>
RSVP by May 7 by sending a check made payable to the East<lb/>
Carolina Alumni Association to Cindy Callaway, TaylorSlaughter<lb/>
Alumni r louse, ECU,Greenville, N.C27858. Tickets will be held at the<lb/>
gate.<lb/>
Eor more information, contact Callaway at CJQ) 757-b072.<lb/>
EastCare celebrates fifth anniversary<lb/>
More than 1,31X1 former patients, emergency medical service (EMS)<lb/>
personnel and friends arc invited to attend the fifth anniversarv cele-<lb/>
bration (if EastCare on April S from 2 to 5 p.m. in the park beside the<lb/>
Brodv Medical Sciences Building<lb/>
EastCare. Pitt County Memorial I iospital's air ambulance service,<lb/>
began operation in April 1985 and has made about 2,(XX) flights.<lb/>
A ceremony at 2:30 p.m. will include a brief history ot the program,<lb/>
speeches by former patients and a dedication to former patients and<lb/>
EMS personnel. If available, the EastCare helicopter will be on display.<lb/>
Eor more information, contact the FastCare office at 5S1 -427.<lb/>
Nigerian discusses democracy at home<lb/>
One of Nigeria's leading social scientists, Dr. Oveleve Oyediran,<lb/>
will speak on "Dilemmas of Democratic Political Development in<lb/>
Nigeriaat 7:30 p.m. Wcdnesdaj in KHm 1032 o the (iencral Class-<lb/>
room Building. Oyediran has served in various capacities in the Nige-<lb/>
rian government and was most recently .1 member oi the country's<lb/>
Constituent Assembly.Oycdiran'slecture is part of the Thomas River's<lb/>
Distinguished Chair in Internationa Studies I ectureSeries and is tree<lb/>
and open to the public.<lb/>
i mrtiJ ftowt f i (i Sn? Hwfiiu fry rti<lb/>
National Campus Clips<lb/>
UNC-CH discusses self-segregation<lb/>
last Wednesday a forum sponsored by rheNetwork for Minorities<lb/>
Issues at UNC-Chapel Hill discussed the development of self-segrega-<lb/>
tion in campus housing over the last years. "Even though it is not a<lb/>
problem caused by the universitv, the university needs to address it<lb/>
said Matthew Stewart, a graduate student. Several reasons account for<lb/>
this trend, according to the members of the forum Wayne Kuncl,<lb/>
housing director, said that the first-come, tirst-served basis method<lb/>
used bv the housing service at UNC may bo one of the reasons<lb/>
However he said the change in policy has made the system fairer. P.J.<lb/>
Studevent, a freshman, said he was encou raged bv his friends to live on<lb/>
South campus with other black students. Another student, Ronni<lb/>
Williams, a sophomore, said that some black students would like to live<lb/>
on North campus but the small number of other minorities would make<lb/>
the students feel alienated.<lb/>
Gretchan Diffendal, the Residence I Kill Association president said<lb/>
"People would be unhapm not because of integration, but becaus<lb/>
you're taking away the choice<lb/>
Cyto<lb/>
Continued from page 1<lb/>
Crime Report<lb/>
Police walk dog out of Greene<lb/>
27 March 1990<lb/>
1853- Officer stopped a moped south oi the Publications Building.<lb/>
Campus citation issued to non student for equipment and one-way<lb/>
street violations.<lb/>
28 March 19<lb/>
2201- Officers responded to (Ireene Residence I Kill in reference to<lb/>
a suspicious subject in the lobby. Trespass warning issued to non-<lb/>
student.<lb/>
2308- Officers responded to Fleming Residence I lall in reference to<lb/>
a 911 call advising that they had received a call and the caller was not<lb/>
speaking.<lb/>
2356-Officers stopped a vehicle at Wright Circle for one-way street<lb/>
violation. Campus citations issued for alcohol violations and one-way<lb/>
street.<lb/>
29 March 1990<lb/>
0120- Officer was transported to Pitt County Memorial Hospital-<lb/>
Emergency Room because of chest pains and breathing problems.<lb/>
0540- Officers checked third floor of Garrett Hall and other resi-<lb/>
dence hall areas tn surrounding grounds for a subject who was<lb/>
behaving suspiciously on the third floor of (.arrett. The subject could<lb/>
not be found<lb/>
0551- Officers checked out at I. instead Residence Hall with two<lb/>
residence advisors who rexrted a student (non-resident of Umstead<lb/>
Hall) was on the second flinr i rearing a disturbance. Subject was<lb/>
located and arrested for being intoxicated and disruptive. Subject was<lb/>
also banned from all resident e halls<lb/>
30 March 1990<lb/>
1150- Officer dispatched to I instead Residence 1 lall looking for a<lb/>
recentlv banned subject; the same was gone on arrival.<lb/>
1202- Officer checked out at (often in reference to a possible<lb/>
larceny, the incident is pending investigation.<lb/>
31 March 1990<lb/>
(K)13 Officer responded to Umstead Residence Hall in reference to<lb/>
an activated fire alarm. The alarm was triggered by fireworks on first<lb/>
floor central<lb/>
0641- Officer responded to Umstead Residence I lall in reference to<lb/>
a report of a busted pipe. A large amount of water in the basement was<lb/>
caused by a faucet that had been left running. Housekeeping was<lb/>
notified.<lb/>
0740- Officers responded to Bolk Residence Hall in reference to a<lb/>
report of a male subject living in a female room. Contact was made, the<lb/>
male subject was issued a trespass warning, escorted off the campus<lb/>
and the female subject was issued a campus citation.<lb/>
1853- Officer responded to Greene Residence Hall lobby because of<lb/>
reports of an unescorted K-9 (dog). Same was escorted out of building.<lb/>
1 April 1990<lb/>
1924- Officer responded to the area south of Mendenhall Student<lb/>
Center in reference to a report of an assault on a female. Victim was<lb/>
located in Mendenhall Student Center and transported to Public Safety<lb/>
for report.<lb/>
2316- Officers responded to )ones Residence Hall in reference toan<lb/>
attempted overdose by a female student. Same was transported to<lb/>
PCMH Emergency Room.<lb/>
1354- Officer stopped vehicle staff member due to exceeding safe<lb/>
speed. Verbal warning.<lb/>
IV Crime Ktjmtt u l?k?? fwm office! F( U ISAhr 'Xif'ty tnf<lb/>
will be theonlv baccalaureate-level<lb/>
cytoteehnology program in North<lb/>
Carolina. The Department of<lb/>
Medical Allied Health Professions<lb/>
of the University of North Caro-<lb/>
lina School of Medicine otters a<lb/>
post-baccalaureate certificate pro-<lb/>
gram in the discipline.<lb/>
The current demand for cy-<lb/>
totechnologists far exceeds the<lb/>
supply, according to Smith. In<lb/>
North Carolina, for example, a<lb/>
survey of medical institutions<lb/>
found that 10 to 12 cvtotechnolo-<lb/>
gist positions were unfilled in 1988,<lb/>
while cytoteehnology programs in<lb/>
North Carolina had onlv four<lb/>
graduates Nationally, there were<lb/>
twice as many job opening as there<lb/>
were newly minted c totechnolo-<lb/>
gists to claim them.<lb/>
Yet at the same time that<lb/>
demand has been increasing, the<lb/>
number of cytoteehnology train-<lb/>
ing programs m the U.S. has Stead -<lb/>
ily declined. Over the last 10years,<lb/>
t he number (it active programs has<lb/>
fallen from 107 to 41, Smith said<lb/>
Much ol the recent demand<lb/>
tor cytotechnologists has been<lb/>
driven bv the development ot a<lb/>
technique known as one needle<lb/>
aspiration biopsy, Smith ex-<lb/>
plained The procedure allows<lb/>
pathologists to collet t cells through<lb/>
a thin needle inserted directly into<lb/>
a suspic ious growth or body cav-<lb/>
ity. The i ei's ,ire then examined<lb/>
microscopicalh b the cytotech-<lb/>
nologist and pathologist to deter-<lb/>
mine the ; ? f can cr or<lb/>
ether ccllulai hang o iated<lb/>
Election<lb/>
with disease.<lb/>
Fine needle biopsy is normally<lb/>
more convenient and pleasant for<lb/>
the patient than a surgical biopsy.<lb/>
Smith said the School of Medicine<lb/>
has developed a highly-regarded<lb/>
program centering on this tech-<lb/>
nique under the leadership of Dr.<lb/>
Ian Silverman, professor of clini-<lb/>
cal pathology and diagnostic<lb/>
medicine, who will be medical<lb/>
director for the new program.<lb/>
"The cytotechnologist works<lb/>
very closely with both the patholo-<lb/>
gist and the patient in fine needle<lb/>
biopsy said Smith. "1 think that<lb/>
has made the cvtotechnologist's<lb/>
work a lot more interesting<lb/>
Another advantage of the<lb/>
program in cytoteehnology is that<lb/>
it offers an option to the degree<lb/>
program in medical technology,<lb/>
which has been offered by ECU<lb/>
for nearly 20 vears.<lb/>
"The medical technology-<lb/>
program requires extensive study<lb/>
in both biologv and chemistry<lb/>
prior to the professional courses<lb/>
said Smith. "The new track in<lb/>
cytoteehnology will offer students<lb/>
who desire to work in a medical<lb/>
laboratory an additional option<lb/>
which places less emphasis on<lb/>
preparation in chemistry and more<lb/>
on biologv, which some students<lb/>
prefer. There are students for<lb/>
whom biology is more their cup of<lb/>
tea<lb/>
She noted, however, that ca-<lb/>
reer opportunities in both fields<lb/>
remain excellent.<lb/>
Continued from page 1<lb/>
Watch WITN Channel 7 for a Public<lb/>
Service Announcement Featuring Artist<lb/>
Thorn, Tim &amp; Torrence dail<lb/>
(<lb/>
'Director of advertising<lb/>
James F.J. McKee<lb/>
ott eUx (ion on Wednesday. Alter<lb/>
Monday's election, Thomas won<lb/>
the 41.9percentol the votes, while<lb/>
Andrews captured $3.6 percent ot<lb/>
the votes. Their other contender,<lb/>
Marry I lelms, won 22 5 percent ot<lb/>
the votes.<lb/>
I homas said he was eager<lb/>
Monday night to get to work. . s<lb/>
1 said before, I have a slate ol ideas<lb/>
to accomplish and 1 look forward<lb/>
to working with theS iA as whole<lb/>
I NEWS I<lb/>
I Writers I<lb/>
I meeting today at<lb/>
5 p.m.<lb/>
and bringing these ideas to real-<lb/>
ity Thomas sud.<lb/>
Thomas said that he looks<lb/>
forward to working with the fac-<lb/>
ulty, students and other universi-<lb/>
ties "towards projecting ECU<lb/>
around the state as the outstand-<lb/>
ing university it is<lb/>
Thomas will officially take<lb/>
office April 28 at theSGA banquet<lb/>
where he will make his first speech<lb/>
as president.<lb/>
Olarol<lb/>
mum<lb/>
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<pb facs="00058206_0003"/><lb/>
The Fast Carolinian, April 3, 1990<lb/>
SGA debates whether group discriminates against men<lb/>
By Samatha Thompson<lb/>
Staff Writer<lb/>
The constitution for the ECU<lb/>
Pure Gold Dancers was passed as<lb/>
a non-funded group by the Stu-<lb/>
dent Government Association in<lb/>
Monday's meeting, after a lengthy<lb/>
debate whether the groupdiscnmi<lb/>
nated against men and should tx-<lb/>
funded bv both the SX.A and the<lb/>
Athletic Department.<lb/>
I egislator Michael Hadley<lb/>
made the motion to suspend the<lb/>
rules tor the dancers to have their<lb/>
constitution approved so that they<lb/>
could receive funds through the<lb/>
H iA to attend a competition rep<lb/>
resenting (?( I<lb/>
Some legislators argued<lb/>
whether the group discriminated<lb/>
against men. 1 egislator Susan<lb/>
( ooperman said that even though<lb/>
the group has try (Hits, it is the<lb/>
same as other organizations sik h<lb/>
as honor societies and sports or-<lb/>
ganizations It's net realk dis<lb/>
crimination Cooperman said.<lb/>
"Requirements to get into these<lb/>
groups is due to what the organi-<lb/>
zations are based on<lb/>
Another legislator read to the<lb/>
legislature one of the rules in the<lb/>
ECU Pure Cold Dancers'<lb/>
constitution stating a "his or her"<lb/>
clause, ending the debate on dis-<lb/>
crimination.<lb/>
I egislator Renee Cundiff said<lb/>
that since the dancers are ranked<lb/>
lth in the nation and thev have<lb/>
raised funds themselves tor uni-<lb/>
forms and pompons, thev should<lb/>
bo a funded organization.<lb/>
1 egislator Marry 1 lelmsmade<lb/>
the motion that the ECU Pure Gold<lb/>
Dancers be a non-funded organi-<lb/>
zation since the Athletic Depart<lb/>
ment also funds them at the begin-<lb/>
ning ot each year to attend a train<lb/>
ing camp<lb/>
The Athletic Department<lb/>
should work with them for more<lb/>
funding 1 lelms said.<lb/>
Cooperman said that since<lb/>
student funds pay for both the<lb/>
Athletic Department and the SGA,<lb/>
the students would be paying for<lb/>
the dancers twice.<lb/>
Because the dancers promote<lb/>
the FCU basketball team, and are<lb/>
funded through the Athletic De-<lb/>
partment, the bodv voted by con-<lb/>
sent for the FCU Pure Cold Danc-<lb/>
ers to be a non-funded group,<lb/>
which would not allow them to<lb/>
receive SGA funds for two years.<lb/>
In other business, the $140<lb/>
appropriation to lambda Alpha,<lb/>
ECU'S anthropology honor soci-<lb/>
ety, was passed bv a voice vote of<lb/>
the legislature. The 15 members<lb/>
requested funds to pav for over-<lb/>
night lodging while thev are in<lb/>
Atlantic Beach on a field trip,<lb/>
1.egislator Barbara Lamb said. The<lb/>
students will study anthropology<lb/>
at sea in a shnmp boat, which the<lb/>
gro<lb/>
up will pav for themselves.<lb/>
The constitution of the orth<lb/>
Carolina Student Legislators also<lb/>
passed bv a voice vote. The NCSL<lb/>
members, several of which are also<lb/>
SGA members, learn the concepts<lb/>
of representing government in a<lb/>
model of the North Carolina Gen-<lb/>
eral Assembly during their meet-<lb/>
ings, Hadley said.<lb/>
The constitution of the Society<lb/>
of Medical Technology passed by<lb/>
a voice vote after questions were<lb/>
raised whether the group was dif-<lb/>
ferent from other medical socie-<lb/>
ties. Hadley said the purpose of<lb/>
the organization was to promote<lb/>
unity of those entering the clinical<lb/>
laboratory science profession.<lb/>
Another legislator said the group<lb/>
was different from the Pre-profes-<lb/>
sional Health Alliance, which<lb/>
promoted those entering medical<lb/>
school.<lb/>
Helms made the motion to<lb/>
have all of the annual appropria-<lb/>
tions introduced as package in the<lb/>
April 16 SGA meeting so that the<lb/>
body can have a list of all the groups<lb/>
needing money in order to "grasp<lb/>
the whole picture Helms said.<lb/>
The motion passed bv consent.<lb/>
Legislator Derek McCullers<lb/>
told the bodv that after "watching<lb/>
what has been going on lately"<lb/>
that it lacked professionalism. "We<lb/>
were chosen as represon ta ti ves a nd<lb/>
we should trv to be fair and equal<lb/>
and consistent McCullers said<lb/>
"There is a lot of misrepresenta-<lb/>
tion here and I hope we can do<lb/>
some things to change it<lb/>
Cooperman agreed with<lb/>
McCullers and added that the use<lb/>
of "previousquestion" wasabused<lb/>
in Monday's meeting. "We're here<lb/>
to express views of the people we<lb/>
represent C ooperman said "We<lb/>
need to have different opinions a<lb/>
lot of different viewpoints to chose<lb/>
the best solution<lb/>
Speaker of the House Bob<lb/>
Lindrv read the body the rules<lb/>
concerning attendance, adding<lb/>
that several members are close to<lb/>
being expelled from the SGA.<lb/>
Landry noted the absence of 2<lb/>
members of the legislature and<lb/>
asked present members toencour<lb/>
age others to attend upcoming<lb/>
meetings<lb/>
Symposium examines transition of culture<lb/>
Bv Ted C hristensen<lb/>
sijff Writer<lb/>
Before lubilee a symj osium<lb/>
discussing the transition or Afri-<lb/>
can-American culture from slav-<lb/>
ery to freedom, will be held in the<lb/>
Willis Building at E( I from It1<lb/>
a.m. to 4 30 p.m. on April 10.<lb/>
The symposium is ftee and<lb/>
intended tor a general audience,<lb/>
particularly appealing to African<lb/>
Americans and groups interested<lb/>
in all areas of African-American<lb/>
culture in the Southeast.<lb/>
1 here are three mam obje<lb/>
fives to the program. Fhe first is to<lb/>
identify the qualities of sele ted<lb/>
areas in the antebellum African-<lb/>
American culture The second isto<lb/>
show how these qualities e olved<lb/>
in the transition form slavery to<lb/>
freedom, and thirdly, to recognize<lb/>
theimpac t the the ultural aspe ts<lb/>
had on later generations.<lb/>
! he program will start with a<lb/>
brief introduction by ECU sympo-<lb/>
sium moderator Dr. Henry Fer-<lb/>
rell. I Ins will be followed by lec-<lb/>
tures from tour speakers, two in<lb/>
the morning and two in the after<lb/>
noon. All of the speakers are spe-<lb/>
cialists in black history and cul-<lb/>
ture and have thoroughly re<lb/>
searched or published documents<lb/>
related to the' African-American<lb/>
community.<lb/>
Dr. 1 a id Dennard, professor<lb/>
of history at ECU, will give a pres<lb/>
entation on leadership practices<lb/>
which evolved before I860 and<lb/>
how the were preserved bj Afri<lb/>
can American civilization in the<lb/>
years that followed<lb/>
I r lodd Savitt, adjunct pro-<lb/>
fessor of medical humanities at<lb/>
E( I , will dist uss health practices<lb/>
and practitioners which evolved<lb/>
w ithin the African-American com<lb/>
munity during the transition from<lb/>
slavery to freedom.<lb/>
Next. Dr. CharlesJoyner, pro-<lb/>
fessor of history at Coastal Caro-<lb/>
lina Community College, will<lb/>
speak on the growth of African-<lb/>
American folklore.<lb/>
Dr. (.eorge McDaniel, execu-<lb/>
tive director of Drayton Hall Char-<lb/>
leston, S.C will give the last lec-<lb/>
ture, which deals with the evolu-<lb/>
tion of African-American housing<lb/>
and material culturein thepostbel-<lb/>
lum period.<lb/>
Fach lecture will be last than<lb/>
an hour and will be accompanied<lb/>
bv slides or tapes presentations to<lb/>
further illustrate the characteris-<lb/>
tics of each topic.<lb/>
The symposium is sponsored<lb/>
bv ECU'S Institute for Histonca<lb/>
and Cultural Research in coopera-<lb/>
tion with the College of Arts and<lb/>
Sciences and the office of Minority<lb/>
Student Affairs.<lb/>
(Irjc 'last Ckrclintan<lb/>
is now taking applications for summer<lb/>
employment for the following positions:<lb/>
? Asst. Features Editor<lb/>
? Staff Writers<lb/>
Asst. Sports Editor<lb/>
?Copy Editors<lb/>
Submit applications to LORI MARTIN at<lb/>
The East Carolinian by 5 p.m. April 11, 1990<lb/>
ATTENTION ECU STUDENTS<lb/>
Get Your SummerFall Semester Application in NOW<lb/>
Pirates Landing offers a new concept in student housing $200.00per<lb/>
month tor 1 year lease. $200 Security Deposit.<lb/>
$225.008 month with a I. 6. or 9 month lease. $225 Seeurity Deposit.<lb/>
Pre Leasing Available <lb/>
Rooms Complex Common Area m<lb/>
? ? isneci<lb/>
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?Fully eai peted<lb/>
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? ?utdooi Grills<lb/>
?2 large bathrooms<lb/>
?Storage Closet<lb/>
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Convenient &amp; Economical<lb/>
Three Bkx ks foi Campos &amp; Downtown<lb/>
?l tilil.es Included in Kent<lb/>
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Laundry Facilities on Site<lb/>
?Free Maid SetVk e<lb/>
?( ential I lc.it &amp; Air<lb/>
?-?1<lb/>
?r i<lb/>
1<lb/>
REMCO EAST INC ? P.O. BOX 6026 ? GREENVILLE, NC 27834 ? 919 758-6061<lb/>
UPERSAVER FARES<lb/>
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ITG saves you money this spring with these low priced roundtrip airfares<lb/>
from Greenville on USAir andor American airlines<lb/>
ATLANTA $184 ORLANDOs158 MIAMI U78<lb/>
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Faculty and Staff,<lb/>
The On - Campus<lb/>
Bank Is for You too!<lb/>
New East Bank of Greenville's Mendenhall Student Center<lb/>
Office can be your most convenient bank, anytime. Our<lb/>
office hours here are 9 - 5 Monday through Friday and our<lb/>
main office at 2310 Charles Street (near Red Banks Road) is<lb/>
open from 9am - 6pm Monday through Friday and 9am to<lb/>
12noon on Saturdays. Its drive - through window opens 30<lb/>
minutes earlier than the main office Monday through Friday.<lb/>
We have a New East 24 ATM and our<lb/>
own parking spaces at Mendenhall<lb/>
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Almost every service we provide at our main office is also at<lb/>
our campus office. This means you can open and maintain<lb/>
personal checking and savings accounts, investment ac-<lb/>
counts, commercial accounts (including our unique courier<lb/>
service), loan payments, utility payments, travelers' &amp;<lb/>
official checks all right here where you work.<lb/>
Convenience for everyone at ECU<lb/>
at New East Bank of Greenville<lb/>
Mendenhall Student Center Office<lb/>
Call us at 757-1188<lb/>
We're open from 9am until 5pm Monday - Friday<lb/>
Member Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation<lb/>
NEW EAST BANK<lb/>
OF GREENVILLE<lb/>
ECU ? MENDENHALL<lb/>
<pb facs="00058206_0004"/><lb/>
?be Saat (Earnltnian<lb/>
k3<lb/>
yEP-THAhlK to TH'&amp;ivweNT;<lb/>
FARMING A M6-AP?ASER WoW-<lb/>
AHfrMAKlN MUCH fAOHeiTHOdG?<lb/>
I<lb/>
David Herring, General m.okvf<lb/>
1 ori Martin, I ditot<lb/>
I n i 1 I Nb Ki i Pirn lot oj WrerfisiHfl<lb/>
v w-l II i 1 i NKINS k , V os I ditot<lb/>
M kRGl MoKIN, -t News Jitor<lb/>
 ? Roi IN! ClJSlCK, futures I iitot<lb/>
 h in 11 v ki k, Issl Features ,iifi<lb/>
Mu uaei Martin, Spon ' rfifw<lb/>
PHONG I I ONG, I redit Manager<lb/>
Sii'AKi Rosner, Business Manager<lb/>
PAM1 1 A Coi'l . -U li'i'i Sufvn'iM'r<lb/>
M n i ii vv Kk i i! i R, Circulation Manager<lb/>
Trac "i Weed, Production Manager<lb/>
TiiomasH BARRY VI Issl Sports Editor Sim Reid, Staff ffhistratoi<lb/>
CARRU ARMSTRONG, Entertainment Editoi CHARLES WiLUNGHAM, Darkroom Technician<lb/>
S on Maxwi i i, Satire I ditoi<lb/>
Hi hi LuiTON, Set retary<lb/>
Ilk f ast amlinian has been serving the EatfCamlira campus community since 1925, with primary emphasis on in-<lb/>
fomiationmostdircctl affecung ECU students. It is published twice weekly, with a circulation ol 12,000. 1 he last<lb/>
Carolinian reserves the right to refuse ot discontinue am advertisements thai discriminate on the basis ol age, sex.<lb/>
creed oi national origin The East Carolinian welcomes letters expressing all points ol ic? For purposes c4 decency<lb/>
and brt it. rhc East Carolinian reserves the right to edit am Icttei foi publication I ettcrs should be sent to I he East<lb/>
Carolinian. Publications Bldg ECU,Greenville.NC, 2 TC34; oi call usai (919) '5 ' 6366<lb/>
CAW, VJZ'Ufo<lb/>
IS Wlll&amp;rVf1<lb/>
Opinion<lb/>
Page4, Tuesday, April3 1990<lb/>
M life ??(?<lb/>
The global grain drain <lb/>
Our waning food security<lb/>
Should they be paid to play?<lb/>
In recent weeks I he issue of college athletes serves the purpose ol education of the masses.<lb/>
receiving pay for their services has sparked Instead, colleges are hig businesses, players in<lb/>
controversy In the Nationalollegiate Athletic the prime time arena, where a good atheletic<lb/>
Association rhe main concern stems from an team can mean five 01 even seven digits in the<lb/>
c A rule that states if athletes are on scholar mone categon<lb/>
ship, the m,n not receive any financial com tl mone is no! the only thing Prestige<lb/>
pla sa big pan in the development ol anattrac-<lb/>
By Nathaniel Mead<lb/>
I ditorial Columnist<lb/>
Dale Broun head coach ol the 1 ouisiana live universit) It is important because it at-<lb/>
m no I lni ersih i igers said in an interview on tr.u Is a large number ol re nuts<lb/>
lhen there i- the c A fhey make all the<lb/>
ilu'ii hands in everybody s pocket<lb/>
Bui because ol their hard work and dedica-<lb/>
tion should studenl athletes be paid twiceover?<lb/>
No<lb/>
i in -m uhliti being paid 1 hey get a<lb/>
1'SPN ih.it student athletes should be paid<lb/>
Some of them (players) can't even afford to bu) mone Ihey make all the rules and they have<lb/>
? .1 i. .  i  I- . 4  L 1 .<lb/>
,i sports i oat<lb/>
But w here must the line be drawn between<lb/>
college and professional sports It seems these<lb/>
davs wi have forgotton exactly what purpose<lb/>
college sports are supposed to serve<lb/>
Havers are now asking for money to sup free education free room and board and books<lb/>
meni th, free ride thev alreadv get from rhey are getting what a lot of young Americans<lb/>
scholarships It's not enough that thev get a fro are not able to gel an education,<lb/>
education Ibex wanl to gel payed to leam rhe American society has looked to colleges<lb/>
I , k hes are pushing th? ii ath letes farther and universitii s as a stepping stone tor profes-<lb/>
than ever before Anacademi. life is important sional sports rhe have overlooked the lmpor-<lb/>
because if the student athelete does not pass his tanceand necessity of an educanon in todays<lb/>
classes, he can't play. And if they don't play, the world<lb/>
team does no! win ? .<lb/>
The amount of pressure that is put on these rhe mone would be nice, but not all oi<lb/>
studenl athletes must also be recognized 1 he) these athletes will turn professional. If thev do,<lb/>
pul ,n endless hours ol training, practice and tho can thank the colleges and universities for<lb/>
, f 11 ir years of practice. If they don't, they can still<lb/>
Adn rs push the ?aches t . thank the colleges and universities for an edu-<lb/>
duceawinningleai ' fterall colli ger ?1 riger cation<lb/>
We know all about the "il<lb/>
"shocks" that upset tho global<lb/>
economy in the lQ(K But those<lb/>
days we are faced with the possi<lb/>
bilityofa "shock ofanotherkind:<lb/>
a massive shortage ol grain and<lb/>
soaring food prices. Other than<lb/>
farmers, politicians, and intema<lb/>
tional bankers, most Americans<lb/>
haven't even thought about the<lb/>
global food supply But this sup<lb/>
ply is expected to become a crisis<lb/>
situation in the near future, and<lb/>
the causes are rooted in agricul-<lb/>
tural economkxarKi the rising food<lb/>
demandsof our burgeoning world<lb/>
population.<lb/>
Today's farmers make up loss<lb/>
than 2 percent ol the United States<lb/>
population yet still produce<lb/>
enough food to feed all of us and<lb/>
provide more than 85 percent of<lb/>
tho world's surplus as well. At tho<lb/>
same time, however, our food<lb/>
system taxes our natural resource<lb/>
base severel v. consuming tar mo re<lb/>
land, steel, and energy through<lb/>
production, transportation, proc-<lb/>
essing, and marketing than any<lb/>
other sector ot the economy. And<lb/>
supplying food at low cost is this<lb/>
country's biggest business more<lb/>
money is spent each day on food<lb/>
than on any other commodity.<lb/>
Thus food is a major cog in the<lb/>
economic machinery of theUnited<lb/>
States<lb/>
These days the power over<lb/>
America's tinnl supply isconcen-<lb/>
tratod in fewer and tower hands<lb/>
Today, tour multinational corpo-<lb/>
rations control nearly 40 percent<lb/>
ot tho L.S. grain market. More<lb/>
powerful than tho Pentagon and<lb/>
tho White 1 louse, these corporate<lb/>
giants can choose whether to<lb/>
export gram say, to help bal-<lb/>
ance the deficit in trade payments<lb/>
or to feed millions ot people in<lb/>
need oi food. International finan-<lb/>
ciers dictating orders to beei im-<lb/>
porters are ruthless m their profi-<lb/>
teering schemes, mindlessly sac-<lb/>
rificing half the world's rain-<lb/>
forests (along with millions of<lb/>
indigenous peoples, like the hun-<lb/>
dreds of Amazon Indian tribes)<lb/>
just to raise beef cattle and hence<lb/>
cheaper hamburgers for 1 s fasl<lb/>
food (hams<lb/>
The heavyweighl ?: i ite<lb/>
deal making going on ii<lb/>
these days shows jusl how p iwer<lb/>
tul the multinationalists grip on<lb/>
the food industry really is When<lb/>
managers of K1K Nabisco i ffered<lb/>
to buy out its stockholders tor SI<lb/>
billion, kohlberg Kravis Roberts<lb/>
immediately quickly ou I bid tin n<lb/>
with $?4.53 billion a deal coor<lb/>
dinated behind the scenes by two<lb/>
of the world's most powerful<lb/>
banks. Citibank andhase Man<lb/>
hattan Philip Morris ('os Ini<lb/>
recently bought Kraft Irw for$12 6<lb/>
billion The immense scale of these<lb/>
deals raises big questions aboul<lb/>
the frenzied level of debt financed<lb/>
restructurings that are transform<lb/>
ing much of corporate Amcrii i<lb/>
and whether it has gone too far<lb/>
()ne repen ussion is that the food<lb/>
system itself has become increas<lb/>
ingly unstable<lb/>
Meanwhile, farm bankrupt<lb/>
cies, now approaching Greal<lb/>
Depression levels maybe anotri<lb/>
symptom of this creeping insta<lb/>
bility. The major economic blow.<lb/>
accordingtoa 1985 Wall Street Jour<lb/>
tutl mbc1oii Wfcy Ihc ramm Crisis<lb/>
is 1 ikelv to Worsen has boon a lJ0<lb/>
percent increment in farminterei I<lb/>
expense, averaging$8 billion and<lb/>
concentrated among small and<lb/>
middle sized tanners in partii<lb/>
lar Despite increasing income<lb/>
from farm assets, annual farm<lb/>
income(afterinterestexpense)f 1!<lb/>
i'n the average between Si bil<lb/>
lion and $20billion from theearl<lb/>
1950s to the early 1980s, rhe de<lb/>
cline corresponds closely with the<lb/>
increase in interest expense farn<lb/>
ers paid on loans that enabled th? n<lb/>
to participate m rising land allies<lb/>
during that time.<lb/>
A major fa t?r behind the<lb/>
medium-sized farm'sdemiseisthe<lb/>
constantly manipulated value ol<lb/>
the American dollar relative to<lb/>
foreign currencies. Because fthe<lb/>
need for more i apital. the farmer<lb/>
is especially vulnerable to the<lb/>
Federal Reserve's manipulation ol<lb/>
interest rates, which is basicall)<lb/>
- bankrupting him. I he Brookings<lb/>
Institution ,ud various other tri-<lb/>
lateral foundations originated th<lb/>
nonetary programsimpli i<lb/>
by the I ederal Reserve I<lb/>
small ? 1 ? Hum ?? i<lb/>
i ,u; farm rs I his is I<lb/>
'<lb/>
UlS! 1.1. V<lb/>
.? ?? h ? irmer will ?<lb/>
1 ti iUl -ive il h :??<lb/>
vorkerol th . ' I<lb/>
ness trusts<lb/>
? ? .i ? <lb/>
it tl ? iditional fi irmula l<lb/>
land phis laboi for the farmei<lb/>
?' due ti- th( fan<lb/>
rchasi<lb/>
mod- ? I' .<lb/>
inci their I<lb/>
inputs but getting '? ? Iron<lb/>
thel ? ' liscussed i<lb/>
, ? ?? .? h.c ' '?<lb/>
? S ii input ?'???' '?' ' ? ? '<lb/>
? ? h i<lb/>
? fertilizers pi -1<lb/>
herbicides drying,ir<lb/>
tm in and transporl I<lb/>
can farmers have been sed<lb/>
theglossv im ?. ? '<lb/>
vi- n<lb/>
e x t remel r per - a<lb/>
to. hi proje n.M sol<lb/>
ri indicati i<lb/>
diminishing of marginal return U ?<lb/>
- mT??,??? rilr? - ? ,v '<lb/>
In. p.273 ?<lb/>
though we u i ?<lb/>
) ro i ? ??<lb/>
lion I<lb/>
ve pu t<lb/>
I rtihi is<lb/>
?<lb/>
' ? iit dm ; '<lb/>
ultu ?? ' -<lb/>
alh indu i<lb/>
has n dm ed our arabk<lb/>
net apacih to produce ('?<lb/>
grazing and oven roppii<lb/>
r suit inextensive I ps? il n ??<lb/>
are s i ii us problems in -1;<lb/>
trieswith 1 Ibilli<lb/>
losses of forests have cKcurred<lb/>
at least 24 devel ing ?ui I<lb/>
I he major incentiv e f i<lb/>
ing forests to (roplan I<lb/>
mg fields is ol coui - I<lb/>
demand for food nd<lb/>
ests go i ai th loses it<lb/>
itvtokeep. 02in Iie k hei<lb/>
climate crisis intensities witl<lb/>
colder winters and hotter<lb/>
mers. k ading t i short r p<lb/>
See loud,page 5<lb/>
?<lb/>
Campus Spectrum<lb/>
Historical evidence supports Christian doctrine and teachings<lb/>
 ? ?t -????U ?V 1 LnAorc ih?il i<lb/>
in A i t, half Of Ki ine w i<lb/>
bun e lb) a nine-day fire and Nero<lb/>
relentli ssly persecuted a religious<lb/>
se t know n ahristianit) b)<lb/>
using them as scapegoats for star!<lb/>
mg that fire Ioday there is an<lb/>
invisible tire ot hatred and greed<lb/>
that has consumed the political<lb/>
state of the world in which Bill)<lb/>
loci makes his musical statements<lb/>
about the tunes we live and the<lb/>
hearts of men<lb/>
Christianity didn't start the<lb/>
tire then, nor did it start the tire<lb/>
UnJav In the Christian faith, it is<lb/>
i learlv understood that all people<lb/>
of aD persuasions (includingChris-<lb/>
tians) stand guiltybeforea perfect<lb/>
i reator. So do I, if I have rebelled<lb/>
against a fellow creature or his<lb/>
(reator. Only the cascades of sav<lb/>
mg love put the flames that have<lb/>
scorched man's conscious.<lb/>
I befieve this love can be ex-<lb/>
pressed ingenuint concern for the<lb/>
world in action and most impor<lb/>
tantly through prayer to change<lb/>
the human heart. The world will<lb/>
not change nor will man change<lb/>
until his heart is i hanged and radi<lb/>
cally transformed.<lb/>
I U not feel thai Christianity,<lb/>
nor c hristian leaders in America<lb/>
,ir?' to blame tvt the st.ito ot .ittairs<lb/>
inentral America which leads<lb/>
me to detail the nature ot c hristi<lb/>
amtv itself. ohn R W. Stott, tin<lb/>
honorary chaplain of the queen ot<lb/>
1 neJand.detmestho( hristian taith<lb/>
bv stating it is to commit our<lb/>
seh.es, heart anil mind soul and<lb/>
will, home and life, personally and<lb/>
unreservedly to esushrist We<lb/>
must hianfcieourselves before him<lb/>
Ve must trust inhtmasoursaviof<lb/>
and submit to him asour Lord; and<lb/>
then go on to take out places as<lb/>
loyal members of the c hurch and<lb/>
responsible ltionsin thocommu<lb/>
ruty<lb/>
This is not tho case for a major-<lb/>
ity of American people so how can<lb/>
it be stated that we live in ahns<lb/>
tian nation. T his lifestyle above is<lb/>
not a living realitytor our nation as<lb/>
a whole. America is primarily a<lb/>
secular nation.<lb/>
RjG Sproul, author of "Life<lb/>
ews. Stated: "Our nation is not<lb/>
pagan because paganism is a pre-<lb/>
( hristian condition where the<lb/>
(.ospol has never been preached<lb/>
i. lurs is what I call a secular<lb/>
environment, a secular society.<lb/>
! he sot ulanzation of the Ameri-<lb/>
cans c letv isa post-Christian phe-<lb/>
nomenon<lb/>
Steve Sommers proposed in<lb/>
his article Student questions va-<lb/>
hditv of Christianity" in the March<lb/>
15 issue ot Ihel tvt Carolinian that<lb/>
there are two type's of people in<lb/>
respect to the acceptance of a par-<lb/>
ticular taith. He pointed out that<lb/>
there ,uv those who follow popu-<lb/>
lar myths and those who are per-<lb/>
secuted tor not following them. If<lb/>
he intends that to point to the<lb/>
C hnstian faith as a belief in myth,<lb/>
1 would call this into question.<lb/>
.B.rhilhpspointsoutthat"a<lb/>
myth, being pre-scientific and<lb/>
imaginative, attempts to explain<lb/>
some phenomena  more accu-<lb/>
ratelv as an effort to reach a feel-<lb/>
ing of satisfaction 1 would sum<lb/>
up mvth as being a blind faith<lb/>
with no good reasonable evidence<lb/>
for such a belief. 1 would answer<lb/>
Sommers' question about myths<lb/>
in relation to what we know about<lb/>
Jesus, His life, His death and His<lb/>
resurrection.<lb/>
There are public points of<lb/>
testimony given by eye witnesses<lb/>
in the New Testament. The resur-<lb/>
rection itself is a historical time<lb/>
and space event with sufficient<lb/>
evidence to be worthy of investi-<lb/>
gation. The testimony of history<lb/>
and law; the testimony of theearly<lb/>
church fathers; the resurrection<lb/>
scene where Jesus was dead, the<lb/>
tomb itself, the burial, the stone,<lb/>
the Roman seal, the Roman<lb/>
guards; the fear of the disciples;<lb/>
and the post-resurrection appear<lb/>
ances to support it as being an<lb/>
actual event and to support the<lb/>
validity of Christianity.<lb/>
Sommers brought into ques-<lb/>
tion how we, Christians, can trust<lb/>
a book written about 2000 years<lb/>
ago. 1 feel you did not seek to look<lb/>
at the New Testament in compari-<lb/>
son to other books of antiquity.<lb/>
From Norman C.eisler's research<lb/>
as a current professor of religion<lb/>
at Liberty Universitv, he states:<lb/>
"The New Testament is the most<lb/>
well authenticated document from<lb/>
the ancient world. There are more<lb/>
manuscripts of the New Testament<lb/>
ot an earlier date and more reh<lb/>
able nature than anv other book oi<lb/>
antiquity"<lb/>
One of the greatest biblical.<lb/>
archaeologists, W.F. Albright,<lb/>
stated in 1963 in Christianifv<lb/>
Todav that: "In mv opinion, every<lb/>
book of the New Testament was<lb/>
written by a baptized lew between<lb/>
the forties and the eighties of I he<lb/>
first century A.D<lb/>
This would not leave a 2,(W<lb/>
year gap, but at the most, a 20 year<lb/>
gap between some of the histon<lb/>
cal events and the written testi-<lb/>
mony in the New Testament.<lb/>
Jesus did not come to change<lb/>
Judaism and the religious institu-<lb/>
tion of the synagogue. He himself<lb/>
studied there and later he and his<lb/>
disciples taught and reasoned with<lb/>
the religious leaders about tho<lb/>
same things l am discussing now<lb/>
about the validity of Christi in<lb/>
ity. esus did not come to change<lb/>
ludaism but tii fulfill it<lb/>
It one is going to question the<lb/>
validity of Christianity then you<lb/>
must come face to face with the<lb/>
evidence ot tho resurrection ot<lb/>
historical esus as (. ,od in the flesh<lb/>
whichstandsat theptnnacleof the<lb/>
Christian taith<lb/>
I will stand in agreement w ith<lb/>
the apostle Paul who wrote in U<lb/>
Corinthians 114. 17: It Christ<lb/>
has not been raised then our<lb/>
preaching is in vain . It for this<lb/>
life onlv we have hoped in Christ<lb/>
we are of all men most pitied "<lb/>
So it there is no resurrection<lb/>
then there is no real Christianity<lb/>
all but if the resurrection and tl<lb/>
claimsof Christ are validated, tl<lb/>
1 le is either a liar, a lunatic or 1<lb/>
of all.<lb/>
Brian Creech<lb/>
Senior<lb/>
Psychology<lb/>
<pb facs="00058206_0005"/><lb/>
The East Carolinian. April 3. 1990 5<lb/>
To the Editor<lb/>
Writer pays<lb/>
tribute to<lb/>
his mentor<lb/>
To the editor<lb/>
I ewisMumford,my mentor's<lb/>
mentor, died in January Kirkpa<lb/>
trick Sate wrote an obituary in the<lb/>
February l9editionoi Nation, call-<lb/>
ing him the wisest Americancritk<lb/>
ot the twentiethenturv" who pro-<lb/>
duced the most trenchant and<lb/>
farsighted philosophy" of his age<lb/>
1v mentor, R Cop preaching<lb/>
in the titties, said that beside him,<lb/>
Arnold Toynbee was "a babe in<lb/>
swaddling clothes<lb/>
I lowever, East Carolina is not<lb/>
Food<lb/>
the only uni versify whoso students<lb/>
I ha ofound totally unfamiliar with<lb/>
Mumtord'sname. 1 lis work is long,<lb/>
published in books (many of them<lb/>
in loyner Library) and magazine<lb/>
pieces (especially The New Yorker).<lb/>
His later social criticism, perhaps<lb/>
culminating in The Pentagon of<lb/>
Tower" 11470), is rooted in his ear-<lb/>
lier urban and architectural criti-<lb/>
cism, of which 1 can personally<lb/>
recommend'Sticks and Stones, The<lb/>
Culture of Cities ami "Technics<lb/>
and Civilization His scholarship<lb/>
ot the history and culture ot tech-<lb/>
nology is magisterial.<lb/>
In recent years, he wrote<lb/>
memoirs of his years growing up<lb/>
in and around New York Citv le<lb/>
was lM when he died.<lb/>
Carroll Webber<lb/>
Mathematics (retired)<lb/>
Noise issue<lb/>
concerns<lb/>
Greenville<lb/>
resident<lb/>
To the editor:<lb/>
This letter is written to give<lb/>
vnu a Greenville resident's opin-<lb/>
ion about noisy neighbors. 1 live<lb/>
close to the university and some<lb/>
of my neighbors are students. Oc-<lb/>
casionally they have parties, and<lb/>
sometimes they are noisy. If their<lb/>
doors and windows are closed<lb/>
and mine are too the noise doesn't<lb/>
bother me much. But when the<lb/>
participant s start runningoutsido,<lb/>
whooping, yelling, and making<lb/>
other strange sounds as the party<lb/>
progresses, usually about 2 am 1<lb/>
object.Itisalso unpleasant to have<lb/>
the bass from their music thump-<lb/>
ing away inside my house.<lb/>
Giving people permits to<lb/>
make excessive noise is the same<lb/>
as giving them the right to disturb<lb/>
my peace. They are actually com-<lb/>
ing into my home uninvited. Is<lb/>
that fair? Is it right? 1 would ask<lb/>
Mr. Roakes to consider mv feel-<lb/>
ings too when he makes his re-<lb/>
quest to the City Council to rein-<lb/>
state the noise permit.<lb/>
Sincerely yours,<lb/>
Margaret). Rosett<lb/>
Greenville Resident<lb/>
Continued from page 4<lb/>
MINI STORAGE<lb/>
seasons and extremely turbulent<lb/>
weather conditions. This, of<lb/>
course, will further jeopardize the<lb/>
foixl system.<lb/>
Small and medium sized<lb/>
farms continue to he gobbled up<lb/>
by large agribusinesses or paved<lb/>
over by urban sprawl. Everyday<lb/>
in the United States, 12 square<lb/>
miles ot prime farmland are lost<lb/>
to developers. According to<lb/>
American Farmland Trust, this<lb/>
adds up to more than three tril-<lb/>
lion acres ot productive soils that<lb/>
are consumed each year by ur-<lb/>
banization And since the control<lb/>
ot food production and farm<lb/>
equipment manufacture is being<lb/>
concentrated in the hands of fewer<lb/>
and fewer people, our food sys<lb/>
tern has become increasingly<lb/>
vulnerable to ecological problems<lb/>
and less adaptive in times of eco-<lb/>
nomic stress<lb/>
I he agribusiness monopoly<lb/>
also means, ultimately . that con-<lb/>
sumers have lesscontrol inchoos-<lb/>
ing thi kind and quality ot food<lb/>
eaten. The three thousand-plus<lb/>
different chemical additives cir-<lb/>
culating in our food supply may<lb/>
ha e innumerable ad verseeffects<lb/>
on all variety ol biological sys-<lb/>
nervous systems Most of these<lb/>
chemicals .ire either untested or<lb/>
very loosely tested for their effects<lb/>
on human biology. In 1981,George<lb/>
Bush, then chairman of the Task<lb/>
Forceon Kegulatorv Relief, recom-<lb/>
mended a freeze on the entire sys-<lb/>
tem of testing agricultural pesti-<lb/>
cides and controlling hazardous<lb/>
industrial chemicals (league ot<lb/>
Conservation Voters, Wash D.C<lb/>
1988).<lb/>
People cannot survive with-<lb/>
out food. And vet the L .S food<lb/>
system, as presently structured,<lb/>
would suffer a severe breakdow n<lb/>
under Depression conditions.<lb/>
Ironically it is the food system it-<lb/>
selt which might catapult us into<lb/>
major economic decline, because<lb/>
food is built into cost-of-living<lb/>
increases,and inflation has hit food<lb/>
prices harder than any other com-<lb/>
modity in recent years. Most<lb/>
Americans hav e been obliv ious to<lb/>
the fact that widespread contami-<lb/>
nation of their food via pesticides<lb/>
and thousands of additives' has<lb/>
occured since World War 11. But<lb/>
they could not ignore the mass<lb/>
toiHi shortages which would en-<lb/>
sue in the event ot a t rash, or with<lb/>
terns, including the immune and the successive droughts predk ted<lb/>
as a result of our escalating cli-<lb/>
mate crisis. According to Lester<lb/>
Brown, President ot the<lb/>
WorldWatch Institute, if another<lb/>
drought-reduced harvest like the<lb/>
one in 1988 occurs, the amount of<lb/>
gram ted to livestock would have<lb/>
to be drastically reduced to avert<lb/>
a global food emergency.<lb/>
As the "breakbasket or the<lb/>
world the United States is faced<lb/>
with two monumental challenges.<lb/>
 irst, we must reverse the green-<lb/>
house effect. Second, we must<lb/>
adopt more sustainable, ecologi-<lb/>
cal methods of food production.<lb/>
With fertile cropland on the wane,<lb/>
future food securitj depends on<lb/>
safeguarding it both from con-<lb/>
version to nortfarm uses the<lb/>
asphalt deluge or suburban<lb/>
sprawl and from the erosion<lb/>
that reduces its inherent produc-<lb/>
tivity. In this regard, fapan and<lb/>
China may serve as models for<lb/>
the Untied States and other coun-<lb/>
tries. Faced with acute land pres-<lb/>
sures, these countries have estab-<lb/>
lished an approach to cropland<lb/>
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Lester Brown suggests that.<lb/>
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preferred Above average salary andbene<lb/>
Ms Write or call ITC rravel J55 5075 The<lb/>
Plaza P.O Box 1514 G ville M 27sY<lb/>
si MM1 K BABIsi II K NI I DEDiFlex<lb/>
ible hours, own transportation .itui refer<lb/>
ences required call 355 0783<lb/>
BIGSPI ASH GOLF IMI R: Seeks part<lb/>
time employeesoverage needed irom<lb/>
8:00 a.m to 12 00 midnight Call 758 1341<lb/>
to arrange an interview Golf knowledgi .1<lb/>
pills<lb/>
ATTEN rON-HIRINC I ovi rnmentjobs<lb/>
your area S17.840-Sf9,485.ill 1 602 838<lb/>
sss i Ext K 285<lb/>
ATTENTION: Earn money reading<lb/>
books' S32,OOl .? ir me potent il<lb/>
Details (1)602 K 8885 Ext Bk 5285<lb/>
IKII IK II Bl Ml Is' Q<lb/>
and casir is, i him Ml tioi<lb/>
?-  ?? ?<lb/>
IRI f IK II Bl Mils nes now<lb/>
hiring! All positi ns!S17 0-S58.24 Call<lb/>
?? : 838 888 . Ext. <lb/>
Mil NTION I M Mi l 1 WAT M-<lb/>
I . I ' s . '<lb/>
lota ? ? ' ? : ? ? ' '? -<lb/>
and store wide discount Apply npei<lb/>
Brody s Hw PUza Von Wed I i ;<lb/>
BRODVS-Are you a college srudei ?<lb/>
need erf extra spenduig money Bi <lb/>
accepting appli ations t. u p.irt tune sale-<lb/>
associates and customer sen i e represi i<lb/>
t.itm-s whin an work flexible hours<lb/>
in person Brody's Dae PUza Mon '?<lb/>
1 4pm<lb/>
PERSONALS<lb/>
AI l I (.KM Ks i let ready i<lb/>
:nd annual P A Qu-O ???<lb/>
; r.iu ! uesday Apnl Ird .it the Vti<lb/>
!ripk specials!<lb/>
HAS Congratulations on ? gr<lb/>
Br 'ti ?? . ??<lb/>
Beetlegeusi ' ?? : ?? ? d . I ? ?<lb/>
Kaleih this weekend :? I i<lb/>
lot M)<lb/>
? ?<lb/>
?<lb/>
' ?<lb/>
?<lb/>
SUMMERFIELD APARTMENTS 3209 Summerplace Nev 1 and 2 bedrooms ? located across from Parker's Barbecue on Memorial Drive ? Available April 1, 1990 Contact Aaron Spain 355-6187 756-8060<lb/>
BRASSWOOD APIS. Brasswood Ct. New 1 &amp; 2 bedrooms ? located across from Lowes on Greenville Blvd ? available Ma 1st. 1990 Contact Aaron Spain 355 -61X7 756-8060<lb/>
IIHHill1 1<lb/>
WILLIAMSBURG<lb/>
M WOK<lb/>
APARTMENTS<lb/>
(loncord Drive<lb/>
New 1 &amp; 2 bedrooms<lb/>
? located behind<lb/>
Wal - Marl<lb/>
? available Aug 1st,<lb/>
Sept 1st, &amp; Oci 1st<lb/>
( ontact Aaron Spain<lb/>
355 -6IN7<lb/>
756-8060<lb/>
FREE<lb/>
PREGNANCY<lb/>
TESTING<lb/>
uhiio you wait<lb/>
I ree &amp; ' ontldentiaJ<lb/>
Services .vs Counseling<lb/>
Carolina Pregnancy Center<lb/>
757-0003 <lb/>
li! E. 3rd Sl<lb/>
The Lee Building<lb/>
Greenville, NC<lb/>
Hours<lb/>
M-F 9 am-5 pv.<lb/>
III I.PW I I l<lb/>
 . .<lb/>
itSDl nputei<lb/>
?? . ?<lb/>
P K I I IMI M I PI I' r daily wart<lb/>
 . ? ? ? i :<lb/>
liverv requh i Iwards<lb/>
? -<lb/>
I t 1 IIS(. I't s riON a<lb/>
pable pei i ?  . ? .?<lb/>
si.it : ? ' ?<lb/>
ness<lb/>
rk ability and<lb/>
ssentu<lb/>
Brodv s  i PI I a M i ?'?? I. 1-4 j<lb/>
HELP WANTED<lb/>
cooks dishwasl ers rs and wail<lb/>
stafl pph in ;?? "?? i il '? fessorCi<lb/>
?:esl Shopping ter8<lb/>
Ml N'S SPE IALTYSTOR1 king<lb/>
tor mature moh i i d iiduals with<lb/>
an interest in fashion and the desire to sell<lb/>
Good t nmne ?)ir<lb/>
DISPLAY Cl ASSI1 tEDS<lb/>
sll KK ? itt r'sgerl<lb/>
m'Dovouthinl - lr<lb/>
' ?<lb/>
CEEf KS: Creek Weekend was<lb/>
ok forward I next yeai '?<lb/>
CHI OMEGA<lb/>
?<lb/>
i Ml )MI (. <lb/>
I'l K VV II I IH.I- .<lb/>
end Wait I i I ? ?<lb/>
 ? ? ??  rk rva .<lb/>
Al I'M PI I I I'l <lb/>
PI k IM's Congral<lb/>
rothera ird, ? '?'<lb/>
? ? iei<lb/>
to gi  tS we woi<lb/>
.r.v.ir is! I no!<lb/>
?s ? Alpha Delta Pi Greek Mai ? ? ?<lb/>
Year. Congratuiat cns<lb/>
IRIPP ROAKES<lb/>
nus 110 i iarvs rk ai d di<lb/>
??. ful ire<lb/>
CM IK TianV .<lb/>
? I threi<lb/>
wonderful Life would besoempi<lb/>
out mi 1 Iapp i? ? -<lb/>
fore ei Idled I<lb/>
mSI'LA CT.ASSIUI D!<lb/>
ABORTION<lb/>
UNIVERSITY<lb/>
APARTMENTSFree Pregnancy<lb/>
2899 E. ?Testing<lb/>
?M-F B:30 - 4:00 p.m.<lb/>
? 1 ov.iud Near 11Sat. 10 - i p m.<lb/>
? Ni .ii Major Shopping Centers<lb/>
? 1 i 1 lius Serv ieeTriangle Women's<lb/>
? t insite Laundn<lb/>
. i A .? Health Center<lb/>
756-7815 oi s -4X(,<lb/>
?wum. kpt v ?K 1 . ' '<lb/>
<lb/>
lSv .  <lb/>
a  .  <lb/>
. ' ? i iff<lb/>
M 1 i 11M! H! s: 1 v , k.SSm<lb/>
K ? i i j .  j1-800-433-2930<lb/>
Announcements<lb/>
siM C AL OlA MP1CS VOLUN-<lb/>
TEERS M EDED<lb/>
W0 Greenville Pitt t ount) Special<lb/>
I . - . i ? ? ? imes will be held on<lb/>
pril 12 ? ui te. rs ir nei k d lo hdp<lb/>
serve as buddies chaperones tur the Spe<lb/>
. il Hvmpians Volunteers must be able<lb/>
to work a ?? m 9:00 a m 2:00 pm<lb/>
? ental meeting will be held on<lb/>
I. Apt ? d Joy nei 1 ihrarv Kinim<lb/>
? I ? ? ill volunteers who are<lb/>
? r . lunches and t<lb/>
shu . ? ? ided the day ot the<lb/>
y ?  rt leers who attended this<lb/>
nental - Foi more inturmarnin<lb/>
? . : ? ial (. Hympics office 830<lb/>
IMA<lb/>
rhi I ? u ial Management Association is<lb/>
pi - try vout<lb/>
k at pi ling th ??? nes Indus<lb/>
trial Vvera Vpnl 23. ontact anv<lb/>
FMAn ? ? rg by the finance office to<lb/>
luckv chance. I ast day to<lb/>
make prediction is April The<lb/>
it umati ? . . win S iO.OO<lb/>
GAMMA HI TA PHI<lb/>
? ? , , ? ??  til :? ??? ' ? lw Id pr.l II in<lb/>
lenkins auditorium at y p ni Offkerswill<lb/>
meet it B 10 p m I ton'l forget 'ur. ards<lb/>
.ir monev for fhe tati- Project<lb/>
PSICM<lb/>
Pa hi meeting Vpnl al .<lb/>
in Kawl 105 Pizza, I Iraw i<lb/>
and tun Just bring yourst If, S2 and<lb/>
attitude tor a ;ik time All n i<lb/>
 .1- d to show<lb/>
ASTROLOGY IKUKl<lb/>
Ir Robin B Barnes Professor of Hi<lb/>
at Davidson College will pres<lb/>
lecture on the topu Asti ?<lb/>
ion in Suttvnth Centur lei<lb/>
Tuesd.iv. April J, .it 7 p m<lb/>
?. ollege (lassroom Buildi .<lb/>
(. ampus), Room 1007 rhelect<lb/>
coaponsored by I'hi Alpha<lb/>
1 hstor 1 lonorsSociety and t<lb/>
and Renaissance Studies -<lb/>
lessor Barnes a graduati<lb/>
lege, received his Ph P ??<lb/>
sitv of Virginia, and v<lb/>
?V .1<lb/>
 I<lb/>
ton<lb/>
tblic<lb/>
eliR-<lb/>
ire v<lb/>
rheti<lb/>
M M4<lb/>
Prophecy and tn<lb/>
the Wake of th<lb/>
iM.inturd I niv<lb/>
osis Apocah<lb/>
uthei in N't<lb/>
t Press, i ?<lb/>
'11 he<lb/>
the<lb/>
ievd<lb/>
Pi ? <lb/>
i i 1<lb/>
:<lb/>
m in<lb/>
ation<lb/>
BOBin WATSON AND<lb/>
HORIZON<lb/>
The !1990 Eastern North arolina azz<lb/>
FestivaT on Friday, April 6 featun<lb/>
acclaimed Blue Note t. ord<lb/>
. Watson and 1 lorizon ! ;<lb/>
by Phi Mu Alpha fraterml the fesl<lb/>
will be held from 1 p. m until 6pm inth<lb/>
A 1 Fletcher Musk Center Admission is<lb/>
tree The Festival includes perl rn m es<lb/>
and clinics hv Bobby Wal<lb/>
d lion<lb/>
PS I CHI<lb/>
Attention all I'si Chi members We need<lb/>
youi ideas about prizes For what 'The I'm<lb/>
Chi booth at Barefoot n the Mall. Get<lb/>
ed! Contact LisaShepard (757-1437)<lb/>
r leave ideas In Palhi Mailbox in R-104.<lb/>
ton. the ECU jazz Ensembk and ECU la<lb/>
Band, and area hih school bands On<lb/>
Sunday, April B, the E I az2 i nsemble,<lb/>
directed by faculty bassist( arrolIV Dash<lb/>
iell, Jr, will feature Bobby Watson and<lb/>
Horizon as special guest artists on their<lb/>
spring roncert, scheduled tor 15 p m in<lb/>
Wright Auditorium Admission is free<lb/>
For more information call 75 t -? <lb/>
HI l IHI AIR<lb/>
nl i lealth and llness Fail<lb/>
 n Wedni sj.i. pril I from<lb/>
 p.n j ni in Mi morial i . m<lb/>
I si.iar, 1 loi pres<lb/>
in and fitness testing will be available<lb/>
along with a variety ol educational<lb/>
booths to help you live a healthy life!<lb/>
FRI i food and dooi ptios' For more<lb/>
il all (hi Student 1 lealth<lb/>
entei it 757-6794 oi the Intramural<lb/>
X reational v-?,i v i? es .it 757 6443! 1 ive a<lb/>
? ilthy life!<lb/>
NATIONAL STUDEN1<lb/>
EXCHANGI<lb/>
11 l students It's not to ite to apply<lb/>
:or NSI tor fall oi spring placements<lb/>
ngs .ire (ill n .i' able New<lb/>
11? i alifomia I't.ih si country<lb/>
Spend .in ?'?i iting w mi-str or t-ar in<lb/>
her state And remember, you only<lb/>
? ,i i i i tuirJ ' ' ome hv and see the<lb/>
list of universities available Contact<lb/>
Stephanie Evancho in 1002 G B or call<lb/>
7 6769 tor more information.<lb/>
IHI ANIMALS' MLM<lb/>
he Animals i dm viil be shown in<lb/>
li i.dnv 1 heati r on Itiesda April ji<lb/>
-j m Ihetilm : .inatedhv iuliei hnstie,<lb/>
examines societv s treatment of animals<lb/>
he event is sponsored hv 111 SETA<lb/>
and is tree and open to the public.<lb/>
PLANT iALL<lb/>
'hie FX I Biology club will be sponsor-<lb/>
ing a plant sale on Thursday, April and<lb/>
Friday, April6from7:30a m to 1 p m at<lb/>
the biology Greenhouse-Room S-lll.<lb/>
SCHOOL OF HOME ECO-<lb/>
NOMICS<lb/>
School of 1 lome Economics Annual Spring<lb/>
1'icnic, 4 p.m , Monday, April 23, Him Street<lb/>
Park Fried chicken, sott drinks, potatosalad<lb/>
rickets $.50 See member oi Phi U or<lb/>
A 11 E A for rickets Open to School oil lome<lb/>
Economics members and guests Please come<lb/>
and support the School o 1 lome Economics<lb/>
PHI UPS1LON OM1CRON<lb/>
Phi Upsilon Omkron II E Honorary Soci-<lb/>
ety will meet Monday, Apnl 9, at 5:15 in<lb/>
VanLandingham Kixim, Home Economics<lb/>
Building Election ot 1990-1991 officers<lb/>
Pizza served, social follows.<lb/>
SPECIAL EVENTS COMMIT-<lb/>
TEE<lb/>
The deadline for haying a bixth for Barefoot<lb/>
on the Mall will be Friday, April 6 There<lb/>
will be a S3 fee. Turn money in to the Central<lb/>
Ticket Office<lb/>
EAST CAROLINA FRIES PS<lb/>
An end of the year cookout will be held<lb/>
April 8 at River Park North from 1 30 until 4<lb/>
pm rain or shine Come with your little<lb/>
friend. There will bo food and games for<lb/>
everyone' For directions call Susan Moran<lb/>
at 737 b2t See you there!<lb/>
IHEECLj MODEL UNITED<lb/>
NATIONS JCLLB<lb/>
The ECU Model Nations Club will be hav-<lb/>
ing an organizations meeting tor the Fall of<lb/>
WO on Wednesday, April Ilart7 30 p m in<lb/>
Brewster C-105. 1 lardworking, dedicated<lb/>
and serious students are invited to become<lb/>
a part of ECU's fastest growing organiza-<lb/>
tion Discussion of Fall trips, fund raisers,<lb/>
and other important information will be<lb/>
addressed. Due to the date of the Geor-<lb/>
getown Conference, we will be seeking<lb/>
commitments by the end of THIS SEMES<lb/>
TER. If you are interested but unable to<lb/>
attend, call Steve-Pres. at 756-8699, Doug-<lb/>
  atu:M 9062, or see<lb/>
Political Science Depl<lb/>
:n the<lb/>
LASTLROWm SALL<lb/>
ECU District97 State Employees Associa<lb/>
tion of North Carolina 'st ANi will be<lb/>
selling homemade Faster Lollipops on<lb/>
Monday Ihursday, April g 2. on cam<lb/>
pus in the lobby oi the Student Supply<lb/>
Store and at the Vh.xl of Medicine in the<lb/>
corridor leading to the hospital, Br?dv<lb/>
Building The lollipops vcill sell tor S 50 to<lb/>
SI 25 each Proceeds will go towards ti<lb/>
nancing the activities ot the District<lb/>
WesZtel is a Christian fellowship which<lb/>
welcomes all students, and is sponsored<lb/>
tointlv bv the Presbyterian and Methodist<lb/>
Campus Ministries. Come to the Method<lb/>
1st Student Center (501 E Sth, across trom<lb/>
i iarrett dorm) this Wednesday night at 5<lb/>
pm and every Wednesday night tor a<lb/>
delicious, all you can eat home cooked<lb/>
meal (S2 25) with a short program after-<lb/>
wards Signed tor the hearing impaired<lb/>
Call 758-2030 tor more information<lb/>
MASSAGE CLINIC<lb/>
The ECU PT dub would like to invite all<lb/>
to our last massage clinic for this semester<lb/>
on Wednesday, April i at the BVlk Bldg<lb/>
The time is from 5 M)- 30p m Portions ot<lb/>
the money go to chant v Please bring shorts<lb/>
and T shirts or swimsuit tops Price is SI<lb/>
in advance- and $2 at the door tor 10 min<lb/>
utes (3) minutes max)<lb/>
NATIONAL STUDENT EX-<lb/>
CHANGE<lb/>
Having trouble gettingdassesIf you can't<lb/>
find it at ECU, trv going on exchange to<lb/>
one of over 8? universities in the US and<lb/>
take your classes in a differesnt environ-<lb/>
ment. Pay ECU tuition and study in an-<lb/>
other part of the country There are still<lb/>
openings tor next tall and spring semes<lb/>
ters Contact Stephanie Evancho in 1002<lb/>
v ?- B or call 757 ffg tor farther inl<lb/>
turn<lb/>
SAFER SEX!<lb/>
Did you know that condoms ban<lb/>
abstinence, when properly used car help<lb/>
reduce the risk ot spreding the AIDS vii is<lb/>
and other sexually transmitted, diseases II<lb/>
vo choose to be active be smart and 1<lb/>
responsible Protect vourselt and youi<lb/>
partner The student 1 lealth Center Ph.i:<lb/>
Ottacy sell latex lubricated condoms at the<lb/>
cost of one doen tor S2 IX).<lb/>
ECU SHCOQL OF MUSIC<lb/>
EVtNTSAZRJL3-9<lb/>
Angel Burns and Tim Legercvs voice I<lb/>
Recital (Apnl 3, 7pm. Fletcher Rectal<lb/>
1 lall, free); String Chamber Concert i April<lb/>
4, 8:15 pm Fletcher Rev ital 1 lall, tree<lb/>
Chamber Winds Concert (April V 7 p m<lb/>
Fletcher Recital Hall tree). Thomas Sulli<lb/>
van, trombone, lunior Recital iApril 9<lb/>
pm . Hetcher Recital Hall free); Eastern<lb/>
North Carolina la Festival teanmng<lb/>
clinics and performaces bv Bobbv Vat<lb/>
son and Honon ECU ja Ensemble<lb/>
ECU Jaz Band, and area high sehoo! ja<lb/>
bands, sponsored bv Phi Mu Alpha (April<lb/>
6, 1-6 pm, A I Fletcher Musk Center,<lb/>
free); Alex Pappas, violin, and kathv Al-<lb/>
exander, piano, Senior Recital (Apnl h 7<lb/>
pm, Fletcher Rectial Hall, invi Robin<lb/>
Lee, llute, and Rodney Howard, percus-<lb/>
sion. Senior Recital April fv 9 00 pi<lb/>
Fletcher Recital Hall, tree 1'niv.ersit<lb/>
ChoraleConcert (April 8,3 1p m . Wng<lb/>
Auditorium, free);ECU lazz Frsombla<lb/>
Concert with guest artists Bobbv W.itsast<lb/>
and Horizon" (April 8, 8 1 ; p m , Wright<lb/>
Auditorium, free) Percussion Fnsembkt<lb/>
Concert (April 9, S IS pm Fletcher Re?<lb/>
cital Hall, free) DIAL 757-4370 FOR '<lb/>
SCHOOL OF MUSICS RECORI<lb/>
CALENDAR OF EVENTS "<lb/>
<pb facs="00058206_0007"/><lb/>
The East Carolinian, April 3,1990 7<lb/>
Chair named at ECU Med School<lb/>
ECU News Hureau<lb/>
Pr. I Frank lames has boon appointed chairman<lb/>
ol the department of psychiatric medicine at the ECU<lb/>
School ot Medicine.<lb/>
ames a former commissioner ol the Oklahoma<lb/>
department ot mental health who joined the ECU<lb/>
? k ult) as a full professor last summer, was selet ted<lb/>
following a national sean h 1 le succeeds the found-<lb/>
ing hairman o( the E( l department ot psychiatric<lb/>
? ine, Dr lames 1 Ma this who joined the School<lb/>
i ? Medicine in 1977.<lb/>
? native ol Troy, N C . lames earned an under-<lb/>
duate degree at the Universit) t orth (. arolina<lb/>
s hapel Hill and his medical degree at the I niversity<lb/>
" nnessee in Memphis He completed an intern-<lb/>
Bo<lb/>
ship at the Medical College of Virginia in Richmond<lb/>
followed by residency training in aerospace medi-<lb/>
cine at the U.S. Navy Aerospace Medical Institute in<lb/>
Pensacola, Ha. and in psychiatry at Dorothea Dix<lb/>
1 lospital in Raleigh and Duke University.<lb/>
lames'scareer includesemployment asassociate<lb/>
deputv commissioner of mental health tor the east-<lb/>
ern region o North Carolina and superintendent of<lb/>
C henry 1 lospital His military career includes service<lb/>
as a flight surgeon at the U.S. Naval Aerospace<lb/>
Medk al Institute and as lieutenant commander and<lb/>
flight surgeon in Southeast Asia.<lb/>
The search committee that selected James was<lb/>
.haired by Dr. D.E Darnell lones, professor and<lb/>
chairman of the ECU department of obstetrics and<lb/>
gyne? ology.<lb/>
Continued from page 1 <lb/>
I<lb/>
I<lb/>
I<lb/>
I<lb/>
I<lb/>
I<lb/>
I<lb/>
I<lb/>
I<lb/>
I<lb/>
I<lb/>
I<lb/>
?<lb/>
I<lb/>
I<lb/>
I<lb/>
RACK ROOM SHOES<lb/>
GREENVILLE BUYERS MARKET - MEMORIAL DRIVE<lb/>
10<lb/>
TAKE AN<lb/>
E-X-T-R-A<lb/>
OFF OUR EVERYDAY LOW.LOW<lb/>
PRICES ON ENTIRE STOCK<lb/>
Mjst present coupon at time of purchase.<lb/>
Not valid with any other otter.<lb/>
Famous brand shoes at affordable price;<lb/>
ion efforts such as insulating theii<lb/>
mes t.1 save energy "Cheaper<lb/>
nergv today willbepaid forin the<lb/>
uture he added<lb/>
1 homas said he is against off-<lb/>
re oil drilling in Northaro<lb/>
We should not defile off-<lb/>
waters and take a chance "<lb/>
Id the audience 'Thetpress<lb/>
ises) from the petroleum<lb/>
c l tell you what you want<lb/>
ar. '<lb/>
! homas also said he opposes<lb/>
ng off the North Carolina<lb/>
 because there is already an<lb/>
 ssol natural cason the market<lb/>
tv.<lb/>
the staU<lb/>
Wll<lb/>
not<lb/>
efit from the exploration until<lb/>
there is a market. "Forwhatdowe<lb/>
take a chance?" Thomas asked.<lb/>
tt elected to the Senate, Tho-<lb/>
mas plans to protect state- lands ot<lb/>
c ultural and natural resource value<lb/>
such as Roan Mountain mu the<lb/>
(ireal 1 Hsmal Swamp, and he will<lb/>
support a $65 million cut in the<lb/>
rrst services' budget for road<lb/>
construction to protect undis-<lb/>
turbed wilderness .ire.is.<lb/>
Thomas supports federal as-<lb/>
sistance tor solid waste manage-<lb/>
ment, and he encourages the fed-<lb/>
eral purchase' it ncled materi-<lb/>
als. I lealso n antsthegovernment<lb/>
to establish programs to reduce<lb/>
the use of unrei vclable products.<lb/>
Cancer<lb/>
Thomas is calling for the<lb/>
United States to negotiate treaties<lb/>
with foreign governments to re-<lb/>
duce emissions that are damaging<lb/>
the ozone layer, and he wants the<lb/>
United States to take the lead in a<lb/>
complete phase out of chlo-<lb/>
roflourocarbons.<lb/>
1 homas previously served<lb/>
nine years in the North Carolina<lb/>
Senate He was chairman of the<lb/>
Appropriations Subcommittee on<lb/>
General Government and the<lb/>
Small BusinessCommittee.and he<lb/>
was co-chairman of the Senate<lb/>
1 inance Committee and the Waj s<lb/>
and Means Committee.<lb/>
Continued from page 1<lb/>
 nesandmonokinesarenatu-<lb/>
i , occurring molecules in the<lb/>
 the produce considerably<lb/>
? sidceffectsthanother drugs<lb/>
sed in the treatment oi cancer<lb/>
ente<lb/>
I'art of the EC I' studv is<lb/>
letl?rminca (eptabkd tsage<lb/>
-indtreatment into-rval5 at<lb/>
thecytkines illproide<lb/>
naximumpreitection agiitistthe<lb/>
of:hemotherapyandra<lb/>
??rap? without serkIUS 1 1nv<lb/>
li arkins.<lb/>
Ai5 to Kovas. 1 .dif-<lb/>
? ?ical moleulc's,ire<lb/>
i urrently being studied at institu-<lb/>
tions participating in the project.<lb/>
EC I scientist are studying five of<lb/>
the 10.<lb/>
Several ol the molecules pro<lb/>
 ideproto tion when given before<lb/>
motherapyand radiation treat-<lb/>
ments, t<lb/>
?we ei.<lb/>
u'ciiminarv<lb/>
studiesby Kovacsand I r Roberta<lb/>
ohnke,E( I assistant professor of<lb/>
radiation oncology, have demon-<lb/>
strated that other molecules ap-<lb/>
ide better protection<lb/>
when given as rescue agents"<lb/>
after the therap) has begun.<lb/>
"Laboratory studies have<lb/>
substantiated that more effective<lb/>
protection can be achieved when<lb/>
specific cvtokinesand monokines<lb/>
are given together said Kovacs.<lb/>
"Once researchers have estab-<lb/>
lished the proper dose levels and<lb/>
treatment sequences, clinicians<lb/>
will be able to intensify their ap-<lb/>
proach to cancer treatment by<lb/>
increasing the amount of radio-<lb/>
therapy and chemotherapy given<lb/>
to patients without serious con-<lb/>
cern for their effects on the normal<lb/>
blood-forming tissues<lb/>
c.0oY.JNeek<lb/>
real i el<lb/>
Organizing follness<lb/>
 J?))0 ? E<lb/>
arolina Univei sjt;<lb/>
"The Stampede'<lb/>
Monday. V<lb/>
1.5 mile Wellness Walk with ECU Celebrities<lb/>
Begin and end on the campus mall<lb/>
Meet at 12 ISpm<lb/>
Refreshments and Prizes<lb/>
? : ? 'triable shros and clothing<lb/>
Beach Volleyball Tourney i p<lb/>
the RE A ENTI<lb/>
. ?? a qoi Moi egeH<lb/>
. n . y ??? ? <lb/>
??:?' l ? I<lb/>
??:??:?' ? ?<lb/>
 .  . .<lb/>
'Moo-ving Experiences'<lb/>
187<lb/>
I uesday, April 3<lb/>
The Round-Up'<lb/>
Wednesday. Apnl 4<lb/>
Health Fair<lb/>
:???:??? ??morial Gymnasium<lb/>
iltl ????: Cholesterol (S3 50). Glaucoma<lb/>
? ?? od Pressure. Heightweight, visual<lb/>
acuity, fitness testing, educational exhibits,<lb/>
demonstrations, door prizes and refreshments<lb/>
. ? e your stn mag I : .<lb/>
jxingot the Attics i lyZoni<lb/>
medians Ma ; ki n I ott<lb/>
teehn First 100 pe ptethi ????<lb/>
;? - pm ; ? eed i<lb/>
versify Weflrv Projecl<lb/>
The Cow-medy Zone'<lb/>
Wednesday, April 4<lb/>
 ?? ??? H<lb/>
m Improvement for State<lb/>
. , ? ? Services<lb/>
for additional informatioi call Suz inne Kellerman at 757 6794 or Kathy Hill at 757-6387<lb/>
What Makes<lb/>
K&amp;W Cafeteria<lb/>
ECU's Favorite Cafeteria?<lb/>
Great Food .4our dishes and bakery goods are ma :? trotr<lb/>
scratcl not I its and mixes. It's freshly cooked through<lb/>
meal and s' i ? . ? '<lb/>
E Honest Value ireat food at reasonable prices and plenty<lb/>
At K&amp;W, value has been the bosit policy for 35 years and will<lb/>
continue to be tl policy f re'er.<lb/>
V Customer Service All our cafeterias are staffed t iisun<lb/>
. . ,? ut txakeatint. tinn - At K&amp;W th<lb/>
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V Volume Feeding K&amp;W's great food valui<lb/>
fromil me Ev n though we have the highest tston<lb/>
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mimii '? ,uth to each customer.<lb/>
V Pleasant Surroundings Diningroom lecorand<lb/>
? ents K&amp;Ws honest food value to give you a<lb/>
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kiVW<lb/>
K2etena<lb/>
M . . Ihurs 11 n? i .i in 1 0 p iv. 1:00 - ?" .<lb/>
I ? Sal II 00a m 8 ;i? p m Sun 11:01<lb/>
M.nint. Goldsboro. Fayetteville. and 11 " '<lb/>
Virginia ind Smith "arolina<lb/>
STUDENT UNION<lb/>
Hitchcock Double Feature<lb/>
Wed April 4<lb/>
Mov us Soreen at 8 pm in Hendrix Theatre<lb/>
1 REE Admission Valid ECU ID or Faculty, Staff Film Pass<lb/>
What's Up ECU?<lb/>
Call the Program Hotline for<lb/>
Entertainment Information<lb/>
757-6004<lb/>
Get Ready for Barefoot<lb/>
on the Mall!<lb/>
Coming Thursday, April 19<lb/>
STUDENT UNION<lb/>
STUDENT'tJNION<lb/>
<pb facs="00058206_0008"/><lb/>
2Hc iEaHt (Earolfnfan<lb/>
Page 8<lb/>
State and Nation<lb/>
April 3,1990<lb/>
Tax protest causes London riot<lb/>
LONDON tAP) - About 100<lb/>
peoplechanting "Can't pay, won't<lb/>
pay clashed with police in a<lb/>
second day ot anti-tax protests as<lb/>
a Cabinet minister toured the site<lb/>
of one of the worst riots in London<lb/>
this century. Police said tour<lb/>
people were arrested in Sunday's<lb/>
clash<lb/>
On Saturday, youths smashed<lb/>
windows, set cars ablae and<lb/>
battled police in Whitehall and<lb/>
Trafalgar Square for six hours af-<lb/>
ter a protest by 40.1HX1 people<lb/>
against a new tax denounced by<lb/>
opponentsas favoring the nch. At<lb/>
least 331 people were injured and<lb/>
341 arrested.<lb/>
Scotland "lard police head-<lb/>
quarters said 68 people arrested in<lb/>
the noting would appear in court<lb/>
Saturday on charges of disturbing<lb/>
public order, burglary, theft and<lb/>
assault, and had been kept in cus-<lb/>
tody.<lb/>
On Sundav, Prime Minister<lb/>
Margaret Thak her and opposition<lb/>
politicians agreed that a small<lb/>
group of extremists were to blame<lb/>
for turning what had been a peace-<lb/>
ful protest violent.<lb/>
Among those appearing in<lb/>
court Saturday were three men<lb/>
and a woman arrested Sundav<lb/>
when Home Secretary David<lb/>
Waddington, touring Whitehall,<lb/>
was met with protests. His car<lb/>
was damaged by protesters, who<lb/>
attacked him shouting: "No poll<lb/>
tax<lb/>
The tax, which took effect<lb/>
Sunday in England and Wales,<lb/>
replaces a property tax with a levy<lb/>
on each adult.Cri tics sayttisunfair<lb/>
because Britain's richest manpays<lb/>
the same amount as his gardener<lb/>
Politiciansofall political lean-<lb/>
ings said the rioters were enemies<lb/>
of freedom and demanded tough<lb/>
punishment.<lb/>
The demonstration organiz-<lb/>
ers, the All Britain Anti-Poll Tax<lb/>
Federation, blamed small groups<lb/>
of troublemakers without specifi-<lb/>
cally identifying them. They also<lb/>
accused police of losing control.<lb/>
Ms. Thatcher said the protest<lb/>
was "taken over by some extreme<lb/>
Shcivilians to the hospital, injured<lb/>
22 police horses and caused hun-<lb/>
dreds of thousands of dollars of<lb/>
damage.<lb/>
Of those injured only two<lb/>
police officers and two civilians<lb/>
remained hospitalized Sundav,<lb/>
police said.<lb/>
The heart of London looked<lb/>
like a war zone. Clean-up crews<lb/>
groups who used violence with cleared rubble and burned-out<lb/>
no consideration forothersor their<lb/>
property<lb/>
Labor Party chief Neil kin-<lb/>
nock, whose4 party is 2h points<lb/>
ahead ot Mrs. Thatcher's Conser-<lb/>
vatives in the polls, said those who<lb/>
caused the violence must be<lb/>
"treated as criminals" and pun-<lb/>
ished.<lb/>
Scotland Yard launched an<lb/>
investigation into the six-hour<lb/>
street battle that sent 58 police and<lb/>
cars from the streets and strollers<lb/>
wandered past boardod-up res-<lb/>
taurants, pubs and shops whose<lb/>
windows had been smashed<lb/>
In Trafalgar square on Sun-<lb/>
day, black smoke rose from con-<lb/>
struction cabins on the side ot a<lb/>
seven-storv building set on tire by<lb/>
the protesters. The South African<lb/>
Embassy across the street had<lb/>
smashed windows<lb/>
South African bloodshed continues<lb/>
Bv Chris Erasmus<lb/>
Gannett News Service<lb/>
CAPE OWN. South Africa<lb/>
Political violence and criminal<lb/>
savagen in South Africa's black<lb/>
townships now are at levels un-<lb/>
precedented in the nation's mod-<lb/>
em history particularly in the<lb/>
strife torn Indian Ocean province<lb/>
of Natal.<lb/>
1 he causes of the bloodshed<lb/>
in the past 10 days are numerous.<lb/>
White right-wing vigilantes<lb/>
are taking the law into their own<lb/>
handsbyattackingblacksinmany<lb/>
ot the conservative-dominated<lb/>
towns and rural areas.<lb/>
Young radicals of the anti-<lb/>
apartheid movement are ignoring<lb/>
calls tor peace from leaders such<lb/>
as Nelson Mandela. Opposing<lb/>
black factions in Natal are dra-<lb/>
matically increasing the violence<lb/>
in their 30-month-old feud parts<lb/>
ol the province are experiencing<lb/>
civil war.<lb/>
in the conservative mining<lb/>
town ot Welkom, in Orange Free<lb/>
State province, Law and Order<lb/>
Minister Adnaan Ylok was forced<lb/>
this week to hold emergency<lb/>
meetings with anti-apartheid lead-<lb/>
ers and right-wing whites in a bid<lb/>
to defuse the potential for an orgy<lb/>
of racial blood-letting.<lb/>
llis warnings primarily<lb/>
directed at white extremists, most<lb/>
of whom support the militant neo-<lb/>
Nazi Afrikaner Resistance Move<lb/>
ment appeared by week's end<lb/>
to be having some cooling effect.<lb/>
But elsewhere the picture is bleak.<lb/>
Observers believe the show-<lb/>
down this week between tens of<lb/>
thousands of anti-apartheid dem-<lb/>
onstrators and police in the Se-<lb/>
bokong township near Johan-<lb/>
nesburg, which left several do,o<lb/>
and more than 400 injured, was<lb/>
just an indicator of more to come.<lb/>
But in Natal, the bitter fac-<lb/>
tional feud K tween the tradition-<lb/>
alist all-Zulu Inkatha party and<lb/>
militant loyalists of the United<lb/>
Democratic Front-African Na-<lb/>
tional Congress alliance expkxaYd<lb/>
into the war it has threatened to<lb/>
become for more than two years.<lb/>
Sheilagh Gastrow, author of<lb/>
South Africa's political "Who's<lb/>
Who said the situation around<lb/>
Pietermaritzburg, the Natal pro-<lb/>
vincial capital, and Durban, the<lb/>
province's major port and com-<lb/>
mercial center "is now totally out<lb/>
of control, as some of us have been<lb/>
predicting tor years it would be<lb/>
one day.<lb/>
"Apart from the news reports<lb/>
of up to 10,000 or 12,000 (Zulu<lb/>
warnors facing up to each other in<lb/>
the township while hundreds of<lb/>
houses burn and thousands are<lb/>
left homeless all of which is bad<lb/>
enough ? the individual horror<lb/>
Stories are what is truly depress-<lb/>
ing she said.<lb/>
Gastrow said she had learned<lb/>
that in the past week, a black school<lb/>
headmistress returned to her homo<lb/>
in Natal province from an over-<lb/>
night trip and found it filled with<lb/>
voung militants.<lb/>
'When she asked them to<lb/>
leave, she was threatened and told<lb/>
that they knew her and the school<lb/>
where she taught and that they<lb/>
would kill her and her pupils it<lb/>
she did not leave. These voung<lb/>
thugs simply appropriated her<lb/>
home and belongings Gastrow<lb/>
said.<lb/>
"There has been a total break-<lb/>
down oi all authontv in manv of<lb/>
the violence-afflicted townshipsof<lb/>
the province, and personally 1 see<lb/>
no wav out of the situation<lb/>
Gastrow said "literally hun-<lb/>
dreds of women and children"<lb/>
sleep outside every night either<lb/>
because their homes have been set<lb/>
ablae or they are afraid to go to<lb/>
whatever home may be left.<lb/>
Savs Professor David Welsh,<lb/>
professor of political stud iesat the<lb/>
University of Cape Town. "There<lb/>
is no doubt that things have spun<lb/>
outof control completely in Natal.<lb/>
"It is clear that the situation<lb/>
has gone way beyond the original<lb/>
political differences between<lb/>
Inkatha and the UDF - 90 per-<lb/>
cent ot combatants have no idea<lb/>
what the original ideological basis<lb/>
oi the feud was all about<lb/>
But, added Welsh, There are<lb/>
a lot ol unscrupulous folk making<lb/>
good money out of the fighting,<lb/>
like the gunsmiths and the war<lb/>
lords who otter a dubious sort of<lb/>
protection<lb/>
"Nothing short of a national<lb/>
political settlement will end the<lb/>
fighting in Natal it will take<lb/>
something like Mandela and<lb/>
(Inkatha party leader Chief Man-<lb/>
gosuthu) Buthelezi touring the<lb/>
war-torn areas jointly calling tor<lb/>
peace<lb/>
Even with that kind of inter-<lb/>
vention, Welsh said, the "abiding<lb/>
socio-economic problems arising<lb/>
from apartheid still need to be<lb/>
addressed jobtessness,extreme<lb/>
poverty and lack of educational<lb/>
facilities among them<lb/>
While the inequities and ine-<lb/>
qualities that apartheid has<lb/>
spurned can be cited as the deep-<lb/>
seated causes ot the violence, it is.<lb/>
ironically, the latest and most far-<lb/>
reaching reforms initiated bv<lb/>
President FW.de Klerk that seem<lb/>
to be the spark.<lb/>
South Africans are now dis-<lb/>
covering that the Trench historian<lb/>
Alexis de Tocqueville was correct<lb/>
when he said that the most dan-<lb/>
gerous moment tor a bad govern-<lb/>
ment is when it seeks to mend its<lb/>
wav said Welsh.<lb/>
day<lb/>
Controversial day care<lb/>
bill passed by House<lb/>
By Judi Hasson<lb/>
Cannett News Service<lb/>
WASHINGTON ? The<lb/>
House swept aside conservative<lb/>
objections Thursday and passed a<lb/>
$27 billion plan to help lower-and religious care through a voucher<lb/>
middle- income parents find program for parents.<lb/>
number of provisions:<lb/>
? School-based care for<lb/>
"latchkev" children before and<lb/>
after regular school hours.<lb/>
Allowing existing state<lb/>
laws to block federal funding of<lb/>
quality day care for their children.<lb/>
Passed 265-145, the bill now<lb/>
goes to a conference committee<lb/>
w here it must be reconc i led with a<lb/>
less expensiv e Senate plan passed<lb/>
last year.<lb/>
"The leadership will now have<lb/>
Requirements that states<lb/>
meet health and safety guidelines<lb/>
within three years.<lb/>
? A $7 billion higher price<lb/>
tag ? over five years.<lb/>
The cost of the bill would be<lb/>
partially paid for bv extension of a<lb/>
Minimum wage rises<lb/>
The first minimum wage increase since<lb/>
1981 takes erfee' Sunday The hourly rate<lb/>
since the Fair LaDor Standards Act was<lb/>
enacted by Congress in 1938 $3 3.<lb/>
J<lb/>
14 1 90<lb/>
 $3 80'<lb/>
$4 25<lb/>
Criminal, drug cases soar<lb/>
Increases m the number of foderai ludgus and prosecutors<lb/>
have not Kpt pace with the dramatic rise in drug cases ?<lb/>
and other toderal criminal rases ? in t"e past 10 years<lb/>
Increase 1980-199CT<lb/>
All crjm na<lb/>
cases<lb/>
Drug<lb/>
; r<lb/>
DiStnd<lb/>
judges<lb/>
Prosecuto's<lb/>
Percentage ot federal<lb/>
criminal cases that<lb/>
involve drugs<lb/>
82.7"<lb/>
425"<lb/>
11 2?.<lb/>
11.4?<lb/>
108.1<lb/>
? ?<lb/>
" <lb/>
Lithuanian leaders<lb/>
refuse to back down<lb/>
'M US DtPI O' UiDO'<lb/>
Jo S"t"Ocn Garden News Sen ce<lb/>
MOSCOW (AP) A day af-<lb/>
ter Mikhail S. Gorbachev offered<lb/>
talks if Lithuania repeals its decla-<lb/>
ration of independence, Moscow<lb/>
stepped up the pressure by mov-<lb/>
ing dozens more armored person-<lb/>
nel carriers mto the republic's<lb/>
capital<lb/>
Rut leaders of the Baltic state<lb/>
stood firmly, refusing to back<lb/>
down from their March 11 decla-<lb/>
ration despite the Soviet<lb/>
president's warning that pressing<lb/>
on with secession could result in<lb/>
"graveconsequencesforallol us<lb/>
Lithuania's depute prime<lb/>
minister. KazimierasMotieka,told<lb/>
reporters in the capital, Vilnius,<lb/>
that his government "remains<lb/>
ready to negotiate and discuss any<lb/>
questions with the Soviet Union<lb/>
except that of independence<lb/>
The republic's president,<lb/>
Vytautas Landsbergis, said Gor-<lb/>
bachev was demanding "impos-<lb/>
sible things<lb/>
I ithuania's Parliament was to<lb/>
meet Monday morning to forge a<lb/>
response to Gorbachev's appeal,<lb/>
and Landsbergis said he would<lb/>
send negotiators to Moscow<lb/>
Monday to try to set up a meeting<lb/>
with Soviet officials.<lb/>
"It cannot be now demanded<lb/>
that we annul everything that we<lb/>
bore in our hearts he said in<lb/>
comments carried Sundav bv the<lb/>
official Soviet news agency lass<lb/>
The last Western correspon-<lb/>
dents were ousted from I ithuania<lb/>
on Sundav night on orders of the<lb/>
Soviet government, leading some<lb/>
Lithuanians to express tears ol an<lb/>
impending military crackdown.<lb/>
1 ist week, (Gorbachev said he<lb/>
would use force only it lives were<lb/>
threatened. But Soviet troops<lb/>
subsequently rounded up several<lb/>
dozen Lithuanians who had de-<lb/>
serted the Red Army. The troops<lb/>
also seized several buildings Fn-<lb/>
day, taking over the Lithuanian<lb/>
prosecutor's office and the main<lb/>
newspaper printing plant.<lb/>
Manv people worried that<lb/>
martial law would be imposed<lb/>
within days.<lb/>
"1 fear thev are going to start<lb/>
shootingone middle-aged Lithu-<lb/>
anian woman said Sunday.<lb/>
Western reporters counted<lb/>
nearly 30 armored vehicles being<lb/>
unloaded from trains that arrived<lb/>
near the Vilnius airport on Sun-<lb/>
dav. Othersdrove through the city,<lb/>
their treadsslicing into the asphalt<lb/>
apparently on their wav to a<lb/>
nearby base<lb/>
The reinforcement ol the<lb/>
Vilnius garrison came in broad<lb/>
daylight when manv residents<lb/>
were out for Sunday -trolls m the<lb/>
spring sunshine Motieka com-<lb/>
plained that the Soviet army had<lb/>
refused to inform the Lithuanian<lb/>
government about its activities<lb/>
n additional columnof some<lb/>
15armorcd personnel carriers had<lb/>
moved through Vilnius in the early<lb/>
morning hours, Lithuanian offi-<lb/>
cials said, the vehicles rolling into<lb/>
a military base in central Vilnius<lb/>
(.orbachev, in his first formal<lb/>
appeal siiw e the Lithuanian crisis<lb/>
began, said Sunday that the<lb/>
republic's chosen path towards<lb/>
independent e was "ruinous and<lb/>
will only lead to a dead end<lb/>
In an 18-line statement ad-<lb/>
dressed tol ithuania sParliament,<lb/>
he charged Lithuanian leaders<lb/>
with taking steps that "are openly<lb/>
challenging and insulting to the<lb/>
entire (Soviet) Union.<lb/>
"I propose that the 1 ithuanian<lb/>
Supreme Soviet immediately<lb/>
annul the illegal acts it has<lb/>
adopted (orbachev wrote in the<lb/>
appeal, which was prominently<lb/>
played Sundav on the front paces<lb/>
of major Soviet newspapers.<lb/>
 v said that onlv once Lithu-<lb/>
ania repealed its independence<lb/>
declaration could talks on seces<lb/>
sion begin. The SovietConstitution<lb/>
allows a republic the right to se-<lb/>
cede but otters no mechanism tor<lb/>
secession.<lb/>
Gorbachev has promised<lb/>
Lithuania and other independ-<lb/>
ence-minded Soviet republics to<lb/>
establish such a mechanism, but<lb/>
the measure presently before the<lb/>
Soviet legislature gives the Krem-<lb/>
lin final authority in such issues<lb/>
On Pridav, neighboring Esto-<lb/>
nia pledged to join Lithuania in its<lb/>
drive to regain independence lost<lb/>
in W40 when the Soviet Union<lb/>
forcibly annexed them along with<lb/>
the third Baltic republic. Latvia.<lb/>
Latvia is expected to pursue<lb/>
independence next month and<lb/>
possibly move with the caution<lb/>
exhibited bv the Estonians, who<lb/>
Opted to deter declaring a formal<lb/>
break from Moscow until after an<lb/>
unspecified "transition period<lb/>
to exert pressure to work things 3 percent telephone excise tax and<lb/>
Supreme Court debates lawsuit awards<lb/>
out said Rep Dale Kildee, D-<lb/>
Mich.<lb/>
1 louse Speaker Thomas Foley,<lb/>
D-Wash, called it "a landmark bill,<lb/>
one of the great achievements of<lb/>
the Congress and this era But<lb/>
President Bush's advisers will<lb/>
recommend he veto the measure<lb/>
unless it's revised and scaled back.<lb/>
bveliminauonof current child care<lb/>
tax credits for parents earning<lb/>
more than $90,000<lb/>
Throughout a nine-hour de-<lb/>
bate, Republicans sought to draw<lb/>
philosophical differences between<lb/>
their plan and the one supported<lb/>
by Democratic leaders. Democrats<lb/>
contended their proposal helps a<lb/>
broader range of families.<lb/>
Children were rarely men-<lb/>
tioned, although two members<lb/>
coincidentally brought youngsters<lb/>
to the House floor dunng the<lb/>
After months of internal<lb/>
squabbling and back room nego-<lb/>
tiating, 1 louse leaders fashioned a<lb/>
bill not radically different from a<lb/>
competing bill supported by the debate.<lb/>
White House. That proposal was<lb/>
rejected by a vote of 225-195. Democrats said their proposal<lb/>
"This is the time to put up or helps working parentseamingless<lb/>
shut up said House Majority than $20,000 through the tax cred-<lb/>
1 eador Richard Gephardt, D-Mo. its and parents earning over that<lb/>
"Parents and families want child amount through the school-based<lb/>
care Thev need to know if their care,<lb/>
kids are going to be safe Opimi<lb/>
But Republicans opposed a<lb/>
College Information Setwu.vrk<lb/>
WASHINGTON (AP) ? The<lb/>
Supreme Court Monday agreed<lb/>
to decide whether huge punitive<lb/>
damage awards in lawsuits may<lb/>
violate constitutional guarantees<lb/>
of fundamental fairness.<lb/>
The court said it will consider<lb/>
overturning a $1 million award<lb/>
and three smaller awards to Ala-<lb/>
bama residents who successfully<lb/>
sued an insurance company for<lb/>
fraud.<lb/>
The case, of enorn ice s impor-<lb/>
tance to Amencan business, is<lb/>
likely to be decided u. 1991<lb/>
In other action, the court:<lb/>
? Let stand rulings that pro-<lb/>
tect automobile manufacturers<lb/>
from design-defect lawsuits for not<lb/>
installing airbags.<lb/>
The justices, without com-<lb/>
ment, refused to revive three such<lb/>
suits against General Motors, one<lb/>
against Honda and one against<lb/>
Nissan. Three federal appeals<lb/>
courts and a California state court<lb/>
ruled in favor of the car makers.<lb/>
? Left intact a ruling airlines<lb/>
say could make it more difficult<lb/>
for them to merge.<lb/>
The court, without comment,<lb/>
refused to shield Delta Air Lines<lb/>
frombindingarbitrationthatcould<lb/>
lead to a monetary-damages<lb/>
award for a flight attendants un-<lb/>
ion.<lb/>
? Turned away an appeal by<lb/>
a Massachusetts church that says<lb/>
its religious freedom will be vio-<lb/>
lated if state approval is required<lb/>
for its school's curriculum.<lb/>
The justices, without com-<lb/>
ment, let stand a ruling that the<lb/>
New Life Baptist Church Acad-<lb/>
emy in East Longmeadow, Mass<lb/>
must submit for approval the non-<lb/>
religious education its students<lb/>
receive.<lb/>
? Allowed Maryland officials<lb/>
to revoke the license of a day-care<lb/>
center where young children al-<lb/>
legedly were abused physically<lb/>
and sexually<lb/>
The court, without comment,<lb/>
rejected arguments bv thecenter's<lb/>
operator, who said her rights were<lb/>
violated because a psychologist<lb/>
she hired was not allowed to inter-<lb/>
view the children.<lb/>
The justices ruled last year that<lb/>
huge awards in civil suits, often<lb/>
millions of dollars, do not violate<lb/>
the Constitution's ban on exces-<lb/>
sive fines. But the court left open<lb/>
the possibility that such awards,<lb/>
intended to punish wrongdoers,<lb/>
may be so disproportionate to the<lb/>
actual harm that thev violate due-<lb/>
process rights.<lb/>
The Constitution savs states<lb/>
mav not deprive anyone ot prop-<lb/>
erty without due process of law<lb/>
Those wishing to limit damage<lb/>
awards say due process prohibits<lb/>
unlimited discretionbv judgesand<lb/>
Junes.<lb/>
In the case acted on Monday.<lb/>
Pacific Mutual Life Insurance Co.<lb/>
was found bv a jury to have par-<lb/>
ticipated in fraud bv one of its<lb/>
agents, Lemmie Ruffin.<lb/>
Employees of Roosevelt Citv.<lb/>
Ala paid health insurance premi-<lb/>
ums to Ru ft in which he pocketed,<lb/>
according to court records.<lb/>
Cleopatra Haslip, a citv<lb/>
worker who had been paying<lb/>
premiums, incurred $2,500 in<lb/>
hospital and medical bills in 1982<lb/>
and then learned her insurance<lb/>
had been cancelled bv Pacific<lb/>
Mutual.<lb/>
<pb facs="00058206_0009"/><lb/>
Pave 9<lb/>
Features<lb/>
April 3,1990<lb/>
Professor speaks on<lb/>
colonial literature<lb/>
By Doug Morris<lb/>
StJlt Writer<lb/>
Dr. 1 ofaro, an English profes<lb/>
om the University oi Tennes-<lb/>
spoke about Colonial Ameri-<lb/>
v an literature on rhursday His<lb/>
ition tor the let lure was to<lb/>
vpand the traditional thoughts<lb/>
? people concerning colonial lit-<lb/>
iture He said that he tools the<lb/>
outhem expansionist literature<lb/>
has not been explored thoroughly<lb/>
igh but has instead been<lb/>
ted in favor of the more trad i-<lb/>
il ow England and Mid-<lb/>
i itu st les<lb/>
:? literature ol I<lb/>
has always been describe J<lb/>
ii t teristicalh distin t :r m<lb/>
I fNewI nglandandtht M<lb/>
i stat? s ifaro said<lb/>
'arrati es ol religii n<lb/>
' d hi moi u. ? :<lb/>
inked toj t! i d<lb/>
ilaheii nod in liacvin<lb/>
i f ibi id<lb/>
. rn for the ; i pi si itior<lb/>
I, v ? r as vet um<lb/>
and a livelv<lb/>
I mes rakish n nc ,i<lb/>
ir point ol iew<lb/>
kcs them both unmistakably<lb/>
tl and presents a tar more<lb/>
trg? - ' I i signifi<lb/>
ntribut n I I sis ? I<lb/>
 neii( an mind than thai tl<lb/>
led b a puritan model<lb/>
s rmon w as the mosl<lb/>
  uton<lb/>
? olutionary warhriginall)<lb/>
?? ? believed thatoi<lb/>
hem sermons wore Mi in<lb/>
st nc? however I ofaro has<lb/>
?? I it ?ul ' ? rn ns and<lb/>
? I lesaid<lb/>
th? rn sci mons are in<lb/>
tljueneed rpofeby the land and the<lb/>
pie than those ol the New<lb/>
Effable<lb/>
Oddities<lb/>
 tkette dancing<lb/>
p akes; B duck<lb/>
.v ahaii ill, D<lb/>
a little cake<lb/>
?: chocolab<lb/>
sf rt; I ?'<lb/>
. . e pri i mer; 1<lb/>
cat-fur coat<lb/>
langav: A a<lb/>
hi<lb/>
 ; B ga)alifor<lb/>
C. moistut izing<lb/>
D. hanging lorn<lb/>
I (!ank: A. to cackle,<lb/>
gabble; B. alternator<lb/>
irt; i ruthless vvan-<lb/>
?? rer; I sore ov, your<lb/>
t"u$2 toe<lb/>
( elure: A cell atti ac -<lb/>
i<lb/>
? ?: B. lisping sount<lb/>
i u py or h inging; D<lb/>
cat manure<lb/>
6 ? !hippy: A a super<lb/>
rtehead; B. made of<lb/>
i hips; C. loose women<lb/>
who frequents streets; 11<lb/>
happy go lucky<lb/>
7. Chuckhote A<lb/>
mud hole; B. varmit hole;<lb/>
C. dog food hole; D.<lb/>
break in laughter<lb/>
H Claut A to tear,<lb/>
scratch; B. one who car-<lb/>
ries a club flutelike<lb/>
instrument; I), a grasp-<lb/>
ing hand<lb/>
9 . rusafic: A under-<lb/>
wear extract; B. long and<lb/>
hard; C a short, rough<lb/>
? nor, I). forming a<lb/>
crust<lb/>
10uck: A. to throw; B<lb/>
to hit; C. to headbutt; D.<lb/>
to bump<lb/>
C ompiled by John<lb/>
Tucker<lb/>
11<lb/>
England states.<lb/>
In short Lofaro sud, "the<lb/>
south has much the same sermonic<lb/>
tradition as existed in New Eng-<lb/>
land but one marked by a more<lb/>
ameliorated tone. view that's<lb/>
supported by both the surviving<lb/>
texts and the absence of execution<lb/>
sermons and ferimiahs so named<lb/>
because ol their text being taken<lb/>
mostly from ferimiah decrying the<lb/>
end coming soon<lb/>
1 ofaro tools that the Spanish<lb/>
form had a major influence on<lb/>
southern literature. lhe southern<lb/>
narrative springs from tales ol the<lb/>
the Spanish conquistadors. 1 ig-<lb/>
ures such ,h Daniel Boone and<lb/>
Dave Crockett promoted the<lb/>
belief ot acquiring wealth through<lb/>
land b westward expansion.<lb/>
After the sermon, the alma-<lb/>
na became the most popular and<lb/>
widespread form oi literature ol<lb/>
the time lho most popular alma-<lb/>
nac w as the Da ey ' rockctt alma-<lb/>
na ! ho death ol the real Davey<lb/>
Crockett at the Mamo had made<lb/>
i nJ i rotn I s to 1856<lb/>
Daverocket! comics wore<lb/>
published as part ol the Davey<lb/>
i rockett almanac to boost sales.<lb/>
N Davey Crockett comics<lb/>
portraved the south and west in a<lb/>
humorous hght. with both the men<lb/>
and the women being strong and<lb/>
usually ugly. ' the Crockett com-<lb/>
: s ffer an inversion of tho then-<lb/>
current idoal of feminity said<lb/>
Lofaro.<lb/>
rhroughout the lecture Lofaro<lb/>
stressed the importance oi the<lb/>
effects that southern expansionist<lb/>
euro has had on Americans<lb/>
today. "Onohasonly tolookat tho<lb/>
power exerted bv religion in the<lb/>
19th and 20th centuries in tho<lb/>
south, both personal and political.<lb/>
See Literature, page 10<lb/>
iti UQBt tiaraltoUut<lb/>
Scott Cameron Heft) and Richard I ubanks right) read the last issue ol The Last Carolinian Headlines<lb/>
about the SGA elections and a shortage of funds allocated to Joyner Library receive front page attention<lb/>
(Photo by Garrett Killian ECU Photo I ab)<lb/>
Headlines change with time<lb/>
By Marjorie McKinstr)<lb/>
statt Writer<lb/>
Last week ECU bustled with the ictivitie;<lb/>
SGA elections All the information perta<lb/>
candidates and their positions were refli I I i<lb/>
student paper I he East (Carolinian<lb/>
Tho paper is j mirror ol E( I 's hist -r<lb/>
history chronicles the debates o cr the S ffi. s<lb/>
A trip further back in the school year would remind<lb/>
students of the "Halloween Riots !t is possible to<lb/>
gaze even further into ECU's past<lb/>
rhe students at E I in 1958 wen just i litl<lb/>
different than the students todav On Marcl<lb/>
1958, tho banner headline road Bettv Phillips<lb/>
Poparts tor Azalea Eestival Phillips w as n present-<lb/>
ing ECU in a pageant at the festival. Onecommenl<lb/>
in the article said "for the first time in four voars<lb/>
ECC will be sending a brunette to the I ity's<lb/>
festiv ides<lb/>
This is not quite the way students in 199<lb/>
the Azalea Festival. Now, it is a wecken I part<lb/>
in Wilmington, not a beauty pageant in which I<lb/>
color is oi utmost importance.<lb/>
Tho interest in gossip was high in T958, not<lb/>
unlike today. But, if students were unsure ol who<lb/>
was important, and who was not the road the<lb/>
Cussjn' N Discussin' column b Nancy 1 ilk. She<lb/>
kept students up to date on tho "Liz Taylor and Mr.<lb/>
Todd" s, one, as well as tho cute artist who had tho<lb/>
best watercolor exhibit ever soon at ECC<lb/>
B I960 interests were starting to change. The<lb/>
n r headline in tho issue ot March 31, I960 road<lb/>
imSp ight 1 oses lopSC .A Position Tho students<lb/>
i 1 made a final decision in a run-off to decide the<lb/>
ot theSt IA rhe election was a closeone, and let-<lb/>
t. rs to the editor questioned tho election. Another<lb/>
headline on the front page was "Lambda Chi Opens<lb/>
owet.uvhe Street I louse the (.reek system was<lb/>
strong back then. too. Main front page articles be-<lb/>
58 and 1960 dealt with fraternity and soror-<lb/>
it) get tog thers, even down to pledge parties.<lb/>
J itire was strong on the early '60s, and political<lb/>
cartoons started to appear in the paper. Some, started<lb/>
???ire, students preparing tor tho Aaloa Festival<lb/>
b arro, ing to class in Bermuda shorts, straw hatsand<lb/>
sunglasses. Ihc paper started looking more and more<lb/>
liketoda s East Carolinian, except for the ads. In the<lb/>
1960s, the paper was filled with ads for Vaseline Hair<lb/>
! onu cigarettes and various cars<lb/>
At the start ot tho 1980s, everything was almost<lb/>
tical to todav. Tho ads had changed from hair<lb/>
tome to the Christ Care Clinic. Alcohol ad? wore<lb/>
prevalent. Fraternities advertised their Rushes with<lb/>
the words "beer served The drinking age had yet to<lb/>
See Headline, page 10<lb/>
Movie has<lb/>
believable<lb/>
story line<lb/>
By Marjorie McKinstry<lb/>
Staff Writer<lb/>
The Hunt for Red October is<lb/>
like an under water roller coaster<lb/>
ride that leaves the audience gasp-<lb/>
ing for breath.<lb/>
Sean Connery stars as an ag-<lb/>
ing, saltv, Russian sea captain, who<lb/>
has thrown the world upside<lb/>
down because he and his officers<lb/>
have decided to defect<lb/>
Because oi this detection, the<lb/>
Soviet Union and tho United States<lb/>
are in a race against time to find<lb/>
tho submarine (Rod October)<lb/>
Connery is on. The Russians want<lb/>
to blow it up, and the Americans<lb/>
want to save the delecting officers<lb/>
and the submarine they are on.<lb/>
At one point, tho audience is<lb/>
lulled into a false sense oi security<lb/>
only to have chaos break lose on<lb/>
the screen. l"he movie is slow in<lb/>
tho beginning, but once started,<lb/>
the action never stops.<lb/>
Tho film is technical, but all<lb/>
the language is easily understood<lb/>
by people without nautical or mill-<lb/>
tare experience. Everythingseems<lb/>
eminently realistic. There is oven<lb/>
a trace ot patriotism as the Rus-<lb/>
sian crew sings their national an-<lb/>
them<lb/>
It is not a film ol good guvs<lb/>
versus bad guvs. It there are anv<lb/>
"bad guvs it would be the politi-<lb/>
cians on Kith sides of tho Atlantic<lb/>
Ocean.<lb/>
The acting of Connery, Scott<lb/>
Glenn, lames Earl ones and Alec<lb/>
Baldwin is not only fantastic, it is<lb/>
believable. Bevond the acting, the<lb/>
sot design, tho motion ot the film,<lb/>
the music and the affects makes<lb/>
tho viewer feel as if he is a part of<lb/>
the movie. That involvement is<lb/>
the most outstanding characteris-<lb/>
tic of Tho Hunt for Rod October.<lb/>
Co-op office offers<lb/>
career placement<lb/>
By Doug Morris<lb/>
Statt Writer<lb/>
Councelor Mary McCavley helps student Mary Joyce find a job and start a career in her field ot study But<lb/>
the co op office is more than an employment agency Co-op also helps students establish iob contacts, earn<lb/>
money and accumulate college credit (Photo by J D. Whitmire ? ECU Photo Lab)<lb/>
An Ideal View<lb/>
The East Carolina office ot<lb/>
cooperative education allows stu-<lb/>
dents to get real work experience<lb/>
in their field of study while they<lb/>
are still in school. Through full-<lb/>
time, part-time or summer jobs,<lb/>
students gain valuable experience<lb/>
to help their future careers.<lb/>
The Co-op office staff placed<lb/>
approximately isW of tho 3000<lb/>
students who came in looking tor<lb/>
lobs last year. The office draws on<lb/>
a list of about 2000 local businesses,<lb/>
government agencies and fortune<lb/>
500cornpaniesaspossibleemploy-<lb/>
ers, and that list is constantly in-<lb/>
Red Riding Hood walks on the wild side<lb/>
By Caroline Cusick<lb/>
Features Editor<lb/>
Ok boys and girls, it's gossip<lb/>
time. Welcome to the world fa-<lb/>
mous "Gossip comer Hold your<lb/>
hat and take a seat.<lb/>
Once upon a time, in the far<lb/>
off country of Carolina-land there<lb/>
lived a girl named Little Red Rid-<lb/>
ing Hood. Every Saturday after-<lb/>
noon Red helped her mom clean<lb/>
the house. Every Saturday night<lb/>
she went to parties with her<lb/>
fnends. Every Sunday morning<lb/>
she went to church and snored to<lb/>
the background music of the sen-<lb/>
ior citizens choir.<lb/>
Her days were nice and gen-<lb/>
erally innocent. But thosered-light<lb/>
nights were too hot for this flam-<lb/>
mable newsprint to stand. Red<lb/>
could drink with the best, dance<lb/>
the latest moves to the pop-charts<lb/>
tunes full of suggestive lyrics and<lb/>
seduce the most savage of beasts.<lb/>
I guess you could say that<lb/>
Little Miss Hood left trunruweenee<lb/>
of youth and the carefree days of<lb/>
childhood to embrace the ways of<lb/>
the world and to walk on the wild<lb/>
side.<lb/>
Why would she do this? What<lb/>
was Red looking for? There has to<lb/>
be a reason behind her decision to<lb/>
drop her picnic basket and run<lb/>
from woodcutter to woodcutter,<lb/>
drink to drink, and bar to bar<lb/>
searching for love, acceptance,<lb/>
peace, fun and joy without guilt.<lb/>
Thisgossipcolumnist spreads<lb/>
the truth, the whole truth and<lb/>
nothing but the truth so help me<lb/>
God. Speaking of the all knowing<lb/>
One, lef s see what He thinks of<lb/>
Red's situation.<lb/>
Still she rebels and seeks for<lb/>
fulfillment on her own. She is a lot<lb/>
like the kiddies the Apostle Paul<lb/>
wrote about: "They profess to<lb/>
know God, but deny and disown<lb/>
and renounce Him bv what thev<lb/>
do; they are  disobedient and<lb/>
disloyal and rebellious and they<lb/>
are unfit and worthless for good<lb/>
work of any kind (Titus 1:16).<lb/>
That may sound cruel. Well, I<lb/>
guess it is.<lb/>
'The Word oi God that speaks<lb/>
is alive and full of power; it is<lb/>
sharper thin any two-edged<lb/>
sword exposingand siftingand<lb/>
analyzing and judging the very<lb/>
thoughts and purposes of the<lb/>
heart (Hebrews4:12). That just<lb/>
means the truth hurts.<lb/>
Red is like a lot of people who<lb/>
go to church on Sundaysand teach<lb/>
first grade Sunday school. Some<lb/>
would say, sleep through church<lb/>
and spare yourself the guilt, but<lb/>
Lady Red knows where to find<lb/>
her solutions.<lb/>
Some of you are probably<lb/>
thinking, "Who does this chick<lb/>
think she is, telling us the answers<lb/>
to life are in church?"<lb/>
Well, my name is Caroline<lb/>
Cusick. 1 am the Features Editor<lb/>
For The East Carolinian. And I<lb/>
don't find my answers in church<lb/>
either. Going to church doesn't<lb/>
make you a Christian, or even a<lb/>
good person, any more than going<lb/>
to McDonald's makes you a ham-<lb/>
burger.<lb/>
So why the church-goers song<lb/>
and dance? I'm glad you asked.<lb/>
Unfortunately, church is the<lb/>
one place, and Sunday the one<lb/>
day of the week, where people<lb/>
uncover their faith in a supreme<lb/>
creator. Haveyou ever noticed that<lb/>
someone you know goes to church<lb/>
one day a week and lives like Hell<lb/>
the other six?<lb/>
There are a lot of people in<lb/>
churches who are, like our friend<lb/>
Red, hypocritical. They profess to<lb/>
be Christians and neglect to rec-<lb/>
ognize that the word means<lb/>
"Christ-like<lb/>
Living a life like Jesus Christ<lb/>
requires seven daysa week. Chris-<lb/>
tianity requires sacrifice of certain<lb/>
desires and requires action and<lb/>
conviction to replace those desires<lb/>
with the desires of Christ,<lb/>
Now who would want to do<lb/>
that? He was fust an old Jew who<lb/>
died about 2,000 years ago, A lot<lb/>
See Riding Hood page 10<lb/>
creasing.<lb/>
Tho Co-op is more than an<lb/>
employment agency. It is a good<lb/>
source tor obtaining a part-time<lb/>
iob in or around Greenville.<lb/>
1 lowever, it you want to find a ob<lb/>
that will help you alter gradu-<lb/>
ation. Co-op is the only place to<lb/>
go. Jobs from Co-op not only<lb/>
provide experience, but can also<lb/>
help to establish contacts for after<lb/>
graduation.<lb/>
"It'sr'b - imtyfor<lb/>
people to get e e? e says<lb/>
Hill B rn " p Ivisor<lb/>
"Thafs the bottom line because<lb/>
when you graduate vou're not just<lb/>
competing with students from<lb/>
ECU. You're competing with stu-<lb/>
dents from Duke, Virginia Tech<lb/>
and UC, and vou're going to<lb/>
need something that will set vour<lb/>
resume apart Although the pri-<lb/>
mary benefit oi Co-op is the expe-<lb/>
rience it provides, students can<lb/>
earn money and, in most majors,<lb/>
college course credit.<lb/>
Summer is the busiest time of<lb/>
the year for the Co-op office. The<lb/>
rush for summer jobs has already<lb/>
begun; however, there are still<lb/>
many positions available here in<lb/>
North Carolina and in other parts<lb/>
of the country. In Greenville, the<lb/>
competition is tough because most<lb/>
employers do not want to work<lb/>
around a summer school sched-<lb/>
ule.<lb/>
In order to join the Co-op<lb/>
program students need to fill out<lb/>
an application available in the Co-<lb/>
op off ice in the General Classroom<lb/>
Building, Room 2028. Students<lb/>
also need to attend one of the<lb/>
seminars that the Co-op gives<lb/>
twice a week. Finally, students<lb/>
must make appointments with a<lb/>
Co-op advisor to look for a job.<lb/>
For more information, call the<lb/>
office of Cooperative Education at<lb/>
757-6979, or visit their office in the<lb/>
General Classroom Building<lb/>
<pb facs="00058206_0010"/><lb/>
10 The East Carolinian, April 3,1990<lb/>
Faculty Profile<lb/>
English professor serves as<lb/>
dean of the School of Art<lb/>
By Joe Herat<lb/>
Suft Writer<lb/>
It von had told Dr. Erwin ester wh.it position he would hold when<lb/>
he came to ECl in 1966, he probably wouldn't have believed you. Since<lb/>
une 1, ll8l, fester has served .is the acting dean of the School or Art.<lb/>
I he fact that 1 tester is currently from the English department, with<lb/>
a teaching field in Victorian literature, is what makes this hard to<lb/>
understand Asked to take over the administrative duties when the<lb/>
former dean retired, Hester now divides his time between the said<lb/>
duties teaching a Jass on English grammar and serving on many<lb/>
committees around the campus<lb/>
1 lester began his teaching career when he received an A.11, MA.<lb/>
and a Ph P from the I niversity of Northarohna in Chapel Hill. From<lb/>
there he taught at the I niversity ot Virginia from lM to Nw also<lb/>
being the chair of Freshman composition from 1964 to lfvv In tt,<lb/>
1 lester moved to E I where he has taught in the English department<lb/>
and served as the chair ot the English department from llhM to 982.<lb/>
 hen he has finished w ith his teaching and administrative duties,<lb/>
1 lester serves on many committees from the English department and<lb/>
the overall campus. One major contribution that he makes is his<lb/>
position as secretary ol Phi kappa Phi, one ol the university's honor<lb/>
fraternities. I lis role is to assist in the recognition ot individuals who<lb/>
excel in any field ot academk s<lb/>
1 hough the administrativ e duties ol his position of 'acting dean'<lb/>
take up about three quarters of his time, 1 lester still p.irtu ipates fullv in<lb/>
E events. With his obvious aid to ECl s academic status. ester<lb/>
shows a pride that ex? eeds normal standards.<lb/>
Bits and Pieces<lb/>
IRS electronic tax filing more<lb/>
successful than originally expected<lb/>
k tronic tax tiling is off I i fast start. In the first year taxpayers<lb/>
nationwide ha e been able to file electronically, the program has been<lb/>
more suc essful than the IRS expe ted I hree weeks before the April<lb/>
16th tax filing deadline, 3 5 million taxpayersalready have zapped their<lb/>
returns to the RS. It hoped tor two million electronicretumsall season.<lb/>
Company introduces new waffles<lb/>
"I ley, let go my new honevnut eggo"<lb/>
Mrs Smith's Frozen Foodsompanv has introduced two new<lb/>
wattle varieties to their EGGO frozen wattle line. Kellogg's L 1 Kl-<lb/>
(,RAI Multi-Bran wattles and 1,() ut and 1 lortey wattles will be<lb/>
available in the spring. L IKKAI waffles contain com, wheat.<lb/>
rice and oat bran E i( .(. waffles contain the taste of peanuts and honey.<lb/>
I hev contain no cholesterol, preservatives or added sugar.<lb/>
Oscar winners out on video soon<lb/>
I he race is on to get (v ir w rnners into video stores Buena Vista<lb/>
Home Video is rush-releasii  Dead Poers Society The Little Mer-<lb/>
maid which wen awards f - - re and songarrives in May. "Driving<lb/>
Miss Daisv " still m theaters will not arrive until at least September.<lb/>
"My Left Foot" isexpe ted in early summer and Bom on the Fourth c4<lb/>
lulv hits stores this tall<lb/>
Turner inspires comeback in slip<lb/>
.?V tress Kathleen I urner has inspired a slip i omeku k. 1 timer has<lb/>
been drawing raves on Broadwaj in v at on a Hot hn Rinit" tor her<lb/>
? . ustom m ide lav ender slip. 1 ashion expertsagrce slip viles will<lb/>
get hiked<lb/>
urner's lavender number.<lb/>
Early detection stops skin cancer<lb/>
American' u ? Society survcj ot<lb/>
emphasize early dctei tion !<lb/>
000 d(H tors s.ivs 5 percent<lb/>
ie A S president sivs that is disturbing<lb/>
because malignant mi I inoma is almost always curable when spotted<lb/>
early, fne rise is due to tai ningl ivior and the thinning ozone layer<lb/>
whk h bi ?. ks (,ni, er , tusing ultraviolet light.<lb/>
Eyeliner is back on beauty map<lb/>
elincri bad nt e beauty map. The BrigitteBardot look isevc-<lb/>
ry where and the fashion world is read) ing for the thick bla k line edged<lb/>
ontheuppcrlid '?? r vi il ranks with miniskirts, tie-dye T-shirts and<lb/>
bell bet: ms inexpertssa) tdultsdonot want togoback to<lb/>
complicated eye makeup, but tet nagers will probably wear it.<lb/>
Wendy's offers choice in soft drinks<lb/>
Starting next year, customers at many Wendy's restaurants will<lb/>
havea new choice in soft drinks 1 ffectivc next Jan. 1 ,the fast-food chain<lb/>
intends to convert from Pcpsi-( ola Co. products toocaolao<lb/>
produ( ts (t the 3,755 Wendy's restaurants, 1,118 are company-owned.<lb/>
Wendy's train fuses may als swiu h soft drinks tocapitalizeonadsand<lb/>
promotions<lb/>
Madonna's new video reveals dance<lb/>
Madonna has discovered another way to express herself ? vogue-<lb/>
ing, the trendy Manhattan-born dance of peacockish poses. The video<lb/>
premiereson MTV 1 hursdav night at two, four, nine and 10 Eastern and<lb/>
Pacific times The "V Ogue" single from her album "I'm Breathless:<lb/>
Music trom and Imfnrrd h hr ! Dkk Tracy" is due Mav 15th.<lb/>
The Lighter Side<lb/>
Bufoonery is rule for the April fool<lb/>
SAN I KA( IS O(AP) lor a while, it looked like the joke was<lb/>
going to be on the pranksters at (he 11th Annual St. Stupid's Day<lb/>
Parade, whu h got off to a late start because half the participants forgot<lb/>
to set their i lot ks ahead<lb/>
But on e the gang gathered nearly an hour alter (he official starting<lb/>
time, the ritual i elebration ot April 1 ools I av was under wav.<lb/>
( ne partK ipanl wore a wedding dress and (arnecf.) drum. Patrick<lb/>
Campbell wore a blanket and a Donald Duck safari hat.<lb/>
I cunder "Bishop foey a fat, balding man in rvd leotards, arrived<lb/>
to a drum roll and handed out kaoos.<lb/>
"I am Bishop lev, head of the Church of the Last Laugh, the<lb/>
world's fastest growing snack religion veiled the bishop, who is also<lb/>
known as ac tor Id I lolmes of the San fraru ISCO Mime Troupe.<lb/>
"Wise up' It's later than we think hesaid, leading thecrowd down<lb/>
( olumbus Avenue.<lb/>
Headline<lb/>
Continued from page 9<lb/>
be changed to 19, never mind 21.<lb/>
However, the concerns are<lb/>
reflective of today. The top head-<lb/>
lmeon March 27,1980read "Four-<lb/>
teen Busted In College Hill Raid<lb/>
Among the students busted was<lb/>
the top candidate for defensive<lb/>
team captain of ECU'S football<lb/>
team He was charged with "one<lb/>
count of sale and possession of<lb/>
marijuana and one count of sale of<lb/>
cocaine The raid was made bv<lb/>
the Greenville Police Department<lb/>
and the State Bureau ot Investiga-<lb/>
tion.<lb/>
Students throughout campus<lb/>
were concerned with a larger is-<lb/>
sue, the Iran lostages. At the time,<lb/>
Iran's Revolutionary Council<lb/>
Literature<lb/>
wanted to put the American hos-<lb/>
tages on trial. It was their 144th<lb/>
day of captivity.<lb/>
Students were also concerned<lb/>
about issued closer to home, the<lb/>
price of education. Inflation was<lb/>
sounng, and along with it was<lb/>
college tuition. Everyone was<lb/>
scrounging for student loans.<lb/>
ECU and The Fast Carolinian<lb/>
have come a long wav since 1958.<lb/>
There are a few missing vears in<lb/>
the historv. but tor the most part,<lb/>
a reflection of ECL's past will<lb/>
alwavs be available. Remember,<lb/>
holding a copv of The East Caro-<lb/>
linian is like holding a mirror of<lb/>
the past, present and future.<lb/>
Continued from page 9<lb/>
JAMES STEWART<lb/>
is ALFRED HITCHCOCK'S<lb/>
'REAR WINTDOW<lb/>
also stakkim. GRACE KELLY<lb/>
SEE THE ORIGINAL PSYCHO<lb/>
UNCUT! THE VERSION TV<lb/>
JJION T OAREj<lb/>
SHOW<lb/>
Double Feature:<lb/>
Playing Wednesday,<lb/>
prii 4, nm<lb/>
K:00pm Hendrix Theatre<lb/>
h Kh K v Muciint II)<lb/>
sponsored b) ihe<lb/>
Student L'l I '<lb/>
and itsettect upon literature to see<lb/>
that these early roots need investi-<lb/>
gation l.ofaro said.<lb/>
Lofaro closed bv tying in the<lb/>
American expansionist historv in<lb/>
with space travel. "From Da Vim i<lb/>
to the Wright brothers, the ro-<lb/>
mance ot exploration beyond the<lb/>
earth's atmosphere became real-<lb/>
Riding Hood<lb/>
ity; a realitv heightened bv risks<lb/>
"For in penetrating the un-<lb/>
known, life was and is penlouslv<lb/>
in jeopardy. To me the- Spanish<lb/>
origins of these new American<lb/>
adventurenarrativesisclear. How<lb/>
fitting that s( many steps in the<lb/>
American space program begin in<lb/>
the south<lb/>
Continued from page 9<lb/>
ot people believe- that. A lot of<lb/>
people believehristianitv is iist<lb/>
another ot many world religions.<lb/>
lanv ssn it you believe in some-<lb/>
thing, anything, you'll be ("k.<lb/>
Well Christianity is similar to<lb/>
many religions, t lowever, it is the<lb/>
only religion that is based on a<lb/>
friendship and a personal relation-<lb/>
ship with its founder.Christianity<lb/>
is the only religion that addresses<lb/>
man's basic problem sin and<lb/>
otters a K0 percent, no-strings-<lb/>
attached solution<lb/>
The problem I sec with Chris-<lb/>
tianity is that loo many people<lb/>
who believe in fesus don't pattern<lb/>
their lives after His Fhev keep<lb/>
their beliefs a secret. In a sense.<lb/>
they are unden over c hristi ii<lb/>
It's time people stand up tor<lb/>
thier beliefs. Be those beliefs in<lb/>
esus or elsewhere. I havea prob-<lb/>
lem with people who run others<lb/>
down tor their beliefs but hav<lb/>
convk tionsot thierovi nand leav-<lb/>
ing themselves vulnerable.<lb/>
Being ahnstian.ladmit lam<lb/>
biased. Thus, 1 agree with Paul<lb/>
who wrote. "1 am not ashamed i i<lb/>
theC kspel good news) ot c hrist,<lb/>
tor it is Cod's power working unto<lb/>
salvation tor deliverance trom<lb/>
eternal death) to everyone who<lb/>
believes with a personal trust and<lb/>
a confident surrender and turn<lb/>
reliance, to the lew firs! and also to<lb/>
the Creek. Romans 1: ls.<lb/>
RALEIGH WOMEN'S HEALTH<lb/>
ORGANIZATIONS<lb/>
Abortions from 13 to 18 weeks at additional cost. Pregnancy<lb/>
Test, Birth Control, and Problem ?regnancy Counseling<lb/>
For further Information, call 738-0444<lb/>
(toll free number: 1 800-532-5384) Between 9 am and 5 pm<lb/>
weekdays General anesthesia available<lb/>
LOW COST ABORTIONS IP TO I2THWEEK OF PREGNANCY<lb/>
EARTILBAV<lb/>
sal?e!<lb/>
pril Fools Day Throughout Earth I)a. 1990<lb/>
Be Aware of Your<lb/>
Environment<lb/>
WHAT Ol CAM START DOING<lb/>
TODAY TO 11KLP THK KNV1RONMKNT<lb/>
? Refuse plastic bags and containers<lb/>
? (Onsrrv e energy<lb/>
? Recycle your glass, paper and aluminum<lb/>
? Voice your concerns to industries, government<lb/>
and even your local retailers<lb/>
ALBUMS$1.69 OFF<lb/>
CASSETTES$1.50 OFF<lb/>
(TVs$2.50 OFF<lb/>
VIDEO RENTALS$2.00 EACH<lb/>
POSTERS $2.99 EACH<lb/>
Large SetattM<lb/>
T-SHIRTS $6.99EACH<lb/>
Large sj nun i , ,r,tn-i- Price'<lb/>
USED NINTENDO.D's &amp;<lb/>
VIDEOS15 OLE<lb/>
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The 7th Annual<lb/>
Great Pirate PurpleGold<lb/>
Pigskin Pig-Out Party<lb/>
vm&amp;x<lb/>
tni hot m<lb/>
Presents In Concert The ECU Mac<lb/>
At ECU'S Ficklen Stadium Concerts Committee<lb/>
Tl7? 'CeMptatioN<lb/>
<lb/>
,<lb/>
v<lb/>
Jv<lb/>
Concert immediately following the<lb/>
PurpleGold Spring Football Game (2:00 pm Kickoff)<lb/>
ECU STUDENTS S5.00<lb/>
Each ECU student can purchase two tickets with a valid ECU ID.<lb/>
Other tickets can be purchased at regular ticket prices (Advance SIOOO, Day of Game SI 2 OO)<lb/>
Tickets available at Mmges Coliseum ? Mendenhall Student Center ? Record Bar ? Tracks<lb/>
or call 1-8QO-DIAL ECU (in NC) or (919) 757-4500<lb/>
? Texasgulf<lb/>
I<lb/>
itr<lb/>
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WCTI-FM<lb/>
<pb facs="00058206_0011"/><lb/>
f<lb/>
She lEaBt (garoHtttan<lb/>
Page U<lb/>
ECU sweeps<lb/>
two from<lb/>
Richmond<lb/>
By Frank Reyes<lb/>
Staff Writer<lb/>
1 he ECU baseball team swept<lb/>
,i doubleheader by stomping the<lb/>
Richmond Spiders 11-3 and 2-1<lb/>
Sunday afternoon in Greenville.<lb/>
In the tirst game, the Pirates<lb/>
dished starting pitcher Sean<lb/>
(lavaghan I J-2,4.54 ERA this mm<lb/>
son) for eight runs and 10 hits in<lb/>
five innings pitched 1 le also gave<lb/>
up Iwo walks while tanning two<lb/>
batters.<lb/>
K I s John White, whoisnow<lb/>
this season, shut down the<lb/>
?? ; offense with a pitching<lb/>
gem White gave up only three<lb/>
runs on ten hits 1 U struck out<lb/>
so en hatters while walking only<lb/>
two<lb/>
! he first inning belonged to<lb/>
the 1'irates scoring on three runs<lb/>
iK in Brow n s two run din<lb/>
? Mis homerun was hit ninth on<lb/>
Sports<lb/>
April 3,1990<lb/>
the season.<lb/>
tter three additional runs<lb/>
were scored in the titth inning<lb/>
head oa hi ian i "h ertonbrought<lb/>
Pirate Paw Willis (2-0, 3.74<lb/>
tie pitched one and one<lb/>
urd ol an inning to earn his sec-<lb/>
I saN c of the season, gi ing up<lb/>
hit.<lb/>
VA ith 1 c I leading 6 i alter<lb/>
the fifth inning, the Pirates mas-<lb/>
sac red Brian 1 lelms (1-2,8.44 ERA)<lb/>
tor five more runs, making the<lb/>
final score 11 -3.<lb/>
Pirates Kevin Riggs, I'ommv<lb/>
Eason, Corey Short and Tommy<lb/>
Yarborough led the attack with<lb/>
two hits each Steve Codin (371,<lb/>
pi RHP led all hitters with three<lb/>
its ? ? ?<lb/>
?S l he Pirates held:?U ihc f<lb/>
ders 2-1 in game two, thanks to a<lb/>
strong pitching performance from<lb/>
lonathan ionkins. lenkins, who is<lb/>
now f-0 on the year, gave up one<lb/>
run on Hist two hits. He also al-<lb/>
lowed two walks while tanning<lb/>
five<lb/>
I thought (lenkms) threw a<lb/>
magnificent game'Overton said.<lb/>
I le was a little rusty at first due to<lb/>
k of work But he settled down<lb/>
In fiU t enkinsset down lqot<lb/>
the 23 batters he faced in the game,<lb/>
With the game tied at one in the<lb/>
sixth inning. Brown smashed a<lb/>
solo homer over the leftfield fence<lb/>
to cue ECU the lead, 2-1.<lb/>
Spiders starting hurler Craig<lb/>
Saccavino (2-1,4.22 ERA) pitched<lb/>
.i i : game as well. In his five<lb/>
innings, he gave up only two runs<lb/>
on six hits, l le was also credited<lb/>
with three walks while striking<lb/>
out five Pirates.<lb/>
(Saccavino) did a great job<lb/>
said Ron Atkins, head coach for<lb/>
the Spiders. "1 wasn't disap-<lb/>
pointed at all with his perform-<lb/>
ance<lb/>
I he offense was led by ohn<lb/>
( ,ast I J50, 23 RBI) with two hits.<lb/>
Eason and Barry Narron both hit<lb/>
one each in the game.<lb/>
Ihe Pirates now post a 25-3<lb/>
overall record and have a 2-0 mark<lb/>
in the Colonial Athletic Associa-<lb/>
tion.<lb/>
Calvin Brown, LCU s tirst baseman, catches the ball from the pitcher as a Richmond runner dives back to first base. The Pirates took two games<lb/>
from the Spiders at Harrington Field on Sunday (Photo by Garrett Killian ? ECU Photo Lab)<lb/>
UNLV crushes Duke for national title<lb/>
DENV 1 R (AP) When<lb/>
Anderson Hunt caught tire, the<lb/>
NCAA final was still a game Al-<lb/>
ter he scored 12 points in an 18-0<lb/>
UNLV run. the game had all but<lb/>
ended.<lb/>
Hunt, the Runnin' Rebels'<lb/>
quiet sophomore, scored three<lb/>
straight baskets and tNvo -point-<lb/>
ers during the spurt that sealed<lb/>
L'M.V's first national champion-<lb/>
ship Mondav night, a 103-73 rout<lb/>
over Duke.<lb/>
Named the tournament's<lb/>
outstanding player, Hunt re-<lb/>
mained characteristically reticent<lb/>
afterward, all but sweeping aside<lb/>
his 29-point performance on 12-<lb/>
for-16 shooting.<lb/>
"I was really concentrating on<lb/>
Bobby 1 lurley (Duke point guard)<lb/>
and not on the offensive game,<lb/>
he said.<lb/>
With I NLVahead57-47 with<lb/>
lo:24 10 play, Hunt hit a 12-toot<lb/>
baseline jumper to open the run.<lb/>
Alter a bucket by Larry ohnson,<lb/>
Stacey Augmon's steal set up<lb/>
Hunt's 3-pointer from the right<lb/>
corner.<lb/>
The next trip down the floor,<lb/>
Augmon again stole the ball and<lb/>
fed an outlet pass to a sprinting<lb/>
Hunt tor a lavup.<lb/>
With the score 66-47, Puke<lb/>
called a timeout. At midcourt,<lb/>
fohnson ran to 1 hint, meeting him<lb/>
with a high-five.<lb/>
Hunt didn't let up after the<lb/>
break, getting another lavup. And<lb/>
atter Augmon scored on a tast<lb/>
break. Duke again called time.<lb/>
This time. Hunt seemed to<lb/>
know it was over, raising his arms<lb/>
in triumph as the Blue Devils<lb/>
straggled to the bench.<lb/>
Hunt's third 3-pointer of the<lb/>
game ended the spree and ended<lb/>
the hopes of the Blue Devils, who<lb/>
trailed 75-47 with 13:18 left.<lb/>
In Durham it wasappropriate<lb/>
that a thunderstorm raged out-<lb/>
side Cameron Indoor Stadium<lb/>
because Nevada-Las Vegas rained<lb/>
all over Duke's parade.<lb/>
With sky-high expectations,<lb/>
4.1XH) students st. rambled into the<lb/>
50-year-old homo of Blue Devil<lb/>
basketball feeling very confident.<lb/>
By the end ot the night, the Run-<lb/>
nin' Rebels stormed past the Blue<lb/>
IVviK 103-73 in a shcuvdown be-<lb/>
tween teams fighting for their first<lb/>
NCAA basketball championship.<lb/>
"I've been watching basket-<lb/>
ball tor wars said freshman Mike<lb/>
Krachon of Cincinnati. "We were<lb/>
so dose. 1 don't know, thev just<lb/>
couldn't do it tonight. We had our<lb/>
chance and we blew it<lb/>
Before watching the contest<lb/>
on a big screen, Duke students<lb/>
were being their rowdy selves.<lb/>
Thev munched on pizza, hot dogs<lb/>
and chips, but what thev didn't<lb/>
eat was truownat their classmates.<lb/>
Students cheered wildly as<lb/>
thev watched a highlight tape of<lb/>
Duke's march to the Final Four,<lb/>
which thev had hoped all day<lb/>
would end Nvith highlights of the<lb/>
school's first title.<lb/>
Bv halftime, a crowd which<lb/>
had Ixvn on its feet, was sitting on<lb/>
the wooden bleachers, elbows on<lb/>
knees and heads in hands.<lb/>
A glimmer of hope appeared<lb/>
in the second halt, but the UNLV<lb/>
fast break snuffed out those hopes<lb/>
in a flash and sent a few die-hards<lb/>
heading back to their dorms. One<lb/>
CO-ed, refused to give her name,<lb/>
but left no doubt where her heart<lb/>
Nvas.<lb/>
"No matter if we lose, no<lb/>
matter how the game turns out.<lb/>
Duke's still the greatest school<lb/>
Nvith the greatest team and the<lb/>
greatest coach and players, no<lb/>
matter what the co-ed said. She<lb/>
had one more comment as she<lb/>
reached the door.<lb/>
"And we're smarter than they<lb/>
are<lb/>
Onlv a tew tans lingered at<lb/>
game's end. When the final score<lb/>
appeared on the big screen, that<lb/>
screen soon Nvent dark. Those<lb/>
members of the pep band Nvho<lb/>
didn't make it to Denver and who<lb/>
plaved at Cameron struck up the<lb/>
team's tight song.<lb/>
Outside, several hundred<lb/>
students gathered at a bonfire that<lb/>
was raging even though the Blue<lb/>
Devils lost.<lb/>
"Duke is still the best team in<lb/>
my book. Thev are still No. 1 with<lb/>
us said freshman Mark Parnsh<lb/>
of Boston.<lb/>
"It's hard to, but 1 guess you<lb/>
have got to take Nvhat you can<lb/>
get he said. "1 guess we should<lb/>
be happv with what we got<lb/>
Musburger announces final assignment<lb/>
By Rudy Martzke<lb/>
Gannett News Service<lb/>
DENVER ? On April Fool's<lb/>
Day, CBS wasn't okmg around<lb/>
with Brent Musburger.<lb/>
CBS Sports president Neal<lb/>
Pilson, citing a need for more main<lb/>
roles tor vounger announcers, said<lb/>
the contract of Musburger, CBS'<lb/>
sports voice for 1 years, was not<lb/>
being reneNved.<lb/>
Mondav night's NCAA cham-<lb/>
pionship basketball game between<lb/>
I hike and Nevada-Las Vegas was<lb/>
the last CBS assignment tor<lb/>
Musburger. His five-year, $10<lb/>
million contract expires une JO.<lb/>
"I'm surprised Musburger<lb/>
said. "1 didn't know anything<lb/>
about it, but it's been a great run.<lb/>
I'll take with me lots of memories<lb/>
with great friends. 1 wish them<lb/>
nothing but the best<lb/>
Musburger, 50, said he'll take<lb/>
some time off, but "NlbeNvorking<lb/>
again somedav<lb/>
Pilson saH, "This Nvasn't a<lb/>
sacking. It Nve Nvere tiring Brent,<lb/>
he wouldn't he Nvorking Monday<lb/>
night's game.<lb/>
"1 have great respect for him<lb/>
as a person and as a talent. The<lb/>
timing is unfortunate but the con-<lb/>
tract situation brought it to a head<lb/>
now<lb/>
Recently the omnipresent<lb/>
Musburger was displeased he had<lb/>
Ixvn taken off Masters golf, U.S.<lb/>
Open tennis and college football<lb/>
assignments. In contract negotia-<lb/>
tions, he wanted to maintain all<lb/>
hisdominant roles with CBS' other<lb/>
major events: baseball, NFL To-<lb/>
day, college basketball and the<lb/>
Olympics.<lb/>
CBS decided to split up those<lb/>
assignmments Nvith younger an-<lb/>
nouncers such as lim N'antz, Greg<lb/>
Gumbel and James Brown, Nvho<lb/>
had been Nvaiting for openings.<lb/>
"It was one oi the most diffi-<lb/>
cult situations I've had to Nvork<lb/>
with and a verv tough decision to<lb/>
make said Pilson.<lb/>
CCotygkt 1990. USA 7U1MV Apple Colltp<lb/>
Inforwmtum Setfk<lb/>
ECU golfers<lb/>
finish second<lb/>
in home<lb/>
tournament<lb/>
By Paul Garcia<lb/>
Staff Writer<lb/>
The ECU golf team continued<lb/>
its success as it hosted the Green-<lb/>
bner Intercollegiate Golf Tourna-<lb/>
ment in New Bern, N.C, March<lb/>
23-25. The Pirates' purple team<lb/>
finished in second place and the<lb/>
gold team finished in a tie for ninth<lb/>
in the 18 team field.<lb/>
The Pirates' purple squad was<lb/>
not able to get off to its usually fast<lb/>
start as it tired a 303 for the first<lb/>
round leaving it nine shots from<lb/>
first and in a tie for fifth. At the end<lb/>
of the first day, Jacksonville Uni-<lb/>
versity and Augusta College were<lb/>
tied tor first at 24 followed by<lb/>
UN Chapel Hill at 2. The Pi-<lb/>
rates gold team shot a 312 in the<lb/>
first round that put it in eighth<lb/>
place.<lb/>
"We simple didn't play well<lb/>
today said head :oMh Hal Mor-<lb/>
rison. "The team plays here a lot<lb/>
and should have an advantage<lb/>
over the field but shooting 303<lb/>
with the competition here will not<lb/>
win you a lot<lb/>
Individually, the Pirates'<lb/>
purple team was lead by junior<lb/>
Simon Move Nvho shot a 73.<lb/>
Jacksonville University's Bill<lb/>
Moreland and Augusta College's<lb/>
Michael Peterson were tied for the<lb/>
individual lead both shixtting a<lb/>
three under par 69 giving them a<lb/>
two-shot lead over their nearest<lb/>
competitor.<lb/>
"I stayed out of trouble today<lb/>
and avoided the big number which<lb/>
is important on this course said<lb/>
Move.<lb/>
The second dav brought more<lb/>
great Nveather and lower scores.<lb/>
The Pirates purple squad shot a<lb/>
293 giving them a two-day total of<lb/>
5, Nvhich put them into a tie for<lb/>
second place Nvith Augusta Col-<lb/>
lege. The day's low round was<lb/>
posted bv UNC-Chapel Hill Nvho<lb/>
fired a 291 giving them a two-day<lb/>
total of 587, and the lead after two<lb/>
rounds. The Pirates gold squad<lb/>
had a two-day total of h24 and was<lb/>
alone in tenth place going into the<lb/>
final round.<lb/>
"Today we played more like<lb/>
we are capable of as a team. Any<lb/>
time you have two plavers under<lb/>
par you can post a good score and<lb/>
pass vmc people said Morn-<lb/>
son.<lb/>
"LNC is playing really well<lb/>
and we will need another good<lb/>
round if we expect to put any<lb/>
pressure on them he added.<lb/>
Individually the Pirates were<lb/>
led bv Move as he found himself<lb/>
in a group of three tied for second<lb/>
place Nvith a tNvo dav total of 144.<lb/>
Pat Moore oi UNC-Chapel Hill<lb/>
found himself in first after shoot-<lb/>
ing a new course record 67 giving<lb/>
him a two dav total of 139. Also<lb/>
plaving Nvell the second day for<lb/>
the Pirates was freshman Ryan<lb/>
Perna Nvho shot a one under par<lb/>
71.<lb/>
The Pirates ran into some bad<lb/>
See Greenbrier, page 12<lb/>
Corchiani threatens to leave<lb/>
N.C. State if Valvano is fired<lb/>
Intramural action  satisfaction<lb/>
Troy Rector of Sigma Phi Epsilon gets another hit in a battle with Pi Kappa Alpha in the fraternity league<lb/>
of intramural Softball The Sig Eps won the game 13-9 and closed in on Pi Kappa Alphas lead in the<lb/>
Chancellor Cup race (Photo by J.D. Whitmire ? ECU Photo Lab) <lb/>
RALEIGH (AP) ? Chris<lb/>
Corchiani is the only North Caro-<lb/>
lina State basketball player thus<lb/>
far to seek formal permission to<lb/>
transfer if Jim Valvano is dis-<lb/>
missed, but the junior point guard<lb/>
says he's not the only one.<lb/>
"There's no question, I will<lb/>
leave if Coach V is fired Corchi-<lb/>
ani said Friday at a rally for Val-<lb/>
vano on the N.C. State campus. "I<lb/>
don't want to be a part of an insti-<lb/>
tution that I can't support<lb/>
He said that junior guard<lb/>
Rodney Monroe, the team's lead-<lb/>
ing scorer, sophomore forward<lb/>
Tom Gugliotta and freshman re-<lb/>
serve Bryant Feggins ha vedecided<lb/>
to leave if Valvano does.<lb/>
Lawyers for N.C State are<lb/>
going to the University of North<lb/>
Carolina Board of Governors seek-<lb/>
ing authorization to pursue legal<lb/>
action against Valvano.<lb/>
"There's so much uncertainty<lb/>
about what is going to happen<lb/>
with the (Wolfpack) program<lb/>
Mark Rodgers, a West Palm Beach,<lb/>
Fla attorney Nvho specializes in<lb/>
sports law, said Sunday. "The<lb/>
uncertainty has affected Chris<lb/>
Corchiani. It has affected his<lb/>
mental well-being<lb/>
"I think college basketball is<lb/>
supposed to be fun for a kid said<lb/>
Rodgers. "Chrishasbeen hounded<lb/>
by the media. This has not been<lb/>
what Chris Corchiani wanted in<lb/>
college basketball.<lb/>
"This kid should not be pe-<lb/>
nalized for the actions of other<lb/>
people<lb/>
Corcniani Nvas m Pittsburgh<lb/>
with a friend, Rodgers said, add-<lb/>
ing that he did not have a phone<lb/>
number. Phone numbers for<lb/>
Monroe, Gugliotta and Feggins are<lb/>
not listed.<lb/>
Corchiani's father, Gabe<lb/>
Corchiani, told The Charlotte Ob-<lb/>
server that he and his son made a<lb/>
list of six schools last week and<lb/>
that he has met with coaches from<lb/>
four of the schools this week in<lb/>
Denver ? Louisiana State, Min-<lb/>
nesota, New Orleans and<lb/>
Syracuse.<lb/>
<pb facs="00058206_0012"/><lb/>
12 The East Carolinian, April 3, 1990<lb/>
Sports Briefs<lb/>
Greenbrier<lb/>
Continued from page 11<lb/>
Announcer denied contract renewal<lb/>
C BS announced Sunday it will not renew the contract of announcer<lb/>
Brent Musburger. Reason: .i need tor more leading roles for young<lb/>
announcers, according to CBS Sports president Neal Pilson. Monday's<lb/>
INK A A championship game was the last appearance by tho fifty-year-<lb/>
old Musburger.<lb/>
USA upsets Soviet Union in wrestling<lb/>
rhe USA defeated the Soviet Union 21 15 in a dual meet Sunday to<lb/>
grab the team title at tru World Cup freestyle wrestling tournament in<lb/>
1 oledo Ohio It was the third outright team title in the tournament's IS<lb/>
years tor the USA, which shared a title with the Soviets in 186<lb/>
Earnhardt takes TranSouth 500 in S.C.<lb/>
Dale Earnhardt, driving a Chevrolet 1 umina. won TranSouth S00<lb/>
at Darlington Raceway, in Darlington, S.C, Sunday. Earnhardt came<lb/>
form the fifteenth position to edge Mark Martin's Ford by two car<lb/>
lengths for the i tory.<lb/>
King wins Dinah Shore tournament<lb/>
Betsy King shot aover par 75 to win the Nabisco Dinah Shore golf<lb/>
tournament Sunday. King finished at 5-under-par 283, defeating Kathy<lb/>
Postlewait and Shirley Furlong by two shots she won $90,000 tor the<lb/>
 i toi <lb/>
NHL playoffs set to start Wednesday<lb/>
I In- Mil regular season ended Sunday ami the playoffs begin<lb/>
Wednesday in the Campbell Conference and Thursday in the Wales.<lb/>
Play in each i onferen e will boon an every-other day format. The only<lb/>
trams not making the playoffs Penguins, Flyers, Nordiques, Red<lb/>
Wings and Canw ks<lb/>
Heathcoate named Coach of the Year<lb/>
Named Sunday as the 1vn0 Kodak (. oachesof the ear in balloting<lb/>
by the National ssot iationol BasketbalK baches were Jud 1 Icathcoate<lb/>
ot Michigan State (Di ision I), Wa rte( hapman ot Kentucky Wesleyan<lb/>
(Division II), Mike Neer ol Division III Rochester (N.Y.) and Kirk<lb/>
Spcraw ol Pensacola (Flajunior College.<lb/>
Former Olympic champion takes title<lb/>
Former Olympic champion Andrew Maynard (11-0) got up from<lb/>
two sixth-round knockdowns to win the North American Boxing<lb/>
Federation light hea weight title Sunday night with a 12 round ma<lb/>
iont decision against Mike Sedillo at I akc rahoc, Nev<lb/>
Brewers' star gets record S3 million<lb/>
Major league baseball will open its season April with 25 players<lb/>
making S2 million or more an average salary of nearly $600,000and an<lb/>
industry payroll approat hing s4i)0 million. According to a USA TO<lb/>
PA) study ol all major league salaries, Milwaukee's Robin Yount<lb/>
becomes the first player in baseball history to earn$3 million this year.<lb/>
U.S. Davis Cup set to play Austria<lb/>
Aaron Km kstein and Brad i albert won Sunday as the I ,S I ivis<lb/>
c up team defeatedzechoslovakia 4 I at Prague and advanced to the<lb/>
semifinals to play Austria Sept 21 22. Krickstein, who won his opening<lb/>
match Friday, beat Petr Korda6-2,6-3,1 -6,6-3 to give the United states<lb/>
an unbeatable 3-1 lead.<lb/>
Soccer team to play in United States<lb/>
The I .S. national soccer team will play Malta May 5 .it Rutgers<lb/>
Stadium in Pis ataway, N.J and European power Ajax of Amsterdam<lb/>
May 12 at Rl K stadium in Washington. D.C as it prepares tor the<lb/>
Worldup The I nited states, 2-5 in international pla, is in the World<lb/>
i up tor the first time sun e 1950.<lb/>
Unser, Rahal enter Indianapolis 500<lb/>
The Indianapolis Motor Speedway received entries Thursday tor<lb/>
drivers Bobby Rahal, winner of the Indianapolis SK) in 1986 with a<lb/>
record average speed ol 170 7?? and Al Unser lr who was bumped<lb/>
into the wall two laps from apparent victory last year. There are 76<lb/>
entries with a doen more expected for the Mav 27 race<lb/>
Nicklaus wins $800,000 tournament<lb/>
lack Ni klaus won the lYaditiongolf tournament at Desert Woun<lb/>
tain golf tournament Sunday inhis first Senior PGA Tour event. Nick-<lb/>
laus won the $800,000 tournament by tour shots with a 4 hole bl-<lb/>
under par 206. Gary Player finished second.<lb/>
Virginia, Stanford give others hope<lb/>
Virginia and Stanford were two new teams in the women's NCAA<lb/>
basketball championship I inal I our I hat, says Cavaliers coach Debbie<lb/>
Ryan, v as good lor the game, he said it would not have been possible<lb/>
five years ago and gives other programs hope<lb/>
In the Locker<lb/>
Championship points<lb/>
The average total points scored in men's championship<lb/>
games, by decade:<lb/>
y 1 150.7<lb/>
141 1 1437<lb/>
141,1 135.5<lb/>
89.2<lb/>
Average<lb/>
points<lb/>
1940s 1950s 1960s 1970s 1980s<lb/>
luck on the last day as Move's<lb/>
father was admitted to the hospi-<lb/>
tal on Saturday and the Pirates<lb/>
would bo without his services for<lb/>
the final round.<lb/>
"I really feel sorry for Simon<lb/>
though because he was playing<lb/>
really well and had a chance to<lb/>
win individually, but we all wish<lb/>
the Move family the best, said<lb/>
Morrison.<lb/>
The purple squad didn't let<lb/>
Moye's absence slow it down as it<lb/>
managed to shoot a 24 the final<lb/>
day giving them a 890 total which<lb/>
was good for second place.<lb/>
Meanwhile UNC-Chapel Hill<lb/>
equalled their low round for the<lb/>
tournament by tiring a 291 on the<lb/>
final day giving them a three day<lb/>
total of 878 and a twelve shot vie<lb/>
tory over the Pirates.<lb/>
"Weplayed well today for jus!<lb/>
having tour players and it we<lb/>
could have had )ust one more low<lb/>
score to put pressureon I c who<lb/>
knows what could have hap<lb/>
pened. said Morrison<lb/>
"1 hopenooneissatisfied with<lb/>
second place. Ilus is our touma<lb/>
mentand weplay here all the time<lb/>
which should have giving us a<lb/>
Source: .USA TODAY research<lb/>
Julie Stacev, Gannett News Service<lb/>
decided edge said red-shirt<lb/>
freshman Michael 'The Worm"<lb/>
league.<lb/>
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