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<pb facs="00058207_0001"/>
(Iftfz iEaat (ftanrlmian<lb/>
Serving the TLasi Carofina campus community since 1925<lb/>
Vol. M No. 24<lb/>
I hursdav April 5, 1990<lb/>
Greenville, North Carolina<lb/>
Circulation 12,000<lb/>
14 Pages<lb/>
ECU researchers discover<lb/>
cause of Pamlico fish deaths<lb/>
By Adam Cornelius<lb/>
SUM Writer<lb/>
A team ol K I researchers<lb/>
believe they have pinpointed the<lb/>
ii.Unroot.i disease w hah has been<lb/>
diminishing the population ol<lb/>
menhaden m the Pamlico Sound<lb/>
area for the post six years. But it is<lb/>
not the same disease which scien-<lb/>
tists .it tirst suspected.<lb/>
Dr. Charles Bland, chairman<lb/>
Menhaden infected with the red sore disease Inset photo is an<lb/>
enlargement ol a cross section showing the destroyed muscle and<lb/>
skin tissue taken from the tell-tale mark of the disease (Photo<lb/>
courtesy of Dr Charles Bland)<lb/>
Arrest made in theft<lb/>
of freshmen vehicles<lb/>
Bv Shannon Buckley<lb/>
Staff Writer<lb/>
ol EC U'sbiotogy department, said<lb/>
that a common marine bacterium<lb/>
called erottwn i '? .? hila w as<lb/>
responsible tor the tish kills At<lb/>
a presentation in lanuarv at the<lb/>
I idewa ter section ol the .Amen, an<lb/>
I isheriesScK iety. Bland suggested<lb/>
thai the disease be known as red-<lb/>
soredisease instead ot iheoriginal<lb/>
diagnosis erf the deaths, ulcerative<lb/>
mycosis.<lb/>
According to a release pre-<lb/>
pared by Bland and biology de-<lb/>
partment faculty members Char-<lb/>
les Singhas and Edmund Stell wag,<lb/>
red-sore disease has symptoms<lb/>
like ulcerative mycosis and is<lb/>
known to be caused by  Aero<lb/>
monas hydrophila in a variety ol<lb/>
aquatic animals" with open sores<lb/>
including fish, frogs alligators<lb/>
and humans<lb/>
The bacterium thrives in riv-<lb/>
ers and estuaries when the salinity<lb/>
is low, the temperatures are high<lb/>
and organic runoff is present.<lb/>
Bland says that there is a link to<lb/>
phosphate runoff, such as fertiliz-<lb/>
ers, citing an increase in dv,d<lb/>
menhaden.<lb/>
The tish become stressed due<lb/>
to the km salinitv and depleted<lb/>
oxvgon levels Bland attributes this<lb/>
to heavy summer rainfall and the<lb/>
m h animal life found in the Tarn<lb/>
lico Sound area. He went on to<lb/>
explain that, since the menhaden<lb/>
travel in schools, abrasions from<lb/>
the tish rubbing against each other<lb/>
mav cause open sores which can<lb/>
lead to infections.<lb/>
The seasonal deaths of hun-<lb/>
dreds ot menhaden in the Pamlico<lb/>
Sound had originally been studied<lb/>
by a research team from UNC-<lb/>
c hapel Hill and N.C. State in the<lb/>
summer ot 1984 At the time, the<lb/>
disease had been tentatively diag-<lb/>
nosed as "ulcerative mycosis<lb/>
caused by the fungus Aphanomy<lb/>
Bland had originally sus-<lb/>
pected the cause to he viral rather<lb/>
than fungal because of an abrupt<lb/>
border on the sore between the<lb/>
living and dead tissue, a symptom<lb/>
he said was uncharacteristic of a<lb/>
See Menhaden, page 3<lb/>
 North Carolina State I ni<lb/>
vcrsitv studtit was arrested by<lb/>
the Greenville Police Department<lb/>
on March 29 .nd charged with<lb/>
larceny of an automobile, which<lb/>
was stolen from an ECU freshman<lb/>
parking lot. The same subject had<lb/>
been apprehended two days ear-<lb/>
lier by the Raleigh Police Depart-<lb/>
ment for possession of the same<lb/>
stolen vehicle.<lb/>
Donald Keith Paterson,20,ol<lb/>
Raleigh was arrested last ITiurs<lb/>
dav and charged with larceny oi<lb/>
an automobile. In addition to the<lb/>
larceny charge, ECU Public Safety<lb/>
charged Paterson with breaking<lb/>
and entering of an automobile,<lb/>
attempted larceny of an automo-<lb/>
bileand damage to personal prop-<lb/>
erty, according to Captain John W.<lb/>
Burrus of ECU Public Safety.<lb/>
"This was a joint investigation<lb/>
between our department and the<lb/>
Greenville Police Department<lb/>
Burrussaid " rhearresti a me from<lb/>
a case that was reported to us on I<lb/>
March 1 ol a breaking and enter<lb/>
ing of an automobile at the Fifth<lb/>
and Reade freshman parking lot<lb/>
According to I etective rho<lb/>
mas eelle. three ECU freshman<lb/>
vehicles were involved in the inci-<lb/>
dent that occurred on March 1<lb/>
()ne vehicle was stolen, the second<lb/>
vehicle was broken into and the<lb/>
third c ar was damaged.<lb/>
Ncvelle said Paterson was<lb/>
apprehended and held by the<lb/>
Raleigh Police. Nevellc arrested<lb/>
the suspect on the behalf ol the<lb/>
Greenville Police. According to<lb/>
Burrus, Lieutenant Ernest Suggs<lb/>
arrested Paterson for the campus<lb/>
police.<lb/>
Southern cuisine can contribute to illnesses<lb/>
Jisv ipline<lb/>
, ECU New;<lb/>
at the me dit al -c hool<lb/>
ith diabetic patients in an<lb/>
 educational program aimed at<lb/>
A meal consisting of tried teaching them how to change their<lb/>
diets as a part of the management<lb/>
ol their disease<lb/>
Showing people how to mod-<lb/>
ify their diets and cooking style is<lb/>
just one of the manj lessons taught<lb/>
through the program, which has<lb/>
nied for meeting na<lb/>
meat, vegetables seasoned with<lb/>
animal tat. a mound of tatoes<lb/>
smothered in gra i coupli ?l<lb/>
buttery rolls and a rich desserl is<lb/>
considered good eating in eastei n<lb/>
North i arolina.<lb/>
But such Southern t ire on a<lb/>
regular basis can contributi '<lb/>
chronic illnesses such asdiabt '? -<lb/>
according to Sue Daughtrj . a die-<lb/>
titian .it the E ' S? hool ol Medi<lb/>
cine<lb/>
Daughtr) nd a team ol pro-<lb/>
fessionals representing several<lb/>
to propel managi<lb/>
tes, a disease in wl ch the pan-<lb/>
creas is unable to c ither produce<lb/>
enough insulin or to use it prop-<lb/>
erly. Included among the self-care<lb/>
areas .ire toot care blood sugar<lb/>
testing, insulin injection tech-<lb/>
nique's, and individualized exer-<lb/>
cis programs<lb/>
r cram and<lb/>
hanks to tl<lb/>
heen rccog<lb/>
tional standards ol quality by the<lb/>
Vmerican Diabetes Association.<lb/>
The program is a component ol<lb/>
the educational mission ol the<lb/>
I iabetes( enter at ECl .<lb/>
Patients are also mstrik ted in<lb/>
other areas ot self-care important<lb/>
his own determination. Cornell<lb/>
Parker, a custodian at the School<lb/>
ol Medic me and participant in the<lb/>
ECU diabetes education program,<lb/>
has lost more than 25 pounds and<lb/>
stopped taking insulin, lie now<lb/>
controls his diabetes with diet,<lb/>
exercise arid a pill to lower his<lb/>
Students compete<lb/>
in communication<lb/>
Bv Kristin Brooks<lb/>
Special to The I as!jrolini.in<lb/>
1 he 1 irsl Annual Pastern<lb/>
Regional High School Communi-<lb/>
cations Tournament will be held<lb/>
at ECU on April 7. Students from<lb/>
20 eastern North Carolina high<lb/>
schools have been invited to par-<lb/>
ticipate in the tournament.<lb/>
I he students will be compet-<lb/>
ing in tour events: extemporane-<lb/>
ous speaking, dramatic reading,<lb/>
news announcing and news writ-<lb/>
ing. I .i h ?? hiol will Decomposed<lb/>
oi a team ol tour students, along<lb/>
with .i faculty or volunteer adult<lb/>
supervisor.<lb/>
"The major purpose of the<lb/>
tournament is to celebrate the new<lb/>
Department of Communications<lb/>
said I 'r Beverly Mcrrk k, a coordi-<lb/>
nator of the tournament. "Wo want<lb/>
to show people we are here and<lb/>
keeping up with the changing<lb/>
trend towards communications<lb/>
As sponsors ot the program, the<lb/>
i C L Department ot<lb/>
Communications is bringing<lb/>
together speech, journalism and<lb/>
broadcasting.<lb/>
A winning team will be cho-<lb/>
sen in each category. The school<lb/>
with the highest overall team so ire<lb/>
will receive the 1990 High School<lb/>
Communications Tournament<lb/>
Award<lb/>
"It always excites me when<lb/>
young people have ways to<lb/>
broaden their perspective Mer-<lb/>
rick said about the upcoming<lb/>
event "It will provide high school<lb/>
students tin1 opportunity to sec<lb/>
that college isa good place to be<lb/>
()ther communication faculty<lb/>
helping with the tournament are<lb/>
Kerry Cox, Carlton Benz, lames<lb/>
Recsand Catherine Wickern, along<lb/>
with anice Schreiber of the ECU<lb/>
theatre arts faculty. Several ECU<lb/>
students have volunteered to es-<lb/>
cort the high school visitors, assist<lb/>
the judges and re-enact an auto<lb/>
accident for the news writing<lb/>
competition.<lb/>
The idea tor the communica-<lb/>
tions tournament came from a<lb/>
student Darek ld ullers He<lb/>
came up with the idea ofthediffer<lb/>
ent workshops to prepare th. high<lb/>
school student tor college I he<lb/>
students can experiment with dif-<lb/>
ferent media and become more<lb/>
familiar with the different pro<lb/>
grams offered at Il<lb/>
"The whole community, pro<lb/>
fessionalsand students, are work-<lb/>
ing together in this communica-<lb/>
tive ettort said Mcrrick Local<lb/>
media representatives will be<lb/>
appearing at the tournament to<lb/>
help in the judging, lerry A Ik-<lb/>
good of The News ami Observer of<lb/>
Raleigh, Alan I loffmanol WN( T-<lb/>
TV, Greenville and Tom Morns ot<lb/>
The Daily Reflector will be present,<lb/>
along with Chancellor Richard<lb/>
Eakin.<lb/>
After arriving on campus, the<lb/>
students will register and attend<lb/>
an orientation session. The com<lb/>
petition begins at 10:30 a.m. and<lb/>
will last for two hours. Following<lb/>
the competition will be lunch,<lb/>
courtesy of Hardee's Inc. An<lb/>
award ceremony will be held at 2<lb/>
P m m Room HBI of E I I's (len<lb/>
oral C lassroom Building to an-<lb/>
nounce the tournament winners<lb/>
blood sugar. I le has also learned<lb/>
toeniov his favorite foods cooked<lb/>
with less fat and sugar<lb/>
"Before 1 got involved in the<lb/>
program, 1 thought life with dia-<lb/>
betes would be miserable said<lb/>
Parker, who was diagnosed with<lb/>
diabetes in 1986 after losing his<lb/>
vision while driving his car. Dis-<lb/>
ciplining yourself to control a dis-<lb/>
ease likediabetes is kind of tough<lb/>
"A healthy litestvlo is essen-<lb/>
tial in managing diabetes said<lb/>
Daughtry. "A person with diabe-<lb/>
tes can reduce the risk ot develop-<lb/>
ing complications such as blind-<lb/>
ness, kidney disease, cardiovascu-<lb/>
lar disease or amputations bv<lb/>
changing habits to control his dia-<lb/>
betes<lb/>
Daughtry and the diabetes<lb/>
education team work individually<lb/>
with patients and their family<lb/>
members. Thev begin the program<lb/>
by first assessing each patient's<lb/>
lifestyle, then outline ways to<lb/>
improve them.<lb/>
lor example. Parker enjoyed<lb/>
vegetables seasoned with animal<lb/>
fat. Daughtry helped him reduce<lb/>
the amount of fat in his diet by<lb/>
suggesting other ways to season<lb/>
his food. Alternatives include the<lb/>
use of smoked turkey, broth or<lb/>
herbs.<lb/>
See Homecookin page 2<lb/>
Inside<lb/>
9 B<lb/>
These migrants, along with volunteers from Faith and Victory Church, sing songs in Spanish at a smali<lb/>
home m Simpson, N.C The structure is home to four families who travel the East Coast Stream each year<lb/>
along with about 40.000 other workers (Photo by Lori Martin ? The East Carolinian)<lb/>
Migrants return to N.C. fields<lb/>
Bv I ori Martin<lb/>
Managing I ilitor<lb/>
About 40,000 people travel<lb/>
through Northarolina eat h year<lb/>
working in the cotton and tobacco<lb/>
fields of the state. These migrant<lb/>
workers, who are primarily Mexi-<lb/>
can, participate in what is called<lb/>
the hast Coast Stream<lb/>
The stream begins in the South<lb/>
in the earlv spring months, as the<lb/>
workers pick oranges and other<lb/>
fruits in Florida. In April, the<lb/>
migrants move up through North<lb/>
("arolina, where thev stay until<lb/>
November. They finish the sweep<lb/>
picking apples in Maine during<lb/>
the winter.<lb/>
A lu82 study conducted by<lb/>
the N.C State Legislature showed<lb/>
that about 60 percent ol the 10,000<lb/>
migrant farm workers in North<lb/>
Carolina are Mexican, 10-15 per<lb/>
cent are 1 l.utian and the remain<lb/>
ing 25 30percentareCuban, Pana-<lb/>
manian or of other Hispanic na-<lb/>
tionalities<lb/>
According to Greg Allison ot<lb/>
Catholic Social Ministries m<lb/>
Greenville, few studies have Ken<lb/>
done to update these-statistics, but<lb/>
"we do know that the numbers ot<lb/>
migrants are increasing, not do<lb/>
creasing he said.<lb/>
Allison's organization tries to<lb/>
alleviate problems the Mexicans<lb/>
mav encounter as a result ot the<lb/>
language barrier. Since the<lb/>
summer of 1989, Catholic Social<lb/>
Ministries hasorganized a 24-hour<lb/>
Spanish-language hotline for<lb/>
migrants who have questions or<lb/>
emergencies. In addition, the<lb/>
organization has joined forces with<lb/>
the N.C. Department ot<lb/>
Transportation to develop a<lb/>
driver's license test in Spanish.<lb/>
A current project ot Catholic<lb/>
Social Ministries is the publication<lb/>
ol a monthly newsletter in Span<lb/>
ish to provide the seasonal work-<lb/>
ers with news about Greenville<lb/>
and surrounding counties<lb/>
Members ot ECU'S Spanish cTub<lb/>
is helping with the project b con-<lb/>
tributing articles. Allison said that<lb/>
The "M" Voice newspaper a<lb/>
minority publication inGreenville,<lb/>
will publish the newsletter<lb/>
beginning April 26.<lb/>
Other organizations have ex-<lb/>
tended their Support to the mi-<lb/>
grant workers. St. GabneTsCat ho<lb/>
Ik Church conducts a Spanish<lb/>
See Migrants, page 2<lb/>
Editorial4<lb/>
If I don't win, I won't<lb/>
play the spoil sport<lb/>
says.<lb/>
Classifieds6<lb/>
Personals. For Sale.<lb/>
Help Wanted, For Rent<lb/>
and Services Rendered<lb/>
State and Nation8<lb/>
Bush pressures Con-<lb/>
gress to enact his aid<lb/>
request for Panama and<lb/>
Nicaragua<lb/>
Features10<lb/>
Corrosion of<lb/>
Conformity to play at the<lb/>
Attic Friday night<lb/>
Comics12<lb/>
Sports13<lb/>
Pirate baseball team<lb/>
upsets UNC Chapel Hill<lb/>
2- 1<lb/>
<pb facs="00058207_0002"/><lb/>
2 The East Carolinian, April 5,1990<lb/>
ECU Briefs<lb/>
EastCare celebrates fifth anniversary<lb/>
More than 1,500 former patients emergency medical service (EMS)<lb/>
personnel and friends are invited to attend the fifth anniversary cele-<lb/>
bration of EastCare April 8 from 2-5 p.m. in the park beside the Brody<lb/>
Medical Sciences Building.<lb/>
EastCare, Pitt County Memorial 1 lospital'sair ambulance service,<lb/>
began operation in April 1985 and has made apporoximately 2,000<lb/>
Hights.<lb/>
A ceremony at 2:30 p.m. will include a brief historv oi the program,<lb/>
speeches by former patients and a dedication to former patients and<lb/>
EMS personnel. If available, the FastCare helicopter will be on display.<lb/>
Biology to hold annual plant sale<lb/>
I he ECU Biology Department s annual spnng plant sale will be<lb/>
held April 5-6 in the Science Complex (RoomS-111 from 7:30a.m until<lb/>
1 p m each daj . Ottered for sale will Iv container-grow n plants propa-<lb/>
gated from contributed seeds and cuttings Student and faculty bota-<lb/>
nists will be available to explain the cultural rcquiremenisol each plant.<lb/>
High school scholars to visit campus<lb/>
A total of 147 top juniors in North Carolina's public .mil private<lb/>
' schools have accepted invitations to isit East Carolina I niversit) April<lb/>
7-9 as participants in ECU'S annual Scholars Weekend<lb/>
The students were recommended by guidance counselors and<lb/>
principals on the basis of superior PSAT scores and academic records.<lb/>
Students who participate in the event become candidates foi one ot<lb/>
E I s major scholarship programs winch otter up to $12,000 over a<lb/>
four-year period<lb/>
1 he weekend's activities include living in campus residence halls,<lb/>
meeting with professors and students of various academic depart-<lb/>
ments, visiting classes, and such events as a reception at the home of<lb/>
ECU Chancellor and Mrs. Richard Fakin, a banquet, a Qu bowl<lb/>
competition and informal social gatherings<lb/>
National Campus Clips<lb/>
Faculty resignations at ASU may be<lb/>
related to conflict over research<lb/>
Two faculty members recenth resigned at Appaiachain State<lb/>
I nncrsitv. Psychology Chairperson Dr. Verne Bachara h and ollegc<lb/>
of Arts and Sciences Dean Dr. William . Herd's letters ol resignation<lb/>
may be connected, according to Dr. Harvey Durham, the university<lb/>
provost and vice chancellor for Academic Affairs Other faculty mem-<lb/>
bers from the College oi Arts and St it nces think those resignations may<lb/>
be caused bv the divergent opinions about the university's main<lb/>
mission. Dr. Gregory Reck, the gradute school assistant dean and<lb/>
anthropology professor, said: One of the facets that lies behind the<lb/>
conflict now is the difference of opinion about where the university<lb/>
should be going in the future<lb/>
Chancellor lohn Thomas said SU has three main objectives:<lb/>
education, research, public service and that education is the top prior-<lb/>
ity. Dr. Sally Atkins, the faculty senate chairperson said that It s tinis.1<lb/>
who feel we're not emphasizing research enough against those who feel<lb/>
in some arenas we've emphasized it too much She said that Bvrd felt<lb/>
thov did not haveenough facilities t'1 emphasize research in the future<lb/>
Schools join Operation Earth<lb/>
Two thirds ot all U.S. schools and colleges will participate in<lb/>
Operation Earth, a partnership between PBS and five major education<lb/>
croups to inform the public ol environmental issues plaguing the<lb/>
world today.<lb/>
The groups sav the program's purpose is to spend more than just<lb/>
Earth Day, April 22, exploring environmental problems. Featured will<lb/>
bo activities such as series and specials, local programming on environ-<lb/>
mental problems and spots on topics such as recycling and home<lb/>
energy conservation.<lb/>
"We intend to give a message ol hope, which is that people can<lb/>
tackle environmental problems on a grassroots level said TBS presi-<lb/>
dent Bruce L. Christensen.<lb/>
Highlights of Operation Earth will include profiles of young envi-<lb/>
ronmentalists and a special four-part series entitled "leewalk" for use<lb/>
in schools. "Icewalk" tells the stor) of 22 teenagers' expedition to the<lb/>
North Pole documenting threats to the planet.<lb/>
Fraternity names<lb/>
Miss Black and Gold<lb/>
To Your Health<lb/>
Effective time management<lb/>
can ease end of semester cram<lb/>
By D.A Highan, Health Promotion Assistant<lb/>
Student Health Center, 757-6794<lb/>
Spring fever is here, right in the midst of everyone getting ready for<lb/>
final exams. There are so many things to do, and if vou don't want to<lb/>
miss anything vou should start getting readv now and be prepared for<lb/>
exam time. Good time management is essential for success, and now is<lb/>
as good a time asever to Start. Think about the following questions: Are<lb/>
vou always late? Do you daydream while studying7 Do vou put off<lb/>
doing things until the last minute"1 D i you wish there was an extra hour<lb/>
in each day?<lb/>
If vou answered yes to any of these questions, chances are you are<lb/>
a victim of pcxir time management. Poor time management is a habit<lb/>
that is learned as a child. People have a difficult time in learning to<lb/>
manage their time more effectively because it requires a change in their<lb/>
lifestyle and a great deal of practice.<lb/>
Before you attempt to improve how you manage your time, iden-<lb/>
tify your weaknesses Keep a daily journal of everything you do and<lb/>
how you feel at each particular time. One of the greatest problems in<lb/>
poor time management is interruptions. You must learn to say no when<lb/>
faced with interference and stick to vour priorities There are always<lb/>
going to be interruptions, but main can wait until a later time. Victims<lb/>
of poor time management are often easily distracted Slowly begin to<lb/>
say no, soon the feeling of success w ill make the change easier.<lb/>
Many people have their own strategy ot good time management.<lb/>
Here are some guidelines to help you create yourown system. Soon you<lb/>
can be more productive and successful. Good Luck'<lb/>
-Make a list of things to do and establich priorities. Stick to it!<lb/>
-Get organized. Much time is wasted trying to figure out what you<lb/>
need to do.<lb/>
-Separate study time and play time. Strive to keep the two apart.<lb/>
-Make breaks just that. Take 5 minute study breaks each hour. This<lb/>
will help you to stop daydreaming.<lb/>
-Learn to say no! Avoid unnecessary interruptions.<lb/>
-Don't try to overdo it!<lb/>
Aim for improvement, not perfection. Success awaits those who<lb/>
See Time, page 3<lb/>
By Val Touloumbadjian<lb/>
Stjit Writer<lb/>
I uesday night the EC I chap-<lb/>
ter ol the Alpha Phi Alpha frater-<lb/>
nity presented Delia Denene<lb/>
Richardson as Miss Bla k &amp; (lold<lb/>
tor 1990 Six contestants partici-<lb/>
pated in the event, introduced by<lb/>
the master ot ceremonv and lor<lb/>
mer Miss Black &amp; Cold Valeria<lb/>
Lassiter.<lb/>
" It'sa shock, Richardson said<lb/>
alter the competition. " 1 didn't<lb/>
expe t to win<lb/>
According to Lassiter, Miss<lb/>
Black &amp; i .old acts as a spokesper-<lb/>
son tor ALA fraternity and repre-<lb/>
sents it during various events. She<lb/>
said that being a past Miss Black<lb/>
and( old "allowed mc to compete<lb/>
on a state level and it made me<lb/>
think about what beaut) actually<lb/>
is. It is not outward It comes from<lb/>
inward<lb/>
Yolanda Sidbury won first<lb/>
runner upandStaciePompili took<lb/>
second runner-up. The jury in-<lb/>
cluded Teresa (Gordon, a teacher<lb/>
from 1 Ivden Elementary School;<lb/>
Shelia Bunch, an ECU professor<lb/>
and Mark Cordon, a Pitt County<lb/>
hospital administrator.<lb/>
Iimothv Inman an organizer<lb/>
ol the event said "the purpose ol<lb/>
Homecookin'<lb/>
i ontinued from page 1<lb/>
? - ? d(Hsn ! like pin su al<lb/>
.u ti itiessui has running or swim-<lb/>
ming but enj s gardening, walk<lb/>
ing and helping to maintain the<lb/>
grounds at hist hurch in rural Pitt<lb/>
County Through the program, he<lb/>
was able to develop an exercise<lb/>
program which he enjovs and<lb/>
which ' elps to control his blood<lb/>
sueii<lb/>
According to Daughtry, the<lb/>
program's emphasis on the in-<lb/>
volvement ot each patient in<lb/>
managing his own health is the<lb/>
kev to its sl cess She said that<lb/>
group sessions, which includi<lb/>
family members, provide time tor<lb/>
learning activities and information<lb/>
exchange.<lb/>
"Managing diabetes is a fam-<lb/>
ily affair Daughtry said. "When<lb/>
family members and friends<lb/>
understand more about diabetes,<lb/>
they can really he helpful<lb/>
Migrants<lb/>
Continued from page 1<lb/>
Mass on Sundays at 12:30 p.m<lb/>
anol Faith and Victory Church and<lb/>
the ECU chapter ot Chi Omega<lb/>
sorority have donated clothing to<lb/>
the migrant families.<lb/>
According to Allison, it is dif-<lb/>
ficult to determine the percentage<lb/>
of migrant workers who have le-<lb/>
gal status. The migrant campsand<lb/>
houses are well hidden in rural<lb/>
Pitt County and other areas in<lb/>
Eastern North Carolina. It is also<lb/>
hard to tell how main' workers<lb/>
will follow the East Coast Stream,<lb/>
or where they will come from.<lb/>
Nevertheless, the farmers of<lb/>
Eastern North Carolina are highly<lb/>
dependent on their labor.<lb/>
Positions<lb/>
Open at<lb/>
The East<lb/>
Carolinian!<lb/>
Apply<lb/>
Today!<lb/>
2nd Floor<lb/>
Publications<lb/>
Building<lb/>
the pageant is to represent ATA<lb/>
en a state level and then possibly<lb/>
on a regional level, and thin on a<lb/>
national level Richardson will<lb/>
next participate in a state conven-<lb/>
tion in November at Winston-Sa-<lb/>
lem should she win at this level.<lb/>
she will go to a regional conven-<lb/>
tion I hope I can oo it,<lb/>
Richardson siul 1 m still a little<lb/>
bit nervous because it is my first<lb/>
win<lb/>
The pageant consisted of five<lb/>
main phases First, the contestants<lb/>
modelled in casual wear. Next<lb/>
came the swimsuit competition.<lb/>
The participants then displayed<lb/>
their artistic talents through songs,<lb/>
monologues or mini-plays. After-<lb/>
wards, thev presented their eve-<lb/>
ning gowns. The last phase was a<lb/>
question-answer session con-<lb/>
ducted bv Phillip Timmons, an<lb/>
ALA brother.<lb/>
The pageant took place in<lb/>
Room 244 at Mendenhall Student<lb/>
( enter, from 8 p.m. - 9:30 p.m in<lb/>
front of about 170 people.<lb/>
'Director of Advertising<lb/>
James F.J. McKee<lb/>
Advertising 'Jepresentative:<lb/>
Carolinian<lb/>
Gliy J. Harvey<lb/>
Shay Sitlinger<lb/>
Adam T. Blankenship<lb/>
Phillip V. (ope<lb/>
Kellev O'Connor<lb/>
per column inch<lb/>
National RateS5.75<lb/>
Open Rate$4.95<lb/>
Local Open Rate$4.75<lb/>
Hulk &amp; Frequency Contract<lb/>
Discounts Available<lb/>
?. 'Business Hours:<lb/>
Phone:  <lb/>
Monday - Irida<lb/>
757-6366 10:00 -5:00 pm<lb/>
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Memberships<lb/>
ATTIC<lb/>
Captain Cook &amp;<lb/>
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Jimms But tot Tribute<lb/>
iu<lb/>
jmst (UuTlinuiTi<lb/>
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also<lb/>
Thursday D.a . <lb/>
Hi kin i Contest<lb/>
April Mil with $300.00 in Prizes<lb/>
(Buyers Quide<lb/>
Arlington756-9933<lb/>
Attic752-7303<lb/>
Bogies752-4668<lb/>
Brasswood Apts355-6187<lb/>
Carolina Pregnancy Center355-3473<lb/>
CharleyoO's355-5000<lb/>
Chicos757-1666<lb/>
David's Automotive830-1779<lb/>
Delta Airlines404-756-2501<lb/>
ECU Homecoming Committee757-4711<lb/>
Economy Ministorage757-0373<lb/>
Gary Reynold's1-800-447-8560<lb/>
Geo Imports756-5253<lb/>
New Deli758-0080<lb/>
Overton's Supermarket752-5025<lb/>
Park ? Plaza Buc756-0088<lb/>
Pizza Hut752-4445<lb/>
Rack Room355-2519<lb/>
Raleigh Women's Health832-0535<lb/>
Research Information1-800-351-0222<lb/>
Ringgold Towers752-2865<lb/>
Student Union757-4715<lb/>
Summerfield Apartments355-6187<lb/>
Travel Connection719-687-6662<lb/>
Triangle Women's Health1-800-433-2930<lb/>
Two Dogs Pizza746-8020<lb/>
University Amoco758-9976<lb/>
Williamsburg Manor Apts355-6187<lb/>
<pb facs="00058207_0003"/><lb/>
The Last Carolinian Aprii 5, 199U 3<lb/>
Scholars to discuss<lb/>
children's literature at<lb/>
upcoming conference<lb/>
LCU News Bureau<lb/>
Tracy Yates teeters precariously on a handrail as she stretches to<lb/>
recover her shoe from a ledge at Jarvis Residence Hall after a<lb/>
Tnend" placed it there (Photo by J D. Whitmire ? ECU Photo Lab)<lb/>
"Non-Fiction for Children" is<lb/>
the theme of the 14th annual FCC<lb/>
Children's Literature Conference,<lb/>
scheduled for April n in the Willis<lb/>
Building.<lb/>
The conference is intended tor<lb/>
librarians, teachers, children's<lb/>
book authors and parents.<lb/>
Featured guest at the confer<lb/>
ence is author Vicki Cobb ot<lb/>
Mamaroneck, N. Y , whose books<lb/>
include "Science Experiments You<lb/>
Can Eat "I low the Doctor Knows<lb/>
You're Fine" and "Getting<lb/>
Dressed Ms Cobb's bxxks have<lb/>
won several awards, including the<lb/>
Christian Science Book Award, an<lb/>
ALA Notable Book designation<lb/>
and the Washington Irving<lb/>
Children's Book Award. Copiesof<lb/>
her books will be available for<lb/>
purchase and autographing at the<lb/>
conference.<lb/>
Also apprcaring on the pro-<lb/>
gram are several scholars in the<lb/>
field of children's literature. Speak-<lb/>
Menhaden<lb/>
ers include:<lb/>
? "The Nature of the Dis-<lb/>
course About Children's Science<lb/>
Trade Books Diane L. Barlow,<lb/>
University of Maryland.<lb/>
Sex, Lies and Textbooks<lb/>
Frances Bradburn, ECU.<lb/>
"Human and Heroic: A<lb/>
Look at Some Successful Modern<lb/>
Biographies Sarah V. Clere,<lb/>
Mount Olive College.<lb/>
?"Women and C.irls, Men<lb/>
and Boys, and Science Milton C.<lb/>
Hathaway, Appalachian State<lb/>
University.<lb/>
Cultivating a Child's<lb/>
Imagination Through C.ardening<lb/>
Books Dr. LccAnna Lawrence,<lb/>
ECU.<lb/>
The conference is coord mated<lb/>
by Dr. Charles W. Sullivan III of<lb/>
the ECU Fnglish faculty.<lb/>
Further information about the<lb/>
conference is available from the<lb/>
FCC Division of Continuing Edu-<lb/>
cation, ECU,GreenviHe,N.O, tele-<lb/>
phone 757-6143orkng distance 1-<lb/>
S0(V7b7-in 11.<lb/>
Continued from page 1<lb/>
DAVID'S AUTOMOTIVE<lb/>
Is Now Open In Greenville!<lb/>
We sell import and domestic pans and<lb/>
accessories at wholesale prices. We also have<lb/>
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We Specialize in German Car<lb/>
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Chef Caught In<lb/>
Middle Of<lb/>
luicy Fowl Flay.<lb/>
fungal infection<lb/>
"Although I have been inter-<lb/>
ested in it since the disease broke<lb/>
out, I have always been skeptical<lb/>
that it was caused bv a fungus.<lb/>
When 1 read the final report on the<lb/>
people who had been working on<lb/>
it, it was till not decisive that a<lb/>
fungus had caused the disease<lb/>
The FCC researchers, made<lb/>
up of members (if the Biology and<lb/>
Microbiology Departments and<lb/>
the School of Medicine, began<lb/>
studying the menhaden in the<lb/>
summer of 1989. The team iso-<lb/>
lated bacteria and the fungi from<lb/>
the diseased fish and examined<lb/>
the infected tissues<lb/>
"Hie primary bacterium we<lb/>
isolatedwasAert monasHydrovhilal<lb/>
Bland s.iui. "That was isolated<lb/>
from every legion. Aphanomyces<lb/>
was never isolated Afterwards,<lb/>
the researchers exposed healthy<lb/>
fish todifferent bacterium in order<lb/>
to isolate the disease.<lb/>
In the early stages oi the dis-<lb/>
ease, .i red sore usually develops<lb/>
on a fish's underside. The spot<lb/>
grows under the scales, and even-<lb/>
tually the tissue within the dis-<lb/>
eased area dies and tails off, leav-<lb/>
ing a gaping wound near the tail.<lb/>
The tish almost always die in<lb/>
the advanced stages, when the<lb/>
bacterium either eats into the vital<lb/>
organs or physically stresses the<lb/>
tish, increasing its vulnerability to<lb/>
other diseases. Because ol the size<lb/>
ami configuration ol the wounds,<lb/>
fishermen netting thediseased fish<lb/>
had originally believed they had<lb/>
been attacked by predators.<lb/>
The young menhaden, or<lb/>
peanut menhaden" are a source<lb/>
otbait tor I'amlico river fishermen<lb/>
and serve as a vital link in the food<lb/>
chain in the ocean and sounds.<lb/>
Adult menhaden are used com-<lb/>
mercially in oils and in the live-<lb/>
sUik industry.<lb/>
Fishermen in the I'amlico<lb/>
Sound and its estuaries have been<lb/>
calling the area "commercially<lb/>
dead tor several yeari. Hths<lb/>
Henries (it Carolina Seafood in<lb/>
Aurora said that Beaufort county<lb/>
alone lost $6.5 million in 1984, the<lb/>
first ear that the tish began wash-<lb/>
ing up on riverbanks.<lb/>
The Pamlieo River over the<lb/>
last five years hasgone from one of<lb/>
the most productive rivers in the<lb/>
state to one of the least produc-<lb/>
tive Henries said.<lb/>
Edmund Stellwag.an assistant<lb/>
biology professor, is also working<lb/>
on the makeup of the toxin the<lb/>
bacterium uses to digest the tis-<lb/>
sue. Other researchers include<lb/>
Thomas Charles, a research ana-<lb/>
lyst, Ms. o Robertsof the school of<lb/>
medicine and Diane Norrisof the<lb/>
biology department. Bland said<lb/>
thata manuscript documenting the<lb/>
findings is currently in prepara-<lb/>
tion and will be completed bv the<lb/>
summer.<lb/>
WAWTBD<lb/>
for the summer<lb/>
for all sections.<lb/>
Deadline for<lb/>
applications is<lb/>
April 11, 1990.<lb/>
Apply in person<lb/>
at<lb/>
GxrolinUm<lb/>
second floor of<lb/>
the Publications<lb/>
Building.<lb/>
ECONOMY MINI<lb/>
STORAGE<lb/>
USE YOUR<lb/>
STUDENT<lb/>
DISCOUNT<lb/>
SHARE WITH A ROOMMATE<lb/>
SPECIAL RATES MAY 1 - AUG 31<lb/>
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GREAT PIZZA HUT. PIZZA<lb/>
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SUNTHURS. 4 PM TO MIDNIGHT<lb/>
FRI. &amp; SAT. 4PM TO 1:00 AM<lb/>
LIMITED DELIVERY AREA<lb/>
DELIVERY CHARGE 75'<lb/>
$3 OFF ANY LARGE PIZZA<lb/>
OR $2 OFF ANY MEDIUM<lb/>
OR $1 OFF ANY SMALL<lb/>
COUPON FOR PIZZA HUT DELIVERY ONLT AND EXPIRES 4-30-90.<lb/>
ROT OOOD JR CONJUNCTION WITH AWT OTHER DISCOUNT.<lb/>
?ten ol tne Htftor nri Ireeny  Ian ? eyCs restaurant<lb/>
?as Questioned by autnoNii ??? ????????<lb/>
com?  ( ?????? I . le game hen<lb/>
,rvr, ??.?  ?? . ? ?- ?<lb/>
Be Use allegations later toMieporters mat . -?-????<lb/>
dewe to pronde Chafe) ? ?-? trees even  '? ' ' ? ??<lb/>
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vclfiff BSVs Jk.<lb/>
HILTON INN<lb/>
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Mfe the computer you net<lb/>
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ft'seasj (usttn ourBeal "Jbrkl Demo on a Macintosh"<lb/>
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If you're one rfl4 Grand Prize winners, you II net to<lb/>
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There will abobe 20 First Prize winners who will<lb/>
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see how eas it :v ' i is and how much one odd do for<lb/>
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tou'll apprecate the value i i a Sfewntosh o mputer<lb/>
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too Bui dm ? taki oui ?. x 11 ril ome in and try a<lb/>
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Enter Apples Real World Sweepstakes and vou could win a week at<lb/>
one of these leading organizations and a Slacintosh a )mputer.<lb/>
Enter April 9th-April 20th<lb/>
St) fCUt i .unptisi onipiiter Reseller for Sw? pfl A<lb/>
? ?  . v? "? Vr ?<lb/>
tmetlMiiinniri?ir-)i"iiiiiii-iir<lb/>
mpi?i"j.? <lb/>
<pb facs="00058207_0004"/><lb/>
I<lb/>
2HE Saat (fJarolitiian<lb/>
David Herring, i ? ?<lb/>
Low Martin, <lb/>
I KMES I' I M KEE, Dii Xto<lb/>
1'v'l<lb/>
fosi ii I fi NK1NS Jr News Editor<lb/>
Margi Mok . <lb/>
Caroline Ci ?<lb/>
$1 News Editor<lb/>
I atures I ditor<lb/>
? features Edttor<lb/>
. Sports Editor<lb/>
rHOMAS H BaRIO VI, f Sports Editor<lb/>
CARR1I Armstrong, ! nterlainmeni Editor<lb/>
S OT1 Maxwi I I . Satire I ditor<lb/>
11 ' I I II t : <lb/>
Mk HAEI M H<lb/>
Pi ionc I i NC,retlit Marui$ ?<lb/>
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Steve Reid, Stojjl IWn ifraioi<lb/>
C ! R ? S VV I INGHAM, I arkt ' m<lb/>
P! ;m I l T( 1. Secretary<lb/>
, : ?<lb/>
11 fmi ;j?;<lb/>
ON BEHALF OF<lb/>
1UB NUCLEI<lb/>
INDUSTRY, I WOULb<lb/>
LIKE. To j&amp;tSSMRE<lb/>
YOU ALL TrVAT ?<lb/>
AUCLEAR. POUER 6<lb/>
ANO REPRESENTS<lb/>
AO TUREbT to<lb/>
AMERICAN PUBLIC<lb/>
rhe I ast Carolinian has been serving the East Carolina campus communuj s?ncc J925,wiihprimar emphasis on tn<lb/>
lormation mosi dira iK affecting ECl I sludems. It is published t? ice wcckl). w nh a circulationol 12,(XX) I he East<lb/>
Carolinian reserves the right lo refuse or discontinue an advertisen m that discriminate on the basis oi age, sex,<lb/>
treed or national on gin rite East Carolinian welcomes letters expressing all points of view For purposes of decency<lb/>
and brc it). rhe I asi Carolinian reserves the right to edit am letter foi publk ation. 1 cttcrs shoukl be sent to 1 he last<lb/>
Carolinian, Publications Rids , 1 CU, Greenville, NC, 27834; or call ?s at (919) r57 6W?<lb/>
Opinion<lb/>
Pate4, Thursday, April 5, 1990<lb/>
Nuclear power propaganda <lb/>
Bv Nathaniel Mead<lb/>
 tlilori.il Columnist<lb/>
Sportsmanship is a must<lb/>
Sportsmanship in college athletics should be a<lb/>
top priority.<lb/>
On ruesday, ECU hosted the 13th ranked team<lb/>
in the nation the rarheels ot the University ot<lb/>
North Carolina at Chapel Hill. After the game, prob<lb/>
lems arose that caused players on both teams to<lb/>
become hostile and angry. Although no punches<lb/>
were thrown, several Pirate and Tarheel players<lb/>
exchanged words.<lb/>
rhe problem, according toCarolina'shead coach<lb/>
Mike Roberts, occurred when "a Ian from Easl Caro-<lb/>
lina danced around naked out in leftfieki As a<lb/>
result, the Tarheel players refused to shake hands<lb/>
u ith the 'irate team, and thecoachcommented that<lb/>
he would not bring his team back to ECU.<lb/>
rhe attitudes displayed by the Tarheels and the<lb/>
Pirates are intolerable The proper action to take<lb/>
aftoi en competition is to shake your opponents'<lb/>
hands whether you win or lose. Fliis was not the<lb/>
c.isc in I uesda) s game.<lb/>
I Iowcvct, blame should not totally be issued to<lb/>
irhecl playersand coaches The Pirate fan who<lb/>
"streaked" in tefttield also deserves to be chastized.<lb/>
1 lis.inth s wore immature and non exemplary ol thi<lb/>
majorit) ofE Ufans Notonh didhecastanegativ?<lb/>
image on the university but he may have endan-<lb/>
gered the future series between the Pirates and the<lb/>
rarheels, as well.<lb/>
An ECl player did attempt to stop the fan, but<lb/>
the damage had already been done. This was not the<lb/>
first show ol lack ot sportsmanship between the<lb/>
Pirates and the larheete. In 1988, the larheeh re-<lb/>
fused to shake hands after a Pirate i ictory al 1 lar-<lb/>
rirtgton Field.<lb/>
Regardless, the rarheels have no right to blame<lb/>
ECU'S head coach I iary Overton or the Pirate team<lb/>
And threatening the series between the two schools<lb/>
isnosolution cither nycootes! is competitive, but<lb/>
the competitiveness ol a game should never over<lb/>
look or outweigh the issue ol sportsmanship Per-<lb/>
haps when the Pirates travel to Chapel Hill next<lb/>
week, a more mature Tarheel team will play. And<lb/>
let's I,ope that E streaker will Stay at home<lb/>
lust before last Christmas<lb/>
on December I the National<lb/>
Academ) ol Sciences' National<lb/>
Resean hbuncil issued a dev as-<lb/>
tatmg re assessment ol the health<lb/>
risks posed by the nuclear power<lb/>
industry. i"he oimcil's ommit-<lb/>
tee on the Biological I ffet ts of<lb/>
Ion 11iv Radiation (BE1R), w hich<lb/>
sets the standards tor radiologii al<lb/>
health impacts, found that the<lb/>
cancer risk from exposure ti<lb/>
levels ol radiation from ntu lear<lb/>
soun es was three to tour times <lb/>
deadh as pre ioush thougl<lb/>
the tilth and most comprehensive<lb/>
in a series on the biologi al effei ts<lb/>
ol ionizing radiation, these illed<lb/>
: 1R i. port was based on new<lb/>
modi Is for i ancer risk revis I<lb/>
estimates ot how much radiati ??<lb/>
thesun ivorsol thenuclean ?;<lb/>
siens ol ! Iiroshima and Nagas iki<lb/>
were expensed to. rhe BEIR <lb/>
committee ot 17 i nent s icn<lb/>
tists concluded that there is no<lb/>
sate threshold tor the types ot<lb/>
radiation associated vith the<lb/>
nuclear fuel cycle. Thus, all stan<lb/>
dardsfor "permissible emissions<lb/>
.it reactor and weapons sitee uu-<lb/>
completely obsolete, their revision<lb/>
a potentiall) grave matter for those<lb/>
people living nearby or ep.<lb/>
to fallout<lb/>
i he BEIR V report also<lb/>
reveals that many nuclear in<lb/>
lations are leaking radiation with<lb/>
significant health effects to nearb<lb/>
communities. Studies reviewed by<lb/>
the BEIR committee found clus<lb/>
tors ot childhood leukemia and<lb/>
various cancers (brain, liver, lung<lb/>
and lymph node) around numer-<lb/>
ous nuclear plants in Europe and<lb/>
the United States Most oi these<lb/>
studies show an increased risk ol<lb/>
cancer, and mainly tor younger<lb/>
people up to 24 years of age.<lb/>
Moreover, human fetusesexposed<lb/>
tii low levels ot radiation are at<lb/>
muM h greater risk ol mental retar<lb/>
dation than earlier estimates had<lb/>
Ai d. One study by an Israi li<lb/>
group found that hildren irradi-<lb/>
.? d tor therapeutii purposes<lb/>
set red p orly on aptitude, intelli-<lb/>
gence, and psychol tgi iltests,and<lb/>
showed higher rates of psychiat-<lb/>
ru disorders and mental retarda-<lb/>
tion ouple these findings with<lb/>
the high rates ot i ongenital m n<lb/>
ous s stem defet ts observed near<lb/>
mil lear . r plants, and an in<lb/>
, 11  . miruuspictun begins<lb/>
to erm rg<lb/>
VV1 ill!<lb/>
mi. r face in<lb/>
nei <lb/>
? imissn n ? : ' did It '<lb/>
 ' ' ' ?<lb/>
? ? ? . ? - , : ic 11 v 11 ? '? i ?<lb/>
?<lb/>
?? ? icl ? :<lb/>
thi ' . ' :<lb/>
the<lb/>
?<lb/>
mi.<lb/>
 n ? Ui I '<lb/>
then ?ult c '<lb/>
ii ?? was later<lb/>
linked withepidemii s I i in<lb/>
I ? Id il and Arizona 11<lb/>
recent Bl IK report confirms<lb/>
main previous findings i t hij<lb/>
ranis n c.iii'r aircfc '?"iit<lb/>
-? li h ? i a).i?i <lb/>
among the residents :<lb/>
from the Ne ad i h ?mb t<lb/>
sit- sinthel S (Nr id i md i I<lb/>
Bi tain<lb/>
1 here h ttle d ?ubt<lb/>
regarding the sci ilidity<lb/>
behind ti ? lims Norcanthere<lb/>
be anv doubt that thousands of<lb/>
"routirw i I<lb/>
n i tor releases have occurred<lb/>
since the mid-sixties. And ai i I<lb/>
ingtoarecentC ongressional com-<lb/>
mittee, nuclear bomb makers not<lb/>
onlv se retly dumped nu<lb/>
wastes tor decades, but also over<lb/>
exposed their workers to high<lb/>
?Isof radiation without telling<lb/>
them For instance, hundreds ol<lb/>
workers at the Hanford (Wash-<lb/>
ington) and i Vtk Ridge I Fennes-<lb/>
 capons plants were dai<lb/>
oushcontaminated withurai<lb/>
and other radioactive substanc<lb/>
As stated by Sen John3enn H<lb/>
committee's spokesman i<lb/>
the findings, "The U s ma<lb/>
 ipons program was exp<lb/>
- ? number- ot wirk( rs t <lb/>
? ? ? illy dar<lb/>
? ? did nothing to ???? irnthcmai<lb/>
,wept the problem under th<lb/>
I N spit th. ??? ilth . -<lb/>
i rimmatine. e id thenu<lb/>
isrrv is loath to adi I I<lb/>
th ?<lb/>
 r will i' ' ze to the tl<lb/>
Is o f<lb/>
, around hi ' '?<lb/>
planl ted the 1 - report<lb/>
 ?<lb/>
know to 1 n I -<lb/>
no mistal il it it: oui<lb/>
' ' ?<lb/>
succeed, and it ha<lb/>
misled tlu publii : ? t <lb/>
ing the true releasesb ;<lb/>
Rocky Flat<lb/>
Savanna River PI ii ' ?<lb/>
Mile Island s.c ? '<lb/>
i ntists seen to gi i <lb/>
.? mmeni s attempts t<lb/>
?nedeLriuci??r :i.ard? -<lb/>
A case in point is a i<lb/>
 : - .<lb/>
? fessoH arl( i.Adlei<lb/>
of ECU'S departmei I I <lb/>
whi I v -tons ?<lb/>
merits ot m tv.<lb/>
thedangersol nu learj r. It is<lb/>
disturbing but not suq i ng I<lb/>
see a professor of phys ? I I nd-<lb/>
ing the nu lear industn<lb/>
icand unsubstanti il I ai<lb/>
m.ents. in light of ti R V re-<lb/>
port issued bv our nation s m<lb/>
prestigious scientific instil iti<lb/>
the National Academy of Sciences,<lb/>
Adler's position isbot td ited<lb/>
and indefensible. Adler also I<lb/>
rates Ernest Sternglass, an emi-<lb/>
nent professor ol radi<lb/>
See Propaganda, page 5<lb/>
Student<lb/>
questions<lb/>
dormitories<lb/>
thci .htor<lb/>
' im a foreign student living<lb/>
? n is and I haven't had an<lb/>
? well ometodorm life<lb/>
1 . ii ning ol Ihc fall<lb/>
.  tci m roommate had been<lb/>
?het boyfriend to sleep<lb/>
. ? ilatinglement dorm<lb/>
. urfevi rules, for all the days and<lb/>
nights ?l the week without asking<lb/>
my permission<lb/>
rwo times I woke up in the<lb/>
mi lilt of the night because of the<lb/>
lid noises in the other bed the<lb/>
two were having sex Oneofthose<lb/>
times my resident advisor heard<lb/>
the noises, too So 1 had told the<lb/>
R who, consequently, talked to<lb/>
my roommate I'or a week, she<lb/>
stopped having her boyfriend<lb/>
over But then, site started again. I<lb/>
?old my K h hO'n ??d she told<lb/>
the lement coordinator: they let<lb/>
me know thev were going to take<lb/>
some actions against mv room<lb/>
mate<lb/>
NOTHING WAS DOME!<lb/>
hen, I confronted my room<lb/>
mate and she told me she did not<lb/>
. ire at all So, I moved out, had to<lb/>
) $15, and moved in with some<lb/>
body else In the meantime, my<lb/>
former roommate had the room<lb/>
In hersell and still brought her<lb/>
' ? ? I vcrni ;1 I ' ????? '? talk<lb/>
tothet ounsi ling i nterand I ha c<lb/>
to thank Dr. Deilers for helping me<lb/>
out I had .m appointmenl with<lb/>
Yue( haiiiellor Allied Matthews.<lb/>
NOTHING HAS YE1 BEEN<lb/>
pi NE<lb/>
I iov? can lastarolina I ni<lb/>
vcrsit) students pretend to gel a<lb/>
better reputation it R.A.S, dorm<lb/>
coordinators and students them<lb/>
selves o not enforce simple rules<lb/>
like i urtew, partying and drink<lb/>
ing??'<lb/>
I feel like nobody inthesi hool<lb/>
really tares it mv roommate de-<lb/>
prived me of that universal right<lb/>
called "privacy When 1 was<lb/>
deciding where to applv. I heard<lb/>
that tl ECU it is common to find<lb/>
girls like my former roommate 1<lb/>
did not want to believe it. then<lb/>
Now I tlo<lb/>
I also believe strongly that the<lb/>
good image ol a S( hool is not only<lb/>
measured by the academic pro<lb/>
grams and their quality (al E I.<lb/>
these excel), but also by the kind ol<lb/>
people that attend it<lb/>
Unfortunately, MOST (NOT<lb/>
All) ol E( I s students are like<lb/>
my former roommate<lb/>
I hope this letter will be read<lb/>
and more prevailtions in the future<lb/>
will be taken.<lb/>
ECU does nol deserve this?!1<lb/>
Sincerely,<lb/>
Akssandra Bortolotti<lb/>
Freshman<lb/>
Biochemistry<lb/>
Candidate<lb/>
for treasurer<lb/>
speaks out<lb/>
about<lb/>
elections<lb/>
To the editor:<lb/>
1 irst of all, let me explain why<lb/>
I decided to run for treasurer ot<lb/>
the Student Governmenl Associa-<lb/>
tion. It's really quite simple<lb/>
Number one I believe I can<lb/>
do as good or better a job as treas<lb/>
urer than anyone else on campus.<lb/>
Number two It is my right<lb/>
to run tor treasurer. I am perfectly<lb/>
qualified. I'm enrolled on a full-<lb/>
time basis, I've successfully com-<lb/>
pleted more than 48 semester<lb/>
hours, I've been enrolled at ECU<lb/>
for more than two consecutive<lb/>
semesters, I'm in good standing<lb/>
and my grade point average is<lb/>
above the minimum 2.0.<lb/>
What has happened since 1<lb/>
decided to run has left a very sour<lb/>
U?temmy mouth concerning SGA<lb/>
politics and the system as a whole<lb/>
? particularly the performance of<lb/>
Ms. Kelly loncs as Elections<lb/>
Committee chairperson<lb/>
When 1 picked up a copy of<lb/>
the March 27 edition of The Fast<lb/>
Carolinian I was shocked to dis-<lb/>
cover that I was disqualified from<lb/>
the rue for treasurer Accordim;<lb/>
to the paper. Ms ones said that 1<lb/>
had been disqualified because 1<lb/>
tailed to submit a copy of my<lb/>
campaign expenditures by the 5<lb/>
p.m. deadline (Monday, March<lb/>
I knew this could not be true<lb/>
because 1 submitted a cop ol my<lb/>
expenditures at 4:45 p.m Mon-<lb/>
day knew, or at least hoped, that<lb/>
there had been a mistake<lb/>
When I finally reached Ms.<lb/>
ones Tuesday afternoon around<lb/>
4:30 p.m she informed me that<lb/>
what was printed in the paper<lb/>
was wrong. Instead, 1 was being<lb/>
disqualified because 1 failed to sub-<lb/>
mit a "list of campaign workers<lb/>
I had taken a general meaning<lb/>
as to what a list of workers was.<lb/>
Instead of writingdown the names<lb/>
of all who helped me, 1 simply put<lb/>
down that I had used three cam-<lb/>
paign workers. 1 figured that if she<lb/>
had anv questions as to what I<lb/>
meant, she would call me and 1<lb/>
would gladlv give her the names<lb/>
of mv threecampaign workers. In<lb/>
Article XII, section 4 of the elec-<lb/>
tion rules, it states that "The Elec-<lb/>
tion Committee has the right to<lb/>
request any candidate to appear<lb/>
before it to clarify hisher account.<lb/>
1 mean, let's face it, 1 had about as<lb/>
much chance of winning the elec-<lb/>
tion as a normal student has of<lb/>
getting through the school year<lb/>
without rcceivingaparkingticket.<lb/>
i also questioned Ms. Jones as<lb/>
to why 1 had to find out about my<lb/>
disqualification from the new spa-<lb/>
per A cording to what Ms. loncs<lb/>
told me personally, she did not<lb/>
inform the newspaper She said<lb/>
that mv opponent, Mr. Randy<lb/>
Royal, had told the neu spaper of<lb/>
mvdisqualification When 1 asked<lb/>
how he had found out, Ms. (ones<lb/>
said that she did not have to tell<lb/>
me that.<lb/>
All ot this contradicts what<lb/>
writers from the newspaper told<lb/>
me. Thev agreed that ves. Ms fones<lb/>
had in fact told them ol my dis-<lb/>
qualification.<lb/>
The worst part of all this is the<lb/>
fact that all of this went on with-<lb/>
out my knowledge I wassittingin<lb/>
my dorm room studying the whole<lb/>
night and never received a phone<lb/>
call.<lb/>
Regardless, somewhere along<lb/>
the line someone is lying. 1 just<lb/>
want a true version of what ex-<lb/>
actly happened.<lb/>
All 1 wanted was fair election<lb/>
and a chance. 1 played bv niv inter-<lb/>
pretation of the rules, which I now<lb/>
know are not Ms. lones' interpre-<lb/>
tation, I performed onlv positive<lb/>
campaigning Heck, I never even<lb/>
met Mr. Royal until the day of the<lb/>
candidates forum.<lb/>
Fair chance? On this campus?<lb/>
Keep dreaming!<lb/>
loseph S. Corlev<lb/>
lunior<lb/>
Journalism<lb/>
Greenville<lb/>
resident<lb/>
chastizes<lb/>
slam<lb/>
dancing<lb/>
Fo the editor:<lb/>
For weeks now. 1 have been<lb/>
reading in The East Curolinun<lb/>
about slam dancing, Us do's and<lb/>
don't's, and "slam dancing eti-<lb/>
quette Quite frankly, 1 think<lb/>
you're flogging a dead horse<lb/>
At a recent 1 agazi show in<lb/>
Raleigh Ian MacKaye said (and I<lb/>
paraphase to make it printable)<lb/>
that in 1970 people were doing<lb/>
the Bump. In 1980, people started<lb/>
doing this "crazy stuff" (slam-<lb/>
ming). This is 1990, and you're<lb/>
still doing this "crazy stuff So 1<lb/>
can't help but wonder, are these<lb/>
the people who were doing the<lb/>
Bump in 1980?<lb/>
Slam dancing is synonymous<lb/>
with hard-core music, and the<lb/>
hard-core movement is all but<lb/>
dead (hopefully rust resting). East<lb/>
Carolina, welcome to 1990, and<lb/>
let's think about what is appro-<lb/>
priate.<lb/>
Brian Toust<lb/>
Greenville Resident<lb/>
<pb facs="00058207_0005"/><lb/>
The East Carolinian. April 5, 1990 5<lb/>
Propaganda<lb/>
Continued from page I<lb/>
fofm?f head oi the laboratory tor<lb/>
radiological physics and engineer-<lb/>
ing at the I tmersitvoi Pittsburgh<lb/>
School of Medicine. Sternglassalso<lb/>
did lime ax senior physicist at<lb/>
Westinghousc Research Labora-<lb/>
tories an experience which<lb/>
made him privy to the dark side ot<lb/>
niu Icarpolitics Anoutspokenand<lb/>
radw al critic ol the nuclear indus-<lb/>
try, Sternglass is understandably<lb/>
despised b tin- industry; none-<lb/>
theless, his scientific integrity<lb/>
seems inta t<lb/>
It v omes as no surprise that<lb/>
government and industry officials,<lb/>
along with a few nuclearphilic (sic)<lb/>
physicists, continue to minimize<lb/>
the health risks associatedwith<lb/>
run lear power. For decades, the<lb/>
nuclear industry uniformly denied<lb/>
all associations between radon (a<lb/>
radtoac ti cgas)in uranium mines<lb/>
and the miners' high rates ol lung<lb/>
cancer But with strongdissent b<lb/>
sin h reputableauthoritiesas ohrt<lb/>
Gofman, Ph.D M.D (doctorates<lb/>
in medicine and nuclear physi al<lb/>
chemistry; and former head oi the<lb/>
1 awrence I ivermore Radiation<lb/>
I aboratories tor the Atomic l:n<lb/>
crgy Commission), the AEC was<lb/>
soon discredited. In the "Vs. the<lb/>
AFC changed its name to the<lb/>
Department ol Energy (DOE),<lb/>
which today is comprised ol two<lb/>
areas: fossil fuels and nuclear<lb/>
power tot which the Nuclear<lb/>
Regulator) Commission, or NRC,<lb/>
is one branch).<lb/>
today, the DOE harps<lb/>
repeatedly on the fact that areas<lb/>
around nuclear power reactors<lb/>
tvpicalh measure far lower radio<lb/>
activity than is found in peoples'<lb/>
basements For this reason says<lb/>
the government, we should be<lb/>
more concerned about the cancer<lb/>
causing radon in our homes 1 his<lb/>
is ,i blatant distortion ol scientific<lb/>
fact 1 irst, no definitive research<lb/>
supports the link between lung<lb/>
cancer and residential radon<lb/>
(though much resean h has shown<lb/>
that, due to very high radon expo<lb/>
sure uranium miners are at risk<lb/>
tor lung cancer) Moreover, the<lb/>
radioactive output from nuclear<lb/>
reactors is never measurable from<lb/>
the ground because it is in the<lb/>
formol fallout which contaminates<lb/>
the food supply. Indeed, BEIR V<lb/>
recent report shows that lung<lb/>
cancer rates are exceedingly high<lb/>
tor people living in the vicinity ol<lb/>
several large nuclear plants In<lb/>
Gofman's expert opinion, the<lb/>
DOE's hype over household ra<lb/>
don is an effort to deflect or dilute<lb/>
public concerns toward nuclear<lb/>
power.<lb/>
Not surprisingly, the En-<lb/>
vironmental Protection Agency<lb/>
also pays lipservicc to the nuclear<lb/>
industry. In their new book.<lb/>
"Deadly Deceit: how level Radia-<lb/>
tion and High-level Cover-up"<lb/>
(Four Walls &amp; Eight Windows,<lb/>
1990), noted scientists ay Could<lb/>
(a biostatistician formerly on<lb/>
EPA's Science Advisory Hoard)<lb/>
and Benjamin (loldman present a<lb/>
devastatinganal) sisol thenuclear<lb/>
industry and its ties to the IS<lb/>
government They document in<lb/>
painstaking detail how the EPA<lb/>
and other federal agencies have<lb/>
deliberately attempted to mislead<lb/>
and pacify the public through a<lb/>
massive disinformation campaign<lb/>
m which EPA press releases were<lb/>
presented as scientific reports. It<lb/>
documents how the EPA not only<lb/>
misrepresented the effects of dif-<lb/>
ferent sources of radiation m the<lb/>
environment, but how they fre-<lb/>
quently falsified radiation meas-<lb/>
urements around nuclear power<lb/>
plants 1 ike the DOE, the IT As<lb/>
primary concern is to suppress<lb/>
any information that might<lb/>
threaten the nuclear weapons<lb/>
complex<lb/>
With the recent BEIR V<lb/>
report, however, nuclear physi-<lb/>
cistscan no longer hide the deadly<lb/>
hazards ot nuclear weapons test<lb/>
ing, radioactive wastedumps, and<lb/>
other follies of nuclear power.<lb/>
Openness must replace secrecy.<lb/>
As Sen (. ilenn savs. "It will do us<lb/>
little good to protect ourselves<lb/>
from our adversaries if we poison<lb/>
our own people in the process<lb/>
Besides the incalculable human<lb/>
costs, there are also enormous fis-<lb/>
cal costs to consider. Though<lb/>
matters of life and death have<lb/>
generally been outranked by ivc<lb/>
nomic considerations in the tor<lb/>
mation ot nuclear policies viz<lb/>
the Hush administration's pleas<lb/>
for developing "safe" nuclear re<lb/>
actors in the name oi "national<lb/>
security" the costs are now too<lb/>
staggering torus to bear. Based on<lb/>
revised IX )E estimates,Glenn savs<lb/>
it will cost at least $200billion to<lb/>
clean upand replace the military's<lb/>
problematic nuclear production<lb/>
facilities! And this cost does not<lb/>
even take into account the more<lb/>
daunting problem of what to do<lb/>
with all t he raduvKtive wastes now<lb/>
accumulating around the United<lb/>
States.<lb/>
It is high time the govern<lb/>
men) began to reframc the issueol<lb/>
"national security" and toaddrcss<lb/>
public concerns about the health<lb/>
risks (it nuclear power. It is also<lb/>
high time our university physi-<lb/>
cists got down from their ivory<lb/>
towers 10 admit the truth about<lb/>
the nuclear industry. Continued<lb/>
dependency on nukes constitutes<lb/>
the ecological crime of the cen-<lb/>
tury. Professor Adler would do<lb/>
well to remember the bodies of<lb/>
those killed at Chernobyl and to<lb/>
reflect on the po ssi bili t) that thou-<lb/>
sands ot children living near nu-<lb/>
clear plants may suiter from ra-<lb/>
diation-induced birth defects and<lb/>
mental retardation.<lb/>
Socially responsible citi-<lb/>
zens see three moral imperatives<lb/>
before them: to renew emphasis<lb/>
on energy conservation, reorient<lb/>
the DOE toward 'soft" energy<lb/>
technology (solar, wind, water,<lb/>
and gasohoi), and abolish the in<lb/>
sane nuclear industry once and<lb/>
tor all. Let's get our government<lb/>
moving in misdirection before it's<lb/>
too late to move at all.<lb/>
 Nathaniel Mead holds a<lb/>
bachelor's degree in bioloev from<lb/>
SAVE YOUR PRECIOUS DOLLARS!<lb/>
When STUDENTS want to<lb/>
SELL they goto<lb/>
IThe ANYTHING Store"<lb/>
COIN &amp; RING MAN! ? m<lb/>
It's a Tradition. JJ?ffe<lb/>
Need Money? We Buy Almost Anything $$$$<lb/>
Moving? Leaving? Graduating?<lb/>
We Pay Spot Cash For:<lb/>
? Furniture ? Microwaves ? Dorm Refridgerators ?<lb/>
Electronics (TV, Stereo, VCR, CD, etc.) Linens ?<lb/>
Kitchenware ? Lamps ? Accessories<lb/>
$ WE BUY ALMOST ANYTHING $<lb/>
Used: Clothing, Jewelry, Furniture, Small<lb/>
Appliances, CD's, Lamps, Pictures, Calculators,<lb/>
TV's Stereos, Kitchenwares - and<lb/>
almost ANYTHING!<lb/>
Call! We come By Appraise - Pick - Up -<lb/>
Pay Cash or bring your items to the store<lb/>
CLOTHES<lb/>
The Coin &amp; Ring Man<lb/>
I0-5MOI1-Fri On the Comer Below Fi?<lb/>
10 -3 Sat<lb/>
Reed College and will soon com-<lb/>
plete his second degree in Science<lb/>
Education from Hast Carolina<lb/>
University. In 1985, Rood's biol-<lb/>
ogy program was ranked number<lb/>
one in the country by top graduate<lb/>
schools.<lb/>
Got a hot<lb/>
news tip?<lb/>
Call<lb/>
The East<lb/>
Carolinian<lb/>
at<lb/>
757-6366<lb/>
fe<lb/>
MAO HATTMH MUFFLMH<lb/>
A BRAKE CENTER<lb/>
Mutmg<lb/>
Ford<lb/>
?<lb/>
lOthSl<lb/>
3140MosleyDr.<lb/>
Suite F<lb/>
758-2306<lb/>
Dunk in<lb/>
DonuB<lb/>
?<lb/>
Greenville Bl?d<lb/>
D<lb/>
L'nivenity.<lb/>
Squue<lb/>
ftikxn<lb/>
Mad<lb/>
Hatter<lb/>
Thomas Duncan<lb/>
Manager<lb/>
Oil &amp; Filter Change<lb/>
I,ife Time Warranty Pads &amp;f en<lb/>
up to 5qts. PENNZOIL 10W30<lb/>
Plus Free<lb/>
Tire Rotation &amp;<lb/>
20 Point Safety Inspection<lb/>
not gooil with any other offers<lb/>
Expires 4 30-90<lb/>
 i Ubrid Class Protection'<lb/>
10 studentTmscolnton services<lb/>
 Excluding Slate Inspections, I' Haul Rentals &amp; Oil Changes<lb/>
FREE Estimates ? FREE Pick - Up &amp; Delivery<lb/>
Reg $79.95<lb/>
Sale $10 Off<lb/>
Includes: installation of new pads<lb/>
lurning roiors; rcplacking plus<lb/>
inspecting wheel hearing &amp; road<lb/>
testing vehicle<lb/>
Good fhru 4-13-90<lb/>
Noi good with any other dutouns<lb/>
PEHNJOI<lb/>
WANTED<lb/>
? Self- Starter<lb/>
? High Energy Individual<lb/>
? Exceptional Leadership &amp; Organizational Skills<lb/>
?Service Oriented<lb/>
FOR<lb/>
The Student Homecoming Committee Chair to oversee the entire<lb/>
1990 Homecoming function. Under the auspices of the ECU<lb/>
Homecoming Steering Committee. This volunteer position is<lb/>
highly visible and prestigious.<lb/>
Application forms are available at the Information Desk, Mendenhall<lb/>
Student Center. Please return the application by 5:00 PM, Monday,<lb/>
April 16, 1990 to the Information Desk, Mendenhall Student Center.<lb/>
For further Information contact J. Marshall at 757-4711.<lb/>
Thank You<lb/>
Price 1 ffcciive Wednesday - April 4 - Saturday April 7, 1990<lb/>
Our Family Skim Milk<lb/>
Gallon Plastic Jug<lb/>
$1.99<lb/>
Fresh<lb/>
Mixed<lb/>
Frver Parts<lb/>
lb 48<lb/>
Open Sundays 1pm 6pm<lb/>
Mon - SaHam - hpm<lb/>
Coke - Coke Classic<lb/>
Diet Coke<lb/>
2 litter bottle QQ<lb/>
limit 4<lb/>
Cold Power<lb/>
Detergent<lb/>
37 oz box<lb/>
990<lb/>
limit 1<lb/>
Cottenelle<lb/>
Tissue<lb/>
4 Roll pkg<lb/>
890<lb/>
limit 2<lb/>
Busch Beer<lb/>
Rceular or Lite<lb/>
suitcase - 24 12oz cans<lb/>
$8.99<lb/>
Overton s<lb/>
Supermarket, lnc<lb/>
Gwaltney<lb/>
Great<lb/>
Dogs<lb/>
12oz pkg<lb/>
490<lb/>
limit 4<lb/>
400 S. Evans Street<lb/>
752-3866<lb/>
Fresh Frozen<lb/>
Shrimp<lb/>
Medium Size<lb/>
41 - 50 Count<lb/>
lb $4.59<lb/>
Produce 90 Truck LoadSale<lb/>
Snow White Cauliflower head 99tf<lb/>
Crisp Celery 2 stalks for $1.00<lb/>
Tender Fresh Broccoli Large Bunch 99c<lb/>
White Potatoes or Rutabagas 4 lbs for $1.00<lb/>
Duncan Hines<lb/>
Yellow Cake Mix<lb/>
17 oz box<lb/>
790<lb/>
Bounty Towels<lb/>
Giant Roll .69<lb/>
limit 2<lb/>
<pb facs="00058207_0006"/><lb/>
Page 6<lb/>
Classifieds<lb/>
April 5,1990<lb/>
K)R RENT<lb/>
1 ARt.fONt HI PROOM APT Carpeted<lb/>
kitchen appliances, central air and heat<lb/>
Close to campus Some apts furnished<lb/>
Kings tans Apts 752-8915 Mow accept<lb/>
ing applications (or tall<lb/>
BEDROOM Available May Call 752<lb/>
2S49<lb/>
ROOMMATI WANTED: Available in<lb/>
Mav $110 a month plus 13 utilities (Vn<lb/>
bedroom Call Kris830-4054.<lb/>
2 ROOMMATES NEEDED: For 3 bod<lb/>
room i partment in Wilson Acres One year<lb/>
lease starting in Mav Musi bo Junior,<lb/>
Senior, grad student or professional Malo<lb/>
or female $167 month, central boatAC,<lb/>
1 I 2 bath pool, and tennis No pets Call<lb/>
Susan .it 830 r-11 or leave message<lb/>
lt1l I ROOMMATEWANTED.Grad<lb/>
student or professional to share 2 bdrtn2<lb/>
bath apt sriM1 month Balconv, fire place<lb/>
and pool Call 355 f084<lb/>
ATK 1 Ml NT TO SUBLET: At Scottish<lb/>
Manor this summer Fullv furnished, 1<lb/>
bedroom air conditioning, only 5 nun.<lb/>
walk from ECU Call Tracov 931 7543 or<lb/>
Bernadette 931 7685<lb/>
ROOMMATI WANTED: For large I<lb/>
?? rr house near downtown and cam<lb/>
pus $145 month plus 1 I u till tie? Call lav,<lb/>
24 790days 758 I375nights<lb/>
WAN I in Female non smoker to sublet<lb/>
room for summer. $155 mo.plusl "?utili<lb/>
DISP1 Cl ASSIF1EDS<lb/>
ties Call 752 2245 and leave message<lb/>
MAIF ROOMMATI NEEDED Foi<lb/>
summer (mid Mav through mid ug I 2<lb/>
bedrooms at Carriage 1 louse Apts Non<lb/>
smoker $142 50 plus ! '2 utilities mo<lb/>
Swimming pool Pay 12 tor Mav and<lb/>
Aug 7564023<lb/>
2 BEDROOM APARTMENT:Tosubkt in<lb/>
Ringgoid Towers Available May uly il<lb/>
Completely furnished A 1 hK AA' Call<lb/>
830 44 alter 3 p m $420 i month<lb/>
FOR SALE<lb/>
FUR SAl E: 6x12 free standing loft with<lb/>
ladder and railing It's going to the best<lb/>
otter so call fast Ask for I D at  161 1<lb/>
FOtSALE:1984Nissan200SX,autotrans<lb/>
mission AC.PS PB.PW.cruise AM FM<lb/>
cassette, 72,000 mi Great shape Asking<lb/>
$4395.00 Call Eric 752 6660<lb/>
8? SCHWINN SPRIN r. Mens frame I a<lb/>
prade pedals, toe clips, allov carr r.nk.<lb/>
water Kettle holder Like new $165 830<lb/>
.1828 1 eave message<lb/>
ATTEN HON:CO tKNMl I SI 11 l<lb/>
VEHICLES: from $100 fords Mercedes,<lb/>
Corvettes, Che ys Surplus Buyers Guide<lb/>
I-6G2 838 8885 EXT A 285<lb/>
IOC rON tot c Hit sak Mm I<lb/>
Cre.it i ondition  int rested<lb/>
Price negotiabk<lb/>
FOR SAl E: Dinette set.i<lb/>
table Brand tu w sklti<lb/>
FOR SAl F: 2 1 i <lb/>
DISPLAY CLASSIFH DS<lb/>
AC ideal tor students Please call 1<lb/>
8114 sk toi Mark<lb/>
1 OR sll I1 ' i ?! ?? Nissan Pul<lb/>
s ii, moon to,  i speed manual trans<lb/>
mission,economical p5,000miles $4,500<lb/>
I all752 B592or752 2474after5p.m tor<lb/>
more information<lb/>
FORSALI:Honda Kebel 2 01985,8 200<lb/>
miles $600 or best of fei Mustsell Runs<lb/>
excellent ill931 t688 l ivemcssage<lb/>
KiR SMI 84BMW318i il.OOO miles<lb/>
sun root financing nsidercd Call<lb/>
Roberllarretl ! -<lb/>
( , YOI at i ii l PS, i ars ? ?'a<lb/>
Seized in drug raids tor under $100 00?<lb/>
Call to: f t- today - 644-9533 Dept<lb/>
458<lb/>
SI l l I S OFF1 RED<lb/>
SUMMER? let there anytime from Ik or<lb/>
NY tor $160 of loss with AlRHiTCH (as<lb/>
reported in onsumer Reports, N runes, A<lb/>
Let's GoO For details, call AIRH1U 11 212<lb/>
H64 2000<lb/>
IFRM I'APIRS rYPED: Letter quality<lb/>
print I all l.ninv 756-0520 Tick up and<lb/>
delivery available Reseasonable rates<lb/>
(li M'2 ss s-<lb/>
1 (I X<lb/>
PERSONA1 S<lb/>
Hill' WAN 111)<lb/>
PIRATI KIPI ? P1R Ml RIDE<lb/>
dentsdon  ?'<lb/>
Duns s j, m 12:15 i m rhe routi now<lb/>
includes SIa and Umstead Dorms Foi<lb/>
more mfoi mation i ill ? Vi 26<lb/>
WORD 1'IUK 1 ssii. KNDPHOTO-<lb/>
 OPY1NGSI R H 1 W eoffi rtypii<lb/>
and ' V<lb/>
s,t!u .ites .  ? rs in and<lb/>
11 i<lb/>
I written <lb/>
?? ? . .<lb/>
Kl s( Ml III 1<lb/>
? . ? otir<lb/>
752-7303<lb/>
Cocof<lb/>
elite<lb/>
least<lb/>
Carnluuan<lb/>
ATiTIC<lb/>
111 DIM, FOR FTJROP1 I HI'<lb/>
DISP1 l As11 II DS<lb/>
BEST USED TIRES<lb/>
<lb/>
toll F(.F STUDENTS - TFAC HFRS -<lb/>
AIH.i FSAG1 19-4&amp; 1 ineupsunimer work<lb/>
now! When Early May, une to Late Aug<lb/>
EarlySept Where Eastern N Cos Lenoir,<lb/>
v raven, Pitt, ones Onslow Greene Pa)<lb/>
Mm$5 50: hourplusmileageexpense, What<lb/>
field scouts to monitor crops We train'<lb/>
Oaialif. conscientious good physical shape,<lb/>
have own vehicle, reliable Send resume to<lb/>
MCSLP.O Bon 179 Grifton P 28530<lb/>
I HI AUTISM s(H II It Of NC: is cur<lb/>
rentlv recruiting counselors to ? rl at our 8<lb/>
week residential summer camp for i ersons<lb/>
with Autism rhe camp is held at I<lb/>
New I lope nearhapel 1 hi! and begins Ma<lb/>
20running through uly28 A. ademu credit<lb/>
is available For tin'her information, please<lb/>
contact Gr g Be - at (919) S21 0859 '<lb/>
ntAVl I ACT NT: ; i . ; a  I enter has<lb/>
an immediate opening for an experienced<lb/>
travel agent in our full sen n in<lb/>
(Ireem ille I <lb/>
? ? ?? or call ? rravi<lb/>
laa P.O. Hoi I<lb/>
ATTENTION-HIRING: Coven<lb/>
?, our area SI ?  ? i<lb/>
sss . ;  .<lb/>
VTTENTION: Ean i ?<lb/>
   mo pot<lb/>
. ,?; g  ? Ext. Bl 2i<lb/>
1K1I IK W M BIN! II l"S! <lb/>
and (.asm ??? now I ' ' all<lb/>
 <lb/>
IRll IK.WI1 BENEFITS! irlines now<lb/>
 tring All positions! $17,500-5 1<lb/>
DISPLAY CLASSIFIEDS<lb/>
Mil NIIO EARN K)M t WAK H-<lb/>
IN(. I v - . ? ? ? n ? potential<lb/>
Details. (1)602-838-8885 Ext FV 285<lb/>
HI 1 PWANTIP: Immediate opening lor<lb/>
typist .??? V. ??  tween ani<lb/>
nputer. 106East5th! (reel<lb/>
PAR I IIM1 HELP M EDED for dad)<lb/>
is,n. house J 'in up )i i.isional<lb/>
delivery required, t illLouatQl Edwards<lb/>
it - -<lb/>
I11 Ic P ii i (ON: For highly <lb/>
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ness ' ? - i'i skills, paper<lb/>
wori abilil I I : munii a<lb/>
tion essenti ? ? i Appl<lb/>
Brody s the 1 iaM n Wed I i p m<lb/>
HI I PWAN fED.l ull and part hm cooks,<lb/>
dishwashers bartoi lers and wait st.itt<lb/>
nph in person ?or CM ools,<lb/>
? - i m or 2<lb/>
5 p m<lb/>
1I N'S si'l ClALTY STORI I<lb/>
tor mat ' duals with an<lb/>
? ?? t in fashion and the desire to ?<lb/>
iarv<lb/>
and ' ?<lb/>
,7a. Mon-V I 1-4p.tr<lb/>
sic.MA PI ongratulahons on ?'?<lb/>
place win in the All Sing last .? -<lb/>
job on the part of the V<lb/>
Brothers<lb/>
sic; i r i ongi itul it<lb/>
most outstand<lb/>
Softball and soccer rean<lb/>
ro. k with the 'rents<lb/>
CONCRAIl 1 TIONSSENlORS:Sara<lb/>
Williams ind. i<lb/>
qui, Amy (liBespie, u<lb/>
lohnson, Alice larmon, V. ? : . ' I<lb/>
raeAnnentrout,Stephaj ? M<lb/>
Beason, LeArui<lb/>
We are going to miss Good<lb/>
?, a Alj Ka Phi si ter<lb/>
i HI OMEGA AND III! IK DATES<lb/>
re.id; for our c'pr ' -<lb/>
April7th ?'? ' forward!<lb/>
Chi ' s<lb/>
SIGMA PI: ' ?'<lb/>
-<lb/>
? enberry. Pet<lb/>
Chris I<lb/>
1 last rt "isU1j s ?? ?<lb/>
-??<lb/>
. i. n guys. 1<lb/>
BR ili'i s needol trj ?? lent in - ?. S IS ? -? ?(()c. sin? ?<lb/>
.i . .<lb/>
FFMAll BARTENDERS NP V ll K! SSI i NfcEDISIGMA PI rhcA-te " ' t keep n<lb/>
MOM i MONEY, MOM ?re ACY R<lb/>
I<lb/>
'<lb/>
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IMsl'l A t I ASSIFIEDS<lb/>
RESEARCH INFORMATION<lb/>
3r 800 351 0222<lb/>
Prosonts<lb/>
Thursdoy<lb/>
WntBD TTDn?<lb/>
Eaisd;<lb/>
rr?<lb/>
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  ?i <lb/>
.<lb/>
ABORTION<lb/>
Etfifi Pregnancy<lb/>
Testing<lb/>
M F8:3Qfc?p opy<lb/>
Sat. 10 - 1 p.m.<lb/>
Triangle Women's<lb/>
Health Center<lb/>
RISCl ! I OWERS<lb/>
Now Taking I or Fall<lb/>
I " .v .<lb/>
kLPHAPHISI<lb/>
' ? '<lb/>
causewi o .<lb/>
? ? i<lb/>
C H Kl I s Mol COM HEATH OI<lb/>
DAS, HRIW, M' F.O '<lb/>
m as  I <lb/>
the<lb/>
were you Nexl ' n<lb/>
-<lb/>
? ? iway tw ? ?<lb/>
'? am<lb/>
sic, EP (.oc, si ?VN '<lb/>
v M ?? to ?? " -<lb/>
i!ikin. o<lb/>
. 5 . .<lb/>
Hli<lb/>
(711 6S7 6662<lb/>
I itiyiiiiaaA'i im<lb/>
as Pres Thanks ? r<lb/>
Love your Alp i l<lb/>
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DISPLAY CLASSIFH DS<lb/>
1-800-433-2930<lb/>
PARROT! CANVAS CO. j<lb/>
okbags,<lb/>
fravel Bags&amp; Accessories.<lb/>
SOX <lb/>
We Repair<lb/>
52 i<lb/>
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Capt. Cook &amp;<lb/>
the Coconut<lb/>
Shipwreck Party<lb/>
99c Hi - Halls<lb/>
99c Memberships<lb/>
SLMMERFIELD<lb/>
APARTMENTS<lb/>
$2?'? Summerplace<lb/>
New I and 2 bedrooms<lb/>
? located across from<lb/>
Parker's Barbecue on<lb/>
Memorial Drive<lb/>
? Available<lb/>
April 1, 1990<lb/>
(Ion tad Aaron Spain<lb/>
355-6187<lb/>
756-8060<lb/>
BRASSWOOD APTS.<lb/>
Brasswoodt.<lb/>
New 1 &amp; 2 bedrooms<lb/>
? located across from<lb/>
Lowes on<lb/>
Greenville Blvd<lb/>
? available<lb/>
Ma) 1st, 1990<lb/>
Contact Aaron Spain<lb/>
355-6187<lb/>
756-S060<lb/>
WILLIAMSBL'RG<lb/>
MANOR<lb/>
APARTMENTS<lb/>
(loncord Drive<lb/>
New I ?S. 2 bedrooms<lb/>
? located behind<lb/>
Wal - Mart<lb/>
? available uy 1st,<lb/>
Sept 1st. : Oct 1st<lb/>
Contact Aaron Spain<lb/>
355 -6187<lb/>
7fftW<lb/>
UNIVERSITY<lb/>
APARTMENTS<lb/>
- - 5thSu<lb/>
? .1.<lb/>
? Located Scar I t 1<lb/>
? Near Major Shopping Centers<lb/>
? 1I Itus Servk e<lb/>
? (nsilc 1 .iiindr <lb/>
756-7X1 i r 758 4.<lb/>
? AZALEA GABDENS ?<lb/>
 ? ? t - ?<lb/>
??'? A" . N , ? ,<lb/>
Announcements<lb/>
SPLCIAL OLYMPICS<lb/>
voi INTLLRS NEEDED<lb/>
rjeenville Pitt County Special<lb/>
 i-iv Spring Games will ho held on<lb/>
' lesday April 10, Jt E B Aycock Ir High<lb/>
xh?l in t .riHtnilU'irjindato Iburlav.<lb/>
pril 12) V ohmteers are ntHHiod to help<lb/>
s?-r- js bm1dl?rhar wnr tt tor theSpe-<lb/>
l.ilOhmptan V'oluntoersmustbeableto<lb/>
tvort all day trom 9 00 a m 2 00 p m An<lb/>
orientation meotinp will be hold on Wod<lb/>
April 4 ip( ltd nnor I ibrarv. Koom22l at<lb/>
iflOp m tor all volunteers who are inter<lb/>
.Mod m helping Free lunches and t shirts<lb/>
will (.provided the day of the games to all<lb/>
volunteers who attended this orientation<lb/>
H-ssicn For more information contact the<lb/>
Sm ial Olympics ottice 830-4:il or MO-<lb/>
141<lb/>
EMA<lb/>
Phe Finanaal Management Asscxration is<lb/>
gtvtng vou the opportunity to try your<lb/>
luck at predicting the Dow Jones Indus-<lb/>
trial Average on April 23 Contact any<lb/>
FMA member or go by the finance office to<lb/>
buy vour SI 00 lucky chance Last day to<lb/>
make vour prediction is April 9 The clos-<lb/>
est estimate will win $50 00<lb/>
.AMMAJEIAJZHl<lb/>
The last meeting will be held April 11 in<lb/>
? nkins auditorium at 9 p m Officers will<lb/>
nnvt at 8 SO p m Don'l torgol vour cards<lb/>
or money for the State Project<lb/>
PSICH1<lb/>
Attention all Pst c hi members We need<lb/>
vour ideas about prizes Forwli.it1 thePsi<lb/>
Chi bo?ith at Barefoot on the Mall Get<lb/>
involved' Contact UtShepard (757 1437)<lb/>
or leave ideas in Psi Chi Mailbox in K KM<lb/>
Pbl CHI<lb/>
Si Chi mooting April 5 at p Bt in Kawl<lb/>
lt6. PtZZa, lTawing Psychology' and tun<lb/>
Just bring yourself, 52 and an attitude for a<lb/>
good time All members are encouraged to<lb/>
show<lb/>
BQM1JVATSQN AND<lb/>
HQR1ZQM<lb/>
The "1990 Eastern North Carolina azz<lb/>
Festival" on Fndav. April f, features the<lb/>
acclaimed Blue Note recording artists<lb/>
Bobby Watson and I lonon Sponsored b v<lb/>
Phi Mu Alpha fraternity, the festival will<lb/>
be held from 1pm until o p m in the A I<lb/>
Fletcher Music Center Admission is free<lb/>
The Festival includes performances and<lb/>
clinics by Bobby Watson and 1 lonon, the<lb/>
ECU Jazz Ensemble and ECU Jaz Band,<lb/>
and area high school bands Cn Sunda)<lb/>
April 8, the ECU Jazz Ensemble, directed<lb/>
by faculty bassist Carroll V Dashiell. Jr,<lb/>
will feature Bobbv Watson and I lonzon as<lb/>
spo. ial gui ? t .irtists on Iheii spring vn<lb/>
cerl s I edi c I foi s l"1 p.m in Wright<lb/>
Auditni dn ision is free. For more<lb/>
?<lb/>
PLAN I SAl L<lb/>
;?  Biology' il ????' b sp nsoi<lb/>
ing a plant sale on Htursda) April "and<lb/>
Friday, April 6 from 7 JO am to 1 p.m at<lb/>
the biology greenhouse Room S-111<lb/>
SCHOOL OF HOME<lb/>
ECONOMICS<lb/>
School ol Homo Economics Annual<lb/>
Spring Picnic 1 p m . Monday, April 21,<lb/>
Elm Street Park Fried chicken, soft<lb/>
drinks, potato salad Tickets $30 Sv<lb/>
member of Phi V or AHEA tor tickets<lb/>
Open to School of Home Economics<lb/>
members and guests Please come and<lb/>
support the School ol 1 tome Economics<lb/>
PHI LPSILON OMICRQN<lb/>
Phi Upsilon Onucron 111 Honorary<lb/>
Society vmU meet Monday, April g, at<lb/>
"i i"i in VanLandingham Room, Home<lb/>
Economics Building Election of 1990-<lb/>
19Q1 officers Pia MTVad, MKial tol<lb/>
lows<lb/>
SPfcClAL LVLNTS<lb/>
COMMlTTLt<lb/>
The deadline tor having a booth for<lb/>
Barefoot on the Mall will be Fndav April<lb/>
6. There will be a S3 fee<lb/>
 entral Ticket Office<lb/>
Turn monov in to the<lb/>
IMPROVING YOUR STUD<lb/>
SKILLS<lb/>
I earning how to improve your study skills<lb/>
tor greater success in college The following<lb/>
mini course and workshops can help vou<lb/>
prepare for the added workload of college or<lb/>
help to increase vour grade point average<lb/>
All sessions wul be heldin 313 Wright Build<lb/>
ing April 9, Monday Test Taking i 4 m<lb/>
p m V OU mav attend all the topic sessions or<lb/>
 hiHis the onet in which v OU need the most<lb/>
improvement<lb/>
EAST CAROLINAFRIKNUS<lb/>
An end ot the year cookout will beheld April<lb/>
S at River Park North from 1 30 until 4 p m.<lb/>
rain or shine Come with your little friend<lb/>
There will be food and games tor everyone!<lb/>
For directions call Susan Moran at 757-6268<lb/>
See vou there!<lb/>
TtLE ??L1 MODEL UNITED<lb/>
NATIONiaUB<lb/>
The ECU Model Nations Club will be hav<lb/>
ing an organization meeting for the fall ot<lb/>
1990on Wednesday, April 11 at 7 30 p m in<lb/>
BrewsterC 105 I lardworking, dedicated and<lb/>
serious students are invited to become a part<lb/>
of ECU's fastest growing organization Dis<lb/>
cussion of fall trips, fund-raisers, and ether<lb/>
important information will be addressed<lb/>
Due to the date of the Georgetown Confer<lb/>
ence, we will be seeking commitments bv<lb/>
t,e end ot THE SEmTsTER it vou are<lb/>
interested but unable to attend, call Steve<lb/>
Pres at 756 8699 Doug- P it 931 9062,<lb/>
.?r see Dr Spalding 'it International Stud<lb/>
I<lb/>
EAST! RCAND SALE<lb/>
ECU District97, State Employees Associa<lb/>
lion ol Northarolina (SEANO will be-<lb/>
s?-lling homemade" Easter lollipops on<lb/>
Monday Thursday, April9 12, on campus<lb/>
in the lobb) ol the Student Store and at the<lb/>
snh.Hil ot Medicine in the corrida leading<lb/>
to the hospital, Hr.viv Building The lolli<lb/>
pops will sell tor S 50 to i2S each Pro<lb/>
ceeds will go towards financing the activi-<lb/>
ties ot the restrict<lb/>
NATIONAL STUDENT<lb/>
EXCHANGE<lb/>
Having trouble getting classes? It vou can't<lb/>
find it at ECU, try going on exchange to<lb/>
one of over 85 universities in the V S and<lb/>
take your classes in a different environ<lb/>
ment Pav ECU tuition and study in an<lb/>
other part of the country There are still<lb/>
openings tor next fall and spring semes-<lb/>
ters Contact Stephanie Evancho in 1002<lb/>
GCB or call 757-6769 for further informa-<lb/>
tion<lb/>
SAiiOLSEXl<lb/>
Did vou know that condoms barring ab-<lb/>
stinence, when propcrh used can help<lb/>
reduce the risk of spreading the AIDS vi-<lb/>
rus and other sexual!) transmitted dis<lb/>
eases If you choose to be activi<lb/>
and be responsible Protect yourseU<lb/>
your partner The Student 1 lealtfl Cenl<lb/>
Pharmacy sells latex i1 ?<lb/>
at the cost of one doon foi 52 "<lb/>
ECLLSCHOOLO. ML SIC<lb/>
EVENTS APRIL M<lb/>
Angel Burns and Tim Legoros voice Jun<lb/>
lor Recital (April 7pm, Retcher Kcvitai<lb/>
Hall, free); String Chamber Concert I V, i<lb/>
4, 8:15 pm, Fletcher Recital Hall :ri-?<lb/>
Chamber Winds Concert V.ni 5 7 p m<lb/>
Fletcher Rcvital 1 iall. free) Thomas s.<lb/>
van, trombone. Junior K.v.tai i April ; 9<lb/>
pm Retcher Recital Hall rt ?.i<lb/>
North Carolina la Fi-stiva) toatiinngchn<lb/>
io and performances bv "Bobb) Watson<lb/>
and Horizon ECU azz Ensemble, EX I<lb/>
Jazz. Band, and area high sh,vilj.v bands<lb/>
sponsored bv Phi Mu Alpha i April b. 1 h<lb/>
pm, A J Retcher Music Center free);<lb/>
Alex Pappas, violin, and Kathy Alexander<lb/>
piano. Senior Revital (April b, 7 pm,<lb/>
Retcher Rectial Hall, free); Robin Lee<lb/>
fiute, and Rodnev Howard, percussion<lb/>
Senior Recital (April b, 9 00 p m , Retcher<lb/>
Recital Hall, free); University Chorale<lb/>
Concert (April 8, 3 15 p m , Wright Audi-<lb/>
torium, freeVECU Jazz Ensemble Concert<lb/>
with guest artists "Bobbv Watson and<lb/>
Horizon" (April S 8:15p.m Wright Audi<lb/>
tonum, free), PeccuRaaon Fnsemble Con-<lb/>
cert (April 9, 8:15 pm, Retcher Recital<lb/>
Hall, free) DIAL 757 4370 FOR THE<lb/>
SCHOOL OF MUSICS "RECORDED)<lb/>
CALENDAR OF EVENTS "<lb/>
<pb facs="00058207_0007"/><lb/>
' l?- I as!arolinian pi il 5 1990<lb/>
International Language<lb/>
Organization sponsors series<lb/>
Harris teeter<lb/>
t . I News Burea<lb/>
UI<lb/>
I Ivsses intohmesc He has University of Berne Switzerland<lb/>
lectured arui worked at s ale I ni will speak on the topu rhelW<lb/>
versitv and Ml Souls ollege Sequence it Events in Eastern<lb/>
?  two noted schol Oxford I niversitv and other Europe<lb/>
t;iven at EC! during campuses At present he is a visit Steiner's lecture will be held<lb/>
.?? , ihe F. I Interna ing fellow at the I niversitv ol in Room 21120 ot the CeneraK lass<lb/>
iaei Organization's Virginia's Centei loi Ulvanced room Building beginning a I I '<lb/>
nes Studies p.m<lb/>
a hinesewntei trans m's translations include Eng Both programs are fro and<lb/>
it will speak on lish storiesbv Aldous Huxley and open to the public<lb/>
J I topian in rransla Somerset Maugham and various<lb/>
. lx - . it.TWp.m RussiannovelsintoChiiuseaswell Further information about the<lb/>
t i-ci General as translations of htnesowritings lectures is available from I i ?1<lb/>
into English Frederic Fladcnmuller of the E 1<lb/>
irded as a lead 1n rhursda April 12, jurg Cepartment of Foreign Languages<lb/>
n the Sterner professor of political sci and Literatures, phone (M4<lb/>
mes lovce's once at LN( Chapel Hill and the r343.<lb/>
PRft I MPARISi WS CONDI 1CTED BY INDEPENDENT A UDITORS IN OVER 16 DIFFERENT MARKF TS<lb/>
UNBELIEVABLY<lb/>
LOW PRICES!<lb/>
HT Hamburger<lb/>
Buns<lb/>
Panhellenlc award adds<lb/>
to ECU scholarship fund<lb/>
I I i'U S luitlUI<lb/>
Time<lb/>
 1 .111Alphasoront<lb/>
vepresenting 1( I at there<lb/>
??ren ev.i-d aura Sweet<lb/>
rsity's ol the 1Idi isiont studenllife<lb/>
i con stafl'?llenicad isir andtwo<lb/>
ujpters Panllelleni i n l a 11?studentleaders K. : a inhell 1 i ? : ?iren ? tl<lb/>
?tion n?<lb/>
?! itiechai tin 1 at 1 1<lb/>
' 1 monp it, ?. . ? ?P'the<lb/>
? iintzati. bpotVMring<lb/>
.idershn. tin sorun<lb/>
1Irom iimpusesinV ?aro<lb/>
i. ontinue.1 from page 2<lb/>
The East<lb/>
Carolinian<lb/>
would like to<lb/>
help in the<lb/>
recycling effort<lb/>
by encouraging<lb/>
its readers to<lb/>
R<lb/>
E<lb/>
this<lb/>
news-<lb/>
paper<lb/>
time management ing Center at 757-6661<lb/>
' '  J st,ll I se ii ro Your Health" is a weekh<lb/>
: ' wasU il health education and information<lb/>
m on Time Man- column. Please direct any ques<lb/>
all the Student Health tions, comments, or suggestions<lb/>
4orthe( to757 6794<lb/>
c<lb/>
Y<lb/>
C<lb/>
W L<lb/>
E<lb/>
More Than 70 Lean<lb/>
Ground<lb/>
Pepsi Cola,<lb/>
Mountain Dew<lb/>
2Ltr.<lb/>
CUPTHESEVALUABLE COUPONS FOR S2.70 IN SAVINGS<lb/>
Dinner Bell flflC Fox PlBV<lb/>
Sliced iT i DeLuxe T<lb/>
j Bacon ZMM ! Pizza W<lb/>
I COUPON VALUE WITH THIS COUPON I I COUPON VALUE WITH THIS COUPON I<lb/>
20C (C) JOC (C) <lb/>
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REDEEM AT HARRIS Ii Ti R bK)RESONL Vj REDEEM JTH ARRIS JEJERSjTORESONLYj<lb/>
! Macaroni 4k AQ ' HT M 1 C<lb/>
Salad IVV! American V<lb/>
? w w Singles<lb/>
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ICOUPONVALUE WITH THIS COUPON I ICOUPONVALUE WITH THIS COUPON I<lb/>
I 50c Total Purchase (C) 30c (Li <lb/>
i i i i<lb/>
?eoeem aimahris teeti soresWvj jreoEEM Jharris teen iorasoNLVj<lb/>
i Gain ?BamC ' clorox Ty;<lb/>
j Detergent BHT! Bleach MM<lb/>
rF I ? ?<lb/>
ICOUPONVALUE WTO TWIS COUPON I ICOUPONVALUE WITH THIS COUPON I<lb/>
 60C (C) 30C IM<lb/>
nrui em irjaSSs n-rniTOHF-So J MEM ?tJhahris TCEurylTom'sjjNLYj<lb/>
i HT A fat 'Maalox AQQ<lb/>
j Aspirin 4MV; j ??<lb/>
ICOUPONVALUE WITH THIS COUPON I ICOUPONVALUE WITH THIS COUPON I<lb/>
? 30C (C) 40c M I<lb/>
ti i  ???? ??? I j" ? "?' ' ??? ' ? i<lb/>
REDEEM AT HARRIS Til fER STORES ONLy! IrFDEEM ATH ARRIS TFETESJORESOUl Yj<lb/>
Prices Good Through Tuesday, April 10,1990<lb/>
 ?? by. April 19901<lb/>
V. Reserve The Right 1 Limit Quanlitn N i ? old 1 . ? ???<lb/>
1400 Charles Boulevard - University Center Shopping Center<lb/>
<pb facs="00058207_0008"/><lb/>
IheE.istC.irolini.in April 5, 1490 7<lb/>
International Language<lb/>
Organization sponsors series<lb/>
ECU News Bureau<lb/>
Lectures bv two noted schol-<lb/>
ars will bo given at ECU during<lb/>
April as part of the ECU Interna-<lb/>
tional Language Organization's<lb/>
spring lecture series.<lb/>
Pi Iin, a Chinese writer, trans-<lb/>
later and scholar, will speak on<lb/>
"The Good Utopian in Transla-<lb/>
tion' Monday, April 9, at 3:30 p.m.<lb/>
in Room 1032 at ECU's General<lb/>
(lassroom building.<lb/>
Prof, fin, regarded as a lead-<lb/>
ing authority on translation the-<lb/>
er is translating lames Joyce's<lb/>
"Ulysses" into Chinese He has<lb/>
lectured and worked at Yale Uni-<lb/>
versity and All Souls College,<lb/>
Oxford University, and other<lb/>
campuses. At present he is a visit-<lb/>
ing fellow at the University of<lb/>
Virginia's Center for Advanced<lb/>
Studies.<lb/>
Jin's translations include Eng-<lb/>
lish stories by Aldous Hu xley and<lb/>
Somerset Maugham and various<lb/>
Russian novels into Chinese as well<lb/>
as translationsof Chinese writings<lb/>
into English.<lb/>
On Thursday, April 12, Jurg<lb/>
Steiner, professor of political sci-<lb/>
ence at UNC-Chapel Hill and the<lb/>
University of Berne, Switzerland,<lb/>
will speak on the topic, "The IW<lb/>
Sequence of Events in Eastern<lb/>
Europe<lb/>
Sterner's lecture will be held<lb/>
in Room 2020 of the General Class-<lb/>
room Building beginning at 3:30<lb/>
p.m.<lb/>
Both programs are free and<lb/>
open to the public.<lb/>
Further information about the<lb/>
lectures is available from Prof.<lb/>
Frederic Fladcnmuller of the ECU<lb/>
Department of Foreign Languages<lb/>
and Literatures, phone (919) 737-<lb/>
6543.<lb/>
Panhellenic award adds<lb/>
to ECU scholarship fund<lb/>
ECU News Bureau<lb/>
East Carolina University's<lb/>
Panhelleni Association a con-<lb/>
sortium of social sororitv chapters<lb/>
hasbeen judged most outstand-<lb/>
ing in tho southeastern region.<lb/>
("he selection w as made .it the<lb/>
recent Southeastern Panhellenk<lb/>
i onference .it the University of<lb/>
renncssce As winner of the re-<lb/>
nal award. 1 ?'( I received a<lb/>
contribution ot $1,000 tor its gen-<lb/>
eral scholarship fund. The award<lb/>
was given to ECU Chancellor Rich-<lb/>
ard Eakin by the Crown I )e elop-<lb/>
meni Trust Fund Inc. of Indian-<lb/>
apolis, Ind a foundation ot eta<lb/>
Time<lb/>
Tau Alpha sorority.<lb/>
Representing ECU at the re-<lb/>
gional conference was Laura Sweet<lb/>
of the ECU division of student life<lb/>
staff, Panhellenic advisor, and two<lb/>
Panhellenic student leaders: Karen<lb/>
Prevost ot Alexandria. Va and<lb/>
Sonia Turner ot Sea ford, Va.<lb/>
Purpose of the Panhellenic<lb/>
organization i to promote the<lb/>
(ampus (reek system and to pro-<lb/>
vide opportunities for cooperation<lb/>
and interaction among the various<lb/>
sororities chartered at ECU.<lb/>
Among its recent projects, the<lb/>
organization has been sponsoring<lb/>
a leadership workshop for sorori-<lb/>
ties t rom campuses in North Caro-<lb/>
lina and Virginia.<lb/>
Continued from page<lb/>
have good time management.<lb/>
Time will not stand still. Use your<lb/>
time wisely, don't waste it! For<lb/>
more information on Time Man-<lb/>
agement call the Student Health<lb/>
("enter at 757-6794 or the Counsel-<lb/>
ing Center at 757-6661.<lb/>
"To Your Health" is a weekly<lb/>
health education and information<lb/>
column. Please direct any ques-<lb/>
tions, comments, or suggestions<lb/>
to 757-6794.<lb/>
The East<lb/>
Carolinian<lb/>
would like to<lb/>
help in the<lb/>
recycling effort<lb/>
by encouraging<lb/>
its readers to<lb/>
R<lb/>
E<lb/>
this<lb/>
news-<lb/>
paper<lb/>
n<lb/>
FLIGHT ATTEN1<lb/>
Delta has<lb/>
Im mediate<lb/>
Openings<lb/>
Available<lb/>
Immediate openings for Flight Attendamts. Special persons who<lb/>
enjoy air travel and conmmunicate easily with people.<lb/>
Minimum qualifications include:<lb/>
? Minimum age 20 years<lb/>
? Neatattractive appearance<lb/>
? Friendly personality<lb/>
? High moral character<lb/>
? Good health, including good vision<lb/>
(uncorrected visual acuity no greater than 20100)<lb/>
? Two years college or equivalent business experience<lb/>
? Weight in proportion to height<lb/>
? Willingness to relocate and work flexible hours<lb/>
Successful applicants will be based in one of the following cities: Atlanta,<lb/>
Boston, Chicago, Cincinnati, Dallas, Houston, Los Angeles, Miami, New<lb/>
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1400 Charles Boulevard - University Center Shopping Center<lb/>
<pb facs="00058207_0009"/><lb/>
3ije gaat Carolinian<lb/>
Pnc 8<lb/>
State and Nation<lb/>
April 5,1990<lb/>
Baker seeks plan for Lithuanian settlement<lb/>
WASHINGTON (AP) Sc<lb/>
retary of State fames A Baker ill is<lb/>
? eking a Soviet plan foi .1 peace<lb/>
ul settlement in I ithuania and .<lb/>
date tor (he next supcrpowei<lb/>
summit during three da) -ot t.ilks<lb/>
u ith Foreign Ministei Eduard <lb/>
She ardnadze<lb/>
1 'V. 1 also hopes I rl out<lb/>
imits to be placed on nuclear<lb/>
ped 1uise mis: ill ? in .1 treat)<lb/>
icsignated foi signing .it the<lb/>
tunurut l President Bush and<lb/>
ioviei President Mikhail S G01<lb/>
?? hi U.S otth uls iiii ! us<lb/>
day<lb/>
Also on the ag? nda is the war<lb/>
in ni, l.i l t. 1 ? lh ii the Soviet<lb/>
rm I o it nmenl and 1 S<lb/>
.thlil rebels Baket istn ing foi a<lb/>
ea? ?? fire but insi itson a 1 ommit<lb/>
men I ft tint the I la ? em<lb/>
moot thai it w ill .han po? et w ith<lb/>
tin '? N : 1 Agut dt lor<lb/>
Saimhi<lb/>
fore the o ot<lb/>
Ivginning latt V1 Ini -i.e. aftei<lb/>
not n. US. ofiiu, h id no ord<lb/>
: hit<lb/>
br ?t a repl<lb/>
t. r h s letter la I w eel lerat<lb/>
ing I ? S, hop<lb/>
 i'n ? ,t in . it<lb/>
tut the offii ials ok<lb/>
r 1 ci ndition ol inon nut said<lb/>
th ? hoped Got ba he a nd<lb/>
c ii irdnad; i? ? uld spell it<lb/>
i- (hi Soviets j e to<lb/>
ips ith the seci<lb/>
men! in the Baltk republic.<lb/>
Shevardnadze told Baker last<lb/>
month at a meeting in Namibia.<lb/>
the newly independent African<lb/>
country, that the Soviets would<lb/>
not use force against theLithuani<lb/>
ans Without challenging that<lb/>
pledge, 1: S officials said no clear<lb/>
in lure hasemerged from Moscow<lb/>
on (lOrbachev 's long range plan<lb/>
lhe Soviets have demanded<lb/>
thai the I ithuaniansannula March<lb/>
11 declaration oi independence,<lb/>
w hichthesecessionistsareunwill<lb/>
ing fo do.<lb/>
Still, US. officials hope tor a<lb/>
settlement to pave the way tor<lb/>
l ithuanian sell determination, a<lb/>
right some Soviet officials have<lb/>
at knowledgod<lb/>
Arriving here Tuesday,<lb/>
Shc H'lnade likened events in<lb/>
I ithuania to an earthquake, but<lb/>
he also pledged to engage in<lb/>
1   n t(H. inde<lb/>
leiH't MO (MlH-nt<lb/>
While the foreign minister's<lb/>
 miiks h.hl ,1 conciliatory ring,<lb/>
, ? 1 mpha: ied the impor<lb/>
11. the Kremlin atta hes t 1 the<lb/>
ii 1onstitution and Son iel<lb/>
 ,i, must understand the<lb/>
? lam e ol th if question lor<lb/>
the Soviet I nion and the Soviet<lb/>
people, Shevardnadze said.<lb/>
Bush and Baker have no m<lb/>
tcntion ol Si rapping plans tor the<lb/>
sir or 1 ilhu.itua. officials<lb/>
said. Thesele lionofaprecisedate<lb/>
in lune depends on the Soviets<lb/>
scheduling a People's Congress in<lb/>
Moscow the same month.<lb/>
bush and Gorbachev hope<lb/>
during the summit to sign an ac-<lb/>
cord to limit their long-range<lb/>
nuclear missiles, bombers and<lb/>
submarines 1 lowever, claims that<lb/>
the overall cutback would amount<lb/>
to 50 percent came under chal-<lb/>
lenge on Tuesday.<lb/>
A senior administration offi-<lb/>
cial, declining to bo identified, told<lb/>
The Associated Press the United<lb/>
States would wind up with only<lb/>
slightly fewer deployed warheads<lb/>
than in the current arsenals. When<lb/>
warheads kept in storage are taken<lb/>
into account, ho sud, the U.S. total<lb/>
actually would exceed the current<lb/>
level.<lb/>
The official said that from the<lb/>
U.S. standpoint the principal vir-<lb/>
tue of the treaty would be to force<lb/>
a reduction in long-range Soviet<lb/>
SS-18 missiles.<lb/>
Meanwhile,State Department<lb/>
spokeswoman Margaret D. Tut-<lb/>
wilersaid the treaty would cut the<lb/>
i'T?"WIIW ? ?????IW l'?l???l?W<lb/>
w nmnTtTW'<lb/>
Valdez cleanup<lb/>
Cost to the government of the Valdez oil spill1<lb/>
SS-18 force in half and also reduce<lb/>
the total of deployed Soviet mis-<lb/>
silos bv about half.<lb/>
"The treaty is based on equal-<lb/>
ity shesaid, reading from a state-<lb/>
ment. "Since Soviet force levels<lb/>
exceed our own in the most dan-<lb/>
gerous and destabilizing systems,<lb/>
their reductions will be somewhat<lb/>
larger<lb/>
N.Y. court<lb/>
calls for<lb/>
affordable<lb/>
housing<lb/>
1 -Through Sept. 30, 1989<lb/>
2-Through Nov 15, 1989<lb/>
Bush pressures Congress to enact aid request<lb/>
 S! 11 , ; V<lb/>
'? i dent Bush is ! uming up pn s<lb/>
? ur n ongri to quMv 6PSlM<lb/>
.? d retjui st ? i Panama ud ,<lb/>
 i. iragua is th?? I lehiSe "if1"<lb/>
pr '? ed mi asun lacesdela) in the<lb/>
Senate<lb/>
' hel l use voted Wi' W rues-<lb/>
da) fora$J I billion spending bill<lb/>
that pro idesV ' millii n foi tl<lb/>
. i o pntral n rican .1-<lb/>
m h 1 1 ies i"h 111 isun includes<lb/>
ne trlj $1 7 billu 1<lb/>
ing mo: t ol it I lo iet tii pi 1'<lb/>
trams such as disaster relief food<lb/>
stamps and Forest Service fire<lb/>
fighting.<lb/>
"he ill is partlj funded b) a<lb/>
 1 8 billion 1 ut from the Pentagon<lb/>
budget that amounts to the tirst<lb/>
:se ot a 'peace dividend" from<lb/>
essened East West militan ten<lb/>
sions.<lb/>
Bu h c 1II1 d 1 1. ; a! .1 la<lb/>
like request to Help Panama<lb/>
and Nicaragua and State Depart<lb/>
nyiU spokeswoman Margaret<lb/>
ityjk?laid failure to pass the<lb/>
fQl Ke?)iiirVI would threaten<lb/>
the fledgling dcmcx racies and be<lb/>
like pl tying with dynamite<lb/>
But while the Senate prepares<lb/>
to consider a companion bill au<lb/>
i izing aid programs for the two<lb/>
countries, it seems in no rush to<lb/>
tak up the money bill itself.<lb/>
We have a problem lighting<lb/>
,1 fire under the Senate to move the<lb/>
bill said a senior administration<lb/>
official, speaking on condition ot<lb/>
anonymit) rhereisan alarming<lb/>
lack 't enthusiasm to get this<lb/>
through the Senate<lb/>
An aide to Sen. Robert C .Byrd,<lb/>
D W.Va chairman of the Senate<lb/>
Appropriations Committee. said<lb/>
the senator believes the admini-<lb/>
stration is sending too much<lb/>
money to Panama and Ni aragua<lb/>
,nd not enough to emerging<lb/>
democracies in Eastern Europe<lb/>
I hat me.ms Bush's Thursday<lb/>
dead line for passage of themoney<lb/>
bill apparently will not be met,<lb/>
and that the measure will bo be<lb/>
tore the Senate when Congress<lb/>
returns from its 12-day Easter<lb/>
rci ess later this month.<lb/>
The administration sent its<lb/>
ambassador to Panama, Deane<lb/>
I linton, before the Senate Foreign<lb/>
R? lations 1 ommittce on Tuesday<lb/>
to argue tor the urgency ot aid.<lb/>
"That money is desperately<lb/>
needed, and needed now Hin-<lb/>
ton said. He said Panama's gov-<lb/>
ernment is bankrupt and dealing<lb/>
with M) percent unemployment<lb/>
and that the publk has high ex-<lb/>
pectations following December's<lb/>
IS. invasion that ousted dictator<lb/>
Manuel Antonio Noriega.<lb/>
Investors lack confidence<lb/>
until they see what the United<lb/>
States is going to do Hinton said,<lb/>
In Nicaragua, President-elect<lb/>
VioletB Chamorro will take (f fuv<lb/>
April 23 faced bv a litany ot imme-<lb/>
diate problems, Ms. Tutwiler said.<lb/>
"She will inherit an economy<lb/>
that is bankrupt and a country<lb/>
that will run out ot oil as early as<lb/>
lulv. Hundreds of thousands oi<lb/>
Nicaraguans will be returning to<lb/>
their country ? former Contras<lb/>
and their families, demobilized<lb/>
soldiersand refugees trom lOycars<lb/>
oi war the State Department<lb/>
spokeswoman said.<lb/>
"Congress must decide<lb/>
whether these Nicaraguans will<lb/>
return as an armv of the unem-<lb/>
ployed, unable to feed or support<lb/>
their families, or as citizens of a<lb/>
democracy in which jobs and<lb/>
Opportunities are available she<lb/>
said<lb/>
In the 1 louse, the supplemen-<lb/>
tal money bill tor the balance of<lb/>
fiscal 1990 easily survived at-<lb/>
tvnrpt 9 to strikeout or trim foreign<lb/>
aid sections. But the attemptsdrew<lb/>
derision from the bill's support-<lb/>
ers.<lb/>
"1 am amazed at the number<lb/>
of flat-headed members in this<lb/>
House who are all too happy to<lb/>
spend whatever it takes" to sup-<lb/>
port wars "but wouldn't spend a<lb/>
pennv to prevent the necessity to<lb/>
fight those wars in the first place<lb/>
said Rep. David Obey, D-Wis.<lb/>
The House-bill includes Bush's<lb/>
full S3lX?million request for Nica-<lb/>
ragua. But it trims$80million from<lb/>
the $500 million he sought for<lb/>
Panama, diverting $30 million oi<lb/>
that to aid African countries, 520<lb/>
million to Caribbean nations and<lb/>
$0 million to refugee programs.<lb/>
ALBANY. N.Y. (AP) ? The<lb/>
state must give welfare recipients<lb/>
enough monev to afford housing,<lb/>
Now York's highest court ruled in<lb/>
a decision hailed as a victory for<lb/>
the homeless.<lb/>
"A schedule establishing as-<lb/>
sistant e levels so low that it forces<lb/>
large numbers of families with<lb/>
dependent children into homeless-<lb/>
rtess does not meet the statutory<lb/>
standard the Court of Appeals<lb/>
declared Tuesday<lb/>
The court ordered a trial to<lb/>
determine whether New York<lb/>
State's welfare shelter allowance<lb/>
is inadequate.<lb/>
The case was brought bv Bar-<lb/>
bara liggettes, a New York City<lb/>
woman who complained her shel-<lb/>
ter allowance forced her to choose<lb/>
between housing and food for her<lb/>
children<lb/>
State Social Services Commis-<lb/>
sioner Cesar Rerales, in a state-<lb/>
ment, said the ruling established a<lb/>
requirement for a reasonable<lb/>
housing allowance but did not<lb/>
conclude the state's welfare grants<lb/>
wore inadequate.<lb/>
But lawyers for hggett said<lb/>
they believed the Court of Ap-<lb/>
peals' strong language would<lb/>
make it hard for a lower court not<lb/>
to order increased welfare rates.<lb/>
"It's a groat decision and it's<lb/>
very important for the welfare<lb/>
population of Now York said<lb/>
Allan Cropper of the state Bar<lb/>
Association's Project for the<lb/>
Homeless of the City.<lb/>
hggetts, a single mother of<lb/>
three, sued Now York City social<lb/>
See Welfare, page 9<lb/>
Least expensive phone calls<lb/>
The average ;v  lo ? ? ?-?:<lb/>
call' rs 70 cents The! 1<lb/>
Illinois<lb/>
$00000? 1<lb/>
Pennsylvania<lb/>
H H R h ? '<lb/>
Minnesota<lb/>
W00O00 K)<lb/>
New Jersey<lb/>
'?e-minute long?dt$tanco<lb/>
(1 expensive states:<lb/>
Yfoom: KP n<lb/>
Study discourages coastal development<lb/>
I?direct da<lb/>
daytime. 25 m 0<lb/>
calling range.<lb/>
ini tate<lb/>
K '? arter. Gannett News Service<lb/>
rOPSAlLlSl AND,N.C(AP)<lb/>
Although I'uke Universitj<lb/>
geology professor Onrin Pilkev<lb/>
wouldn't advocate anyone living<lb/>
on a harrier island, he and his<lb/>
colleagues hope a study of the<lb/>
picturesque islands will help save<lb/>
lives and money.<lb/>
Working with I odd Miller,<lb/>
director of the N.C. Coastal Fed-<lb/>
eration, 1'ilkev ranked the islands<lb/>
based on their natural features,<lb/>
government policies and danger<lb/>
to people and property should a<lb/>
severe storm slam the coast.<lb/>
Sunset Beach ranked host,<lb/>
with 12 of lr points. North Top-<lb/>
sail Beach ranked worst, with one<lb/>
point.<lb/>
"We hope that this classifica-<lb/>
tion will result in a lot of thinking<lb/>
and talking  on the part of citi-<lb/>
zens who are living on these is-<lb/>
lands Pilkev said.<lb/>
Capitalizing on the lingering<lb/>
damage from Hurricane Hugo,<lb/>
Pilkev is using the three-day media<lb/>
tour of the North and South Caro-<lb/>
lina coasts to lambaste developers<lb/>
for crowding too many buildings<lb/>
on the fragile, migrating slips of<lb/>
sand that fringe the two states.<lb/>
Pilkey said he hopes to teach<lb/>
people about the dangers of build-<lb/>
ing high rise hotels and other<lb/>
large-scale developments on bar-<lb/>
rier islands. If people understand<lb/>
the dangers, he said, they may be<lb/>
able to influence their town gov-<lb/>
ernments to prohibit it.<lb/>
"We're starting to see that is-<lb/>
lands are Ivginning to be con-<lb/>
trolled more bv people instead of<lb/>
developers, and that's good<lb/>
Pilkev told the Wilmington Morn-<lb/>
ing Star.<lb/>
But the throat of overdevelop-<lb/>
ment still looms, even in places<lb/>
like Sunset Beach. Residents there<lb/>
are fighting plans for a high-rise<lb/>
bridge to replace the one-lane<lb/>
swing bridge that has tunneled a<lb/>
trickle of cars onto the island for<lb/>
decades.<lb/>
It they build it, we're going<lb/>
to lose one of the best areas in the<lb/>
entire Atlantic Coast said resi-<lb/>
dent Warren "Bud" knapp.<lb/>
Sunset Beach is an attractive<lb/>
spot for development. Pilkey said,<lb/>
because of its natural features. It is<lb/>
one oi few East Coast islands<lb/>
whore the beach is growing wider<lb/>
rather than losing sand to erosion.<lb/>
"From a geological stand-<lb/>
point, we can't explain why this<lb/>
island isbuildingseaward Pilkey<lb/>
See Study, page 9<lb/>
Helms joins dissenters in opposition to bill<lb/>
W AS1IIM . I 'v ? ' ; S<lb/>
?he ' S. Senate ovei ;ngb'<lb/>
approved sv ecj trols on<lb/>
air pollution. North arolina<lb/>
Republican essc I lehn; hm ted 11<lb/>
dissenters, saying the bill threat<lb/>
(.?ns jobs and 1 too expensive tor<lb/>
small busim<lb/>
1 c innot in g od 1 k nee<lb/>
support this bill n 1 ngnizing that<lb/>
it is no! fair t the v orking peo le<lb/>
of Amem a who ? ill unque -t n.i<lb/>
W lose their jobs is a result of this<lb/>
legislate n I lelmssaid ina speech<lb/>
01 ,l ' rtate floor before the vote<lb/>
Tuesday.<lb/>
it is not fail to the taxpayers<lb/>
because a bill (osting far less than<lb/>
this one could achieve iust about<lb/>
the same benefits for the environ-<lb/>
ment he said. "And it is not fair<lb/>
to the small business men and<lb/>
women of our country who will<lb/>
be driven into bankruptcy by the<lb/>
enormously expensive and unnec-<lb/>
essary costs of compliance with<lb/>
this bill if it should become law<lb/>
lhe new controls, which ii<lb/>
tect automobile, factory and power<lb/>
plant emissions and are estimated<lb/>
to cost the economy $21 billion a<lb/>
year when they go fully into ef-<lb/>
fect, wore approved by a vote of<lb/>
89-11.<lb/>
President Bush, speaking in<lb/>
I nd ianapolis in ad va nee of Senate<lb/>
a lion, called if "an historic vote"<lb/>
that would "affect generations to<lb/>
corneas we work to build a cleaner,<lb/>
safer America<lb/>
Before voting against the bill.<lb/>
Helms and his staff worked be-<lb/>
hind the scenes to reduce its im-<lb/>
pact on North Carolina.<lb/>
His staff helped organize an<lb/>
informal Southern coalition that<lb/>
lobbied for better treatment of<lb/>
Southern power companies which<lb/>
it received, and industries, which<lb/>
won limited concessions, accord-<lb/>
ing to published reports in the<lb/>
Winston-SaU m journal Wednes-<lb/>
day<lb/>
Son. Terry Sanford, D-N.C,<lb/>
and his staff joined Helmsonsome<lb/>
issues related toacid rain and toxic<lb/>
air omissions, but they came at the<lb/>
bill from different directions.<lb/>
While Helms considered the<lb/>
bill potentially ruinous to indus-<lb/>
try, Sanford thought that it could<lb/>
be made workable without dimin-<lb/>
ishing its protection for the envi-<lb/>
ronment, aides said.<lb/>
"You've got to remember that<lb/>
the textile industry is made up of<lb/>
very responsible people. And very<lb/>
responsible people realize that<lb/>
some cost is going to be necessary<lb/>
to protect the environment not<lb/>
only for ourselves, but as pollu-<lb/>
tion grows unrestrained, for our<lb/>
children and grandchildren<lb/>
Sanford said in voting for the bill.<lb/>
An early version of the bill<lb/>
reached the Senate floor in late<lb/>
January but was pulled off the<lb/>
calendar to avoid a filibuster.<lb/>
Loaders of the Senate and the<lb/>
Senate Environment Committee<lb/>
went behind closed doors with<lb/>
administrationofficialsand a shift-<lb/>
ing collection of senators to nego-<lb/>
tiate an end to the impasse.<lb/>
One of Helms' aides started<lb/>
calling the staffs of other Southern<lb/>
senators in mid-January, urging<lb/>
them to join forces informally on<lb/>
the acid-rain issue. The Midwest,<lb/>
West and Northeast already had<lb/>
coalitions, leaving the South in<lb/>
danger of being frozen out of any<lb/>
compromise, the aide told the<lb/>
newspaper.<lb/>
The problem with the acid-<lb/>
rain section, aides to Helms and<lb/>
Sanford said, was that Southern<lb/>
Utilities would not have been able<lb/>
to expand their comparatively<lb/>
clean power plants without pay-<lb/>
ing a heavy price. Duke Power<lb/>
Co for example, estimated that<lb/>
its rates would go up 10 percent to<lb/>
12 percent because of the low cap<lb/>
on its sulfur-dioxide emissions.<lb/>
The solution negotiated by the<lb/>
Southern senators raised North<lb/>
Carolina's cap by almost 40 per-<lb/>
cent without violating the national<lb/>
goal. According to Helms, Duke<lb/>
Power estimates that the new<lb/>
version will raise its rates 5 per-<lb/>
cent to 7 percent.<lb/>
See Helms, page 9<lb/>
<pb facs="00058207_0010"/><lb/>
The East Carolinian April 5, 1990 9<lb/>
Helms<lb/>
Continued from page 8<lb/>
1 he Southern senators also<lb/>
lobbied against the bill's "residual<lb/>
risk" provisions on toxic emis-<lb/>
sions, which wore weakened but<lb/>
not eliminated Ihe bill would<lb/>
require industries to cut their toxic<lb/>
emissionsby about 90 percent and<lb/>
then cut them again until the<lb/>
residual risk" ol cancer is less<lb/>
than one additional ease per lO.lHXl<lb/>
people exposed.<lb/>
Helms and other Southern<lb/>
senators, including Sanford, also<lb/>
sought with limited success<lb/>
to exempt power companies from<lb/>
the limitson toxic emissions. They<lb/>
. re able, however, to modify the<lb/>
treatment required for nitrogen-<lb/>
oxide emissions.<lb/>
Sanford obtained several<lb/>
changes in the WB through amend-<lb/>
ments and behind-the-scenes<lb/>
negotiations. His most significant<lb/>
amendment encourages industries<lb/>
to reduce their toxic emissions<lb/>
early and gives them more credit<lb/>
tor the improvements they make<lb/>
w ithoul pressure from the federal<lb/>
government.<lb/>
The clean air bills before<lb/>
Congress represent the first at-<lb/>
tempt to strengthen federal air<lb/>
pollution laws in 13 years, despite<lb/>
widespread agreement among<lb/>
environmentalists and federal<lb/>
regulators that the 1970Clean Air<lb/>
Act has failed to nd cities of dirty<lb/>
air. The law was last amended in<lb/>
1977.<lb/>
Among its key provisions are:<lb/>
?Tighter automobile tailpipe<lb/>
emission controls, requiring new<lb/>
cars run cleaner and reduce smog-<lb/>
causing pollutants. Cleaner fuels<lb/>
would be required tor fleets and<lb/>
automobiles toward theendoi the<lb/>
decade in the most polluted cities.<lb/>
?A reduction in sulfur-diox-<lb/>
ide emissions from coal-burning<lb/>
utility plants by 10 million tons a<lb/>
year, curbing acid rain.<lb/>
? Reductions through the<lb/>
installation of the best available<lb/>
control technology of toxic chemi-<lb/>
cal releases by industry, including<lb/>
controls on about 2(X) chemicals<lb/>
linked to cancer, nervous disor-<lb/>
ders and birth detects.<lb/>
The bill would require states<lb/>
to implement Specific pollution<lb/>
control plans to Jean vp urban<lb/>
smog and establish incremental<lb/>
requirements to cut pollution by 3<lb/>
percent to 4 percent a year until<lb/>
federal air quality standards are<lb/>
achieved.<lb/>
1<lb/>
Welfare<lb/>
. ontinued from page 8<lb/>
! RACK ROOM SHOES<lb/>
. rvice offk uils in 1987 when she<lb/>
 is being evicted from her apart<lb/>
ient. She's since found housing,<lb/>
il her families joined the law-<lb/>
iil and the state became the de<lb/>
ndant, said Matthew Dillcr a<lb/>
r tor the e York legal<lb/>
 York state has more than<lb/>
 welfare recipients, two-<lb/>
rds in New i ork City.<lb/>
v hristopher Lamb, another<lb/>
id Sot iety lavvx er said the<lb/>
v ance for . fa mil v of<lb/>
ii m New i ork Cits is $312 a<lb/>
th 1 lie Department oi 1 lous<lb/>
 and Urban Development re<lb/>
? ? iverage market rate fora<lb/>
tx droom apartment tor poor<lb/>
n ew "i ork CitV is -<lb/>
MINI STORAGE<lb/>
408 W. Arlington Blvd<lb/>
(919)756-9933<lb/>
w (across from Cable TV)<lb/>
For Summer<lb/>
Storage<lb/>
FREE Moving for 6 months leases<lb/>
Most Convenient &amp; Electronically<lb/>
Surveillanced<lb/>
Mon - Sat<lb/>
9 - 5:30pm<lb/>
Study<lb/>
( ontinued from page 8<lb/>
nd we antu ipate that it is<lb/>
ran Her time like other<lb/>
ds, we think it will bo erod<lb/>
Though he dislikes the idea ot<lb/>
ling anything on barrier is-<lb/>
Tilkev had a few words of<lb/>
use tor development .it Sunset<lb/>
1 each. Because houses sit behind<lb/>
althy rows ol dunes, the beach<lb/>
irVned I hirrnane I lugo rrfSep<lb/>
teitligfunsCatMed, ftffslrtd<lb/>
Seventy-six miles north ol<lb/>
Sunset Beach, however, there are<lb/>
severelyeroded sectionsoi North<lb/>
ipsail Beach.<lb/>
is now taking applications for summer<lb/>
employment for the following positions:<lb/>
Assistant Sports Editor<lb/>
Assistant Features Editor<lb/>
Copy Editors<lb/>
Staff Writers<lb/>
Submit applications to Lori Martin at The<lb/>
East Carolinian by 5 p.m. April 11,1990<lb/>
<lb/>
Why head South, wnen you can find the<lb/>
very Dest in Mexican cuisine right here?<lb/>
Come treat vourseit to our authentic hot.<lb/>
spicy or mild dishes . . Eacn served with<lb/>
a flair.<lb/>
COCO'S PRESENTS: A A j<lb/>
 I <lb/>
?Lunch Specials $3 yLj<lb/>
Served MonFn. t1 til 3 ?J X<lb/>
?Dinner SpecialsCT O<lb/>
Served SunThurs. after 5 p.n.<lb/>
N<lb/>
MexicxiriResTaujcml<lb/>
521 Cotanclu St.<lb/>
Iff fi<lb/>
That's What Our New East ATM Machines Mean To You<lb/>
j<lb/>
So you torget to cash a check and now it's hall<lb/>
pas! seven and you're supposed to go out to a movie<lb/>
and frizz later and you'll feel like a geek if you have<lb/>
to borrow the money again? No problem. Get over<lb/>
to a New East 24 ATM anytime.<lb/>
You can take money out, put money in, find<lb/>
out how full or flat your account is, 7 days a week,<lb/>
24 hours a day. And you can bank at any of the<lb/>
32,700 CirrusR or Relay ? ATMs worldwide, because<lb/>
we're members.<lb/>
Any Time Money because it's ready to help<lb/>
you, any time. It even savs "Thanks<lb/>
MEW EAST BANK<lb/>
lOF GRE E N V I L L E<lb/>
ECU ? MENOENHALL<lb/>
UIHMtUn'<lb/>
olh? . ,? -?<lb/>
See Helms, page 9<lb/>
<pb facs="00058207_0011"/><lb/>
&amp;z ffast (garolfnian<lb/>
Page W<lb/>
Features<lb/>
tml5,1990<lb/>
COC to play for Attic crowd<lb/>
By Deanna Nevgloski<lb/>
Staff Wntrr<lb/>
Friday, the Attic will bo bringing back Raleigh-<lb/>
based quintet Corrosion of Conformity for their tirst<lb/>
show in Greenville in over throe years.<lb/>
A band whose name is audacious and attention<lb/>
getting, COC traces its roots back seven years to<lb/>
when core members Woodv Weatherman and Reed<lb/>
Mul)ifl formed the band with Mike IVan and Eric<lb/>
Fvckr.<lb/>
The original line up released "No Core a 15-<lb/>
song compilation cassette in 1982, "Whv Are We<lb/>
Here a three song compilation FT in 1983 and<lb/>
finally, their first full length LP Fve tor An Eye<lb/>
which was released in 184 on No Core Records and<lb/>
included 20 songs.<lb/>
In 1985, COC released their second 1 P titled<lb/>
Animosity an album that broke new ground bv<lb/>
fusing hardcore with heavy metal. The LP, which<lb/>
featured the work ot Metallica artist Pushead, found<lb/>
its debut on DeathMetal BladeEnigma Records<lb/>
here in the States, and proved to be the release that<lb/>
created a large, devoted following tor the hardcore,<lb/>
metal stompors<lb/>
The line-up changed when Eycke parted ways<lb/>
with the band. leaving Dean and Mullm to takeover<lb/>
the vocals.<lb/>
rechnocraey a five-song, 2 inch 1 P was re<lb/>
leased in 1987and featured new vocalist Simon Bob<lb/>
Sinister (from the Ugly Americans). Dean soon left<lb/>
the band due to musical differences" and was re<lb/>
placed bv Phil Swisher.<lb/>
Not long after, Sinister left the band to reform his<lb/>
old band and the rest of COC decided to go on<lb/>
hiatusbreak up Two vears later, COC is back in<lb/>
action with a new line up, new music and new<lb/>
attitudes.<lb/>
The current thrashin' line up is comprised ot<lb/>
guitarists Weatherman and Pepper Keenan (a New<lb/>
Orleans native), drummer Mullm. bassist Swisher<lb/>
and vocalistNow i orker Karl Agell.<lb/>
Now that all theCXX'history hasbeen explained,<lb/>
let s get to the reason whv-this current line upisbv far<lb/>
the "most cohesive and furious line up to date<lb/>
Ae.ell. who used to sing for New York's School of<lb/>
Violence, describes C (X "s music as being a fusion of<lb/>
'70s hard rock (Deep Purple,Sabbath) with hardcore<lb/>
(Had Brains, Black Flag) and metal (Judas Priest) to<lb/>
create the perfei t, but raw and crunchv COC sound<lb/>
COC is a strong unit th.it combines Metallica<lb/>
like ntts with traditional British Steel bluster Spraved<lb/>
and glazed with a thick mist of post-thrash radiance,<lb/>
the new COC dome is proof that this band can lav<lb/>
down some Of the heaviest and crunchiest tunes.<lb/>
1 he tour song demo includes songs like<lb/>
"Damned tor AH Time a song dealing with people<lb/>
ot power who are motivated bv profit and greed,<lb/>
"Danceof The Dead "Daysof Rage" and "Future<lb/>
Now, ' an old NK 1 Song<lb/>
Lvricall) CXX s songs tend to trace social po<lb/>
litical consciousness and awareness, similar to thrash<lb/>
bands like 1 estamenl and Nih lear Assault.<lb/>
See Corrosion, page 11<lb/>
Writers speak to students<lb/>
Bv Doug Morris<lb/>
Maff Writer<lb/>
Published authors and re-<lb/>
spected writers, Brendan Calvin<lb/>
and Gordon Weaver, spoke about<lb/>
and read their work Monday<lb/>
night.<lb/>
Calvin is a professor of Fng-<lb/>
lish at Central Connetieut State<lb/>
University in New Britain, Conn<lb/>
In addition to six previous vol<lb/>
nmes of poetry, Calvin has re<lb/>
cchtly published "Croat Blue. New<lb/>
arid Selected Poems He was<lb/>
recently honored at Boston Col-<lb/>
lege as a distinguished alumnus<lb/>
Calvin spoke first, explaining<lb/>
she inspiration and other events<lb/>
related to many ol his poems from<lb/>
'Croat Blue New and Selected<lb/>
Poems" nd then reading them<lb/>
He talked about his homo in I uro,<lb/>
Mass , his family from Ireland, his<lb/>
dog and several poems about<lb/>
birds<lb/>
Weaver is a professor ol Fng-<lb/>
hsh and director of the graduate<lb/>
program m creative writing at<lb/>
Oklahoma StateUniversity inStill-<lb/>
water, Okla. He has written six<lb/>
volumes ot short stories and four<lb/>
novels, one ot which, "Count a<lb/>
Lonely Cadeance is being turned<lb/>
into a movie.<lb/>
Weaver read his short story,<lb/>
"Liafomia about a child who lies<lb/>
constantly. 1 le said, The inspira<lb/>
hon actually came from a story<lb/>
my older brother told me<lb/>
There was a reception in the<lb/>
faculty lounge ot the English<lb/>
department immediately follow-<lb/>
ing the presentation where people<lb/>
were allowed to speak to the au-<lb/>
thors and ask questions.<lb/>
The English department here<lb/>
at ECU brings in many famous<lb/>
writers each semester to speak;<lb/>
however, the turn out at most of<lb/>
these e ents is not great enough to<lb/>
continue supporting this practice.<lb/>
It more people, both faculty and<lb/>
students, do not start attending<lb/>
these functions, it could mean that<lb/>
less speakers will be coming to<lb/>
E I<lb/>
Coming Up<lb/>
Thursday<lb/>
O ROCKEFELLER'S<lb/>
The Usuals<lb/>
ATTIC<lb/>
Captain Cook<lb/>
&amp;<lb/>
the Coconuts<lb/>
NEW PIT-I<lb/>
The Channel Cats<lb/>
MENDENHA1 1<lb/>
Turner and Hooch<lb/>
Friday<lb/>
O' ROCKEFELLER'S<lb/>
Bad Checks<lb/>
ATTIC<lb/>
Corrosion of Confor-<lb/>
mity<lb/>
NEW DELI<lb/>
8 or 9 Feet<lb/>
FIZZ<lb/>
Bobby Watson<lb/>
MENDENHALL<lb/>
Turner and Hooch<lb/>
Saturday<lb/>
O' ROCKEFELLER'S<lb/>
Day for Night<lb/>
ATTIC<lb/>
Paragon<lb/>
NEW DELI<lb/>
Mike Hammer<lb/>
&amp;<lb/>
the Rhinocerous<lb/>
FIZZ<lb/>
Rockilia<lb/>
MENDFNHALL<lb/>
Turner and Hooch<lb/>
l he Hooters played to an enthralled Attic crowd last week In the<lb/>
past the band played back up for Cyndi Lauper Here, guitarist John<lb/>
Lilley holds his instrument vertical as he hammers out a solo<lb/>
Corrosion ot Conformity will return to Greenville tor their first show in over three years i ne tnrasnmg metal<lb/>
band will be playing at the Attic Friday as part of a tour of Virginia and North Carolina The band will be<lb/>
heading to Dublin. Ireland in April to kick of a six week European tour<lb/>
Teenage Mutant Ninja<lb/>
Turtles' disappoints audience<lb/>
By Chip Carter<lb/>
Stjff Writer<lb/>
"Teenage Mutant Ninja<lb/>
Turtles" is technically (lawless. It<lb/>
sutters only from one thing <lb/>
terminal hipness<lb/>
Translating the lean, green<lb/>
fighting machines from the pages<lb/>
ot their comic books to television<lb/>
didn't require half the effort that<lb/>
the live-action film did. Rimed in<lb/>
Wilmington, N.C the cinematog-<lb/>
raphy is especially dazzling.<lb/>
Segues, dizzying pan shins<lb/>
and effective lighting (one ot the<lb/>
most damaging aspects ot the<lb/>
"Batman" movie) make "TMNT"<lb/>
easily watchaWe. It's the storyline,<lb/>
dialogueand soundtrack that drag<lb/>
this film down to the level of "Mac<lb/>
and Me<lb/>
The Ninja Turtles started out<lb/>
asa parody of certain mainstream<lb/>
comic books who,at the time, were<lb/>
overloading their stories with<lb/>
ninjas, radioactively-induced<lb/>
mutations and. ol course, teenag<lb/>
angsf<lb/>
K'in Eastman and Peter<lb/>
Laird, the turtle creators, wove<lb/>
thes. elements into a great in toke<lb/>
parody of the comic b(Mk indus-<lb/>
try Between then and now the<lb/>
i( ke has worn thin, as thev and the<lb/>
Turtles begin to take themselves<lb/>
seriously as the barometer of cool<lb/>
in this country.<lb/>
Since the movie is based rather<lb/>
faithfully on the satirical origin"<lb/>
story of the Turtles. I'd hoped it<lb/>
would contain some of thespice of<lb/>
the original parody But, like the<lb/>
Saturday morning cartoon, it sac-<lb/>
rifices satire for commercialism.<lb/>
Understandable, though The<lb/>
producers no doubt had to assnm?<lb/>
that 90 percent of the audience<lb/>
was not conversant with thecomic<lb/>
books being parodied, and there-<lb/>
fore had to present the jokes as<lb/>
straightforward plot devices It<lb/>
hurt the irtooi ? ? ?<lb/>
the tilm as well.<lb/>
There is no heart fl i<lb/>
? ? despite the filmn - i<lb/>
overwrought (and mark<lb/>
moerotic, it theTurtles an h<lb/>
to be sexualh classified ?<lb/>
gender who knows pei<lb/>
Donatelioisunki ??? i I<lb/>
attempts to show then for<lb/>
erne another and th?-ir mentor<lb/>
Splinter<lb/>
Especially nauseating is the<lb/>
scene where, after telepathic<lb/>
communication with Splinter the<lb/>
all break down and cry h. ?ld hands<lb/>
and comfort one another irei n<lb/>
rubber hands and Visine running<lb/>
down green, rubbery masks in-<lb/>
spires no svmpathy in me.<lb/>
Kemomber 'Bill and fed S<lb/>
Excellent Adventure " neline<lb/>
(a syncopated I ig! tl ? ? man<lb/>
aged to convey love, embarrass-<lb/>
ment and humor. Polyurethene<lb/>
See Ninja, page 11<lb/>
Versatile Hooters entice fans<lb/>
By Terri A very<lb/>
Staff Writer<lb/>
Vibrant and versatile, the<lb/>
Hooters' performance impressed<lb/>
Attic goers last Thursday night<lb/>
The five-man group immediately<lb/>
drew the crowd's attention with<lb/>
"You Never Know Who Your<lb/>
Friends Are off their newly re-<lb/>
leased album, "Zig Zag<lb/>
Eric Bazilian, vocalist and<lb/>
guitarist, teased the crowd by of-<lb/>
fering a sample of the group's<lb/>
incredible versatility when he<lb/>
played the harmonica and the<lb/>
flute. Later, fans saw Bazilian play<lb/>
the saxophone, Rob Hyman<lb/>
played the recorder, accordion,<lb/>
and the band's trademark,<lb/>
hooter The use of these instru-<lb/>
ments along with guitars and<lb/>
drums formed an interesting blend<lb/>
of rock and folk sounds for which<lb/>
the band is known.<lb/>
The Hooters were formerly<lb/>
Cyndi Lauper'sband, but being a<lb/>
back-up band has not hurt their<lb/>
ability to perform in the forefront.<lb/>
Bazilian and Hyman quickly set<lb/>
the tone of the show with their<lb/>
energetic antics. As Bazilian<lb/>
plaved guitar solos, he made pro-<lb/>
vocative facial gestures to the<lb/>
crowd standing at the edge ot the<lb/>
stage.<lb/>
After doing a few songs and<lb/>
working up a sweat, Bazilian<lb/>
grabbed a towel, and after drying<lb/>
his face and hair, he tossed the<lb/>
towel into the crowd, who<lb/>
scrambled tor the souvenir<lb/>
Hyman plaved the keyboard with<lb/>
an enthusiasm that spread into<lb/>
the audience<lb/>
Many people who saw the<lb/>
show were not familiar with the<lb/>
group beforehand, and most were<lb/>
surprised at their outstanding<lb/>
performance. Bazilian and 1 ivman<lb/>
were truly the stars of the show,<lb/>
but bassist Andy King, guitarist<lb/>
John Lillevm, and drummer David<lb/>
L'osikkinen provided obvious<lb/>
foundational support for the<lb/>
group<lb/>
Bailian's strong and some-<lb/>
times raspy voice blended with<lb/>
the softer voice of Hyman on sev-<lb/>
eral songs. Their voices were es-<lb/>
pecially effective in ballads such<lb/>
as "Where Do Hhet hildrenk?"<lb/>
and Heaven Laughs<lb/>
As popular as me ballads<lb/>
were, thev did no! come cl I<lb/>
reaching the level of commotion<lb/>
caused b) hits like And We<lb/>
I m ed" and "Johnny Bioode<lb/>
When the Hooters plaved 'Tu<lb/>
Bv D.i the crowd had stacks of<lb/>
speakers shaking so hard the<lb/>
were threatening I fall any sec-<lb/>
ond.<lb/>
rhegroupclosed with another<lb/>
crowd-pleaser titled Mr Big<lb/>
Baboon Returning for an encore,<lb/>
the band played "500 Miles, a<lb/>
song so moving that it will almost<lb/>
surely bea future hit for the group.<lb/>
After holding the crowd's<lb/>
attention for nearly two hours with<lb/>
a string of songs from their two<lb/>
previous albums, "One Way<lb/>
1 tome" and " Nervous Night and<lb/>
great new songs trom their cur<lb/>
rent album, "7ig Zag the Hoot-<lb/>
ers had gained at least one new<lb/>
fan in Creenville.<lb/>
Pickin'the Bones<lb/>
3<lb/>
Bonehead notes the finer points of local police forces<lb/>
By Chippy Bonehead<lb/>
Staff Speed Trap Victim<lb/>
Ever feel like<lb/>
your car has the<lb/>
license plate<lb/>
"PULL ME" on it?<lb/>
Whether ifs the<lb/>
kampus kops or<lb/>
the overfed<lb/>
Greenville PD,<lb/>
students ha veit rough in this town.<lb/>
Why? Obviously, we're easy<lb/>
targets We either drive pieces of<lb/>
shit, or we have new Preludes?.<lb/>
Don't think they don't teach cops<lb/>
this in Pulling and Ticketing 1000.<lb/>
And we stay out later than<lb/>
permanent citizens of Greenville.<lb/>
Name one of your neighbors who<lb/>
isn't a student that you've seen<lb/>
pull in the driveway at 1:15 in the<lb/>
morning.<lb/>
Cops know we think we can<lb/>
drive after drinking, and that if we<lb/>
just park here for five minutes, we<lb/>
won't get a ticket. I think they<lb/>
envy that sense of invulnerability<lb/>
we posess, and that irks them.<lb/>
So they lie in wait for us. They<lb/>
carry extra chalk to mark our cars,<lb/>
and grab an extra handful of<lb/>
bubble gunvcolored tickets when<lb/>
they go out on patrol. Whatever<lb/>
paper company is supplying these<lb/>
people, is making a fortune.<lb/>
But the one inexcusable trait<lb/>
that the law enforcement officers<lb/>
in the Emerald City have in com-<lb/>
mon is rudeness. They don't care.<lb/>
They can say whatever they want<lb/>
to us-We don't matter.<lb/>
Don't believe me? Then you<lb/>
haven't been stopped i n this town.<lb/>
And you stayed at home on Hal-<lb/>
loween (and you didn't live in Tar<lb/>
River).<lb/>
I've been pulled many times.<lb/>
One night, turning into the park-<lb/>
ing lot of a bank that I thought<lb/>
contained a 24-hour teller, 1 got<lb/>
pulled. What did he think I was<lb/>
doing, casing the place?<lb/>
In a rude tone, he asked me<lb/>
what I was doing. I told him I was<lb/>
trying to find a teller machine, but<lb/>
he took my license and registra-<lb/>
tion and checked mem anyway. I<lb/>
asked him did he think I would<lb/>
really rob a bank in an orange<lb/>
pick-up, but he didn't smile as he<lb/>
said, "I don't know what you<lb/>
might really do.<lb/>
We accidenuny set off the<lb/>
silent alarm at our video store last<lb/>
week. Thirty minutes later, a rude<lb/>
woman called andaskedmvname.<lb/>
When I said, "Chip she snarled,<lb/>
"Your real ramd'anddemanded<lb/>
I have identification ready when<lb/>
an officer showed up fifteen min-<lb/>
utes later.<lb/>
Had it been a hostage situ-<lb/>
ation we'd have been long dead.<lb/>
1 wonder if they get some<lb/>
of neurotic mental orgasm ft<lb/>
busting a student, a buss<lb/>
don't get from ticketing a<lb/>
wife in a stat onwagon. A hou;<lb/>
wife can go 5 down Fifth<lb/>
but try going 26 in a resident<lb/>
area and see if you don't get <lb/>
by three state troopers and aSWj<lb/>
team, with "Save Our Pi<lb/>
Children From Speeding Dead<lb/>
the Hands of Irresponsible<lb/>
lege Students" stickers pl<lb/>
across their helmets.<lb/>
I'm sure the crack dealers<lb/>
See Police, page 11<lb/>
<pb facs="00058207_0012"/><lb/>
Campus Voice<lb/>
What do you like or dislike<lb/>
about The East Carolinian?<lb/>
Eric Spruill, 20,<lb/>
Industrial Tech Soph.<lb/>
The coverage of intramural<lb/>
sports is lacking<lb/>
Wendell Alsbrook, 22,<lb/>
Industrial Tech Senior<lb/>
'There should be more classified<lb/>
ads for jobs tor students. Also,<lb/>
there is a lack of ads in general<lb/>
Saveena Singh, 21,<lb/>
Physical Therapy, junior<lb/>
I would like the paper to print<lb/>
more student opinions<lb/>
Charles Simmons, 20,<lb/>
Computer Science, Soph.<lb/>
I hev need a section for movies<lb/>
with previews,ratings,stars,etc<lb/>
Lisa Moore, 21,<lb/>
i inance, junior<lb/>
1 he announcements never seem<lb/>
t i come out m time<lb/>
Nancy Crab tree, 21,<lb/>
Accounting, Junior<lb/>
"I like the paper because it is all<lb/>
student run. It gives students the<lb/>
opportunity to work in a profes-<lb/>
sional environment<lb/>
?Compiled by Marjorie McKinstry<lb/>
(Photos by Angela Pridgen?ECU Photo Lab)<lb/>
Bits and Pieces<lb/>
Strange laws rule many states<lb/>
Patrons at nude-dancing establishments in Salem, Ore cannot bo<lb/>
.vithintwo feet ol the dancer. It is illegal to take someone sbear without<lb/>
: ?. rmission in New I lampshire. And in i ouisiana, it is against the law<lb/>
? gargle in public, rhose are a tew strange laws on the books. Also<lb/>
i led is .i i lalifornia law say ing it is illegal to let a phone ring more<lb/>
in h1 times.<lb/>
Company shareholders in U.S.<lb/>
adopt enviromental attitudes<lb/>
run lei ii . ? -  ' ward a green revolution at<lb/>
- companies this spring f"he re investors ted up with oil<lb/>
i id rain and polluted beaches and they've turned the environ-<lb/>
? ? into the hottest topic at annual meetings this) ear. Proposals range<lb/>
? ? it  Exxon redesign its tanker fleet to requiring companies to<lb/>
r. r en ironmentalists on their boards.<lb/>
nfMtf fM USATGDA ppU Coibgt Information Network<lb/>
Odd Answers<lb/>
Cakette: D. a little cake 2 Caitiff:C a captive, prisoner<lb/>
( ilangay: A. a white cockatoo 4. Carrie A to cackle,<lb/>
gabble 5 Celure: C. canopy or hanging 6. Chippy: C loose<lb/>
women who frequents streets 7.Chuckhole: A.mudhole 8.<lb/>
ClautrA to tear, scratch 9. Crustific: D. forming a crust 10.<lb/>
ick: A to throw<lb/>
Music Notes<lb/>
The end of the semester is nigh and there's m we than enough going<lb/>
mto keep even i ?nc bus) Barefoot on the Mall is April ll?th and should<lb/>
be a pretty standard good time, ("here's going to be rap. reggae, white<lb/>
funk, a possible Hart SimpsonAJ Bundy look alike contest and the<lb/>
tea red V MB dunking booth. Si tunds like something from a B-movie,<lb/>
doesn t it<lb/>
Even though the WZMB jinks keep calling it Naked City, that's<lb/>
H tually fohn Zorn, and he, along with Lava Love, the Kanamits, Bad<lb/>
( hei W and the best compilation album ever. And tor all of vou<lb/>
persistent king Missile tans, wefound thealbun finally and you'll be<lb/>
hearing it until you don't want to anymore<lb/>
This 1 riday is staggering with its soii.il possibilities. Bad Cheeks<lb/>
with rhe Outside at O" Rockefellers, Corrosion ot Conformity at the<lb/>
ttie Bor9 Feet at the New Deli and grammy winning Bobby Watson<lb/>
ind The 1 lorizon at the Fizz. WZMB is gi ing away 8or 9 Feet albums<lb/>
'his week so go dial now ust in ease the dise jockey is doing a contest<lb/>
and vou didn't hear about it<lb/>
Yes, the end of the semester is quite busy. WZMB, for example, has<lb/>
been bus) being bad, getting caught and plotting our next subversive<lb/>
m -ve The SGA is our next target. A more deserving stooge is not to be<lb/>
found WZMB we eal the worm and get veiled at for doing it.<lb/>
?Compiled bv Beth "The Instigator" Ellison<lb/>
Ninja<lb/>
The East Carolinian, April 5, 1990 11<lb/>
Turtles hugging eaeh other just<lb/>
made me embarrassed.<lb/>
Throughout the film, the dia-<lb/>
logue was strained. Each Turtle<lb/>
attempted to OUtcool the other,<lb/>
with witticisms and one-liners,<lb/>
only to be (supposedly) outcooled<lb/>
bv Splinter at the tilm's finale.<lb/>
Maybe skate rats (and skate<lb/>
turtles?) still sav things like "radi-<lb/>
cal "awesome" and "excellent<lb/>
but those words were old bv the<lb/>
time "Bill and Ted' hit the video<lb/>
stores.<lb/>
Occasionally,a few funny bits<lb/>
would shp by the cutting room<lb/>
floor. Casey ones, sports fanatic<lb/>
vigilantecomplete sexist, when<lb/>
Corrosion<lb/>
accused of being claustrophobic,<lb/>
retorts, "No way! I've never even<lb/>
looked .it another guy<lb/>
Seems like humor that'sa little<lb/>
too subtle for kids (though 1<lb/>
wouldn't bet money on that) and<lb/>
humor of a kind that would defi-<lb/>
nitely be more appreciated bv<lb/>
parents forced into the theater. So<lb/>
why wasn't there more of it?<lb/>
Whenever you have a dra-<lb/>
matic villain, directors tend torelv<lb/>
on ominous background music<lb/>
swelling up whenever the villain<lb/>
enters the room. This is why the<lb/>
Shredder looks ridiculous stand-<lb/>
ing in a warehouse for A5 seconds,<lb/>
jerking his head left and right at<lb/>
Continued from page 10<lb/>
Currently, COC is shopping<lb/>
the demo and would like to cut .?<lb/>
deal with a major or large inde-<lb/>
pendent label that accepts the<lb/>
band's "artistic integrities" and.<lb/>
as their name implies, not having<lb/>
lo conform to the idea ot censor-<lb/>
ship or anything else.<lb/>
Three labels are now being<lb/>
considered. "hey include<lb/>
Megaforce (Mctallica), Caroline<lb/>
and In Effect.<lb/>
( has toured 'played w ith<lb/>
headlining acts sui h as Anthra <lb/>
Slayer, Metal Church and Suicidal<lb/>
1 endent ies. I he tour aeenda tor<lb/>
Police<lb/>
the next couple (t weeks includes<lb/>
shows m North Carolina and Vir-<lb/>
ginia.<lb/>
After the Raleigh show on<lb/>
April 13, COC will be starting a<lb/>
European tour with Pirv Rotten<lb/>
1 mbecilest PR1). The si week tour<lb/>
will kkk off in Dublin, Ireland<lb/>
It vou'rea fan oftheold (DC,<lb/>
don't be surprised if vou hear a<lb/>
v hange with their new material.<lb/>
COC has definite!) N )T mel<lb/>
lowed out, but has naturally pro<lb/>
gressed to a point that has put<lb/>
forth better attitudes, better songs<lb/>
and better musicians.<lb/>
Continued from page 10<lb/>
rapists in this town love it though.<lb/>
Thcv don't have a thing to wony<lb/>
about here in (.reem llle. Want to<lb/>
commit a rape? ust do it at 1:15<lb/>
a.m. in Greenville Every copon<lb/>
the force is downtown waiting tor<lb/>
potential DWls, or at Krispe<lb/>
Kreme<lb/>
Want to deal crack"1 lust do it<lb/>
ott campus. Illegal parkers and<lb/>
speedersare much more of a threat<lb/>
to society, and at any hour.<lb/>
To be fair, that's about all the<lb/>
cops and campus security can<lb/>
really handle. The majority of both<lb/>
forces are made up of overweight,<lb/>
out-of-shape, older individuals<lb/>
Does all this sound scary? 't<lb/>
is. Remember, they never caught<lb/>
that rapisl from last semester.<lb/>
Between the GPD and Campus<lb/>
Security, in a town of less than<lb/>
50,000 the) never found a serial<lb/>
rapist<lb/>
May the hango ers be gentle,<lb/>
the buzzes intense  and I'd lock<lb/>
my doors and windows if I were<lb/>
vou.<lb/>
PI<lb/>
76 Cinema 3 f<lb/>
Sho?4 Starting lnd?y,j (.<lb/>
Cry Baby (R)<lb/>
Nightl) 7 004 9 (Ki<lb/>
S.ii Sun Matinees 2:004 4:00<lb/>
The Hunt for Red October (R) <lb/>
Nightl) 7:004 9 i()<lb/>
s.u Sun Matineei I JO 4 ?? 00<lb/>
eenagc Mutant Ninja Turtles (PCo <lb/>
ii;h!l 5 10,7 15 4 9:00<lb/>
? auccaneet 3<lb/>
756-3307<lb/>
Arlington Blvd<lb/>
Ernest Goes To Jail (PG)<lb/>
Sight) ' ml A 9 (X)<lb/>
rSai Sun Matineei 2 004 4 00<lb/>
Prcll) Women ik)<lb/>
Njghtl) r.004 9 20<lb/>
i Sai Sun .VUunoes 2:00-4:20<lb/>
Opportunity Knocks iK'il<lb/>
N (htl) 1IX) A 9 (X)<lb/>
1<lb/>
M.i<lb/>
i x) i 4 (x i<lb/>
? Pexkfheatte<lb/>
v-<lb/>
Def By Temptation (R)<lb/>
Weekdays 7:00 &amp; s:(M)<lb/>
Sun 2:00.4:00.7:00, &amp; 9:00pmi<lb/>
TOM HANKS<lb/>
TURNER<lb/>
&amp;H00CH<lb/>
PG<lb/>
Playing Wednesday, April 5 - S, 1990<lb/>
8:00pm Hendrix Theatre<lb/>
FREE v student I.I),<lb/>
sponsored b) the Student Union Rims Committee<lb/>
Thurs. 5th<lb/>
Channel Cats<lb/>
Sat. 7th<lb/>
Fri. 6th<lb/>
S or 9 Feet<lb/>
Mike Hamer &amp;<lb/>
The Rhinocerus<lb/>
Hours of Operation<lb/>
Mon 11 am - 8 pm<lb/>
Tues 1 lam-lam<lb/>
Wed 11 am - 1 am<lb/>
Thurs 11 am L) pm<lb/>
Fri 11 am - 1 am<lb/>
Sat 12 noon - 1 am<lb/>
 If Band Night -<lb/>
close at 1 am<lb/>
513CotancheSt.<lb/>
(located across from UBE)<lb/>
Each Tues. &amp; Wed. Night<lb/>
Open Mic Night<lb/>
Sign up<lb/>
starts at 3pm<lb/>
758-0080<lb/>
dramatic intervals.<lb/>
It I was a super villain, I doubt<lb/>
I'm gome, to have time to stand<lb/>
and pose for my soundtrack, while<lb/>
all my lackeys are looking up at<lb/>
me, wondering it I'm choregra-<lb/>
phing the latest Kate Hush video.<lb/>
There aren't a whole lot ot<lb/>
good things to sav about the act-<lb/>
ing either. Pauses get stepped on,<lb/>
hvstena raises its uglv head and<lb/>
deep brooding looks from the<lb/>
token troubled teen are the special<lb/>
of the dav.<lb/>
(ranted, it must be hard toad<lb/>
with any seriousness against a<lb/>
blubbering green polvurethene<lb/>
suit shaped like a turtle, but look<lb/>
Continued from page 10<lb/>
how manv films overcome that<lb/>
kind of difficulty  "Star Wars<lb/>
"E.T "Return to () <lb/>
Overall, "Teenage Mutant<lb/>
Ninja Turtles" inspired only tear<lb/>
in my being. The same kind of tear<lb/>
"Batman" left me with  a dread<lb/>
of more merchandising.<lb/>
It the filmmakers had stopped<lb/>
to look at something really cool,<lb/>
something that realizes trends<lb/>
aren't tup, and rupnesscorrtes from<lb/>
within ("The Simpsons "Heath-<lb/>
ers and theB-52scometo mind),<lb/>
and not worried about beating the<lb/>
revenues ott the Hatdude, we<lb/>
might have seen a Turtles 'closer<lb/>
to their original conception fun.<lb/>
y<lb/>
CLIFF<lb/>
Seafood House and Oyster Bar<lb/>
W??hmgton Highway (N C 33 ExtGreenville North Caroline<lb/>
Phone 752 3172<lb/>
In business fur 30 years' !<lb/>
Mon. thru Thurs Night<lb/>
Plate $3.75<lb/>
Hours: 4 M) 9:00pm Mem Sal<lb/>
" ike On is welcome<lb/>
EPISCOPAL CAMPUS<lb/>
MINISTRY<lb/>
St. Paul's Episcopal Church<lb/>
401 E. 4th St.<lb/>
HOLY WEEK &amp; EASTER DAY<lb/>
AprilS- 15<lb/>
Schedule of Services<lb/>
Palm Sunday - Celebration of Hoh Eucharist - 7:30am<lb/>
9:00am - Liturg) of the Palms &amp; Eucharist: begins in<lb/>
Parish Hall<lb/>
11:00am<lb/>
louda - Hol Eucharist 7:00am: 12:10pm<lb/>
Tuesday - Hot) Eucharist 7:00am ; 12:10pm<lb/>
Wednesday - Ho!) Eucharist 7:00am; 12:10pm; 5:30pm<lb/>
Episcopal Student Fellowship supper and program<lb/>
follow 5:30pm service<lb/>
Maimd - Thursday - Liturgy<lb/>
7:30 - Last Supper, Stripping of Altar<lb/>
Good Friday - 12:10pm Good Fridaj Liturgy<lb/>
Easter Dav<lb/>
5:00am - The Great Viil Hoh Eucharist and Baptism<lb/>
9:00am- Holy Eucharist<lb/>
11:00am - Hoh Eucharist<lb/>
?<lb/>
UNIVERSITY AMOCO<lb/>
Beer Specials<lb/>
Natural Light $11.50 per case<lb/>
Budweiser $13.50 per case<lb/>
Truck Load Tire Sale on<lb/>
INTERCEPTOR<lb/>
Special Low Prices on Exhaust<lb/>
repairs &amp; installations<lb/>
Official NC Inspection Station<lb/>
? All Complete Muffler Shop<lb/>
? 24 Hour Towing<lb/>
? Any Kind of Repair Service<lb/>
101 East 10th St.<lb/>
Greenville, NC 27858<lb/>
Telephone:<lb/>
(919) 758-9976<lb/>
<pb facs="00058207_0013"/><lb/>
12 I he last Carolinian, April 5, 1490<lb/>
<pb facs="00058207_0014"/><lb/>
31ic lEast (Earnlmtan<lb/>
Page 13<lb/>
Sports<lb/>
April 5,1990<lb/>
Pirates upset<lb/>
Tarheels, 2-1<lb/>
By Frank Reyes<lb/>
StaH Writei<lb/>
game, rhey deserved to win.They<lb/>
were the bettor team "<lb/>
 E 11 scored the first run in the<lb/>
hl" U1 baseball tram third inning when Steve Godin<lb/>
toppled national!) ranked UN (.4 w 11 RBI) doubled to Mart the<lb/>
M l'ucsda nightinCrcen rail) Later, Godin moved to third<lb/>
when Bern Natron I 287, 7 RBI)<lb/>
1'he Tarheels whoareranked sacrificed Kevin Riggs I 277, 21<lb/>
NMtonbyi Base RBI) knocked in the Gtdin with a<lb/>
P?'? could only sal run scoring single.<lb/>
ge five hits against E( I shurler North Carolina scored itsonly<lb/>
,on run in the sixth inning when short-<lb/>
v- " tnan ! ' mswatched stop Ron Maurer (.346, 27 RBI)<lb/>
;iveuponl) one run in belted a solo homerun. Maurcr's<lb/>
? I lis w m boosts Ins dingcr was his fourth on tin- sea-<lb/>
rdto? i I angdon also fanned son<lb/>
ir Heels while walking five rhe Pirates scored again in<lb/>
us was our biggest non the fourth inning when Calvin<lb/>
 I .nv.vions.iKi I Brown singled. JohnGast (.365,24<lb/>
'lb tell ?d out there RBI) followed with an run-scor-<lb/>
win also increased ingdoublc After leading2-1, the<lb/>
1 record to 2b Coverall. Piratesnevergaveupanothermn.<lb/>
: ? ?' h foi thn atened the<lb/>
 edwith lead in the ninth inning. With men<lb/>
on second and thud with one out,<lb/>
n outstanding the Pirates went to the bullpen<lb/>
berts said. Pirate head coach Gan Overton<lb/>
I real baseball See Overton page 11<lb/>
? ???? ne of 12 ECU Cure Gold Dancers, practices a tew ot her<lb/>
? :  itkei 11 ' many other students will try out for the 1991 team<lb/>
? in Memorial Gym (Photo by J I) Whitmire ? ECU Photo Lab)<lb/>
Exercise, family<lb/>
inspire dancer<lb/>
Walker credits cheerleading<lb/>
By Frank Reyes<lb/>
Staff W ritci<lb/>
tune Walker said "And since<lb/>
you know when practice is, you<lb/>
have to work your studies around<lb/>
that<lb/>
Walker made the team her<lb/>
freshman year. I ynette lohnson,<lb/>
Junior Ann Walker puts her<lb/>
dan. 1111; talon t to good use at ECU:<lb/>
she is a Purelold I 'aiu or.<lb/>
Hw native from Greensboro, presently the supervisor of the<lb/>
( , has been dancing since the Pure Gold Dance team, said<lb/>
age of seven, thanks to theencour-<lb/>
agemenl from her parents and<lb/>
Walker is an asset to the squad.<lb/>
'(Walker) is very energetic<lb/>
M parents wanted me and has a lotol leadership on the<lb/>
(dancing lessons) Walker squad lohnson said "She is<lb/>
said And when I went, I really alwaysloaded with ideas to help<lb/>
liked it "<lb/>
Walker is one ol 12 varsity<lb/>
daiu t rs 1 ? the Pure I old I )ance<lb/>
the team<lb/>
According to Walker, danc-<lb/>
ing with the team has main- ,A-<lb/>
squad Earlier this year, over 120 vantages.<lb/>
dancers ti I ut for the varsity "You get a lot of exercise and<lb/>
team Be' to meet s? many people<lb/>
w,k . ,vhoch(M Uover Walker said. "The team members<lb/>
UN( Wilmington, credits her are very close and we're all good<lb/>
cheerli iding .kills from Apex friends. We're like sisters a great<lb/>
I ligh &amp; hool to her success in be- big family<lb/>
coming a member ol the team. rhe mam goal tor the Pure<lb/>
rhis dancing program enters Gold Dance team is to promote<lb/>
its sixth ieason at ECI During ECU spirit. Walker says that get-<lb/>
the basketball season, daneers ting the crowd involved during<lb/>
usually pra tice on ruesday and basketball games is very satisfy-<lb/>
Thursday nights tor approxi- trig.<lb/>
mat. I) two hours Butthisdoesn'l Walker also thinks that darte-<lb/>
m to bother Walker mg with the team should be con<lb/>
'You have to organize yourSec Walker, page 14<lb/>
 CU's Tommy Yarborough touts the ball in Pirate baseball action The team travels to UNC-Wilmington<lb/>
Saturday tor a pair ot games against the Seahawks (Photo by J D Whitmire ? ECU Photo I ab )<lb/>
Maginnes leads golfers at Yunnan<lb/>
 Paul (iarcia<lb/>
st.itt Writes<lb/>
1 he EC I goll team had a very<lb/>
disappointing twelfth place finish<lb/>
in the 22 team field at the Furman<lb/>
Inten illegiate in (Irecnville,s .<lb/>
Man h  April I.<lb/>
I he 1 urman Intercollegiate<lb/>
is one ot the best tournaments in<lb/>
the 1 ountrv and has a very com<lb/>
petitive Held, said head coach<lb/>
1 lal Morrison. 'We felt that we<lb/>
were playing well this spring and<lb/>
could go to Furman and prove<lb/>
ourseh es to everyone else<lb/>
1 he first das provided poor we are capable of today, but lik<lb/>
said its hard to make up a lot ot<lb/>
ihots on teams like this said<lb/>
all shot three undei pai ? ? lies<lb/>
1. nip v as tollow ed b) tu 1 pla<lb/>
eis tied at 70<lb/>
For the Pirates, junior ohn<lb/>
Maginnes lead the way shooting a<lb/>
two over par 74, just five shots out<lb/>
ol the lead Next for the Pirates<lb/>
was rod shirt freshman Mn heal<lb/>
1 eaguc and senior Paul 1iarcia<lb/>
both w, ith us<lb/>
1 he sec ond dav brought bet<lb/>
ter weather and lower scores. I he<lb/>
Piratesshota296ontheda) whi I<lb/>
allowed them to move into a tu-<lb/>
tor 1 th place<lb/>
We played much more like<lb/>
:? usl .mi ai rage<lb/>
Pirates rhe team<lb/>
 th( m a 908 total<lb/>
hom m 12th place<lb/>
weather conditions tor the tield as<lb/>
the course was wet and the -w<lb/>
was cold and overcast. The Pirates<lb/>
ended up in the hole by shooting<lb/>
512 the first d,t. which gave the<lb/>
team lth place, twenty shots out<lb/>
of the lead.<lb/>
You cannoYshoot those tvpe<lb/>
numbersand expect to make those<lb/>
sliots up against teams like<lb/>
Morrison.<lb/>
The low round for the day<lb/>
u asshot by Virginia as they posted<lb/>
a seven under par 281, which<lb/>
olted them into tirstplai ? with a<lb/>
two day total of u<lb/>
Virginia was followed by<lb/>
Georgia at 585, East Tennessee<lb/>
Clemson and Georgia lech said State at 586 andlemson and<lb/>
Morrison.<lb/>
After the first d, Clemson<lb/>
shot a tour over par 2q2 giving<lb/>
them a three shot lead over both<lb/>
(Jeorgia lech and East Tennessee<lb/>
state In a tie for fourth was I NC-<lb/>
Charlotte and Puke both at 296<lb/>
Indtviduallv there wasa three<lb/>
(Georgia Tech at 587.<lb/>
1 red Widi us of irginia shot<lb/>
a seven under par 65 lifting him<lb/>
into the lead with a I 59 total tor<lb/>
the two days. Widicus was fol-<lb/>
lowed by White who was uist one<lb/>
shot back at 140.<lb/>
Leading the wa again tor the<lb/>
way tie tor the lead. Defending Pirates was Maginnes who fired a<lb/>
champion Tod White of Furman, 73 that was equalled by junior<lb/>
Bobb) Gage ot East Tennessee Francis Vaughn.<lb/>
State, and Bill Bierman of Virginia The final day provided the<lb/>
shot a ?<lb/>
and Seavinj<lb/>
overall.<lb/>
" I his was our 1 hanceto prove<lb/>
ourselves and we didn't take<lb/>
ad antage ol that 1 ban. e We will<lb/>
ha e to rebound and play well the<lb/>
restol the year tostill havea hancc<lb/>
to attend the regional tournament<lb/>
in May, said Morrison.<lb/>
Georgia rech managed to<lb/>
come from eight shots back by<lb/>
tiring a 10 under par 278 the<lb/>
final round giving them an <lb/>
total and edging second-round<lb/>
leader Virginia by six shots tor the<lb/>
title. In third was Fast Tennessee<lb/>
Mate .it 877 and in fourth was<lb/>
Georgia at ss<lb/>
Individually White was able<lb/>
to defend his title by shooting a<lb/>
tour under par 68 the last day<lb/>
giving him an eight urfcle? par tdfh I<lb/>
ot 2iK and a three-shot victory<lb/>
over David Duryal ot Georgia<lb/>
rech.<lb/>
Freshman Ryan Pema shot an<lb/>
even par 7?. to pace the Pirates on<lb/>
the last dcv. He was followed by<lb/>
Vaughn, league and Garcia all<lb/>
with 76s.<lb/>
The Pirates will take the week<lb/>
ott in preparation to recapture the<lb/>
conferencechampionshiptheylost<lb/>
to Richmond last year. The team<lb/>
will travel to Hot Springs, Va<lb/>
.April 13-15 to accomplish this goal.<lb/>
Nelson Scott takes aim for his next shot as Rex Parker looks on I uesday in the Sigma Phi Epsiion Dimaras<lb/>
tournament Parker is the leader going into today's final round (Photo by J D Whitmire ? ECU Photo Lab)<lb/>
Catalano<lb/>
enjoys role<lb/>
on team<lb/>
By Chip Rutan<lb/>
Staff Writer<lb/>
Webster's dictionary defines<lb/>
transition as "a change from one<lb/>
pMace or state to another ECU<lb/>
women's tennis player Nicole<lb/>
Catalano has made her transition<lb/>
from Louisville, Ohio to Green-<lb/>
ville, N.C and for this freshman<lb/>
standout, the 6(X)-mile trek was<lb/>
well perceived.<lb/>
'Ever since I was little, I<lb/>
wanted to play in the south<lb/>
Catalano said. "When I came on<lb/>
my recruiting trip here, I really<lb/>
liked the school<lb/>
Growing up in a family of<lb/>
tennis players, Catalano began to<lb/>
plav at a young age. At about 11-<lb/>
years-old, she real I v became inter-<lb/>
ested in the sport and began to<lb/>
develop her game<lb/>
Catalano played tennis at<lb/>
Louisville High School and won<lb/>
her team MVP three times and<lb/>
County Player of the Year twice.<lb/>
1 ler high school coach. Greg Pcr-<lb/>
nsh, especially had m influence.<lb/>
"My high school coach was<lb/>
like my second dad Catalano<lb/>
said " le really put a lot into the<lb/>
program and 1 benefited from his<lb/>
teaching<lb/>
Beside tennis, Catalano par-<lb/>
ticipated in other sports such as<lb/>
basketball But for her, tennis had<lb/>
a unique aspect.<lb/>
"1 really like the idea of an<lb/>
individual sport that gives a point<lb/>
or helps out a team" she said.<lb/>
"Plus, tennis is a sport I can play<lb/>
for the rest of my life<lb/>
While playing at ECU, Cata-<lb/>
Lino has worked her way to the<lb/>
number He seed on the young<lb/>
and talented team. Being the<lb/>
number one seed is sometimes<lb/>
difficult for her.<lb/>
"Evervtime we go to play a<lb/>
team, even it they may not be very<lb/>
good, 1 know in my head they<lb/>
probabl v ha ve a good or very good<lb/>
number one (player) she said.<lb/>
Since the start of the 1990<lb/>
season, Catalano has already<lb/>
improved some aspects of her<lb/>
game. "Mv consistency and serve<lb/>
have improved she said. "Also,<lb/>
because we exercise more, I'm in<lb/>
better shape for the matches<lb/>
Using herquicknessand solid<lb/>
ground strokes, Catalano has a<lb/>
current six-game winning streak<lb/>
and an overall record of 7-3. As a<lb/>
left handed player, Catalano feels<lb/>
that she has an advantage over<lb/>
right handed opponents.<lb/>
"First of all, my spin is back-<lb/>
wards (on the ball) and I hit to the<lb/>
1 'ppositesidea right bander wants<lb/>
to be hit to she said.<lb/>
In preparing for a big match,<lb/>
Catalano has an interesting ap-<lb/>
proach. "Sometimes the night<lb/>
before, 1 think about the upcom-<lb/>
ing match the next day she said.<lb/>
"Right before I play the match, I<lb/>
try and concentrate and I get kind<lb/>
ot quiet<lb/>
For Catalano, playing tennis<lb/>
has contributed more than just<lb/>
phvsical conditioning and pleas-<lb/>
ure, "it has helped academically<lb/>
"It helps me be more disci-<lb/>
plined and budget my time bet-<lb/>
ter Catalano added.<lb/>
Unlike some athletes, Cata-<lb/>
See Catalano, page 14<lb/>
Lady Pirate soccer team beats UNC-CH, 4-1<lb/>
J<lb/>
By Kristen Halberg<lb/>
Staff Writer<lb/>
The ECU women's soccer<lb/>
tea m. i nan outstanding effort over<lb/>
the weekend, extended their rec-<lb/>
ord to 2-2-1 when they split in<lb/>
games against the UNC-CH Tar-<lb/>
heels and the Raleigh Club Team.<lb/>
ECU coach oe Atkins, despite<lb/>
Sunday's eventual loss to the<lb/>
Raleigh Club Team, was pleased<lb/>
with the efforts of the Lady Pi-<lb/>
rates "Overall, in both games,<lb/>
ECU peaked right towards theend<lb/>
of the season Atkinssaki. That's<lb/>
a good time to peak<lb/>
The action began Saturday<lb/>
when ECU traveled to Tarheel<lb/>
country in Chapel I lill, N.C. On<lb/>
UNC's home turf, the Lady Pi-<lb/>
rates were able to dominate both<lb/>
offensively and defensively, to<lb/>
overcome the Lady Tarheels 4-1.<lb/>
Despite the extreme field<lb/>
conditionsfromthepreviousday's<lb/>
rain, the Lady Pirates played one<lb/>
of their best games of the season.<lb/>
"The field was a sandpit with<lb/>
water in it ECU'S Ann Totaro<lb/>
said of the tield conditions. "It had<lb/>
been saturated from the ram all<lb/>
week<lb/>
Center halfback Cari (.nttith<lb/>
oi ECU opened the scoring for the<lb/>
Pirates in the first halt:of play. But<lb/>
UNC wasquick to answer as Chris<lb/>
Dinsrnore put the Tarheels back<lb/>
into the game with a goal towards<lb/>
the end of the first half.<lb/>
"Our strategy was to keep<lb/>
slow control on the wings and we<lb/>
executed that on the maximum<lb/>
level Atkins said. "We also had<lb/>
great communication<lb/>
The Lady Pirates continued<lb/>
their strategy while also execut-<lb/>
ing different runs and exercising<lb/>
super ball control. And by theend<lb/>
of the second half, they had not<lb/>
only shut down the Tarheel de-<lb/>
fense, but added ECU goals to<lb/>
secure the Pirate victory. Center<lb/>
forward Jeanie Managhan added<lb/>
the third goal to the score while<lb/>
fullback Christine Menning<lb/>
wrapped it up for the Lady Pirates<lb/>
on a long goal.<lb/>
"It was the first time they<lb/>
played socccron Division I level<lb/>
Atkins said, "and (they) had fun<lb/>
at the same time<lb/>
Sunday proved to be more of<lb/>
a struggle for the Lady Pirates as<lb/>
the fatigue from the previousgame<lb/>
became a major factor in the out-<lb/>
come against the Raleigh Club<lb/>
See Soccer, page 14<lb/>
<pb facs="00058207_0015"/><lb/>
14 The East Carolinian, April 5,1990<lb/>
Sports Briefs<lb/>
Baseball clubs cut, trade players<lb/>
Several moves were made by Major League baseball teams Tues-<lb/>
day Pitcher Greg Booker was cut by the Chicago Cubs but signed later<lb/>
by the San Francisco Giants, who have lost players to injuries. The<lb/>
Montreal Expos cut pitcher Joaquin Andujar,and the Pittsburgh Pirates<lb/>
traded outtielder Billy Hatcher to Cincinnati for pitcher Mike Roesler<lb/>
and intielder Jeff Richardson.<lb/>
Navratilova wins in second round<lb/>
Top-seed Martina Navratilova, looking for her first tournament<lb/>
victory on clav in nearly two years, defeated Halle Cioffi 2, 6-1<lb/>
ruesday in the second round of the $500,(XX) Family Circle Magazine<lb/>
Cup .it I lilton 1 lead, S.C.<lb/>
Oklahoma Senate adopts resolution<lb/>
I he Oklahoma Senate adopted a resolution Tuesday deploring the<lb/>
dropping of the women's basketball program at the University of<lb/>
Oklahoma, with some senators calling the action sexist and embarrass-<lb/>
ing I he resolution, by Sen. Darryl Roberts, P-Ardmore,tfa!lod lor re-<lb/>
instatement of the program.<lb/>
Italian basketball team wants Kimble<lb/>
Mcssaggero Roma, the Italian basketball club that lured former<lb/>
Duke tar Danny Ferrv away from the NBA, is bidding for Loyola<lb/>
Marymount forward Bo kimble. Team officials say Kimble would be a<lb/>
replacement tor Brian Shaw, who decided to rejoin the Boston Celtics<lb/>
after one season in Italy.<lb/>
Mattingly wants five-season contract<lb/>
New i ork Yankees first baseman Don Mattingly, who has said he<lb/>
will not negotiate once the season starts, is in the final season of a three-<lb/>
year, $6 million contract. He is seeking a five-year deal on the order of<lb/>
$15 million. Team owner George Stembrenner will handle negotiations<lb/>
and has met with Mattingly. Talks are expected to begin soon.<lb/>
Dickerson wants to retire from NFL<lb/>
Eric Dickerson, the Indianapolis Colts' unhappv running back,<lb/>
reiterated Tuesday his plans to retire from the NFL and said no trade of<lb/>
salary increase will make him change his mind.<lb/>
Chavez to defend title against Taylor<lb/>
Julio Cesar Chavez, the 1BF junior welterweight champ, must<lb/>
defend his title against No. 1 contender Meldrick Taylor within six<lb/>
months. Taylor lost his title to Chavez in a disputed March 17 fight,<lb/>
when referee Richard Steele stopped the 12-round fight with two<lb/>
seconds left after Chavez knocked down Taylor, who was ahead on two<lb/>
score cards.<lb/>
Colorado ski member killed in crash<lb/>
A Colorado ski team member was killed Tuesday when she lost a<lb/>
-ki and c rashed into a tree at the Eldofa ski area near Nederland, Colo.<lb/>
Laura Rood, 19, of Ketchum, Idaho, died instantly, police said.<lb/>
Horse gets prep for Kentucky Derby<lb/>
Summer Squall, impressive winner of Saturday's Jim Beam Stakes<lb/>
(his sixth win in seven starts in 1W)-90), will get his final Kentucky<lb/>
I erbv prep in the April 14 Blue Crass Stakes at Keeneland in Lexington,<lb/>
Ky.<lb/>
Dolphins' Marino asked to be traded<lb/>
The Miami Dolphins want to negotiate an extension for unhappy<lb/>
quarterback Dan Marino's contract, possiblv this year, club president<lb/>
Tim Robbie said. Marino, who has asked to be traded for the second<lb/>
yea r in a row, has two seasons remaining on a contract that will pay him<lb/>
$1.5 million this season and $1.6 million in 1991.<lb/>
CBS to co-sponsor All-Star balloting<lb/>
USA T( DAV and CBS have agreed to a trade-out promotion of<lb/>
Major League Baseball's All-Star game balloting. CBS, which this year<lb/>
begins broadcasting Major League Baseball, replaces Anheuser-Busch<lb/>
as the promotion's co-sponsor. CBS and USA TODAY will also co-<lb/>
sponsor an All-Star sweepstakes.<lb/>
Investment group interested in Padres<lb/>
An investment group headed by Hollywood producer Tom Werner<lb/>
signed a letter of intent Monday to purchase baseball's San Diego<lb/>
Padres, owner loan Kroc said. Sales terms were not released, but the<lb/>
asking price was reported to be $75 million. The sale must now be<lb/>
approved by the owners of the other major league clubs.<lb/>
Hornets interim coach to decide on job<lb/>
NBA Charlotte Hornets interim coach Gene Littles expects to<lb/>
decide within a eek whether he will return as coach next season or as<lb/>
director of player personnel. Hornets owner George Shinn said Littles<lb/>
can pick his job. Littles, popular with his players, took over after coach<lb/>
I )k k iarter was fired in January.<lb/>
In the Locker<lb/>
Umpires with most, fewest<lb/>
years of major league service<lb/>
ECU crew team competes in Augusta<lb/>
The ECU crewrowing team<lb/>
began its season this past week-<lb/>
end with a second place finish at<lb/>
the Augusta Invitational Regatta<lb/>
Catalano<lb/>
in Augusta. Georgia. FCU com-<lb/>
peted in the men'snovice-4 against<lb/>
Florida Institute of Technology,<lb/>
Agusta College and Georgia Tech<lb/>
Continued from page 13<lb/>
lano docs not sec herself domi-<lb/>
nant at number one, but is excited<lb/>
about the potential of the team.<lb/>
"Our team has good depth and<lb/>
we're a well balanced team she<lb/>
said.<lb/>
With thishumbleattitude, she<lb/>
Walker<lb/>
will continue to better her game<lb/>
and see Ihe team continue to<lb/>
improve with ever)- rtvtch. As for<lb/>
the future, she is not sure yet.<lb/>
"I might go into communica-<lb/>
tions, but I'll wait and see she<lb/>
said.<lb/>
Continued from page 13<lb/>
The team met various crew<lb/>
teams from different universities<lb/>
along thee.ist coast in addition to<lb/>
the Russian, Bulgarian and I rench<lb/>
national teams<lb/>
The crew team has been pr.u<lb/>
ticing hard for this season I he<lb/>
remainder of the season consists<lb/>
of races against l (II Old<lb/>
Dominion, Puke and UNC-<lb/>
Wilmington.<lb/>
The ECU crew team is i .u hed<lb/>
bvTom Allen, an active rower and<lb/>
all-around sports enthusiast I he<lb/>
men's 4 tram consists of (bow to<lb/>
stroke) Mike Snipes, ohn fuzaitis,<lb/>
Kellv Skinner, lett Owens and<lb/>
Stephanie !reasj. coxswain.<lb/>
I he crewrowing club is<lb/>
sponsored bv the Intramural Rci<lb/>
national Services and the SGA<lb/>
Questions and inquiries can be<lb/>
dim ted to Mike Snipsat 752-1596<lb/>
Follow ECU sports with The Cast Carolinian<lb/>
sidered a sport.<lb/>
"We put in just as much time<lb/>
practicing as anv other sport<lb/>
Walker insisted. "We provide<lb/>
entertainment for the fans and we<lb/>
promote school spirit. We also get<lb/>
ECU recognition "<lb/>
When basketball season is<lb/>
over, dancing competitions begin.<lb/>
This year, ECU placed lth over-<lb/>
all out of 350 collegiate teams in<lb/>
the Dance Team Championships<lb/>
in Memphis, Term.<lb/>
Although Walker loves danc-<lb/>
ing, she could not consider it a<lb/>
Soccer<lb/>
lifetime career. As a marketing<lb/>
major and broadcasting minor, she<lb/>
considers the sport an extracur-<lb/>
ricular activity<lb/>
"I think marketing is mv fu-<lb/>
tiirecaroer Walkersaid. "I would<lb/>
like to prove to people and mvself<lb/>
that I could make it into the busi-<lb/>
ness world<lb/>
For any students interested in<lb/>
joining the team, tryouts will be<lb/>
held at the Memorial Gym Gym-<lb/>
nastics Room on April 9, from 730-<lb/>
9-30 p.m. and April 11, from 8-10<lb/>
p.m.<lb/>
Continued from page 13<lb/>
 Sports Lounge<lb/>
tV "Billiard - N - Games'<lb/>
Team. Despite the eventual 7-0<lb/>
loss ECU suffered against Raleigh<lb/>
Club, Atkins said the entire EC U<lb/>
team played with much effort<lb/>
'ECU came out taking shots<lb/>
on the Raleigh Club goalkeeper,<lb/>
but fatigue set in and eventually,<lb/>
they fell flat Atkmssaid. "Raleigh<lb/>
then dominated the rest ot the<lb/>
halt<lb/>
ECU wafl four goals down by<lb/>
the end of the first half, but that<lb/>
did not seem to discourage the<lb/>
Overton<lb/>
Lady Pirates. "The second half,<lb/>
we were fired upagain, and again,<lb/>
fatigue sot in and we got trus<lb/>
trated from not coming up with<lb/>
the immediate goal Atkins said.<lb/>
"Raleigh once again dominated<lb/>
the game<lb/>
ECU will host the Seahawks<lb/>
ot UN( Wilmington Sunday<lb/>
when they plav their final game of<lb/>
the season. The game will be<lb/>
played at 2 p m at the Allied<lb/>
Health field.<lb/>
Continued from page 13<lb/>
brought in Jonathan Jenkins (6-0,<lb/>
251 ERA) to pitch the last inning.<lb/>
Lacing only three batters, lenkins<lb/>
slammed the door on the Tar Heels<lb/>
to earn his second save of the<lb/>
season<lb/>
North Carolina's starting<lb/>
pitcher, Jim Dougherty (7-1, 1.70<lb/>
ERA), threw eight innings He<lb/>
gave up two runs on SIX hits<lb/>
s?r23?<lb/>
presents<lb/>
Every Thursday Night<lb/>
"STUDENT BUDGET NIGHT"<lb/>
$1.00 Imports<lb/>
$1.00 Cans<lb/>
$1.50 Highballs<lb/>
LADIES FREE ALL NIGHT<lb/>
Try our "Squeeze Teas<lb/>
$2.50 leas<lb/>
$2.50 Pitchers<lb/>
Barmaids Wanted,<lb/>
Apply in Person<lb/>
R &amp; N inc<lb/>
DRIVERS NEEDED<lb/>
Source 1990 Red and Green Books<lb/>
Two Dogs Pizza<lb/>
of Ayden is now delivering<lb/>
in the AydenWinterville area.<lb/>
Drivers with the following<lb/>
qualifications are needed:<lb/>
? 18 yrs or older<lb/>
? Valid driver's license<lb/>
? Good driving record<lb/>
? Own transportation<lb/>
? Outgoing personality<lb/>
Flexible work schedule as few as<lb/>
2 nights per week<lb/>
depending on your needs.<lb/>
Apply in person at Two Dogs Pizza, Harris<lb/>
Shopping Center, Ayden or<lb/>
Call Ruth Ann Smith<lb/>
746-8020<lb/>
Dougherty also struck out five<lb/>
Pirates while walking three.<lb/>
The Pirates post a 26-3 overall<lb/>
record whilethe lar 1 leelsclropto<lb/>
26-6on the season.<lb/>
The next game tor the Pirates<lb/>
will be on the mad against the<lb/>
Seahawks of UNC-Wilmington at<lb/>
6 p.m Saturday.<lb/>
DJ playing<lb/>
variety music<lb/>
Located on Hwy 264 A West<lb/>
Open Tues - Sat 7pm - until<lb/>
Sun 1 - I'ntil<lb/>
Phone<lb/>
756-627S<lb/>
Wheel in<lb/>
when you 're on the go!<lb/>
Join Our Birthday<lb/>
Celebration With<lb/>
79?<lb/>
1 41b Hamburgers<lb/>
(Always made with 10095 USDA Fresh<lb/>
Ground Beef and fixed just the way you want it.)<lb/>
Wheel into RALLY'S and help<lb/>
us celebrate our 1st birthday<lb/>
in North Carolina.<lb/>
NO COUPON NECESSARY<lb/>
NO LIMIT.<lb/>
(Otter good for limited time only.)<lb/>
711 S. Memorial Drive<lb/>
(across from the Holid.n Inn)<lb/>
 Net weiehi before<lb/>
cooking<lb/>
COLLEGE GRADUATE<lb/>
FINANCE PLAN<lb/>
An individual six months<lb/>
prior to or 1 year after<lb/>
graduation qualifies<lb/>
See Full Details At<lb/>
GEO Imports<lb/>
205 K. Greenville Blvcl<lb/>
Greenville, NC<lb/>
756-5253<lb/>
<pb facs="00058207_0016"/><lb/>
14 The East Carolinian, April 5,1990<lb/>
Sports Briefs<lb/>
Baseball clubs cut, trade players<lb/>
Several moves were made by Major League baseball teams Tues-<lb/>
day Pitcher Greg Booker was cut by the Chicago Cubs but signed later<lb/>
by the San Francisco Giants, who have lost players to injuries. The<lb/>
Montreal Expos cut pitcher JoaquinAndujar, and the Pittsburgh Pirates<lb/>
traded outfielder Billy Hatcher to Cincinnati for pitcher Mike Roesler<lb/>
and infielder Jeff Richardson.<lb/>
Navratilova wins in second round<lb/>
Top-seed Martina Navratilova, looking for her first tournament<lb/>
victory on day in nearly two years, defeated Halle Cioffi b-2, 6-1<lb/>
hiesday in the second round of the $5(X),IXX) Family Circle Magazine<lb/>
rup.u 1 lilton Head, S.C.<lb/>
Oklahoma Senate adopts resolution<lb/>
I he Oklahoma Senate adopted a resolution Tuesday deploring the<lb/>
dropping ot the women's basketball program at the University of<lb/>
Oklahoma, with some senators calling the action sexist and emlwrass-<lb/>
ing 1 he resolution, by Sen. Darryl Roberts, D-Ardmore,callcd for re-<lb/>
instatement ot the program.<lb/>
Italian basketball team wants Kimble<lb/>
Messaggero Roma, the Italian basketball club that lured former<lb/>
Duke Mar Danny Ferry away from the NBA, is bidding for l.ovola<lb/>
Marymount forward Bo Kimble I earn officials sav Kimble would bea<lb/>
replacement tor Brian Shaw, who decided to rejoin the Boston Celtics<lb/>
after one season in Italy.<lb/>
Mattingly wants five-season contract<lb/>
New N (rk Yankees first baseman Don Mattingly, who has said he<lb/>
will not negotiate once the season starts, is in the final season of a three-<lb/>
sear. $6 7million contract He is seeking a five-vcar deal on the order of<lb/>
$ IS million. Team owner CieorgeStombrenner will handle negotiations<lb/>
and ha met with Mattingly. Talks are expected to begin soon.<lb/>
Dickerson wants to retire from NFL<lb/>
Eric Dickerson, the Indianapolis Colts' unhappv running back,<lb/>
reiterated Tuesday his plans to retire from the NFL and said no trade or<lb/>
salary increase will make him change his mind.<lb/>
Chavez to defend title against Taylor<lb/>
Julio Cesar Chavez, the 1BF junior welterweight champ, must<lb/>
defend his title against No. 1 contender Meldrick Taylor within six<lb/>
months. Taylor lost his title to Chavez in a disputed March 17 fight,<lb/>
when referee Richard Steete stopped the 12-round fight with two<lb/>
sccondslefl alter Chavez knocked down Taylor, who was ahead on two<lb/>
score cards.<lb/>
Colorado ski member killed in crash<lb/>
A Colorado ski team member was killed Tuesday when she lost a<lb/>
ski andrashed intoa tree at the Eldora ski area near Nederland, Colo.<lb/>
Laura Hood, 14, of Ketchum, Idaho, died instantly, police said.<lb/>
Horse gets prep for Kentucky Derby<lb/>
Summer Squall, impressive winner of Saturday's Jim BeamSta'kes<lb/>
(his sixth win in seven starts in 1909-90), will get his final Kentucky<lb/>
I VrK prep in the April 14 Blue Grass Stakesat Keenelandin Lexington,<lb/>
Dolphins' Marino asked to be traded<lb/>
1 he Miami Dolphins want to negotiate an extension for unhappy<lb/>
quarterback Pan Marino's contract, possibly this year, club president<lb/>
rim Robbie said. Marino, who has asked to be traded for the second<lb/>
year in a row, has two seasons remaining on a contract that will pay him<lb/>
SI .5 million this season and $1 h million in 1991.<lb/>
CBS to co-sponsor All-Star balloting<lb/>
USA rODA and CBS have agreed to a trade-out promotion of<lb/>
Major League Baseball's All-Star game balloting. CBS, which this year<lb/>
begins broadcasting Major League Baseball, replaces Anheuser-Busch<lb/>
as the promotion's co-sponsor. CBS and USA TODAY will also co-<lb/>
sponsor an All-Star sweepstakes.<lb/>
Investment group interested in Padres<lb/>
An investment group headed by Hollywood producer Tom Werner<lb/>
signed a letter of intent Monday to purchase baseball's San Diego<lb/>
Padres, owner )oan Kroc said. Sales terms were not released, but the<lb/>
asking price was reported to be $75 million. The sale must now be<lb/>
approved by the owners of the other major league clubs.<lb/>
Hornets interim coach to decide on job<lb/>
NBA Charlotte Hornets interim coach Gene Littles expects to<lb/>
deeide within a week whether he will return as coach next season or as<lb/>
director of player personnel. 1 lornets owner George Shinn said Littles<lb/>
can pick his job. Littles, popular with his players, took over after coach<lb/>
Dick 1 iarter was fired in January.<lb/>
Ctrynjitf jjo USA TOfAYIAppltColletr InprmMum Nelvork<lb/>
In the Locker<lb/>
Umpires with most, fewest<lb/>
years of major leajgue service<lb/>
pN (ihrou1989)<lb/>
Doug mmfW I<lb/>
Jim JoycAty ij<lb/>
Hohn (NL) jy Fewes)<lb/>
Je(ryLayne(NL) ft<lb/>
ECU crew team competes in Augusta<lb/>
The ECU crewrowing team<lb/>
began its season this past week-<lb/>
end with a second place finish at<lb/>
the Augusta Invitational Regatta<lb/>
Catalano<lb/>
in Augusta, Georgia. ECU com-<lb/>
peted in the men's novice-4 against<lb/>
Honda Institute of Technology,<lb/>
Agusta College and Georgia Tech.<lb/>
Continued from page 13<lb/>
lano does not see herself domi-<lb/>
nant at number one, but is excited<lb/>
about the potential of the team<lb/>
'Our team has good depth and<lb/>
we're a well balanced team' she<lb/>
said.<lb/>
With thishumbleattitude, she<lb/>
Walker<lb/>
will continue to better her game<lb/>
and see the team continue to<lb/>
improve with ever)- rtvtch. As for<lb/>
the future, she is not sure yet.<lb/>
"I might go into communica-<lb/>
tions, but I'll wait and see she<lb/>
said.<lb/>
Continued from page 13<lb/>
sidered a sport.<lb/>
"We put in just as much time<lb/>
practicing as any other sport<lb/>
Walker insisted. "We provide<lb/>
entertainment for the fans and we<lb/>
promote school spirit. We also get<lb/>
ECU recognition<lb/>
When basketball season is<lb/>
over, dancing competitions begin.<lb/>
This year, ECU placed lsth over-<lb/>
all out of 330 collegiate teams in<lb/>
the Dance Team Championships<lb/>
in Memphis, Term<lb/>
Although Walker loves danc-<lb/>
ing, she could not consider it a<lb/>
Soccer<lb/>
lifetime career. As a marketing<lb/>
major and broadcasting minor,she<lb/>
considers the sport an extracur-<lb/>
ricular activity.<lb/>
"I think marketing is mv fu-<lb/>
turecareer Walkersaid. "I would<lb/>
like to prove to people and myself<lb/>
that I could make it into the busi-<lb/>
ness world<lb/>
For any students interested in<lb/>
joining the team, tryouts will be<lb/>
held at the Memorial Gym Gym-<lb/>
nastics Roomon April 9, from 7:30<lb/>
9:30 p.m. and April 11, from 8-10<lb/>
p.m.<lb/>
Continued from page 13<lb/>
Team. Despite the eventual 7-0<lb/>
loss LCI' suffered against Raleigh<lb/>
Club, Atkins said the entire LC I'<lb/>
team played with much effort.<lb/>
"ECU came out taking shots<lb/>
on the Raleigh Club goalkeeper,<lb/>
but fatigue set in and eventually,<lb/>
they fell flat Atkinssaid. Raleigh<lb/>
then dominated the rest ot the<lb/>
halt<lb/>
ECU was four goals down bv<lb/>
the end of the first half, but that<lb/>
did not seem to discourage the<lb/>
Overton<lb/>
Lady Pirates "The second half,<lb/>
we were fired up again, and again,<lb/>
fatigue set in and we got trus<lb/>
(rated from not coming up with<lb/>
the immediate goal Atkins said.<lb/>
"Raleigh once again dominated<lb/>
the game<lb/>
ECU will heist the Seahawks<lb/>
ot UNC-Wilmington Sunday<lb/>
when they play their final game of<lb/>
the season. The game will be<lb/>
played at 2 p.m. at the Allied<lb/>
Health field.<lb/>
Continued from page 13<lb/>
brought in Jonathan lenkins (6-0,<lb/>
251 ERA) to pitch the last inning.<lb/>
Facing only three batters, lenkins<lb/>
slammed thedoor on the Tar Heels<lb/>
to earn his second save of the<lb/>
season.<lb/>
North Carolina's starting<lb/>
pitcher, Jim Dougherty (7-1, 1.70<lb/>
ERA), threw eight innings He<lb/>
gave up two runs on si hits<lb/>
Dougherty also struck out five<lb/>
Pirates while walking three.<lb/>
The Pirates post a 26-3 overall<lb/>
record while the Tar I leelsdrop to<lb/>
26-6 on the season.<lb/>
The next game for the Pirates<lb/>
will be on the road against the<lb/>
Seahawks of L'XC-Wilmington at<lb/>
6 p.m. Saturday.<lb/>
presents<lb/>
Every Thursday Night<lb/>
"STUDENT BUDGET NIGHT"<lb/>
$1.00 Imports<lb/>
$1.00 Cans<lb/>
$1.50 Highballs<lb/>
LADIES FRKB ALL NIGHT<lb/>
Try our "Squeeze Teas<lb/>
$2.50 Teas<lb/>
$2.50 Pitchers<lb/>
Barmaids Wanted,<lb/>
Apply in Person<lb/>
R &amp; N inc<lb/>
Source 1990 Red and Green Books<lb/>
Bob Laird, Gannett News Service<lb/>
DRIVERS NEEDED<lb/>
Two Dogs Pizza<lb/>
of Ayden is now delivering<lb/>
in the AydenWinterville area.<lb/>
Drivers with the following<lb/>
qualifications are needed:<lb/>
? 18 yrs or older<lb/>
? Valid driver's license<lb/>
? Good driving record<lb/>
? Own transportation<lb/>
? Outgoing personality<lb/>
Flexible work schedule as few as<lb/>
2 nights per week<lb/>
depending on your needs.<lb/>
Apply in person at Two Dogs Pizza, Harris<lb/>
Shopping Center, Ayden or<lb/>
Call Ruth Ann Smith<lb/>
746-8020<lb/>
The team met various crew<lb/>
teams from different universities<lb/>
along the cast coast in addition to<lb/>
the Russian, Bulgarian and French<lb/>
national teams.<lb/>
Thecrew team has been pra<lb/>
ticing hard for tins season "he<lb/>
remainder of the season consists<lb/>
of races against UN CH, (Hd<lb/>
Dominion, Duke and UNC<lb/>
Wilmington.<lb/>
The ECU crew team iscoached<lb/>
by Tom Allen, an active rower and<lb/>
all-around sports enthusiast rhe<lb/>
men's 4-team consists ot 'bow to<lb/>
stroke) Mike Snipes, ohn fuzaitts,<lb/>
Kelly Skinner, lett Owens and<lb/>
Stephanie Creasy, coxswain<lb/>
(he crewrowing club is<lb/>
sponsored by the Intramural Rc<lb/>
reational Services and the SGA<lb/>
Questions and inquiries can be<lb/>
directed to MikeSnipsat752-1596<lb/>
Follow ECU sports with The East Carolinian<lb/>
(fr<lb/>
V sPorts lounge<lb/>
 ' "Billiard-N-Games"<lb/>
DJ playing<lb/>
variety music<lb/>
Located on Hwv 264 A West<lb/>
Open lues - Sat 7pm - until<lb/>
Sun 1 -Until<lb/>
Phone<lb/>
756-6278<lb/>
<lb/>
Wheel in<lb/>
when you're on the go!<lb/>
Join Our Birthday<lb/>
Celebration With<lb/>
790<lb/>
1 41b Hamburgers<lb/>
(Always made with 100 USDA Fresh<lb/>
Ground Beef and fixed jusl the way you want it.)<lb/>
Wheel into RALLY'S and help<lb/>
us celebrate our 1st birthday<lb/>
in North Carolina.<lb/>
NOCOUPON NECESSARY<lb/>
NO LIMIT.<lb/>
(Offer good tor limned lime only.)<lb/>
711 S. Memorial Drive<lb/>
(across from the Holiday Inn)<lb/>
 Net weight before<lb/>
cooking<lb/>
COLLEGE GRADUATE<lb/>
FINANCE PLAN<lb/>
An individual six months<lb/>
prior to or 1 year after<lb/>
graduation qualifies<lb/>
See Full Details At<lb/>
GEQ Imports<lb/>
205 E. Greenville Blvd<lb/>
Greenville, NC<lb/>
756-5253<lb/>
<pb facs="00058207_0017"/>
</div></body></text></TEI>