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<pb facs="00058208_0001"/>
?he iEaHt (EaralbiUm<lb/>
9 . , , ? . .   i.vic<lb/>
Sewing the Tost Carolina campus community since 1925<lb/>
Vol. t4 No. 25<lb/>
Tuesday April 10, lW<lb/>
Greenville, North Carolina<lb/>
Circulation 12,000<lb/>
12 Pages<lb/>
Commiittee calls<lb/>
for run-off election<lb/>
Candidates face off again<lb/>
By Samantha Thompson<lb/>
Matt Writer<lb/>
1 he Election Committee<lb/>
vk ided 6 " Mondav e ening thai<lb/>
the elex lion rules w ere no! clearly<lb/>
interpreted prior to the run ott<lb/>
election and set a new date tor ,i<lb/>
run of! election bt tvveen Student<lb/>
Go crnment Association<lb/>
presidential candidates Robin<lb/>
?pJu w s .md llen rhomas.<lb/>
tter Andrews officially<lb/>
voiced sc er.il ol her complaints<lb/>
lo th? Electommittee, the<lb/>
nru mbi ? led that a run off<lb/>
election will be held pril 17<lb/>
I ike being disquali<lb/>
on five o i lock Monda was a<lb/>
violation, ndrews told the<lb/>
ElectionC ommittee yet I didnot<lb/>
personalh know since I was never<lb/>
formally explained the rules also<lb/>
the fact that .ill these other rules<lb/>
haw been violated Md no action<lb/>
is being taki n i - ut these ether<lb/>
complaints filed<lb/>
rhomas was declared i <lb/>
president April 2 b Election<lb/>
. ommitteeC hairman kelh Jones<lb/>
when Andrews tailed to submit<lb/>
her expense report byp m. and<lb/>
was disqualified from the race.<lb/>
During the meeting with the<lb/>
Ele lions - Committee, Ml<lb/>
Attorney ieneral Brian Stevens,<lb/>
rhomas' representative Gary<lb/>
Dudley and others. Andrewscited<lb/>
specific ekvtion rules which she<lb/>
said were not followed properly<lb/>
b the Election Committee.<lb/>
mong these. Andrews said<lb/>
she was not notified about thedate<lb/>
ol the run -ott ekvtion She said she<lb/>
iead it the day after the election in<lb/>
 asl Carolinian .nd that lones<lb/>
never held a manditory meeting<lb/>
as the election rules stated she was<lb/>
required.<lb/>
ones argued that it was not<lb/>
-tated in the rules that she should<lb/>
have held the meeting and that<lb/>
Vndrews had si representatives<lb/>
at the ballot counting who said<lb/>
they would tell Andrews of the<lb/>
run ott election.<lb/>
Andrews also said that in the<lb/>
election rules it stated that two<lb/>
w eeks were to elapse between the<lb/>
regular election and any run-off<lb/>
elections. She said she never had a<lb/>
choice on the date of the run-oft<lb/>
election. et, lones said that it was<lb/>
a typing mistake in the ekvtion<lb/>
rules.<lb/>
Although, according to the<lb/>
author ot the ekvtion rules revision<lb/>
act. the amendment passed during<lb/>
a previous SGA meeting with the<lb/>
two weeks between the elections,<lb/>
pro vine, that it was not a typing<lb/>
mistake in the rules.<lb/>
During the meeting with<lb/>
See Run off, page 3<lb/>
These two young ladies enjoy dinner at the ECU Fnends cookout that was held Sunday at R.ver Park North ECU Friends is a campus<lb/>
organization that pairs special youths m the Pitt CountyGreenville area with ECU students (Photo by J D Whitmire - ECU Photo Lab<lb/>
Media Board dismisses WZMB staffers<lb/>
. . . .  i i. rv ? , 1 .<lb/>
By Adam Cornelius<lb/>
Staff Writer<lb/>
Two staff members ol WZMB<lb/>
were fired by the ECU Media Board<lb/>
Thursday as a result of the March<lb/>
2 broadcast oi a morning talk<lb/>
show.<lb/>
WZMB program director I rev<lb/>
"Bien" Burley and media<lb/>
personality John "Chippy<lb/>
Bonehead" Carter were tired from<lb/>
the campus radio station b) a<lb/>
unanimous vote of the Media<lb/>
Board under the personal conduct<lb/>
code of the Media Board Policy<lb/>
Manual.<lb/>
According to Media Board Ray<lb/>
Madden, the most serious charge<lb/>
that the two faced was failure to<lb/>
obtain a person's permission prior<lb/>
to broadcasting their voice over<lb/>
the air a violation of Federal<lb/>
Com mum cat nms Commission<lb/>
regulation. Madden said that such<lb/>
an action was described in the<lb/>
Media Board Policy Manual as<lb/>
"parti ipation in any action that<lb/>
would inany way seriously disrupt<lb/>
or disturb the normal operation of<lb/>
the media '<lb/>
"It the action was reported to<lb/>
? - ,e F( C. there is the possibility the<lb/>
station could lose their license and<lb/>
n uldn't be able to broadcast<lb/>
Madden said.<lb/>
During the morning show,<lb/>
Burley and Carter broadcast a skit<lb/>
they named a particular faculty<lb/>
member in whose class Burley and<lb/>
Carter said thev would enroll it<lb/>
that faculty member taught it "in<lb/>
the nude<lb/>
The two broadcasters folk) wed<lb/>
with a live, aired telephone call to<lb/>
the English Department asking the<lb/>
secretary whether that instructor<lb/>
would be teaching the class "in the<lb/>
nude" for the fall semester<lb/>
According to Madden, the<lb/>
board weighed theaction taken by<lb/>
former WZMB General Manager<lb/>
Andrew Forbis along with<lb/>
information from acting chair of<lb/>
the communications department<lb/>
Dr. Mane Farr and Media Adviser<lb/>
(tcc; Brownbefore reaching its<lb/>
Forbis wrote a letter to the<lb/>
Media Board dated April 5 living<lb/>
he had suspended the two<lb/>
broadcasters from working at<lb/>
WZMB for the remainder of the<lb/>
Spring 1990 semester.<lb/>
The Media Board in turn voted<lb/>
to dismiss Burley and Carter<lb/>
entirely.<lb/>
The board "had<lb/>
?v- .<lb/>
i 'aling with preregistration. In it decision.<lb/>
information and thev made a<lb/>
decision. I have to stand behind<lb/>
that, and I respect that decision<lb/>
Madden said.<lb/>
The Constitution ot the ECL<lb/>
Media Board stipulates that tru-<lb/>
Board may removea student from<lb/>
a position tor failing to maintain<lb/>
standards established in that<lb/>
See WZMB, -age 3<lb/>
EastCare celebrates fifth anniversary<lb/>
BarefootirV<lb/>
Last year's Barefoot on the Mall held a lot ot tun and entertainment<lb/>
tor everyone This year's Barefoot is planned for April 18<lb/>
Special Olympics holds<lb/>
games in Greenville<lb/>
By Margi Morin<lb/>
Assistant News 1 ditor<lb/>
The Pitt Count)hapter ol<lb/>
the Special Olympics w ill hold its<lb/>
spring track and field games today<lb/>
at Charles B Aycock High School.<lb/>
ECU students who have tea, hed<lb/>
the Special Olympics athletes this<lb/>
vear will also ho present at the<lb/>
games.<lb/>
"1 have never volunteered tor<lb/>
Special Olympics before, but I look<lb/>
foreword to it. I have heard et the<lb/>
activities that go on and would<lb/>
eventually like to be a volunteer<lb/>
coach said ECU student Mike<lb/>
Martin will boone i it the volunteers<lb/>
helping with today's events.<lb/>
Connie Sappenfield,<lb/>
coordinator of the Greenville<lb/>
Special Olympics, said thai the<lb/>
games have had "tremendous<lb/>
support from ECU faculty and<lb/>
students<lb/>
Manv students begin<lb/>
volunteering as part of their<lb/>
practicum for courses. Also, this<lb/>
year, Health 1000 students may<lb/>
volunteer for part of their grade<lb/>
According to Sappenfield, the<lb/>
coaching volunteers attend an<lb/>
eight-hour workshop to get<lb/>
certified. Volunteers may request<lb/>
which sport they want to coach<lb/>
and no experience is necessary.<lb/>
"Today's  winners will<lb/>
compete in the State Olympics in<lb/>
Raleigh June 8-10 she said.<lb/>
Winners from the state event will<lb/>
then go to the International games<lb/>
which are held every four years.<lb/>
1 he next international games are<lb/>
scheduled for 1991<lb/>
Greenville will be the host of<lb/>
the 1991 and 1992 State Special<lb/>
Olympics Competition.<lb/>
"ECU helped write the bid,<lb/>
will provide housing facilities, feed<lb/>
the athletes and provide the<lb/>
See Special, page 3<lb/>
By Sarah Martin<lb/>
Stjff Writer<lb/>
They are called the "Blue<lb/>
Angels" and have saved many<lb/>
lives in their five years oi sen ice.<lb/>
Thev are EastCare.<lb/>
EastCare is Pitt County Me<lb/>
morial Hospital's air ambulance<lb/>
and on Sunday. April 8, they ele<lb/>
bra ted their fifth year oi service to<lb/>
eastern North Carolina.<lb/>
More than 1,300 former pa-<lb/>
tients, emergency medical service<lb/>
(EMS) personnel, family and<lb/>
fnends were invited to attend the<lb/>
celebration with the EastCare statt<lb/>
on the field beside the Brody<lb/>
Medical Sciences Building.<lb/>
A ceremony at 2:30 p m. was<lb/>
held that included a brief history<lb/>
of EastCare, speeches by former<lb/>
patientsand F MS personnel thank<lb/>
ing the EastCare Staff tor their<lb/>
service and the dedication of the<lb/>
celebration to the patients that<lb/>
made the last five years possible.<lb/>
One termer patient ot Roper.<lb/>
N C, Sidney W. Spruill called on<lb/>
EastCare in May of 1986. He had<lb/>
suffered a heartattack on the job in<lb/>
Plymouth. The trip that would<lb/>
normally take J5 to 40 minutes<lb/>
took roughly seventeen minutes<lb/>
by way oi the EastC are helicopter.<lb/>
"It it hadn't been for East-<lb/>
Care Spruill said, "1 mav not have<lb/>
made it here today to thank them<lb/>
These same weirds were shared by<lb/>
manv on Sunday as patients<lb/>
thanked those that helped them<lb/>
when thev too called on EastCare.<lb/>
In 1984, Pitt County Hospital<lb/>
and the ECU School of Medicine<lb/>
saw an increasing need tor rapid<lb/>
transport lo the hospital. With a<lb/>
shorter time between the scene of<lb/>
the accident and the onset of hos-<lb/>
pital care, the chance of survival is<lb/>
increased. This is one of the main<lb/>
purposes of EastC are.<lb/>
On April 8, 1985, EastCare<lb/>
received its first call. Since that<lb/>
first flight, they have served 2100<lb/>
more. Not all of the past 2100 calls<lb/>
have been successes. On January<lb/>
S. 1987, the EastCare helicopter<lb/>
crashed in ones County killing all<lb/>
tour people aboard, the pilot, the<lb/>
two flight nurse's and the young<lb/>
patient. Ik-cause that accident<lb/>
killed their management group,<lb/>
the EastCare program had to re-<lb/>
build. Three months later, thev<lb/>
returned to service.<lb/>
"The program was not much<lb/>
different, safety was always an<lb/>
issue savsMollieSwindell, R.N<lb/>
"We never let that stop us. We tly<lb/>
because that is what we want to<lb/>
do, so we go on<lb/>
EastCare is staffed with ten<lb/>
flight nurses, two doctors, four<lb/>
pilots and one mechanic. They<lb/>
must first go through a land and<lb/>
water survival training, aviation<lb/>
physiologv, advanced procedure<lb/>
labs and must have at least two<lb/>
years of ICL training.<lb/>
EastCare receives an average<lb/>
et4i Vails a month and serves a 120<lb/>
mile radius ol 36 counties in east-<lb/>
ern North Carolina.<lb/>
Patients are truly what<lb/>
EastCare is dedicated to says<lb/>
Patty Collins, a flight nurse. "We<lb/>
share in their happiness and we<lb/>
share in their sadness. Our reward<lb/>
is unmeasurable. Our patients<lb/>
touch us briefly, but stay in our<lb/>
memories forever<lb/>
Inside<lb/>
Editorial4<lb/>
The media board's<lb/>
deliberations were over<lb/>
before they began<lb/>
Classifieds6<lb/>
Personals, For Sale,<lb/>
Help Wanted. For Rent<lb/>
and Services Rendered<lb/>
State and Nation8<lb/>
Jury convicts Poin-<lb/>
dexter of felony conspir-<lb/>
acy, obstruction of Con-<lb/>
gress<lb/>
Features9<lb/>
Eight or Nine Feet<lb/>
play at the Deli<lb/>
Sports11<lb/>
Irates fail short in<lb/>
home tournament<lb/>
"EastCare the Pitt County Hospitals aTr ambulance service, marked its fifth anniversary Sunday with a<lb/>
ceremony in the park next to the ECU School of Medicine (Photo by J D. Whitmire - ECU Photo Lab)<lb/>
<pb facs="00058208_0002"/><lb/>
2 The East Carolinian April 10,1990<lb/>
ECU Briefs<lb/>
Scholar discusses variety of topics<lb/>
Dr. Victor Salvador Desouza, a noted sociologisl from India will<lb/>
present a series ol lectures at ECU April 11 12 with topics ranging from<lb/>
the status of women in India toa sociologist's experience in Communist<lb/>
countries<lb/>
Desouza is a former president of the Indian Sociological Associa-<lb/>
tion and a three time Fulbright Scholar<lb/>
Black culture in America examined<lb/>
The beliefs and traditions established in America by the Afro<lb/>
Americans v ho w ere slaves will be discussed Tuesday at a symposium<lb/>
atECU. I he program Before Jubilee: The Transition of African Amen<lb/>
can Culture from Slavery to Freedom begins at Id a.m. today in the<lb/>
Willis (Regional Development Institute) building. Four experts on<lb/>
African American histor .nd culture will be the guest speakers.<lb/>
Economics faculty present research<lb/>
"Some Advances in the Theory and Measurement of the Influence ot<lb/>
Uncertainty will be the presentation by Dr. Paul Flacco of the Depart-<lb/>
ment ol Economicsat oonttdav in Room 221 of MendenhallStudent<lb/>
Center I he presentation is part of the ECU Arts and Sciences Faculty<lb/>
Research Forum.<lb/>
European events explored<lb/>
Political scientist Inn; Sterner, a professor at UNC-Chapel Hill and at<lb/>
the University ot Berne, Switzerland, will speak Thursday on the topic<lb/>
"The 1989 Sequence ol Events in Eastern Europe at 3:30 p.m. in Room<lb/>
2020 ot ECU ? .eneral C lassroom building.<lb/>
National Campus Clips<lb/>
SGA pushes for<lb/>
unified calender<lb/>
 getting out at the same time won't<lb/>
By Samantha Thompson (hmge thinfiS ?<lb/>
Suff Writer Thc rcsoKition, which was<lb/>
? ??? ????-?<lb/>
Campus volunteers battle hunger<lb/>
University ol Kentucky students are joining peers.across the coun-<lb/>
try in the 1990 National Hunger Cleanup campaign, designed to<lb/>
address the problems ol homclessness and hunger.<lb/>
Sponsors donate mone) to the cleanup, and volunteers utter com<lb/>
munit sen ice tor the contributions received. Sen ice proje( ts include<lb/>
cleaning up local parksand painting homeless shelters. All proceeds go<lb/>
toward the 1 lunger Cleanup project.<lb/>
lhe National I lunger Cleanup is the largest student run commu-<lb/>
nity service program in the nation. It began in 1985 with nine Mu higan<lb/>
schools,md has grown to include 110 U.S. cities. The program raised<lb/>
$150,000 last year.<lb/>
"It shows that everybody cues aboul this international problem<lb/>
and is willing to work together to solve it. which gives you a great<lb/>
feeling, said I K student Maria ! 1 Narvaez.<lb/>
Sticker backs demoted officer<lb/>
Students .it 1 ouisiana State University are distributing a<lb/>
bumper sticker in support ol a campus officer demoted for writing<lb/>
a letter questioning why a drunken driving charge was dropped.<lb/>
Ihe purple on whitestit ker reads "1 si Police Please Don't Arrest<lb/>
Me I'm I rom Alood I amilv. A dollar sign is printed at ter the slogan<lb/>
The sticker refers to Officer Ri k Roubiquc, who was demoted<lb/>
from fOqniraliAfliiJyrr'tfc' ltHpr " A tiisrirt attorney aA'l $<lb/>
PVVI charge against a Shreveport youth was dropped.<lb/>
In August 1988, Roubiquc arrested lames "Sonny" Weeks lr a<lb/>
dentist'sson on a I )W1 count Alter the East baton Rouge Parish district<lb/>
attorney's office dismissed the case the officer wrote a letter to then-<lb/>
District Attorney Bryan bush tor an explanation<lb/>
Roubiquc sent a copy to Mothers Against Drunk I hiving which<lb/>
The Student Government previously mandated to just ECU<lb/>
Association passed by consent a Chancellor Richard Eakin and the<lb/>
resolution Monday afternoon to NIC. Board of Governors, will be<lb/>
unify the calender ot all 16 sent to all 16 N.C. university<lb/>
universities of the North Carolina chancellors and the chairman of<lb/>
System the ECU Faculty Senate. Helms<lb/>
legislator Eric Milliard. made the motion to mandate the<lb/>
author ot the resolution, told the latter academic authorities and a<lb/>
legislature he proposed the idea unanimous consent of the<lb/>
because it would make all N.C. amendment followed.<lb/>
students leave for and return from After a lengthy debate<lb/>
breaks and holidays at the same whether the ECU underwater<lb/>
time. This, he said, would allow hockey team should be a SGA<lb/>
families with children at different funded organization, the<lb/>
N.C. universities to attend legislature voted 34- 7 to pass the<lb/>
vacations and add fairness to constitution as a funded group.<lb/>
acquiring winter and summer jobs. Since the SGA is facing the<lb/>
Tie resolution had previously approvalofannualappropriations<lb/>
passed OUt Of the Student Welfare to requesting groups, Legislator<lb/>
Committee 8-0as non-prejudicial, Barbara Lamb reminded the body<lb/>
meaning that the committee that it was important to look at<lb/>
would not decide on it and that which groups they were passing<lb/>
the resolution should go straight is funded organizations. She said<lb/>
to the bodv tor discussion and a funding was limited because so<lb/>
decision. many organizations are requesting<lb/>
Chairman ol the Student appropriations this year.<lb/>
Welfare Committee Beth Howard legislator I'npp Hogg agreed<lb/>
s.nd the committee voted it non- saying thai the SGA must start<lb/>
prejudic ial bc ,mv. although the prioritizing which groups should<lb/>
resolution wasa ctxxi idea, it had<lb/>
Golden opportunities<lb/>
are made of silver.<lb/>
Golden nursing opportuniue<lb/>
come wuh the silvei Air Force emblem<lb/>
Indeed, ? -n Force shapes .i sophisti<lb/>
, ated med .il environment tli.u helps you<lb/>
learn, advan es youi edu atwn and de<lb/>
velops youi professionalism toa hignei<lb/>
standard Dia ovei travel, exi itement<lb/>
?) ?  p, you'll know .i- an An<lb/>
i, e off ei See wh ???<lb/>
many "Hit standing nurs<lb/>
ing prole ioi ?<lb/>
to weai the silvei em<lb/>
?  n ? ? n Fort<lb/>
&amp;<lb/>
I<lb/>
S(,T DAVE LEONARD<lb/>
STATION-TO-STATION COLLECT<lb/>
919-483-7846<lb/>
last<lb/>
'Director of advertising<lb/>
James F.J. McKee<lb/>
Advertising 'Jycprcscn tatives<lb/>
G113 J. Harvej<lb/>
Shay Sitlinyer<lb/>
Adam 1. Hlankenship<lb/>
ret en<lb/>
e tundine<lb/>
a lot ol problems with it<lb/>
1 loward said that it all thestudents<lb/>
got out .it the same time, it would<lb/>
pose traffic problems throughout<lb/>
the state<lb/>
1 he acations were<lb/>
staggered on purpose 1 loward<lb/>
said "TheUNC s stem board did<lb/>
it tor a reason<lb/>
"It's a fine time for the S( .A to<lb/>
question and prioritize who gets<lb/>
funding and who doesn't I lelms<lb/>
s.ud before the final vote on the<lb/>
issue was made.<lb/>
The body entered debate again<lb/>
when 1 a mb asked for the approval<lb/>
of the additional appropriation oi<lb/>
$1300 to the Panhellenic Council.<lb/>
(Earnliman<lb/>
Phillip V. Cope<lb/>
Kelle O'Connor<lb/>
Organization<lb/>
makes grants<lb/>
for graduate<lb/>
forwarded a copy to the Baton Rouge State Hmes. LSU said the officer fpl J fl7i)Qyf 1 1Q<lb/>
violated department policy by not consulting superiors and releasing J L I IK. tt I I j. C<lb/>
I egislator Marty Helms Before it was passed by a voice<lb/>
vote. Speaker ot the legislature<lb/>
bob Landry stepped down to<lb/>
debate approving the funding.<lb/>
Ihi funds will cover costs tor<lb/>
the publishing of a rush booklet to<lb/>
attract female students to sorority<lb/>
rush Lamb said that since last<lb/>
See SGA, page 7<lb/>
disagreed, saying that the<lb/>
resolution, it passed by all the<lb/>
mandates, would be beneficial to<lb/>
thestudents. 'Trafficconcernsare<lb/>
not the concerns ot tins<lb/>
resolution 1 lelmssaid Students<lb/>
per column inch<lb/>
National Rate$5.75<lb/>
Open Rate$4.95<lb/>
Local Open RateS4.75<lb/>
bulk A Frequenc)rmtract<lb/>
Dis mints Available<lb/>
(Business 'Hours:<lb/>
Pnone: Mondaj - Frida,<lb/>
757-6366 10:60 - 5:06 pm<lb/>
the letter without going through the school<lb/>
Rob Marionncaux, 21, an LSU senior and a student in the criminal<lb/>
justice program, came up with the idea tor the sticker and said he hopes<lb/>
to pressure the sehool to restore Roubiquc to corporal.<lb/>
Marionncaux said he is supporting Roubique's right to tree<lb/>
speech. 1 think as a citizen, Mr Roubique has every right to write a<lb/>
letter to the district attorney he said. "I think he was shafted in a big<lb/>
way<lb/>
(Buyer's Quide<lb/>
Crime Report<lb/>
Skateboarders terrorize ECU campus<lb/>
April 2<lb/>
1113 Officer checked out to Ragsdale Residence Hall reference to<lb/>
a student being harassed; situation handled by the complainant.<lb/>
1853 ()ffi ers i he ked on three subjects (students) riding skate<lb/>
boards on Ficklcn Drive Verbal warning given.<lb/>
April 3<lb/>
180b- Officer responded to a tire alarm at (.arrett Residence Hall<lb/>
Cause found to be cooking on the fourth floor<lb/>
2? 38- C M fk ers resp? inded to the area ol (ones Residence I lall &amp; Rose<lb/>
High School in reference to larceny ol bicycles.<lb/>
April 4<lb/>
(jV, (Officer responded to an ,n tivated tire alarm at fones Resi-<lb/>
lience Hall aused by cooking on the second floor.<lb/>
2147 Officcrs responded to Ireene Residence Hall in reference to<lb/>
a reported drug violation I Infounded.<lb/>
April 5<lb/>
0215 Officer checked out Slay Residence Hall in reference to the<lb/>
resident advisor smellod something burning.<lb/>
April h<lb/>
0928 'the erchei ked out at Slay Residence Hall in reference to the<lb/>
activation ol the alarmooking was the cause<lb/>
1741 (ttn er responded to fones Residence I lall cafeteria in refer<lb/>
ence to an assault with a deadly weapon<lb/>
2318 tii( er was east ol (,reene Residence I lall in reference to an<lb/>
alcohol violation Two males issued campus citations for alcohol viola<lb/>
tions and urinating in public.<lb/>
April 7<lb/>
(i.117officer stopped a vehicleon Fifth and Rotary streets Student<lb/>
was stopp i foi no left turn and was also i harged with I )WI<lb/>
rlifficer traveled to Carrctt Residence 1 lall due to disturbance<lb/>
i ,ui ,( ,) by kateboarders lone on arrival<lb/>
April 8<lb/>
0454 ttu erhot ked in a parked vehii le at the old Attic parking<lb/>
lot A student was found passed out in his vehicle.<lb/>
1118)iik rr investigated larceny ol a vchi le north of (ones Resi-<lb/>
dence Hall<lb/>
I s?, Officer responded to Aycock Residence Hall in reference toa<lb/>
report of damage to a room door and lock<lb/>
1H44 Officer observed a student ruling a skateboard south ot<lb/>
( otten Resident e I I.ill. Verbal warning given.<lb/>
April 9<lb/>
0118 Officer responded to Slay Residence Hall In reference to a<lb/>
student re? vis ing harassing phone .ills<lb/>
By Adam Cornelius<lb/>
Statt Writer<lb/>
A Connecticut-based<lb/>
philanthrope institution has<lb/>
endowed three ol K U's health<lb/>
sciencesdepartmentsvvithS 0,00l<lb/>
towards a $100,01X1 grant tor<lb/>
graduate fellowships<lb/>
I he grants w ill be eligible to<lb/>
graduate studentsby the 1991-92<lb/>
academic year I hev were given<lb/>
by the Berbecker Foundation, a<lb/>
private philanthropic<lb/>
organization which gives out<lb/>
annual grants tor post graduate<lb/>
Study in medical and health<lb/>
related schools in North Carolina,<lb/>
New i ork and Connecticut.<lb/>
"Graduate students with spe<lb/>
i ial skills are increasingly needed<lb/>
in today's diversified health care<lb/>
delivery system Dr. Alastair M<lb/>
. onnell, vice chancellor tor health<lb/>
s ieni.es, said. "I'his gilt will sup<lb/>
Mirt ECUs commitment to tram<lb/>
students ol the highest caliber to<lb/>
meet the needs ot the region and<lb/>
the nation<lb/>
Ihetellowshipsol upto $3,000<lb/>
a year for graduate students in the<lb/>
Schoolsol Allied Health Silences,<lb/>
Nursing and Medicine were pre-<lb/>
sented at a ceremony March 1 at<lb/>
the Webb Civic Library in More<lb/>
head City, home ot the<lb/>
foundation's creator, the late Ms.<lb/>
I llhe A Webb The endowment<lb/>
agreement and lundmgeheck was<lb/>
presented by Berbecker Founda-<lb/>
tion trustee 1 BrowerMoffit, step-<lb/>
grandson ol Ms Webb, to Micah<lb/>
I ball dn torot planned giving<lb/>
?or I1st tffice ol Institutional<lb/>
Advant cment.<lb/>
Mottit isanexet uuvewith the<lb/>
BanqueNationaledeParisinNcw<lb/>
'l ork<lb/>
lhe berbecker Foundation<lb/>
was established upon Ms. Webb's<lb/>
death. Its original funding, used<lb/>
lor the Webb Civic Library, was<lb/>
established by Ms. Webb as a<lb/>
memorial upon the death ot her<lb/>
husband. Earl W Webb lr<lb/>
I<lb/>
Arlington Mini Storage756-9933<lb/>
Host Used Tires830-4579<lb/>
Brasswood Apts355-6187<lb/>
Carolina Pregnancy Center355-3473<lb/>
C hitos757-1666<lb/>
ECU Homecoming Committee757-4711<lb/>
Economy Mini Storage757-0373<lb/>
Fosdick's Seafood756-2011<lb/>
ITG355-5075<lb/>
Jiffy Lube756-2579<lb/>
New Last Bank821-1085<lb/>
1'arrott Canvas752-8433<lb/>
Rack Room 355-2519<lb/>
Raleigh Women's Health832-0535<lb/>
Real Crisis758-HFlP<lb/>
Remco Last 758-6061<lb/>
Research Information1-800-351-0222<lb/>
Rtnggold Lowers 52-2865<lb/>
Student Stores757-6731<lb/>
Student Union757-4715<lb/>
Summerfield Apartments355-6187<lb/>
Travel Connection?719-687-6662<lb/>
Triangle Women's Health1-800-433-2930<lb/>
Two Dogs Pizza746-8020<lb/>
Williamsburg Manor Apts355-6187<lb/>
<pb facs="00058208_0003"/><lb/>
The East Carolinian, April 10, 199U 3<lb/>
Viruses infect ECU<lb/>
Macintosh computers<lb/>
By Kim lev Edei<lb/>
SUM Writer<lb/>
Apple Macintosh computers<lb/>
on ECU's campus have recently<lb/>
been subject to two new computer<lb/>
viruses, called WDEF-A and<lb/>
 PI i B I hi- viruses were first<lb/>
noticed around tin1 beginning ol<lb/>
February, 1990<lb/>
ccording to Ray Drake,<lb/>
microcomputer consultant tor<lb/>
E( I 's Academic Computing, the<lb/>
WDEF andWDEl Bvirusesare<lb/>
mosth nuisance viruses Hesaid<lb/>
the do not destroy or damage<lb/>
data or files on mosl Macintosh<lb/>
computers "he only real problem<lb/>
th.it has been found with these<lb/>
viruses is that the Macintosh IKi<lb/>
and the Ma? in tosh portable com<lb/>
puters crash ' immediately when<lb/>
.in infected dik is inserted, Drake<lb/>
aid the al<lb/>
IH' Other<lb/>
Macintoshes to 'crash more fre<lb/>
cjucntlv than usual<lb/>
Run off<lb/>
Drake said thai a computer<lb/>
becomes infected with the WDEF<lb/>
virus as soon as an infected disk is<lb/>
inserted into the computer. The<lb/>
tile attaches itsell to the windows<lb/>
definitions file in Macintosh desk-<lb/>
top. The virus then emulates and<lb/>
overrides this file in the Mac, caus-<lb/>
ing the computer to run the virus-<lb/>
infected file instead ol the non-<lb/>
infei ted one.<lb/>
The two viruses are almost<lb/>
identical, Drakesaid 1 lesaid that<lb/>
the onl differeni e he has noticed<lb/>
is that when WIT! B infects a disk,<lb/>
the Macintosh beeps whereas with<lb/>
WDEF-A it does no! beep.<lb/>
1 here is a t ure for these vi<lb/>
rusi's, however Academk com-<lb/>
putingoffersa iruscheckingserv-<lb/>
ice in the microcomputer center.<lb/>
located in 20n Austin Building I hie<lb/>
computer is dedii a ted to running<lb/>
.i program called 1 isinfectanl 1.6<lb/>
1 lisfnfet tant 1 6 i hei ks disks<lb/>
tor r different viruses, according<lb/>
to Drake, and corrects any viruses<lb/>
found on the disks. The Disinfec-<lb/>
tant program does not harm any<lb/>
tiles on thedisk. It just corrects the<lb/>
virus.<lb/>
Drake said he thinks that it<lb/>
will take about 2-3 months to get<lb/>
rid of the virus on campus. He<lb/>
said, 'If people would come in<lb/>
and use our service, we could get<lb/>
rid of it pretty quick<lb/>
Drake said that the last Macin-<lb/>
tosh virus to at feet FCU was the<lb/>
nYIR virus, last fall. It took about<lb/>
two months to eradicate the nVIR<lb/>
virus, according to Drake.<lb/>
The viruses are widespread to<lb/>
some degree throughout the<lb/>
United States, Drake said. He said<lb/>
that tins region (Eastern North<lb/>
Carolina) seems to be one ol the<lb/>
last to be hit by the viruses.<lb/>
Drake s.iui that the viruses<lb/>
originated in Belgium and in a lab<lb/>
.it Northwestern University.<lb/>
Continued from page 1<lb/>
Andrews SGA member Eri up to the legislature. participating.<lb/>
Hilliard said that thedav Andrews After Andrews and others Andrews, who submitted her<lb/>
was disqualified from the race, he commented on the situation, the expense report Monday before 5<lb/>
was going to pass a motion in the committee decided that since the p.m. as she read to do in her copy<lb/>
SGA to amend that the rule be rules that Andrews received at the of the election rules, said "I think<lb/>
changed to one week between beginning ol the race stated that thev (the Flection Committee)<lb/>
elections. He said that since two weeks must pass before the made a tair decision<lb/>
Andrews wasdisqualified, he was run-off election, a run-off election Thomas was unavailable for<lb/>
told there was no need to bring it would be held with Andrews comment Monday night.<lb/>
WZMB<lb/>
i ontinued from page l<lb/>
Media Hoard Manual or iol.itions<lb/>
ol the Media board Constitution<lb/>
- Carter said thathesnd Shirley<lb/>
via-vi'iui issue ot their viismivsui<lb/>
4 m- ted in the first amendment of<lb/>
the I S . onstitution and have<lb/>
,i'rtid<lb/>
ht leeal consultation<lb/>
with lawyers from the North<lb/>
? lina t i il 1 iberties I nion.<lb/>
"Given we were on sate tirst<lb/>
amendm nt grounds, they had no<lb/>
ison to fin us (. arter said.<lb/>
We re students learning to<lb/>
use the media Carter said,<lb/>
(.ranted we should have to be<lb/>
extra responsible, but we should<lb/>
be allowed to make mistakes<lb/>
Special<lb/>
i ontinued from page 1<lb/>
ition tor the' ga mes<lb/>
?api nfield c ommented.<lb/>
? . ith thoc ir Rtx reation<lb/>
cnl and Pitt (!ounty<lb/>
 ill hi sl till biggest<lb/>
sp rl . ?. t 111 c ircen ille.<lb/>
An estimated SI "  a day<lb/>
for thi tour- day event will K'<lb/>
needed according li i Sappenfield.<lb/>
mho raises the money,<lb/>
but lo? il spinsorsarealsoneeded.<lb/>
In turn the event will generate as<lb/>
much as two million in the two<lb/>
years that it will be held in<lb/>
(reen ille<lb/>
1 he Spe( ialM mpics<lb/>
program was founded by its<lb/>
present chairman ol the board ol<lb/>
dire ti rs, Eunice Kennedy Shriver<lb/>
after she started a day camp tor<lb/>
adults and children with mental<lb/>
retardation in 1963. After<lb/>
conducting the camp she<lb/>
discovered thai mentally<lb/>
handicapped people were not as<lb/>
phj sicallyhandM appedasexperts<lb/>
once thought<lb/>
Since then, the Special<lb/>
Olympics program has spread to<lb/>
"mi states, the District ol Columbia,<lb/>
all U.S territories, and over 65<lb/>
countries in the world.<lb/>
I he organization's purpose is<lb/>
10 provide year round sports<lb/>
training and athletic competition<lb/>
in Olymph type sports for<lb/>
mentally retarded adults and<lb/>
c hildren, gi ing tin m i ontinuing<lb/>
opportunities to develop physical<lb/>
fitness and fo participate in a<lb/>
sharing ol gifts, skills and<lb/>
friendship with their poors,<lb/>
families and the ommunity<lb/>
DRIVERS NEEDED<lb/>
Two D(??;s Pizza<lb/>
ol Ayden is now delivering<lb/>
tyZIjA in ihe .i1cmi inten ille area.<lb/>
Drivers with the following<lb/>
? qualifications are needed:<lb/>
? IS 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/>
ppl in person al Two Dogs Pizza, Harris<lb/>
Shoppingenter, Ayden or<lb/>
( .ill Ruth Ann Smith<lb/>
746-8020<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 Holy Eucharist - 7:30am<lb/>
9:00am - Liturgy of the Palms &amp; Eucharist: begins in<lb/>
Parish Hall<lb/>
11:00am<lb/>
lmda - Hot) Eucharist 7:00am: 12:10pm<lb/>
liKsdav - Holy Eucharist 7:00am ; 12:10pm<lb/>
Wednesday - Holy Eucharist 7:00am; 12:10pm; 5:30pm<lb/>
Episcopal Student Fellowship supper and program<lb/>
follow 5:30pm service<lb/>
Maundy - Thursday - Liturgy<lb/>
7:30 - Last Supper, Stripping of Altar<lb/>
Good Friday - 12:10pm Good Friday Liturgy<lb/>
Easter Day<lb/>
5.00am - The Great Vigil Hot) Eucharist and Baptism<lb/>
9:00am - Holy Eucharist<lb/>
11:00am- Holv Eucharist<lb/>
News<lb/>
Writers<lb/>
meeting<lb/>
TODAY<lb/>
(as always)<lb/>
at 5 p.m.<lb/>
Who's having an affair with whom?<lb/>
50,000 DRIVERS A DAY THUST<lb/>
THEIR CARS TO THE J-TEAM<lb/>
In 10 minutes with no appointment<lb/>
Here's what the J-Team can do for you:<lb/>
?Change your oil with a major brand!<lb/>
?Add a new oil filter!<lb/>
?Lubricate the chassis!<lb/>
?Check and (111 transmission,<lb/>
differential, brake, power steering<lb/>
window washer and battery fluids!<lb/>
?Check air Filter!<lb/>
? Inflate tirea!<lb/>
?Check wiper blades<lb/>
?Vaccum the Interior!<lb/>
?Wash your windows!<lb/>
"America's Favorite Oil Change"<lb/>
$2.00 OFF (with this Ad)<lb/>
"America's Favorite<lb/>
Oil Change"<lb/>
126 Greenville Blvd. phone: 756-2579 Hours: MonFri. 8am - 6nm Sat .til S<lb/>
Wednesday, April 11. 1990<lb/>
Movies Screen at X pm in Hendrix Theatre<lb/>
ONE FREE w Valid ECU ID or Facull) Film Pass, al Central Tickd Office<lb/>
Call 757-4788 more more details <lb/>
What's Up ECU?<lb/>
ATLANTIS<lb/>
SYMPHONY<lb/>
BRASS QUINTET<lb/>
For the Latest Information on<lb/>
Campus Entertainment Call<lb/>
757-6004<lb/>
GET PSYCHED!<lb/>
BAREFOOT<lb/>
ON THE MALL '90!<lb/>
Thursday, April 19<lb/>
<pb facs="00058208_0004"/><lb/>
?he<lb/>
The EPA<lb/>
David Herring, General Manager<lb/>
Low Martin, Editor<lb/>
James F.J. McKff, Director of Advertising<lb/>
Who is it really protecting?<lb/>
Joseph L Jenkins Jk News Editor<lb/>
Margi Mokin, Asst. News Editor<lb/>
CROUN! CUSCK, Features Editor<lb/>
fOHN TUCKER, Aa$t. Features Editor<lb/>
Mien ah Martin, Sports Editor<lb/>
Thomas H. Barr VI, Asst. Sports Editor<lb/>
Carrie Armstrong, Entertainment Editor<lb/>
Scon Maxwell, Satire Editor<lb/>
Phong Luong, Credit Manager<lb/>
Stuart Rosner, Business Manager<lb/>
Pamfi a Cope, Ad Tech Supervisor<lb/>
Matthew RiCHTER, Circulation Manager<lb/>
TRAO WEED, Production Manager<lb/>
Steve Reip, statt illustrator<lb/>
CHARLES WiLUNGHAM, Darkroom Technician<lb/>
BETH LUPTON, Secretary<lb/>
Tie E ast Carolinian has been serving the East Carolina campus community since 1925, with P"niarv emphasis on in-<lb/>
formation most d.recth affecting ECl I students. It is published tw.ee weekly, with a circulation of Um The East<lb/>
C irol.n.an reserves the right to refuse or discontinue any advertisements that discriminate on the basis of age. sex.<lb/>
c rood or national origin. The East Carolinian welcomes letters expressing all points of view For purposes ol decency<lb/>
?ul hro us IT East Carolinian reserves the right loed.tanv letter lor publication, letters should be sent to The East<lb/>
v aroliman Publications Bldg ECU, GreenvtBe, NC, 27834; or call us at (919) 757-6366.<lb/>
Opinion<lb/>
Media Board made a bad move<lb/>
iucsdavs and ihursdavs from 6 to 8 a.m<lb/>
you can hoar or, rather, couW hear a WZMB<lb/>
wake upshow hosted by ChipCarter and fre Burley,<lb/>
uinder the pseudonyms 'Chippy Bonehead" and<lb/>
Irev Bien . Hut it the ECU Media Board has its<lb/>
a a. v on 11 nevef be able to hear that show again<lb/>
On April 29 the two deejays were talking<lb/>
jokingly, about faculty members they'd like to see<lb/>
teaching classes in the nude As part of the joke, they<lb/>
ailed a department secretary to ask ton the air<lb/>
whether a particular faculty member would bo teach-<lb/>
ing nude in the fall semester.<lb/>
Their comments inflamed Dr. Mane Parr.<lb/>
who heads both ECU's Department of Women's<lb/>
Studies and the Department of Communications<lb/>
She charged that the two were guilty of sexual har-<lb/>
assment and recommended that the ECl Media<lb/>
Board punish them<lb/>
Aware that they had offended sensibilities<lb/>
more than usual. Carter and Burlev wrote letters ot<lb/>
apology to the parries concerned WZMB General<lb/>
Managt r -ndv Forbis de ided to punish the duo<lb/>
not for their comments, but for related violations of<lb/>
station policy b suspending them for four weeks<lb/>
I lowev er. the ECl Media Board judged this punish-<lb/>
ment insufficiently harsh, and met ma closed session<lb/>
the following rhursday (during which the Board<lb/>
took testimon) trom Carter Bien, Forbis and Fair) to<lb/>
discuss the incident. When it reopened the session,<lb/>
the Board took a extremely unusual action: it fired<lb/>
both deejays<lb/>
Specifically, the Board voted to fire Carter<lb/>
and Burlev pursuant to two supposed violations of<lb/>
the Media Board's by-laws. These were "guilty of<lb/>
gross misconduct or conduct unbecoming an East<lb/>
Carolina I niversity employee" and "participation<lb/>
in any action that would in any way seriously disrupt<lb/>
or disturb the normal operation of the media<lb/>
1 he Board cannot make a reasonable deci-<lb/>
sion on the first count. I here is ample room to doubt<lb/>
the Board- c ntention that c arter and Burley con-<lb/>
ducted themselves unethically or engaged in con-<lb/>
duct unbecoming a University employee" all the<lb/>
more so because the Board never heard the offending<lb/>
broadcast, never asked to hear the deejays' tape of<lb/>
the broadcast (though they were aware of the tape's<lb/>
existence), and never asked tor a transcript of the<lb/>
broadcast. If they had not heard what the deejays<lb/>
said, then thev could not fairly pass judgement<lb/>
What remains of the Board's case, then, rests<lb/>
on the second count Presumably, Carter and Burlev<lb/>
are guilty under this count hei ause their putting the<lb/>
English Department se retary on the air without her<lb/>
consent violates both FCC policy and federal law It<lb/>
the EC enforced that poKcy which it does only<lb/>
very rarely then it could refuse to renew WZMB's<lb/>
broadcasting license. 1 lowever, it would be tar more<lb/>
likely that the FCC would at worst reprimand the<lb/>
station. especialU since WZMB is student-run. it<lb/>
indeed thev chose to act at all. Therefore, Carter and<lb/>
Bien participated in an action that could seriously<lb/>
disrupt or disturb the normal operation of the media<lb/>
but it is not hkelv that the action would do so. The<lb/>
difference is both obvious and crucial, but it appar-<lb/>
ently escaped the Media Board.<lb/>
rhougharter and Bien technically vio-<lb/>
lated policy firing the duo is unjustifiable. Students<lb/>
participate in student media knowing that thev will<lb/>
make mistakes, and hoping that thev will have a<lb/>
chance to learn trom these mistakes before thev go<lb/>
out into the real world It the Board was going to<lb/>
overridel orbis.it should hav done so in the interest<lb/>
of instituting more constructive punitive measures<lb/>
In fact, Carter and Burlev themselves sug-<lb/>
gested a more reasonable punishment to the Board.<lb/>
Stating the.r desire to make amends, thev contended<lb/>
that a more sensible penalt) would have been a<lb/>
shorter suspension coupled with an obligation to<lb/>
tape public service announcements dealing with<lb/>
rape and or sexual harassment<lb/>
Evidently, the Board disagreed, but it is<lb/>
difficult to say wh In w hat way is firing the pair a<lb/>
bettor solution? It doesn't teach thorn anything use-<lb/>
ful More importantly, it gics them no chance to<lb/>
make public reparations to anyone thev might have<lb/>
wronged or ottencied<lb/>
By Nathaniel Mead<lb/>
Editorial Columnist<lb/>
The U.S. Senate has just passed<lb/>
a sweeping revision of the Clean<lb/>
Air Act the first real improve-<lb/>
ment in 20 years. The bill has some<lb/>
positive points. It puts the first<lb/>
controls ever on factory and busi-<lb/>
ness air emissions of toxic chemi-<lb/>
cals, and specifically mandates a<lb/>
50 percent cut in 10 years in sulfur<lb/>
dioxide emissions (gases that<lb/>
cause1 acid rain and contribute to<lb/>
the greenhouse effect and ozone<lb/>
layer deterioration). The bill also<lb/>
slightly tightens auto emissions<lb/>
and other urban smog controls<lb/>
In reality, however, the new<lb/>
bill must be considered a dismal<lb/>
compromise between the Amen<lb/>
can public's need tor cleaner air<lb/>
and the government's desire to<lb/>
protect big business The bill "re<lb/>
moves the mandatory second<lb/>
round ot tough tailpipe standards<lb/>
and completely eliminates any<lb/>
requirements to clean up emis-<lb/>
sions of carbon dioxide In addi<lb/>
tion, there is a weakening of a pro<lb/>
gram tor alternative or clean mo-<lb/>
tor fuels 1 he i omprouusc hill also<lb/>
limits theability of citizens to force<lb/>
the government to clean up by<lb/>
taking legal action against the fed<lb/>
eral government. Further, it al<lb/>
lows polluters to move the people<lb/>
who live around the polluted site<lb/>
rather than clean up the site<lb/>
(Sierra Club, Cypress Croup<lb/>
News, April. lW)<lb/>
The new bill, originated by<lb/>
President Bush, pits the interests<lb/>
of public health and environ-<lb/>
mental quahrv against the narrow<lb/>
self-interest of special interests<lb/>
Big Oil, Big Auto, Big Coal and Big<lb/>
Utilities At a time when cleaner<lb/>
motor vehicles are necessarily the<lb/>
cornerstone of any serious smog<lb/>
control plan, the new bill allows<lb/>
the industry to keep producing<lb/>
cars whoso fuel consumption<lb/>
ranks as gluttony even by today's<lb/>
standards By allowing the auto<lb/>
mobile and fossil fuel industries<lb/>
to remain lax on emissions tor<lb/>
another de? .nv. the new bill is in<lb/>
effect the government's way of<lb/>
saying, "1 et them breathe smog "<lb/>
In 1970, thelean ;r ct<lb/>
Amendments called tor a 90 per<lb/>
cent reduction in urban levels ol<lb/>
various air pollutants, including<lb/>
To the Editor<lb/>
ozone, setting a 1977 deadline for<lb/>
a hieving this goal In 197 the<lb/>
deadline was moved to 1982; and<lb/>
in that year i? was delayed once<lb/>
more to 19H7 Now, with nearly<lb/>
100 milln .n people breathing p <lb/>
quality air in urban areas that are<lb/>
still in non-compliance (11 ol 2"<lb/>
badly polluted urban areas failed<lb/>
tederal air standards), the dea I<lb/>
line is being extended another 10<lb/>
years! After all these years, the<lb/>
government is still dragging Ms<lb/>
feet on the issue of clean air<lb/>
Should we be surprised hv<lb/>
such spineless slackness? In re<lb/>
i ent years, the federal Environ-<lb/>
mental Protection Ag i<lb/>
drawn harsh criticism tor soften<lb/>
ing penalties to corporate pollut<lb/>
ers Biologist Barryomn ???? i<lb/>
contendsthal EPA sn .<lb/>
bigindustry isgrossh in ideq<lb/>
and has not signifu inth n ?<lb/>
air pollutant emissions si nee 1981<lb/>
the year Reagan took of!<lb/>
i. umentedin In<lb/>
27. 1988) recent de isions by i<lb/>
ii (1 ite Siq erf ind provi<lb/>
and rela v testing ol pestn ? I<lb/>
test to the agerw y ?; icity I<lb/>
See ? 'n'ju Air, page 5<lb/>
Sports<lb/>
section<lb/>
fails to<lb/>
clarify<lb/>
still worse, given that the Media Board is in<lb/>
the wrong, the firing places the Board in conflict with<lb/>
itsown c onstiluhonon at least one point. Section - of<lb/>
its constitution states The Board shall be respon-<lb/>
sible for maintaining free and responsible student<lb/>
media<lb/>
Whether intentionally or not, firing C arter<lb/>
and Burlev has the effect ot shaping the editorial<lb/>
policy of WZMB (and, by extension, the other cam-<lb/>
pus media) a crude method, but potentially quite<lb/>
effective in the wrong hands Far from ensuring that<lb/>
the media will be ' free and respon I le the Board's<lb/>
sledgehammer censorship makes the media decid-<lb/>
edly less tree. I heir action creates atmosphere in<lb/>
which students must tear tor their jobs it they dare<lb/>
sav anything that might be deemed offensive or<lb/>
embarrassing to the Board, the administration or the<lb/>
faculty, or which might somehow be construed as<lb/>
harassment or dis rimination in the loosest sensesof<lb/>
those words.<lb/>
The bottom line is this: the members of the<lb/>
Media Board who voted to tire Carter and Burlev<lb/>
never heard the broadcast in question, nor did thev<lb/>
so much as ask to hear a tape or read a transcript vi<lb/>
that broadcast. If follows that the Media Board was<lb/>
negligent and based its findings entirely on hearsay.<lb/>
It iscommon knowledge among the student<lb/>
media that several members ot the Media Board,as<lb/>
well as certain administrators influential with the<lb/>
Board, find much of arter's published writing (as<lb/>
"Chippy Bonehead") personally offensive Viewed<lb/>
in the light ol this knowledge, one wonders whether<lb/>
the Board waslessconcerned withdomg justicethan<lb/>
with "getting" Carter- even if Burley got hurt in the<lb/>
bargain<lb/>
Given the foregoing, it is the considered<lb/>
opinion of the Editorial Board of The East Carolinian<lb/>
that ECU's Media Board was less concerned with<lb/>
carrying out justice than with pursuing a vendetta.<lb/>
Their actions, unreasonable in the extreme, seem<lb/>
quite reasonable indeed it it is given that they w-anted<lb/>
to "get" I arter. That's pettv It 's disgusting. And it's<lb/>
shameful<lb/>
To the editor<lb/>
I'm sure that the whole of ECU<lb/>
loves to read in the spirts section<lb/>
oi The East Carolinian about Pirate<lb/>
victories over the Heels 1 also<lb/>
realize that many readers don't<lb/>
care about soccer and a large<lb/>
number don'tcareabout women's<lb/>
spirts in general However, this<lb/>
newspaper should verify andor<lb/>
clarify all of its sports stories Inac-<lb/>
curate or misleading information<lb/>
about a team is worse than no<lb/>
publicity al all.<lb/>
I was stunned to read in the<lb/>
case with women's soccer.<lb/>
I suppose I should be thank-<lb/>
ful that women's soccer got co<lb/>
ered at all. I simpl) feel that all<lb/>
athletes deserve some respect. At<lb/>
the verv least, writers should make<lb/>
it clear tor the reader as to what<lb/>
team thev are referring. 1 don't<lb/>
mean to diminish the E 1 vk tor)<lb/>
over the 1 club team I con<lb/>
gratulate them'<lb/>
April 1 lardison<lb/>
MBAandidate .it E I<lb/>
Few show<lb/>
up to hear<lb/>
s<lb/>
peaker<lb/>
April<lb/>
The East Carolinian<lb/>
that<lb/>
Lady Pirate soccer team beats<lb/>
 c CH, 4-1 1 et me state tor<lb/>
the record that 1 don't have any<lb/>
first hand information about the<lb/>
weekend soccer tournament or<lb/>
round-robin or whatever it was. 1<lb/>
was not there and 1 don't, to my<lb/>
knowledge, ki w any soccer play<lb/>
ersat ECl orUNC.l lowever. 1 do<lb/>
know that the regular competi-<lb/>
tion season for women's collegiate<lb/>
soccer is in the fall. I also know<lb/>
that the varsity I NC women's<lb/>
SOCCeT program is the best pro<lb/>
gram in the nation. They have won<lb/>
the national championship for<lb/>
eight out ot the last nine years<lb/>
(That ninth year thev came in sec<lb/>
onddThey dominate every major<lb/>
collegiate soccer team in the coun-<lb/>
try. It has been compared to a<lb/>
dynasty. In short, there is no way<lb/>
that particular team lost to ECU,<lb/>
4-1. If thev had lost,that would've<lb/>
been quite a coup for ECU-and it<lb/>
would've warranted a much big-<lb/>
ger to-do.<lb/>
So apparently, this was a club<lb/>
team. The third team participat-<lb/>
ing was identified as a Raleigh<lb/>
club team (which subsequently<lb/>
boat ECU 7-0). Why was the UNC<lb/>
club team not identified as such?<lb/>
Since it did not clarify the situ-<lb/>
ation, the story implied that the<lb/>
UNC team was the team<lb/>
"Who cares? What's the big<lb/>
deal?" you might ask. "More sni-<lb/>
velling and whining from a UNC<lb/>
fan?" I apologize if this sounds<lb/>
that way. What if, one October<lb/>
weekend, some intramural foot-<lb/>
ball squad from ECU lost to an EM<lb/>
team from UNC. And on Monday<lb/>
the Daily Tar Heel proclaimed<lb/>
(UNC stuns ECU football)<lb/>
without clarifying somewhere in<lb/>
the story that the ECU team in<lb/>
question was not the team, i.e. the<lb/>
one coached by Coach Bill Lewis.<lb/>
A few people might be a tad<lb/>
miffed. Fortunately, most of you<lb/>
know so much about football that<lb/>
you wouldn't need any clarifica-<lb/>
tion. Unfortunately, that is not the<lb/>
I i the editor.<lb/>
It we are the future then ??? t<lb/>
must begin to act with responsi<lb/>
bilitv to ourselves and to those we<lb/>
defend. In the past few years it<lb/>
seem that the entire open<lb/>
minded' scctorof the population<lb/>
has taken it upon themselves to<lb/>
detest the situation i th Af-<lb/>
rica It is an easily detestable situ-<lb/>
ation 1 he oppression suffered by<lb/>
thebl.uk majority issui h an injus-<lb/>
tice and so obviously inhumane<lb/>
that it is nearlv .is appalling as the<lb/>
turnout to hear the v ice consulate<lb/>
on African affairs speak. He was<lb/>
here at E 1 last Thursday It is<lb/>
mr responsibility asopen minded<lb/>
individuals grouped together tor<lb/>
just causes, such as the abolishing<lb/>
of Apartheid, to listen to both sides<lb/>
and be objective. We neglected<lb/>
our duties and came out looking<lb/>
hypocritical.<lb/>
1 here were onlv six or seven<lb/>
students present to hear the repre-<lb/>
sentative ot the Peklerk govern-<lb/>
ment; the rest of the audience was<lb/>
faculty and two local television<lb/>
stations. It is sad to think that we<lb/>
so loudly denounce the extremi-<lb/>
ties to which the South African<lb/>
government has earned segrega-<lb/>
tion and racial inequality but we<lb/>
were too busy to come and listen<lb/>
or even better, to protest.<lb/>
This campus is a breeding<lb/>
ground for free thought and as we<lb/>
have all witnessed apathy and<lb/>
indifference are not always the<lb/>
case, i.e. the protest and petition<lb/>
over the noise ordinance. We must<lb/>
involve ourselves further in causes<lb/>
like South Afncaifweare going to<lb/>
continue to carry a torch for the<lb/>
millions whoare being prosecu ted<lb/>
by one of history's most indiges-<lb/>
table governments<lb/>
Incidentally, the vice counsel<lb/>
was a consummate poRtkan with<lb/>
a less than realistic view of both<lb/>
the situation and the solution His<lb/>
answers 10 questions were seem-<lb/>
ingly rehearsed and full of fluff<lb/>
and rhetoric He did acknowledge<lb/>
changes but was reluctant to say<lb/>
that the government was losing<lb/>
control. He also did not comment<lb/>
on world pressure to dismantle<lb/>
Apartheid or the continual<lb/>
lence 1 lis position is indefensible<lb/>
a, dhi ? .?? ? asily transparent<lb/>
It is not mv intention toai .<lb/>
anyone but more to just call atti<lb/>
tion to pp irtunities like the visit<lb/>
last week We could hav ? I i<lb/>
representative of the IV-<lb/>
know that Amen, asyouthdetest?<lb/>
the practu e of majority exclusi<lb/>
and that we are not indiffen<lb/>
Philip Magjnnes<lb/>
Commercial<lb/>
fishing kills<lb/>
marine life<lb/>
in Pamlico<lb/>
r Editor a IF<lb/>
1 att? ledSei<lb/>
ralh u quart ?<lb/>
17,9 ird i ?<lb/>
and trawler operators sp? - "?<lb/>
garding the oyster fishery Itv<lb/>
uld not pie lea<lb/>
ovsh md impn<lb/>
theirexpense; wi ? -??<lb/>
spend more ta lyers n<lb/>
reseed the bottom so we will I<lb/>
. -tors 1 heard w i -<lb/>
be ab itch whatever w ii<lb/>
with fev ? : n strii tionsand vil<lb/>
r needsol<lb/>
n ' r the nei<lb/>
otht r oystermen I think <lb/>
Basnight heard thesesame thir<lb/>
 e ???.hen looking at i hat I<lb/>
of the Pamlico Sound, th it ti<lb/>
; j? is permitted on moi I<lb/>
million acres of bottom in I<lb/>
Pamli o Sound as well as ?<lb/>
Pamlico Pui e i indNeuserri i<lb/>
and in many ol our creeks thai<lb/>
designated tish nursery areas<lb/>
Much of this bottom is also -<lb/>
able 'or oy ster produ I<lb/>
It is a surveyed fact that over<lb/>
500,000 acres of bottom werei i<lb/>
considered suitable tor oyst<lb/>
production and that this bottom<lb/>
would not require extensri eoys<lb/>
ter transplanting to become pro<lb/>
ductive I will admit that this study<lb/>
was done before the advent<lb/>
trawling. I will admit that over<lb/>
fishing was the initial cause tor<lb/>
the decline of the oyster and 1 will<lb/>
admit that over fishing is still the<lb/>
cause for the decline 1 will not<lb/>
admit however, that over-fishing<lb/>
by the oystermen, during the short<lb/>
period thev are allowed to wort<lb/>
is the reason for the continuing<lb/>
decline. Reason tells me that year<lb/>
round, almost unrestricted trawl<lb/>
ing, allowed by the members of<lb/>
the N.C. Marine Fisheries Com-<lb/>
mission, is the major cause tor the<lb/>
oyster's inability to restore itselt<lb/>
Reason also tells me that the<lb/>
destroying of millions ol pounds<lb/>
of juvenile tish yearly by travC<lb/>
operations, in our estuanne SyS<lb/>
tern, is also over-fishing and the<lb/>
major cause for fishes habitat<lb/>
destruction and the decline of our<lb/>
adult finfish population<lb/>
Sincerely,<lb/>
Charles G. Clark<lb/>
BelhavenNC<lb/>
<pb facs="00058208_0005"/><lb/>
1<lb/>
The East Carolinian. April 10.1990 5<lb/>
'Fathers will never be obsolete'<lb/>
By Dinah Eng<lb/>
Gannett Newt Service<lb/>
"I've boon brooding about the<lb/>
fact that men are becoming obso-<lb/>
lete in today's society said my<lb/>
friend Stan "We're not needed to<lb/>
make babies or business decisions<lb/>
anymore. Basically, we're just<lb/>
asked to take out the garbage<lb/>
It's easy to see how he could<lb/>
feel that way With sperm banks<lb/>
and artificial insemination avail-<lb/>
able, women don't need the act of<lb/>
sexual intercourse to become preg-<lb/>
nant As equal employment op-<lb/>
portunities grow, women are less<lb/>
likely to be excluded from the<lb/>
board room<lb/>
So men are beginning to dis-<lb/>
cover what women have known<lb/>
for a long time being seen as<lb/>
one-dimensional human beings is<lb/>
garbage.<lb/>
Both men and women are<lb/>
multi-faceted diamonds, and no<lb/>
matter how long we live, we never<lb/>
will learn everything there is to<lb/>
know about one another.<lb/>
And no matter ROW much<lb/>
technology changes our tradi-<lb/>
tional roles in society, we always<lb/>
will need each other.<lb/>
Last week, my father at-<lb/>
tempted to adopt a 12-year-old<lb/>
Clean air<lb/>
boy, an act that caused immediate<lb/>
uproar in a family full of women.<lb/>
My father, 63, has always<lb/>
wanted a son. What he got was<lb/>
seven daughters, a fact that he<lb/>
never quite accepted.<lb/>
Through the years, he has<lb/>
occasionally "helped" voungmen<lb/>
from China, putting them through<lb/>
school and lavishing the time and<lb/>
attention on them that he never<lb/>
gave'his daughters.<lb/>
It was painful to see, and as the<lb/>
oldest of the seven girls, 1 probably<lb/>
am further along in accepting that<lb/>
this behavior is my father's prob-<lb/>
lem, and has nothing to do with<lb/>
me, than any of my sisters are.<lb/>
Still, when 1 learned that my<lb/>
dad wanted to formally adopt a<lb/>
young bov, I felt a stab in the heart<lb/>
1 hadn't experienced in a long time.<lb/>
It was the remembered pain of<lb/>
an adolescent girl who wanted her<lb/>
father to show love and approval<lb/>
of her, but never quite found the<lb/>
kev to make it happen.<lb/>
After so many vears. I thought<lb/>
the wish for acceptance was re-<lb/>
solved. How could my lather see<lb/>
me for who 1 am, when he kept<lb/>
looking for himself in young men<lb/>
he wished were his sons1<lb/>
This time, my father met a<lb/>
Chinese woman in her 40s whose<lb/>
visa will soon expire, and the<lb/>
woman was willing to give up<lb/>
parental rights to her son because"<lb/>
she thought she would be better<lb/>
marriage material to a U.S. citizen<lb/>
without a child in tow.<lb/>
So my father si id he'd take<lb/>
the bov. without asking my<lb/>
mother. When my mom, who's<lb/>
60, learned what had happened,<lb/>
she asked all the daughters what<lb/>
she should do.<lb/>
It she did not sign the adop-<lb/>
tion papers, she was afraid my<lb/>
father would simplv lose his tem-<lb/>
per and disappear. If she signed,<lb/>
she'd be committed to rearing a<lb/>
child she'd never met.<lb/>
We all urged her to say no,<lb/>
regardless of the outcome<lb/>
Atter much agonizing, mv<lb/>
mother did just that. And with-<lb/>
out dissent, mv father agreed to<lb/>
drop the adoption proceedings.<lb/>
The entire family was<lb/>
shocked Atter vears ot unrelent-<lb/>
ing resentment against mv<lb/>
mother, fate, but most of all,<lb/>
against himself, my father ac-<lb/>
cepted the fact that he was not<lb/>
going to have a son.<lb/>
We are always on our way to<lb/>
a miracle, and my father's change<lb/>
of heart was a reminder that<lb/>
people respond u hen weareilear<lb/>
Continued from page I<lb/>
on where we stand.<lb/>
My mother said "no" with a<lb/>
conviction that could not be ques-<lb/>
tioned. After 37 years of marriage<lb/>
to a man who thought sons were<lb/>
moredesirable than daughters, my<lb/>
mother had grown enough to call<lb/>
that thought what it is ? garbage.<lb/>
I am relieved for my mother,<lb/>
and the family, that my father<lb/>
chose not to press the issue. Most<lb/>
of all, I am relieved for the boy<lb/>
whose name I do not even know.<lb/>
1 cannot judge a stranger's<lb/>
motivation for giving up her son<lb/>
I'erhaps she thought he would<lb/>
have a better life with an estab-<lb/>
lished family here than in China.<lb/>
I'erhaps she thought only of her-<lb/>
self.<lb/>
Either way, it would not have<lb/>
been in the best interests of the<lb/>
child to enter a family where the<lb/>
father had not grown up enough<lb/>
to appreciate his own daughters.<lb/>
As tor this daughter, I've<lb/>
learned that no matter what prob-<lb/>
lems my father has in his mind, 1<lb/>
still see him with love in my heart.<lb/>
lathers, like mothers, will<lb/>
never be obsolete.<lb/>
opyrigltt 1990 USA WMYApple CcOegt<lb/>
? main n .Nr?i A.<lb/>
"appeasing industry at theexpensc<lb/>
of public health<lb/>
During the Reagan era. the<lb/>
FTA repeatedly minimized and<lb/>
even belittled public concerns<lb/>
about the cancer causing potential<lb/>
of our modern supply of air, food,<lb/>
and water Put in the late 1980's,as<lb/>
Reagan's vainglorious term came<lb/>
to an end, the EPA began empha-<lb/>
sizing a novel strategy: blame na-<lb/>
ture. First they began citing the<lb/>
problem of "natural carcinogens<lb/>
in food, telling the public that there<lb/>
were ust as much nasty things in<lb/>
potato salad as in Twinkiesor other<lb/>
iunk foods. Next the agency sought<lb/>
to incriminate natural carcinogens<lb/>
in air, namelv radon, the radioac-<lb/>
tive gas that seeps from the ground<lb/>
and enters millions of homes na-<lb/>
tionwide.<lb/>
How do we account for EPA's<lb/>
There is a tendency among, EPA<lb/>
officials and corporate representa<lb/>
lives to trivialize cancer risks, it<lb/>
you cater to the view that nature is<lb/>
not benign, or even worse, that<lb/>
"everything causes cancer then<lb/>
you Stop try mg to control environ-<lb/>
mental cancer hazards altogether.<lb/>
And that would be sheer folly.<lb/>
Part ol the problem with air<lb/>
pollution seems to be a lack ot<lb/>
resolve on the part of our "envi-<lb/>
ronmental president Compared<lb/>
to his predecessor who said trees<lb/>
were the primary source ot air pol-<lb/>
lution George Push otters a<lb/>
breath of fresh air. Put at this junc-<lb/>
tureour nation needsa strong, fresh<lb/>
wind. We should be building<lb/>
smogless cars that run on ethanoi<lb/>
and electricity. We should also<lb/>
reorient our industry toward the<lb/>
ecologically sensible, renewable<lb/>
? ? ? i resources such as the sun.<lb/>
Onl when we move in this more<lb/>
sustainable direction can we re-<lb/>
ally begin cleaning up the envi-<lb/>
ronment<lb/>
The total long-term costs of<lb/>
continually befouling Earth's at-<lb/>
mosphere ore difficult Accord-<lb/>
ing to the American lung Asso-<lb/>
ciation, the major air-polluting in-<lb/>
dustries represent tangible<lb/>
sources ot much lung disease.<lb/>
inflicting about $40 billion in<lb/>
health care annually. Though<lb/>
American businesses will have to<lb/>
pa more tor the new clean air<lb/>
bill, they will still get off rela-<lb/>
tively cheaply. The cost of envi-<lb/>
ronmental damage and the dam-<lb/>
age to our lungs still exceeds any<lb/>
cost taken up through the conser-<lb/>
vation efforts of business and in-<lb/>
dustry.<lb/>
sudden zeal to warn people about<lb/>
the "C" word which the agency<lb/>
has generally avoided? One rea-<lb/>
son mav be that big business's<lb/>
power over EPA is bigger than<lb/>
most people realize. Moreover, the<lb/>
agency stands to benefit by point-<lb/>
ing to "natural causes" of mortal-<lb/>
ity rather than to artificial or man-<lb/>
made causes<lb/>
Radon is a case in point. This<lb/>
"soil pollution" is considered the<lb/>
most deadly carcinogen under<lb/>
FPA's jurisdiction even dioxin<lb/>
pales by comparison Yet no de-<lb/>
finitive evidence has shown that<lb/>
radon in homes causes lung can-<lb/>
cer. Of course, "no proof is not by<lb/>
anv means "no hazard and<lb/>
whether the gas actually causes<lb/>
cancer i n homes remains to be seen.<lb/>
Put EPA has presented radon as it<lb/>
it were an established health haz-<lb/>
ard. Laying the blame on radon<lb/>
for lung cancer caused by tobacco<lb/>
smoke or industrial pollution<lb/>
helps take the heat off the real<lb/>
culprits, including the radioactive<lb/>
particles routinely released from<lb/>
nuclear power plantsand continu-<lb/>
ally contaminating our the food<lb/>
chain in the form of fallout.<lb/>
Because radon is a "crime<lb/>
without blame the issue is es-<lb/>
sentially a win-win situation for<lb/>
legislators. No politician, indus-<lb/>
try or policy decision is at fault.<lb/>
Thus, as Teresa Opheim writes in<lb/>
a 1988 issue of litne Reader, legisla-<lb/>
tors emerge as "environmental<lb/>
crusaders to their constituents<lb/>
while favoring; legislation that<lb/>
won't endanger their businessand<lb/>
industry The situation is remi-<lb/>
niscent of the recent hype over<lb/>
natural carcinogens in food, which<lb/>
has diverted attention from the<lb/>
potential haz-ardsof the thousands<lb/>
of artificial additives in the U.S.<lb/>
food supply.<lb/>
Again, it's not that these sub-<lb/>
stances or gases are harmless; in-<lb/>
deed, they may be quite harmful,<lb/>
at least at certain levels of expo-<lb/>
sure. Problem is, the dispropor-<lb/>
tionate amount of attention given<lb/>
by EPA to natural carcinogens<lb/>
diverts society's attention from<lb/>
serious hazards of human origin,<lb/>
such as pesticides and mercury.<lb/>
RALEIGH WOMEN'S HEALTH<lb/>
ORGANIZATIONS<lb/>
Abortions from 13 to 18 weeks at additional cost. Pregnancy<lb/>
Test, Birth Control, and Problem Pregnancy Counseling<lb/>
For further Information, call 738-0444<lb/>
(toll free number. 1 800-532-5384) Between 9 am and 5 pm<lb/>
weekdays. General anesthesia available.<lb/>
LOW COST ABORTIONS UP TO 12TII WEEK OF PREGNANCY<lb/>
ECU Student Store<lb/>
W right Building<lb/>
fcoto Center<lb/>
SUPER SAVING COUPON FOR A<lb/>
FREE<lb/>
SECOND SET OF PRINTS<lb/>
with every disc or roll of color print<lb/>
film brought in for processing,<lb/>
offer good thru April 10 - 24, 1990 <lb/>
II<lb/>
4 6 Prints Not Included<lb/>
Coupon Musi Accompany Order<lb/>
1<lb/>
I<lb/>
I<lb/>
I<lb/>
I<lb/>
I<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/>
Read<lb/>
The East<lb/>
Carolinian<lb/>
tor the<lb/>
hottest<lb/>
news!<lb/>
. NfcJ w 'Tot an encore presentation<lb/>
' B.S.&amp;M.<lb/>
Recently Played Friday Afternoon To A<lb/>
Standing Room Only Croud'<lb/>
This Wednesday Night<lb/>
April 11, 1990<lb/>
Pre - Easter Holiday Special<lb/>
Do Not Miss It Again!<lb/>
WANTED<lb/>
? Sell" - 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, Mcndcnhall<lb/>
Student Center. Please return the application by 5:00 PM, Monday,<lb/>
April 16, 1990 to the Information Desk. Mcndcnhall Student Center.<lb/>
For further Information contact J. Marshall at 757-4711.<lb/>
Thank You<lb/>
300 FARMER ST<lb/>
GREENVILLE<lb/>
757-0373<lb/>
What Makes<lb/>
K&amp;W Cafeteria<lb/>
ECU's Favorite Cafeteria?<lb/>
52 Great Food - All our dishes and bakery goods are made from<lb/>
scratch, not from short cuts and mixes. It's freshly cooked throughout the<lb/>
meal and "Seasoned" just so.<lb/>
H Honest Value - Great food at reasonable prices and plenty<lb/>
of it. At K&amp;W, value has been the bask policy for 35 years and will<lb/>
continue to be the policy forever.<lb/>
53 Customer Service - All our cafeterias are staffed to insure<lb/>
fast, courteous service even at peak eating turns. At K&amp;W, the customer<lb/>
is always 1.<lb/>
Su Volume Feeding - K&amp;W's great food value comes directly<lb/>
from its customer volume. Even though we have the highest customer<lb/>
whom per cafeteria of any cafeteria company in the United States, we<lb/>
are committed to the personal touch to each customer.<lb/>
H Pleasant Surroundings - Dining room decor and<lb/>
atmosphere compliments K&amp;W's honest food value to give you a<lb/>
pleasant, leisurely dining experience.<lb/>
At K&amp;W. we only know how to serve great food, and give honest value<lb/>
to the people we serve  our customers. To us this is the basics of being<lb/>
a cafeteria, and we've never left the basics.<lb/>
K$W<lb/>
Carolina Kast Mall Memorial Drive<lb/>
Mon Thurs 11:00 a.m-2 W p.m. 4.00 p.m8:00 p.m.<lb/>
Frt Sat 11:00 a.m 8 Wp.m. Sun II 00 a.m8:00 p.m<lb/>
F.njoy K&amp;W's in Wilson. Rockv Mount. Goldsboro. Fayetteville. and W other locations in<lb/>
North Carolina. Virginia, and South Carolina<lb/>
<pb facs="00058208_0006"/><lb/>
Page 6<lb/>
Classifieds<lb/>
April 10, 1<lb/>
?OR HINT<lb/>
1 MU.I ONI HI DROOM IMjrpeted<lb/>
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Campus organizationss, clubs, fr;iis. soroi ities call<lb/>
OCMC: 1(8W) 932-6528 1(800)950-8472, exl 1??<lb/>
Announcements<lb/>
GAMMA BLTAEMi<lb/>
Triela-t rm ' ?M be held Apni<lb/>
lenkinsauditori irr M ? p m Office<lb/>
mcx-t jiviOpm Don't forget your<lb/>
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QfHnni OF HOME<lb/>
11 in<lb/>
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ECONOMICS<lb/>
Schooled I lorneEconomics AnrmelSpring<lb/>
: p m Mond) April 23. Elm<lb/>
Street iirk Fruxl chicken, oft drinks,<lb/>
potatoaolad Tickets 5.50 See member of<lb/>
Phi U or Al IEA for tickets Open to School<lb/>
of I lome Economics members and guests<lb/>
Please come and support the School of<lb/>
THE EOLMODELLMTLiD<lb/>
NAIJQNS cu;fi<lb/>
The ECU Modd Nations Club will be<lb/>
having an organization meeting tor the<lb/>
fall of 1990 on Wednesday, April 11 at<lb/>
7 30 pm in Brewstcr C-105.<lb/>
I lardworkmg, dedicated and serious<lb/>
students are invited to become a part of<lb/>
FCL"s fastest crowing organizaRon<lb/>
Discussion of fall trips, rund-raweis, and<lb/>
other important information will be<lb/>
addressed Due to theciateofther.corgetown<lb/>
Conference we will beseeking commitments<lb/>
by the end of Tl 1!S SEMESTER If vou arc<lb/>
interested but unable to attend, call Steve<lb/>
I'res at 756-8699, Doug V P at 931-9062. or<lb/>
sec Dr Spalding in International Sludtaa<lb/>
NEWMAN CATHOLIC<lb/>
STUDENT CENT! K<lb/>
Announcing ? Wednesday night dinner<lb/>
special' Fun, fellowship and all the I<lb/>
cooking vou can eat It ailst.irts.it ; I<lb/>
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CAMFL'S CHRISTIAN<lb/>
1111 cwsHir<lb/>
?<lb/>
?<lb/>
Announcements see page<lb/>
<pb facs="00058208_0007"/><lb/>
The East Carolinian April 10, 199(1 7<lb/>
SGA<lb/>
6:<lb/>
rsca<lb/>
Continued from page 2<lb/>
yeai was tho tirst time that<lb/>
son rities had rush before tho t.ill<lb/>
semester, Panhellenic needed the<lb/>
money before annual funding<lb/>
came out in August so tho book<lb/>
an be paid tor before orientation.<lb/>
1 andry debated that tho<lb/>
organization is selective and it<lb/>
iolatesthe student's rights. Since<lb/>
Panhellenic requested additional<lb/>
nding hist year also. Landry<lb/>
u .tioned why it was happening<lb/>
lin<lb/>
s the debate ended, lamb<lb/>
.aid the Panhellenic was one ot tho<lb/>
biggest organizations on campus<lb/>
with more than SIX) members, and<lb/>
they participated in more<lb/>
community service projects than<lb/>
most other ECU clubs.<lb/>
In other business, the rules<lb/>
were suspended by 1 amb tor tho<lb/>
Forensics Association to be<lb/>
appropriated $1 039 tor tour<lb/>
members to attend a tournament<lb/>
in Minnesota April 26-30. Iho<lb/>
majority of the funds will cover<lb/>
hotel expenses and transportation<lb/>
costs. Attor tho president ot tho<lb/>
speech, debate and interpretative<lb/>
reading organization, Mary<lb/>
1 larrisen, was yielded tho floor to<lb/>
encourage tho SC i A to vote in favor<lb/>
ot tho appropriation, tho bodv<lb/>
passed the funding by a voice vote.<lb/>
Tho legislature passed bv<lb/>
consent tho motion madeby lelms<lb/>
disallowing tho use of previous<lb/>
question until one full round of<lb/>
debate on an issue is made. "Wo<lb/>
nood tohearbothsidesofanissue<lb/>
Holms said. Though tho motion<lb/>
passed, it will onlv apply to this<lb/>
year's body.<lb/>
Announcements<lb/>
Continued from page 6<lb/>
w i s:i 11<lb/>
Ml PI I 111 .1SI IIKI<lb/>
;k ii (i(, i : r<lb/>
t lllM.TH tUL'CATOR<lb/>
ECUS HDOl Dl Ml SIC<lb/>
I I I s APRI1 ID-lb<lb/>
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l It R NATION.l<lb/>
I (,l G!<lb/>
i . 1 I ION<lb/>
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WORKSHOP<lb/>
Scotti) s Tottys Co.<lb/>
Party Special<lb/>
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Need A Pott hr Your Parly-Just Call Scottv<lb/>
waittsd: State and Nation Editor<lb/>
Position to begin second summer session (July 1990).<lb/>
Deadline for applications is June 11,1990.<lb/>
Call The East Carolinian at 757-6366 for more information.<lb/>
The East Carolinian<lb/>
is now accepting applications<lb/>
for the following positions for the summer sessions:<lb/>
?Advertising Technical<lb/>
Supervisor<lb/>
?Assistant Features Editor<lb/>
?Assistant Sports Editor<lb/>
?Copy Editors<lb/>
? Staff Writers<lb/>
for all sections<lb/>
I )e?idlinc for applications is Wednesday, April 11,1990.<lb/>
Apply in person at The East Carolinian, second floor of<lb/>
the Publications Building, across from Joyner Library.<lb/>
f<lb/>
I II I II<lb/>
Vnilmu <lb/>
t<lb/>
Start off yw t:zi"w<lb/>
'Right 'By Visiting Us!<lb/>
'Buif Seii ? Trade<lb/>
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There's plenty of FREE<lb/>
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The things they get away with!<lb/>
ATTENTION ECU STUDENTS<lb/>
Get Your Summer, Fall Semester A; ; <lb/>
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Pirates Landing otters a new concept in student housing $20 i er month<lb/>
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Faculty and Staff,<lb/>
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open from 9am - 6pm Monday through Friday and 9am to<lb/>
12noon on Saturdays. Its drive - through window opens 3Q<lb/>
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We have a New East 24 ATM and our<lb/>
own parking spaces at Mendenhall<lb/>
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Almost every service we provide at our main office is also at<lb/>
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Convenience for everyone at ECU<lb/>
at New East Bank of Greenville<lb/>
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Call us at 757-1188<lb/>
We're open from 9am until 5pm Monday - Friday<lb/>
Member Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation<lb/>
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OF GREENVILLE<lb/>
ECU ? MENDENHALL<lb/>
<pb facs="00058208_0008"/><lb/>
s<lb/>
(Hire iEaHt Qtarolinfan<lb/>
Page 8<lb/>
State and Nation<lb/>
April 70,7990<lb/>
Jury convicts Poindexter of felony<lb/>
conspiracy, obstruction of Congress<lb/>
WASHINGTON in luly<lb/>
1987, fohn Poindexter told the<lb/>
congressional committee investt<lb/>
gating the Iran Contra scandal,<lb/>
Hie buck stops here with mo"<lb/>
Saturday, a )ury agree! with him,<lb/>
convicting him of Hv? criminal<lb/>
i harm's<lb/>
In his monthlong trial, Poin-<lb/>
dexter tried loshove responsi-<lb/>
bility tor the foreign policy affair<lb/>
into the Oval Office. Hut eight<lb/>
hours ot testimony from former<lb/>
President Reagan apparently<lb/>
tailed to persuade Hirers that<lb/>
Reagan participated in the con-<lb/>
spiracy tin over up the embarrass<lb/>
ing scandal.<lb/>
As a result, ,i critical facet<lb/>
jusi what did Reagan know"1<lb/>
may never be inllv understood<lb/>
especially since the former presi-<lb/>
dent offered little illumination on<lb/>
the subject while on the witness<lb/>
stand<lb/>
I'nder those condition said<lb/>
Washington, D.C , constitutional<lb/>
scholar Bruce Fein, "it probably<lb/>
was grossly in error for his lawyer<lb/>
not to have Poindexter testify and<lb/>
give ? sense of what he is as a<lb/>
person to the jury<lb/>
"These were not crimes of<lb/>
personal aggrandizement and<lb/>
enrichment Fein said Toindex-<lb/>
ter could have been able to tell the<lb/>
ur , I was doing mv best to help<lb/>
the president<lb/>
But I triumphant Dan VVebb,<lb/>
the former US attorney in Chi<lb/>
ragowholcd the prosecution, said<lb/>
after the verdict<lb/>
"There's no question that,<lb/>
even N'ing charitable to Admiral<lb/>
Poindexter, he (tried to cover up<lb/>
the scandal) because he wanted to<lb/>
protect the political viability ot<lb/>
Ronald Reagan And I consider<lb/>
that to lv a selfish motive<lb/>
not taking the witness stand<lb/>
"No second thoughts re<lb/>
Sponded Linda Poindexter<lb/>
The federal jury convicted<lb/>
Poindexter of felony conspiracy<lb/>
and obstruction of (ongress, find<lb/>
ing that during thechaotu days in<lb/>
November 1986 when the scandal<lb/>
was unraveling, he actively la-<lb/>
bored to prevent important vie<lb/>
tails ot the so ret dealings from<lb/>
becoming known<lb/>
The urv not only rejected the<lb/>
retired admiral'si .nrnth.it he was<lb/>
acting under the direction ot his<lb/>
commander in chief but also Re<lb/>
agan's assertion that no crimes<lb/>
were ommitted in the s andal;<lb/>
With Poindexter eight people<lb/>
ha ve either pleaded guilty or been<lb/>
convicted ol crimes arising from<lb/>
a i hess came played by giants<lb/>
As Poindexter and his wife, Poindexter however had to<lb/>
Linda, left the U.S. Courthouse in show that he too was a pawn<lb/>
a light snow, someone asked it he Instead, his jui y determined that<lb/>
had any second thoughts about he was one of the giants<lb/>
Yugoslavia holds multiparty elections<lb/>
I M Hi I A i tigoslavia<lb/>
i r Hie liberal republic ol<lb/>
Slovenia held Yugoslavia's first<lb/>
free multipart) elections since l'M<lb/>
and the presidential candidate<lb/>
w hi ? ia ored a cautious approa h<lb/>
to secession won the most votes<lb/>
but formerCommunist Milan<lb/>
Kucan did not gam an absolute<lb/>
majority inSunday s balloting and<lb/>
faces an April 22 nmott vote with<lb/>
loe Pucnik a former political<lb/>
prisoner ot the DEMOS opposi<lb/>
tion coalition, returns showed<lb/>
today<lb/>
Political analysts predicted a<lb/>
neck and neck race between<lb/>
Pucnik, who advocates ojjickSlov<lb/>
em,in independence from Yugo-<lb/>
slav ia, and Kiu ,m who has i ailed<lb/>
or a more cautious pohtnal ap<lb/>
pro.n h<lb/>
About 75 percent ol eligible<lb/>
voters i ast ballots choosing<lb/>
among 17 parties tor a new Slov<lb/>
enian Parliament and among tour<lb/>
candidates for president<lb/>
With 90 percent ol ballots<lb/>
counted, Kucan led with 44.3 per<lb/>
cent ot the vote to 26.1 percent tor<lb/>
Piu mk Independent candidate<lb/>
ban Kramberger won 18.8 jxt<lb/>
cent and I tberal Party candidate<lb/>
Marko Demsar took 10.5 percent.<lb/>
Ihe tirst round results "sug<lb/>
gest that Slovenians have opted<lb/>
lor a peaceful transition Irom a<lb/>
single party monopoly to a par<lb/>
liamentary democracy said<lb/>
Kucan, an engineer ol the<lb/>
republic's mine toward democ-<lb/>
racy<lb/>
Pucnik, who spent seven years<lb/>
in Slovenian prisons in the 1950s<lb/>
for his opposition to communism,<lb/>
said he would win the runoff<lb/>
"because those who voted tor<lb/>
Krambergerand 1 )emsarwill now<lb/>
probably vote tor me<lb/>
lark returns from Sunday's<lb/>
balloting indicated the Slovenian<lb/>
Communists, who recently re-<lb/>
named themselves the Part) (it<lb/>
I Jemocratk Renew at,would lv the<lb/>
largest single party in the<lb/>
republic's Parliament but would<lb/>
face a tough DEMOS coalition ot<lb/>
five conservative parties<lb/>
Hietormeri. ommunists,who<lb/>
have also broken with the national<lb/>
Communist Partv leadership be-<lb/>
cause it has resisted democratic<lb/>
reform, wen about -11 percent of<lb/>
the vote in balloting for the<lb/>
republic's 240 seat Parliament,<lb/>
with the five DEMOS parties get-<lb/>
ting about 35 percent, returns<lb/>
showed<lb/>
Exxon pleads innocent to charges<lb/>
?W HORACE, Alaska (AP) nouncing its intended plea<lb/>
Exxon announced Monday that Exxon and its subsidiary,<lb/>
it would plead innocent to a five- Exxon Shipping Co. were sched-<lb/>
COUnt criminal indictment charg ulevi tor separate arraignments<lb/>
ing if with negligence and other before a federal magistrate later in<lb/>
crimes in the nation's worst oil the day.<lb/>
spill a year ago<lb/>
Ihe grounding ol the tanker On Feb 27, a federal grand<lb/>
I won Valdez "was tragic, but it jury handed upafive-countcrimi<lb/>
v. as ,m accident the company nal indictment against ihe com<lb/>
s lid in a pn pared statement an p.m stemming from the oil spill,<lb/>
which occurred after the Exxon<lb/>
Valdez slammed into a charted<lb/>
reel on March 24. 1989, in Prince<lb/>
William Sound<lb/>
I he spill ol nearly 11 million<lb/>
gallons it North Slope crude oil<lb/>
coated hundreds ol milesof coast<lb/>
line and killed uncounted num-<lb/>
bers of fish, birds and othi i ma<lb/>
line lite<lb/>
S&amp;L<lb/>
losses<lb/>
mount<lb/>
The USA's<lb/>
2,878<lb/>
savings<lb/>
and loans<lb/>
had a<lb/>
record loss<lb/>
of $19.2<lb/>
billion last<lb/>
year,<lb/>
despite the<lb/>
government's<lb/>
bailout.<lb/>
Bailout will cost taxpayers<lb/>
more than estimated<lb/>
WASHINCTt N i P) The<lb/>
Bush administration conceded<lb/>
Mond.ec that the savings-and loan<lb/>
bailout will cost taxpayers more<lb/>
than previously estimated.<lb/>
rhere's no question that the<lb/>
i ost isin reasingand wc II have to<lb/>
take that into account in decidmp<lb/>
future actions said White I louse<lb/>
spokesman Martin Fitzwater<lb/>
His comments were in re<lb/>
sponse to Friday's report by the<lb/>
General Accounting Office an<lb/>
in estigatory arm ol (Congress<lb/>
that the 10-year cost oi the pro-<lb/>
gram would be $243 billion in<lb/>
stead of the $166 billion estimated<lb/>
by the administration<lb/>
Furthermore, the ?AO said,<lb/>
the 30-year cost of the program<lb/>
could reach $325 billion.<lb/>
"We don't have an analysis<lb/>
either to endorse or reject theGAO<lb/>
numbers, except to say there<lb/>
clearly is going to be additional<lb/>
costs Fitwater said. "Those<lb/>
numers will have to be decided<lb/>
upon at some point<lb/>
1 itwater rejected as "total<lb/>
nonsense" the contention b) C har<lb/>
lesBowsher.thet .AC comptrol-<lb/>
ler general, that the administra-<lb/>
tion had deliberately understated<lb/>
the cost i the bailout<lb/>
Bowsher, interviewed on<lb/>
NBC'S "Meet the Press said the<lb/>
bush administration had set an<lb/>
artificallv low cost on the bailout<lb/>
so the government could appear<lb/>
to meet deficit-reduction targets<lb/>
Fitzwater said the Resolution<lb/>
Trust Co, set up to oversee the<lb/>
restructuring of the S&amp;L industry,<lb/>
had so far used about $10 billion<lb/>
of the $50 billion it was provided<lb/>
under that original bailout legis-<lb/>
lation signed by Bush last sum-<lb/>
mer.<lb/>
"The best thing to do, we be-<lb/>
lieve, is to work speedily with the<lb/>
funds and the progress we now<lb/>
have in place the spokesman<lb/>
said<lb/>
"At this time there is not<lb/>
enough information to make a<lb/>
reliable estimate of how much<lb/>
more may be required Many fac-<lb/>
tors will determine if we need<lb/>
more funds including loss ra-<lb/>
tios interest rates, asset sales, et<lb/>
cetera litwater said<lb/>
Asked if the net effect would<lb/>
be an increase in the federal defi-<lb/>
cit, Fitzwater said "There is al-<lb/>
wavs that consequence. If vou have<lb/>
to increase amounts, you have a<lb/>
responding impact on the deficit<lb/>
and budgetary considerations "<lb/>
Bowsher has said that the extra<lb/>
ost of trieSott bailout is so sub<lb/>
stantial that a tax increase will be<lb/>
needed.<lb/>
Economists have said for some<lb/>
time that the rescue plan would<lb/>
cost more than the administration<lb/>
estimated.<lb/>
I Communications Majors:<lb/>
Positions available for summer employment at<lb/>
The East Carolinian<lb/>
Apply at the Publications Building<lb/>
It took Freud 38 years to understand it.<lb/>
You have one night.<lb/>
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<pb facs="00058208_0009"/><lb/>
t<lb/>
Sire lEast (SaroUnian<lb/>
Page<lb/>
Q<lb/>
Features<lb/>
tyr;7 10,1990<lb/>
Bulimia disrupts and<lb/>
dominates victims' lives<lb/>
By lami I ee Martin<lb/>
Special to The fast Carolinian<lb/>
! he victim is usually slim, young, attractive, and<lb/>
in most cases, female She is successful in her career<lb/>
and social life Shedocs however haveasecret, self<lb/>
destroying habit that stems from an emotional ill<lb/>
ness<lb/>
Mmosl e en dav she will eat enormous amounts<lb/>
of high calori food, sometimes as much ,)? ?0,0(X1<lb/>
valor us in one sitting Almost immediately after<lb/>
1 to avoid gaining weight, shew ill purge hcrsell<lb/>
through sell induced omiting and sometimes laxa<lb/>
tivc abuse rhis dark secret is shared b millions ol<lb/>
men and is known as bulimia<lb/>
Pam nervously twists the ring on her finger as<lb/>
this description is read to her She is thin and meti u<lb/>
loush ;i omed Her clothes are neal andshehasan<lb/>
urabout her that suggests confidence. 'Icanidentih<lb/>
? ith that description, 1 really can Pam said.<lb/>
Pam is a junior at Fast i. arolina and confesses<lb/>
penh to being bulimic She said I've never been<lb/>
'Mail 10 pounds overweight, which is just<lb/>
ugh tor friends to tease me unmercifully rhe<lb/>
how conscious 1 am about m weight, fhe<lb/>
 mv senior vear in high school 1 had an<lb/>
 md lost 10 pounds i ver both vvi i I<lb/>
 - : ?? that, 1 ro<lb/>
? an eatu ? ? '<lb/>
? . ? ? t. Food is to thei i i ' is I<lb/>
remembei ta parent<lb/>
- ? ?. bed and devouring m i I I I d<lb/>
?? ??? u ind guil t<lb/>
because I know I an eal all 1 want she said. "Food<lb/>
is .ill 1 win think about<lb/>
EvervtimePam feels the craving for food coming<lb/>
on, she feels guilty because she promised herself<lb/>
before that shecould quit rheguilt is soon forgotten<lb/>
w lien she buys large amounts ol sweets to binge on<lb/>
I sometimes make mysell a few bowls ol cereal<lb/>
and oat a few bagels smothered in ream v horse, she<lb/>
said I hen 1 11 eal a gallon ol icecream to satisfy my<lb/>
sweet tooth<lb/>
When Pam has eaten everything that she can<lb/>
possiblv hold she w ill go to the bathroom and pull<lb/>
her hair back She then turns the shower im so that<lb/>
her neighbors cannot hear and drinks a glass ol<lb/>
water Pam forces hersell to vomit until herstoma h<lb/>
is completely emptv, Sometimes 1 step on the scales<lb/>
to make sure 1 haven't gained any weigh! and that<lb/>
m stoma h is reallv emptv<lb/>
Phis scenario mav sound repulsive, but Pam<lb/>
goes through it as main as 20 times in one day. 1 ler<lb/>
compulsive beha ions the result of vearsol hinging<lb/>
and purging<lb/>
Psychiatrists are investigating bulimia's rela<lb/>
tion ? ther addi tions rhev hope to find a<lb/>
comm n fact r that will help them understand the<lb/>
; ordei Bulimia victims may lack the ability to<lb/>
ntro  ne, impulses, making it easv for them to<lb/>
ibuseh : r : thersubstan ? s<lb/>
in some bulimu<lb/>
eband eight or nine feet played to a small audience al the New Deli this weekend The show featured<lb/>
music oft the band's latest LP, Resolution " The band has attained a small following locally and receives<lb/>
playing time on ECUs radio station. WZMB<lb/>
EigJit or nine feet play at the Deli<lb/>
ertectii nism<lb/>
What ippi u-sti<lb/>
, ma .u tualK<lb/>
B) (ft I Parker<lb/>
Stall W ritei<lb/>
heard i Iwi I runchmg i e<lb/>
w In-n tin ?. I '? ? i<lb/>
1 timing around, thev tound a<lb/>
ii<lb/>
; i . ?  i<lb/>
?? ? for perfection and arei onstantly<lb/>
elves to othi i hev be-<lb/>
and intense and view lit md<lb/>
' ?<lb/>
? I ind then ? I I ;<lb/>
? ?  ml<lb/>
I . ? ? nts begai <lb/>
? ?? i d large amounts ol<lb/>
Pam had to si<lb/>
and purge habit I ft In<lb/>
i hide from m parei<lb/>
or Pam, a t pical bi i<lb/>
e episode begins when she<lb/>
,i i ra ing for food i<lb/>
, . just van t wait to get h<lb/>
it I could eat<lb/>
tb eal ries so 1<lb/>
suspicious when<lb/>
od disappearing<lb/>
indulge her<lb/>
lv guiltv because I<lb/>
it now that I'm at<lb/>
?? i<lb/>
Mtl mia is .m eatn<lb/>
notcentei n in I' ?d Somepeopl<lb/>
?? in a sens in<lb/>
simpl - ? ? ' ' enter ai ind l<lb/>
food as ,i sell r.H'du ation or a<lb/>
i v<lb/>
 ? ? imes their main obsession and a<lb/>
?? ? ioi as well as comfort Pam can not<lb/>
substitute lor unful-<lb/>
filled ne<lb/>
i. oncentrate on anything except what<lb/>
See Bulimia, page 10<lb/>
I -<lb/>
Men in and 1 id I out ? -<lb/>
take their shot at bvii<lb/>
the annual New Musu -<lb/>
Austin though a hand name<lb/>
I idi t been dec id I i . I<lb/>
B the ! ouisuina I?? i '?? i<lb/>
pen irlv marked highw a signsand<lb/>
a vague road map had tl<lb/>
 . eral milesofh om seona rarelv<lb/>
traveled b.u kroad V hile - ro ?<lb/>
ing an early-style wtxxien bridge,<lb/>
Ian de ivied to pull over and re-<lb/>
think their course Atter settling<lb/>
onanewdirtx non,thedisgruntled<lb/>
fellows start d forth<lb/>
largi i nunk<lb/>
? am-<lb/>
lortv feel bi<lb/>
ur mm lei I<lb/>
ist Bo I a lo<lb/>
been plai<lb/>
audii ?<lb/>
from fate I<lb/>
measim 11<lb/>
Lexicon<lb/>
Mushroomin<lb/>
I Iconoclastic: A. chal-<lb/>
lenging cherished<lb/>
iels; B s lid com-<lb/>
puter Icon; percep-<lb/>
tion ol forms; D. hard as<lb/>
a rock<lb/>
2. Umbra: A. power<lb/>
surge; B c hicken part;<lb/>
C umbrella top; D<lb/>
shadow, dark spot<lb/>
3. Taiga: A sub in ti<lb/>
U irest; B healii g pi ml<lb/>
v ; Atri a; I agi s<lb/>
ter; 1) protei ti?<lb/>
covering<lb/>
; I ii hvcardia: A ih i:u<lb/>
 i isaur; B a dispos-<lb/>
diaper; rapid<lb/>
vat; D. emotional<lb/>
breakdown<lb/>
' alus: A. communica<lb/>
tion mode; B. ankle-<lb/>
? i me; C dirt in nose. I)<lb/>
censored satire<lb/>
6 1 isle: A strong knit-<lb/>
ted cotton; B type oi<lb/>
seasonal greenery; C<lb/>
long and slender; D.<lb/>
light flow<lb/>
7 I oess: A yellowish<lb/>
loam; B. famous scien-<lb/>
tists; C. hard tooth<lb/>
buildup; D. to acquiesce<lb/>
8 loam: A. Loess that is<lb/>
yellow; B organically<lb/>
rich soil, C. pro hard-<lb/>
ened foam, D. drapery,<lb/>
hung tapestry<lb/>
( Shunt: A. turn aside;<lb/>
B leg crutch, C. small<lb/>
boat, 1). full of juice<lb/>
ID. Vitiate: A. to con-<lb/>
taminate, spoil; B to<lb/>
revitalize; C. to nourish;<lb/>
D. to titillate<lb/>
 omp.lfd bjr n Tucker<lb/>
part of<lb/>
z ixophonist Bobby Watson demonstrates for I ast Carolina Univ<lb/>
preparing an ithpiece ree I W itson  v. jr luctinga<lb/>
? ? istern North Carolina Jaz2 Festival (Photo by Rk hard Davit<lb/>
: ? ? bridge missing,<lb/>
; in the ro k ireek<lb/>
?low Another eight<lb/>
mmented guitar-<lb/>
 'and we would have<lb/>
ng to a whole new<lb/>
j this strong cue<lb/>
men adopted that<lb/>
nt ter the name, and<lb/>
have been plaving under it since<lb/>
i kav, so I made that all up<lb/>
But the real name origin isn't all<lb/>
that ewitiniand thisbandisgoing<lb/>
to be prettv famous vine dav. so<lb/>
they'll need one<lb/>
Eight or nine feet appeared at<lb/>
the New Deli Friday night, and<lb/>
tin, and played to a smaller crowd than<lb/>
opected, c n ad? ring they've<lb/>
received good airplay in this area<lb/>
from WZMB. Audiencesizemade<lb/>
no difference in the performance<lb/>
though,and the band played with<lb/>
tull enthusiasm<lb/>
A bit of a problem resulted<lb/>
from tins however because the<lb/>
equipment was cranked up too<lb/>
loud I he sound was still crisp<lb/>
and clear, but this gave mam<lb/>
 heapskates the opportunity to not<lb/>
pa and listen fromoutside, since<lb/>
the songs could be heard from<lb/>
down the street. You reallv can't<lb/>
blame people for that, so if s some-<lb/>
thing bands should watch out tor.<lb/>
Such are the hazards of live music.<lb/>
Much of the music came from<lb/>
eight or nine toot's latest release.<lb/>
Resolution which was pro-<lb/>
duced by the band itself, and is<lb/>
sureh one of the better self pro-<lb/>
duced LP's 'Many a trat party<lb/>
helped pa for this album ex-<lb/>
plained drummer Ian Schreier.<lb/>
1 he album is a gtuxJ example<lb/>
ol what a band in the South oast<lb/>
ressive scene van do with<lb/>
studi nts the<lb/>
?. ? - I<lb/>
New- lun<lb/>
progr<lb/>
practice and originality One ot<lb/>
thestrongest nts, 'I augh W ithin<lb/>
You is probably the best repre-<lb/>
sentation ot the band s integral<lb/>
sound At times the vocals and<lb/>
guitars ol laylor and Esetgroth<lb/>
evokeaquahty like thatof Camper<lb/>
Van Beethoven, without the pur-<lb/>
posely off-tune instrumentation.<lb/>
Other outstanding cuts like "Re-<lb/>
volving Door" and "Another<lb/>
Night have a late '60's musical<lb/>
feel, and to risk comparison with<lb/>
another big-time band, not unlike<lb/>
the Smithereens.<lb/>
The band credits neither of<lb/>
these groups as influences, but oo<lb/>
profess to draw upon the old stan-<lb/>
dards I The Beatles, hmmv Page,<lb/>
Stewart Copeland and Pete<lb/>
Townsend, among others) as in-<lb/>
spiration.<lb/>
Most ot the music is easily<lb/>
high-geared and full of life, though<lb/>
some songs take the more mellow<lb/>
route ol Rescue which, though<lb/>
an artistic and quality song, proba-<lb/>
bly should be left out of a live<lb/>
show. This is especially true in<lb/>
smaller clubs where a majority of<lb/>
tans show up to dance to live<lb/>
music One might expect resis-<lb/>
tance to this idea from eight or<lb/>
nine feet, who are a bit put oft by<lb/>
the trend ot m many bands tump-<lb/>
ing on the tunk bandwagon<lb/>
driven bv the success oi groups<lb/>
like Red Hot Chili Peppers The<lb/>
band instead inters other avenues<lb/>
ot dance tunes, such as those of a<lb/>
country-western nature like "Lake<lb/>
Tahoe<lb/>
Perhaps the strongest aspects<lb/>
of eight or nine feet's music are its<lb/>
consistency (very tight and uni-<lb/>
fied )arwj the lyrical content, which<lb/>
are well de eloped tor a band only<lb/>
three yeai i gr "P<lb/>
needs is tohookuj vitequally<lb/>
see Eight, page ii<lb/>
Sitting on a Fence<lb/>
Sporadic ramblings of a crazed road trip warrior<lb/>
By John Tucker<lb/>
Assistant Features Editor<lb/>
Every college student at one<lb/>
time or another experiences what<lb/>
is known at first as "the road trip"<lb/>
but what can often be more appro-<lb/>
priately termed "the fiasco<lb/>
Now, a road trip is not some<lb/>
thing to be taken lightly. If you<lb/>
have the right attitude when you<lb/>
get out on the road, no matter how<lb/>
bad the trip turns out, something<lb/>
positive can be extracted<lb/>
After all, misery loves com-<lb/>
pany, and sometimes it can he fun<lb/>
to be in the company ot misery.<lb/>
Recently, the opportunity to<lb/>
get out of Gunkvilfe and see the<lb/>
world was thrust upon me bo-<lb/>
ran4 of mv large amount of good<lb/>
fortune. Maybe you can relate to<lb/>
what 1 went through.<lb/>
The first element of a road trip<lb/>
are the basic ingredients. These<lb/>
ingredients are usually, a sturdy<lb/>
car ia Chevette), a sturdy driver<lb/>
(or two), sturdy compatriots<lb/>
(friendsof misery), beer (optional),<lb/>
and of course.a proposed destina-<lb/>
tion (unknown).<lb/>
.t to say these are the inl<lb/>
things you need, other things, like<lb/>
money, help. But if vou have these<lb/>
basics, you're good to go.<lb/>
Most college road trips start<lb/>
when you least expect them. Spon-<lb/>
taneity is a key to a reckless road<lb/>
trip with top-drawer results.<lb/>
Usually it's the one idiot that s<lb/>
good at talking people into some<lb/>
thing that can set the trip off with<lb/>
"the plan<lb/>
The plan is usually developed,<lb/>
expressed and catalyzed in the<lb/>
time span of a few brief seconds.<lb/>
1 et's say Wes is our compatriot<lb/>
catalyst and the plan is something<lb/>
to this effect: Hey, let's go to<lb/>
Raleigh and see this band that my<lb/>
friend told me was good<lb/>
Usually that's enough to con-<lb/>
jure up a motley crew oi slobber-<lb/>
ing buffoons to enjoy each others<lb/>
compatriotism. A few beers in the<lb/>
gut sometimes helps though.<lb/>
The next step is acquiring a<lb/>
vehicle for the fateful journey. This<lb/>
process relies on who has the big-<lb/>
gest junk car and the credit card<lb/>
for gas with it.<lb/>
Lef'ssay frank istheonewho<lb/>
owns the Chevette and although<lb/>
he doesn't have a gas credit card<lb/>
his buddy Dave does. Dave, oi<lb/>
course is the only one besides<lb/>
yourself who can drive because<lb/>
he hasn't gotten a DUl yet.<lb/>
there is only one last charac-<lb/>
ter in the crew. His name is Guy<lb/>
and his trademark is complain-<lb/>
ing. He's the one that sleeps most<lb/>
oi the trip and only awakens to<lb/>
whine when something goes<lb/>
wrong. It's always great to havea<lb/>
Guy on the trip because everyone<lb/>
can heap their frustration on him<lb/>
when things realty get bad.<lb/>
The brainchild Wes is the one,<lb/>
naturally, that has no money at all.<lb/>
He's the same one that always<lb/>
comes up with the great ideaslike,<lb/>
"let's eat or "let's go spend five<lb/>
bucks to see this band Of course,<lb/>
the most common thing he says is,<lb/>
spot me until we get back to<lb/>
Gunkville<lb/>
Dave, because he is driving, is<lb/>
the most stressed out of the crew.<lb/>
Everyone else iscuttingup, throw-<lb/>
ing paper or whatever, and Dave<lb/>
is stuck behind the wheel in an<lb/>
apprehensive stupor, yelling at<lb/>
who ever is acting like the biggest<lb/>
idiot at the time.<lb/>
Now that we've established<lb/>
the characters of this melodrama,<lb/>
lefs come up with some of the<lb/>
various scenarios that occur.<lb/>
My favorite one is, after get-<lb/>
ting lost and ending up in some<lb/>
backwoods place called Hogtown,<lb/>
you finally arrive at your destina-<lb/>
tion to find that the reason why<lb/>
you made the road trip no longer<lb/>
exists.<lb/>
This is followed closely by the<lb/>
realization that you can not locate<lb/>
the person you were supposed to<lb/>
stay with, or you're out in the cold<lb/>
becauseyoudidn't haveanywhere<lb/>
to stay m the first place.<lb/>
If you are lucky and you do<lb/>
have a place to stay, you always<lb/>
have to contend with the couch,<lb/>
pillow and blanket fight. Guy<lb/>
usually vvins this contest because<lb/>
if he doesn't get a couch, then he<lb/>
cries all night and nobody sleeps.<lb/>
Another fight that is always<lb/>
good for a little action is the fight<lb/>
tor the coveted front seat. "Shot-<lb/>
gun" is alwavs called normally,<lb/>
but on road trips it seems like it is<lb/>
every man for himself.<lb/>
Clothes are another item that<lb/>
almost always become a problem<lb/>
on the trip. Mostof the time no one<lb/>
brings enough clothes to last the<lb/>
whole trip. If you are lucky, and<lb/>
do happen to prepare, often you<lb/>
end up wearing the same clothes<lb/>
all weekend anyway because<lb/>
everyone else has yours on.<lb/>
Money seems like a perpetual<lb/>
problem. There's always those<lb/>
special expenditures mat pop up<lb/>
out of nowhere thafnoone likes to<lb/>
pick up. Flat tires are a good ex-<lb/>
ample of a problem that not only<lb/>
makes arrival slightly later than<lb/>
expected,but also takes a dent out<lb/>
off the wallet<lb/>
Overall though, whatever<lb/>
happens, humor abounds<lb/>
throughout the trip. The unusual<lb/>
circumstances you arecontinualJy<lb/>
forced to cope with make what-<lb/>
ever happens an always Interest'<lb/>
See Tripr page 10<lb/>
<pb facs="00058208_0010"/><lb/>
10 The last Carolinian April 10, 1990<lb/>
I<lb/>
Bulimia<lb/>
Continued from page 9<lb/>
Bits and Pieces<lb/>
Trump reveals newest venture<lb/>
Taj Mahal opened with a big bang<lb/>
Donald Trump's $1 billion Taj Mahal opened its d(ors to the<lb/>
gambling public Friday night in Atlantic Citv. Trump, with the help ot<lb/>
a 40 fool interactive a ideo genie, cut the 500-foot ribbon that hangs from<lb/>
the hotel tower by exploding a 40-foot inflatable bow at its center.<lb/>
Trump toured the Taj Ihursdav. giving interviews and inspecting his<lb/>
newest v enture<lb/>
Celebrity look-alikes compete<lb/>
for job openings at theme park<lb/>
Fourteen celebrity look-alikes will be flown to Orlando, Fla next<lb/>
uesday to audition tor i??bs at the Universal Studios Florida theme<lb/>
p.irk Winners get the job of walking around the site to have their<lb/>
pictures taken by visitors. Someot the expected look-alikes: Mr T, Clint<lb/>
Fastwood, Marilyn Monroe, Pee Wee Herman and lerrv I ewis.<lb/>
MTV looks for comical people<lb/>
1 I needs funny tolks tor ' 1 IV's i.iit 1 lour Comedy I lour<lb/>
I hev .ire looking tor oft be.it amateur films tor the show. Films can be<lb/>
between Ml seconds and five minutes. Send name, address and phone<lb/>
to MTV's 1 lalt I lourComedy! lour 1775Broadway, I (Mb Floor,New<lb/>
vi rk. New York, 10019. Deadline May 1<lb/>
General Motors tops Fortune 500<lb/>
rin ?'??; '500 and - I) lists are out. rhis vear, both magii<lb/>
zincs i - ? ? neral Motors as the nation's largest public company,<lb/>
based - ies GM's number one sales position is based<lb/>
revenm - ?! nearU $127 billion Ot companies in the u-y V. Bristol<lb/>
K eis Siuibb made the biggest jump from 73 to 50; Philip Morns from<lb/>
in II on Vta ol t )maha from lit h<lb/>
Short skirts to be trend in the fall<lb/>
Short skirts and winter shorts are coming on strong tor fall Both<lb/>
i. ah in Klein and Charlotte eu ille proclaimed short stutf to be "in"<lb/>
at their uesdav shows in New ork both designers want you to go<lb/>
mad for colorful plaids and twei ds. olors include bark brow n, ripe<lb/>
plum, leal green, creamy sand or stone gray.<lb/>
Office becomes a mating ground<lb/>
1 he workplace is becoming the new meeting jnd mating ground.<lb/>
1 or singles, the office may be the safest place to make friends. For dual<lb/>
career couples, it may be the easiest, but experts caution to beware ol<lb/>
narrow networks Explore other meeting places as well. Friendships<lb/>
with thebosscan be seen as manipulative and employeescan simply be<lb/>
expecting too much from work<lb/>
Lambada films said to be 'el stinko'<lb/>
I he an hbishop ol Guatemala wants authorities to ban L.smade<lb/>
movies ambada and I ambada: The Forbidden Dance Monsignor<lb/>
Pro poi IVnadosdel Barrio say sthehip-grindingdanceis"in very bad<lb/>
? ? Mam I S. filmcritics, while not calling tor a ban, agree with the<lb/>
an hbishop that the mo i? s are el stinko.<lb/>
Programs help kids resist pressure<lb/>
Pre1 ?? ? programs in schools help fifth and sixth graders resist<lb/>
peer pressure to use alcohol In a Michigan survey ot 1,500 kids, about<lb/>
one in In e admitted sneaking alcohol These voung drinkers partici-<lb/>
pated in tour sessions teaching how to resist peer pressure. By eighth<lb/>
gt ide they were drinking halt as much as early-experimenters not in<lb/>
the program<lb/>
Government prints STD pamphlet<lb/>
A pamphlet on the use ol condoms to prevent AIDS and other<lb/>
sexualtv transmitted diseases is aboul to reach government printing<lb/>
presses, rhiscomi itwoy irsa!ti i the Food and Drug Administration<lb/>
requested it. In a f ? ?veck?  0 copies of the pamphlet should be<lb/>
available through the the Centers for Disease Control's Allt; Informa-<lb/>
tion c learinghousc and at clinics.<lb/>
Book helps people identify liars<lb/>
' ou look great' and "the check's in the mail M i lirsh Goldberg<lb/>
exposes fomi ;reat fakes in The Book ot 1 ies. Schemes. Scams, lakes<lb/>
and Frauds "hat Havehanged the Course of 1 listory and Affet tOur<lb/>
Dailv Lives, (Morrow, $15.95) He says you can easily spot a liar. The<lb/>
pupils grow larger and the voice gets higher. It you want to lie safely,<lb/>
w in a seal in Congress<lb/>
French 'abortion pill' to be tested<lb/>
A movement to test the I rench "abortion pill" at three San Fran-<lb/>
cisco hospitals could lead to the drug being available in the nation tor<lb/>
the firs! time. A proposal before the county Board of Supervisors asks<lb/>
the state to approve and pay for testing the pill, called RU 486. The study<lb/>
would involve 200 women. Analysts say the use of RU 486 will open<lb/>
doors tor its entry into the U.S. market.<lb/>
? BpjrriaM l'?0. I s TOI Apple Coll?n? Information Network.<lb/>
eat next I his is common for bu-<lb/>
limics Food is a drug that they are<lb/>
addicyted to.<lb/>
Severely ill bulimics may even<lb/>
ste.il monev tc finance their habit,<lb/>
bulimics have been caught steal-<lb/>
ing from department stores, tak-<lb/>
ing items they o not need just to<lb/>
sell to get monev tor food.<lb/>
"I feel like a drug addict be-<lb/>
cause 1 am so dependent on food<lb/>
Pam said. "People just don't be-<lb/>
lieve that someone can be addicted<lb/>
to food and that makes it hard to<lb/>
get help<lb/>
bulimics, like anorexics, are<lb/>
trapped in an unending cvcle.<lb/>
bulimics begin their hinging and<lb/>
purging to avoid gaming weight,<lb/>
but some where along the way their<lb/>
concern with weight becomes ir-<lb/>
relevant At this point the bulimic<lb/>
is hooked on the tranquilizing<lb/>
effects of purging. Most eventu-<lb/>
ally learn to vomit bv reflex ac-<lb/>
tion, as though it were natural.<lb/>
VV h() beci mes bulimic? Some-<lb/>
where between SO percent and 95<lb/>
percent ol bulimics are women,<lb/>
although there are men with the<lb/>
disorder. Women can be affected<lb/>
at any age, from the teens well mto<lb/>
middle age White, middle-class<lb/>
women and adolescents with a<lb/>
strong orientation toward aca<lb/>
demic a hievement and who lead<lb/>
ti.ntitu-n.il lifestyles are the most<lb/>
?? ulnei ible to bulimia<lb/>
Mi ?st are ver intelligent and<lb/>
altrai tive N el traditionally the<lb/>
!i.r, v low sell t Mcm. a desire for<lb/>
perfection a sense ol loneliness<lb/>
and isolation and an obsession<lb/>
with food as it relates to body<lb/>
weigh! Pam said, 1 feel iike I'm<lb/>
split into two different people, the<lb/>
one w ho is competent in the out<lb/>
side world and the one who only<lb/>
wants to satisfy her urge to binge<lb/>
Anorexia nervosa and bulimia<lb/>
are similar in some way s. Beth ol<lb/>
their i timsare in the self-starva-<lb/>
tion syndrome, both lack self-es-<lb/>
teem, both ha e a paralyzing sense<lb/>
ot ineffectiveness,both havea dis<lb/>
totted body image, and both have<lb/>
an obsession with food. Anorex-<lb/>
ics and bulimics are likely to have<lb/>
been brought up in middle-class,<lb/>
upwardly mobile families when'<lb/>
their mothers are over-involved<lb/>
in their lives. I heir fathers seem to<lb/>
be preoccupied with work out-<lb/>
side ot the home. Usually both<lb/>
anorexics and bulimics were<lb/>
known as good children eager<lb/>
to please those around them and<lb/>
to gam approval<lb/>
1 here are. however, signifi-<lb/>
cant differences between the two<lb/>
disorders. 1 he apathy and irnta-<lb/>
bility that contribute to the ano-<lb/>
rexics tirm stance in therapy is not<lb/>
Eight<lb/>
Continued from page 9<lb/>
, reativc producer and they'll go<lb/>
all sorts ol places, I lopefully, they<lb/>
 i'ii! bei ome so big that they<lb/>
forsake their first love, cross dress<lb/>
ine.<lb/>
Trip<lb/>
present in bulimw s Anorexics are<lb/>
generally younger than bulimics,<lb/>
tar less sot ially i ompetent, mm h<lb/>
more isolated, and much more<lb/>
dependent on family<lb/>
While tx 'tli are obsessed with<lb/>
foeJ, tor anorexics eating binges<lb/>
are infrequent occuranccs The<lb/>
anorexic is near starvation most of<lb/>
the time. In moments ol stress<lb/>
bulimics turn to food instead ot<lb/>
away from it as anorexics do. A<lb/>
bulimic's life may bo affected by<lb/>
her disorder, but her lite is not<lb/>
necessarily in danger, as i often<lb/>
the case with anorexic s.<lb/>
"I finally admitted my prob<lb/>
lem ti mv parents and they have<lb/>
arranged tor me to sec a psy hia<lb/>
trist Pam said "I'm seared, but I<lb/>
know 1 need help because 1 can't<lb/>
beat this thing, alone<lb/>
Pam has taken the Step she<lb/>
needed to reach recovery M<lb/>
though some people do nol take<lb/>
an addiction to food seriously,<lb/>
professionals are realizing thai<lb/>
eating disorders are becoming<lb/>
more common in young women,<lb/>
especially ol college age<lb/>
It is s,ul to think that so iet<lb/>
has placed such emphasis on<lb/>
weight and appearam e thai<lb/>
women, can n t K' happy just hi ing<lb/>
themsel es Pam nt e w ,i a<lb/>
dancer and dreamed ol pursuing<lb/>
a dan ing i areer<lb/>
"Now, 1 can't fhinI il<lb/>
Sharky's<lb/>
of Greenville<lb/>
located b Sports Pad on 5th Strict<lb/>
Enter through Alk<lb/>
Thurs.<lb/>
Import Night<lb/>
The Lighter Side<lb/>
Pigeon droppings save church<lb/>
HARM ORD, Conn. (API Trinity Episcopal Church is hawking<lb/>
"Sign of the Pove" fertilizer the legacv of pigeons that have lived in<lb/>
the church bell tower for 80 years ? to help pay for fixing its organ.<lb/>
Aboul the time they got hit with a $110,000 repair bill last fall,<lb/>
church officials discovered 1,200 pounds of bird droppings when they<lb/>
went to clean the 90 toot boll lower.<lb/>
The Rev. William J Eakins, the church rector,saw the droppings as<lb/>
a sort of manna from heaven<lb/>
When state agricultural tests confirmed the droppings were rich in<lb/>
organic matter and nitrogen, Eakins suggested selling them in 3-pound<lb/>
bags for $3 each to help raise the $35,000 m repair costs not covered bv<lb/>
contributions.<lb/>
The assistant rector, the Rev 1 tope H. Adams, is handling market<lb/>
mg She named the product "Sign of the Dove" and gave it a plug in<lb/>
Sunday's church bulletin.<lb/>
"Our house brand fertilizer has been produced over the years by<lb/>
the pigeons who have called the tower home she wrote.<lb/>
Adams says about 82 bags have been sold since the fertilizer was<lb/>
offered tor sale a few weeks ago<lb/>
" I he I ord uorks m mysterious ways<lb/>
The East<lb/>
Carolinian<lb/>
would like to<lb/>
help in the<lb/>
recycling efforts<lb/>
by encouraging<lb/>
its readers to<lb/>
recycle this<lb/>
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w<lb/>
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2 For<lb/>
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imaginan iibjei t "I in t evei<lb/>
i ? mi 'mber the last time I lai ? I<lb/>
Shark 's is a private club tor members and<lb/>
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"We Free Pour All Our Drinks"<lb/>
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Not valid with any other otter<lb/>
Famous brand shoes at affordable prices I<lb/>
I THERE ARE TWO SIDES TO<lb/>
BECOMING A NURSE IN THE ARMY.<lb/>
And they're both repre-<lb/>
sented by the insignia you w? ?:<lb/>
as a member ol the Army N irsy<lb/>
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n. ir tho prum Ihe gold bar - -<lb/>
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earning a BSN, write: Army Nurse Opportunities, P.O Box<lb/>
Clifton, N 07015<lb/>
ARMY NURSE CORPS. BE ALL YOU CAM BE.<lb/>
ii v u re<lb/>
i i i<lb/>
continued from page l<lb/>
ing event.<lb/>
It things go well, it's some-<lb/>
thing new and exciting. It things<lb/>
go badly, it's something new and<lb/>
exciting, and you feel that much<lb/>
better when you do finally get to<lb/>
"home sweat home<lb/>
With Easter coming up quite<lb/>
a few of us will be road-tripping<lb/>
this weekend. No matter how bad<lb/>
it goes, try to enjoy it. Things could<lb/>
be worse you know, you could be<lb/>
dead.<lb/>
LOW SUPERSAVER FARES<lb/>
ARE BLOOMING <lb/>
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ITG saves you money this spring with these low priced roundtrip airfares<lb/>
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TRAVEL CENTER<lb/>
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Saturday &amp;<lb/>
Sunday<lb/>
T<lb/>
<pb facs="00058208_0011"/><lb/>
uJiye i?agt (garolftuan<lb/>
Vae U<lb/>
Sports<lb/>
April 10,1990<lb/>
Irates fall short in Ultimax<lb/>
By John Tucker<lb/>
Assistant Features I dilor<lb/>
This past weekend the ECU<lb/>
frisbee club hosted, nine mens<lb/>
teams and four womens teams in<lb/>
I lhmax XVI, a tournament spon-<lb/>
sored each semester by the club<lb/>
! tie men S team, the Irates.<lb/>
came away from play on Sunday<lb/>
disappointed witha loss suffered<lb/>
m the semifinal game at tin' hands<lb/>
ol he Raleigh based club team<lb/>
ot 1 ire.<lb/>
1 eryone knows we have the<lb/>
talent to win a tournament but<lb/>
?vi- again, we came up shirt<lb/>
?.iid teamaptam C ?irv I hirlov<lb/>
he match lasted almost two<lb/>
rs before the Irate team lost<lb/>
 ere 19-18 and was elinu<lb/>
? i from play in the finals after<lb/>
 undefeated Saturday<lb/>
indeasih winning their first game<lb/>
igainsl William and Marv 1 3-hon<lb/>
? i.n<lb/>
! he game was really excit-<lb/>
?  I know it was close, rheguys<lb/>
aved well and 1 thought<lb/>
leserved to w in, said i <lb/>
rudenl Samantha rhompson.<lb/>
Irates lumped out to an<lb/>
irh lead bv capatilizingon some<lb/>
errors and establishing a 5-2 lead<lb/>
The lead changed quickly as the<lb/>
Raleigh team scored five unan-<lb/>
swered points and eventually took<lb/>
the halt at l 7.<lb/>
I he points directly alter the<lb/>
halt saw another surge bv the Ring<lb/>
ot 1 ue team as the team increased<lb/>
their lead before the Irate team<lb/>
could make a comeback and tie<lb/>
the game at 1.<lb/>
We made a strong comeback<lb/>
from a 15-11 deficit against Ring,<lb/>
but itcamedown toone point, and<lb/>
we just couldn't put it together<lb/>
said veteran player Dave Kelly.<lb/>
1 he two teams went point tor<lb/>
point and eventually the score was<lb/>
tied at Is In a gutsy defensive<lb/>
play Irate rookie Chuch Pant<lb/>
for? ed a turnover in the endone<lb/>
on the final point and gave the<lb/>
Irates a chance to march the tns-<lb/>
bee up the field and score to win<lb/>
the game<lb/>
On the tirst pass ot the drive<lb/>
however, the team turned the fris-<lb/>
bee over Ring ol lire players<lb/>
quickh capatilized on the mistake<lb/>
and ended the game allow me, the<lb/>
team to advance to the finals.<lb/>
Although the team did lose<lb/>
the close game players emerged<lb/>
with a positive outlook, "every<lb/>
time we lose it just makes us<lb/>
hungrier for a tournament win,<lb/>
we've got plenty of tournament<lb/>
play vet to see on the college cir-<lb/>
cuit, and evervtime we play we<lb/>
make a stronger showing Hurley<lb/>
said.<lb/>
The championship game saw<lb/>
Ring of Fire matched up against<lb/>
UNC-Wilmington. The game<lb/>
ended up being no contest, as the<lb/>
tired Ring of Fire team had only<lb/>
two substitutes and could not<lb/>
match the rested playofaWilming<lb/>
ton team that advanced easily to<lb/>
the finals due to team depth.<lb/>
I he game final game of the<lb/>
tournament ended with UNC-W<lb/>
easily clinching the match and the<lb/>
tournament with a decisive!7-4<lb/>
victory.<lb/>
The womens team, the He-<lb/>
lios, also faired well in their last<lb/>
tournament ol this season. The<lb/>
team placed second out of four<lb/>
trams and also managed to win<lb/>
the coveted "party trophy<lb/>
The Irates will be traveling to<lb/>
 ilmingtonthis omingweekend<lb/>
to play intheNinth Annual Faster<lb/>
Estravaganga that will play host<lb/>
to as many as 2 teams<lb/>
. - , ? - -w- ?<lb/>
The frisbee club sponsored Ultimax XVI this past weekend with 13 teams competing t<lb/>
region Above. Irate Lee Walstongoes ?horizontal in an ettort to prevent a turnover a<lb/>
Melvin looks on from the sideline (Photo by J.D. Whitmire ? ECU Photo Lab)<lb/>
rom the At<lb/>
s team me<lb/>
antic Coast<lb/>
mber David<lb/>
IRS to sponsor golf classic<lb/>
Langdon pitches ECU past UNC-W<lb/>
By Frank Roves<lb/>
Stjtt Writer<lb/>
I he ECl baseball team im-<lb/>
proved Us overall record to - ?<lb/>
bj defeating the UNC-Wilming-<lb/>
t n Seahawks 5-2 Sunda night at<lb/>
 mington<lb/>
ECU'S starting pitcher ! im<lb/>
Langdon (6-1, 1.85 IRA this sea-<lb/>
- n baffled Wilmington with a<lb/>
raft eight-hit complete ;ame.<lb/>
? ;don pitched nine innings<lb/>
d two runs on six hits. He<lb/>
and staff, l H erton said<lb/>
The Pirates came out with the<lb/>
earlv lead when ohn Adamsl .360,<lb/>
23 RBI) and Iommv Eason (.376,<lb/>
11 HR) scored in the tirst inning.<lb/>
E I scored again in the sixth<lb/>
inning when shortstop Corey<lb/>
Short i J30,21 RBI) smashed a solo<lb/>
homerun. Short's dinger was his<lb/>
fourth ot the season. Alter six<lb/>
innin<lb/>
i U led the came 4-0.<lb/>
'alsoianned Tour while walkii<lb/>
? ur Langdon'scompletegameis<lb/>
his third of the season<lb/>
1 lead coach iaryOverton was<lb/>
 pleased with the victor) lo<lb/>
win two out ol three games on the<lb/>
: was very pleasing to our team<lb/>
V ilmington s starting hurler,<lb/>
David Morrison was shelled tor<lb/>
five hits and three runs He also<lb/>
gave iy three walks while tan-<lb/>
ning three. With the loss Morn-<lb/>
son dropped his pitching record<lb/>
to 1 ; on the season<lb/>
I he Seahawks brought in ler-<lb/>
ome 1 hint to finish the last three<lb/>
innings. 1 hint gave up one run on<lb/>
one hit. He also walked a batter<lb/>
while fanning one.<lb/>
The Pirate offense was led bv<lb/>
Kevin Riggs, Fason and Short with<lb/>
two hits each in the contest.<lb/>
Wilmington had six different bat-<lb/>
ters to get a hit as well.<lb/>
UNC-Wilmington scored its<lb/>
two runs in the last inning when<lb/>
two batters reached home on<lb/>
fielder choices. The Seahawks<lb/>
could not score again, making the<lb/>
final score 5-2 in favor of ECU.<lb/>
The Pirate win put them in<lb/>
first place in the Colonial Athletic"<lb/>
Association with a 4-1 record. The<lb/>
Seahawk loss gave them a 17-15<lb/>
overall record, 2-3 in the CAA.<lb/>
The next game for ECU will<lb/>
be on the road against N.C. State<lb/>
in Raleigh this afternoon at 3 p.m.<lb/>
By Jannette Roth<lb/>
IRS<lb/>
The spring intramural 'ports<lb/>
schedule rounds out its registra-<lb/>
tion dead lines today with signups<lb/>
available for the golf classic, fris-<lb/>
bee golf competition and a beach<lb/>
volleyball tournament.<lb/>
The golf classic will be held at<lb/>
the Indian Trails Country Club<lb/>
April 17 and 18. Divisions are<lb/>
designed for all faculty, staff and<lb/>
students with green tees set a t$6.00<lb/>
for the dav. Frisbee discers are<lb/>
encouraged to register for the<lb/>
annual disc golf tournament to be<lb/>
held April 11 and 12, 3 p.muntil.<lb/>
The spxrt offers experienced as<lb/>
well as inexperienced discers the<lb/>
opportunity to challenge them-<lb/>
selves, enjoy1 the outdoors and<lb/>
practice their tossing skills on one<lb/>
of the only frisbee disc courses on<lb/>
the east coast. ECU'S course is<lb/>
located adjacent to the Lady Pi-<lb/>
rate Softball diamond and offers<lb/>
some very challenging holes of<lb/>
play throughout the wooded area.<lb/>
Pick up a disc with your ECU<lb/>
identification in the Recreational<lb/>
Services Equipment Room located<lb/>
in 115 Memorial Gym. Registra-<lb/>
tion begins at 5:30 p.m. in Biology<lb/>
103.<lb/>
The newest activity on the IRS<lb/>
schedule involves the sun and<lb/>
sand of summer as Recreational<lb/>
Services plays h st t an end of the<lb/>
ycarbeach volleyball tournament.<lb/>
Action takes place April 17, IS and<lb/>
19onthe olli fe Hill courts. Men's<lb/>
and women sdi isions have been<lb/>
developed tor four-person teams<lb/>
interested in tast paced volleyball<lb/>
action and fast tanning. Registra-<lb/>
tion tor the beach tourney takes<lb/>
See IRS, page 12<lb/>
Track team splits, finishes high in meets<lb/>
Bv Chip Kline<lb/>
Staff Writer<lb/>
1 he ECU men's and women's<lb/>
"i.k teams ran away with some<lb/>
in ; rcssive finishes over the week-<lb/>
? ? i Phe women's team traveled<lb/>
I N Wilmington, while the<lb/>
n i n's team split up one group<lb/>
iveling to lempe. A tor the<lb/>
Vngal I rack Classic and the<lb/>
- to the Colonial Relays at the<lb/>
i ge of William and Mary in<lb/>
A llliamsburg, 'a<lb/>
Vanessa Smith led the 1 <lb/>
tracksters as she took first in the<lb/>
meter with a time of 10.9 sec-<lb/>
onds. I he 4X100 relay team of<lb/>
Smith, Cheryl 1 lopkins, Chandra<lb/>
 ooper and Danita Roseboro<lb/>
captured tirst place with a time ol<lb/>
47.5seconds. rhe4X100"B" team<lb/>
of 1 iane lacobs, Sherry 1 lawkins,<lb/>
lhaha Persons and lev Dorsey<lb/>
1 ii soi end w itha tmieot 50 06<lb/>
soi onds.<lb/>
In the Sun Vngel 1 rack Clas-<lb/>
sic, the 4X400 meter relay teamot<lb/>
Brian Irving, William Davis, Fred<lb/>
Owens andi y Brooks raced to<lb/>
a fifth place finish with a time of<lb/>
3:09.30, the team's fastest time ot<lb/>
the outdoor season.<lb/>
The 4X200-meter relay team<lb/>
of Damon DeSue, Davis, Owens<lb/>
and Brooks finished in third place<lb/>
with a time of 1:22.62.The4X100-<lb/>
meter relay team ol lames Parker,<lb/>
Irv in. Ike Robinson and Davis<lb/>
finished fourth with a time of 40.29<lb/>
seconds<lb/>
At the Colonial Relays, the<lb/>
Pirates' 4X200-meter relay team<lb/>
of Johnson, Yemen, McC.ill and<lb/>
fackson finished third with a time<lb/>
of 1:27.22. The 4400-meter relay<lb/>
team of McGill. Wright, Jeff Shu-<lb/>
makeand Udon Cheek finished in<lb/>
fifth place with a time of 3:1?.12.<lb/>
Brian Williams finished fifth in<lb/>
the 110-meter hurdles.<lb/>
The men's team will travel to<lb/>
1 larrisonburg, Va next weekend<lb/>
to compete in the Colonial Ath-<lb/>
letic Association Championship<lb/>
meet.<lb/>
ECU splits doubleheader<lb/>
with Seahawks, 3-7,12-3<lb/>
By Frank Reyes<lb/>
Staff Writer<lb/>
Darn, missed again!<lb/>
Grace Oh watches as the horseshoe she just threw falls short Oh and<lb/>
others were participants in a Sigma Alpha Iota sponsored event<lb/>
(Photo by J D Whitmire ? ECU Phofo Fab)<lb/>
Phe ECU baseball team split a<lb/>
doubleheader with the UNC-W<lb/>
Seahawks in a Colonial Athletic<lb/>
Association contest Saturday af-<lb/>
ternoon.<lb/>
The Seahawks took the first<lb/>
game 7-3, thanks to dingers by<lb/>
Wilmington's Joe Catalino and<lb/>
Trent Mongero.<lb/>
The Pirates scored first in the<lb/>
third inning when John Riggs<lb/>
clobbered his sixth homerun of<lb/>
the season, giving ECU the early<lb/>
lead 1-0.<lb/>
"Riggs has really developed<lb/>
this year said head coach Gary<lb/>
Overton. "He has learned to hit<lb/>
with power<lb/>
But the Seahawks scored a run<lb/>
when Catalino smashed a solo<lb/>
homer in the bottom of the third.<lb/>
Catahno's dinger was only his<lb/>
third of the season.<lb/>
The Pirates' starting hurler<lb/>
John White, who dropped his<lb/>
record to 5-1, pitched five and one-<lb/>
thirds innings. He gave up four<lb/>
runs on four hits. White also<lb/>
tanned two, while walking four.<lb/>
Hut Overton wasn't disappointed<lb/>
in White's pitching performance.<lb/>
"(White) did an exceptional<lb/>
job Overton said. "UNC-<lb/>
Wilmington just had some timely<lb/>
hits<lb/>
The Seahawks scored six runs<lb/>
in the last inning, giving Wilming-<lb/>
ton the victory 7-3. ECU'S Bnen<lb/>
Berckman was tagged for three<lb/>
runs on three hits in only one-<lb/>
thirdsofan innings pitched. Over-<lb/>
ton also used Howard Whitfield<lb/>
and Owen Davis to pitch the last<lb/>
inning.<lb/>
Wilmington's Keith Jarman<lb/>
increased his record to 4-3 on the<lb/>
season with a complete game.<lb/>
Jarman pitched seven innings,<lb/>
allowing three runs on six hits. He<lb/>
was also credited with five strike-<lb/>
outs and four walks.<lb/>
The second game featured<lb/>
four Pirate homeruns as ECU<lb/>
punished the Seahawks 12-3.<lb/>
ECU'S Corey Short, Steve<lb/>
Godin, John Adams and Tommy<lb/>
Eason all belted homeruns in the<lb/>
contest. Eason's dinger was his<lb/>
11th of the season. The Pirates'<lb/>
starting hurler Jonathan Jenkins<lb/>
improved his record to 7-0 with a<lb/>
seven-hit pitching gem. He gave<lb/>
See Jenkins, page 12<lb/>
Freshman pitcher Jenny Parsons sparked tne Lady Pirates sottball<lb/>
team to a 2-0 victory of the Lady Tarheels this weekend Parsons'<lb/>
picked up her 10th win of the season. (Photo by J D Whitmire ? ECU<lb/>
Phofo Lab)<lb/>
Softball team upsets<lb/>
Lady Tarheels, 2-0<lb/>
By Lisa Spiridopoulos<lb/>
Staff Writer<lb/>
The Lady Pirate sottball team traveled to UNC-CH last weekend<lb/>
and vent5-0tocapturethechampionshipof the UNC Tournament, and<lb/>
increase its record to 24-7.<lb/>
The team defeated the seventh-ranked in the southeast region Lady<lb/>
Tarheels, 2-0 to come away with the final win.<lb/>
"We had the attitude of suceees said head coach Sue Manahan.<lb/>
'In different games, different people came through for us, especially<lb/>
offensively. We have just been playing as a team and that's really the<lb/>
key<lb/>
That team effort was shown in ECU'S final game of the tournament<lb/>
against UNC-CH. Freshman pitcher fenny Parsons racket up her 10th<lb/>
win of the season and held the Lady Tarheeb scoreless.<lb/>
"Jenny threw a very smart ball game, she u,b very solid for seven<lb/>
innings" said Manahan.<lb/>
Senior catcher Tracy kee anchored the Lady Pirates and noted,<lb/>
"UNC can be very intimidating, but fenny iust played unreal<lb/>
Both teams were held scoreless until the top of the sixth inning<lb/>
when ECU brought in two runs. Cindy Kilter singled and stole second.<lb/>
Chris Byrne was then walked, and Parsons banged in a double, bring-<lb/>
ing in both Ritter and Byrne.<lb/>
"It was truly a spectators game, with both team's making spectacu-<lb/>
lar plays<lb/>
Senior outfielder Kathy Schrage held a UNC-CH surge by making<lb/>
two diving catches tor ECU.<lb/>
Senior pitcher Jennifer Sagl said, We wanted to win really bad, and<lb/>
See Lady Pirates, page 12<lb/>
<pb facs="00058208_0012"/><lb/>
12 The East Carolinian, April 10, 1990<lb/>
??.<lb/>
1<lb/>
Sports Briefs<lb/>
Faldo captures second victory in golf<lb/>
1 iistory repeated itsolt Sunday in The Masters golf tournament, as<lb/>
Nick Faldo won for the second year in a row. He is the first repeat<lb/>
champion since lack Nicklaus won in 1966. Faldo trailed by lour shots<lb/>
with six holes to play Sunday, made three birdies, then paired the<lb/>
second play hole, alter Raymond Floyd hit his approach shot into a<lb/>
pond.<lb/>
Baseball season begins after long delay<lb/>
The cry of "Play Bail" was heard tor the first time this season in<lb/>
Boston's Fenway Park, Monday. Major I eague Baseball kicked off its<lb/>
delayed season in boston as tlc Rod Sox hosted the Detroit Tigers.<lb/>
There were 11 games plavcd Monday the latest opening day since l11.<lb/>
Monaghan victorious in LPGA tourney<lb/>
Kris Monaghan, whose best finish was fourth in six years on the<lb/>
1 P .A tour, fired 4 under par 67 Sunday for a two shot ictory in the<lb/>
Lady Pirates<lb/>
Continued from page 11<lb/>
we were confident we could do<lb/>
it<lb/>
Ritter's stolen base in the first<lb/>
inning, broke the ECU stolen base<lb/>
record! 16). Of her 17 attempts,<lb/>
Ritter has only been thrown out<lb/>
ting<lb/>
ECU'S first game on Saturday<lb/>
with UNC-VV was rained out, so<lb/>
the team faced Limestone College<lb/>
in the semi-finals Senior pitcher<lb/>
Renee Myers started out the game<lb/>
once. Byrnealsowasaddedtothe and held 1C. scoreless until the<lb/>
$300,000 Rod Robin Kyocera<lb/>
earned $45,000 lor the victory.<lb/>
Inamori Classic at Poway, Calif. She<lb/>
Search begins for an N.C. State coach<lb/>
North Carolina State University has begun its search tor a men's<lb/>
basketball coach to replace im Valvano. Mentioned as a possible<lb/>
sin i essor: East fennessee State coach I es Robinson, who played for the<lb/>
Wolfpack.<lb/>
Raiders' tickets sell fast in Oakland<lb/>
1 he Raiders h.n etwo years lolt on their lease with the I os Angeles<lb/>
Coliseum but tans in Oakland are already reserving tickets tor Un-<lb/>
learn s planned return 1 he Oakland Raiders, .is ol Saturday, have<lb/>
received cash reservations for27333 season tickets, with$3.7 million in<lb/>
cash deposits on hand<lb/>
U.S. soccer team defeats Iceland, 4-1<lb/>
With Eric W nalda scoring two goals the I .S. national soccer team<lb/>
turned in its best offensive performanc c since 1988, defeating Iceland 4-<lb/>
1 Sunday at Teuton. Mo. The United States is 4-5 in its 15-game series<lb/>
leading to this sumrru i s World 'p in Italy.<lb/>
Comiskey Park enters final season<lb/>
The Chicago White Sox opened their season Monday in Comiskey<lb/>
Park by hosting the Milwaukee brew ers It was the 80th and final season<lb/>
tor Comiskej bark before a w re king ball takes the final swings. Next<lb/>
season the White Sox will play in a now park built across the street<lb/>
Comiskey is theonlj park left whereCy Young pitched and babe Ruth<lb/>
hit a home run<lb/>
Oakland's activities focus on rings<lb/>
Oakland Athletics players received their 1989 World Series rings<lb/>
Monday. They were handed out in the Oakland Coliseum before the<lb/>
team played the Minnesota I wins. Also, Rickey Henderson and Dave<lb/>
Stewart received their postseason MVP trophies and there was a<lb/>
moment of silence and video tribute to Billy Martin, former A's man-<lb/>
ager who was killed in an auto accident in December.<lb/>
Dawson sets eyes on Mays' record<lb/>
As the1990seasor<lb/>
Cubs has stolen 284 b.<lb/>
record books with her 29th RBI of<lb/>
the season. Byrne is now batting<lb/>
.382 after the weekend.<lb/>
On the first day of tourna-<lb/>
ment games the l.ady Pirates<lb/>
scored 22 runs in three games and<lb/>
allowed just three to come in.<lb/>
Senior pitcher Tracve larkin<lb/>
earned her seventh win in ECU'S<lb/>
7-2 victory over UNC-Charlotte.<lb/>
Byrne led ECU at bat with 3 RBIS<lb/>
and a triple.<lb/>
In the team's second game of<lb/>
the day, Ritter went 3-3 and scored<lb/>
threeof the eight Lady Pirate runs.<lb/>
Sagl increased her record on the<lb/>
mound to 4-2.<lb/>
"11 felt good for me, "said Sagl.<lb/>
"1 hadn't been doing as well as 1<lb/>
should have been and I felt like<lb/>
things were back again<lb/>
In the third game the team<lb/>
i.cw the Lady Patriots of George<lb/>
Mason University and again<lb/>
chalked upa win. Parsons Struck-<lb/>
out six batters and Byrne smashed<lb/>
two-triples.<lb/>
"We did everything well<lb/>
said Kee. "Never before has the<lb/>
whole team hit like this, usually<lb/>
it's just a few individuals, but in<lb/>
the tournament everyone was hit-<lb/>
third inning when it tied the score<lb/>
at four.<lb/>
Larkin then came in the fourth<lb/>
inning to get her first save of the<lb/>
season. ECU scored three runs in<lb/>
the fourth to insure the victory.<lb/>
Laura Crowder led with a<lb/>
triple and Ritter then hit in Crow-<lb/>
der with a single. Bvrne then<lb/>
stepped up and hit her second<lb/>
home-run of the season. The I ad v<lb/>
Pirates added one more run in the<lb/>
fifth to make the final score 8-4<lb/>
and put them in the champion-<lb/>
ship against the lady Tarheels.<lb/>
"Our offense was a lot<lb/>
stronger than the teams weplaved,<lb/>
and we were able to score quite a<lb/>
few runs said Manahan.<lb/>
The Lady Pirates game sched-<lb/>
uled withUNC-W today has been<lb/>
canceled because the Lady<lb/>
Seahawks have only eight healthy<lb/>
players. The team's next game<lb/>
will be on Thursday at home<lb/>
against Nicholls State at 2 p.m.<lb/>
The Lady Pirates will face<lb/>
I IN' Cl lagainon Friday at home<lb/>
at 5 p.m. in a douWeheader<lb/>
"We've got a busy week, we'll<lb/>
t have tii see how werea t at tor<lb/>
a bic win<lb/>
aid Manahan<lb/>
IRS<lb/>
Continued from page 11<lb/>
egins, outfielder Andre Dawson of the Chicago<lb/>
?s in his career. I le is 16 short of becoming the<lb/>
second player in major league history to have 300 home runs and 3(Mi<lb/>
steaK in a career. 1 lall ol 1 amer Willie Mays was the first.<lb/>
place today in Room N-102 in the<lb/>
Biology building at 6 p.m.<lb/>
Now all participants have the<lb/>
chance to challenge their arch-<lb/>
rivals during this week of chal-<lb/>
lenge events. Challenge Week is<lb/>
open to all faculty, staff and stu-<lb/>
dents and gives you the chance to<lb/>
take on that individual or team<lb/>
you want to plav the most.<lb/>
Recreational Services pro-<lb/>
ages persons with interest in the<lb/>
action-packed water sport to come<lb/>
out. The clinic takes place at 7-30<lb/>
p.m. Please register today. An<lb/>
additional windsurfing clinic will<lb/>
be held April 19 beginning at 3<lb/>
p.m. Register prior to the clinic in<lb/>
113 Memorial Gym.<lb/>
The ROC can equip you tor<lb/>
your next outdoor adventure with<lb/>
an array ol outdoor supplies tor<lb/>
Sooners reinstate women's basketball<lb/>
University of Oklahoma officials, reacting to a public outcry and<lb/>
facing imminent legal action. I hursday reinstated the women's basket-<lb/>
ball program. The announcement by President Richard Van 1 lorn and<lb/>
athletic director Donnie Duncan came a day alter players' attorneys<lb/>
threatened to sue over the school's decision to drop the program<lb/>
Buck to announce CBS baseball<lb/>
lack Buck, longtime voice ol the St. Louis Cardinals was named the<lb/>
replacement for brent Musburger as the top baseball play-by-play<lb/>
announcer tor CBS Sports.<lb/>
Interim coach signs with Hornets<lb/>
Gene Littles, who took over as interim coach of the Charlotte<lb/>
1 lornets at midseason, was signed to a multiyear contract to continue<lb/>
coaching the team Littles, previously the team's director oi player<lb/>
vides you with the playing site, camping, canoeing, kayaking,<lb/>
the equipment and the officials. beach enjoying, and more.<lb/>
Interested personsteams must Experienced attendants can<lb/>
complete challenge week forms in help plan your next trip with e-<lb/>
UU-AMemonalC.vninasium.Anv tensive resources from outdoor<lb/>
sport can qualify for the weeks ac- areas across the state and the re-<lb/>
Hvittes. gion. Browse through adventure<lb/>
Interested adventurers have magazines to heighten your inter-<lb/>
the opportunity to learn windsurf- est and let the RiX do the rest,<lb/>
ing skills or enhance previously<lb/>
learned skills through the ROC<lb/>
(Recreational Outdoor Center)<lb/>
windsurfing clinic held today in<lb/>
MG 113. The ROC has all the<lb/>
equipment required and encour-<lb/>
personnel and a coaching<lb/>
Pick 1 lartcr was tired Ian<lb/>
assistant, was named interim coach when<lb/>
Umpire files sex discrimination suit<lb/>
1 ormer umpire Pam Postema filed a sex discrimination suit Thurs-<lb/>
day against Major 1 eague baseball with the U.S. Equal Employment<lb/>
Opportunity Commission, saying she was denied a job as a major<lb/>
league umpire because she is a woman. Major League Baseball hat! no<lb/>
comment Postema,36,umpired in the minor leagues beginning in 1477<lb/>
and was dismissed alter last season<lb/>
In the Locker<lb/>
Jenkins<lb/>
up only two runs and two walks.<lb/>
"1 think (fenkins) is one of the best<lb/>
that has been here (ECU) Over-<lb/>
ton said. With the score tied at two<lb/>
in the third inning, the Pirates<lb/>
bombed Wilmington's starting<lb/>
pitcher Bryant Balentine tor seven<lb/>
runs. Threeof those runs were un-<lb/>
earned.<lb/>
ECU'S Godin started the bar-<lb/>
rage with his third homer oi the<lb/>
year. Berry Narron followed with<lb/>
a single. Tommy Yarborough re-<lb/>
sponded with a double, scoring<lb/>
Narron. Kevin Riggs reached sec-<lb/>
ond base, thanks to a Seahawk<lb/>
error. John Adams continued the<lb/>
The Recreational Outdoor<lb/>
Center is open Monday and l'n-<lb/>
day 11:30 a.m1:30 p.m. and 3<lb/>
p.m6p.m.and Tuesday through<lb/>
Thursday 3 p.mo p.m.<lb/>
Continued from page 11<lb/>
8<lb/>
FEELING LOW?<lb/>
UNCERTAIN?<lb/>
NEED HELP?<lb/>
OrMCdW<lb/>
Why not come by the REAL Crisis Intervention Center: 312 E.<lb/>
10th Street; or call 758-HELP, For Free Confidential Counseling or<lb/>
Assistance.<lb/>
Our Volunteers and Staff are on duty 24 hrs. a day. year around,<lb/>
in order to assist you in virtually any problem area you might have<lb/>
Our longstanding goal has always been to preserve and enhance the<lb/>
quality of life for you and our community.<lb/>
Licensed And Accredited By The State of North Carolina<lb/>
inning with his first home-run of<lb/>
the season, giving ECU tholoadS-<lb/>
-<lb/>
The Pirates added tour runs<lb/>
in the fourth inning, which ex-<lb/>
tended the Pirate lead 12-2. Eight<lb/>
oi the nine Pirate starters had at<lb/>
least one hit ea h.<lb/>
ECU also bombed Seahawks'<lb/>
Pan 1 lerring for four runs, none ol<lb/>
those were earned. 1 lerring gave<lb/>
up three hits and three walks<lb/>
Wilmington was led by Perry<lb/>
Currin with three hits and two<lb/>
runs batted in. Mike Siopes col-<lb/>
lected two hits in the game.<lb/>
Read The East Carolinian<lb/>
Base stealing in the majors<lb/>
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<pb facs="00058208_0013"/>
</div></body></text></TEI>