<?xml version="1.0"?><TEI xmlns="http://www.tei-c.org/ns/1.0" xmlns:xsi="http://www.w3.org/2001/XMLSchema-instance" xsi:schemaLocation="http://www.tei-c.org/ns/1.0 http://digital.lib.ecu.edu/tei/xsd/tei_P5.xsd"><teiHeader><fileDesc><titleStmt><title></title><author></author><respStmt><resp>Text encoded by</resp><name>Digital Collections</name></respStmt></titleStmt><publicationStmt><distributor>East Carolina University. J. Y. Joyner Library</distributor><address><addrLine>Digital Collections</addrLine><addrLine>Joyner Library, East Carolina University</addrLine><addrLine>East Fifth Street, Greenville NC 27858-4353 USA</addrLine></address><date>2012</date></publicationStmt><sourceDesc><bibl></bibl></sourceDesc></fileDesc><encodingDesc><samplingDecl><p>All quotation marks retained as data.</p><p>All end-of-line hyphens have been removed, and the trailing part of a word has been joined to the preceding line.</p><p>All smart quotes have been converted into straight quotes.</p></samplingDecl><classDecl><taxonomy xml:id="LCSH"><bibl>Library of Congress Subject Headings</bibl></taxonomy></classDecl></encodingDesc><profileDesc><creation><date></date></creation><langUsage xml:lang="en-US"><language ident="en-US" usage="100">English</language></langUsage><textClass><keywords scheme="#LCSH"><list><item></item></list></keywords></textClass></profileDesc></teiHeader><text><body><div type="other">
<p rend="align(centerbold)">[This text is machine generated and may contain errors.]</p>
<pb facs="00058253_0001"/>
Bowling the Bearcats<lb/>
Cincinnati fails to keep up with the Jones's.<lb/>
4<lb/>
Phoenix restaurant<lb/>
Maria's rises from the ashes of Flamingo's.<lb/>
II<lb/>
&amp;hz iEaat Carolinian<lb/>
Serving the East Carolina campus community since 1925<lb/>
Voc.65 No.65<lb/>
Tuesday, December 3,1991<lb/>
Greenville, North Carolina<lb/>
Circulation 12,000<lb/>
8 Paqes<lb/>
Students camp out for tickets<lb/>
Vice Chancellor resigns post<lb/>
David Mclntire, vice chancellor of student affairs,<lb/>
resigned his position at the University of Missouri-Co-<lb/>
lumbia on Mondav, Nov. 18 due to the recent controversv<lb/>
J r J<lb/>
from sexual harassment allegations.<lb/>
Mclntire will stay at the university as a faculty mem-<lb/>
ber in the department of educational and counseling<lb/>
psychology. Because Mclntire has tenure, the university<lb/>
would have to perform a long review process to fire him.<lb/>
The charges of sexual harassment have followed<lb/>
Mclntire all the way from Appalachian State University.<lb/>
Asa resultofMclntire'sresignationtoa lower position, he<lb/>
will be receiving a $21,000 a year pay cut.<lb/>
Missing trophies recovered<lb/>
Duke University's 1991 basketball championship<lb/>
awards were discovered on the campusof the University<lb/>
of North Carolina-Chapel Hill.<lb/>
The awards were stolen from Duke's Cameron In-<lb/>
door Stadium on Nov. 15. The a wards taken were the 1991<lb/>
Atlantic Coast Conference regular season championship<lb/>
trophy, Mike Krzyzewski' s coach of the year trophy, a net<lb/>
cut down from the national championship game and a<lb/>
symbolic game ball.<lb/>
An anonymous caller informed UNC police that the<lb/>
missing trophies were located in front of the Old Well on<lb/>
the campus. Police recovered all the awards except the<lb/>
basketball.<lb/>
The anonymous caller later informed The Daily Tar<lb/>
tied that the theft was meant as a joke, but the joke had<lb/>
gone bad. The caller also said that the symbolic ball was<lb/>
also left with the trophies and that someone else must<lb/>
have taken the ball before police arrived.<lb/>
University inflates condom<lb/>
A two-stories-high, glow-in-the-dark condom floa ted<lb/>
above the library mall at the University of Wisconsin as<lb/>
part of the "Safe Sex Awareness Day" activities.<lb/>
Members of the Madison AIDS Support Network<lb/>
sponsored the giant condom as part of their effort to grab<lb/>
students, and faculty's attention and give them the mes-<lb/>
sage of how to protect themselves from AIDS.<lb/>
The giant condom was on loan from the manufac-<lb/>
turer. This was the first time they had let anyone borrow<lb/>
it.<lb/>
Sorority placed on probation<lb/>
The Gamma Phi Beta sorority at the University of<lb/>
Missouri-Columbia has been placed on probation after a<lb/>
hazing incident that occurred in late October.<lb/>
Jewel Howe, program coordinator for Greek Life,<lb/>
said that several students reported the incident to her and<lb/>
she launched a 10-day investigation. On Nov. 11, Howe<lb/>
said that the incident allegations proved to be true and<lb/>
that she was recommending a one year social probation<lb/>
along with other sanctions.<lb/>
The sorority will be able to hold rush and continue its<lb/>
philanthropy activities.<lb/>
Student charged with assault<lb/>
A University of North Carolina-Chapel Hill student<lb/>
was charged with sexual assault against a fellow on Oct.<lb/>
31.<lb/>
Robert Joseph Steele, 20, of 618 Craige Residence Hall<lb/>
was arrested at 9:46 a.m. and charged with one count of<lb/>
second-degree sexual assault. Second-degree sexual as-<lb/>
sault is defined as forced sexual activity without the use<lb/>
of a weapon.<lb/>
The assault took place on Sept. 24 in a Craige dormi-<lb/>
tory room. The victim reported it to campus police but<lb/>
asked that no action be taken. The victim later changed<lb/>
her mind and pressed charges<lb/>
Rolling indicted in murders<lb/>
After nine days of testimony, a grand jury needed<lb/>
only 25 minutes to decide to indict a Louisiana transient<lb/>
for the murders of five college students in August 1990.<lb/>
On Nov. 15, the 17-member jury indicted Danny<lb/>
Harold Rolling, 37, on five counts of first-degree murder<lb/>
and three counts each of sexual battery and armed bur-<lb/>
glary.<lb/>
Four of the women were stud en ts of the University of<lb/>
Florida and the other was a student at Santa Fe Commu-<lb/>
nity College.<lb/>
The jury relied heavily on forensic evidence for its<lb/>
verdict.<lb/>
Inside Tuesday<lb/>
Crime Scene72<lb/>
Editorial74<lb/>
EntertainmentJ5<lb/>
Classifieds76<lb/>
Sports77<lb/>
By John Carter<lb/>
Staff Writer<lb/>
Beer cans and rumors flew<lb/>
as ECU students camped out<lb/>
in hopes of obtaining a ticket<lb/>
to the Peach Bowl in Atlanta.<lb/>
The beer cans ranged from<lb/>
M il waukee's Best to M ichelob,<lb/>
and the rumors ranged from<lb/>
"there are no tickets left" to<lb/>
"there are more people<lb/>
camped ou t than there are tick-<lb/>
ets<lb/>
"I'll be in Atlanta on New<lb/>
Years'day (for thegame)even<lb/>
if I have to sell peanuts ECU<lb/>
student Draughon Cranford<lb/>
said.<lb/>
Such were the feelings of<lb/>
students as they were faced<lb/>
with the possibility of not ob-<lb/>
taining tickets to the Peach<lb/>
Bowl. As a result, about 1,200<lb/>
studentspitched tentsanddug<lb/>
out the blankets in hopes of<lb/>
being one of the lucky ones to<lb/>
get a ticket.<lb/>
However, there was no<lb/>
truth to these rumors. Four<lb/>
thousand tickets were made<lb/>
available to ECU students on<lb/>
Dec. 1. By 10 a.m. Monday,<lb/>
everyone that camped out<lb/>
received a ticket and more<lb/>
were available for those that<lb/>
chose to sleep in a bed.<lb/>
According to Dave Hart,<lb/>
athletic director at ECU, the<lb/>
students' biggest anxiety was<lb/>
the fact that they had camped<lb/>
out � some for two days �<lb/>
and might not get a ticket.<lb/>
Straightening out the rumors<lb/>
helped to relieve the anxiety<lb/>
and students soon felt more<lb/>
confident that they would be<lb/>
able to get a ticket<lb/>
The problems began<lb/>
when rumors surfaced that<lb/>
ECU had more students want-<lb/>
ing tickets than they had tick-<lb/>
ets available for students.<lb/>
However,many students pur-<lb/>
chased tickets early through<lb/>
Ticketron and Tracks, helping<lb/>
to reduce the remaining de-<lb/>
mand to more in line with the<lb/>
limited supply.<lb/>
The general rule of thumb<lb/>
among universities is to allo-<lb/>
cate 10 percent of tickets to<lb/>
post-season games for stu-<lb/>
dents. However, ECU went to<lb/>
20 percent for the Peach Bowl.<lb/>
"At other universities, stu-<lb/>
dents pay full price for tick-<lb/>
ets Hart said. "Here they are<lb/>
Questions abound<lb/>
over wiretapping<lb/>
settlements' future<lb/>
By Matt Jones<lb/>
New Editor<lb/>
Settlements are pending<lb/>
for an additional five persons<lb/>
in the wiretapping scandal<lb/>
spurred from illegal phone<lb/>
taps which occurred on cam-<lb/>
pus in 1990.<lb/>
According to Herman<lb/>
Gaskins, theattomey who rep-<lb/>
resented two previous recipi-<lb/>
ents of settlements, the pay-<lb/>
offs will be discussed in a<lb/>
meeting of ECU'S Board of<lb/>
Trustees. Gaskins said a deci-<lb/>
sion will be made at the meet-<lb/>
ing on whether or not the ad-<lb/>
ditional settlements will be<lb/>
paid.<lb/>
This information could<lb/>
not be confirmed with any of<lb/>
the members of the board nor<lb/>
with University Attorney Ben<lb/>
Irons.<lb/>
Irons said that the wire-<lb/>
tapping issue is not on the<lb/>
agenda for the normally<lb/>
scheduled meeting which will<lb/>
be held Friday.<lb/>
Hesaid that .there will<lb/>
be discussion of legal mat-<lb/>
ters in the executive ses-<lb/>
sion of the meeting. Irons,<lb/>
however, did not speculate on<lb/>
whether a discussion of the<lb/>
wiretapping settlements will<lb/>
be included in the session<lb/>
According to J. Craig<lb/>
Souza, vice chairman of the<lb/>
board, the wiretappings are<lb/>
not on the agenda, but .may<lb/>
be in the legal discussion<lb/>
Dick Edwards, executive<lb/>
assistant to the Chancellor,<lb/>
also had no knowledge of a<lb/>
discussion of the wiretapping<lb/>
settlements, but pointed out<lb/>
that Chancellor Eakin made a<lb/>
statement concerning the is-<lb/>
sue at the last board meeting.<lb/>
In the release, the Chan-<lb/>
cellor states: To date no<lb/>
payment of any kind has been<lb/>
madeby the University which<lb/>
was not properly sanctioned<lb/>
by the Office of the Attorney<lb/>
General<lb/>
The statement continues:<lb/>
As I have said before, in-<lb/>
discretions or exercisesof poor<lb/>
judgement by a few should<lb/>
not detract from the overall<lb/>
health and vitality of the Uni-<lb/>
versity and the good and con-<lb/>
scientious deeds of so many<lb/>
members of the faculty and<lb/>
staff<lb/>
According to Federal law,<lb/>
any person recorded on an<lb/>
illegal wiretap may be<lb/>
awarded up to $10,000. If the<lb/>
Board approves the settle-<lb/>
ment, a total of $50,000 will be<lb/>
paid by the University.<lb/>
Thus far, the university<lb/>
has paid over $20,000 in other<lb/>
wiretapping settlements.<lb/>
Johnny Rose, former chief<lb/>
of police for Public Safety, was<lb/>
awarded over $12,000 in Sep-<lb/>
tember after filing a lawsuit<lb/>
which alleged that his voice<lb/>
was recorded on the wiretaps.<lb/>
The lawsuit was filed against<lb/>
two individuals, but was<lb/>
settled by the University.<lb/>
Another settlement re-<lb/>
cipient, Lois Braxton, received<lb/>
$10,500 in October after in-<lb/>
forming the University that<lb/>
she too was recorded on the<lb/>
phone tap.<lb/>
The wiretapping oc-<lb/>
curred in early summer 1990<lb/>
on the phoneline of former<lb/>
telecommunications em-<lb/>
ployee. Brooks Mills.<lb/>
The fol towing employees<lb/>
were indicated as being in-<lb/>
volved or having knowledge<lb/>
of the wiretapping: Richard<lb/>
Brown, vice-chancellor of<lb/>
Business Affairs; James<lb/>
DePuy, director of Public<lb/>
Safety; Jim Burns, former cap-<lb/>
tain of investigations for Pub-<lb/>
lic Safety; Evan Midgette, as-<lb/>
sistant director of Human Re-<lb/>
lations and Teddy Roberson,<lb/>
former director of Telecom-<lb/>
munications.<lb/>
Both Roberson and Burris<lb/>
resigned three days before the<lb/>
release of the State Auditor's<lb/>
report concerning the wire-<lb/>
tapping.<lb/>
DePuy, Brown and<lb/>
Midgette are still employed<lb/>
by the University.<lb/>
Photo by Jamas Browning � ECU Photo Lab<lb/>
Lines, lines everywhere lines. These students took time out of their busy schedules to do a<lb/>
little camping, a little drinking and a little purchasing.<lb/>
halt price all year<lb/>
Also, nobody actual ly has<lb/>
ticketsin their handsnght now<lb/>
except for students. I really<lb/>
bel ieve we ha ve been as fair as<lb/>
we could Hart added.<lb/>
Four thousand tickets<lb/>
went on sale to students. Stu-<lb/>
dents were allowed to pur-<lb/>
chaseonly one ticket with their<lb/>
student l.D. and could not buv<lb/>
one with someone else's iden-<lb/>
tification.<lb/>
According to Hart, this<lb/>
decision was made in an at-<lb/>
tempt to minimize abuse of<lb/>
student tickets, to help lines<lb/>
move quickly, and to maxi-<lb/>
Photo by Jam Browning � ECU Photo Lab<lb/>
O Beercan tree<lb/>
This special Christmas tree is the epitome of the<lb/>
Christmas spirit held by all ECU students.<lb/>
Student honored with grant<lb/>
ECU New Bureau<lb/>
A talented medical stu-<lb/>
dent with a penchant for bio-<lb/>
medical research has landed<lb/>
another prestigious honor at<lb/>
the ECU School of Medicine.<lb/>
Laura Harris, currently in<lb/>
her third year of studies, has<lb/>
been awarded a $25,000 grant<lb/>
from the Howard Medical In-<lb/>
stitute (HHMI) to defray the<lb/>
cost of her medical education<lb/>
and nuture her growing in ter-<lb/>
est in research.<lb/>
The grant is renewable for<lb/>
an additional $25,000 for her<lb/>
senior year.<lb/>
The institute awards the<lb/>
grants to 120 students each<lb/>
year with the intention of ex-<lb/>
panding the future pool of<lb/>
medically trained researchers<lb/>
in the United States and<lb/>
abroad. True to the program's<lb/>
goals, she plans to incorpo-<lb/>
rate a research emphasis into<lb/>
her medical career.<lb/>
The HHMI award is only<lb/>
the latest in a series of honors<lb/>
that Harris has garnered. She<lb/>
spent die last academic year<lb/>
on leave from the medical<lb/>
school to participate in<lb/>
HHMl's Research Scholar's<lb/>
Program, operated in concert<lb/>
with the National Institute of<lb/>
Health(NIH), the nation'spre-<lb/>
mier biomedical research or-<lb/>
ganization.<lb/>
Each year the program<lb/>
brings an eli te group of 35 stu-<lb/>
dents from medical schools<lb/>
across the country to HHMl's<lb/>
Bethesda, Md campus, where<lb/>
the chance to work with<lb/>
world-renowned scholars at<lb/>
the NIH on one of 20 different<lb/>
research projects.<lb/>
Harris spent her year in a<lb/>
molecular biology laboratory<lb/>
at the National Eye Institute,<lb/>
studying proto-oncogene ex-<lb/>
pression and proteins that<lb/>
regulate the development of<lb/>
the eye. She also had the op-<lb/>
portunity to attend the Inter-<lb/>
national AIDS Conference<lb/>
held in Florence, Italy.<lb/>
Harris called her year at<lb/>
HHM1-NIH "an outstanding<lb/>
experience<lb/>
"1 was initially worried<lb/>
about taking a year out of my<lb/>
medical studies she said,<lb/>
"but I only gained<lb/>
Hams first made a splash<lb/>
in the research field in 1988 as<lb/>
a graduate student in ECU's<lb/>
Department of Biology.<lb/>
mize opportunities for all stu-<lb/>
dents. However, students that<lb/>
could not afford to miss class<lb/>
while standing in line found<lb/>
obtaining a ticket difficult be-<lb/>
cause of this policy.<lb/>
The Pirate dub received<lb/>
about 16,000 tickets and<lb/>
See Tickets, page 2<lb/>
Police<lb/>
suggest<lb/>
Halloween<lb/>
shutdown<lb/>
By Julie Roscoe<lb/>
Suf f Writer<lb/>
The Greenville police de-<lb/>
partment isattempting to gain<lb/>
authority to close downtown<lb/>
bars through state legislation.<lb/>
At the Nov. 25 SGA meet-<lb/>
ing Greenville Police Chief<lb/>
Charles Hinman and George<lb/>
Hurst, legal advisor for the<lb/>
Greenville policedepartment,<lb/>
both spoke about student is-<lb/>
sues, one involving the an-<lb/>
nual student Halloween cel-<lb/>
ebration.<lb/>
Halloween falls on a Sat-<lb/>
urday night after a home foot-<lb/>
ball game in 1992.<lb/>
In response to what<lb/>
Hinman predicts to be a higher<lb/>
level of excitement next Hal-<lb/>
loween, the Greenville police<lb/>
department is trying to enact<lb/>
legislation that will give the<lb/>
policedepartment the author-<lb/>
ity toctose the downtown bars.<lb/>
"We don't want to ob-<lb/>
struct anyone from ha ving fun,<lb/>
but we need to maintain pub-<lb/>
lic safety levels said Hinman.<lb/>
'The legislation is for us to<lb/>
have control in case we need<lb/>
it<lb/>
The plan to go to the state<lb/>
legislation is in its infancy and<lb/>
Hinman isaware that this type<lb/>
of legislation might be infring-<lb/>
ingonbusinessowners' rights.<lb/>
Hinman also addressed<lb/>
the lack of student and police<lb/>
communication and asked for<lb/>
student participation with the<lb/>
Greenville policedepartment.<lb/>
After speaking with stu-<lb/>
dents in classrooms and on<lb/>
the street Hinman is interested<lb/>
in forming a group of 12 to 15<lb/>
students to meet on a monthly<lb/>
basis to attempt to solve prob-<lb/>
lems in the community.<lb/>
"I can learn from them,<lb/>
they can learn from us Chief<lb/>
Hinman said.<lb/>
Hinman said meetings<lb/>
with students in an informal<lb/>
setting can only enhance po-<lb/>
lice community relations in<lb/>
every respect<lb/>
SmSGA, page 2<lb/>
<pb facs="00058253_0002"/><lb/>
2 Sfte East (Earnltntan December 3, 1991<lb/>
crjmeSene<lb/>
Public Safety responds to face-down<lb/>
subject at Austin; same gone on arrival<lb/>
Nov. 23<lb/>
0542�Rugby Field: Checked out a report of suspicious activ-<lb/>
ity. All units responded and subjects were cleared from the area.<lb/>
2221�Jones Hall: Responded to a report of a disturbance.<lb/>
One subject was arrested for assault and was transported to the<lb/>
Magistrate's office.<lb/>
0046�Scott Hall: Vehicle stopped for DVV1 west of the build-<lb/>
ing. The student was arrestod and taken to the magistrate's office.<lb/>
0142�Joyner Library: Vehicle stopped north of the building<lb/>
for a one-way street violation, no operator's license and obstruct<lb/>
and delay. The non-student fled on foot. Warrants are pending<lb/>
and the vehicle was impounded.<lb/>
1252�Austin Building: Responded to a report of a subject<lb/>
lying face-down south of the building. Same was gone on arrival.<lb/>
2237�Aycock Hall: Checked out a report of a fight on the<lb/>
third floor. Rescue was called but did not transport anyone. One<lb/>
subject was banned from campus.<lb/>
2315�White and Clement halls: Checked out the area in<lb/>
reference to a gathering. Subjects were gone on arrival.<lb/>
0143�TenthStreet�Vehicle stopped for erratic driving. Mat-<lb/>
ter was turned over to the Greenville Police Department.<lb/>
Nov. 26<lb/>
1008�Cotten Hall: Responded to a report of a female that had<lb/>
fallen in the area north of the building. Student was transported<lb/>
to Pitt County Memorial Hospital.<lb/>
1011�Third and Reade streets: Responded to a report of a<lb/>
vehicle being broken into in the parking lot. Several other vehicles<lb/>
were found to be broken into also.<lb/>
1210�Student Stores: Checked out a report of a male subject<lb/>
causing a loud disturbance. Subject located and referred to the<lb/>
Administration for review.<lb/>
Nov. 27<lb/>
022�Belk Hall: Checked out a report of suspicious activity<lb/>
in the area. Subjects asked to leave.<lb/>
004b�Scott Hall: Responded to a noise complaint. Subject<lb/>
was given a verbal warning.<lb/>
Nov. 29<lb/>
2058�Mendenhall Student Center: Responded to a report of<lb/>
a suspicious person west of the building. Subject was waiting for<lb/>
a ride.<lb/>
Nov. 30<lb/>
1730�Scott Hall: Checked out a report of a breaking and<lb/>
entering and damage to real propertv. A report was taken.<lb/>
2013�White Hall. Responded to a report of two subjects<lb/>
being in the building after it was closed. Both subjects were given<lb/>
campus citations.<lb/>
Dec. 1<lb/>
202b�Joyner Library: Responded to a report of indecent<lb/>
exposure.<lb/>
Crime Seen )� taken from official Public Safety log�.<lb/>
SGA<lb/>
Continued from page 1<lb/>
Tickets<lb/>
Continued from page 1<lb/>
Anyone interested in joining<lb/>
the communication group to work<lb/>
with Chief Hinman can contact hi m<lb/>
at his office, 830-4332 or at home,<lb/>
321-2213.<lb/>
Speaker of the House Courtney<lb/>
Jones removed the Captain Stanley<lb/>
Kittrell resolution from the unfa-<lb/>
vorable calendar and sent it to com<lb/>
mittec for revision Nov. 25.<lb/>
The resolution asks for SGA<lb/>
support of Public Safety officer.<lb/>
Captain Stanley Kittrell, who has<lb/>
filed lawsuits against the university<lb/>
and several high officials of ECU.<lb/>
The resolution states "that the<lb/>
ECU SGA goes on record in sup-<lb/>
port of Captain Kittrell and in so<lb/>
doing condemns the action of cer-<lb/>
tain administrators who would<lb/>
punish a person for his brave stand<lb/>
against unethical and illegal acts at<lb/>
our University<lb/>
Matthew Gilbert, vice-chair of<lb/>
the Rules and Judiciary Committee<lb/>
is the author of the Kittrell resolu-<lb/>
tion. He is researching the lawsuits<lb/>
and is preparing to defend his reso-<lb/>
lution or make amendments to it.<lb/>
FOSDICK'S<lb/>
) 1890 SEAFOOD<lb/>
3003 S. Evans 7S6-2011<lb/>
Fresh Oysters, Flounder, Shrimp, Trout,<lb/>
Deviled Crab Cakes, &amp; Clam Strips.<lb/>
" nnv Aur �<lb/>
� Small Shrimp J Regular Shntnp<lb/>
I at Lunch j Dinner at $6.SO<lb/>
I a OO 1 C;et �fie Free<lb/>
I ?'�V - Beverage not included<lb/>
- Beverage not included J Good Monday - Thursday<lb/>
� Expires: 12-21-91 " Expires: 1221-91<lb/>
Includes Parts and Labor<lb/>
(excludes service specials and accessories)<lb/>
MUST SHOW STUDENT I.D.<lb/>
East Carolina<lb/>
Auto &amp; TVuck Center<lb/>
LrKain MtTrun Chmjg Plymouth Dodge CMC<lb/>
HWV 11 4 24 BYPASS � OREENVILLE, NC<lb/>
355-3333<lb/>
Dodge<lb/>
MERCURY<lb/>
LINCOLN<lb/>
GMC<lb/>
TRUCK<lb/>
CAN NOT BE USED WITH OTHER COUPONS<lb/>
SAVE<lb/>
5 O <lb/>
When You buy a medium or large cup of frozen yogurt.<lb/>
In Original, Nonfat and Sugar Free Nonfat.<lb/>
Coupon not val.d with any other offer.<lb/>
THE TASTE THAT'S WON THE WORLD OVER.<lb/>
A Store Full Of Hidden Treasures<lb/>
�Toy� �OoUiinp<lb/>
�Pictures 'Till! Wl il 11 I<lb/>
�Jtwrh-v � tc Old<lb/>
Furniture<lb/>
TrirptloM<lb/>
�Musical Instruraenu<lb/>
�Household Acccson�<lb/>
�F.jcorcisc f qiupmml<lb/>
Opn 1 um. Thru Jri.<lb/>
10 XV5 00<lb/>
Saturday 10:00-2 00<lb/>
CONSIGNMENT SHOP<lb/>
COUPONS FOR CHRISTMAS<lb/>
Athletic Shoes<lb/>
COUPON<lb/>
asics<lb/>
ZL� AND SALE<lb/>
OFF<lb/>
yy<lb/>
new balance<lb/>
PRICES<lb/>
f0canvERsi<lb/>
EXPIRES 12-15-91<lb/>
COUPON<lb/>
Warm-up<lb/>
Suits<lb/>
$1000<lb/>
OFF REG<lb/>
PRICES<lb/>
ASICS<lb/>
DOLFIN<lb/>
CASUAL ISLE<lb/>
MENS � WOMENS � KIDS<lb/>
EXPIRES 12-15-91<lb/>
COUPON<lb/>
A<lb/>
$3.00<lb/>
OFF EACH<lb/>
XS - XXL<lb/>
EXPIRES 12-15-91<lb/>
COUPON<lb/>
EASTPAK<lb/>
$5.00<lb/>
OFF REG<lb/>
PRICES<lb/>
NIKE<lb/>
ASICS<lb/>
UMBRO<lb/>
EXPIRES 12-15-91<lb/>
COUPON "<lb/>
utnbro<lb/>
$5.00<lb/>
OFF REG<lb/>
PRICES<lb/>
Adult &amp; Youth<lb/>
LIMIT 6 PAIRCUSTOMER<lb/>
EXPIRES 12-15-91<lb/>
Athletic World<lb/>
Plaza Mall<lb/>
355-0500<lb/>
OPEN:M-F 10-9<lb/>
SAT 1 -6 &amp; SUN 1 -6<lb/>
Carolina East Mall<lb/>
756-7550<lb/>
quickly sold out. Rumors surfaced<lb/>
early that the Pirate Club had also<lb/>
bought up all the student tickets,<lb/>
but, according to Hart, the Pirate<lb/>
Club was not allowed to use tickets<lb/>
allotted for students.<lb/>
As a result of speculations that<lb/>
student tickets would be almost<lb/>
impossible to obtain, students<lb/>
swarmed MingesColiseumasearly<lb/>
as Saturday morning to begin the<lb/>
long wait for Peach Bowl tickets.<lb/>
At 2 p.m. Monday, a few stu-<lb/>
dent tickets .still remained. After<lb/>
everything students heard, most did<lb/>
not think it possible to get a ticket<lb/>
without camping out, so they did<lb/>
not know they could still get one<lb/>
until late in the day.<lb/>
Post-season play is a new expe-<lb/>
rience for ECU, Hart said. Ticket<lb/>
distribution was handled in the best<lb/>
way anyone knew how.<lb/>
In response to the support and<lb/>
dedication shown by students, 1 Ian<lb/>
said "I hope what we saw out there,<lb/>
we can see on a regular basis, not<lb/>
just for football, but for basketball<lb/>
and other sports<lb/>
PEACH BOWL<lb/>
OLD ENGLISH INN<lb/>
�15 Minutes from<lb/>
Stadium on 1-20<lb/>
Call:<lb/>
(404) 288-5458<lb/>
1900 Glenfair Road � Decatur<lb/>
Drjubk Occupancy<lb/>
TOUCHDOWN AT<lb/>
ST-<lb/>
521 Cotanche S � 757-1666<lb/>
MONDAY<lb/>
12 Price<lb/>
Pitchers<lb/>
TUESDAY<lb/>
Sangria $1.25<lb/>
WEDNESDAY<lb/>
$1.25 Mexican Imports<lb/>
THURSDAY<lb/>
$2.50 Margaritas<lb/>
12 Price<lb/>
Appetizers<lb/>
SUN WED<lb/>
9PM-1230 AM<lb/>
�<lb/>
� r,�<lb/>
l'  �r<lb/>
r<lb/>
Wednesday<lb/>
Progressive<lb/>
Donee Night<lb/>
10 Draft .<lb/>
$1.15 Tall Boys<lb/>
$2.50 Pitchers<lb/>
$ 1.00 Kamikazes<lb/>
�ladles Free til 10:30<lb/>
�,r<lb/>
� ;�<lb/>
tips selling cm <lb/>
Its going to he pi<lb/>
Ho<lb/>
w re i<lb/>
The IBM Personal<lb/>
start in gradual! - hi<lb/>
software, an IBjM 1;<lb/>
PS2 Loan lor Loard<lb/>
ATTE<lb/>
This is vou<lb/>
the 50 ol<lb/>
We now ha<lb/>
available at<lb/>
IMMEDIA<lb/>
Order between!<lb/>
receive a 5 disci<lb/>
all faculty, staff &amp;<lb/>
STOP BY THE S<lb/>
'This offer is available only to qualified studl<lb/>
may withdraw the offer at any t�me without!<lb/>
 IBM, Personal System2, and PS2 are regif<lb/>
� IBM Corporation 1990<lb/>
Casl<lb/>
<pb facs="00058253_0003"/><lb/>
Continued from page 1<lb/>
, K ed not think it possible to get a ticket<lb/>
without camping out, so they did<lb/>
t tickets not know they could still get one<lb/>
ihl late in the day.<lb/>
kets season pla vis anew expe-<lb/>
rience tor R'l Hart said. Ticket<lb/>
Jistr-butKuiHashandledinthebest<lb/>
.n anyone knew how.<lb/>
In response to the support and<lb/>
i how n by students. Hart<lb/>
; w hat wo saw out there,<lb/>
i sei ma nv;ular basis, not<lb/>
� tball Kit tor basketball<lb/>
I<lb/>
HBOm<lb/>
VGLISH INN<lb/>
27<lb/>
95<lb/>
458<lb/>
Daubl� Occupancy<lb/>
lair Road � Decatur<lb/>
HDOWN AT<lb/>
ii<lb/>
9<lb/>
u<lb/>
b: Imports<lb/>
i as<lb/>
:e<lb/>
ers<lb/>
D<lb/>
AM<lb/>
 � �.r<lb/>
, �-<lb/>
dnesday<lb/>
ogrcssive<lb/>
nee Night<lb/>
0 Draft<lb/>
5 Toll Boys<lb/>
50 Pitchers<lb/>
Kamikazes<lb/>
is Free til 10:30<lb/>
'n'<lb/>
.V<lb/>
�.�V<lb/>
4<lb/>
77.<lb/>
V<lb/>
:v-v<lb/>
V<lb/>
5'<lb/>
ffri'V<lb/>
 GRADUATION SALE <lb/>
(ENDS DECEMBER 31,1991)<lb/>
'Hpi selling everything hut his PS2.<lb/>
It's going to he part of his future<lb/>
&amp;�v<lb/>
How're you going to do it?<lb/>
I lit1 IBM Personal Svstem2 not onh helps you now, (ml can �ret you oil to a lii-t<lb/>
start in graduate school or on the job. I 'he PS2" comes with easy-to-use, preloaded<lb/>
software, an IBM Mouse and color display. ith a special student price and the IBM<lb/>
PS2 Loan lor Learning, its cr affordable.<lb/>
PS2 it!<lb/>
ATTENTION SENIORS!<lb/>
This is your last chance to buy an IBM PS2 at<lb/>
the 50 off student price.<lb/>
We now have these preloaded systems<lb/>
available at the Student Store for<lb/>
IMMEDIATE delivery.<lb/>
???Order between 12191 to 123191 and<lb/>
receive a 5 discount. Discount applies to<lb/>
all faculty, staff &amp; students.?<lb/>
STOP BY THE STUDENT STORE TODAY �<lb/>
DON'T WAIT 'TIL ITS TOO LATE<lb/>
'This offer is available only to qualified students faculty and staff who purchase IBM PS2 s through participating campus outlets Orders are subject to ava.lab.hty Prices are subiect to change and IBM<lb/>
may withdraw the offer at any time without written notice �v��,���hi.10.1u,DIvi<lb/>
IBM. Personal System2, and PS2 are registered trademarks of International Business Machines Corporation<lb/>
� IBM Corporation 1990<lb/>
??Cash Sales Only<lb/>
<pb facs="00058253_0004"/><lb/>
Continued from page 1<lb/>
r surfaced not think it possible to get a ticket<lb/>
ir ted abo without camping out, so they did<lb/>
lent tickets, not know they could still get one<lb/>
� ho Pirale until late in the day.<lb/>
i se tickets IW-�ason play isa new expe-<lb/>
rience tor ECU. Hart said. Ticket<lb/>
labors that distribution washandled in the best<lb/>
ibnost wjv am one knew how.<lb/>
In response to the support and<lb/>
X"1 the vitlicationshtwnbystudents,Hart<lb/>
kets said I hi pe what we saw out there,<lb/>
s 5tu w e v an see on a regular basis, not<lb/>
t  v ist for football, but for basketball<lb/>
. si did and other sports<lb/>
HBQWL<lb/>
NJGLISH INN<lb/>
$<lb/>
95<lb/>
5458<lb/>
111<lb/>
� Occupancy<lb/>
tair Road � Decatur<lb/>
HDOWN AT<lb/>
clnesdau<lb/>
B<lb/>
ogres si vc<lb/>
nee Night<lb/>
0 Draft<lb/>
5 Toll Boys<lb/>
50 Pitchers<lb/>
Kamikazes<lb/>
Is Free til 10:30<lb/>
M<lb/>
<lb/>
�i<lb/>
Jo<lb/>
�. �M .1.<lb/>
j�<lb/>
 GRADUATION SALE <lb/>
(ENDS DECEMBER 31,1991)<lb/>
"Hes wiling everything but his PS2.<lb/>
Its going to be part of his future!<lb/>
&amp;&amp;k<lb/>
How're you going to do it?<lb/>
The IBM Personal System2 not onl helps you now. but can �jrt vou oil to a last<lb/>
start in graduate school or on the job. The PS28 comes with easy-to-use. preloaded<lb/>
software, an IBM Mouse and color display. With a special student price and the IBM<lb/>
PS2 Loan lor Learning, its vecv affordable.<lb/>
PS2 it!<lb/>
ATTENTION SENIORS!<lb/>
This is your last chance to buy an IBM PS2 at<lb/>
the 50 off student price.<lb/>
We now have these preloaded systems<lb/>
available at the Student Store for<lb/>
IMMEDIATE delivery.<lb/>
Order between 12191 to 123191 and<lb/>
receive a 5 discount. Discount applies to<lb/>
all faculty, staff &amp; students.<lb/>
STOP BY THE STUDENT STORE TODAY �<lb/>
DON'T WATT 'TDL ITS TOO LATE<lb/>
�This otter is available only to qualified students, faculty and staff who purchase IBM PS2 s through participating campus outlets Orders are subject to availability Prices are subiect to chanoe and IBM<lb/>
may withdraw the offer at any time without written notice. ' �:� - - <lb/>
 IBM. Personal System2, and PS2 are registered trademarks of International Business Machines Corporation.<lb/>
� IBM Corporation 1990<lb/>
"Cash Sales Only<lb/>
<pb facs="00058253_0005"/><lb/>
My Way Or The Highway<lb/>
Qiht ?Ea0t (EatUlttUatt Credit will limit American freedoms<lb/>
�  ,� -  � � for them? . �" -<lb/>
Entertainment<lb/>
Serang the East Carotrw campus community since 1925<lb/>
Tim C. Hampton, General Manager<lb/>
W. Douglas Morris, Jr Managing Editor<lb/>
Gregory E. Jones, Director of Advertising<lb/>
Matt Jones, News Editor<lb/>
Jennifer Wardrep, As-sf. News Editor<lb/>
Matt King, Entertainment Editor<lb/>
Lewis Coble, Asst. Entertainment Editor<lb/>
Brian Kerns, Sports Editor<lb/>
Michael G. Martin, Asst. Sports Editor<lb/>
LeClair Harper, Copy Editor<lb/>
Blair Skinner, Copy Editor<lb/>
Richard Haselrig, Staff Illustrator<lb/>
Michael Albuquerque, Business Manager<lb/>
Larry Huggins, Circulation Manager<lb/>
M. Chantal Weedman, Layout Manager<lb/>
Jean Caraway, Classified Advertising Technician<lb/>
Stephen Schaubach, Systems Engineer<lb/>
CHRIS Norman, Darkroom Technician<lb/>
Deborah Daniel, Secretary<lb/>
The East Carolinian has served the East Carolina campus community since 1925, emphasizing information that affects ECU<lb/>
students. The East Carolinian publishes 12,000 copies every Tuesday and Thursday. The masthead editorial in each edition<lb/>
a the opinion of the Editorial Board. The East Carolinian welcomes letters expressing all points of view. Letters should be<lb/>
1 imiied to 250 words or less. For purposes of decency and brevity. The East Carolinian reserves the right to edit or reject letters<lb/>
f� publication. Utters should be addressed to The Editor, The East Carolinian, Publications Bldg ECU, Greenville, N.C<lb/>
27858-4353. For more information, call (919) 757-6366.<lb/>
Opinion<lb/>
Page 4, Tuesday, December 3, 1991<lb/>
Cramming no longer an option<lb/>
It is time to start studying for exams. there will be more applications coming in<lb/>
At this time of year ECU students next year and in the years to come. ECU<lb/>
guzzle gallons of coffee, make midnight will be able to pick and choose the best<lb/>
runs for snacks and finally gain an hour or students coming out of high school, thus<lb/>
two of sleep before heading for their gruel- improving the overall curriculum,<lb/>
ing two-hour finals. For students now at the university, this<lb/>
This tradition is repeated twice a year means that classes will start becoming more<lb/>
(four times a year for those sadistic enough difficult in an effort to challenge these stu-<lb/>
to take summer classes) and leaves behind dents.<lb/>
16,000 bleary-eyed husks known as college And so, the cramming tradition may<lb/>
students. be left by the wayside � out of necessity.<lb/>
The tradition has, up until now, been Students who have been cramming those<lb/>
workable here at ECU. Students have been last three chapters of sociology will instead<lb/>
By Matthew Bulley<lb/>
Editorial Columnist<lb/>
Let's play a little imagination<lb/>
game.<lb/>
Imagine a man and woman with<lb/>
a modest income, maybe $2,500 a<lb/>
month. Instead of living modestly,<lb/>
though, they live like royalty. They<lb/>
liveina3,000-square-foot house, with<lb/>
a mortgage of $200,000. Five new cars<lb/>
sit in the driveway. The finest stereo,<lb/>
appliances, fuinishings, all fill their<lb/>
life. All of it bought on credit.<lb/>
The grocery store lets them<lb/>
charge their food on credit.<lb/>
The utility and phone compa-<lb/>
nies accept their promise to pay, de-<lb/>
spite their mounting debt.<lb/>
Gas cards and credit cards all<lb/>
carry four-digit debts.<lb/>
Their personal debt tops SI mil-<lb/>
lion. The combined interest on their<lb/>
debt tacks on another S2,000 per<lb/>
month. Sound okay? It gets worse.<lb/>
Let's also say that t hey're dumb<lb/>
and lazy. When they finish at work,<lb/>
they go out to eat on their credit card,<lb/>
and spend the evening shopping for<lb/>
clothing, a boat and a motor-home.<lb/>
Worse, they drink too much and<lb/>
abuse drugs.<lb/>
A sick couple. What lies ahead<lb/>
able to do their homework and cram for 30<lb/>
hours straight before their exam in order to<lb/>
pass.<lb/>
But ECU is not "that school in one of<lb/>
the Carolinas" anymore. Around the coun<lb/>
find themselves with seven chapters. Over-<lb/>
all, the curriculum will become more de-<lb/>
tailed.<lb/>
This change will not occur overnight.<lb/>
The students will have to come here first<lb/>
RUSH'S<lb/>
for them?<lb/>
What lies ahead for the United<lb/>
States? The economy of our country is<lb/>
critically ill.<lb/>
George Bush and the Congress<lb/>
are rifling through their medicine<lb/>
chests, looking for aspirin and band-<lb/>
aids while the economy is in the inten-<lb/>
sive care unit.<lb/>
Diagnosis? A national debt that<lb/>
approaches S2 trillion. Without see-<lb/>
ing a trillion, it is hard to imagine, so<lb/>
let's imagine something else.<lb/>
A stack of $1,000 bills to equal a<lb/>
million dollars would be about an<lb/>
inch high.<lb/>
A billion would create a stack<lb/>
about 16 feet high.<lb/>
A trillion dollars, stacked in<lb/>
$1,000 bills would extend more than<lb/>
67 miles into space. We are farther in<lb/>
debt than that.<lb/>
The people in Washington we<lb/>
employ to keep our country sailing on<lb/>
an even keel have our ship heeled<lb/>
over on her side. Each session of con-<lb/>
gress passes without meaningful<lb/>
progress on reducing the staggering<lb/>
debt. They continue to manage the<lb/>
economy as if we are in a period of<lb/>
rapid expansion, like the 1930's. We<lb/>
are not.<lb/>
Just two weeksagoouremplov-<lb/>
ees in Washington loaned the Soviets<lb/>
umpteen billionsof our dollars. How'<lb/>
Can we afford to do that?<lb/>
My point is this. The blame for<lb/>
what is wrong with the economy is<lb/>
irrelevant. Finger-pointing politicians<lb/>
have three fingers pointing at them-<lb/>
selves. The important task now is ad-<lb/>
dressing how we are going to get out<lb/>
of this mess. No one seems to grasp<lb/>
that.<lb/>
Fiddling with the interest rates<lb/>
won't do it. Gramm-Ruddman hasn't<lb/>
cut the mustard.<lb/>
Just like the couple we imag-<lb/>
ined, there is no way to have a bal-<lb/>
anced budget when you spend more<lb/>
than you take in. The finances of this<lb/>
,3untry must re-examined, and diffi-<lb/>
cult decisions must be made.<lb/>
We have 1,200 aircraft at the<lb/>
disposal of our national government<lb/>
officials. Do .ve need so many?<lb/>
Do we need "Star Wars<lb/>
Sitting here, we are not the ones<lb/>
to say that one program or another<lb/>
program should becut. We pay people<lb/>
to do that for us. But without serious<lb/>
reviewofoureconomy,debtwilldra<lb/>
the U nited States down to third world<lb/>
nation status.<lb/>
Imagine that<lb/>
(pC VJhAT AtL?<lb/>
jAi Jis' take:<lb/>
SOME: o'M<lb/>
RHeartATiz<lb/>
AA MEC<lb/>
POUNCE<lb/>
 ALL<lb/>
The Other Side<lb/>
Athletic Department mishandles ticket sales<lb/>
By John Carter<lb/>
Editorial Columnist<lb/>
try high school students know where to and then the various departments will need<lb/>
find the Pirates and will remember that time to react, but the day is not far over the<lb/>
when they send out their applications. horizon.<lb/>
For this, students can thank the foot- So, for all students who have worked<lb/>
ball team. Bill Lewis and the rest of the so hard (in short bursts) to keep the cram-<lb/>
Pirates have put ECU on the map and in the ming tradition alive, it is time to learn how<lb/>
minds oi many people who would other- to really study,<lb/>
wise never have heard of it. Because in just a few years, it will be<lb/>
What this means for the school is that too late.<lb/>
Congratulations to the 1991<lb/>
ECU football team. Frankly, theseath-<lb/>
letes have done it all this year and<lb/>
deserve praise, not criticism.<lb/>
However, certain university of-<lb/>
ficialsdodeserve criticism for the way<lb/>
they handled the distribution of Peach<lb/>
Bowl tickets.<lb/>
'Trust your university. Students<lb/>
will be better off if they wait and buy<lb/>
their tickets from the university on<lb/>
December 2 This is what students<lb/>
were told when tickets first went on<lb/>
sale, and a lot of people actually be-<lb/>
lieved it. Do you know how many<lb/>
babies are born because of trust me?<lb/>
Theproblemsbegan when ECU<lb/>
first received Peach Bowl tickets. The<lb/>
question was how to distribute them<lb/>
so that everyone had a fair chance to<lb/>
get one? ECU's answer � pretend to<lb/>
take care of the students while screw-<lb/>
ing them.<lb/>
Naturally, the PirateClub mem-<lb/>
bers had to be taken care of because of<lb/>
the large amounts of money they gen-<lb/>
erate for athletics. They were allowed<lb/>
to buy tickets in large quantities be-<lb/>
fore the university even physically<lb/>
had these tickets. Then, after tickets<lb/>
allotted to the Pirate Club were gone,<lb/>
university officials dipped into tickets<lb/>
that should have been reserved for<lb/>
students and sold them to the Pirate<lb/>
Club.<lb/>
Where did this leave the stu-<lb/>
dents? It left them camped out on a<lb/>
rainy, though warm, Sunday night in<lb/>
December hoping to be one of the<lb/>
lucky ones to get a ticket. It was a<lb/>
mess. Granted, it was a great party,<lb/>
but it was still a mess and it never<lb/>
should have come to this.<lb/>
Also, for those fortunate enough<lb/>
to get a ticket, it left them sitting in the<lb/>
end zone at the game. Students that<lb/>
purchased their tickets through<lb/>
Ticketron don't have the best seats,<lb/>
but they are better than end zone seats.<lb/>
Students were allowed to pur-<lb/>
chase only one ticket with their ECU<lb/>
ID. The reason for this seemed to be<lb/>
so that all students would have a<lb/>
chance to get a ticket. However, this<lb/>
madeit difficult forstudentsthat could<lb/>
not afford to miss a class to stand in<lb/>
line<lb/>
But, a person can't be critical<lb/>
and then refuse to say when things are<lb/>
right. The Peach Bowl bid is beneficial<lb/>
to this university in many ways. Play-<lb/>
ers that may be straddling the line in<lb/>
the NFL draft have one more oppor-<lb/>
tunity to play a tough game and show<lb/>
what they can do.<lb/>
This game will bring a lot of<lb/>
money into ECU's athletic program.<lb/>
And it doesn't come from the stu-<lb/>
dents pockets. This money could make<lb/>
new scholarships available and help<lb/>
to build future teams.<lb/>
In light of all the bad press ECU<lb/>
has received over illegal wiretapping,<lb/>
the success of the football team has<lb/>
given the university a lot of positive<lb/>
exposure. Television stations and<lb/>
newspapers have run feature stories<lb/>
across the nation about ECU.<lb/>
Of course, university officials<lb/>
Left Nor Right<lb/>
probablv did not start out with the<lb/>
intentions of making ticket purchases<lb/>
difficult for students, but that is the<lb/>
wav it seemed to turn out. Rumors<lb/>
and speculations before sales began<lb/>
had a lot of students believing there<lb/>
was no hope.<lb/>
As it turned out, getting a ticket<lb/>
was a hassle, but everyone that<lb/>
camped out got one. Some people<lb/>
decided that a ticket was not worth<lb/>
the hassle of camping out and they<lb/>
were still able to purchase one Mon-<lb/>
day afternoon. Student tickets were<lb/>
stiil available at 2 p.m.<lb/>
Overall, getting a ticket to the<lb/>
ECU-N.C. State match-up in Atlanta<lb/>
wasn't all that easy for anyone. 1 can<lb/>
think of ways that might have worked<lb/>
better for everyone, but it wasn't my<lb/>
decision to make. Rumors circulating<lb/>
before tickets went on sale added to<lb/>
the scare and there isn't much anyone<lb/>
can do for rumor control. The deci-<lb/>
sions made bv university of finals may<lb/>
not have been the best ones, but things<lb/>
pretty much worked out.<lb/>
However, a couple of things<lb/>
need to be corrected next time. Let<lb/>
students purchase two tickets with<lb/>
one ID. This way, a student can take<lb/>
a date that may be a non-student or<lb/>
pick up an extra ticket to help out a<lb/>
fnend that can't afford to miss class.<lb/>
Make tickets available to stu-<lb/>
dents as soon as possible and allot a<lb/>
greater number. Then allow two days<lb/>
for students and only students to pur-<lb/>
chase tickets. At the end of those two<lb/>
days, the tickets should become fair<lb/>
game for anyone.<lb/>
Debt will lead U.S. into economic abyss<lb/>
Letters to the Editor<lb/>
Pirates should not<lb/>
play N.C. State in<lb/>
Peach Bowl<lb/>
To The Editor.<lb/>
This is obviously an exciting<lb/>
year for the ECU football team and its<lb/>
crew.<lb/>
The mer� idea of arch-rival<lb/>
North Carolina State University meet-<lb/>
ing the Pirates in an Atlanta Peach<lb/>
Bowl carries with it images of glory,<lb/>
respect and national recognition, not<lb/>
to mention what ECU is renowned<lb/>
for, parties.<lb/>
NCSU is a worthy opponent.<lb/>
Thisbowl becomes a state champion-<lb/>
ship match, the implications of whkh<lb/>
are obvious. Almost every person in<lb/>
the state will be pulling for one team<lb/>
or the other to win on Jan. 1.<lb/>
Who will be pulling for either<lb/>
team outside of North Carolina?<lb/>
Surely many people in our neighbor-<lb/>
ing states, of course. Families of cur-<lb/>
rent or former ECU students have a<lb/>
right to cheer, too. In addition, all<lb/>
mid-atlantic schools and their sports<lb/>
programs will probably have a favor-<lb/>
ite, for certain reasons. Who else in<lb/>
this nation caresabout the Peach Bowl?<lb/>
If you'd ask me that, I'd say<lb/>
nobody. 1 think thisbowl will provide<lb/>
ECU with state or maybe, at best, re-<lb/>
gional recognition, but with no intent<lb/>
to discredit NCSU's team or staff, it<lb/>
seems that the Wolfpack being se-<lb/>
lected as our peachy dbponents takes<lb/>
away from the Pirates' que .or per-<lb/>
manent respect in the NCAA.<lb/>
NCSU fans might feel the same<lb/>
way about State's search for glory.<lb/>
Of course, teams are chosen to<lb/>
compete in a college bowl for reasons<lb/>
of maximum revenue and season per-<lb/>
formances, not by who will receive<lb/>
more recognition from whom. That's<lb/>
understandable.<lb/>
Still, had UVa or another state's<lb/>
pride chosen to compete in or been<lb/>
selected to the bowl, the national Peach<lb/>
Bowl television audience would in-<lb/>
crease dramatically to include fans<lb/>
from two states instead of one. Popu-<lb/>
lation turnout at the game would also<lb/>
be higher, as there are many fans of<lb/>
both ECU and NCSU.<lb/>
I'm glad the ECU Pirates are<lb/>
proving themselves. Atthesametime,<lb/>
I'd like a chance to interest more non-<lb/>
Carolinians and other cut-of-state<lb/>
footM" �� in our excellent sports<lb/>
program. Is that too much to wish for?<lb/>
As we sports fans always say, maybe<lb/>
next year. For now, belieoe.<lb/>
Nelson Tibbitt HI<lb/>
Junior<lb/>
Business<lb/>
By W. Clifton Nelson<lb/>
Editorial Columnist<lb/>
 Most of us, mercifully, missed<lb/>
out on the Great Depression. The<lb/>
images of that time which our parents<lb/>
and grandparents have described<lb/>
seem remote and incredible. How<lb/>
could this wealthy nation ever have<lb/>
gotten itself into such a sorry mess?<lb/>
Well, hang on to your hats,<lb/>
youth of America; we may all be in for<lb/>
the ride of our lives.<lb/>
While Secretary of State George<lb/>
Bush (for he seems little else) globe-<lb/>
trots, dispensing billions of dollars in<lb/>
credit to unworthy countries, we back<lb/>
home have been busy running up our<lb/>
personal charge cards as well. The<lb/>
practice of deficit spending, of living<lb/>
on credit, has once again infected this<lb/>
country with a vengeance, and today<lb/>
the pressure on our whole economic<lb/>
structure is becoming acute.<lb/>
Uncle Sam is hopelessly in hock,<lb/>
and we all know it. Equally appalling,<lb/>
though, is that our banks, large corpo-<lb/>
rations, small businesses and house-<lb/>
holds�truly all facets of the economy<lb/>
� are assuming horrendous ouruens<lb/>
of debt. The practiceof buyinggrocer-<lb/>
ies with credit cards is symptomatic<lb/>
of a people living beyond its means.<lb/>
The old folks who saw it can tell<lb/>
you what easy credit did to this nation<lb/>
back in the Roaring'20s. Of course,<lb/>
they didn't "max out" buying VCRs<lb/>
and vacations to Florida; they took a<lb/>
more "conservative" tack, leveraging<lb/>
themselves into the stock market. But<lb/>
either way it's done, the fact that cor-<lb/>
porate revenues depended upon a<lb/>
daily influx of borrowed money (as<lb/>
they do today) condemned America<lb/>
to the Great Depression.<lb/>
President Bush is looking more<lb/>
and more like Hoover all the time,<lb/>
denying the recession, carping that if<lb/>
Americans would only "start spend-<lb/>
ing we'd see there was no problem.<lb/>
Well, I've got news for the president:<lb/>
weare spending, just as fast as we can,<lb/>
and the problem is that we're spent<lb/>
out. Look not to working America for<lb/>
a "jump-start" from this recession, as<lb/>
in the past. We're still trying to pay off<lb/>
last year's Christmas bills.<lb/>
The same is true of all those<lb/>
lovely blue chip corporations where<lb/>
our parents were able to work out<lb/>
their lives in one city, one shop.<lb/>
Today's generation must anticipate<lb/>
frequent job changes and layoffs be-<lb/>
cause there are so few economically<lb/>
sound companies left. The corporate<lb/>
bosses seem to believe more than any-<lb/>
one else that the end is near, judging<lb/>
by their ravenous orgy of t&amp;:f tak-<lb/>
ing, taking. Wr companies ma-<lb/>
nip,iU�o i �,K oonds, trying to delay<lb/>
collapse, their CEOs are squirreling<lb/>
away obscene nesteggs, figuring that<lb/>
at least "they and theirs" will be able<lb/>
to live a civilized life while the poor<lb/>
working bastards suffer.<lb/>
The banks too, usurers though<lb/>
they are, are going broke. That is why<lb/>
they are littering this campus with<lb/>
Visa and Mastercard applications, try-<lb/>
ing to infuse some young blood into<lb/>
their only remaining profitable racket:<lb/>
high interest consumer loans. Stu-<lb/>
dents should avoid these temptations<lb/>
like the plague, especially in light of<lb/>
the growing indebtedness of our soci-<lb/>
ety as a whole. You may not get a new<lb/>
wardrobe quite so soon by throwing<lb/>
that charge application in the trash,<lb/>
but you'll love yourself in the morn-<lb/>
ing. We all saw the banks' immediate<lb/>
reaction to the move in congress for an<lb/>
interest rate cap: "Mess with us, and<lb/>
we'll mess with you Whether true<lb/>
or not, their threats to revoke half of<lb/>
this nation's charge accounts were<lb/>
blackmail. A word to the wise is suf-<lb/>
ficient: stay on a cash basis.<lb/>
Since we will never pay off this<lb/>
country's debt (how could we?), we<lb/>
must steel ourselves for a more cha-<lb/>
otic settling of accounts. "Gloom and<lb/>
Doom" economists have insisted for<lb/>
years that America was living a fis-<lb/>
cally unhealthy lifestyle, top to bot-<lb/>
tom. They've taken their share of<lb/>
ridicule as the years passed and noth-<lb/>
ing untoward seemed to happen. Even<lb/>
the crash of '87 produced only a<lb/>
muffled thump on Main Street, with<lb/>
all those credit cards flying around.<lb/>
But today credit is drying up, and the<lb/>
nation awaits, in quiet anxiety, a di-<lb/>
saster whose nature no one can guess.<lb/>
Let us hope it doesn't come<lb/>
down to war. It is hard to say how our<lb/>
leaders will react on that day of reck-<lb/>
oning, when all the nations from<lb/>
whom we have borrowed gang up<lb/>
and tell us, "Enough John Q. Public<lb/>
is more predictable, though. 1 wouldn't<lb/>
bet the farm on a peaceful sentiment<lb/>
when some Japanese president tells<lb/>
him to give up his Discover card.<lb/>
Maria's brin<lb/>
Italy to the<lb/>
Emerald Cit<lb/>
By Matt Jones<lb/>
News Editor<lb/>
Those who have passed by the<lb/>
now defunct barrestaurant<lb/>
Flamingo's over the past few weeks<lb/>
have surely had their interest piqued<lb/>
as to the futureof the establishment<lb/>
All questions were answered<lb/>
when Maria's Italian restaurant re-<lb/>
cently opened its doors to a city<lb/>
which has long la. ked a proper eat-<lb/>
ery for the tastebuds of Italy.<lb/>
And Flamingo's it ain't.<lb/>
Many college students have<lb/>
spent nights roaming through the<lb/>
short-lived establishments of<lb/>
Greenville in wanton search of<lb/>
cheap beer and good times.<lb/>
However.over time the restau-<lb/>
rant lost its novelty when the pa-<lb/>
tronage turned more and more<lb/>
rowdy. Traditional college students<lb/>
even feaaxl for their safety in some<lb/>
cases.<lb/>
To quote one rug t<lb/>
known only as 'Joe "Ho<lb/>
you get by catering todoi<lb/>
dnnkers?"<lb/>
The answer was oM<lb/>
owner closed up shop, n<lb/>
renovationsand turned 1<lb/>
into an establishment.<lb/>
And when the dust I<lb/>
cleared, there was Maru<lb/>
I "he atmosphere in Lfi<lb/>
taurant is much mor<lb/>
Mana'sisdtmlv lit, bathe<lb/>
ing pale-red colors whu<lb/>
feeling of complacvnc.<lb/>
A barrier hasbo -<lb/>
separates the eating<lb/>
kjtchen,sodinersarvrK tj<lb/>
by those traveling towaj<lb/>
One of the few items<lb/>
fnm the Flaming<lb/>
tish tank whichdividostl<lb/>
ing from the rest of the<lb/>
ment.<lb/>
The bar area is dls<lb/>
Equus shines<lb/>
92 playhouse j<lb/>
By Joe Horst<lb/>
Staff Writer<lb/>
Last week, the East Carolina Playhouse<lb/>
closed its third production of the 1991-92<lb/>
season with Peter Shaffer's, "Equus<lb/>
The story oi a voting English ben- who<lb/>
has committed a vicious act of violence<lb/>
against six horses, "Equus" grabs the<lb/>
audience's attention with a nerve-wrack-<lb/>
ing look into the troubled mind ot this<lb/>
young criminal. Combining religion and<lb/>
psychology, "Equus" leaves the audience<lb/>
breathless with anticipation for the next<lb/>
revelation. Building tooneof the most tense<lb/>
climax esseenat McGinnisTheater. "Equus"<lb/>
tears away the thin veneer of civilisation to<lb/>
reveal the coarser, more violent side ot<lb/>
man.<lb/>
John Shearin, playing Dr. Martin<lb/>
Dysart, shows his breadth of acting talent<lb/>
with his exemplary portrayal of the psy-<lb/>
chiatrist who agrees to help the young boy.<lb/>
Sheann delves into his multi-faceted char-<lb/>
acter with an ease and grace that shows his<lb/>
level of professional acting experience<lb/>
Though at times lapsing from his character<lb/>
into a more personal attitude, Sheann pave<lb/>
an overall outstanding performance.<lb/>
Carol Pendergrast, who played I tester<lb/>
Salomon, detracted from the overall inten-<lb/>
sity of the plav.<lb/>
10 her charactd<lb/>
in her emotioru<lb/>
mere foil in he<lb/>
Pendergrast s<lb/>
her seen (<lb/>
point that her<lb/>
occurrence<lb/>
Kevin an<lb/>
gave a mind-bo<lb/>
formanee that<lb/>
into speechless<lb/>
trasl to his pi<lb/>
maker" and<lb/>
a palpal' i<lb/>
ming to exp<lb/>
Varner kept thj<lb/>
peak, leaving<lb/>
they left their i<lb/>
The set s<lb/>
the added touj<lb/>
bearing The<lb/>
seemed to sen<lb/>
distracted the<lb/>
tion of the plaj<lb/>
With the<lb/>
done and the <lb/>
the under -cur<lb/>
the audience<lb/>
unsaddled thd<lb/>
ence spell-bod<lb/>
Comedy tande<lb/>
By Joe Horst<lb/>
Staff Writer<lb/>
Last Wednesday, the Attic continued<lb/>
its Comedy Zone tradition with perfor-<lb/>
mances bv Mike OHourke and Eliot Thre-<lb/>
att.<lb/>
QRourke opened the night with some<lb/>
audience-related jokes, showing hisabilitv<lb/>
to maintain a f unnv routine while interact-<lb/>
ing withanaudience.aRturkepkedaKut<lb/>
the differences between men and women,<lb/>
focusing on gxj<lb/>
"Men hai<lb/>
take a piss n.i1<lb/>
is stare at the vl<lb/>
one of those b<lb/>
can play hod)<lb/>
bottom with -<lb/>
can't piss in tl<lb/>
difficult, dotl<lb/>
QRourke<lb/>
"battle crv<lb/>
pens a Roil<lb/>
'<lb/>
r,i'<lb/>
M<lb/>
Sponsored by the<lb/>
'ECU Student'Union<lb/>
Produetwns Committee<lb/>
<pb facs="00058253_0006"/><lb/>
vdoms<lb/>
al<lb/>
vss<lb/>
.<lb/>
Entertainment<lb/>
Oil?c Cast (Earnlintan<lb/>
December 3,1991<lb/>
Maria's brings<lb/>
Italy to the<lb/>
Emerald City<lb/>
; M.itt ones<lb/>
Sew<lb/>
one night man<lb/>
e I low Ion  v m<lb/>
nu<lb/>
" �<lb/>
mI � :<lb/>
�via.<lb/>
�lorswhu h n �<lb/>
� � . <lb/>
� -<lb/>
Prvoto by Jimas<lb/>
' irdlingstor esil II theCrowsf<lb/>
� � . � � -  " taliai<lb/>
D-oto aD<lb/>
irant aficionados<lb/>
Connie k or Frank Vail<lb/>
ide mui h � � � � . ��<lb/>
'�" ' � of all types of dnnl<lb/>
� ' � : - � ik' and  �<lb/>
� - m be tease I with a<lb/>
- ' i 'ii of unusual ippetizei<lb/>
atraditioi alfavontef  liciousform  n I i<lb/>
1 . � �<lb/>
: ' -n 111 vd<lb/>
� - ' � � � �<lb/>
Equus shines as 91-<lb/>
2 playhouse jewel<lb/>
� � �,<lb/>
-<lb/>
.<lb/>
�<lb/>
� : � �<lb/>
quk k delivery In short, it was e�<lb/>
cellenl<lb/>
rhe meal easily rivaled any<lb/>
other in Greenville Specifically, 1<lb/>
feel as though that particular dish<lb/>
surpasses the predominant Italian<lb/>
eatery Villa Roma<lb/>
In addition to taste, Mauna'salso<lb/>
vercomes other restaurants with<lb/>
�  � ir portii ns. Unable to<lb/>
Ii ir the mammoth meal, it was<lb/>
essaiy to take home over halt of<lb/>
'�' i iter date, the other por-<lb/>
� '�' u : � tpertise the bar<lb/>
pa ed : � � m with flying col-<lb/>
' � - prices .ire affordable<lb/>
ii �' : ; 0 for a highball) and<lb/>
" � in bian �� is wel oming. Gone<lb/>
its atmosphere is the usual<lb/>
. I music and rowdy customers<lb/>
ind il the majority ot bars in<lb/>
env ille<lb/>
Even i :  eudo-philoso-<lb/>
phizerwrw partakes of alcohol con-<lb/>
sumption despises a drinking ev<lb/>
hment where the music blasts<lb/>
so loud that conversation becomes<lb/>
ossibk rhis is not the case at<lb/>
Maria s<lb/>
So those with a craving for good<lb/>
food ind gi n d drinks, the search is<lb/>
� � r Maria'sistheplacetogoforall<lb/>
� essentials of an average college<lb/>
student's night on the town<lb/>
Summer The-<lb/>
ater announces<lb/>
pre-Christmas<lb/>
Discount<lb/>
sutt Reports<lb/>
immer rheaten f Eastern North<lb/>
'��� �� Producer Directorjohn<lb/>
i d I<lb/>
mce the 1992<lb/>
Blah Blah Blah<lb/>
.<lb/>
� '����;� �� at now defu l goalpostsaic<lb/>
ime interrogation fodder for I<lb/>
Dati R�d-EClJ Pho�o taa<lb/>
<lb/>
rhe t musical con edy, "Kiss<lb/>
Kate" �� it hisbest will<lb/>
� plaving 2-1 . . 4<lb/>
- � .  ari i farci Lend<lb/>
MeaTenoi ��-� :� ronyawards<lb/>
j � -  irds and three Outer<lb/>
i ���  Is will be appearing<lb/>
ily 8-18 '� thic horror classic,<lb/>
ila � il howl r kids as well<lb/>
be perti rmed uly 22 -<lb/>
. si .<lb/>
rhe Summer rheater is excited to<lb/>
present thiNhne-upand hopes you will hnd<lb/>
� � be as thrilling as we do Shearin said.<lb/>
Bun season tickets now either tor<lb/>
� � r that ontwho-has-everything<lb/>
on your Chnstma list and the Summer<lb/>
rheater will give a whopping 25 percent<lb/>
discount on the season price.<lb/>
IThis will be the largest discount avail-<lb/>
able for the season subscription and is ot-<lb/>
tered onl until Dec. 20, 11<lb/>
omedy tandem ignites Attic Thanksgiving-eve audience<lb/>
�<lb/>
�<lb/>
� � -<lb/>
: n the<lb/>
tare at I �. : inless vou' l<lb/>
obathl<lb/>
�� garette at the<lb/>
� buddy Womei fc �urse<lb/>
in't now I think il - kind of<lb/>
t vou?<lb/>
� in to talk about I �<lb/>
f medic rirv kit 1 lap<lb/>
' '� irke finished with his obser-<lb/>
��<lb/>
ighl<lb/>
ivinga baby<lb/>
i baby i id me feel so . . .<lb/>
I felt like the Im-<lb/>
even h ld the doc t r alter mv<lb/>
�" I'll be back But 1 always<lb/>
 get more sex it 1 was married.<lb/>
- going to 5A Sex<lb/>
nou �   . : .tme is Hill and I<lb/>
self -v.A soon tired the audience with his the stupidest sport yet You see the guy<lb/>
rKn � ighterandl id jokes jump and his friends are likeHey, didn't<lb/>
ilcameinthe realize we were that close to the ground.<lb/>
� itine when he talked about Sony, Bob Then you're hanging there<lb/>
haven t had sex tor six months<lb/>
rhreatt then came on the stage and<lb/>
pn iceeded ti i bore the aw ience to the point<lb/>
of leaving rhreatt seemed unsure ot him-<lb/>
his adventures flvinj mmuter air-<lb/>
planes and bungee-cord jumping<lb/>
"i looked at mv ticket and where savs<lb/>
whatseatyou resitting in, vou know, 2C or<lb/>
JD the ve got written in there Shotgun<lb/>
said ihmatt<lb/>
and they go. Hev. let s go fishing for pit<lb/>
bulls! There sone Oooh, that must hurt<lb/>
Finishing up with an almost guilty look<lb/>
on his face, rhreatt left the stage to an<lb/>
almost audible sigh of rebel The Attic's<lb/>
!ead-inamxdian should be the headliners<lb/>
Bungee-cord jumping from hot air because in the past tour weeks, they've<lb/>
balloons saidThreatt This has got to be been the better performers<lb/>
bu are cordially invited to the<lb/>
'I i 'il Student 'Union $<lb/>
tvlN 7'A '1 �iTKJlMcMleXg PSVTy<lb/>
Tuesday, 'December 3, 1991<lb/>
4:00 p.m.<lb/>
�Mendenliall Student t 'enter Gaffery<lb/>
Seasonal entertainment provided<lb/>
By the ' ('11 Cjospet Choir.<lb/>
'Produi i<lb/>
'Refreshments unit be erred, and Santo Cuius will be<lb/>
there to take those gift-fist requests.<lb/>
SILVER<lb/>
5<lb/>
yjA<lb/>
�L<lb/>
i V<lb/>
 <lb/>
Aduit Entertainment Center <lb/>
�<lb/>
TUESDA YS:<lb/>
WEDNESDA YS<lb/>
Doors Open at 4:00 pm. THURSDA YS:<lb/>
Doors Open at 4:00 pm. FRIDAYS<lb/>
Doors open at 4:00 pm. SATURDAYS: � . � � - , �<lb/>
11 STUDENT SP1!VL<lb/>
$2.00 oft admission Saturdayight<lb/>
Open Tues -Sat VALID ID Required ah? Door<lb/>
<pb facs="00058253_0007"/><lb/>
� m&amp;<lb/>
<lb/>
loins<lb/>
Entertainment<lb/>
nhv iEaat (Earultntan<lb/>
Di<lb/>
ier 3,1991<lb/>
Maria's brings<lb/>
Italy to the<lb/>
Emerald City<lb/>
pm i<lb/>
-<lb/>
quus shines as 91-<lb/>
2 playhouse jewel<lb/>
� -<lb/>
<lb/>
iuick Sort, it was e<lb/>
<lb/>
� �- i . � . i. � : . 11 ,<lb/>
" � r rtvnvilli peahca .<lb/>
igl thai particular dish<lb/>
" � . - - mil ant Italian<lb/>
i'di  i<lb/>
Inadditi � � � ti M u i salso<lb/>
" � � � � tauranl  11<lb/>
� , � � <lb/>
'� � � ' imi th meal, it was<lb/>
���� I - er hall 1<lb/>
�<lb/>
ther por<lb/>
�: � " the Kir<lb/>
, ii� � ' rvith tlying cc)l<lb/>
5� l 1: Gom . � � � �<lb/>
&amp;: . . �  f bars in<lb/>
"<lb/>
r.very a : , . : ; �<lb/>
;�� � � :<lb/>
  t . Ir . . .<lb/>
' �'<lb/>
���<lb/>
-  is not th i - il<lb/>
� " ewithacra ngforgood<lb/>
�' ��� th( earcl<lb/>
��� ' :� i  ' :<lb/>
� ' � � � n the 1 .vn<lb/>
Summer The-<lb/>
ater announces<lb/>
pre-Christmas<lb/>
Discount<lb/>
Staff Rep<lb/>
�� n orth<lb/>
M<lb/>
0<lb/>
Blah Blah Blah,<lb/>
.  �<lb/>
 Mnesl<lb/>
i<lb/>
� � ��. nyav irds<lb/>
I threeHiter<lb/>
� ippearing<lb/>
rr r classic<lb/>
 � t kids as well<lb/>
.  �<lb/>
�<lb/>
� � ited to<lb/>
pes you will find<lb/>
. �  SI i inn aid.<lb/>
5uy season tickets i ��� er for<lb/>
� . erything<lb/>
� " Summer<lb/>
 . percent<lb/>
- mtavail-<lb/>
nd is '<lb/>
i <lb/>
��� ;<lb/>
�easi lbs<lb/>
Dec. I<lb/>
bmedy tandem ignites Attic Thanksgiving-eve audience<lb/>
i<lb/>
�<lb/>
: :<lb/>
i<lb/>
� .<lb/>
I<lb/>
tmed<lb/>
SA<lb/>
s Bill and i<lb/>
stage and<lb/>
.ure ot I in<lb/>
� : air-<lb/>
- - � � . - - �<lb/>
� - resitl - <lb/>
 D, t h e <lb/>
balloons said fhn atl<lb/>
"i ou see the guv<lb/>
like Hey didn't<lb/>
se to the ground<lb/>
re hanging there<lb/>
co fishing tor pit<lb/>
� �<lb/>
<lb/>
iom � hei �<lb/>
and the<lb/>
Is! rht re sone Oooh, that must hurt<lb/>
Finishingupwithanalmost guilty look<lb/>
on his face, rhreatt left the stage to an<lb/>
st audible sigh of relief The Artie's<lb/>
�  ' i med insshouldbetheheadliners<lb/>
 i i� ' past four weeks, thev ve<lb/>
Kvn the better performers<lb/>
i ' i J<lb/>
IS'<lb/>
I K<lb/>
 in  : to the<lb/>
 'Union �<lb/>
; oo<lb/>
4:00 p.m.<lb/>
r<lb/>
Men den hall Student c 'enter Gallery<lb/>
 onal entertainment provided<lb/>
bif the '11 (7 i Jospel ('hair.<lb/>
'Refreshment will be served and Santa Cluus will be<lb/>
there to take those gift list requests.<lb/>
vf-<lb/>
silver;<lb/>
V<lb/>
V4<lb/>
Adult Entertainment, Qeniec<lb/>
TUESDA YS:<lb/>
WEDNESDAYS<lb/>
Doors Open at 4:00 pm.<lb/>
rHURSDAYS<lb/>
Doors Open .it 4:00 pm.<lb/>
FQIDA YS<lb/>
Doors opon .it 4:00 pm.<lb/>
c ati innivc<lb/>
M I STLDEY1 SPi! !<lb/>
$2 "i1 tt admission Saturday Night.<lb/>
Odc Tues Sat UALID ID Required at the Door<lb/>
<pb facs="00058253_0008"/><lb/>
Classifieds<lb/>
(Hire 3aflt (Unrulinian<lb/>
December 3,1991<lb/>
Sports<lb/>
WWII 'OBIA<lb/>
NOTICE: I will pay $75 for a<lb/>
Peach Bowl ticket. 1 need a t least<lb/>
20 tickets. Call Billy at 756-1566.<lb/>
StKH iS OflLKf n<lb/>
WORD PROCESSING AND<lb/>
PHOTOCOPYING SER-<lb/>
VICES: We offer typing and<lb/>
photocopying services. We also<lb/>
sell software and computer dis-<lb/>
kettes. 24 hours in and out Guar-<lb/>
anteed typing on paper up to 20<lb/>
hand-written pages. SDF Pro-<lb/>
fessional Computer Services,<lb/>
106 East 5th St. (beside<lb/>
Cubbie's), Greenville, NC 752-<lb/>
3694.<lb/>
ABSOLUTELY PROFES-<lb/>
SION ALTYPING: Fast service<lb/>
and low prices! Call 321-2522<lb/>
after 5 p.m.<lb/>
TYPING, WORD PROCESS-<lb/>
ING AND FAX SERVICES:<lb/>
Fast service, low prices. Free<lb/>
pick up and delivery! Call 355-<lb/>
5203.<lb/>
FREE HAIRCUT TO FIRST<lb/>
FIVE GIRLS WHO CALL:<lb/>
Regularly $7. Sketch of haircut<lb/>
included Short cuts a specialty.<lb/>
ay's Cuts and Styles, 355-0168.<lb/>
Tease leave message.<lb/>
TYPING SERVICE: Fast, accu-<lb/>
rate, grammatical corrections,<lb/>
copies upon request. Reason-<lb/>
able rates, convenient location.<lb/>
Call Angje at 756-8545 days or<lb/>
753-3924after 6p.m. Leavemes-<lb/>
sage.<lb/>
DISi'l N ASSHifD<lb/>
Rinjiyold Towers<lb/>
Now Taking Leases for<lb/>
1 Bedroom, 2 Bedroom.<lb/>
&amp; Efficiency Apartments.<lb/>
CALL 752-2865<lb/>
SIKVlCftOIMKl<lb/>
TYPESETTING: Resumes and<lb/>
reports. Brochures and news-<lb/>
letters. Call 752-0833 or 830-<lb/>
9090. Ask for Lisa.<lb/>
NEED PAPERS TYPED? Fast<lb/>
service, low prices. Call Julie<lb/>
355-2583 8-4 p.m 830-3874 af-<lb/>
ter 4 p.m.<lb/>
FOK RENT<lb/>
FEMALE ROOMMATE<lb/>
NEEDED: for spring semester.<lb/>
Non-smoker to share 2 bed-<lb/>
room bathapartment.$15750<lb/>
and l2utilitiesand cable. Have<lb/>
1 cat-no more pets. Call 355-<lb/>
1644.<lb/>
RESPONSIBLE FEMALE<lb/>
ROOMMATE WANTED<lb/>
ASAP: Non-smoker, $115.00 <lb/>
13 utilities, 112 from cam-<lb/>
pus, on ECU bus route. Call<lb/>
758-8652 anytime.<lb/>
FEMALE ROOMMATE<lb/>
NEEDED: Private balconv bed-<lb/>
room, Wilson Acres. 1 I utili-<lb/>
ties and rent. Free cable. Dish-<lb/>
washer. Need for second se-<lb/>
mester or sooner. 758-5262.<lb/>
ONE BEDROOM APART-<lb/>
MENT: Eastgate; new; can catch<lb/>
ECU bus to school; J ohn Pardue<lb/>
752-2142. Available Dec 17.<lb/>
FEMALE ROOMMATE<lb/>
NEEDED to share a 2 bed-<lb/>
room apartment with 2 girls.<lb/>
Fully furnished. Across the<lb/>
street from campus at Regency<lb/>
House. $130 a month plus utili-<lb/>
ties. 758-8272.<lb/>
ROOMMATE NEEDED: to<lb/>
take over a room in 3 bedroom<lb/>
apartment at Plantation. Call<lb/>
321-1969.<lb/>
FREE<lb/>
PREGNANCY<lb/>
TESTING<lb/>
Free &amp; Confidential<lb/>
Services &amp; Counseling<lb/>
Carolina Fregnancy Center<lb/>
7S7-0003<lb/>
111 E. 3rd Street<lb/>
The Lee Building<lb/>
Greenville NC<lb/>
Hours:<lb/>
Mon - Fri 8:30-3:00<lb/>
A Hcauliful Place to Ijc<lb/>
�All Ncv<lb/>
�And RcaJ To Rent<lb/>
UNIVERSITY APARTMKNTS<lb/>
2899 E Sdl Strrcl<lb/>
�Located Near ECU<lb/>
�N � Majof Shaping Centers<lb/>
� V: si From Highway 1'atro! Station<lb/>
Ufer � $330 a month<lb/>
Contact J.T. Of Tommy Williams<lb/>
756-7S15 or 830-1937<lb/>
Ofticc open - Apt. 8. 12-5:30pm<lb/>
�AZALEA GARDENS-<lb/>
Ckn and quiel uric bedroom furnished ajwtmri<lb/>
er-erjjv efT. inK, free mtfn �r.d �etcr, �tiher, drwrs,<lb/>
cable TV. CtMpie or sir.gjei itJv. S240 a munth. 6<lb/>
nwiruh !eje MOB Bit HOME RENTALS Wf-M �<lb/>
tk g;r� ArMrsnen!�JkirrxjbUehv�ncin Ax�ie� Garden<lb/>
new Brouit Vtl'cy Country Cub.<lb/>
Contact J.T. or Tommy Williams<lb/>
756-7813<lb/>
DISPLAY CLASSIFIED<lb/>
RESEARCH INFORMATION<lb/>
Largest Library ol Information In U.S.<lb/>
19.273 TOPICS - ALL SUBJECTS<lb/>
Oraer Cala.s; To2ay wix VISA. MC or COD<lb/>
H 800-351-0222<lb/>
Of Run S2 DO to Research infofmacn<lb/>
H322 iaao Ave �?06-A Lo� Angekr CA 900?5<lb/>
COUPON<lb/>
Our Gift To You - Now Thru Dec 14th<lb/>
Must<lb/>
present<lb/>
this<lb/>
coupon<lb/>
20 OFF<lb/>
ANY ONE ITEM IN OUR STORE!<lb/>
(EXCLUDING VIDEOS)<lb/>
Christian Bookstore<lb/>
300 PLAZA DR - BEHIND PEPPI'S<lb/>
IOK K! i<lb/>
ROOMMATE NEEDED: to<lb/>
share 2 bedroom apartment.<lb/>
$113.34 rent 13 electricity. 3<lb/>
blocks from campus. Mostly<lb/>
furnished. Dishwasher and free<lb/>
cable. Call Susan at 757-0329.<lb/>
WANTED: Female roommate<lb/>
to share apartment at Wilson<lb/>
Acres. 14 of rent and utilities.<lb/>
Will have own bed room. Please<lb/>
call for more information. 757-<lb/>
0458.<lb/>
FEMALE ROOMMATE<lb/>
NEEDED ASAP: 2 BR, 1 12<lb/>
bath townhouse. Dishwasher<lb/>
and laundry. On bus route.<lb/>
Great location. Call 321-1560.<lb/>
FEMALE ROOMMATE<lb/>
WANTED FREE rent, utilities,<lb/>
cable in house, near campus in<lb/>
exchange for careattendant ser-<lb/>
vices. Will provide own room.<lb/>
NO experience necessary. Avg.<lb/>
worktime 10 hr. week Call 752-<lb/>
1932 for details Available Jan.<lb/>
8. Ask for Courtney.<lb/>
TOWNHOUSE FOR RENT: 3<lb/>
bedroom, 212 baths, fireplace.<lb/>
Small pets allowed with pet fee.<lb/>
Security deposit required.<lb/>
Available Jan. 1, 1991. $590.00<lb/>
per month. 355-5079.<lb/>
FOKSALE<lb/>
GILBERT'S MUSIC: offers<lb/>
20 discount to ECU students<lb/>
and faculty - 40 off non-<lb/>
stocked items. Musical instru-<lb/>
ment repairs of all tvpes. 2711E.<lb/>
10thSt.757-2667.<lb/>
FOR SALE: Nice 2 bedroom1<lb/>
bath mobile home set up in a<lb/>
quiet park close to campus.<lb/>
Washerdryer, AC, 2 sheds.<lb/>
Was $3,500 Reduced to $3,000.<lb/>
Call 1-919-423-6090.<lb/>
1982 YAMAHA MAXIM: Ex-<lb/>
cellent running condition.<lb/>
Lookssharp, too! Astealat$700.<lb/>
Call Greg at 830-9131.<lb/>
79 CHEVY WAGON: 350, V-<lb/>
8. Must sell now $500 or best<lb/>
offer. 756-7493. Ask for Andy.<lb/>
SEIZED CARS: trucks, boats,4<lb/>
wheelers, motorhomes, by FBI,<lb/>
IRS, DEA. Available vour area<lb/>
now. Call 805-682-7555 ext. C-<lb/>
5999.<lb/>
REPOSSESSED AND IRS<lb/>
FORECLOSED HOMES:<lb/>
availableat below market value.<lb/>
Fantastic savings! You repair.<lb/>
Also S&amp;L bailout properties.<lb/>
Call 805-682-7555 ext. H-6314.<lb/>
FOR SALE Cobra Radar De-<lb/>
tector, all bands, just bought.<lb/>
Paid $110.00, will sell for $60.00.<lb/>
Call 931-8815, leave message.<lb/>
1983 FORD ESCORT: $1400 or<lb/>
best offer. New timing belt, new<lb/>
water pump, good condition.<lb/>
Relocating. Call: 551-2745. 8<lb/>
a.m5 p.m.<lb/>
MERCEDES 240D: High mile-<lb/>
age. Extremely dependable and<lb/>
very safe. $500 firm. Call Amy<lb/>
at 758-8395.<lb/>
FOR SALE: 1984 Ford Tempo.<lb/>
AC, AMFM, cruise, 86,000<lb/>
miles, excellent condition inte-<lb/>
rior and exterior. $2300.00. Call<lb/>
757-3711 Leave message.<lb/>
STUFF YOUR: PIRATE fan's<lb/>
stocking with an ECU carflag!<lb/>
One for$9 and two or more for<lb/>
$8 each. Don't delay. Call 830-<lb/>
3691.<lb/>
WWIi )<lb/>
FUNDRAISER: We're looking<lb/>
for a top fraternity, sorority, or<lb/>
student organization that<lb/>
would like to earn $500-$1500<lb/>
for a one week on-campus mar-<lb/>
keting project. Must be orga-<lb/>
nizecfand nard working. Call<lb/>
Jo Ann or Pam at 1-800-592-<lb/>
2121.<lb/>
MAKE $500-51000 WEEKLY:<lb/>
stuffing envelopes at home.<lb/>
Start now! Rush S.A.S.E. plus<lb/>
$1.00 to Home Employers, 2301<lb/>
Kent 8 Las Cruces, NM 88001.<lb/>
ADDRESSERS WANTED<lb/>
IMMEDIATELY! No experi-<lb/>
ence necessary. Process FHA<lb/>
mortgage refunds. Work at<lb/>
home. Call 1-405-321-3064.<lb/>
HELP WANTED: Morning<lb/>
hours only apply. Apply in per-<lb/>
son at Carpet Bargain Center at<lb/>
1009 Dickinson Ave.<lb/>
FREE TRAVEL: Air couriers<lb/>
and cruiseships. Students also<lb/>
needed Christmas, spring and<lb/>
summer for amusement park<lb/>
�mr�lnvmenr. Callflrfi-ff?-7W<lb/>
ext. F-3464.<lb/>
POSTAL JOBS AVAILABLE<lb/>
Many positions. Great benefits.<lb/>
Call 805-682-7555 ext. P-3712.<lb/>
EASY WORK! EXCELLENT<lb/>
PAY! Assemble products at<lb/>
home. Call toll free. 1-800-467-<lb/>
8585 ext. 5920.<lb/>
FREE SPRING BREAK VA-<lb/>
CATION: Organize a group,<lb/>
earn commission and free trips!<lb/>
Call: 1-800-826-9100.<lb/>
GREAT HOLIDAY JOB OP-<lb/>
PORTUNITY: Going home for<lb/>
the holidays? Need a fun part-<lb/>
time job? The Honey Baked<lb/>
Ham Co. is in search ofseasonal<lb/>
help to fill our sales, counter<lb/>
ana production positions. We<lb/>
have stores located in the fol-<lb/>
lowing markets: Greenville,SC,<lb/>
Columbia, Charleston, Knox-<lb/>
ville, Raleigh, Durham,Greens-<lb/>
boro, Winston Salem,<lb/>
Wilmington, Charlotte, Atlanta<lb/>
and other major cities through-<lb/>
out the southeast. Please stop<lb/>
by during your Thanksgiving<lb/>
break to inquire about Christ-<lb/>
mas help. Check the white pages<lb/>
for information on the store<lb/>
nearest you.<lb/>
SPRING BREAK: Bahamas<lb/>
Party Cruise $279! Panama City<lb/>
$99!5. Padre$199! Cancun$469!<lb/>
Jamaica $399. Jasa 758-5165,<lb/>
Georgia 931-9363, Jeff 830-5367,<lb/>
Wayne and John 757-1369.<lb/>
TRAVEL SALES REPRESEN-<lb/>
TATIVE STS, the leader in col-<lb/>
legiate travel needs motivated<lb/>
individuals and groups to pro-<lb/>
mote winterspnngbreak trips.<lb/>
For information call Student<lb/>
Travel Services at 1-800-648-<lb/>
4849.<lb/>
PAINTERS NEEDED: Need<lb/>
PART-TIME SECRETARY<lb/>
NEEDED: Malefemale. Flex-<lb/>
ible hours. Will work with<lb/>
student's schedule. Call be-<lb/>
tween 10 a.m. and 3 p.m. on<lb/>
Wednesday, Dec. 4 thru Mon-<lb/>
day, Dec 9 to set up interview.<lb/>
PFKSOSAIS<lb/>
SPRING BREAK '92: You've<lb/>
only got one week to livc.so<lb/>
don't blow it! Make it Jamaica<lb/>
with low, low prices starting at<lb/>
$429 Call Sun Splash Tours 1-<lb/>
800-426-7710.<lb/>
$200 REWARD: for any infor-<lb/>
mation leading to the recovery<lb/>
of a red, white and blue '89<lb/>
Honda CBR 600 motorcycle.<lb/>
Stolen from Tar River Apart-<lb/>
ments. Call 752-1217.<lb/>
JEN THOMPSON: You did an<lb/>
AWESOME job on the formal.<lb/>
Though we don't say it enough,<lb/>
we DO appreciate all the great<lb/>
work you do for us. There will<lb/>
never "be another like you! We<lb/>
will greatly miss your warm,<lb/>
loving personality. Love al-<lb/>
waysTPi Delta.<lb/>
PI DELTA PLEDGES: Thank<lb/>
you so much for the great song<lb/>
you sang for us at the formal.<lb/>
Wp Iovp yrwi InK rhp �ic�orc<lb/>
FOUND: Golden lab puppy.<lb/>
Near 1st Street Sunday morn-<lb/>
ing, 1124. Call 758-6788.<lb/>
ALPHA XI DELTA: Would like<lb/>
to thank Cathy Hill and Melisa<lb/>
Mrozek for the great job they<lb/>
did on cocktail! We love you<lb/>
guys! Libos.<lb/>
ALPHAXIDELTA: Would like<lb/>
to wish a Happy Birthday to the<lb/>
following sisters and pledges<lb/>
who have birthdays in Novem-<lb/>
ber: Ashlee Barnes, Christy<lb/>
Coggins, Heidi Hicks, Kim<lb/>
Iannuzzo, Angela Smith,<lb/>
Audrey Weathers, Julie<lb/>
Vanderburg, Dede Folck,<lb/>
Louisa Lewis, Jennifer Stewart.<lb/>
MOM, DAD and SHANER I<lb/>
dun come home early to be with<lb/>
ya'll 1 was tired ot seeing to-<lb/>
bacco and this thieving hall. I<lb/>
was ready for the beach and all<lb/>
its fun! I was ready for home<lb/>
food and Boca sun! 1' m glad 1<lb/>
was home, but now I'm rack.<lb/>
I'm studying hard. My finals<lb/>
attack. Love, the kid.<lb/>
RIDETOTHE PEACH BOWL<lb/>
with Pirate pride! Buy your ECU<lb/>
car flags today. One for $9 and<lb/>
two or more for $8. Call now<lb/>
830-3691 and leave message.<lb/>
CONCERNED ABOUT<lb/>
YOUR FUTURE? Will some<lb/>
uncertain future income pay all<lb/>
of your certain future bills?<lb/>
Maybe we can help. Free confi-<lb/>
dential consultation. 355-3789.<lb/>
DON: I'm sorry I kept waking<lb/>
you upyesterday. I knowyou're<lb/>
not having a good week, but<lb/>
cheer upI still wuv you<lb/>
bunches. If you ever need to<lb/>
talk, 1 will be there for you. Just<lb/>
take things "Day by day Re-<lb/>
member? Hugs forever,<lb/>
Jellybean.<lb/>
THE EAST CAROLINIAN fe HOW<lb/>
accepting applications fbr the<lb/>
following positions: Managing<lb/>
Editor, News Editor, Sports Edi-<lb/>
tor and Entertainment Editor.<lb/>
Applications may be obtaihed at<lb/>
THE EAST CAROLINIAN In the<lb/>
publications building across from<lb/>
gsonj.<lb/>
Buy your car "<lb/>
830-3691.<lb/>
Bu<lb/>
�njanuary i, I<lb/>
flags today.<lb/>
Call<lb/>
CLASSIFIED AD RATES<lb/>
Line Ads:<lb/>
For 1 st 25 words:<lb/>
Students$2.00<lb/>
Non-students$3.00<lb/>
(five cents for every word after 25 words)<lb/>
Pisplay Ads:<lb/>
Open Rate per<lb/>
column inch$5.50<lb/>
Please notify the paper immediately if your ad is incorrect We will not<lb/>
be responsible for incorrect ads after the first day of publishing. All<lb/>
classified ads must be pre-paid. We reserve the right to reject any ad for<lb/>
libel, obscenity andor bad taste.<lb/>
DEADLINE:<lb/>
Friday, 4 p.m for Tuesday issue and Tuesday, 4 p.m.<lb/>
for Thursday issue.<lb/>
Announcements<lb/>
ECU SCHOOL OF MUSIC<lb/>
EVENTS PEC, 4-7<lb/>
Wednesday, Dec. 4�School of<lb/>
Medicine and School of Music<lb/>
Concert Series, "Seasonal Cel-<lb/>
ebrations Symphonic Wind<lb/>
Ensemble, William W.<lb/>
Wiedrich, Conductor (Brody<lb/>
Auditorium of School of Medi-<lb/>
cine, 1230p.m free). Wednes-<lb/>
day, Dec. 4�Joel Mauger, gui-<lb/>
tar, senior recital (Retcner Re-<lb/>
cital Hall, 7 pjru, free); Thurs-<lb/>
day-Saturday, Dec. 5-7-nMad-<lb/>
rigal Dinners, Charles Moore,<lb/>
director (Mendenhall Student<lb/>
Center, 7 p.m. tickets required-<lb/>
call 757-4788 for information).<lb/>
Dial 757-4370 for the School of<lb/>
Music's 24-hour "Recorded<lb/>
Calendar<lb/>
NATIVE AMERICANS<lb/>
The final meeting of the Fall<lb/>
1991 semester wiff be Wednes-<lb/>
day, 9:15 p.m. in MendenhalL<lb/>
The meeting will be held in<lb/>
rooms 8C-D-E. Please come and<lb/>
invite a friend.<lb/>
ATTENTION ALL<lb/>
FMA MEMBERS<lb/>
FMA Christmas party at the Fizz<lb/>
on December 4,5:30 p.m. Don't<lb/>
miss it!<lb/>
STUDY ABROADEX-<lb/>
CHANGE PROGRAMS<lb/>
With Christmas break ap-<lb/>
proaching, now is the time to<lb/>
bring home some information<lb/>
on an exchange for next aca-<lb/>
demic year or a semester! This<lb/>
is your chance to take courses<lb/>
that you may not be able to get<lb/>
at ECU. Why not spend an ex-<lb/>
citing semester or year at one of<lb/>
overlOO colleges or universities<lb/>
in the US or in over 65 coun-<lb/>
tries and earn credit towards<lb/>
graduation. Don'tmiss your op-<lb/>
portunity to see new places,<lb/>
travel and take on new chal-<lb/>
lenges. If you have a GPA of 15<lb/>
or better, you can pay ECU tu-<lb/>
ition and study out of state or<lb/>
out of the country! There is a<lb/>
simple application procedure<lb/>
which will be explained at a<lb/>
seminar on Wednesday, Dec. 4,<lb/>
4 p.m. in 1001 GCB. If you can-<lb/>
not attend the seminar, contact<lb/>
Stephanie Evancho in Brewster<lb/>
A-117,757-6769 for an appoint-<lb/>
ment. DO IT NOW!<lb/>
SUMMER<lb/>
STUDY ABROAD<lb/>
Are you interested in a summer<lb/>
session in Costa Rica, France,<lb/>
England or another country?<lb/>
Come to the study abroad semi-<lb/>
nar on Wednesday, Dec 4, 4<lb/>
p.m. in GCB 1001 and learn how<lb/>
Sou can participate in one of<lb/>
tese exciting programs! If you<lb/>
are unable to attend the meet-<lb/>
ing, you may contact Stephanie<lb/>
Evancho in International Aca-<lb/>
demic Studies in Brewster A-<lb/>
117,757-6769 for further infor-<lb/>
mation. Now is the time to act!<lb/>
Last meeting of the semester.<lb/>
Possible guest speaker. Today!<lb/>
5 pan. in room ON 109 of the<lb/>
Science Complex<lb/>
MATH CLUB<lb/>
The ECU Math Club will be<lb/>
having their next meeting on<lb/>
Wednesday, Dec. 4 at 3 p jrt in<lb/>
Austin 203. All interested stu-<lb/>
dents and faculty are invited to<lb/>
attend!<lb/>
PRE-PHYSICAL<lb/>
JHERA<lb/>
will have<lb/>
El<lb/>
The pre-P.T. club will have if s<lb/>
second organizational meeting<lb/>
Tuesday, Dec. 3, 8 p.m. in<lb/>
Mendenhall Room 221. An ad-<lb/>
visor will be present to answer<lb/>
questions about applications to<lb/>
the School of Physical Therapy.<lb/>
NEED A JOB THIS<lb/>
cruit others interested in cam-<lb/>
pus activities. ARTIST�1 posi-<lb/>
tion for student illustrator. Po-<lb/>
sition requires graphic devel-<lb/>
opment of sports related illus-<lb/>
tration for a variety of market-<lb/>
ing and promotional resources.<lb/>
Excellent for portfolio develop-<lb/>
ment Call Jeannette 757-6387<lb/>
to set up an interview. Portfolio<lb/>
required at interview. Hours<lb/>
vary. PHOTOGRAPHER�1<lb/>
position for student photogra-<lb/>
pher. Position requires black<lb/>
and white developing, print-<lb/>
mg,shocmg of action andteam<lb/>
photos. Slide photography pre-<lb/>
ferred as well as ownership of<lb/>
35 mm camera with various<lb/>
lenses. Portfolio requiredat time<lb/>
of interview. To apply: Stop by<lb/>
204 Christenbury and complete<lb/>
an applications form. Or call<lb/>
757-6387 for details. Self-help<lb/>
and work students eligible.<lb/>
SE<lb/>
Se<lb/>
2<lb/>
Recreational Services will be<lb/>
hiring for the following posi-<lb/>
tions this spring.<lb/>
SJIJ.P.RECS�2 positions for<lb/>
commuter students interested<lb/>
in marketing and promotions<lb/>
of recreational programs. Per-<lb/>
sons must be outgoing creative<lb/>
and willing to contact and re-<lb/>
PUBUCATION OF ANNOUNCEMENTS<lb/>
ANY ORGANIZATION MAY USE THE ANNKDUNCEMENTS<lb/>
SECTION OF THE EAST CAROLINIAN TO LIST ACTIVITIES<lb/>
AND EVENTS OPEN TO THE PUBLIC 2 TIMES FREE OF<lb/>
CHARGE ALL ANNOUNCEMENTS ARE TO BE TYPED OR<lb/>
NEATLYPRINTED. DUETOTHEUMTIEDAMOUNTOFSPACE<lb/>
AVAILABLE, THE EAST CAROUNIAN CANNOT GUARAN-<lb/>
TEE THE PUBUCATION OF ANNOUNCEMENTS. IT B NOT<lb/>
ADVISABLE TO RELY ON THESE ANNOUNCEMENTS ASA<lb/>
SCJLEMEANSOFCXDMMUMCTICN.LEADLuNESAREFRI.<lb/>
DAYAT4IP0RTlJESDAYinJBUCATTONANDMONDAY<lb/>
AT 4PM FOR THURSDAY'S PUBUCATION.<lb/>
Things are<lb/>
looking<lb/>
Peachy in<lb/>
Pirateland<lb/>
By Michael G. Martin<lb/>
Assistant Sports Editor<lb/>
There are those times in life that we<lb/>
say good bye. Then there are those times<lb/>
we say hello.<lb/>
After a lengthy break from the office<lb/>
overlooking the walkway to joyner<lb/>
Library, I've deeded to come home � to<lb/>
my roots at ECU. Although I never left<lb/>
the Emerald City (nor sdwoD, 1 have had<lb/>
a little vacation fnm the pages of The East<lb/>
Carolinian.<lb/>
For the paper, like a npe bottle ot<lb/>
brandy, 1 had to come back for a little<lb/>
more of the sleepless nights, deadlines<lb/>
and Pirate athletics. Much has changed.<lb/>
but the heart and dedication of the staff<lb/>
hasn't<lb/>
So, for all of the former editors<lb/>
returning for another tour of duty, it's<lb/>
time to say goodbye to the old, and hello<lb/>
to the new:<lb/>
ECU football has shed ttV cupcake<lb/>
image for that of Cinderella I at least in<lb/>
the eye of the national media I. Littk<lb/>
my fellow journalists know that the'<lb/>
Pirates are for real, book for the tradition<lb/>
of excellence to continue into the future<lb/>
� so long as Bill Lewis and Co. remain in<lb/>
the Emerald City.<lb/>
High School football has even<lb/>
improved, especially since mv alma<lb/>
mater reached the stare 3A xmi-nnals. 1<lb/>
have not been to a football game this vear<lb/>
in which the team I was pulling for didn't<lb/>
win. I've made plans to be in High Point,<lb/>
N.C this weekend, Chapel Hill in two<lb/>
and Atlanta on New Year's dav.<lb/>
Speaking of New Year's day, hats off<lb/>
to the Peach Bowl for sanctioning the<lb/>
ECU-N.C State match-up. Although<lb/>
another year will pass, bragging rights<lb/>
will be up for grabs again. Let's just hope<lb/>
the goal posts in Fulton County Stadium<lb/>
(and Carter-Finley) don't fall when the<lb/>
final horn sounds.<lb/>
The New Orleans Saints have had a<lb/>
roller coaster ride this year, but I can't<lb/>
wait for the trip to Minneapolis to see<lb/>
them play Buffalo.<lb/>
How about the ECU swimming and<lb/>
diving teams? Opening the season with<lb/>
two big wins each, look for the Pirates to<lb/>
finish well in the CAA standings. Matt<lb/>
Lawrence seems be diving well, and on<lb/>
his current pace, he should make it to the<lb/>
NCAA Championships.<lb/>
Pat Pierson has one tough Lady<lb/>
Pirate basketball team this year. Gaynor<lb/>
ODonnell, Tonya Hargrove, Mechelle<lb/>
Jones and Rhonda Smith should lead the<lb/>
team to the NCAA tournament in March.<lb/>
Speaking of leaders, senior linebacker<lb/>
Robert Jones was recently named to the<lb/>
first team All-America. Look for Jones to<lb/>
be drafted in the first or second round to<lb/>
the NFL.<lb/>
The "We Believe" has carried over to<lb/>
; Eddie Payne's basketball program The<lb/>
! Pirates rallied to defeat Applachian State<lb/>
; in overtime Saturday night. Looks like<lb/>
the "House of Payne will be a tough<lb/>
place for ECU opponents to play.<lb/>
1<lb/>
i<lb/>
Blal<lb/>
Sen<lb/>
and �vi<lb/>
times<lb/>
student <lb/>
plav N<lb/>
Bowl carrj<lb/>
tickets<lb/>
The<lb/>
afternoo<lb/>
the ticket <lb/>
Fo<lb/>
NEU'I<lb/>
appear<lb/>
Fame ball<lb/>
The ij<lb/>
than 40<lb/>
Writers �<lb/>
Kurd ot<lb/>
make inel<lb/>
plavers<lb/>
Rose<lb/>
ballot tori<lb/>
therequirl<lb/>
as an arJ<lb/>
indefinite!<lb/>
Ro<lb/>
of tax evafl<lb/>
prison<lb/>
With<lb/>
Rosesureil<lb/>
on the nrj<lb/>
timeelipl<lb/>
thatdistu<lb/>
Seavel<lb/>
major Iea$<lb/>
eligible tol<lb/>
gamewinf<lb/>
National L<lb/>
lifetime<lb/>
ADVERTISE WITH<lb/>
E EAST<lb/>
CAROLINIAN<lb/>
DISPLAY ADVERTISING<lb/>
RATES PER COtUMNJNCH<lb/>
Local Open Rate $5.00<lb/>
Student $2.50<lb/>
Bulk &amp; Frequency Contract<lb/>
Discounts Available<lb/>
Advertising Representatives:<lb/>
Lisa Berting Beau Cannon<lb/>
lim Knisety 'Richard Littiken<lb/>
Andy Sutorius<lb/>
Business Hours<lb/>
Monday - Friday<lb/>
9:00 - 5:00<lb/>
757-6366<lb/>
WE<lb/>
BELIEVE<lb/>
V<lb/>
The<lb/>
If you<lb/>
entertaH<lb/>
Pi<lb/>
<pb facs="00058253_0009"/><lb/>
Sports<lb/>
V WWAMinIPERSON MS<lb/>
ottfz 3East (Bataiimzm<lb/>
December 3,1991<lb/>
IE SECRETARY<lb/>
4alefemale. Flex-<lb/>
Will work with<lb/>
ledule. Call be-<lb/>
m. and 3 p.m. on<lb/>
, Dec. 4 thru Mon-<lb/>
ti set xip interview.<lb/>
RSONALS<lb/>
LEAK '92: You ve<lb/>
It- week to live .so<lb/>
y. Make it Jamaica<lb/>
Trices starting at<lb/>
i lash Tours 1-<lb/>
KD: for any infor-<lb/>
to the recovery'<lb/>
- te and blue '89<lb/>
600 motorcycle.<lb/>
IT River Apart-<lb/>
'SON: You did an<lb/>
3 on the formal.<lb/>
t say it enough,<lb/>
ve ill thp vtp11<lb/>
1 nei � �. I<lb/>
� ike you! We<lb/>
our warm.<lb/>
Love al-<lb/>
EDCES: Thank<lb/>
11 r the great song<lb/>
is at the formal.<lb/>
len lab puppy<lb/>
Sunday rnorh-<lb/>
758-6788.<lb/>
' TA: Would like<lb/>
Hill and Melisa<lb/>
e great job thev<lb/>
il! We love vou<lb/>
ALPHA XI DELTA: Would like<lb/>
to wish a Happy Birthday to the<lb/>
following sisters and pledges<lb/>
who have birthdays in Novem-<lb/>
ber: Ashlee Barnes, Christy<lb/>
Coggins, Heidi Hicks, Kim<lb/>
lannuzzo, Angela Smith,<lb/>
Audrev Weathers, Julie<lb/>
Yanderburg, Dede Folck,<lb/>
Louisa Lewis Jennifer Stewart.<lb/>
MOM, DAD and SHANER: I<lb/>
d un come home early to be with<lb/>
va IL. 1 was tired of seeing to-<lb/>
bacco and this thieving hall. I<lb/>
was ready for the beach and all<lb/>
its fun! I was ready for home<lb/>
food and Boca sun I' m glad I<lb/>
was home, but now I'm back.<lb/>
I'm studying hard. My finals<lb/>
attack. Love, the kid.<lb/>
RIDE TO THE PEACH BOWL:<lb/>
with Pirate pnde! Buy your ECU<lb/>
car flags today. One' for S9 and<lb/>
two or more for 58. Call now<lb/>
3 � -3691 and leave message.<lb/>
CONCERNED ABOUT<lb/>
YOUR FUTURE? Will some<lb/>
uncertain future income pay all<lb/>
of your certain future bills?<lb/>
Maybe we can help. Free confi-<lb/>
dential consultation. 355-3789.<lb/>
DON: I'm sorry I kept waking<lb/>
vou upvesterda'y. Iknowyou're<lb/>
hot having a good week but<lb/>
cheer up I still wuv you<lb/>
bunches. If you ever need to<lb/>
talk will be there for you. Just<lb/>
take things "Day by day Re-<lb/>
member? Hugs' forever,<lb/>
Jellybean.<lb/>
AST CAROLINIAN is now<lb/>
.ing applications for the<lb/>
ing positions: Managing<lb/>
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:RTUESDArSPUBUCATION AND MONDAY<lb/>
 fURSDAY'S PUBLICATION.<lb/>
Things are<lb/>
looking<lb/>
Peachy in<lb/>
Pirateland<lb/>
By Michael G. Martin<lb/>
Assistant Sports Editor<lb/>
There are those rimes in life that we<lb/>
sav good bye. Then there are those times<lb/>
we say hello.<lb/>
After a lengthy break from the office<lb/>
overlooking the walkway to Joyner<lb/>
I ibrary, I've decided to come home � to<lb/>
my roots at ECU. Although I never left<lb/>
the Emerald City (nor school), I have had<lb/>
a little vacation from the pages of The East<lb/>
Carolinian.<lb/>
For the paper, like a ripe bottle of<lb/>
brandy, I had to come back for a little<lb/>
more  of the sleepless nights, deadlines<lb/>
and Pirate athletics. Much has changed,<lb/>
bat the heart and dedication of the staff<lb/>
hasn't<lb/>
So, for all of the former editors<lb/>
returning for another tour of duty, ifs<lb/>
rime to say goodbye to the old, and hello<lb/>
to the new:<lb/>
ECU football has shed the cupcake<lb/>
image for that of Cinderella (at least in<lb/>
the eye or the national media). Little do<lb/>
my fellow journalists know that these<lb/>
Pirates are for real. Look for the tradition<lb/>
of excellence to continue into the future<lb/>
� so long as Bill Lewis and Co. remain in<lb/>
the Emerald City.<lb/>
High School football has even<lb/>
improved, especially since my alma<lb/>
mater reached the state 3A semi-finals. I<lb/>
have not been to a football game this vear<lb/>
in which the team I was pulling for didn't<lb/>
win. I've made plans to be in High Point,<lb/>
 C. this weekend. Chapel Hill in two<lb/>
md Atlanta on New Year's dav.<lb/>
J<lb/>
Speaking of New Year's day, hats off<lb/>
to the Peach Bowl for sanctioning the<lb/>
ECU-N.C State match-up. Although<lb/>
another year will pass, bragging rights<lb/>
will be up for grabs again. Lef s just hope<lb/>
the goal posts in Fulton County Stadium<lb/>
and Cartcr-Finley) don't fall when the<lb/>
final horn sounds.<lb/>
The New Orleans Saints have had a<lb/>
roller coaster ride this year, but 1 can't<lb/>
wait for the trip to Minneapolis to see<lb/>
them play Buffalo.<lb/>
How about the ECU swimming and<lb/>
diving teams? Opening the season with<lb/>
two big wins each, look for the Pirates to<lb/>
nnish well in the CAA standings. Matt<lb/>
Lawrence seems be diving well, and on<lb/>
his current pace, he should make it to the<lb/>
NCAA Championships<lb/>
Pat Pierson has one tough Lady<lb/>
Pirate basketball team this year. Gaynor<lb/>
CDonnell, Tonya Hargrove, Mechelle<lb/>
lones and Rhonda Smith should lead the<lb/>
team to the NCAA tournament in March.<lb/>
Speaking of leaders, senior linebacker<lb/>
Robert Jones was recently named to the<lb/>
first team All-America. Look for Jones to<lb/>
be drafted in the first or second round to<lb/>
the NFL.<lb/>
The "We Believe" has carried over to<lb/>
Eddie Payne's basketball program. The<lb/>
Pirates rallied to defeat Applachian State<lb/>
in overtime Saturday night. Looks like<lb/>
the "House of Payne" will be a tough<lb/>
place for ECU opponents to play.<lb/>
LI<lb/>
Blake earns more awards<lb/>
Photo by Dail Read � ECU Photo Lab<lb/>
Senior quarterback Jeff Blake was recently named the ECAC Player of the Year<lb/>
and will play in the Japan Bowl. Blake was the ECAC Player of the Week five<lb/>
times this season.<lb/>
Defense reigns as Pirat<lb/>
roll past Bearcats, 30-19<lb/>
By Gregory Jones<lb/>
Staff Writer<lb/>
The ECU football team finished a very<lb/>
believable regular season last Saturday,<lb/>
posting their 10th consecutive win after<lb/>
beating the University of Cincinnati 30-<lb/>
19.<lb/>
With the victory, the team became the<lb/>
first ECU football team to win 10 games<lb/>
and will have an opportunity to make the<lb/>
new record eleven games, when they<lb/>
travel to the Peach Bowl on New Year's<lb/>
Day.<lb/>
The Pirates arrived in the Queen City<lb/>
with a guarantee of post season play in<lb/>
Atlanta. Thus, the game offered this team<lb/>
the title of the best football program in<lb/>
ECU's history, as well as providing some<lb/>
added respect from the national media.<lb/>
In short, the Cincinnati win was for<lb/>
all the bragging rights.<lb/>
Standing in the way of that title and<lb/>
needed respect was the University of Cin-<lb/>
cinnati Bearcats, themselves looking to<lb/>
end the season with an upset of a nation-<lb/>
ally ranked team.<lb/>
The game was much tighter than<lb/>
might have been predicted, perhaps be-<lb/>
cause of a lack of focus generated by<lb/>
Peach Bowl mania. The Bearcats had two<lb/>
weeks to prepare for the Pirates and they<lb/>
spent their time wisely.<lb/>
A crowd of over 8300 ventured to<lb/>
newly refurbished Nippert Stadium on a<lb/>
(AP) � About 1,000 East Carolina<lb/>
students who want to see their Pirates<lb/>
play North Carolina State in the Peach<lb/>
Bowl camped out so thev could get game<lb/>
tickets.<lb/>
The students pitched tents Sundav<lb/>
afternoon in front of Minpes to wait for<lb/>
the ticket window to open Monday<lb/>
Charles R. Bloom, ECU sports infor-<lb/>
mation director, told The News &amp; Observer<lb/>
of Raleigh that about 23,000 orders were<lb/>
received for the 20,000 tickets distributed<lb/>
to the university.<lb/>
The ECU athletic department has al-<lb/>
lotted 4,000 of those tickets to students.<lb/>
Students were worried that tickets to<lb/>
the New Year's Day contest in Atlanta<lb/>
would elude them as Pirate Club mem-<lb/>
bers with big checkbooks snapped up<lb/>
thousands.<lb/>
"I'll be confident when I have the<lb/>
ticket in my hand in the morning said<lb/>
Lori Jessup of Pilot Mountain.<lb/>
The Pirates' 10-1 record, bowl bid<lb/>
Former Cincinnati stars top<lb/>
Baseball Hall of Fame ballot<lb/>
Rose fails to make list<lb/>
cold and wet Saturday to watch the Pi-<lb/>
rates and Bearcats battle it out.<lb/>
The Bearcats scored first with a 18-<lb/>
yard field goal in the first quarter. The<lb/>
Pirates did not respond until the second<lb/>
quarter with a 13-yard touchdown pass<lb/>
from Jeff Blake to Luke Fisher. This set the<lb/>
stage for a close game, giving the Pirate<lb/>
defense the responsibility of protecting<lb/>
the lead and winning the game.<lb/>
In the third quarter, Cincinnati's run-<lb/>
ning game continued to pound away at<lb/>
the Pirate defense. The Bearcat offense<lb/>
proved itself to be a formidable oppo-<lb/>
nent.<lb/>
UC'sredshirt freshman running back<lb/>
Small ran for 131 yards in 25 carries for<lb/>
the game. The Bearcat passing game had<lb/>
also found its niche. Quarterback Lance<lb/>
Harpthrew 18-32-4 fora totalof 283 yards.<lb/>
As what has become a tradition for<lb/>
the 1991 Pirates, the game came down to<lb/>
the fourth quarter. And this time the Pi-<lb/>
rate defense took control ensuring the<lb/>
victory.<lb/>
ECU led 21-19 with 1:50 remaining in<lb/>
the game. The Bearcats had possession of<lb/>
the ball and started to drive. Defensive<lb/>
End Jerry Dillon intercepted Harp's pass<lb/>
and ran it in for a touchdown, securing<lb/>
the game for ECU.<lb/>
The defense struck again with a 1:05<lb/>
remaining by tackling David Small in the<lb/>
end zone for a safetv, making the final<lb/>
score 30-19 ECU.<lb/>
e woodwork<lb/>
and lofty ranking in the polls has the<lb/>
university and town seeing purple and<lb/>
gold.<lb/>
The team's slogan "1 Believe" is ev-<lb/>
erywhere � on buttons, shirts and signs.<lb/>
"Unbowlievable is the way a motel<lb/>
marquee put it.<lb/>
See Peach, page 8<lb/>
NEWYORK(AP)�Thirty-six names<lb/>
appear on this year's baseball Hall of<lb/>
Fame ballot, none of which is Pete Rose.<lb/>
The list was mailed Friday to more<lb/>
than 400 voting members of the Baseball<lb/>
Writers Association of America, whose<lb/>
board of directors vote-d in February to<lb/>
make ineligible for the ballot any former<lb/>
players banned from the gamt<lb/>
Rose would have qualified for the<lb/>
ballot for the first time this year, meeting<lb/>
the requirement of five years' retirement<lb/>
as an active player. But he was barred<lb/>
indefinitely from the game for gambling<lb/>
in 1989.<lb/>
Rosewasconvicted the following vear<lb/>
of tax evasion and served five months in<lb/>
prison.<lb/>
With an all-time record of 4,256 hits,<lb/>
Rosesurely would have gone into the hall<lb/>
on the first ballot. Now, only one first-<lb/>
time eligible, Tom Sea ver, is likely to earn<lb/>
that distinction this year.<lb/>
Sea ver, a 311-game winner with four<lb/>
major league clubs, is among 18 players<lb/>
eligible for the first time. He was a 20-<lb/>
game winner five times and holds several<lb/>
National League records, including most<lb/>
lifetime strikeouts by a right-hander<lb/>
(3,272) and most years with 200 or more<lb/>
strikeouts (10).<lb/>
Another newcomer to the ballot, Tony<lb/>
Perez, also could receive substantial sup-<lb/>
port. Perez had a .279 lifetime batting<lb/>
average for 23 seasons and had 100 or<lb/>
more RBI seven times. He had 1,652 RBI<lb/>
in his career.<lb/>
The other newcomers on the ballot<lb/>
are Dusty Baker, Vida Blue, Cesar Cedeno,<lb/>
John Denny, Ken Forsch, George Foster,<lb/>
Bobby Grich, Toby Harrah, Dave<lb/>
Kingman, Dennis Leonard, Garry<lb/>
Maddox, Ben Oglivie, Bill Russell,<lb/>
Gorman Thomas, Pete Vukovich and<lb/>
Steve Yeager.<lb/>
Seaver, Perez and Foster all were<lb/>
teammates with Rose at Cincinnati.<lb/>
One of the 18 holdover candidates,<lb/>
Rollie Fingers, who holds the major league<lb/>
record with 341 career saves, missed elec-<lb/>
tion by only 42 votes.<lb/>
The other holdover candidates are<lb/>
Dick Allen, Bobby Bonds, Ken Boyer,<lb/>
Orlando Cepeda, Curt Flood, Jim Kaat,<lb/>
Mickey Lolich, Bill Mazeroski, Minnie<lb/>
Minoso, Thurman Munson, Tony Oliva,<lb/>
Vada Pinson, Ron Santo, Rusty Staub,<lb/>
Luis Tiant, Joe Torre and Maury Wills.<lb/>
Making the move<lb/>
RtoPtNKo<lb/>
ECU running back Cedric Van Buren has bowled over opponents in the 1991<lb/>
season, amassing 480 yards of total offense and four touchdowns.<lb/>
CAROLINIAN<lb/>
DISPLAY ADVERTISING<lb/>
RATES PER COLUMN INCH<lb/>
Local Open Rate $5.00<lb/>
Student $2.50<lb/>
Bulk &amp; Frequency Contract<lb/>
Discounts Available<lb/>
Advertising Representatives:<lb/>
Lisa Berting Beau Cannon<lb/>
I'm Knisefy �Richard LHt&amp;en<lb/>
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Business Hours<lb/>
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WE<lb/>
BELIEVE<lb/>
WE BELIEVE! !<lb/>
Register for 2 FREE tickets to the<lb/>
Peach Bowl, New Year's Day!<lb/>
(No purchase necessary.)<lb/>
Drawing to be held Monday, December 16th.<lb/>
The East Carolinian is now accepting<lb/>
applications for staff writers.<lb/>
If you are interested in sports, news or<lb/>
entertainment, come by our office in the<lb/>
Publications Building or call<lb/>
757-6366<lb/>
for more information<lb/>
SPRING BREAK VACATIONS<lb/>
CANCUN FROM $434 PER PERSON (4 TO A ROOM)<lb/>
) AM AIC A FROM $444 PER PERSON4 TO A ROOM)<lb/>
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Some restrictions apply. Book early! Prices increase $30 per person<lb/>
January 1, 1992!<lb/>
1-800-752-1139<lb/>
Travel for less.<lb/>
FUUSCTVC1TRHV1LI<lb/>
1101 Charles Bv4, CrwnvUle, NC 2785<lb/>
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FAX 919-752-1139<lb/>
<pb facs="00058253_0010"/><lb/>
8 �f)c �uBt(�arultntan<lb/>
December 3, 1991<lb/>
Faulk, Klingler set NCAA records despite losses �<lb/>
��-�������� ���������� ���v<lb/>
(AP) - Although their teams<lb/>
lost, S.ui DtegO State's Marshall<lb/>
Faulk And Houston's David<lb/>
Klingler t�Hk individual honors<lb/>
faulk became the first fresh-<lb/>
m in to i apture the national nish-<lb/>
and scoring titles when he<lb/>
gained 154) ardson 27Cannes in a<lb/>
. loss to top ranked Miami on<lb/>
i.rd.iv<lb/>
I le finished the regular sea<lb/>
son with a s 7 yard rushing av<lb/>
;e compared to 154.4 tor ron-<lb/>
up Vaughn Dunbar of Indi-<lb/>
ana. Faulk, who missed three<lb/>
games with an injury, also scored<lb/>
23 touchdowns and a two point<lb/>
conversion to edge Michigan's<lb/>
Desmond 1 toward tor the scoring<lb/>
championship<lb/>
"I proved 1 could do it against<lb/>
an) body Faulk said. "I'm proud<lb/>
ot myscH but 1 would havehecn<lb/>
happier with a victory against<lb/>
Miami<lb/>
Klingler threw tor 533 yards<lb/>
and six. touchdowns, and set 11<lb/>
moreNC lAArecordsin I louston's<lb/>
5246 loss to Texas Tech. Klingler<lb/>
closed his college career with a<lb/>
total of 54 records, but the Cou-<lb/>
gars finished with a disappoint-<lb/>
ing 4-7 mark.<lb/>
"it didn't go the way we had<lb/>
planned he said. "But what I'm<lb/>
going to remember about this sea-<lb/>
son a long time from now is that<lb/>
this team never quit<lb/>
In other games, third-ranked<lb/>
Ik trida beat No. 5 Florida State 14-<lb/>
9, No. 8 Alabama defeated Au-<lb/>
burn l3-6,No. 10Tennessee routed<lb/>
Vanderbilt 45-0, No. 13 Clemson<lb/>
downed Duke 33-21, No. 18 Notre<lb/>
Dameoutlasted Ha wait 48-42, No.<lb/>
23 Tulsa edged Southern Method-<lb/>
ist 31-26 and No. 24 Georgia beat<lb/>
Georgia Tech 18-15.<lb/>
At Miami,GinoTorretta threw<lb/>
for a school-record 485 yards and<lb/>
four TDs as the Hurricanes beat<lb/>
San Diego St. 39-12.<lb/>
The Hurricanes (11-0), who<lb/>
will play Nebraska in the Orange<lb/>
Bowl, maintained their hold on<lb/>
the top spot in AP poll.<lb/>
my<lb/>
MQIN mi us SIM � i fl lO<lb/>
Mil IMI � I. I U I" Ml I i� V<lb/>
CRABS, I MMKM's y �� k. �J<lb/>
( OMMWIION V llutttl.t.1<lb/>
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Peach<lb/>
Continued from page 7<lb/>
A good chunk or the cit) s<lb/>
- 0 residents are planning bus,<lb/>
mr and car expeditions to At-<lb/>
lanta tor the game<lb/>
ackie Harberson, assistant<lb/>
manager of I K, 1 ravel ("enter in<lb/>
Greenville, said Pirate tans kept<lb/>
five phones busy 12 hours a day<lb/>
after the bowl appearance wascon<lb/>
firmed<lb/>
t !reen ille businessman lack<lb/>
. trdssaid sportswearbusiness<lb/>
haddoubkvi recently at hisdown-<lb/>
town store. University Book Ex-<lb/>
change,<lb/>
There's a lot of what we call<lb/>
sidevs aik alumni, he said They<lb/>
didn t v;o to any school, but the<lb/>
support the Pirates<lb/>
Some sa the scl<lb/>
community have benefited.<lb/>
. mith, a philoso-<lb/>
professor, said the su<lb/>
!i has, reated a senseof<lb/>
it) And, he said, athletics<lb/>
. ide lessons tor people ��<lb/>
� � r sports<lb/>
ulie Woodring, an EC1 �<lb/>
� said many people a wa) ft<lb/>
� - :n illedon'f know a lot al -<lb/>
udii  v bother it's m<lb/>
nk the whole chara t r<lb/>
I ���� re : the m h<lb/>
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Unbeatable<lb/>
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Register beginning December 2 in<lb/>
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Questions? Call 757-6911. U<lb/>
DepotK of125 00 upon fgbtiaMon requited<lb/>
Activities include:<lb/>
� :<lb/>
Cost covers<lb/>
Sponsored by ECU Recreational Services<lb/>
Student Union<lb/>
Peach Bowl Accommodations and Ride<lb/>
NURSES:<lb/>
WELL PAY YOU A BONUS<lb/>
We're a health care organization that appreciates<lb/>
your talent and your skill. Nurses with BSNs get the<lb/>
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To find out if you qualify, call your Army Nurse<lb/>
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IE ALL YOU CAN BE<lb/>
PRICES RANGE FROM FROM $59 - $92<lb/>
(without ticket)<lb/>
Includes round-trip bus ticket, motel room,<lb/>
and ride to game.<lb/>
Bus � � � it 7 a.m D M I - ets z- ore<lb/>
ition, stop Dy the Central Ticket OttiCe or cail 757-4788.<lb/>
Sponsored b the Student Union Travel Committee<lb/>
Movies<lb/>
8:00 pm Hendrix Theatre<lb/>
3rd Animation Celebration<lb/>
Wed Dec 4<lb/>
Kindergarten Cop<lb/>
Thurs Fn Sat Dec 5-7<lb/>
Hunger<lb/>
Sun Dec 8<lb/>
Tree Trimming Party<lb/>
Tonight 4pm Dec 3<lb/>
Second Floor Mendenhall<lb/>
(Refreshments Provided)<lb/>
Sponsored by Student Union<lb/>
Production Committee<lb/>
<pb facs="00058253_0011"/>
</div></body></text></TEI>