<?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="00058255_0001"/>
Ir?"kkim On<lb/>
S<lb/>
VI opens to enthusiastic crowds<lb/>
Bearcats snap Pirates 7<lb/>
f hree-game winning streak ends tor Purple and (lold<lb/>
Qftiz i?ust (ftamlttrian<lb/>
ftV, Dl ; MBEH 10 1991<lb/>
Gbei NVII , ! . N rth Cai<lb/>
c<lb/>
.000<lb/>
H Pages<lb/>
Board reduces assault penalty<lb/>
nd Other<lb/>
A recruits whites<lb/>
niversitv is trying to<lb/>
illmcnt, bv using white<lb/>
 h.nu ellor for academic<lb/>
I art ol .) desegregation<lb/>
? ersitv is still oper-<lb/>
. i rsirv is to try to<lb/>
v ?. ition on campus said<lb/>
nistration of North<lb/>
lires . recruit<lb/>
- stl epercentage<lb/>
its help employees<lb/>
ires, a group of students, t.u<lb/>
? it) of North<lb/>
ieS I 001 buy<lb/>
? - an<lb/>
d faculty<lb/>
mbei<lb/>
md let pci ?<lb/>
: ' ? ?<lb/>
awarded grants<lb/>
? arded to Dt Ram<lb/>
- ? ? istry it 1 jberty<lb/>
cul rre can h in chemistry<lb/>
? ised to develop new<lb/>
?? nk industry Along<lb/>
iffercd a computer system at<lb/>
i simulate molecules<lb/>
. hen a university has been<lb/>
mis and producing papers<lb/>
uregrants, -<lb/>
ity expands recycling<lb/>
the! niversity<lb/>
i is cxj ted to expand the recy-<lb/>
ersJI<lb/>
rsity has become involved,<lb/>
? I has Kt-n made in the<lb/>
his department now<lb/>
rw w lts.t paper<lb/>
? Campus 1 anli<lb/>
d papei ? essential in<lb/>
lepartment<lb/>
' d paper.<lb/>
i irinitiativesaid<lb/>
ill a lot more that can be<lb/>
per arrested<lb/>
? was arrested tor<lb/>
? tball tickets toa police<lb/>
ri ketsii a luffel bar<lb/>
ith him when the<lb/>
rttei aid Pi pe had<lb/>
if them were<lb/>
ma i rcom<lb/>
g equipment to record<lb/>
xision concerns students<lb/>
impus an the No. 1 student<lb/>
tate University, according to an<lb/>
that the student body has brought<lb/>
?rns to the forefront said Kk k Ashby,SGA<lb/>
- Morethananyotherissuestudenb<lb/>
out ra ism and racial issues<lb/>
m Brian Freyberger said that a big<lb/>
v people don't want to talk about the<lb/>
al hand, and a lot of things are blown into<lb/>
? are not<lb/>
 'wnplled by B?h Shimmel<lb/>
Inside Tuesday<lb/>
2<lb/>
4<lb/>
5<lb/>
lb<lb/>
n<lb/>
By ennifer Wardrep<lb/>
 shisun i New! ditor<lb/>
 hearing Wednesday<lb/>
the E I Rev iew &amp; ard n<lb/>
duced thepenalticsi ?! the four<lb/>
I ambdahi Mpha fraternity<lb/>
members found guilty of as<lb/>
sault.<lb/>
The Board n t the<lb/>
1 loner Board's penalty of ex<lb/>
ion was Uxi har I I<lb/>
Anv I, Macoi rod<lb/>
Casev and rrei<lb/>
nos ' usp<lb/>
as  fini 17<lb/>
i ?<lb/>
worV ? ? readmissii n<lb/>
??<lb/>
was 1 much<lb/>
Driskill ha f th<lb/>
Board, sa I suspen<lb/>
nesemesterwastoolil<lb/>
I he Univ ersitv I lonor<lb/>
Board had found the tu I<lb/>
ty of i ndangering ii<lb/>
ingot threah.mii i<lb/>
personorpr perty of another"<lb/>
and had senti I them to<lb/>
ilsion i he students then<lb/>
nishment to<lb/>
rd<lb/>
i ? .r I Marty<lb/>
Baker, cl f tl<lb/>
?<lb/>
that these m<lb/>
the<lb/>
Bak r lid tl ? ? ?<lb/>
?<lb/>
? ; ?? the f( iur si<lb/>
? ? ine and that a<lb/>
hv that mar)<lb/>
aid the Board felt<lb/>
?<lb/>
re found<lb/>
was "irtd<lb/>
?<lb/>
? ?<lb/>
loi t have<lb/>
-<lb/>
? ? . it 1<lb/>
- rave'sfather<lb/>
i he did not think<lb/>
II<lb/>
?<lb/>
? hard for<lb/>
run<lb/>
ildb<lb/>
aid<lb/>
I<lb/>
? -<lb/>
? ?<lb/>
An<lb/>
? ind<lb/>
? mil<lb/>
? ? ?<lb/>
Ocl<lb/>
that<lb/>
-<lb/>
froi<lb/>
?<lb/>
? ? .<lb/>
ib ?<lb/>
- ravi<lb/>
indjulei<lb/>
?<lb/>
-<lb/>
Board<lb/>
Coble urges<lb/>
graduates<lb/>
to persevere<lb/>
B lulie Rosi<lb/>
Shirting the issue<lb/>
?? ? ?? . <lb/>
with Govi<lb/>
Courtroom coverage disputed<lb/>
By C olleen Kirkpatrick<lb/>
Sj!( vv rit?<lb/>
Free press and fair trial aresur<lb/>
rounded b ontn ??. ersv in four ar<lb/>
eas: pre trial public ity, p'n trials.<lb/>
cameras in the courtroom and re<lb/>
leasing the names of vi ti<lb/>
the ain ed<lb/>
New the ourts<lb/>
puttwoconstitutional rightsaga<lb/>
each other Hie Bill of Rights pro<lb/>
hil it . emment from resti<lb/>
ing - pe a irct- press<lb/>
while also guaranteeing the integ-<lb/>
? minal justice sy I<lb/>
ith An nt guarantees<lb/>
peoj isedofa rimeatrial by<lb/>
an impartial j posed<lb/>
lilt or<lb/>
innocence based on i<lb/>
sented in a irtro<lb/>
In court<lb/>
v hat jurors see and hear !<lb/>
outside thei ourtrot m, jun i<lb/>
come m contact ???<lb/>
gossip ib ul the trial they are<lb/>
involved in<lb/>
lip are pi<lb/>
mendment, and oft<lb/>
reads or hears stories that are i<lb/>
allowed<lb/>
(ne of the most<lb/>
mp<lb/>
:of pre h<lb/>
 Iry <lb/>
Ideally, <lb/>
. ceding) . iul : I<lb/>
Mas<lb/>
Mai .<lb/>
ch is ai<lb/>
i violation of the<lb/>
mendment. "Howev i<lb/>
; se sanctions on layvyersto<lb/>
? m revealing Uxi much<lb/>
infon because ' pre ? i<lb/>
ludge i n id Reid !r.<lb/>
.<lb/>
i Id ition he explained<lb/>
- . vays I pn I<lb/>
. .<lb/>
tthejury not to listen, hear or<lb/>
?<lb/>
? d way is to send . at<lb/>
where 1cm s aredi -<lb/>
ee Free .<lb/>
?<lb/>
I - -<lb/>
near!) I ? ? . tsand ' ? il the<lb/>
- ? : ? ill gradual ? ? 7.<lb/>
? . isensi thespet <lb/>
luation day: I 0th a earl<lb/>
Harbor, theeveof the 500th am irof<lb/>
inding of Cr ristopher <lb/>
hemisphere and the abs f thi<lb/>
rate - ? MewYi<lb/>
: .<lb/>
ill ?<lb/>
dice,<lb/>
econoi - orhealtl<lb/>
geousley ind violence in our society<lb/>
the wide-scale neglect ai I our<lb/>
menti ble said<lb/>
recognitioi<lb/>
string confetti a<lb/>
from the studeni<lb/>
Some nursii - - meed<lb/>
blow ? ?'es in the air ?<lb/>
loons<lb/>
graduates new challenges in to<lb/>
world axe as important as I - rand-<lb/>
parents faced after the art ? irbor,<lb/>
?<lb/>
I . e the<lb/>
trials and ady with<lb/>
 . Irous<lb/>
game of life I you<lb/>
? ind nev :<lb/>
yourself and others.<lb/>
See Grad .<lb/>
Bergalis dies after fight with AIDS<lb/>
(AP) Kimberly Bergalis,<lb/>
whocontracted All Sfromher<lb/>
dentist and became the focus<lb/>
of a ruitional crusade tor mm<lb/>
datory testing of health pn ?<lb/>
fessionals, died Sunday ai<lb/>
home surrounded by her fam-<lb/>
ily She was 23.<lb/>
"The world haslostagreat<lb/>
deal, but the world will never,<lb/>
ever forget how brave and<lb/>
how caring and how deter<lb/>
mined that lad) was s.nd<lb/>
Barbara Webb, a retired En-<lb/>
glish teacher who also was<lb/>
infected b) dentist! lavidAcer<lb/>
Bergalis' lawyer, Robert<lb/>
Montgomery, said her father<lb/>
phoned shortly alter 3 a m.<lb/>
and said "Kimberly is not<lb/>
going to suffer any more<lb/>
Bergalis shixked the na-<lb/>
tion in September 1990 when<lb/>
she came forward to sav she<lb/>
was "patient A the first<lb/>
known LS case of a patient<lb/>
hocntra ted VII S du<lb/>
i medical procedure.<lb/>
"I ler courages ?us spirit<lb/>
and her determination to help<lb/>
others avoid her own tate<lb/>
touched Honda and the na<lb/>
tion(iov.I awton( hilessaid<lb/>
Sunday<lb/>
1 Xxtors initially rejected<lb/>
the idea of infei tion hv the<lb/>
dentist,but inanuarv,theL.S.<lb/>
( enters tor Disease Control<lb/>
determined that her particu<lb/>
lar strain of HIV almost iden<lb/>
ticaHy matched Acer's.<lb/>
I heI h. ended doubts<lb/>
tor many when it found Mrs<lb/>
Webb and three others were<lb/>
infected while Acer worked<lb/>
on their tivth in his dental of<lb/>
hee in Stuart.<lb/>
Acer, who was bisexual,<lb/>
refused to assist federal and<lb/>
state AIDS investigators bo-<lb/>
fore he died Sept. 3, 1990.<lb/>
Though visibly in pain,<lb/>
? ? aliswentbeforc television<lb/>
imer.is in October to argue<lb/>
for mandatory testing of health<lb/>
care workers and patients be-<lb/>
fore invasive procedures a<lb/>
position opposed by IDS<lb/>
at tn ists. the American Medi-<lb/>
ci 1 Ass oationand the Amen<lb/>
can 1 Vntal Association<lb/>
! b I blame myself? I sure<lb/>
don't 1 never usi IV drugs,<lb/>
never slept with anyone, and<lb/>
never had a bkod transtu<lb/>
sum Bergalis wrote in a let-<lb/>
ter to a state health official on<lb/>
Vpril6.<lb/>
"1 blame lr. Acer and<lb/>
every single one of vou bas-<lb/>
tards Anyone who knew Dr.<lb/>
Acer was infected and had full-<lb/>
blown All 6and stexni bv not<lb/>
doing a damn thing about it.<lb/>
 on aw all rust as guilty as he<lb/>
was You've mined mv life<lb/>
and my family's<lb/>
BL sjk<lb/>
<lb/>
J 1 pm T'? i<lb/>
We made it!<lb/>
Pholo court??y ECU N?w? Bur?u<lb/>
An enthusiastic graduation candidate expresses her<lb/>
excitement at becoming an ECU alumna<lb/>
<pb facs="00058255_0002"/><lb/>
2 Hht Cast (Carolinian December 10, 1991<lb/>
Board<lb/>
Continued from page 1<lb/>
Free<lb/>
Continued from page 1<lb/>
Student arrested at Hardee's for<lb/>
DWI, revoked license, speeding, and<lb/>
resist, obstruct, delay<lb/>
Dec 4<lb/>
1420?Publications Building: Checked out a report of a damage<lb/>
to personal property. A report was taken.<lb/>
2012?Tenth Street and Rockspring Road: Vehicle stopped for<lb/>
driving with no headlights and speeding on College Hill Drive. The<lb/>
non-student was issued a campus citation.<lb/>
0004?Third and Reade streets: Checked out a report of possible<lb/>
breaking and entering and larceny in the parking lot of the Attic.<lb/>
Same was turned over to Greenville Police Department.<lb/>
0209?Hardee's: Vehicle stopped for speeding west of<lb/>
Mendenhall Student Center. Subject was arrested for DWI, driving<lb/>
with a revoked license, speeding and for resist, obstruct and delay.<lb/>
Dec 5<lb/>
1511?General Classroom Building: Checked out a report of a<lb/>
canine in the building. Same was gone on arrival.<lb/>
1932?Jenkins Art Building: Responded to a report of a gas leak<lb/>
in the building. Contact was made with construction company<lb/>
regarding the leak.<lb/>
0220?Scott Hall: Checked out a scene east of the building in<lb/>
reference to an intoxicated subject. The student was given a campus<lb/>
citation for public intoxication, underage drinking and indecent<lb/>
exposure.<lb/>
0312?Hetcher Hall: Responded to a report of three suspicious<lb/>
subjects north of the building. One subject was arrested for littering<lb/>
and obstruct and delay. The others were advised to leave the area.<lb/>
0326?College Hill: Checked out a report of an intoxicated<lb/>
subject at the bottom of thehill. Student was given a campus citation<lb/>
for public intoxication, underage drinking and damage to state<lb/>
property-<lb/>
Dec 6<lb/>
1205?Brody Building: Vehicle stopped east of the building for<lb/>
transporting a child without a child's seat. The subject was given a<lb/>
state citation.<lb/>
0O44?Jones Hall: Checked out a report of a large amount of<lb/>
unidentified smoke on the first floor north. Greenville Fire and<lb/>
Rescue was called. The smoke was causedj by unknowns on the<lb/>
second floor discharging a fire extinguisher.<lb/>
0120?White Hall: Checked out a report of a group of subjects<lb/>
singing. The subjects were asked to leave the area.<lb/>
0205?Aycock Hall: Vehicle stopped west of the building in<lb/>
reference to a bike hangingou t of the trunk coveri ng the license phi te.<lb/>
I "he subject was given a verbal warning.<lb/>
0253?Clement Hall: Responded to a report of suspicious activ-<lb/>
ity south of the building. Two male subjects were escorted to their<lb/>
residence on Elizabeth Street.<lb/>
Crime Scene la taken from official public safety logs.<lb/>
know how the students got in the<lb/>
apartment, because he had locked<lb/>
the door before going to bed that<lb/>
night. VanCoutren said that the<lb/>
"door was slightly ajar however,<lb/>
and they simply walked in theapart-<lb/>
ment.<lb/>
The students went to Segrave's<lb/>
bedroom, and when he opened the<lb/>
door. Smith said the students<lb/>
"jumped him Segrave said when<lb/>
he opened his bedroom door, the<lb/>
students yelled, "We're Lambda<lb/>
Chis,wecandowhateverwewant"<lb/>
"They were screaming<lb/>
throughout the whole thing Tay-<lb/>
lor said.<lb/>
Smith said Segrave, who was<lb/>
holdinga 9mm gun at the time, shot<lb/>
a warning shot into the closet and<lb/>
the students "proceeded to kick him,<lb/>
beat him to a pulp<lb/>
VanCoutren said he was scared<lb/>
when he saw the gun in Segrave's<lb/>
hand. "I acted on a frightened in-<lb/>
stinct he said.<lb/>
Arnold also said he was scared<lb/>
of thegunand thatheacted because<lb/>
he thought VanCoutren had been<lb/>
shot.<lb/>
During their suspension, the<lb/>
defendants cannot take courses to<lb/>
be transferred to ECU.<lb/>
The defendants have the right<lb/>
to appeal the decision of the Review<lb/>
Board to the Vice-Chancellor for<lb/>
Student Life. Smith said the role of<lb/>
the vice-chancellor is "to make sure<lb/>
nobodsri ghts ha vebeen violated"<lb/>
during the hearing.<lb/>
nected and phone calls are screened.<lb/>
'If s hard to balance the media<lb/>
and the judicial process because both<lb/>
are constitutional rightsand should<lb/>
be guarded Mark Owens III, a<lb/>
criminalattomeyinGreenville,said.<lb/>
Yet in terms of pre-trial publicity,<lb/>
Owens said, "Often 1 believe the<lb/>
press does go too far in releasing<lb/>
information before a trial<lb/>
Another issue when speaking<lb/>
of freedom of the press and fair trial<lb/>
is whether to release the names of<lb/>
people involved in a news event.<lb/>
Much of the decisions that are made<lb/>
about whether to print the names of<lb/>
crime victims are based solely on<lb/>
ethics.<lb/>
RexRoland,court reporter who<lb/>
is covering "The Little Rascals Day<lb/>
Care trial deals with this issue ev<lb/>
ery day. The media have the option<lb/>
of whether to reveal the names of<lb/>
the parents on trial. WNCT-9chost;<lb/>
not to reveal name.<lb/>
"By identifyi ng the parents, we<lb/>
are identifying the kids Roland<lb/>
said. "However, it is a difficult<lb/>
issue because sometimes it seems<lb/>
essential to identify not only the<lb/>
names of the accused, but also the<lb/>
accused<lb/>
Cameras in the courtroom.<lb/>
present another complication be-<lb/>
tween the media and the courts. ,<lb/>
'Tve fought this battle in two<lb/>
states and I'm all for having cam-<lb/>
eras not only in the courtroom, but<lb/>
everywhere said Chris McDaniol,<lb/>
news director at WITN-7.<lb/>
T.6<lb/>
OUTLET<lb/>
Save 50 or more on your favorite<lb/>
men's &amp; women's catalog and<lb/>
department store clothing.<lb/>
PRE CHRISTMAS SAVINGS<lb/>
20 Discount (with coupon) on<lb/>
i any purchase of $10.00 or more.<lb/>
! SALE ITEMS EXCLUDED<lb/>
Good through Saturday, December 14<lb/>
T.G.I. F.<lb/>
210 E 5th St. (across from Bogies)<lb/>
Open M-F 10-6<lb/>
Includes<lb/>
?Round-trip bus transportation<lb/>
?Room at Atlanta's Castleqate Hotel<lb/>
Transportation to Atlanta's Underground<lb/>
Hew Year's Eve<lb/>
?Transportaion to Stadium<lb/>
Prices per person: <lb/>
<lb/>
Quad Otcupanty Room$59.00<lb/>
Triple 0?upany Room$69.00<lb/>
Twin 0?upany Room$69.00<lb/>
Single Otwpanty Room$92.00<lb/>
Trice Does Not Include Gome Ticket<lb/>
Bus leaves at 7:00 am, December 31, from Mendenhall<lb/>
and returns to Greenville after the game on January 1.<lb/>
For tickets or more information, stop by the Central<lb/>
Ticket Office or call 757-4788.<lb/>
Sponsored by the Student Union Travel Committee<lb/>
The Student Union<lb/>
FORUM<lb/>
Committee<lb/>
would like to send our<lb/>
SEASONS GREETINGS<lb/>
and heartfelt<lb/>
THANKS<lb/>
to the over 75<lb/>
AIDS QUILT VOLUNTEERS!<lb/>
Your time and effort was 1<lb/>
much appreciated!<lb/>
HAVE A SAFE<lb/>
AND HAPPY<lb/>
HOLIDAY!<lb/>
Grad<lb/>
Continued 1r<lb/>
Coble said the graduates are<lb/>
prepared to generate newideasand<lb/>
newleadersand asked them toporv<lb/>
der their impact on the future.<lb/>
"In the last nine years, the<lb/>
United States has seen the top 10<lb/>
banks in the world shift from this<lb/>
country to Japan and Germany. In<lb/>
the same time frame, we have<lb/>
dropped from a creditor nation to<lb/>
the largest debtor nation on earth.<lb/>
"The threatenedAmerican<lb/>
middle class has also measurably<lb/>
shrunk. A few!<lb/>
of the wealthy,<lb/>
shifted tolowi<lb/>
"By the i<lb/>
the world you j<lb/>
cna alter may i<lb/>
describedCc<lb/>
The comme'<lb/>
included Cobil<lb/>
senior cias!<lb/>
D.G Martin ofl<lb/>
North Carol<lb/>
Moskop, chairl<lb/>
FOSDll<lb/>
I890 SI<lb/>
3003 S. Evaj<lb/>
Fresh Oysters, Flounder, SL? ,<lb/>
Deviled Crab Cakes, U Clam<lb/>
at Lunch J mSnei<lb/>
$2.99 ? ??<lb/>
Beverage not included " Good Monc<lb/>
lJ5SS22,W L Expire,<lb/>
The<lb/>
East Carolina Uniti<lb/>
HONORS PROG<lb/>
takes pleasure in congratu<lb/>
the following graduating sei<lb/>
fall 1991 for completing<lb/>
requirements to becon<lb/>
GRADUATES OF THJ<lb/>
HONORS PROGRAM<lb/>
?Susan Rose Ambert ? Tammy Rei.<lb/>
?Jeremy Daniel Childress ?Rodney Lee<lb/>
?Jeffery William Qreen ?Stephanie<lb/>
PART-TIME<lb/>
HJ<lb/>
WE'LL HELP<lb/>
PAY OFF YOUI<lb/>
STUDENT LOAI<lb/>
TO20f00a<lb/>
$It you have th<lb/>
to train in o<lb/>
the Arm) Reservd<lb/>
will help repay v<lb/>
qualified student loan upt<lb/>
$20t000. Usually, you'll ser<lb/>
one weekend a month pli j<lb/>
weeksAnnual Training. Ca<lb/>
Sgt 1st Class Hall-756-961<lb/>
BE ALL YOU CAN BE.<lb/>
ARMY RESERVE<lb/>
<lb/>
<pb facs="00058255_0003"/><lb/>
Continued from page 1<lb/>
I<lb/>
leened Care trial desfa with this issue ev-<lb/>
I dia eryday rhemedtahavetheopttoij<lb/>
. vth o whether to reveal the names of<lb/>
nlld t ntson trial. WNCT-9daj<lb/>
not to reveal name<lb/>
den rifying the parents, we<lb/>
iMng the kids Roland<lb/>
h'u'f it is a difficult<lb/>
sMU. . i sometimes it seems<lb/>
denary not only the<lb/>
? the accused, but also the<lb/>
?s in the courtroom<lb/>
present another complication be-<lb/>
.WlV. edia and the courts. ,<lb/>
I w fought this Kittle in two<lb/>
state? and I m all tor having canv<lb/>
in the courtroom, but<lb/>
iere sakl Chris McDaBafaJ<lb/>
sdirector at V' I N-7<lb/>
v't<lb/>
send our<lb/>
REETINGS<lb/>
rtfelt<lb/>
KS<lb/>
er75<lb/>
IOLUNTEERS<lb/>
effort was<lb/>
eciated!<lb/>
Grad<lb/>
December 10,1991 fflfag ?agt (Karoltman 3<lb/>
Continued from page 1<lb/>
Coble said the graduates are<lb/>
prepared to generate new ideasand<lb/>
newleadersand asked them to pon-<lb/>
der their impact on the future.<lb/>
"In the last nine years, the<lb/>
United States has seen the top 10<lb/>
banks in the world shift from this<lb/>
country to Japan and Germany. In<lb/>
the same time frame, we have<lb/>
dropped from a creditor nation to<lb/>
the largest debtor nation on earth.<lb/>
"The threatenedAmerican<lb/>
middle class has also measurably<lb/>
shrunk A few have joined the ranks<lb/>
of the weal thy, but many morehave<lb/>
shifted to lower incomes.<lb/>
"By the choice of your life and<lb/>
the world you want to recreate, you<lb/>
cna alter may of the negatives I just<lb/>
described'Coble said.<lb/>
The commencement speakers<lb/>
included Coble, Jennifer Hedrick,<lb/>
senior class vice president,<lb/>
D.G Martin of the University of<lb/>
North Carolina, and Dr. John<lb/>
Moskop, chair of the ECU Faculty.<lb/>
FOSDICK'S<lb/>
I890 SEAFOOD<lb/>
3003 S. Evans 756-2011<lb/>
Fresh Oysters, Flounder, Shrimp, Trout,<lb/>
Deviled Crab Cakes, &amp; Clam Strips.<lb/>
? ???????????????????<lb/>
Small Shrimp! Regular Shrimp !<lb/>
at Lunch Dinner at $6.50 j<lb/>
?9 OO I e One Free .<lb/>
 W - Beverage not included .<lb/>
. Beverage not included J Good Monday - Thursday Z<lb/>
J Expires: 12-21-91 ? Expires: 12-21-91 1<lb/>
The<lb/>
East Carolina University<lb/>
HONORS PROGRAM<lb/>
takes pleasure in congratulating<lb/>
the following graduating seniors of<lb/>
fall 1991 for completing the<lb/>
requirements to become<lb/>
GRADUATES OF THE<lb/>
HONORS PROGRAM:<lb/>
?Susan Rose Ambert ? Tommy Renee Hurt<lb/>
?Jeremy Daniel Children ?Rodney Lee McCaslcill<lb/>
?Jeffery William Qreen ?Stephanie lee Singleton<lb/>
PART-TIME<lb/>
HS CHAOS<lb/>
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<pb facs="00058255_0004"/><lb/>
?be<lb/>
Letters to the Editor<lb/>
Serving the East Carolina campus community since 7925<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, Asst. 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 ed.tonal in each edition<lb/>
,s the opinion of the Editorial Board. The East Carolinian welcomes letters expressing all points of view. Letters should be<lb/>
limited to 250 words or leas. For purposes of decency and brevity. The East Carolinian reserves the right to edit or reject letters<lb/>
for 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 10, 1991<lb/>
TEC staff turns over again<lb/>
The world is improving.<lb/>
The Soviets have formed a fledgling confederation in<lb/>
hopes of making their country work. The countries in the<lb/>
middle east are gathering for more peace talks. Bush's<lb/>
economic advisor actually said that a middle-income tax<lb/>
cut will be necessary to bring back the failing economy<lb/>
(something that the democrats have been asking for for<lb/>
some time). And Lloyd Bentsen, a democratic senator<lb/>
from Texas, said that, because the cold war has ended,<lb/>
defense spending may take a five percent cut in the<lb/>
coming year.<lb/>
The country may not be sailing on smooth seas, but<lb/>
people are waking up and saying that things need to<lb/>
change, that there is a better way run our government.<lb/>
In the local arena, things do not look so rosy. ECU is<lb/>
still trying to bury all information about the wiretapping<lb/>
scandal with pay-offs and non-existent documents that<lb/>
are protected by attorney-client confidentiality. The ex-<lb/>
ecutive branch of the Board of Trustees met last week in<lb/>
a closed session and, most likely, discussed just that.<lb/>
Stanley Kittrell, the one bright light in the murk of<lb/>
scandal surrounding Public Safety, is still waiting for his<lb/>
day in court concerning the alleged retaliation he re-<lb/>
ceived after taking information concerning the wiretap-<lb/>
ping to the FBI.<lb/>
Charles Hinman, chief of Greenville Police, has<lb/>
unfinalized plans to make the city into a police-state for<lb/>
the next Halloween. He wants the students' support.<lb/>
Registration still sucks. There are not enough profes-<lb/>
sors for all the classes that should be offered or for all the<lb/>
students who want to take them. The campus beautifica-<lb/>
tion project is still throwing piles of dirt and bricks<lb/>
around campus. The SGA has no money. And the SGA<lb/>
president, Alex Martin, thinks The East Carolinian is "the<lb/>
worst source ever<lb/>
As Tim "Earlvis" Hampton would say, for a muck-<lb/>
raking, Chaucer-reading, liberal, yellow journalist, it is a<lb/>
busy time to be working.<lb/>
And so, I quit.<lb/>
The controversy surrounding that is another story<lb/>
not worthy of coverage in The East Carolinian.<lb/>
When I took over the job of Managing Editor, it was<lb/>
immediately following a three-day sleepless stint work-<lb/>
ing on the Welcome Back ed ition. That 56-page behemoth<lb/>
had most of us believing that we would die before the<lb/>
next Tuesday's edition. Blair Skinner had just left to take<lb/>
a break from newspaper work (a break that lasted little<lb/>
more than two months). Blair returned to work as a copy<lb/>
editor, something which made my job immeasurably<lb/>
easier.<lb/>
Unlike other people who had held the job before me,<lb/>
I had only one objective: to make sure the newspaper was<lb/>
at the Daily Reflector to be printed by 2 a.m. We had just<lb/>
changed printers which, in addition to improving the<lb/>
quality of the newspaper, moved our deadline ahead by<lb/>
three hours.<lb/>
The change was good for The East Carolinian. We are<lb/>
now basically a morning newspaper. That, in addition to<lb/>
affordable color and the fact that folks at The Daily Reflec-<lb/>
tor are just easy to work with has helped improve the<lb/>
readability of the newspaper this semester.<lb/>
Matt "scoop" Jones will be taking over as Managing<lb/>
Editor next semester. He will, no doubt continue his<lb/>
investigation of Public Safety and their related scandals.<lb/>
He is perhaps the best investigator to ever work for The<lb/>
East Carolinian, and certainly blows away anyone else<lb/>
who has been here during my three years.<lb/>
Jennifer Wardrep, a recent addition to The East Caro-<lb/>
linian family will be replacing him as News Editor. She<lb/>
will have to find a scandal of her own to unearth, (some-<lb/>
thing that should not prove too difficult).<lb/>
A few people will be leaving the newspaper, for<lb/>
various reasons.<lb/>
"Macho" Matt King has finished Spanish and has<lb/>
graduated. Production will be different without his argu-<lb/>
ments for "Floridanian" and a slew of other words that<lb/>
would make Webster roll over in his grave. In addition,<lb/>
his booming laugh and general good humor will be sorely<lb/>
missed.<lb/>
Lewis Coble will be taking over the Entertainment<lb/>
department. Lewis is so radically different from Matt that<lb/>
it is difficult to predict what the Entertainment section<lb/>
will look like next semester. However, Lewis has some<lb/>
definite plans. Students can look for some country music<lb/>
to make its wav onto the pages of The East Carolinian as<lb/>
well as more comic-book reviews.<lb/>
Brian Kerns, whose time as Sports Editor was short,<lb/>
but poachy, will not continue because of a heavy class-<lb/>
load and his work advising Scott Hall residents. Kerns<lb/>
may have advanced faster than anyone who has ever<lb/>
worked here. In a little over a month, he went from Staff<lb/>
Writer, to Assistant News Editor, to Sports Editor.<lb/>
Mike Martin, a former Sports Editor, Managing Edi-<lb/>
tor, Layout Manager, deadline pusher will be replacing<lb/>
Brian. Mike not only knows the ropes, he has climbed<lb/>
them once, jumped off and has decided to start again. His<lb/>
experience as Sports Editor as well as his knowledge and<lb/>
abilities should make the Sports section better than ever.<lb/>
There are rumors that next semester will see the<lb/>
return of "The Clearly Labeled Satire Section If so, Scott<lb/>
Maxwell will once again be set loose to parody as he sees<lb/>
fit, sending students into an uncontrollable laughing<lb/>
frenzy in the process.<lb/>
Rich Haselrig will continue as Staff Illustrator and<lb/>
comic guru. He has not had much room to work with this<lb/>
year on the comics page, but what he has had, has been<lb/>
filled with the quality comics that have become a tradi-<lb/>
tion at The East Carolinian<lb/>
Rich's work will still be supplemented by Jeff Parker's<lb/>
editorial cartoons. Jeff regularly receives more mail for<lb/>
his cartoons than most writers that work here. His char-<lb/>
acterizations of people both local and otherwise regularly<lb/>
spar' controversy as well as laughter.<lb/>
And then there is Chantal Weedman, Layout Man-<lb/>
ager extrodinare. She, alone, of the editorial board, will be<lb/>
in the same position next semester.<lb/>
Chantal started with minimal layout experience, a<lb/>
little knowledge of computers and has, in one semester,<lb/>
mastered the difficult job of designing two newspapers<lb/>
per week. Chantal is a layout wonder, she's incredible ?<lb/>
we love her. She should make sure that the newspaper<lb/>
starts off smoothly next semester.<lb/>
Greg Jones has made sure that there were enough<lb/>
advertising inches for The East Carolinian to stay alive. It<lb/>
has not been an easy job, but he has managed to keep this<lb/>
newspaper afloat.<lb/>
Finally, there is Tim Hampton. Tim has been with<lb/>
77 East Carolinian since its founding in 1925. After a brief<lb/>
stint working in Eden, he came back for more punish-<lb/>
ment. Most recently, he has been taking his lashes from<lb/>
the media board. Tim has played the whipping-boy for<lb/>
the newspaper all semester and deserves some credit.<lb/>
He has, in turn, whipped Greg Jones and myself to<lb/>
make this newspaper better than ever. He can be heard<lb/>
telling people: "All I want is for this newspaper to be the<lb/>
best that it ever has been<lb/>
I have spent a semester, longer in some cases, work-<lb/>
ing closely with all these people. They all have their own<lb/>
individual quirks and identifying characteristics. They<lb/>
have each been part of my family for the past few years.<lb/>
For every headache they have caused, there have<lb/>
been twice as many enjoyable moments and I know, I am<lb/>
the better man for having known them all.<lb/>
? 30 ?<lb/>
N.C State alumna<lb/>
dislikes depiction<lb/>
of former school<lb/>
To The Editor:<lb/>
I am writing in response to Tim<lb/>
Hampton's editorial that appeared in<lb/>
The East Carolinian on Nov. 21.1 am a<lb/>
first year graduate student at ECU.<lb/>
But 1 am also a N.C. State alumna. Mr.<lb/>
Hampton's slanderous remarks about<lb/>
N.C. State were obnoxious, offending<lb/>
and serve only to perpetuate the false-<lb/>
hood that N.C. State produces noth-<lb/>
ing but an ignorant bunch of slovenly<lb/>
farmers. N.C. State does have a School<lb/>
of Agriculture and Life Sciences, but<lb/>
this is only one of the nine schools that<lb/>
comprise the university. Several of<lb/>
these schools are not only reputable,<lb/>
but have achieved national recogni-<lb/>
tion. Need I go on?<lb/>
Not only is N .C. State recognized<lb/>
in the academic community, but it is<lb/>
also recognized by the business com-<lb/>
munity as an outstanding research<lb/>
university. Proof of this can be seen in<lb/>
theamount of money for research that<lb/>
N.C. State receives from private re-<lb/>
sources. No other University in the<lb/>
state receives more. This is money<lb/>
that is not poured into the athletic<lb/>
department. N.C. State has made<lb/>
many important contributions in ar-<lb/>
eas of current research ? from super-<lb/>
conductors to research done for the<lb/>
Space Shuttle ProgTam. It is, also, in-<lb/>
teresting to note that the first nuclear<lb/>
reactor to be built on a U.S. campus is<lb/>
at N.C. State. Not bad for Moo-U!<lb/>
Overall, I am very disappointed<lb/>
that Mr. Hampton and The East Caro-<lb/>
linian have encouraged such a nar-<lb/>
row-minded attitude. 1 am all for sup-<lb/>
porting your team, but don't do H by<lb/>
"slamming" academics at "that"<lb/>
school. Leave all the "slamming" for<lb/>
the football teams. We should all be<lb/>
proud that two of our outstanding<lb/>
universities in North Carolina will be<lb/>
represented at the Peach Bowl. And,<lb/>
Mr. Hampton, it is too bad that I did<lb/>
not have a course in "Barnyard Hy-<lb/>
giene" while I was at N.C. State. It<lb/>
would have helped me get through<lb/>
your editorial.<lb/>
and hardly merits the adulation you<lb/>
give to it.<lb/>
3. What constitutes a "better"<lb/>
president, "bad" congressmen and<lb/>
"good" government? Based on your<lb/>
past editorials, no doubt "good" gov-<lb/>
ernment impliesanactivegovernment<lb/>
bent on their redistribution of wealth<lb/>
and one which will eventually de-<lb/>
stroy what little freedom we have.<lb/>
While I am on my soapbox, let me<lb/>
now address John Carter. In a recent<lb/>
editorial "U.S. citizens dislike Bill of<lb/>
Rights you state that Marxism is the<lb/>
best form of government and the So-<lb/>
viets messed up a good thing.<lb/>
Mr. Carter, you are definitely a<lb/>
pragmatist; if something does not<lb/>
work, then throw it out and try some-<lb/>
thing else. As a typical pragmatist,<lb/>
you see only the end, not the means to<lb/>
attain that end. Socialism and its fairy<lb/>
tele results you spoke of so highly<lb/>
sounds nice, but the means to attain<lb/>
socialism's ends destroy freedom and<lb/>
ignore absolute truths of life, liberty<lb/>
and property. Socialism is doomed<lb/>
from the start; thus, the Soviets<lb/>
"messed up" nothing. So, which is<lb/>
more important lo you? Freedom, or<lb/>
any type of go vernmentthat "works?"<lb/>
R. Matthew Poteat<lb/>
Junior<lb/>
History<lb/>
Fish should not<lb/>
have been paid to<lb/>
speak at ECU<lb/>
Well, my friends and I will be in<lb/>
Atlanta on New Year's day But we<lb/>
won't be at the Bowl game. We'll find<lb/>
a cozy little bar somewere in town<lb/>
and watch our Pirates hunt down the<lb/>
Wolfpack on a 20-inch television<lb/>
screen. All I can say is, at least we will<lb/>
have instant replay!<lb/>
For us, it is no longer Peach Bowl<lb/>
bound, it is Atlanta Bound!<lb/>
Kimberly Helms<lb/>
Nan Newbern<lb/>
Kathy Sawyer<lb/>
Marye Lissey<lb/>
School has many<lb/>
faults, students<lb/>
will pay<lb/>
Mary Campbell<lb/>
Graduate Student<lb/>
Speech Language and Auditory<lb/>
Pathology<lb/>
Cartoonist wrong<lb/>
about portrayal<lb/>
of N.C. State<lb/>
To The Editor:<lb/>
Your Nov. 21 cartoon by Parker<lb/>
was an embarrassment to our univer-<lb/>
sity. The idea of portraying ECU as an<lb/>
institution of "culture" and N.C. State<lb/>
as an institution of "agriculture" is<lb/>
not only 50 percent incorrect, but is<lb/>
also 100 percent anti-intellectual. Some<lb/>
of our country's top ranked universi-<lb/>
ties haveexcellent agricultural schools<lb/>
and there is nothing academically<lb/>
problematic in taking a degree in any<lb/>
of the agricultural sciences. As a mat-<lb/>
ter of fact, it might be helpful to our<lb/>
entire region and university commu-<lb/>
nity if our students had a little more<lb/>
training in the agriculture sciences.<lb/>
I would also like to point out that<lb/>
N.C. State has been recently rated as<lb/>
the very best university in the country<lb/>
in both forestry and entomology, dis-<lb/>
ciplines ECU students know very little<lb/>
about, if anything. To depict N C. State<lb/>
students as hayseed rednecks who<lb/>
study only agriculture is sophomoric<lb/>
and absurd. The cartoon, reflecting a<lb/>
pitiful mentality of intellectual secu-<lb/>
rity, makes one fed sorry for its cre-<lb/>
ator as well as to those who find it<lb/>
amusing. It's no wonder some people<lb/>
wince and jerk when the concept of<lb/>
ECU and academia are spoken in the<lb/>
same breath.<lb/>
Hal J.Daniel III<lb/>
Faculty<lb/>
Maxwell reminds<lb/>
student of former<lb/>
columnist<lb/>
To The Editor.<lb/>
It seems Dereck McCullers's spirit<lb/>
has found a home in Scott Maxwell's<lb/>
pen. Rather than reading a preachy,<lb/>
religou vslanted opinion each week, I<lb/>
now read a preachy, liberal-slanted<lb/>
opinion. The New and Observer<lb/>
would be proud to have Maxwell on<lb/>
their editorial staff, his ostensible and<lb/>
pontifical attitude would be relished.<lb/>
I speak specifically, though not en-<lb/>
tirely, about his Nov. 21 editorial con-<lb/>
cerning term limitations.<lb/>
Maxwell, let me begin by asking<lb/>
you a few questions:<lb/>
1. Why do you consider America<lb/>
to be a democracy? America is not a<lb/>
democracy. It is obvious you have<lb/>
fallen prey to this socialist fallacy<lb/>
which runs rampant in today's aca-<lb/>
demic institutions. America is a Re-<lb/>
public, with a constitution to protect<lb/>
individuals from democratic ? or<lb/>
should I My, mobocratic ? excess.<lb/>
1 Why do you place voting in<lb/>
such an esteemed position? You seam<lb/>
to think voting to an and into Itself.<lb/>
Voting to a means to an end, nothing<lb/>
more than an expression of opinion<lb/>
To The Editor:<lb/>
Americans are fortunatetolive in<lb/>
a country that grants basic human<lb/>
rights such as freedom of speech to all<lb/>
of its citizens. In the United States,<lb/>
even those who would curtail these<lb/>
freedoms, such as Stanley Fish of Duke<lb/>
University, are allowed to speak their<lb/>
mind freely. But it's one thing to allow<lb/>
people like Fish to attack the funda-<lb/>
mental freedoms justly exercised by<lb/>
all American citizens and another<lb/>
thing entirely to spend tax money on<lb/>
them, as ECU did in sponsoring Fish's<lb/>
talk on Nov. 21. Do the taxpayers of<lb/>
North Carolina really want to spend<lb/>
money to deny liberty rather than to<lb/>
advance it?<lb/>
Fish's method of operation has<lb/>
been widely reported by newspapers<lb/>
such as the New York Times, the Wash-<lb/>
ington Post and the Wall Street Journal,<lb/>
who noted his attempt to deny free<lb/>
speech to his colleagues at Duke. Fish<lb/>
wrote a notorious letter to the provost<lb/>
of Duke arguing that members of the<lb/>
National Association of Scholars, an<lb/>
organization favoring free speech,<lb/>
should not be allowed to sit on impor-<lb/>
tant university committees. This let-<lb/>
ter was circulated to a few chosen<lb/>
friends, one of whom was so shocked<lb/>
by its contents that he made it public.<lb/>
Fish denied his statements until the<lb/>
Duke student newspaper, which had<lb/>
obtained a copy of his letter, broke the<lb/>
story of his deceit. Thereafter, Profes-<lb/>
sor Fish declared himself unavailable<lb/>
for comment.<lb/>
Another example of Fish's deceit<lb/>
is his misrepresentation of the NAS.<lb/>
That organization exists to promote<lb/>
and protect free speech, to guard indi-<lb/>
vidual rights now under attack in<lb/>
universities and to oppose efforts to<lb/>
politicize the curriculum by trendy<lb/>
ideologists.<lb/>
Steven Mandelker<lb/>
Visiting Assistant Professor<lb/>
Department of Philosophy<lb/>
Ticket sales<lb/>
handled badly by<lb/>
administration<lb/>
To The Editor<lb/>
I would like to express my recent<lb/>
disappointment over the way ECU<lb/>
decided to handlethe Peach Bowl tick-<lb/>
ets. I have been a student here for four<lb/>
years and have patiently awaited an<lb/>
event such as this. I have followed the<lb/>
Pirates loyally even before 1 was a<lb/>
student here. I have been to every<lb/>
home game and I have traveled to see<lb/>
my Pirates play, win or lose. Unfortu-<lb/>
nately, I will be unable to attend the<lb/>
Peach Bowl this year. My friends and<lb/>
I faithfully waited until Dec. 2 to pur-<lb/>
chase tickets because our university<lb/>
told us to. However, the tickets sold<lb/>
out right in front of our very eyes.<lb/>
Once again, the students were jilted.<lb/>
After waiting for the Pirate Cub,<lb/>
Alumni and all of Eastern North Caro-<lb/>
lina to purchase their tickets, we got<lb/>
last pick. I pay $6,200 on my own<lb/>
every year to come to this university<lb/>
because I honestly love it. Yet, I am<lb/>
unable to go to the Peach Bowl. Some-<lb/>
thing just doesn't seem quite fair to<lb/>
me The students are the heart of this<lb/>
university. Somehow, I feel that this is<lb/>
taken for granted.<lb/>
1 can't ever remember receiving<lb/>
credit as a student body for honoring<lb/>
our university. Yes, there to Barefoot<lb/>
on the Mall along with many restric-<lb/>
tions.<lb/>
I don't want to go off on a tan-<lb/>
gent, 1 just want to make my point.<lb/>
ECU students deserve some consider-<lb/>
ation. Eight thousand of us went to<lb/>
Virginia Tech to support our Pirates,<lb/>
what would make one think that only<lb/>
4,000 of us would go to the Peach<lb/>
Bowl?<lb/>
To The Editor:<lb/>
What has happened to ECU? We<lb/>
have a police force that wire-taps our<lb/>
phones. we ha ve a stud ent honor court<lb/>
thatunbelievablypresidedoverarape<lb/>
case. And now, we have a fellow stu-<lb/>
dent fired from his job as a resident<lb/>
adviser for expressing his religious<lb/>
preference.<lb/>
Has this university turned into a<lb/>
police state? Paul M. Shaw should not<lb/>
have been fired from his job as resi-<lb/>
dent adviser for doing something we<lb/>
practiceevery day. Freedom of speech<lb/>
and religion areour God -given rights<lb/>
One should not be afraid of reprisals<lb/>
for practicing these rights at a suppos-<lb/>
edly liberal and open-minded institu-<lb/>
tion. Communism is dead in Eastern<lb/>
Europe, but it sure is alive and well at<lb/>
ECU.<lb/>
Who is going to pay for these out-<lb/>
of-court settlements for wiretapping<lb/>
Who is going to suffer for allowing a<lb/>
student honor court (or is that "kan-<lb/>
garoo Court") to preside over feloni-<lb/>
ous crimes? Lastly, who is to pay tor<lb/>
the court settlements of the fired em-<lb/>
ployees expressing religious beliefs?<lb/>
We the students, will pay through<lb/>
higher school fees and continued ad-<lb/>
ministrative shortcomings.<lb/>
The administration and students<lb/>
must start having the foresight to<lb/>
evaluate their actions and put this<lb/>
university back on the right track. I<lb/>
love ECU, but 1 must voice my dissat-<lb/>
isfaction over witnessing these hap-<lb/>
penings.These incidents are unaccept-<lb/>
able.<lb/>
D.H. Marr<lb/>
Graduate Student<lb/>
History<lb/>
Maxwell irritates<lb/>
trekkie with lack<lb/>
of support<lb/>
To The Editor<lb/>
I am surprised that the editors of<lb/>
The East Carolinian would allow Scott<lb/>
Maxwell to write a column without<lb/>
first checking (or at least questioning)<lb/>
his ranhngs and ravings. I refer to his<lb/>
column of Oct. 31 entitled "Weekly<lb/>
irritants Specifically, his vague ref-<lb/>
erences to science fiction "illiterates"<lb/>
and his damning eulogy of the late<lb/>
Gene Roddenberry, writer and creator<lb/>
of Star Trek.<lb/>
On the first point. Maxwell claims<lb/>
that Roddenberry is directly respon-<lb/>
sible for creating a slew of SF-Uhterates<lb/>
who believe "that science fiction is all<lb/>
about flying around in outeT space,<lb/>
shooting phasers at aliens<lb/>
Maxwell deems it unimportant<lb/>
that he lay out the criteria as to what he<lb/>
thinks is good science fiction. There is<lb/>
no concrete evidence in his article that<lb/>
Maxwell knows what he's talking<lb/>
about. Of course, he can justify this by<lb/>
claiming to be a "columnist" ? not a<lb/>
rational being. He never cites examples,<lb/>
sources, genres or any other specifics.<lb/>
As for the passing of Gene<lb/>
Roddenberry, Maxwell's selflessness<lb/>
is downright touching: "Overall, I'm<lb/>
pretty sure V m upset that Roddenberry<lb/>
has died He checks his emotiors at<lb/>
the door and rates his feelings as if it<lb/>
were a new record on American Band-<lb/>
stand.<lb/>
No one doubts that Gene<lb/>
Roddenberry created a pop institution.<lb/>
But I think it is safe to say that he also<lb/>
inspired and stimulated more than a<lb/>
few minds (literate or otherwise) to use<lb/>
their imagination. Imagination is a<lb/>
powerfully creative tool. Maxwell<lb/>
readily admits as much when he says<lb/>
that some of Roddenberry's stories are<lb/>
good stories ? "they're just not good<lb/>
SF Of course, he fails to enlighten<lb/>
us on what he means by good SF.<lb/>
Finally, Maxwell closes out his<lb/>
thoughts on Roddenberry by wishing<lb/>
"Roddenberry had died a lot sooner<lb/>
if hehearsone more person say: "beam<lb/>
me up, Scotty If the columnist had<lb/>
done his homework, he would know<lb/>
that nowhere in the Star Trek canon is<lb/>
that line ever said.<lb/>
But what to more unsettling, other<lb/>
than Maxwell's obvious ignorance, is<lb/>
the crudity of his remark. Maxwell,<lb/>
why wish a man dead because you<lb/>
hate your first name?<lb/>
As for the rest of us not as gi fted as<lb/>
"Scotty" MaxweU, I say to all those<lb/>
wonderfully imaginative minds out<lb/>
there, and in remembrance of<lb/>
Roddenberry: "far Jang and prosper'<lb/>
Robert Caprio<lb/>
Lecturer<lb/>
Communications<lb/>
Entertainment<lb/>
Star Trek<lb/>
By Matt King<lb/>
Entertainment Editor<lb/>
The Star Trek think tank has<lb/>
done it again. Star Trek VI The<lb/>
Undiscovered Country, opened this<lb/>
weekend to an eager audience that<lb/>
was happy to see another page in<lb/>
the trek saga.<lb/>
It takes something special to<lb/>
activley keep two American gen-<lb/>
erations interested. Star Trek, in<lb/>
the form of a series had a unique<lb/>
something that brought viewers<lb/>
back to the rube week in and week<lb/>
out.<lb/>
Even in the re-run phase of<lb/>
the series, kids and adults would<lb/>
rally around the TV to see. Kirk<lb/>
get the girl, Bones say, "Damn it<lb/>
Jim,I'm a Doctor" and Spock flaunt<lb/>
the advantages of logic over hu-<lb/>
man emotion.<lb/>
The success of the series (evi-<lb/>
dent by the thousands of card-<lb/>
carrying "trekkies") will never be<lb/>
able to be blamed on one attribu tc<lb/>
or set of attributes.<lb/>
Regardless of the reasons for<lb/>
the enthusiasum over everything<lb/>
Star Trek-like, the enigma just<lb/>
keeps on snowballing along<lb/>
thanks to mediocore-to-good Trek<lb/>
movies.<lb/>
Even a medn. <lb/>
film is a masterpiece<lb/>
so thev go to the moj<lb/>
Blow Me Down<lb/>
One of the Souths favorite bands was in town this we j<lb/>
no prisoners. There is never any pressure on these boy'<lb/>
Robert Shaw cl<lb/>
crown of the<lb/>
EDITOR'S NOTE ? He gave a<lb/>
new meaning to the word chorale.<lb/>
For half a century Robert Shaw has<lb/>
been directing glee clubs and choirs<lb/>
and in his lifetime, he says, he has<lb/>
seen choral music emerge as a sen-<lb/>
ous art form. The conductor is be-<lb/>
ing honored this month by the<lb/>
Kennedy Center.<lb/>
NEW YORK (AP) ? If any-<lb/>
body embodies poet Walt<lb/>
Whitman's thundrous phrase, "I<lb/>
hear America singing it is Robert<lb/>
Shaw.<lb/>
More than anyone else in the<lb/>
United States, he has been respon-<lb/>
sible for millions of people joining<lb/>
in harmony and lifting their voices<lb/>
in choral groups every week, every<lb/>
day.<lb/>
And he has seen the work im-<lb/>
proveso much that now,Shaw says,<lb/>
the Texas all-state high school choir<lb/>
"swgs things which we thought 50<lb/>
years ago were beyond the capaci-<lb/>
ties of professional choirs<lb/>
Shaw's accomplishments:<lb/>
He formed the Fred Waring<lb/>
Qee Club, which he considers "the<lb/>
best voices ever assembled in the<lb/>
history of marc" first used the word<lb/>
chorale to mean a group singing<lb/>
choral musk; led the Robert Shaw<lb/>
Chorale from 1949 to 1967, and<lb/>
founded thebigCcdlegiateChorale,<lb/>
now cetebratmg its 50th anniver-<lb/>
sary season<lb/>
Shaw conducted the 1939 pre-<lb/>
miereof "Ballad for Americansby<lb/>
the New York Philharmonic and<lb/>
Paul Robeson, which was broad-<lb/>
cast<lb/>
He also conducted a crowd of<lb/>
people pirened into Carnegie Hall<lb/>
inMay,ontheir?rningthe famous<lb/>
concert hal celebrated its 100th<lb/>
birthday. Violinist Isaac Stem wept<lb/>
at the gtorious sound.<lb/>
The American Choral Direc-<lb/>
tors Association, fouj<lb/>
ago with 85 memr.<lb/>
15,600. Carnegie Haj<lb/>
1 2-hour video of Sr<lb/>
150 people in BrahJ<lb/>
Requiem which it<lb/>
sider esoteric.<lb/>
This month, <lb/>
Kennedy Center He<lb/>
awarded to the 75-<lb/>
as well as coun try sii<lb/>
the songwnting tl<lb/>
Comden and Adoll<lb/>
Nicholas Brothers dl<lb/>
actor Gregory Peck.j<lb/>
Kennedy Cenj<lb/>
given for "eonrnbul<lb/>
turallifeof thenatif<lb/>
performing arts<lb/>
Shaw is pleas<lb/>
cause if s public I<lb/>
emergence of the cri<lb/>
"The fact thatl<lb/>
has a much higher d<lb/>
music than it did 50<lb/>
I think is reflected<lb/>
Center Honor.<lb/>
I'm not vain i<lb/>
did it If s recognit<lb/>
art. They needed a J<lb/>
blanket on<lb/>
A music-H<lb/>
goosebumps lis<lb/>
choir.Socanachoi<lb/>
"Singers can I<lb/>
supreme quality<lb/>
the absolute top oi<lb/>
ity he says.<lb/>
"Anextraordi<lb/>
available to the I<lb/>
An instrument<lb/>
to study for years f<lb/>
that level. Not asr<lb/>
of the voice,i<lb/>
"His one oft<lb/>
do with other<lb/>
tain your self-<lb/>
dent enjoyment<lb/>
Ifssortofthel<lb/>
mmm<lb/>
?JpBHBHHBHPiWBsSBBHHbBBShHBHH<lb/>
mmBmmmBaWKWHWBwMaWmmBmkW<lb/>
<pb facs="00058255_0005"/><lb/>
the Editor<lb/>
ds and I will be in<lb/>
iu Yeai ! -lav But we<lb/>
? W? il tmd<lb/>
 ere in town<lb/>
mt do n the<lb/>
telev iston<lb/>
t we will<lb/>
I II ' Kivsl<lb/>
School has many<lb/>
faults students<lb/>
will pa)<lb/>
to E U?We<lb/>
a ire taps our<lb/>
nor court<lb/>
iverarape<lb/>
?W stu-<lb/>
is a resident<lb/>
?i igious<lb/>
. turned into a<lb/>
hiv should not<lb/>
b is resi-<lb/>
ething sv<lb/>
? ??jxvch<lb/>
.i not' $iv ? rights ? reprisals<lb/>
paid tos it a suppos-led institu-<lb/>
,n Eastern<lb/>
md well at<lb/>
? eseout-<lb/>
t? ippings?<lb/>
it m n -<lb/>
?? er feloni-<lb/>
pay ror<lb/>
fired em-<lb/>
- ? ? lief s?<lb/>
<lb/>
d ad-<lb/>
I thi<lb/>
ept<lb/>
Maxwell irritates<lb/>
rekkie with lack<lb/>
support<lb/>
?adlv bv<lb/>
Intion<lb/>
I - Barefoot<lb/>
th many n !<lb/>
MKC my point<lb/>
ftofnsconstder-<lb/>
of us went to<lb/>
lrt our Pirates,<lb/>
uhinkthatonlv<lb/>
to the Peach<lb/>
.n Scott<lb/>
without<lb/>
tioning)<lb/>
fer to his<lb/>
Weekly<lb/>
igue nef-<lb/>
 ites<lb/>
? the late<lb/>
: reator<lb/>
aims<lb/>
. respon-<lb/>
? i literates<lb/>
i ? tion is all<lb/>
r space,<lb/>
? mportant<lb/>
is to what he<lb/>
There is<lb/>
i It-that<lb/>
! talking<lb/>
. itify this by<lb/>
not a<lb/>
ever les examples,<lb/>
? pecifics<lb/>
? Gene<lb/>
laxwi s selflessness<lb/>
?-ail. Im<lb/>
-I lenberry<lb/>
?<lb/>
is if it<lb/>
merican Band-<lb/>
? it Gene<lb/>
restitution.<lb/>
iv that he also<lb/>
more than a<lb/>
erwise)tOUM<lb/>
on is a<lb/>
Maxwell<lb/>
m hen he says<lb/>
nberry's stones are<lb/>
 -? jusl not gtxxi<lb/>
fails to enlighten<lb/>
ins by ?(xxl SF.<lb/>
well closes out his<lb/>
?ddenbeny by wishing<lb/>
rrj - i d died a lot ?xner<lb/>
repersonsay "beam<lb/>
? ?? It the columnist had<lb/>
rk, he would know<lb/>
t ' tr Trek canon is<lb/>
- more unsettling, other<lb/>
'  bvious ignorance, is<lb/>
 ' v of his remark. Maxwell,<lb/>
? i man dead btxause you<lb/>
I name'<lb/>
W rtl. iMtusnotasgiftedas<lb/>
? "? " ?' m-il. I sav to all those<lb/>
wonderfully imaginative minds out<lb/>
there, and m remembrance of<lb/>
Roddenberry "mr long and prosper<lb/>
Entertainment<lb/>
?1? iEaat (Earnltntan<lb/>
December 10,1991<lb/>
StarTrek VI pleases next generation<lb/>
Bv Matt Kirm JL J<lb/>
By Matt King<lb/>
1 ntertainment Editor<lb/>
1 he Star Trek think tank has<lb/>
done it again. Star Trek VI The<lb/>
, ftxrtdi .ounrry, opened this<lb/>
tveekend to an eager audience that<lb/>
rt . happy to see another page in<lb/>
the trek saga.<lb/>
It takes something special to<lb/>
ley keep two American gen-<lb/>
cms interested. Star Trek, in<lb/>
e form of a series had a unique<lb/>
thing that bnnight viewers<lb/>
Kk k ti i the rube week in and week<lb/>
E en in the re-run phase of<lb/>
series, kids and adults would<lb/>
around the TV to see: Kirk<lb/>
t the girl, Bones say, "Damn it<lb/>
n I'm a Ivtiir" andSrxxrk flaunt<lb/>
advantages of logic over hu-<lb/>
emotkm.<lb/>
I lie success of the series (cvi-<lb/>
: by the thousands of card-<lb/>
lrrving "trekkies") will never be<lb/>
to be blamed on one attribute<lb/>
r set oi attributes.<lb/>
Regardless of the reasons for<lb/>
? i enthustasum over even-thing<lb/>
? Irek-like, the enigma just<lb/>
ps on snowballing along<lb/>
k sto mod iocore-to-good Trek<lb/>
movies.<lb/>
Even a mediocore Star Trek<lb/>
film is a masterpiece to a trekkie,<lb/>
so they go to the- movie, so the<lb/>
moviemakes money, somore Trek<lb/>
films go into production. If s a<lb/>
vicious circle.<lb/>
This latest Star Trek adven-<lb/>
Dul R??d-ECU Photo L?b<lb/>
Blow Me Down<lb/>
One of the Souths favorite bands was in town this weekend. The Sex Police came to the Attic and took<lb/>
no prisoners There is never any pressure on these boys when they bring their horns to the Emerald City<lb/>
Robert Shaw claims the<lb/>
crown of the King of Choral<lb/>
Robertapno<lb/>
Lecturer<lb/>
Communications<lb/>
EDITOR'S NOTE ? He gave a<lb/>
new meaning to the word chorale.<lb/>
1i r half a century Robert Shaw has<lb/>
been directing glee clubsand choirs<lb/>
and in his lifetime, he says, he has<lb/>
 n choral music emerge as a seri-<lb/>
art form, fhe conductor is be-<lb/>
ing honored this month bv the<lb/>
nedy Center.<lb/>
NEW YORK (AP; ? If any-<lb/>
, embodies poet Walt<lb/>
Whitman's thundrous phrase, "1<lb/>
ear America singing it is Robert<lb/>
Shaw.<lb/>
More than anyone else in the<lb/>
United States, he has been respon-<lb/>
se for millions of people pining<lb/>
in harmony and lifting their voices<lb/>
i n choral groups every week, every<lb/>
day.<lb/>
And he has seen the work lm-<lb/>
provesomuchthatnow,Shawsays,<lb/>
theTexasall-statc high school choir<lb/>
ngs things which we thought 50<lb/>
 tars ago were beyond the capaci-<lb/>
ties of professional choirs<lb/>
Shaw's accomplishments:<lb/>
He formed the Fred Waring<lb/>
Glee Club, which he considers "the<lb/>
best voices ever assembled in the<lb/>
history of man'first used the word<lb/>
chorale to mean a group singing<lb/>
choral music; led the Robert Shaw<lb/>
Chorale from 1949 to 1967, and<lb/>
founded thebigCollegiateChorale,<lb/>
now celebrating its 50th anniver-<lb/>
sary season.<lb/>
Shaw conducted the 1939 pre-<lb/>
miere of "Ballad for Americans" by<lb/>
the New York Philharmonic and<lb/>
Paul Robeson, .vhich was broad-<lb/>
cast.<lb/>
He also conducted a crowd of<lb/>
people jammed into Carnegie Hall<lb/>
in May, on the morning the famous<lb/>
concert hall celebrated its 100th<lb/>
birthday. Violinist Isaac Stem wept<lb/>
at the glorious sound.<lb/>
The American Choral Direc-<lb/>
tors Association, founded 32 years<lb/>
ago with 83 members, new has<lb/>
13,600. Carnegie Hall is selling a 2<lb/>
1 2-hour video of Shaw rehearsing<lb/>
130 people in Brahms' "German<lb/>
Requiem which it doesn't con-<lb/>
sider esoteric.<lb/>
This month, the 14th annual<lb/>
Kennedy Center Honors are being<lb/>
awarded to the 75-year-old Shaw,<lb/>
as well as country singer Roy Acuff,<lb/>
the songwnting team of Betty<lb/>
Comden and Adolph Green, the<lb/>
Nicholas Brothers dance team, and<lb/>
actor Gregory Peck.<lb/>
Kennedy Center Honors are<lb/>
given for "contribution to the cul-<lb/>
tural life of the nation through the<lb/>
performing arts<lb/>
Shaw is pleased, he says, "be-<lb/>
cause if s public recognition of the<lb/>
emergence of the choral art.<lb/>
'The fact that choral singing<lb/>
has a much higher place in classical<lb/>
music than it did 50 or 60 years ago,<lb/>
I think is reflected in the Kennedy<lb/>
Center Honor.<lb/>
I'm not vain enough to think I<lb/>
did it. It's recognition of an arva of<lb/>
art. They needed a horse to put the<lb/>
blanket on<lb/>
A music-lover can get<lb/>
goosebumps listening to a good<lb/>
choir. So can a chorister, Shaw says.<lb/>
"Singers can approach art of<lb/>
supreme quality, meeting minds at<lb/>
the absolute top of human creativ-<lb/>
ity he says.<lb/>
"An extraordinary repertory is<lb/>
available to the amateur singer.<lb/>
An instrumentalist would have<lb/>
to study for years to play music on<lb/>
that level. Not asmuch isdemanded<lb/>
of the voice, technically.<lb/>
'It is one of the things ou can<lb/>
do with other peopleand still main-<lb/>
tain your self-respect and indepen-<lb/>
dent enjoyment.<lb/>
Ifssort of the best of camarade-<lb/>
ture is one of the best.<lb/>
To avid, almost maniacle, fol-<lb/>
lowers of The Enterprise's adven-<lb/>
tures the new movie ranks at least<lb/>
second to The Wrath of Kahn in the<lb/>
six film series.<lb/>
The Star Trek movies have a<lb/>
great thing going? each one gets<lb/>
to build on the story of the ones<lb/>
that came before.<lb/>
Logically each one has the po-<lb/>
tential to be better than its prede-<lb/>
cessor.<lb/>
Unlike Rocky movies, where<lb/>
the ending is a foregone conclu-<lb/>
sion, Trek movies always have a<lb/>
special twist for their followers.<lb/>
(Balboa could never die and then<lb/>
be brou gh t back to life in the realm<lb/>
of an earthbound boxer movie).<lb/>
The best thing about The Un-<lb/>
dxscovered Country is that, finally,<lb/>
the seasoned crew has learned to<lb/>
take itself with a grain of salt.<lb/>
Howmany times can you save<lb/>
the universe and not become a<lb/>
little desensatized?<lb/>
Many of the nailbiting scenes<lb/>
in themovies are sal ted with some<lb/>
legitamatly funny one-liners (to<lb/>
qu ote would onl y spoil some good<lb/>
belly laughs).<lb/>
Once again the special effects<lb/>
are breathtaking.Sometimes they<lb/>
were so above-par that the only<lb/>
noise the talkative young trckkies<lb/>
behide me could utter was cxxxh<lb/>
or aaaah.<lb/>
The plot is timley even to the<lb/>
non-trekkie. The Federation is<lb/>
hatching a plan to help save the<lb/>
dying Klingon empire and em-<lb/>
bark on time of neverendi ng peace.<lb/>
Unlike the Klingons in Star<lb/>
Trek: The Next Generation the<lb/>
Klingons of Kirk's era are not en-<lb/>
tirely to be trusted, eventhough<lb/>
their planet will beoxygendepleti<lb/>
in 5o years.<lb/>
The plot smells of the luke-<lb/>
warm friendship that America has<lb/>
with its new-found commrads.<lb/>
As fare would have it, Kirk<lb/>
and the rest of the trusty crew are<lb/>
putonliasonassignment. To make<lb/>
a long scenario short Kirk (a noto-<lb/>
rious Klingon hater) is set upasan<lb/>
assassin.<lb/>
The rest of the movie is spent<lb/>
with various past and present En-<lb/>
terprise crew members breaking<lb/>
rules to rescue, and prove the<lb/>
inrxxrense, of their trouble-mag-<lb/>
net of a captain.<lb/>
The movie is a borderline<lb/>
must see; Star Trek VI is certainly<lb/>
worth the price of a Greenville<lb/>
movie ticket.<lb/>
Community welcomes brand<lb/>
new Multicultural Center<lb/>
By Jimmy Robinson<lb/>
Special to i h? Tast Camhman<lb/>
The Eastarohna Multicultural<lb/>
Center is now a reality. Since its<lb/>
conception on fuly of l'l much<lb/>
progress has been made toward<lb/>
making the dream a reality.<lb/>
On November 27,1991 the pro-<lb/>
gram became incorporated as an<lb/>
independent, non profit organiza-<lb/>
tion.<lb/>
The .Multicultural Center lead-<lb/>
ers haveelecul a 17 member board<lb/>
of directors and appointed two ad-<lb/>
ditional committees; a Public Rela-<lb/>
tions Committee and a Member-<lb/>
ship Committee.<lb/>
The location of the center is still<lb/>
undecided, although several build-<lb/>
ings in the downtown Greenville<lb/>
area .m1 being consideration.<lb/>
Members have visited vacant<lb/>
buildings and atv working toward<lb/>
obtaini ng one rent free for two years<lb/>
with an option to buy at the end of<lb/>
the two years.<lb/>
Brochures were distnbuted at<lb/>
the International Festivaland intrest<lb/>
in the project abounded. Threehun-<lb/>
da-d people submitted their names<lb/>
and addresses. In addition to the<lb/>
brochures, a leaflet is being sent out<lb/>
with the Chamber of Commerce<lb/>
Newsletter.<lb/>
The Multicultural Center con-<lb/>
cept was a result of discussion dur-<lb/>
ing a "Community Round-Table<lb/>
Forum<lb/>
The center recieved a grant<lb/>
from the North Carolina Humani-<lb/>
ties Council.<lb/>
Dr. Mohammed Ahad con-<lb/>
ducted four community meetings<lb/>
on four different cultures to be rep-<lb/>
resented in the center Indian, His-<lb/>
panic, Chinescand Mid-Eastern. All<lb/>
the evaluations of the center have<lb/>
been positive and suggest the es-<lb/>
tablishment of a community based<lb/>
cultural center.<lb/>
'This issomething people want<lb/>
to know and will enjoysaid Ahad<lb/>
in an earlier interveiw.<lb/>
The cen tcr pi a ns to ha ve rooms<lb/>
with artifacts, literature, pictures<lb/>
and art from different cultures.<lb/>
The objectives of the center are<lb/>
to amass resources such as films,<lb/>
vide is, charts, maps and books for<lb/>
students, teachers, scholars and in-<lb/>
terested individuals; to conduct ex-<lb/>
hibits on particular cultures, to help<lb/>
with research on health care beliefs<lb/>
and utilization strategies, to con-<lb/>
duct seminars and workshops for<lb/>
target groups such as teachers and<lb/>
nurses and to maintain a library<lb/>
and reading room of reference<lb/>
matenal on immigrant cultures.<lb/>
According to a press release.<lb/>
The Multicultural Center will tar-<lb/>
get grade and high school students,<lb/>
college students, graduate students<lb/>
and professors.<lb/>
"Weare looki ng for willing and<lb/>
enthusiastic students of ECU to<lb/>
volunteer to become members of<lb/>
vanoussubcommitteesand one stu-<lb/>
dent leader to serve on the board of<lb/>
directors<lb/>
"Students and teachers will<lb/>
learn from this center more than<lb/>
any other group. " said Ahad.<lb/>
neand isolation. And because it'sa<lb/>
group effort it demands a certain<lb/>
amount of ethical behavior, likecon-<lb/>
sideration for the person who's next<lb/>
to you<lb/>
In his lifetime, Shaw savs, he<lb/>
has seen the emergence of choral<lb/>
singingasa senousart form. "When<lb/>
I was growing up. then1 were junior<lb/>
high and high school choruses and<lb/>
fraternity sings.<lb/>
When 1 got to New Y rk in 1938<lb/>
the major large choruses were<lb/>
alumni clubsof men who'd left uni-<lb/>
versities and got together to drink<lb/>
beer and sing on Wednesday<lb/>
nights he says.<lb/>
'There was the Oratorio Soci-<lb/>
ety for whom Andrew Carnegie<lb/>
built a hall, for his wife to sing The<lb/>
Hallelujah Chorus<lb/>
Chomses began to flourish af-<lb/>
ter World War 11, Shaw says, when<lb/>
musicologists discovcaxi the rich<lb/>
choral literature of the 16th, 17th<lb/>
and 18th centuries and technology<lb/>
developed to publish and transmit<lb/>
the scores.<lb/>
"With the growth in literature<lb/>
came a corresponding growth in<lb/>
schwls of music and the education<lb/>
of conductors he says.<lb/>
While Shaw finds the general<lb/>
choral scene encouraging, there are<lb/>
some things that disturb him. "One<lb/>
is the removal of the arts from early<lb/>
curriculum he says.<lb/>
"American education would be<lb/>
an awful lot better off if we began<lb/>
with arts rather that memorization.<lb/>
'Singing, instruments, art, po-<lb/>
etry, open up creative aptitudes in<lb/>
children, making them capable of<lb/>
faster learning of the memorization<lb/>
subjects which they need, spelling,<lb/>
arithmetic, history.<lb/>
That has been proved. Ameri-<lb/>
can education has the thing com-<lb/>
pletely upside down.<lb/>
Larroquette predicts court is<lb/>
in session for last roundup<lb/>
NEW YORK (AP) ? John<lb/>
Larroquette, the slightly smarmy<lb/>
prosecutor of NBC's "Night<lb/>
Court thinks this may be the<lb/>
show's final season. But then, he<lb/>
notes, "1 said that last year. And<lb/>
the year before<lb/>
That, he said, was because for<lb/>
the last two years the acting con-<lb/>
tracts were on a vear-to-vear ba-<lb/>
J j<lb/>
sis. But the show, now in its ninth<lb/>
season, keeps getting renewed,<lb/>
and one never knows: "It still pro-<lb/>
duces enough (Nielsen) numbers<lb/>
to make it viable<lb/>
Still, Larroquette, the first ac-<lb/>
tor ever to win four consecutive<lb/>
Emmys for a series, isn't putting<lb/>
all his eggs in one sitcom. He does<lb/>
occasional film roles, and on Sun-<lb/>
day will star in one on NBC ?<lb/>
"One Special Victory<lb/>
He plays a self-absorbed real<lb/>
estate hawker who finds a new<lb/>
meaning in life as the accidental<lb/>
coach of a basketball team of<lb/>
handicapped adults.<lb/>
If NBC does lop "Night<lb/>
Court" off its roster for 1992-93,<lb/>
"I'll do plays or movies if any-<lb/>
body wants me to do some he<lb/>
said. "I'm sure I'll do another tele-<lb/>
vision series. It's a great way to<lb/>
make a living<lb/>
Standing 6 foot 4 and pos-<lb/>
sessed of a rich baritone voice,<lb/>
Larroquette did various things<lb/>
before acting to earn a living.<lb/>
Born and raised in New Or-<lb/>
leans, he studied music for 11<lb/>
years, and did time on tenor sax in<lb/>
a rocknroll band there. He also<lb/>
was an announcer at a classical<lb/>
music station. But without the<lb/>
soothing yawl drawl of his home-<lb/>
town.<lb/>
He worked hard to lose the<lb/>
accent: "I thought it'd be better to<lb/>
sound like Walter Cronkite than<lb/>
'Where y'at<lb/>
I wanted to sound as though<lb/>
I was 40 and had gray on the side<lb/>
of my hair<lb/>
After that, he worked in San<lb/>
Diego as a record promotion man.<lb/>
And then, on to Los Angeles and<lb/>
acting, starting in local stage pro-<lb/>
ductions of "The Crucible" and<lb/>
"Enter Laughing He was at the<lb/>
relativelyadvancedageof24then.<lb/>
He hadn't studied emoting<lb/>
much. But "it was in the back of<lb/>
my mind all my life, even when I<lb/>
was a kid he said. "In New Or-<lb/>
leans, the streets are theater. You<lb/>
can just walk outside and watch<lb/>
great pageantry and drama and<lb/>
comedy<lb/>
It's a good drinking town.<lb/>
Indeed, as Larroquette notes, "the<lb/>
nice thing about New Orleans is<lb/>
that you don't have to go thirsty<lb/>
too long Problem is, he picked<lb/>
up a taste for the sauce there as a<lb/>
teen-ager.<lb/>
Later, when he was starting<lb/>
to roll in Hollywood, his drinking<lb/>
came close to doing him in.<lb/>
It almost cost him his career<lb/>
and hismarriagetohiswife,Eliza-<lb/>
beth, who he had met in "Enter<lb/>
Laughing Finally, he quit, cold<lb/>
turkey, on Feb. 6,1982. He hasn't<lb/>
touched it since.<lb/>
"I think the bottom line is<lb/>
that you've got to quit by yourself<lb/>
and for yourself he said.<lb/>
"Les Enf ants du Paradis7 makes cable<lb/>
television debut this week on Cinemax<lb/>
NEW YORK (AP) ? Cable<lb/>
TV's Cinemax long has billed it-<lb/>
self as the premium channel for<lb/>
movie lovers, but with lastnighfs<lb/>
premiere of "Les Enfants du<lb/>
Paradis it lives up to the billing.<lb/>
"Children of Paradise as<lb/>
Cinemax will insist on promoting<lb/>
it out of fear of scaring you off,<lb/>
was fi 1 med between 1943 a nd 1945<lb/>
during the Nazi occupation of<lb/>
firance.<lb/>
?<lb/>
Director Marcel Came's mas-<lb/>
terwork is a "backstage" movie,<lb/>
set in the theater world of 1840s<lb/>
Paris.<lb/>
Jacques Preverfs screenplay<lb/>
is a beguiling romantic drama, cre-<lb/>
ating a fully realized world filled<lb/>
with interesting characters and<lb/>
interesting ideas.<lb/>
"Les Enfants du Paradis" is a<lb/>
seminal work in just about every<lb/>
cinephile's canon. Once you've<lb/>
seen it, you have a skeleton key to<lb/>
the last 40 years of French cinema.<lb/>
This is the text all those ob-<lb/>
lique New Wave French directors<lb/>
were schooled on and worked<lb/>
from.<lb/>
Don't let this deter you. It's<lb/>
engrossing drama, with moments<lb/>
of high comedy.<lb/>
Considered solely as a ro-<lb/>
mance, "Enfants du Paradis" is<lb/>
worth your time.<lb/>
<pb facs="00058255_0006"/><lb/>
the Editor<lb/>
tvill be in<lb/>
v But vsf<lb/>
us many<lb/>
idents<lb/>
?<lb/>
ates<lb/>
ck<lb/>
. ?.<lb/>
that<lb/>
?<lb/>
? it<lb/>
Kind<lb/>
 <lb/>
- j ,1<lb/>
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would know<lb/>
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<lb/>
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Ty' itrui rT,s'T'r<lb/>
Entertainment<lb/>
(BItc ?Eii?t (Earultnian<lb/>
December 10,1991<lb/>
Star Trek<lb/>
By Matt King<lb/>
I nterlainmenl I ditoi<lb/>
?l at ! rek think bank has<lb/>
igain Stm Trek VI ihe<lb/>
? red( auntry, opened this<lb/>
ltoaneageraudiencethal<lb/>
py to sec another page in<lb/>
taga<lb/>
kes something special to<lb/>
e keep two American gen-<lb/>
interested Star Ink, in<lb/>
! I scries had .1 unique<lb/>
thai brought viewers<lb/>
he tube week in and week<lb/>
ven 111 the re-run phase of<lb/>
kids and adults would<lb/>
ind the rV to see: kirk<lb/>
Bones sn "Damn it<lb/>
?? tor' and Spock flaunt<lb/>
mtages ol logic over hu<lb/>
iuccess ol the series (evi<lb/>
the thousands ol card<lb/>
trekkies 1 will neverbe<lb/>
 blamed on one attribute<lb/>
?? ibutes<lb/>
irdlcss of the reasons for<lb/>
usiasum over everything<lb/>
? like the enigma inst<lb/>
snowballing along film is a masten<lb/>
? ' - good I'n-k so they eo to tl<lb/>
next generation<lb/>
movies<lb/>
Even a mec<lb/>
u re Star I rrk<lb/>
icce to .i trvkkie,<lb/>
u' movie, so thi'<lb/>
movie makes mone) .somore I tvk<lb/>
tilms j;o into production Ifs .1<lb/>
le<lb/>
I lu latt 1 ? ' en-<lb/>
Oail R??a ECU Photo Lab<lb/>
Blow Me Down<lb/>
e ol the Souths favorite bands was in town this weekend '??? ex Police came to 11 Itook<lb/>
noprfsoi ? any pressure on these boys when?. ? their horns to thi iidOty<lb/>
Robert Shaw claims the<lb/>
crown of the King of Choral<lb/>
OF N Mi- Hegavea<lb/>
to the word horale<lb/>
1 r hall .i century Robert Shaw has<lb/>
lirechnggleei tubs and choirs<lb/>
i in his lifetime, he says, he has<lb/>
horal musi emerge as a sen-<lb/>
he o inductor is K-<lb/>
honored this month by the<lb/>
cdyi enter<lb/>
w YORK (AP) - H any-<lb/>
embodies poet Wall<lb/>
tman's thundrous phrase, I<lb/>
11 America singing it is Robert<lb/>
More than anyone else in the<lb/>
ites, he has been respon<lb/>
for millions ol people joining<lb/>
1 . I fting their voices<lb/>
m! groupsevcry week, every<lb/>
1 V<lb/>
ik) he has seen the work inv<lb/>
- mux h that now,Shaw says,<lb/>
the fexasall state high school choir<lb/>
angs things which we thought i<lb/>
its ago were beyond the capaci<lb/>
esol professional choirs"<lb/>
i-tvn s accomplishments:<lb/>
He formed the lred Waring<lb/>
,irt-( fob, which he considers "the<lb/>
U"st voices ever assembled in the<lb/>
history ol man first us?J the word<lb/>
chorale to mean a group singing<lb/>
. horal music; Uvi the Roberl Shaw<lb/>
Chorale from 1949 to 1967, and<lb/>
fi unded thebig ollegiateC horale,<lb/>
now celebrating Its 50th anniver-<lb/>
sary season<lb/>
Shaw conducted the 1999 pre-<lb/>
miere of "Ballad for Americans"by<lb/>
the New York Philharmonic and<lb/>
Paul Robeson, which was broad<lb/>
cast<lb/>
I le also conducted a crowd of<lb/>
people nmnxxl into Carnegie 1 lall<lb/>
in May, on the morning the famous<lb/>
concert hall celebrated its 100th<lb/>
birthday Violinist Isaac Stem wept<lb/>
at the gloriOUS sound<lb/>
Ihe American Choral Direc-<lb/>
tors ssociation, founded V <lb/>
awo with 85 members, now has<lb/>
15,600 c amegie Hall is selling a -1<lb/>
1 2-hour video l Shaw rehearsing<lb/>
150 people in Brahms German<lb/>
Requiem which it doesn't ion<lb/>
sider esoteric.<lb/>
I"his month, the 14th annual<lb/>
Kennedy Center I ionors are being<lb/>
awarded to the 75 y ir-old Shaw,<lb/>
as well ascountry singer Roy Acuff,<lb/>
the songwriting team ol Betty<lb/>
Comden and Adolph Green, the<lb/>
Nicholas Brothersdance team, and<lb/>
at tor (iregory Peck<lb/>
Kennedy . enter 1 lonot arc<lb/>
given tor "contribution to the ul<lb/>
tural lite ol the nation through the<lb/>
performing aits<lb/>
shaw is pleased, he says, be<lb/>
cause it's public n ognirion oi the<lb/>
emergence of the t horal art.<lb/>
"The tact that choral singing<lb/>
has a much higher pU e in classical<lb/>
music than it did 50 or 60 years ago,<lb/>
I think is reflected in the Kennedy<lb/>
Center I lonor.<lb/>
I'm not vain enough to think I<lb/>
did it. It's recognition ol an ana rji<lb/>
art. They needed ? horse to put the<lb/>
blanket on<lb/>
A music-lover can get<lb/>
goosebumps listening to a good<lb/>
choir So can .1 chorister, shaw says<lb/>
"Singers can approach art of<lb/>
supreme quality, meeting munis at<lb/>
the absolute top of human creativ-<lb/>
ity he sivs<lb/>
"An extraordinary repertory is<lb/>
available to the amateur singer<lb/>
An instrumentalist would have<lb/>
to study for years to play music on<lb/>
that level Not asmnchisdenvindcd<lb/>
of the voice, technically.<lb/>
"It isoneof the things you can<lb/>
do with other peopleand still main-<lb/>
tain your Ntf-fcsped and indepen-<lb/>
dent enjoyment.<lb/>
11' s sort of t he best of c ma rade-<lb/>
rie and isolation Andbei luseit'sa<lb/>
group effort il demands a certain<lb/>
amount of ethii albehavior likecon<lb/>
siderabonforthepersonwrw snexl<lb/>
to you<lb/>
In his lifetime, 'haw says, he<lb/>
has seen the emergence ol choral<lb/>
singingasaseriousartform VS hen<lb/>
1 wasgrowingup there were junior<lb/>
high no high school i orusesand<lb/>
fraternity sings<lb/>
When 1 got to New orkin 1938<lb/>
the major large choruses were<lb/>
alumni (lubsol men who d left uni-<lb/>
versities and got together to drink<lb/>
beer and sing on Wednesday<lb/>
nights he say s<lb/>
"There was the (ratorioSki<lb/>
ety tor whom Andrew Carnegie<lb/>
built a hall, tor lus wife to sing the<lb/>
1 lallelujah Chorus<lb/>
( horuses began to flourish af-<lb/>
ter World War 11, Shaw savs, when<lb/>
musicologists discovered the rich<lb/>
choral literature of the 16th, 17th<lb/>
and 18th centuries and technology<lb/>
developed to publish and transmit<lb/>
the scores<lb/>
"With the growth in literatim'<lb/>
came a corresponding growth in<lb/>
schools of music and the education<lb/>
of conductors he s.ns<lb/>
While shaw finds the general<lb/>
choral sceneerx ouraging, then an<lb/>
some things that disturb him. "Cno<lb/>
is the removal of the arts from early<lb/>
curriculum he says<lb/>
"Americaneducation would he<lb/>
an awful lot better off if we began<lb/>
with arts rather that mem natton.<lb/>
"Singing, instruments, art, po<lb/>
etrv, open up creative aptitudes in<lb/>
children, making them capable of<lb/>
faster learningot the memorization<lb/>
subjects which they need, spelling,<lb/>
arithmetic, historv<lb/>
Thai has been proved Ameri-<lb/>
can education has the thing com<lb/>
pletely upside down.<lb/>
hire is one of the best<lb/>
foavid,almost maniac le,fol-<lb/>
lowersol The Enterprise's adven-<lb/>
tures the new movie ranks at least<lb/>
second to The Wrath of Kahn in the<lb/>
six film series.<lb/>
I he Star Trek movies have a<lb/>
great thing going each one gets<lb/>
to build on the story of the ones<lb/>
that came be-fore.<lb/>
logically each one has the po-<lb/>
tential to be better than its prede-<lb/>
cessor.<lb/>
Unlike Rocky movies, where<lb/>
thi ending is a foregone conclu-<lb/>
sion, Trek movies alwavs have a<lb/>
special twist for their followers<lb/>
(Halboa could never die and then<lb/>
be bn night back to life in then a 1 m<lb/>
oi an earthbound txer movie)<lb/>
The best thing about The Un<lb/>
discovered Country is that, finallv,<lb/>
the seasoned crew has learned to<lb/>
take itselt with a grain of salt<lb/>
I low m an v times can you save<lb/>
the universe and not become a<lb/>
little desensatized?<lb/>
Many of the nailbiting scenes<lb/>
in the moviesaresalted with some<lb/>
legitamatly tunnv one-liners (to<lb/>
quote would only spoil some good<lb/>
belly laughs).<lb/>
( mce again the Special effects<lb/>
art' breath taking Sometimes thev<lb/>
wen- so above-par that the only<lb/>
noise the talkative young trekkies<lb/>
behideme could utter was ooooh<lb/>
or aaaah.<lb/>
The plot is tnnlov even to the<lb/>
non-trekkie The Federation is<lb/>
hatching a plan to help save the<lb/>
dying Klingon empire and em-<lb/>
Kirkontimeot neverending peace.<lb/>
Unlike the Klingons in Star<lb/>
Trek: The Next Generation the<lb/>
Klingons of Kirk's era are not en-<lb/>
tirely to be trusted, eventhough<lb/>
their planet will beeixygendepleti<lb/>
niTO yvjrs<lb/>
Ihe plot smells of the luke-<lb/>
warm friendship that America has<lb/>
with its new-found commrads.<lb/>
As fate would have it, Kirk<lb/>
and the rest of the trusty crew are<lb/>
put on hason assignment I o make<lb/>
a kmg scenario short Kirk (a noto-<lb/>
rious Klingon hater) is set upas an<lb/>
assassin<lb/>
"Ihe rest of the movie is spent<lb/>
with various past and present En-<lb/>
terprise crew memtXTS breaking<lb/>
rules to rescue, and prove the<lb/>
innocense, of their trouble-mag-<lb/>
net of a captain.<lb/>
The movie is a borderline<lb/>
must see; Star Trek VI is certainly<lb/>
worth the price of a Greenville<lb/>
movie ticket<lb/>
Community welcomes brand<lb/>
new Multicultural Center<lb/>
By immy Robinson<lb/>
; ? 11 iMultN u I rural<lb/>
in ilit) ince its<lb/>
nnou ? ' I ? ? 1 much<lb/>
en made toward<lb/>
making the dream a reality<lb/>
I nNovembcr27 1991 thepro-<lb/>
gram became incorporated as an<lb/>
independent 'on pntit organiza-<lb/>
tion<lb/>
I tural Center lead-<lb/>
ers haveclet ted a l7memberboard<lb/>
of direi tors and appointed two ad-<lb/>
ditional i ommittees; a Public Rela-<lb/>
tions v ommittee and a Member-<lb/>
ship 1. ommittee,<lb/>
fhe location ol thecenter isstill<lb/>
undecided although severalbuild-<lb/>
ings in the downtown Greenville<lb/>
area an' beingonsidrration.<lb/>
Members have visited vacant<lb/>
buildings and an' working toward<lb/>
obtaining one rent free for two years<lb/>
uith an option to buy .it the end of<lb/>
the two years.<lb/>
Hnvlum-s were distributed at<lb/>
the International i estivaland mtrtNt<lb/>
in thepnm. 1 abi ?unded 'Ihnvhun-<lb/>
drcd people submitted their names<lb/>
ii ? addresses In addition to the<lb/>
? I is being sent out<lb/>
i ? ?hambcr olbmmerce<lb/>
 a lettei<lb/>
Fhe Mulhcultural Center con-<lb/>
cepl was a result of discussion dur<lb/>
ing a " ommunity Round-Table<lb/>
l orum "<lb/>
The enter recicved a grant<lb/>
from the North Carolina Humani-<lb/>
ties Council.<lb/>
Pr Mohammed Ahad con-<lb/>
ducted tour community meetings<lb/>
on four different cultures to be rep-<lb/>
resented in the center Indian, I lis-<lb/>
panicChineseandMid Eastern All<lb/>
the evaluations of the center have<lb/>
been positive and suggest the es-<lb/>
tablishment of a community based<lb/>
cultural center,<lb/>
"This is something people want<lb/>
to know and will enjoy,Msaid Ahad<lb/>
in an earlier interveiw<lb/>
l"ho center plans to have r(Xms<lb/>
with artifacts, literature, pictures<lb/>
and art from different cultures.<lb/>
rhe objectives of the center arc<lb/>
to amass resources such as films,<lb/>
videos, charts, maps and book I 1<lb/>
students, ti 1 hers, scholars and in-<lb/>
?? ? ? : ? . iduals; too induct ex-<lb/>
hibitsonp ??? ilar cultures, to help<lb/>
with resean h on health care beliefs<lb/>
and utilization strategies, to con-<lb/>
duel seminars and workshops tor<lb/>
target groups such as teachers and<lb/>
nurses and to maintain a library<lb/>
and reading room of reference<lb/>
material on immigrant cultures<lb/>
According to a press release,<lb/>
I"he Multicultural Center will tar-<lb/>
gel grade and high school students,<lb/>
college students, graduate students<lb/>
and professors<lb/>
Weare looking for willing and<lb/>
enthusiastic students of ECU to<lb/>
volunteer to become members of<lb/>
various subcornmitteesand one stu-<lb/>
dent leader to serve on the board of<lb/>
directors<lb/>
"Students and teachers will<lb/>
learn from this center men than<lb/>
anv other gnuip said Ahad.<lb/>
Larroquette predicts court is<lb/>
in session for last roundup<lb/>
1 W YORK (AP) lohn<lb/>
Larroquette, the slightly smarmy<lb/>
prosecutor ol NBC's "Night<lb/>
i ourt thinks this may be the<lb/>
show's final season. But then, he<lb/>
notes, 1 said that last year. And<lb/>
the year before<lb/>
That, he said, wasbecausefor<lb/>
the last two years the acting con-<lb/>
tracts were on a year-to-year ba-<lb/>
sis but the show, now m its ninth<lb/>
season, keeps getting renewed,<lb/>
and one never knows: It still pro-<lb/>
duces enough (Nielsen) numbers<lb/>
to make it viable<lb/>
Still, Larroquette, the tirst ac-<lb/>
tor ever to win tour consecutive<lb/>
Emmys tor a series, isn't putting<lb/>
all his eggs in one sitcom. 1 le does<lb/>
occasional film roles, and on Sun-<lb/>
day will star in one on IKZ ?<lb/>
"One Special Victory<lb/>
1 le plays a self-absorbed real<lb/>
estate hawker who finds a new<lb/>
meaning in life as the accidental<lb/>
coach of a basketball team ot<lb/>
handicapped adults.<lb/>
If NBC does lop "Night<lb/>
Court" off its roster for 1992-93,<lb/>
"I'll do plays or movies if any-<lb/>
body wants me to do some he<lb/>
said. Tm sure I'll do another tele-<lb/>
vision series. It's a great way to<lb/>
make a living<lb/>
Standing d foot 4 and pos-<lb/>
sessed of a rich baritone voice,<lb/>
Larroquette did various things<lb/>
before acting to earn a living.<lb/>
born and raised in New Or-<lb/>
leans, he studied music tor 11<lb/>
vears, and did time on tenor sax in<lb/>
a rocknroll band there. He also<lb/>
was an announcer at a classical<lb/>
music station. But without the<lb/>
soothing y awl drawl of his home-<lb/>
town.<lb/>
He worked hard to lose the<lb/>
accent: "I thought it'd be better to<lb/>
sound like Walter Cronkite than<lb/>
Where y'at<lb/>
I wanted to sound as though<lb/>
I was 41) and had gray on the side<lb/>
of mv hair<lb/>
After that, he worked in San<lb/>
Diego as a record promotion man.<lb/>
And then, on to Los Angeles and<lb/>
acting, starting in local stage pro-<lb/>
ductions of The Crucible" and<lb/>
"Enter Laughing He was at the<lb/>
relatJvelyadvancedageof24then<lb/>
He hadn't Studied emoting<lb/>
much. But "it was in the back of<lb/>
mv mind all my life, even when I<lb/>
was a kid he said. "In New Or-<lb/>
leans, the streets are theater. You<lb/>
can iust walk outside and watch<lb/>
great pageantry and drama and<lb/>
comedy<lb/>
It's a good drinking town.<lb/>
Indeed, as l .arroquette notes the<lb/>
nice thing about New Orleans is<lb/>
that vou don't have to go thirsty<lb/>
too long Problem is. he picked<lb/>
up a taste tor the sauce there as a<lb/>
teen-ager.<lb/>
Later, when he was starting<lb/>
to roll in Hollywood, hisdnnking<lb/>
came close to doing him in.<lb/>
It almost cost him his career<lb/>
and his marriage to his wife, Eliza-<lb/>
beth, who he had met in "Enter<lb/>
Laughing Finally, he quit, cold<lb/>
turkey, on Feb. b, 1982. He hasn't<lb/>
touched it since.<lb/>
"1 think the bottom line is<lb/>
that vou've got to quit by yourself<lb/>
and for yourself he said.<lb/>
'Les Enfants du Paradis' makes cable<lb/>
television debut this week on Cinemax<lb/>
NEW YORK (AP) Cable<lb/>
TV's Cinemax long has billed it-<lb/>
self as the premium channel for<lb/>
movie lovers, but with lastnight's<lb/>
premiere of "Les Enfants du<lb/>
Paradis it lives up to the billing.<lb/>
"Children of Paradise as<lb/>
Cinemax will insist on promoting<lb/>
it out of fear of scaring you off,<lb/>
wasfilmod between I943and lM5<lb/>
dunng the Nazi occupation of<lb/>
ranee.<lb/>
f<lb/>
Director Marcel Came'smas-<lb/>
terwork is a "backstage" movie,<lb/>
set in the theater world of 1840s<lb/>
Pans.<lb/>
Jacques Prevert's screenplay<lb/>
isa beguiling romantic drama, cre-<lb/>
ating a fully realized world filled<lb/>
with interesting characters and<lb/>
interesting ideas.<lb/>
"Les Enfants du Paradis" is a<lb/>
seminal work in just about every<lb/>
cinephile's canon. Once you've<lb/>
seen it, you have a skeleton kev to<lb/>
the last 40 vears of French cinema<lb/>
This is the text all those ob-<lb/>
lique New Wave French directors<lb/>
were schooled on and worked<lb/>
from.<lb/>
Don't let this deter you. It's<lb/>
engrossing drama, with moments<lb/>
of high corned v.<lb/>
Considered solely as a ro-<lb/>
mance, "Enfants du Paradis" is<lb/>
worth vour time.<lb/>
<pb facs="00058255_0007"/><lb/>
Classifieds<lb/>
uJK fcazt (Hitrultnian<lb/>
December10,1991<lb/>
NOTICE- I will pay $75 for a<lb/>
Peach Bowl ticket. I need at least<lb/>
20 tickets. Call Billy at 756-1566.<lb/>
WORD PROCESSING AND<lb/>
PHOTOCOPYING SER-<lb/>
VICES: We offer typing and<lb/>
photocopying services. Wealso<lb/>
sell software and computer d is-<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/>
TYPESETTING: Resumes and<lb/>
reports. Brochures and news-<lb/>
letters. Call 752-0833 or 830-<lb/>
9090. Ask for Lisa.<lb/>
A Beautiful Place to LK c<lb/>
?All New<lb/>
?Anil Ready To Kent-<lb/>
IMVKRSITVAPARTMKM<lb/>
2899 E 5th Street<lb/>
?Located Near P.Cl<lb/>
?Ne ir Majoi Shopping Centen<lb/>
?Across From Highway Patrol Station<lb/>
Limitedtffei S3 JO a month<lb/>
Cocitaci J.T or romm) WUIiami<lb/>
756-7815 or 830-1937<lb/>
OfTiceopen y 8,12-5 0pm<lb/>
?AZALEA GARDENS<lb/>
(lean and quirt wir hrJriKtn fanttlsd sjmUIIN tl<lb/>
mrg) effk m, Urr ? and vrr. - ?vrrv t-ven.<lb/>
cjMc TV, Couples a tanajam only SM0 a n?ith. 6<lb/>
m rhlf?? MOB0 IIHOrVfl Kl v; ! S ? I<lb/>
i.rjtln Awtrnrrttar?drn?tbjrhwnet? AaJcali?fdr?<lb/>
nc?i Huk vr Couwn CM<lb/>
Contad J r vv; romim Williams<lb/>
FEMALE ROOMMATE<lb/>
NEEDED: Privatebalcony bed-<lb/>
room, Wilson Aaes. 1 2 utili-<lb/>
ties and rent. Free cable. Dish-<lb/>
washer. Need for second se-<lb/>
mester or sooner. 758-5262.<lb/>
FORRENT:2bedroom duplex.<lb/>
758-5615.<lb/>
DisriV. ciASSifim<lb/>
FREE<lb/>
PREGNANCY<lb/>
TESTING<lb/>
Free &amp; Confidential<lb/>
Services &amp; Counseling<lb/>
Carolina Pregnancy Center<lb/>
757-0003<lb/>
111 E. 3rd Street<lb/>
The Lee Building<lb/>
Greenville NC<lb/>
Hours:<lb/>
Mon - Fri 8:30-3:00<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/>
WANTED: Female roommate<lb/>
to share apartment at Wilson<lb/>
Acres. 1 4 of rent and utilities.<lb/>
Will have own bedroom. Please<lb/>
call for more information. 757-<lb/>
0458.<lb/>
FEMALE ROOMMATE<lb/>
WANTED: FREE rent, utilities,<lb/>
cable in house, near campus in<lb/>
exchange for care attendant ser-<lb/>
vices. Will provide own nxm.<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,2 l2baths, 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/>
TWO ROOMMATES: wanted<lb/>
to share three bedroom<lb/>
townhouse. $190 a month plus<lb/>
13 utilities. Non-smoker pre-<lb/>
ferred. Call 3554)986.<lb/>
FEMALE SEEKING, room-<lb/>
mate to share 2 bedroom apt. it<lb/>
Stratford Arms beginning Jan.<lb/>
1. $175 a month 1 2 utilities.<lb/>
Call 355-7640.<lb/>
SUBLET: 1 bedroom apart-<lb/>
ment. Unfurnished. Dec. 1-July<lb/>
31 or portion thereof. $265<lb/>
monthly, plus utilities and de-<lb/>
posit. Call 321-0288 or 758-2320.<lb/>
ROOMMATE NEEDED: for<lb/>
spring semester to share 4 bed-<lb/>
room apartment. $138month,<lb/>
1 4 utilities, wd, dishwasher.<lb/>
Non-smoker. Wild wood Villas.<lb/>
Call 830-5125<lb/>
PRIVATE ROOM: with shared<lb/>
bath, kitchen, living room. Lo-<lb/>
cated next to campus. 504 E.<lb/>
12th St behind Dominos Pizza<lb/>
on Charles. $180 per month in-<lb/>
cludes utilities. Call Marsha<lb/>
Blair to see at 757-2110 days,<lb/>
355-2228 nights.<lb/>
)ISI'I V (I ASSIIII I)<lb/>
FEMALE ROOMMATE<lb/>
NEEDED ASAP:Non-smoker,<lb/>
on ECU bus route. $170 rent, 1 <lb/>
2 utilities. Share 2 bedroom. Call<lb/>
757-0503.<lb/>
RESPONSIBLE ROOM-<lb/>
MATE NEEDED: Ringgold<lb/>
Towers, fully furnished. $187.50<lb/>
a month plus 12 utilities. For<lb/>
spring semester or sooner. Call<lb/>
Patrick at 7524428.<lb/>
ROOMMATE NEEDED: Half<lb/>
block from campus. Call any-<lb/>
time 758-8225.<lb/>
1 BEDROOM APARTMENT:<lb/>
to sublease Jan. 1. $275month.<lb/>
On 5th Street across from cam-<lb/>
pus. Call 752-0348 after 5 p.m.<lb/>
FOR RENT: 1 bedroom, has<lb/>
loft, washer and dryer, 10<lb/>
minute walk to campus. Call<lb/>
7584287.<lb/>
FEMALE ROOMMATE<lb/>
NEEDED: Share 3 bedroom<lb/>
apartment with 3 girls. 2 12<lb/>
baths, non-smoker, furnished.<lb/>
$138.75 plus 14 utilities. Tar<lb/>
River Estates. Call 752-0895.<lb/>
MARIN MOUNTAIN BIKE:<lb/>
for sale. '91 model, 2 months<lb/>
old. Bought as a gift, ridden<lb/>
once. White wsalamanders.<lb/>
Suntour XCU components.<lb/>
Water bottle, seat bag, lock and<lb/>
computer included. Previewed<lb/>
in the December issue of Moun-<lb/>
tain Bike Action. $400 firm. Call<lb/>
758-5354. Ask for Lew.<lb/>
GREAT BUY! 6 days and 5<lb/>
nights. Bahama vacation. Fun<lb/>
in the sun. $149.00 or best offer.<lb/>
919-776-8511.<lb/>
FOR SALE- Couch and love<lb/>
seat. 6 months old.<lb/>
Williamsburg blue. Asking<lb/>
$250.00. Call 757-3537and leave<lb/>
message.<lb/>
FOR SALE: Queen size<lb/>
waterbed. Simple wooden<lb/>
frame, semi-wave, asking $125<lb/>
or best offer. Call 321-1179.<lb/>
Leave message.<lb/>
FOR SALE- Peach Bowl tickets.<lb/>
Also drafting table, sleep sofa,<lb/>
love seat. Must sell. Call 830-<lb/>
9046.<lb/>
I<lb/>
Ringgold Towers<lb/>
Now Taking Ixascs for<lb/>
1 Bedroom. 2 BodfOORI,<lb/>
&amp; Efficiency Apartments.<lb/>
CALL 752-2865<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 types. 2711E.<lb/>
10th St. 757-2667.<lb/>
1982 YAMAHA MAXIM: Ex-<lb/>
cellent running condition.<lb/>
Looks sharp, too! A steal at $700.<lb/>
Call Greg at 830-9131.<lb/>
SEIZED CARS: trucks,boats,4<lb/>
wheelers, motorhomes, by FBI,<lb/>
IRS, DEA. Available your 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/>
1983 FORD ESCORT: $1400 or<lb/>
best offer. New timingbelt, new<lb/>
water pump, good condition.<lb/>
Relocating. Call: 551-2745. 8<lb/>
a.m5 p.m.<lb/>
FOR SALE Stuff your Pirate<lb/>
fans section with an ECU car<lb/>
flag! $7 each. Don't delay. Call<lb/>
830-3691.<lb/>
WESLEY COMMON APARTMENTS<lb/>
I<lb/>
BRAND NEW!<lb/>
1 and 2 Bedroom Apt.<lb/>
AVAILABLE JAN. 5-10<lb/>
LOCATED NEAR CAMPUS<lb/>
CALL FOR MORE INFO.<lb/>
355-3647<lb/>
laraestllbrary of Information In uT<lb/>
Largest Library<lb/>
19.273 TOPICS - ALL SUBJtCTS<lb/>
Order CaUisg Today with VISA. MC or COD<lb/>
HE 800-351-0222<lb/>
Or Rutn K 0010 RewtrcH littorrralnn<lb/>
11372 Idirto Av? WPM lot Anytw CA KXOi<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/>
nized and hard working. Call Jo<lb/>
Ann or Pam at 1-800-592-2121.<lb/>
MAKE $500-$1000 WEEKLY:<lb/>
stuffing envelopes at home.<lb/>
Start now! Rush S.AS.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/>
FREE TRAVEL: Air couriers<lb/>
and cruiseships. Students also<lb/>
needed Christmas, spring and<lb/>
summer for amusement park<lb/>
employment. Call80S682-7555<lb/>
ext. F-3464.<lb/>
POSTAL JOBS AVAILABLE<lb/>
Many positions. Great benefits.<lb/>
Call 805-682-7555 ext P-3712.<lb/>
EASY WORK1 EXCELLENT<lb/>
PAY! Assemble products at<lb/>
home. Call toll free. 1-800-467-<lb/>
8585 ext 5920.<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 of seasonal<lb/>
help to fill our sales, counter<lb/>
and 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/>
PartyCruise$279! Panama City<lb/>
$99!S.Padre$199!Cancun$469!<lb/>
Jamaica $399. Jasa 758-5165,<lb/>
Georgia931-9363,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 winter spring break trips.<lb/>
For information call Student<lb/>
Travel Services at 1-800-648-<lb/>
4849.<lb/>
PAINTERS NEEDED: Need<lb/>
energetic people to help paint<lb/>
Atlanta purple by displaying<lb/>
ECU car flags on Jaa 1, 1992.<lb/>
Buy your car flags today. Call<lb/>
830-3691.<lb/>
HELP WANTED: Wait staff<lb/>
and bartenders. Apply in per-<lb/>
son at Professor O'Cools (lo-<lb/>
cated behind Quincy's on<lb/>
Greenville Blvd.) from 8 a.m. to<lb/>
10 a.m. and 2 p.m. to 5 p.m.<lb/>
Must be able to work Christmas<lb/>
break.<lb/>
FREE SPRING BREAK VA-<lb/>
CATION: Organize a group,<lb/>
earn commissions and free trip6!<lb/>
Call: 1-800-826-9100.<lb/>
MUSICIANS NEEDED: Key-<lb/>
board or percussion to accom-<lb/>
pany ECU dance classes. Good<lb/>
pay. Call 757-6390.<lb/>
FREE SPRING BREAK<lb/>
TRIPS: Promote and organize<lb/>
our spring break tours. All ma-<lb/>
terials furnished. Good pay and<lb/>
fun. Call Campus Marketing. 1-<lb/>
800-423-5264.<lb/>
portation. Call between 5-10<lb/>
p.m 757-1040.<lb/>
INVENTORY SERVICE seek-<lb/>
ing part-time help. Starting pay<lb/>
$6.00hour. Paid training. No<lb/>
experience necessary. Call 752-<lb/>
1204 Monday,Dec. 16,9a.m. to<lb/>
3 p.m. only. Equal Opportunity<lb/>
Employer.<lb/>
RIDETOTHE PEACH BOWL<lb/>
with Pirate pridei Buy your ECU<lb/>
car flags today. Reduced price:<lb/>
one for $7. Call now: 830-3691<lb/>
and leave message.<lb/>
CONCERNED: about your fu-<lb/>
ture? Will some uncertain fu-<lb/>
ture income pay all of your cer-<lb/>
tain future bills? Maybe we can<lb/>
give you advise on what to do.<lb/>
Free, confidential consultation<lb/>
from people who want to help<lb/>
people. 355-3789.<lb/>
LOST: Red Naurica Ski jacket.<lb/>
Reversible to blue and green.<lb/>
Call 355-5393. Big reward.<lb/>
SLURPY: As finals draw to an<lb/>
end and the real partying be-<lb/>
gins. Make sure to ha ve a Merry<lb/>
Christmas and Happy New<lb/>
Year! We don't agree some of<lb/>
the time (PSYCHO) but I wish<lb/>
you the best in '92! Your new<lb/>
roomey!<lb/>
"WOODSTOCK Youare one<lb/>
beautiful individual found only<lb/>
once in one million. What we<lb/>
have is as much a rarity. Thanks<lb/>
fora mesmerizingsemesterand<lb/>
for brightening my life with<lb/>
your light. I love you now as I<lb/>
will always. Happy 24th Birth-<lb/>
day! Love, 'Snoopy<lb/>
PIKA EXEC: Doing a great job.<lb/>
Keep up the good work. We<lb/>
appreciate it. Hang in there<lb/>
pledges, if s almost over! The<lb/>
Brotherhood.<lb/>
AZL. Last Thursday night was<lb/>
awesome. Lef s do it up again<lb/>
sometime you hear! PIKA.<lb/>
LOST: Blackwhite wind-<lb/>
breaker . Taken from Rawl class-<lb/>
room Wednesday. Has a set of<lb/>
car keys in pocket. Reward. Call<lb/>
830-9046.<lb/>
Peach Bowl Special<lb/>
SINGLE 1 or 2 persons $39.88<lb/>
 "parsons <lb/>
Include: Overnight lodging, arrival h'ort duurvres,<lb/>
super-deluxe complimentary continental breakfast<lb/>
Super 8 ? Atlanta South<lb/>
1-75 Exit 73<lb/>
(404)389-4108<lb/>
20 minutes<lb/>
from stadium<lb/>
WATTERSONWHEEL&amp;Now SPRING BREAK '91- Guaran-<lb/>
hiring delivery driver for both teed lowestprices! Book by Dec.<lb/>
lunch and dinner. Must be reli- 15 and save $100. Call Scot or<lb/>
able, neat and have own trans- Paul at 752-6681 for more info.<lb/>
We mourn the deaths of<lb/>
Macho &amp; Eahh<lb/>
"Macho"<lb/>
Man King. 24,<lb/>
J of an unspeci-<lb/>
fied street in<lb/>
Ripple City.<lb/>
j left us Mon-<lb/>
 day. His rude,<lb/>
boisterous<lb/>
behavormade<lb/>
him an enig-<lb/>
 mabc icon, but<lb/>
few really be-<lb/>
i lieved his wild<lb/>
J tales of con-<lb/>
guest Gone is his earth-shaking laugh.<lb/>
Gone is his sanctimonious trreverance.<lb/>
Gone is his pungent, acrid malodorous<lb/>
scent<lb/>
Doug "Eahh"<lb/>
Mortis. zZ met his<lb/>
fate while taking<lb/>
his dog for a leak.<lb/>
Eahh's last words<lb/>
were "Eahh. weD.<lb/>
actually  His<lb/>
casket consists of<lb/>
200 conogated<lb/>
Dino's Pizza<lb/>
boxes. To be en-<lb/>
graved on his<lb/>
tombstone: ?'Wire-<lb/>
tappers should mmmmmmmmmmmmm<lb/>
have dwdThe funeral will be held at 3 oro,<lb/>
Eahh will promptly appear at 8 pjn. Earn is<lb/>
remembered for being confused with timely<lb/>
matters of 5 hours. ?<lb/>
Announcements<lb/>
PHYSICAL EDUCATION<lb/>
MOTOR AND PHYSICAL<lb/>
FITNESS COMPETENCY<lb/>
TEST SCHEDULE<lb/>
Minges Coliseum, 10a.m. Fri-<lb/>
day, Dec. 13. A passing score<lb/>
cm this test is required of all<lb/>
students prior to declaring<lb/>
physical education as a ma-<lb/>
jor. 1. Maintain an average T-<lb/>
score of 45 on the six-item test<lb/>
battery. 2. Having a T-score<lb/>
of 45 on the aerobics run. <lb/>
Any student with a medical<lb/>
condition that would<lb/>
contraindicate participation<lb/>
in the testing should contact<lb/>
Mike McCammon or Dr. Gay<lb/>
Israel at 757-4688. To be ex-<lb/>
empted from any portion of<lb/>
the test, you must have a<lb/>
physician's excuse. A detailed<lb/>
summary of the test compo-<lb/>
nents is available in the Hu-<lb/>
man Performance Laboratory<lb/>
(Room 371, Sports Medicine<lb/>
Bldg.). Your physician's ex-<lb/>
cuse must specifically state<lb/>
from which items you are<lb/>
exempt.<lb/>
HONORS SEMINARS<lb/>
Faculty members are re-<lb/>
I<lb/>
minded that proposals to<lb/>
teach honors seminars fall<lb/>
semester 1992 are due during<lb/>
the third week of spring se-<lb/>
mester. If you have questions<lb/>
about the procedure or the<lb/>
format, contact David Sand-<lb/>
ers, 757-6373, at the Honors<lb/>
Office, 124 Fleming Hall. The<lb/>
Honors Committee makes the<lb/>
final selection.<lb/>
PUBUCATIQN OF AJWQUNCEMENTS<lb/>
ANY ORGANIZATION MAY USE THE ANNOUNCEMENTS<lb/>
SECTION OF THE EAST CAROLINIAN TO LIST ACTIVITIES<lb/>
AND EVENTS OPEN TO THE PUBLIC TWO TIMES FREE OF<lb/>
CHARGE. ALL ANNOUNCEMENTS ARE TO BE TYPED OR<lb/>
NEATLY PRINTED. DUETOTHE LIMITED AMOUNTOF SPACE<lb/>
AVAILABLE, THE EAST CAROLINIAN CANNOT GUARANTEE<lb/>
THE PUBLICATION OF ANNOUNCEMENTS. IT IS NOT ADVIS-<lb/>
ABLE TO RELY ON THESE ANNOUNCEMENTS ASASOLE<lb/>
MEANS OF COMMUNICATION. DEADLINES ARE: FRIDAY AT<lb/>
4PM FOR TUESDAY'S PUBLICATION AND MONDAY AT 4PM<lb/>
FOR THURSDAY'S PUBLICATION.<lb/>
Bearcats d<lb/>
Pirates, 10<lb/>
By Lisa Spiridopolus<lb/>
Staff Writer<lb/>
ECU snapped a three game wanning<lb/>
streak Friday night by bein routed by the<lb/>
undefeated Bearcats of Cincinnati at the<lb/>
Shoemaker Center, 105-69<lb/>
The statistics said it all for ECU. the<lb/>
team was outmatched and dominated in<lb/>
every facet of the game.<lb/>
"We had a tot of fundamental prob-<lb/>
lems Eddie Payne, ECU's head basketball<lb/>
coach said.<lb/>
The Bearcats took advantage of this<lb/>
problem by forcing 27 turnovers which<lb/>
Cincinnati turned into 31 points.<lb/>
ECU had threeplayers in double figures<lb/>
while the Bearcats had five. UC also shot 55<lb/>
percent from the floor compared to the<lb/>
Pirates 43 percent<lb/>
The bright spots for the Pirates came<lb/>
from Ike Copeland, Steve Richardson and<lb/>
Ronnell Peterson who combined for 50<lb/>
points on the night.<lb/>
Copeland, averaging 14 points a game<lb/>
had 19 points and seven rebounds.<lb/>
Copeland's play on the season has made<lb/>
Copeland a leader for the Pirates this sea-<lb/>
son.<lb/>
"Ike has had some aggressive play for<lb/>
us Payne<lb/>
hard and hi<lb/>
Richard<lb/>
for the Pira<lb/>
and finishir<lb/>
Peterson, wl<lb/>
a game, scoi<lb/>
Lester J<lb/>
sconng an$<lb/>
points and I<lb/>
minutes of <lb/>
ltwasl<lb/>
nan head co<lb/>
strength is i<lb/>
Cinar<lb/>
off the beet<lb/>
Herb <lb/>
hasbeenavl<lb/>
Bearcats sec<lb/>
Payne<lb/>
haveenoug<lb/>
partly duel<lb/>
days<lb/>
Thetis<lb/>
exams and I<lb/>
Tennessee)<lb/>
18.<lb/>
ThePil<lb/>
two-game j<lb/>
Newman i<lb/>
American Unr<lb/>
BvChristie Wilson<lb/>
Staff Writer<lb/>
Both of ECU's swimming and diving<lb/>
teams su f f ered losses Sa turd a y to the Ea gles<lb/>
of Amcncan University.<lb/>
The men's team wasdefeated 130-110,<lb/>
to move their record to 3-1 on the season.<lb/>
The women's team lost 139-86, which<lb/>
moved their overall mark to 2-2.<lb/>
Head swnmmingcoach Rick Kobe said<lb/>
even though both teams lost, they swam a<lb/>
great meet.<lb/>
"Each swimmer put forth their best<lb/>
effort he said. "I just think Amencan was<lb/>
a little stronger than we (were)<lb/>
Leading scorers for the men's team<lb/>
were senior Derek Nelson and sophomore<lb/>
Lance Tate.<lb/>
Nelson took first in the 1,000-yd.<lb/>
freestyle with a time of 957.65, and second<lb/>
in the 500-vd. freestyle in 453.36. He also<lb/>
took first place in the 200-yd. freestyle in<lb/>
15659.<lb/>
Tate<lb/>
breastroM<lb/>
participate<lb/>
in which<lb/>
rime of 3<lb/>
Sopr<lb/>
both thej<lb/>
(15954),<lb/>
Fresh<lb/>
in the 40<lb/>
first in vl<lb/>
yd. freest<lb/>
the 400-vi<lb/>
Fresf<lb/>
ond in bol<lb/>
andthe20<lb/>
also cont<lb/>
relay.<lb/>
Fresr<lb/>
ond in the<lb/>
at 2:04.91<lb/>
4XVvd.<lb/>
Detmer, Jones<lb/>
Freshman<lb/>
From Staff and Wire Reports<lb/>
ECU'S Robert Jones, BYU's Ty<lb/>
Detmer and San Diego State's<lb/>
Marshall Faulk lead the pack of the<lb/>
1991 Associated Press All-Ameri-<lb/>
can college football team.<lb/>
Faulk led the country in rush-<lb/>
ing and scoring, the first freshman<lb/>
to finish on top in either category.<lb/>
On Thursday, the San Diego State<lb/>
running back also become the third<lb/>
freshman to make the AP first team<lb/>
since they became eligible for var-<lb/>
sity competi tion in 1972. The others<lb/>
were Georgia's Herschel Walker in<lb/>
1980 and Pittsburgh's Tony Dorsett<lb/>
in 1973.<lb/>
Detmer, last year's<lb/>
Heisman Trophy winner from<lb/>
Brigham Young and the NCAA's<lb/>
all-time passing leader, is the only<lb/>
repeater from the 1990 team. He is<lb/>
the first quarts<lb/>
first unit in consej<lb/>
Notre Dame's j<lb/>
19467.<lb/>
Joining Faul<lb/>
offense is Heisr<lb/>
Desmond How<lb/>
triple-threat wic<lb/>
159 yards per<lb/>
nation's second -lj<lb/>
23 touchdowns,<lb/>
his trademark dr)<lb/>
his TDs came or<lb/>
return and a 93-<lb/>
Despite rnisj<lb/>
with an injury,<lb/>
1,429 yards and<lb/>
He gained 386 ya<lb/>
setting an NO<lb/>
that was later<lb/>
Tony Sands-<lb/>
Detmer waJ<lb/>
passer this seas<lb/>
of 403 throws for<lb/>
Washington's<lb/>
HOUSTON (AP) ? Washing-<lb/>
ton tackle Steve Emtman had been<lb/>
hoping all year to win the Lombardi<lb/>
Award as the nation's top college<lb/>
Bnermrvbuthecould hardly believe<lb/>
it when the moment arrived.<lb/>
Tm reaDy in awe right now.<lb/>
Thisisthegreatestawardofmylife<lb/>
Emtman and Thursday night "If?<lb/>
the greatest moment of my Hfe<lb/>
Emtman, leader of second-<lb/>
ranked Washington's dominating<lb/>
defense, was selected from a field of<lb/>
four finalists mat also included de-<lb/>
fensive tackle Santana Dotson of<lb/>
Baytor, linebacker Marvin Jones of<lb/>
Hortda State and offensive tackle<lb/>
Greg!<lb/>
Thei<lb/>
minee of sports<lb/>
ers and coaches, j<lb/>
banquet hosted I<lb/>
taryCrub.Thei<lb/>
not announced.<lb/>
The award i<lb/>
Vinos Lorn<lb/>
BayandWa<lb/>
who died of i<lb/>
created toraiser<lb/>
can Cancer!<lb/>
Last year's i<lb/>
Dune'sChrisr<lb/>
mounted)<lb/>
symbol for!<lb/>
<pb facs="00058255_0008"/><lb/>
BOP-<lb/>
Ivme for<lb/>
un pan-<lb/>
icked<lb/>
seasonal<lb/>
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December 10,1991<lb/>
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ture7 Will some uncertam fu-<lb/>
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Christmas and Happy New<lb/>
Year! We don't agree some of<lb/>
the time (PSYCHO) but I wish<lb/>
you the best in '92! Your new<lb/>
roomey!<lb/>
WOODSTOCK You are one<lb/>
beautiful individual found only<lb/>
once in one million. What we<lb/>
have is as much a raritv Thanks<lb/>
fora mesmerizingsemesterand<lb/>
for brightening my life with<lb/>
vour light. I love you now as I<lb/>
will always. Happy 240a Birth-<lb/>
day' Ixwe, 'Snoopy<lb/>
PI KA EXEC: Doing a great job.<lb/>
Keep up the good work. We<lb/>
appreciate it. Elang in there<lb/>
pledges, it's almost over! The<lb/>
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Key- AZD: Last Thursday night was<lb/>
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His rude,<lb/>
s t e t o u i<lb/>
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really he-<lb/>
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actually ' His<lb/>
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hones To he en<lb/>
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have died The funeral will he held at 1 p m<lb/>
Fahh will prorrtptlv appear at 8 pm. Fjfth is<lb/>
rrmemhered for being confuse! with nmelv<lb/>
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N OF ANNOUNCEMENTS<lb/>
MAY USE THE ANNOUNCEMENTS<lb/>
ST CAROLINIAN TO LIST ACTIVITIES<lb/>
0 THE PUBLIC TWO TIMES FREE OF<lb/>
JNCEMENTS ARE TO BE TYPED OR<lb/>
?TOTHE UMITED AMOUNT OF SPACE<lb/>
 CAROLINIAN CANNOT GUARANTEE<lb/>
ANNOUNCEMENTS. IT IS NOT ADVIS-<lb/>
1ESE ANNOUNCEMENTS AS A SOLE<lb/>
CATION. DEADLINES ARE: FRIDAY AT<lb/>
PUBLICATION AND MONDAY AT 4PM<lb/>
IBUCATION.<lb/>
Bearcats down<lb/>
Pirates, 105-69<lb/>
By Lisa Spiridopolus<lb/>
Staff Writer<lb/>
ECU snapped a three game winning<lb/>
streak Friday night by being routed by the<lb/>
undefeated Bearcats of Cincinnati at the<lb/>
Shoemaker Center, 105-69.<lb/>
The statistics said it all for ECU. the<lb/>
te?l) was outmatched and dominated in<lb/>
every facet of the game.<lb/>
"We had a lot of fundamental prob-<lb/>
lems EddiePayne, ECU's head basketball<lb/>
coach said.<lb/>
The Bearcats took advantage of this<lb/>
problem by forcing 27 turnovers which<lb/>
v incinnaH turned into 31 points.<lb/>
ECU had threeplayers in double figures<lb/>
while the Bearcats had five UC also shot 55<lb/>
jxTce from the floor compared to the<lb/>
PI rates 43 percent.<lb/>
The bright spots for the Pirates came<lb/>
trom Ike Copeland, Steve Richardson and<lb/>
Ronnell Peterson who combined for 50<lb/>
points on the night.<lb/>
Copeland, averaging 14 points a game<lb/>
had 19 points and seven rebounds.<lb/>
( opeland's play on the season has made<lb/>
v ppeknd a leader for the Pirates this sea-<lb/>
son.<lb/>
"Ike has had some aggressive play for<lb/>
us Payne said. " He pratices and plays<lb/>
hard and his work ethic is producing<lb/>
Richardson came off the bench again<lb/>
for the Pirates to nail four three-pointers<lb/>
and finishing with 18 points on the night.<lb/>
Peterson, who had been averaging 12 points<lb/>
a game, scored 13 for the team.<lb/>
Lester Lyons, who leads the Pirates in<lb/>
scoring and assists, was held to just two<lb/>
points and was 0-5 from the field in 27<lb/>
minutes of play.<lb/>
It was the sixth straight win for Cincin-<lb/>
nati head roach Bob Huggjns. "I believeour<lb/>
strength is our depth Huggins said.<lb/>
Cinci nna ti had several players to come<lb/>
off the bech and contribute for the team.<lb/>
Herb Jones, a 6'4" senior forward who<lb/>
hasbeen averaging 21 points a game for the<lb/>
Bearcats scored 26and grabbed lOrebounds.<lb/>
Payne said that he felt the team didn't<lb/>
have enough preparation for the match-up<lb/>
partly due to playing four games in seven<lb/>
days.<lb/>
The team will get an eight-day rest for<lb/>
exams and also use the rest to take on the<lb/>
Tennessee Volunteers in Knoxvilleon Dec.<lb/>
18.<lb/>
The Pirates will return to Minges for a<lb/>
two-game home stand against Carson-<lb/>
Newman and against Campbell.<lb/>
Fit photo by DaM R?od??CU Photo Lab<lb/>
The ECU men's basketball team suffered a 105-69 loss to the Cincinnati Bearcats over<lb/>
the weekend. The team will take an eight-day break before playing Tennessee<lb/>
American University sweeps ECU swimmers<lb/>
ByChristie Wilson<lb/>
Staff Writer<lb/>
Both of ECU's swimming and diving<lb/>
teams su ffered lossesSartirday to the Eagles<lb/>
of American University.<lb/>
The men's team was defeated 130-110,<lb/>
to move their record to 3-1 on the season.<lb/>
The women's team lost 139-86, which<lb/>
moved their overall mark to 2-2.<lb/>
Head swimmingcoach Rick Kobe said<lb/>
even though both teams lost, they swam a<lb/>
great meet.<lb/>
"Each swimmer put forth their best<lb/>
effort he said. "1 just think American was<lb/>
a little stronger than we (were)<lb/>
Leading scorers for the men's team<lb/>
were senior Derek Nelson and sophomore<lb/>
Lance Tate.<lb/>
Nelson took first in the 1,000-yd.<lb/>
freestyle with a time of 957.65, and second<lb/>
in the 500-yd. freestyle in 4:53.36. He also<lb/>
took first place in the 200-vd. freestyle in<lb/>
1:46.59.<lb/>
Tate placed first in the 200-yd.<lb/>
breastroke, clocking in at 2:13.90. He also<lb/>
participated in the 400-yd. medley relay,<lb/>
in which the team placed second with a<lb/>
time of 3:38.72.<lb/>
Sophomore Brian Sol tz took second in<lb/>
both the 200-yd. individual medley<lb/>
(1:5954) and 100-yd freestyle (49.63).<lb/>
Freshman Patrick Cassidy participated<lb/>
in the 400-yd. freestyle relay and placed<lb/>
first in 3:19.81. He took second in the 50-<lb/>
yd. freestyle (2259) and also took part in<lb/>
the 400-yd. medley relay.<lb/>
Freshman Jason Callaher placed sec-<lb/>
ond in both the 200-yd. butterfly (2.02.79)<lb/>
and the 200-yd. freestyle (1:46.86). Callaher<lb/>
also contributed in the 400-yd. medley<lb/>
relay.<lb/>
Freshman Robert Goral placed sec-<lb/>
ond in the 200-yd. backstroke, clocking in<lb/>
at 2:04.91. Goral also participated in the<lb/>
400-yd. medley relay.<lb/>
The men's team defeated the Rich-<lb/>
mond SpidersonSat. Nov. 23 before meet-<lb/>
ing with American University.<lb/>
"The women's team had a harder time<lb/>
this meet because once again we were<lb/>
beaten by a teams depth Kobesaid. "(We)<lb/>
were faced with 10 great women swim-<lb/>
mers, but I can't have them swim every<lb/>
event<lb/>
The Lady Pirates lost their first meet<lb/>
last week to Richmond University, but<lb/>
won 7 of the 13 events. Kobe said the<lb/>
reason the team lost was because of<lb/>
Richmond's depth.<lb/>
"It is hard to swim teams that have<lb/>
anywhere from 15 to 20 women swim-<lb/>
mers Kobe said. "I think that when we<lb/>
win it shows that our team has real talent.<lb/>
We don't have to depend on quantity, just<lb/>
quality<lb/>
Against American, the leading scor-<lb/>
ers for the women were junior Tia Pardue<lb/>
and sophomore Jacqueline Silber.<lb/>
Pardue placed first in each event she<lb/>
swam. She won the 50-yd. freestyle in<lb/>
2534, and the 100-yd. freestyle in 55.46.<lb/>
Pardue also contributed to the 400-yd.<lb/>
freestyle relav. The team clocked in at<lb/>
352.85.<lb/>
Silber took second in each event she<lb/>
swam. Silber participated in the 1,000-yd.<lb/>
freestyle, coming in at 1041 01, and the<lb/>
200-yd. freestyle in 159.82. Silber's final<lb/>
event was the 500-yd. freestyle, in which<lb/>
she clocked in at 5:16.26.<lb/>
Junior Julie Wilhelm placed second in<lb/>
the 200-yd. backstroke in 2:18.94. Wilhelm<lb/>
also participated in the 400-yd. medley<lb/>
relay which the team placed second in<lb/>
4:15.30.<lb/>
Freshman Michelle Walck took first in<lb/>
the 200 yd. breastroke coming in at 2:39.97.<lb/>
Walck also contributed to the second place<lb/>
win in the 400-yd. medley relay.<lb/>
The Pirate swimmers next meet will<lb/>
be on Jan. 2 against Ashland University.<lb/>
Lacrosse team<lb/>
prepares to<lb/>
defend crown<lb/>
By Kent Lewark<lb/>
Special to The Eaat Carolinian<lb/>
The EC U lacrosse team has begun early<lb/>
preparation todefend their crown ascharn-<lb/>
pions of the Southern division in the Na-<lb/>
tional Collegiate Lacrosse League.<lb/>
The team has held several informal<lb/>
practices in order to sharpen their skills<lb/>
before next season's March start.<lb/>
A fall season had originally been<lb/>
planned, but was later cancelled in part<lb/>
because the team's budget cuts. The de-<lb/>
partment of intramural recreational services<lb/>
slashed the teams budget by more than half<lb/>
from what they recieved in 1990.<lb/>
The teams' budget covers the costs of<lb/>
equipment, travel and membership fees to<lb/>
the NCLL.<lb/>
The NCAA has extended a bid to ECU<lb/>
to become a Division I team. The Pirates<lb/>
had to decline the in vi tation due to financial<lb/>
problems.<lb/>
'The University could not financially<lb/>
support lacrosse as a varsity sport at this<lb/>
time Wes Davis, team captain, said.<lb/>
The ECU lacrosse team is a club sport,<lb/>
which differs from a varsity team because<lb/>
they receive considerably less financial<lb/>
support than varisty sports.<lb/>
The NCLL consists of 35 club teams<lb/>
from Pennsylvania, West Virginia, Mary-<lb/>
land, Virginia and North Carolina. The<lb/>
teams are split in to seven divisions.<lb/>
ECU competes in the Southern divi-<lb/>
sion against such teams as Old Dominion<lb/>
University, William and Mary College,<lb/>
James Madison University, Virginia Com-<lb/>
monwealth University, the University of<lb/>
North Ca rolina, N.CState University, Elon<lb/>
College, the University of Richmond, Lib-<lb/>
erty College and Howard University.<lb/>
The Pirates are returning eight starters<lb/>
from last year's squad that posted a 9 and 2<lb/>
record and came up one game short of a trip<lb/>
to the Final Four in Baltimore, Md.<lb/>
The Pirates appear to be strong favor-<lb/>
ites to repeat as Southern division champs.<lb/>
Leading scorer Scott "Smitty" Smith returns,<lb/>
as well as other offensive stars. Kirk<lb/>
Katzburg and Drew Borque.<lb/>
On defense, all starters are back, in-<lb/>
cluding Wes Davis, Larry Fortier and<lb/>
standout goalie Phil Truitt.<lb/>
"With 90 percent of our top goal scor-<lb/>
ing back and no one lost on defense, the<lb/>
team should be just as good as last year<lb/>
Katzburg said.<lb/>
See Lacrosse, page 8<lb/>
Detmer, Jones lead All-American team<lb/>
Freshman also makes list of the elite<lb/>
From Staff and Wire Reports<lb/>
ECU'S Robert Jones, BYU's Ty<lb/>
Hetmer and San Diego State's<lb/>
Marshall Faulk lead the pack of the<lb/>
1991 Associated Press All-Ameri-<lb/>
can college football team.<lb/>
Faulk led the country in rush-<lb/>
ing and scoring, the first freshman<lb/>
to finish on top in either category.<lb/>
On Thursday, the San Diego State<lb/>
running back also become the third<lb/>
freshman to make the AP first team<lb/>
since they became eligible for var-<lb/>
sity competition in 1972. The others<lb/>
were Georgia's Herschel Walker in<lb/>
1980 and Pi ttsburgh's Tony Dorsett<lb/>
in 1973.<lb/>
Detmer, last year's<lb/>
Heisman Trophy winner from<lb/>
Brigham Young and the NCAA's<lb/>
all-time passing leader, is the only<lb/>
repeater from the 1990 team. He is<lb/>
the first quarterback to make the<lb/>
first unit in consecutive years since<lb/>
Notre Dame's Johnny Lujack in<lb/>
19447.<lb/>
Joining Faulk and Detmer on<lb/>
offense is Heisman Trophy favorite<lb/>
Desmond Howard of Michigan. The<lb/>
triple-threat widereceiveraveraged<lb/>
159 yards per game and was the<lb/>
nation'ssecond-leading scorer with<lb/>
23 touchdowns, many coming on<lb/>
his trademark diving catch. Two of<lb/>
his TDs came on a 93-yard kickoff<lb/>
return and a 93-yard punt return.<lb/>
Despite missing three games<lb/>
with an injury, Faulk rushed for<lb/>
1,429 yards and scored 140 points.<lb/>
He gained 386 yardsagainst Pacific,<lb/>
setting an NCAA single-game mark<lb/>
that was later broken by Kansas'<lb/>
Tony Sands.<lb/>
Detmer was the nation's No. 2<lb/>
passer this season, completing 249<lb/>
of403 throws for 4,031 yardsand35<lb/>
touchdowns. He finished hiscareer<lb/>
with more passing yards (15,031)<lb/>
and TD passes (121) than anyone in<lb/>
NCAA history, two of his 68 pass-<lb/>
ing and total offense records.<lb/>
Completing the backfield is<lb/>
Indiana's Vaughn Dunbar, the<lb/>
nation's No. 2 rusher with a 154-<lb/>
yard average. Although he only<lb/>
played two years for the Hoosiers,<lb/>
Dunbar finished his career as the<lb/>
school's third-leading rusher and<lb/>
TD scorer.<lb/>
Mario Bailey of Washington is<lb/>
the other wide receiver and Kelly<lb/>
Blackwell of Texas Christian is the<lb/>
tight end.<lb/>
Rounding out the offense are<lb/>
center Jay Leeuwenburg of Colo-<lb/>
rado; guards Jerry Ostroski of Tulsa<lb/>
and Jeb Flesch of Qemson; tackles<lb/>
Greg Skrepenak of Michigan and<lb/>
Bob Whitfield of Stanford; and<lb/>
placekickcr Carlos Huerta of Mi-<lb/>
ami.<lb/>
The defense is led by ECU's<lb/>
Robert Jones and Washington's<lb/>
Steve Emtman, who won the<lb/>
Lombardi Award as the nation's<lb/>
top lineman.<lb/>
They are joined by linemen<lb/>
Santana Dotson of Baylor, Brad<lb/>
Culpepper of Florida and Leroy<lb/>
Smith of Iowa; linebackers Marvin<lb/>
Jones of Florida State and Joe<lb/>
Bowden of Oklahoma; and backs<lb/>
Kevin Smith of Texas A&amp;M,Terrell<lb/>
Buckley of Florida State, Darryl<lb/>
Williamsof Miami and Dale Carter<lb/>
of Tennessee.<lb/>
Top-ranked Miami and No. 2<lb/>
Washington, the only undefeated<lb/>
teams in Division I-A, each have<lb/>
two players on the first team. No. 4<lb/>
Michigan and No. 5 Florida State<lb/>
also placed two players on the<lb/>
squad.<lb/>
See American, page 8<lb/>
Washington's Emtman takes Lombardi Award<lb/>
HOUSTON (AH ? Washing-<lb/>
ton tackle Steve Emtman had been<lb/>
hoping all year to win the Lombardi<lb/>
Award as the nation's top college<lb/>
lineman, but heoould hardly believe<lb/>
it when the moment arrived.<lb/>
"I'm reaDy in awe right now.<lb/>
Trteistregreatestawardofmylife<lb/>
Emtman said Thursday right "If s<lb/>
the greatest morrsnt Of my Me<lb/>
Emtman, leader of second-<lb/>
ranked Washington's dominating<lb/>
defense, was selected from a field of<lb/>
four finalists that also included de-<lb/>
fensive tackle Santana Dotson of<lb/>
Baylor, Hnebacker Marvin Jones of<lb/>
Florid State and offensive tackle<lb/>
Greg Skrepenak of Michigan.<lb/>
The winner, selected by a com-<lb/>
mittee of sports writers, broadcast-<lb/>
ers and coaches, was announced ata<lb/>
banquet hosted by the Houston Ro-<lb/>
tary Club. The final vote totals were<lb/>
not announced.<lb/>
The award is named in honor of<lb/>
Vince Lombardi, the former Green<lb/>
Bay and Washington Redskinscoadh<lb/>
who died of cancer in 197a It was<lb/>
created to raise money for the Ameri-<lb/>
can Cancer Society.<lb/>
Last year's recipient was Notre<lb/>
Dame'sChrbZorich. The award is a<lb/>
mounted chunk of pink granite?a<lb/>
symbol for Lombardi, who, as a col-<lb/>
legiate lineman, was known as one<lb/>
of Fordham's Seven Blocks of Gran-<lb/>
ite.<lb/>
Emtman, a 6-foot-4,280-pound<lb/>
Junior from Cheney, Wash an-<lb/>
chored a Washington defense that<lb/>
allowed onh237yardsand 92 points<lb/>
per game. He made 60 tackles and 6<lb/>
11I sacks, broke up three passesand<lb/>
had an interception for the Huskies<lb/>
(11-0), who will play Michigan in the<lb/>
Rose Bowl on Jan. 1.<lb/>
Emtman, who is also a finalist<lb/>
for theOutiand Trophy, was named<lb/>
a first-team AD-American by The<lb/>
Associated Press on Thursday. Ear-<lb/>
lier, he was named the Pac-lfsde-<lb/>
fensive player of the year for the<lb/>
second straight season.<lb/>
Jones, a 6-2,220-pound sopho-<lb/>
more, led Florida State with 125 tack-<lb/>
les, including a season-high 15<lb/>
against Miami. He was the first<lb/>
sophomore to benamed a Lombardi<lb/>
finalist<lb/>
Dotson, a 6-5,264-pound senior,<lb/>
finished with 60 tackles, one fumble<lb/>
recovery, four sacksandtwoblocked<lb/>
kicks. Skrepenak, a 68,322-pound<lb/>
senior, helped power Michigan's<lb/>
offense to an average of 439 yards<lb/>
and 37 points per game.<lb/>
a Dotson, Jones and Skrepenak<lb/>
Jbo were named AP AH-Americans.<lb/>
toy Mil<lb/>
On the run<lb/>
ECU'S Hunter Galimore makes another outstanding reception<lb/>
against South Carolina earlier this season. Galimore and the<lb/>
Pirates will take on N.C State in the Peach Bowl New Year's Day.<lb/>
Look for the<lb/>
Peach Bowl wrap-up<lb/>
in the first edition of<lb/>
TheEast Cardinitm,<lb/>
January 14,1991.<lb/>
(ecu)<lb/>
<pb facs="00058255_0009"/><lb/>
8 6Ic CnotCEnniltnian<lb/>
December 10, 1991<lb/>
Angels aquire Von Hayes from Phillies in winter meeting<lb/>
MIAMI BEACH, Hi (AP)<lb/>
She l alifornia ngf Is made the big<lb/>
noise al the winter meetings Sun<lb/>
day, getting Von Hayes in .? trade<lb/>
from I'hil.ktt Iphia a few hoursafter<lb/>
general manager Whitey Herzog<lb/>
launched ,1 face to face tirade .it<lb/>
Danny lartabull agent<lb/>
fne ngeb, whe traded Devon<lb/>
White to! orontointheopeningdeal<lb/>
of List vv,i! s meetings, again made<lb/>
th first move fney sent two lop<lb/>
minor leaguers, pitcher Kyle Abbott<lb/>
and outfielder Ruben maro Jr to<lb/>
Philadelphia (or Hayes<lb/>
l laves, M, has been on tlie trad-<lb/>
ing Mock tor several seasons He<lb/>
played only 77 jimcs last war K<lb/>
cause ol a broken right arm mn<lb/>
tained when ho was hit a pitch from<lb/>
rom Browning,and batted ust !<lb/>
with 21 KHIs '<lb/>
I laves has not hit a home run<lb/>
since September I'M) Despite that<lb/>
the Angels hope he can till sonx' of<lb/>
the power void left by 1 taveWmncld,<lb/>
who was let go after hitting .11 am<lb/>
leading 28 homers.<lb/>
"We were 1 Mb in the<lb/>
runs scored and 1 Jthinon baseper<lb/>
centage Herzog said. "We know<lb/>
he's (oming off a bad year B<lb/>
can help ns in those area<lb/>
I lerzog snd I (ayes will take<lb/>
Winfield'sspotinright field, for now<lb/>
rhe Angels are struggling to re sign<lb/>
tt ?? agent tirst baseman Wally<lb/>
foyner.andl lerzog said 1 I.ivm ould<lb/>
plav then' if ncvessirv.<lb/>
"We're not finished We expo '?<lb/>
? 1 a lot dt things this week<lb/>
I lerzog snd.<lb/>
But signing rartabuD, tin- pre-<lb/>
mier free agent remaining, may not<lb/>
!? i uifot diem.<lb/>
I lerzog is still smarting over his<lb/>
dealings with IVnnis Gilbert, the<lb/>
agent who represents Bobby lknilla<lb/>
and lartabull rhe Angels wanted<lb/>
? ilia,but 1 lerzog feltalbert used<lb/>
turn in order to raise the $29 million<lb/>
i iffer that Bonilla ai cepted last week<lb/>
from the New York Mets.<lb/>
So 1 lerzog, .is brunt a baseball<lb/>
man as there is. told Calbvrt m. He<lb/>
cursed fl?agentmtheFontaineWeau<lb/>
I lotel lobby in a brief, but loud, out-<lb/>
burst.<lb/>
It should be pointed out that<lb/>
HefZOg and i albert go wav back.<lb/>
 albert plaved for the Mets' minor<lb/>
league team in Visalia in 1969, when<lb/>
1 ler ig w.is the Mets' farm d irt tt r<lb/>
"We know each other well<lb/>
(albert said<lb/>
Literleraog'svilitewa .<lb/>
but his message was the s<lb/>
lartabull, who had been hij<lb/>
Angels' wish list, wasn't prime any-<lb/>
more.<lb/>
"If he changed agents, I i<lb/>
be interested Heraog said "I'm<lb/>
never going to make an (rffer tt<lb/>
of Dennis C albert S players.<lb/>
"I didn't like what hap;?<lb/>
the Ik milla situation, ' he said<lb/>
a little upset at th.it<lb/>
Peach Bowl<lb/>
draws<lb/>
attention to<lb/>
university<lb/>
By Doug Morris<lb/>
tnnic?rm t ifitm<lb/>
Phe Bowl thi<lb/>
drawing more attention to all ;<lb/>
athletii programs than ever b I<lb/>
The bowl has increased intcn<lb/>
!H?t jusl the football team, but other<lb/>
sports as well<lb/>
?<lb/>
ill<lb/>
??lion<lb/>
lion<lb/>
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Slid<lb/>
all wee!<lb/>
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lively of<lb/>
rate sup ?<lb/>
ommentators<lb/>
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win<lb/>
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 ,i rivalry but<lb/>
ii i tati ' ? ? .<lb/>
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<lb/>
ght about ' Ihe<lb/>
? sitiveisbeinginabowl I<lb/>
? the biggest negative is that<lb/>
 ? vs. ill t(x uson the rivalry and<lb/>
not tb i "ii. and this is some<lb/>
what controled by the media We<lb/>
- people will talk about how<lb/>
? 1 ,iUi. not that this is<lb/>
their first ? !h their rival<lb/>
? i<lb/>
This bowl is ,i reward more<lb/>
than anythingelse Ifsa reward tor<lb/>
theathlet<lb/>
Lacrosse<lb/>
Continued from page 7<lb/>
re going to have an awe<lb/>
some blend of returners and .1 few<lb/>
nismg newcomers Smithsaid.<lb/>
? '? renot going to lose a step '<lb/>
I he up oming 1992 season<lb/>
I  imises to be an exerting one tor<lb/>
the Pirates. "I'm definitely looking<lb/>
forward to this season I avis said.<lb/>
it wet in spread this attitude to the<lb/>
new guys, we can take this team to<lb/>
another level "<lb/>
American<lb/>
Continued from page 7<lb/>
Emtman was the leader of the<lb/>
nation's best defense, vhnh lim-<lb/>
ited opponents to 217 ytardsand 9 -1<lb/>
points per game<lb/>
I iehad ig 1 f2tm klesforlonea,<lb/>
unhiding 6 12 suks, aixl Inter-<lb/>
cepted one pass<lb/>
Robert lonesmadeanaznazing<lb/>
151 tackles for East (arotina, which<lb/>
won its last lOgamestogainaberth<lb/>
in the Peach Bowl.<lb/>
Jones was also a tuvilist tor the<lb/>
Butkusaward, an award given an<lb/>
nu.illy to the nation's top hneKu ker<lb/>
The All Amoru a team was so<lb/>
locted bv AP sports editor IXirrell<lb/>
Christian, college football writer<lb/>
Rick Warner and regional AP sports<lb/>
writers.<lb/>
<pb facs="00058255_0010"/><lb/>
8 vllic ?ast (Harulinian<lb/>
n,<lb/>
W I 1<lb/>
Angels aquire Von Hayes from Phillies in winter meeting<lb/>
?<lb/>
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Kvn or t!<lb/>
hroki<lb/>
; v hen he was hit .1: ?<lb/>
1<lb/>
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nol hit .1 li. ?me run rho <lb/>
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with<lb/>
Later<lb/>
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from the New 1 rk Mel<lb/>
So I lerzog, as Muni 11 is I 1<lb/>
man .is there is, told Gilbert so. Hr<lb/>
i ursedtheagi ntinthe! 1 mtaini I<lb/>
. ! (nit<lb/>
burst.<lb/>
It should be p nted ut that<lb/>
1 lerzog and iilberl<lb/>
( iilbt ?' Mets' minor - ?<lb/>
11 tcaminVisalia in - ?  hen of Q<lb/>
? ? ? I lerzogwastl eMets'I<lb/>
"We ? .a h other well<lb/>
1st v ? - Gilbert said pset<lb/>
.<lb/>
Peach Bowl<lb/>
draws<lb/>
attention to<lb/>
university<lb/>
?<lb/>
Lacrosse<lb/>
d from page 7<lb/>
- ?<lb/>
-<lb/>
1 li<lb/>
1<lb/>
American<lb/>
Continued from page 7<lb/>
He id 1<lb/>
r losses,<lb/>
-<lb/>
ben<lb/>
? .11 Kit<lb/>
won its<lb/>
?<lb/>
? ilsoa<lb/>
Butkus award ti iward j u an<lb/>
nuallvti 1 the nation stoplim<lb/>
Ilic Ml An it-p. .1 team v 1 -<lb/>
Iti ted I ? ? trrell<lb/>
Christian, college football ?<lb/>
Kiek Wamerarwi n v.ii ?nal Al' sp irts<lb/>
writers<lb/>
<pb facs="00058255_0011"/>
</div></body></text></TEI>