<?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="00058259_0001"/>
Qttft i?uBt (Eamltman<lb/>
Serving the East Carolina campus community since 1925<lb/>
Vol.64 No.69<lb/>
Thursday, January 24,1991<lb/>
Greenville, North Carolina<lb/>
Circulation 12,000<lb/>
14 Pages<lb/>
Iraqi missle attacks<lb/>
continue, terrorists<lb/>
strike around world<lb/>
I A.P) Iraq's worst missile at-<lb/>
tack yet on Israel provoked harsh<lb/>
con lomnation worldwide Wednes-<lb/>
day Fears ol terrorism prompted<lb/>
VVesti mbuiidincsfromIndia toLios<lb/>
toshutdovvnandinl ebanonproved<lb/>
latalh real<lb/>
A powerful explosion killed a<lb/>
guard ma parti) French-owned bank<lb/>
in Baalbek ebanon, rite traditional<lb/>
stronghold ol the fundamentalist<lb/>
Shiite Hezbollah, or Party of God,<lb/>
rhe early morning blast oc-<lb/>
curred a few hours after a bomb<lb/>
vventoff outside the French Embassy<lb/>
in west Bemit, causing damage but<lb/>
n- casualties<lb/>
In Istanbul Turkey, bombsex-<lb/>
ploded in the buildings of two US.<lb/>
organizations Wednesday, slightlv<lb/>
injuring one Turkish employee and<lb/>
causingextensivedamage.theserra-<lb/>
offidal Anatolia News Agency re-<lb/>
ported<lb/>
I he attackers left behind notes<lb/>
signed PFV SOI (Revolutionary<lb/>
1 ott ar.extromelettist underground<lb/>
group thai has been earning out<lb/>
attacks since the 1970s, according to<lb/>
a rept irterat the scene. Hie notes said<lb/>
uV bombing was to protest Turkey's<lb/>
involvement in the gulf war.<lb/>
Ihe seventh day of fighting left<lb/>
few areasof the globe untouched bv<lb/>
the war.<lb/>
The threat of terrorism bv<lb/>
Muslims supporting Saddam<lb/>
I lusseincausedSweden'sping-pong<lb/>
Peer health<lb/>
educators<lb/>
to counsel<lb/>
organizations<lb/>
Bv Robin Duffy<lb/>
Matt Writer<lb/>
The Student Health<lb/>
rvia otters Peer Health<lb/>
Education programs for all<lb/>
campus organizations for<lb/>
the 1991 spring semester.<lb/>
Main college-aged men<lb/>
and women may fed they<lb/>
an t( o young and loo vi-<lb/>
brant :r anything to touch<lb/>
them Peer Health Educa-<lb/>
tors are working to dispel<lb/>
this "it-i an't-happen-to-<lb/>
me" myth through their<lb/>
programs.<lb/>
Issues such as sexually<lb/>
transmitted diseases, date<lb/>
rape, pregnancy, AIDS,<lb/>
t an erand drugand alcohol<lb/>
abuse will be approached<lb/>
as well as other health prob-<lb/>
lems that surround college<lb/>
students.<lb/>
The truth is that stu-<lb/>
dents may be aware that<lb/>
these health risks exist, but<lb/>
some might not know the<lb/>
important facts that make<lb/>
him or her a victim.<lb/>
For instance, cancer of<lb/>
the testes is quickly becom-<lb/>
ing a major health concern<lb/>
tor 18- to 25 year-old men.<lb/>
This program will discuss<lb/>
the important health risks<lb/>
that every college male<lb/>
should know like testicular<lb/>
self-examination, risks for<lb/>
contracting sexually trans-<lb/>
mitted diseases, informa-<lb/>
tion on contraceptives,<lb/>
health statistics for men, and<lb/>
ot hers.<lb/>
A n esti ma ted one i n f i ve<lb/>
college women will become<lb/>
a victim of sexual assault. A<lb/>
program discussing date<lb/>
aquaintance rape and its in-<lb/>
crease on college campuses<lb/>
can be given by Lt. Keith<lb/>
Knox of ECU Public Safety.<lb/>
Men are encouraged to at-<lb/>
See Educators, page 2<lb/>
team to forgo a tournament in lapan<lb/>
and IS cultural centers to close in<lb/>
India Even in the remote Liotian<lb/>
capital, Vientiane the Australian<lb/>
Embassy shut down its social club.<lb/>
Anonymous callers claimed to<lb/>
have placed bombs in the US. Fm-<lb/>
bassy and two American banks in<lb/>
Jakarta, but searches at the locations<lb/>
turned up nothing.<lb/>
In Europeancities,dailv lite was<lb/>
affected in other ways. Europeans<lb/>
haunted bv memories of World Wa r<lb/>
II hoarded food and some bought<lb/>
gas masks.<lb/>
Travel agents in Europe and<lb/>
Asia reported a wave ot cancella-<lb/>
tions, parti cularlv by Amencansand<lb/>
other Westerners.<lb/>
"Itisthe worst I think thatanvof<lb/>
us can remember said Dawn<lb/>
McCorrrack Dean, acting adminis-<lb/>
trator oi the British Incoming Tour<lb/>
Operators Association.<lb/>
Cyprus, normally one of<lb/>
Europe's most popular holidav des-<lb/>
tinations, has been dropped from a<lb/>
growing number oi European char-<lb/>
ter flights because of its proximity to<lb/>
the Middle East.<lb/>
Foreign Minister George<lb/>
lacovou said the war could cost the<lb/>
tiny island $1 billion in lost tourism<lb/>
revenue, more per capita than an-<lb/>
other nation. He blamed tour opera-<lb/>
tors and insurers, who have hiked<lb/>
up rates on flights to Cyprus, for<lb/>
"being quite unfair<lb/>
Students<lb/>
hold rally to<lb/>
support<lb/>
U.S. troops<lb/>
By Matt Mumma<lb/>
Assistant Sports Fditor<lb/>
Rodney Strickland ? ECU Photo Lab<lb/>
These students attended the rally held on the mall Wednesday night to voice their support for U.S.<lb/>
soldiers involved in the Persian Gulf Conflict<lb/>
Two ECU students told<lb/>
people garnered at a rallv on the<lb/>
mall Wednesday night to support<lb/>
American troops in the Gulf<lb/>
At the demonstration Janet<lb/>
Sumners and Ion Hardee spoke to<lb/>
the crowd of 200.<lb/>
About 100 of them signed a<lb/>
mass greeting card which will be<lb/>
sent to the troops. The card was<lb/>
open for anyone to sign.<lb/>
The rally was organized by<lb/>
Stunner because we telt that there<lb/>
was too much negative publicity<lb/>
and we thought this would bo a<lb/>
good wav to show our support<lb/>
The crowd was enthusiastic<lb/>
and boisterous. They cheered and<lb/>
yelled when the US flag was dis-<lb/>
plaved, complete with vellow rib-<lb/>
bon at the top.<lb/>
At several points in the evening<lb/>
they chanted "U.S.A USA and<lb/>
threw insults at those who showed<lb/>
up to demonstrate against the war.<lb/>
A few banners were made tor<lb/>
the occasion like "Saddam kills<lb/>
Kill Hussein "Umstead Hall Sup-<lb/>
ports Our Troops as well as "Ne-<lb/>
gotiations not Confrontation"<lb/>
and "No Blood for Oil <lb/>
"The time for protest was be-<lb/>
See Rally, page 3<lb/>
Noise permits to return if new proposal passes<lb/>
By Shannon Copeland<lb/>
Staff Writer<lb/>
ECU students may have rea-<lb/>
son to celebrate if a new proposal,<lb/>
which will reinstate noise permits,<lb/>
is passed by the City Council.<lb/>
The proposal was heard last<lb/>
Thursday by the City Council at a<lb/>
public hearing above theGreenville<lb/>
Police Station.<lb/>
The revised ordinance will<lb/>
make it possible to obtain a noise<lb/>
permit from the Greenville police<lb/>
chief tor a fee. The music or band<lb/>
will bo able to plav for tour hours<lb/>
on a I ridavorSaturdav.butitmust<lb/>
be over by 11 p.m.<lb/>
SGA President Allen Thomas<lb/>
spoke at the hearing: 'There is a<lb/>
noise problem. We can sit and talk<lb/>
all day about problems. What we<lb/>
need is a solution<lb/>
The committee that came up<lb/>
with this proposal hasbeen negoti-<lb/>
ating with the city for six months.<lb/>
Thiscommittee is made up of Tho-<lb/>
mas and other campus and com-<lb/>
munitv leaders.<lb/>
Lorraine Shinn, the commit tee<lb/>
chair, is also on the Citv Council.<lb/>
She wasonginallvagainst the noise<lb/>
permits but now she is the<lb/>
committee's biggest supporter,<lb/>
Thomas said.<lb/>
'That should tell you some-<lb/>
thing he said.<lb/>
Thomas said he is not looking<lb/>
for a miracle, just a compromise.<lb/>
"This is a citywide problem,<lb/>
not just students<lb/>
About 25 students showed up<lb/>
to vokx their opinions and show<lb/>
their support of the new proposal<lb/>
About40Green vile residents were<lb/>
there to voice their opinions Many<lb/>
said students were too irrespon-<lb/>
sible to handle 2 noise permit.<lb/>
Thomas said all-campus par-<lb/>
ties will not return. However, the<lb/>
noise level will not be lowered and<lb/>
students will be able to have per-<lb/>
mits for parties.<lb/>
The committee discussed a<lb/>
"landlord liability" proposal. It<lb/>
would put pressure on the land-<lb/>
lords to keep their tenants from<lb/>
being Uk loud.<lb/>
"Before, the responsibilities<lb/>
wereon the renters, he said "ow<lb/>
we're looking at the responsibility<lb/>
being on the owners of properties.<lb/>
They will be fined and held ac-<lb/>
countable<lb/>
The City Council was rtpon-<lb/>
sive to the students aid Thomas<lb/>
feels good about the outcome.<lb/>
They will vote on ihe proposal<lb/>
at their next meeting at the first of<lb/>
next month.<lb/>
?if Tips<lb/>
Rodney Strickland ? ECU Photo Lab<lb/>
AIDS<lb/>
The Student Health Center and Pitt County Memorial Hospital<lb/>
have information available on precautions against AIDS. For<lb/>
details, call the health center weekdays from 8 a.m. to 8 p.m.<lb/>
at 757-6841, or the hospital weekdays from 9 a.m. to 5 p.m.<lb/>
at 551-4100.<lb/>
Fraternity celebrates Martin<lb/>
Luther King Holiday Monday<lb/>
By LaToya Hankins<lb/>
Staff Writer<lb/>
In a world ripped apart by<lb/>
war, the ECU Alpha Phi Alpha<lb/>
sponsored a pocket of peace in<lb/>
Hendrix Theater on Jan. 21. The<lb/>
organization held their seventh<lb/>
annual Martin Luther King Jr.<lb/>
Leadership Award Ceremony at<lb/>
7: 30 p.m.<lb/>
To begin the program, the Rev.<lb/>
Kenneth Hammond of Shiloh Bap-<lb/>
tist church rendered a prayer. He<lb/>
asked that the audience prove, that,<lb/>
in spite of the present world situa-<lb/>
tion, "peace in not a dream, but a<lb/>
real possibility for one day<lb/>
Chapter president R.L.<lb/>
Beeman Jr. extended a welcome in<lb/>
which he honored King by saying<lb/>
he was the greatest champion of<lb/>
racial equality the world had ever<lb/>
known. A proclamation issued by<lb/>
Greenville Mayor Nancy Jenkins,<lb/>
naming the King holiday, wasread<lb/>
by North Carolina's MissBlackand<lb/>
Gold LaTara Bulluck.<lb/>
Timothy lnman offered a trib-<lb/>
ute to his fraternity brotncis by<lb/>
quoting King as saying, "Learn to<lb/>
live together as brothers, or perish<lb/>
together as fools On that note, the<lb/>
Mass Choir of Farmville took the<lb/>
stage and sang three songs, bring-<lb/>
ing theaudience to its feet. Follow-<lb/>
ing thechoir's performance, ECU's<lb/>
chancellor, Richard Eakin took the<lb/>
podium to introduce the speaker.<lb/>
Chancellor Cleon F. Thompson of<lb/>
Winston-Salem State University.<lb/>
In the past,Thompson has<lb/>
served as the interim chancellor at<lb/>
North Carolina A&amp;T and vice<lb/>
president of academic affairs at<lb/>
Shaw University in Raleigh.<lb/>
Thompson titled his address "A<lb/>
Legacy of Service<lb/>
"King used civil rights to ad-<lb/>
dress the issue of human rights<lb/>
he said, speaking of King's person-<lb/>
ality.<lb/>
Thompson spoke of recent<lb/>
events and asked the audience if<lb/>
"we in America ready for the new<lb/>
world order?" He spoke of the so-<lb/>
cial problems that plague the<lb/>
United States; citing that a child<lb/>
born in Bangladesh has a longer<lb/>
life expectancy than a child born in<lb/>
Harlem. The child in Bangladesh.<lb/>
he said, can expect to liveat least 40<lb/>
years.<lb/>
"What are we as a nation go-<lb/>
ing to do with our problems?" he<lb/>
asked.<lb/>
He offered as a solution, fol-<lb/>
lowing the principals of King ?<lb/>
love and acceptance of other<lb/>
people'scultures. Thompson urged<lb/>
the audience to forgive old griev-<lb/>
ances, and to embrace an enemy.<lb/>
He urged people to let their<lb/>
antagonists know that they are not<lb/>
trying to repay the injustice payed<lb/>
upon you by them, but are<lb/>
struggleing for justice for their op-<lb/>
pressors as well, he said, quoting<lb/>
King.<lb/>
In closing, Thompson asked<lb/>
the audience to not just celebrate<lb/>
the legacy of King, but to work<lb/>
each day to continue it.<lb/>
See Awards, page 8<lb/>
INSIDE THURSDAY<lb/>
Editorial M<lb/>
Bush should have given<lb/>
sanctions time to work, but<lb/>
now we must to support our<lb/>
troops.<lb/>
Features 7<lb/>
Rev. Billy C. Wirtz relieved<lb/>
war-time stress for a crowd at<lb/>
The Attic Jan. 17.<lb/>
Sports 11<lb/>
Richmond Spiders hand Pi-<lb/>
rates their fifth consecutive<lb/>
CAA loss.<lb/>
Classified h<lb/>
Comics ?' 10<lb/>
<pb facs="00058259_0002"/><lb/>
Stye i?nBt (Entalmxnn<lb/>
Serving the East Carolina campus community since 1925<lb/>
Vol.64 No.69<lb/>
Thursday, January 24, 1991<lb/>
Greenville, North Carouna<lb/>
Circulation 12,000<lb/>
14 Pages<lb/>
Iraqi missle attacks<lb/>
continue, terrorists<lb/>
strike around world<lb/>
(AP Iraq's worst missile at-<lb/>
- et on Israel provoked harsh<lb/>
l mnation worldwide Wednes<lb/>
cars ot terronsm prompted<lb/>
 -? nbuikiingsfrom India to Laos<lb/>
? dov nandinl ebanonproved<lb/>
rt'ul explosion killed a<lb/>
ipartlvFrench-ownedbank<lb/>
ilbek Lebanon trie traditional<lb/>
" old ol the fundamentalisl<lb/>
? ? toollah or Party of God.<lb/>
earl) morning blast oc-<lb/>
? ? ,i few hours after a bomb<lb/>
??? ?? utsidcthe French Embassy<lb/>
 t Beirut causing damage but<lb/>
bul I urke bombs ex-<lb/>
: ? ? ' I lings ol two US.<lb/>
? ? Wo Inesdav, slightly<lb/>
i irkish employeeand<lb/>
? ?? ? iivedamage Lhesemi-<lb/>
' ? : News Agencv re-<lb/>
I"<lb/>
ittackers left behind notes<lb/>
? )1 Revolutionary<lb/>
vtremelefbst underground<lb/>
hal has been carrying out<lb/>
the 1970s, according to<lb/>
ittl scene. The notes said<lb/>
- ? ? ? was I protest Turkey's<lb/>
?  gull war.<lb/>
eventhday of fighting left<lb/>
?: " i globe untouched bv<lb/>
M<lb/>
terrorism bv<lb/>
ing Sad dan1<lb/>
edert sping-pong<lb/>
supporting Saddam<lb/>
Peer health<lb/>
educators<lb/>
to counsel<lb/>
oiginizations<lb/>
F. Robin Duffy<lb/>
SUfl Writer<lb/>
1 he Student Health<lb/>
ffers Peer 1 lealth<lb/>
? pn grams for all<lb/>
is organizations for<lb/>
?? i 1991 pring semester.<lb/>
Man a illege aged men<lb/>
u : .vomen may feel Ihey<lb/>
tooung and too vi-<lb/>
? mything to touch<lb/>
'??? ? i lealth Educa-<lb/>
? rking to dispel<lb/>
it-i an't-happen-to-<lb/>
?? i) th through their<lb/>
? - grams<lb/>
ties such as sexually<lb/>
?? insmitted diseases, date<lb/>
? i ? pr gnancy, AIDS,<lb/>
 ? rand drug and alcohol<lb/>
abuse will be approached<lb/>
a  i i . 11 her health prob-<lb/>
l ms that surround college<lb/>
? . Ii nts<lb/>
I he truth is that stu-<lb/>
dents may be aware that<lb/>
se health risks exist, but<lb/>
si rrn might not know the<lb/>
important tacts that make<lb/>
him or her a victim.<lb/>
1 or instance, cancer of<lb/>
ttit testes is quickly becom-<lb/>
. a man ir health concern<lb/>
? ? 18- to 25 war old men.<lb/>
This program will discuss<lb/>
the important health risks<lb/>
thai every college male<lb/>
should know like testicular<lb/>
s. f examination, risks for<lb/>
C rttracting sexually trans-<lb/>
mitted diseases, informa-<lb/>
tion on contraceptives,<lb/>
health statistics for men, and<lb/>
others<lb/>
An estimatedoneintive<lb/>
college women will become<lb/>
a victim of sexual assault. A<lb/>
program discussing date<lb/>
aquaintance rape and its in-<lb/>
crease on college campuses<lb/>
can be given by Lt. Keith<lb/>
knox of ECU Public Safety.<lb/>
Men are encouraged to at-<lb/>
See Educators, page 2<lb/>
team to forgo a tournament in japan<lb/>
and IS cultural centers to close in<lb/>
India. Even in the remote Laotian<lb/>
capital. Vientiane, the Australian<lb/>
Embassy shut down its social club.<lb/>
Anonymous callers claimed to<lb/>
have placed bombs in the U S Fm-<lb/>
bassy and two American banks in<lb/>
lakarta, but searches at the locations<lb/>
turned up nothing<lb/>
In European ci ties, dai I v life was<lb/>
affected in other ways Europeans<lb/>
haunted bymemoriesol World War<lb/>
11 hoarded food and some Knight<lb/>
gas masks<lb/>
Travel agents in Europe and<lb/>
Asia reported a wave ol cancella-<lb/>
tions, particularly bvAmencansand<lb/>
other Westerners<lb/>
"Itistheworstl think that any of<lb/>
us can remember said Dawn<lb/>
McCormick I Van. acting adminis-<lb/>
trator ot the British Incoming Tour<lb/>
Operators Association.<lb/>
Cyprus, normally one of<lb/>
Europe's most popular holiday des-<lb/>
tinations, has been dropped from a<lb/>
growing number of European char-<lb/>
ter fl ights becauseof its proximity to<lb/>
the Middle East<lb/>
Foreign Minister George<lb/>
lacovou said the war could cost the<lb/>
tiny island 51 billion in lost tourism<lb/>
revenue, more per capita than any<lb/>
other nation 1 le blamed touropera-<lb/>
tors and insurers, who have hiked<lb/>
up rates on flights to C"pnis, for<lb/>
"being quite unfair<lb/>
Students<lb/>
hold rally to<lb/>
support<lb/>
U.S. troops<lb/>
By Matt Mumma<lb/>
Assistant Sports I ditor<lb/>
Hodney Strickland ? ECU Photo Lab<lb/>
These students attended the rally held on the mall Wednesday night to voice their support for U S<lb/>
soldiers involved in the Persian Gulf Conflict<lb/>
Two ECU students told<lb/>
people gathered at a rally on the<lb/>
mall Wednesday night to support<lb/>
American troops in the Gull<lb/>
At the demonstration anet<lb/>
Sumners and on 1 (ardee spoke to<lb/>
the crowd of 200.<lb/>
About 100 of them signed a<lb/>
mass greeting card which will he<lb/>
sent to the troops The card was<lb/>
open for anvone t. sign<lb/>
The ralk was organized bv<lb/>
Sumn rbecause wctclt that there<lb/>
vas too much negative publicity<lb/>
d we ?nought this would be a<lb/>
go(l way to show i ur support "<lb/>
The crowd was enthusiastic<lb/>
and boisterous i hi cheered and<lb/>
yelled when the U s flag was dis<lb/>
played, complete with yellow rib-<lb/>
bon at the top.<lb/>
Atseveralpointsin the evening<lb/>
they chanted "ISA IS A and<lb/>
throw insults at those who showed<lb/>
up to demonstrate against the war<lb/>
A few banners wore made tor<lb/>
the occasion like "Saddam Kills<lb/>
Kill 1 lussein "Umstead 1 lall Sup<lb/>
ports Our Troops as well as "Ne-<lb/>
gotiations not Confrontation<lb/>
and "No Blood for Oil<lb/>
"The time tor protest was be-<lb/>
See Rally, page 3<lb/>
Noise permits to return if new proposal passes<lb/>
By Shannon Copeland<lb/>
Staff Writer<lb/>
ECL students mav have rea-<lb/>
son to celebrate it a new proposal,<lb/>
which will reinstate noise permits,<lb/>
is passed by the City Council.<lb/>
The proposal was heard last<lb/>
Thursday bv the City Council at a<lb/>
public hearing above the Greenville<lb/>
Police Station.<lb/>
The revised ordinance will<lb/>
make it possible to obtain a noise<lb/>
permit from the Greenville police<lb/>
chief tor a fee. The music or band<lb/>
will be able to play tor tour hours<lb/>
ona 1 ridav or Saturday, but it must<lb/>
be ov? r by 11 p.m.<lb/>
S !A President Allen Thomas<lb/>
spoke at the hearing: "Then is a<lb/>
noise problem. We can sit ancl talk<lb/>
all dj about problems. What we<lb/>
need is a solution<lb/>
The committee that came up<lb/>
with this proposal has been negoti-<lb/>
ating with the city for six months<lb/>
Thiscommittee is made up of Tho-<lb/>
mas and other campus and com<lb/>
munity leaders<lb/>
Lorraine Shinn, the committee<lb/>
i hair is also On the City Council<lb/>
She uast iriginally against the noise<lb/>
permits but now she is the<lb/>
committee's biggest supporter<lb/>
Thomas said.<lb/>
"That should tell vou some-<lb/>
thing he said.<lb/>
Thomas said he is not looking<lb/>
tor a miracle, just a compromise.<lb/>
"This is a citywide problem,<lb/>
not ust students<lb/>
to voice their opinions and show<lb/>
their support ol the new proposal<lb/>
bout40Greenvilleresidents<lb/>
mere to voice their opinions Main<lb/>
said students were too irrespon-<lb/>
sible to handle noise permit<lb/>
Thomas said all-campus pai<lb/>
ties will not return. However, the<lb/>
noise level will not he lowered and<lb/>
students will be able to have per-<lb/>
mits tor parties.<lb/>
The committee discussed a<lb/>
landlord liability" proposal. It<lb/>
lords to keep their tenants n m<lb/>
being tOO loud.<lb/>
Before, the responsibilities<lb/>
wereontherenters. he said ov<lb/>
we re looking at the responsibility<lb/>
being on the owners of properties<lb/>
The will be fined jn.i held ac-<lb/>
countable<lb/>
The Citv Council was r, spon-<lb/>
sive to the students ai:d Thomas<lb/>
teels good about the outcome.<lb/>
They will vote vi ihs prop sal<lb/>
at their next meeting at the tirst ol<lb/>
Rodney Strickland ? ECU Photo Lab<lb/>
AIDS<lb/>
The Student Health Center and Pitt County Memorial Hospital<lb/>
have information available on precautions against AIDS For<lb/>
details, call the health center weekdays from 8 a.m. to 8 p m<lb/>
at 757-6841, or the hospital weekdays from 9 am to 5 p.m.<lb/>
at 551-4100<lb/>
About 25 Students showed up would put pressure on the land- next month<lb/>
Fraternity celebrates Martin<lb/>
Luther King Holiday Monday<lb/>
By LaToya Hankins<lb/>
Staff Writer<lb/>
In a world npped apart by<lb/>
war, the ECL Alpha Phi Alpha<lb/>
sponsored a pocket of peace in<lb/>
Hendrix Theater on Jan. 21. The<lb/>
organization held their seventh<lb/>
annual Martin Luther King Ir.<lb/>
Leadership Award Ceremony at<lb/>
7: 30 p.m.<lb/>
To begin the program, the Rev.<lb/>
Kenneth Hammond of Shiloh Bap-<lb/>
tist church rendered a prayer. He<lb/>
asked thattheaudience prove, that,<lb/>
in spite of the present world situa-<lb/>
tion, "peace in not a dream, but a<lb/>
real possibility for one day<lb/>
Chapter president R.L.<lb/>
Beeman Jr. extended a welcome in<lb/>
which he honored King by saying<lb/>
he was the greatest champion of<lb/>
racial equality the world had ever<lb/>
known. A proclamation issued by<lb/>
Greenville Mayor Nancy Jenkins,<lb/>
naming the King holiday, wasread<lb/>
by North Carolina's MissBlackand<lb/>
Gold LaTara Bulluck.<lb/>
Timothy Inmanoffered a tnb<lb/>
ute to his fraternity brothers bv<lb/>
quoting King as saying, "I earn to<lb/>
live together as brothers, or perish<lb/>
together as fools "On that note, the<lb/>
Mass Choir of Farmville took the<lb/>
stage and sang three songs, bring-<lb/>
ing the audience to its feet. Follow-<lb/>
ing the choir's performance, ECU's<lb/>
chancellor, Richard Eakin took the<lb/>
podium to introduce the speaker.<lb/>
Chancellor Cleon F. Thompson of<lb/>
Winston-Salem State University.<lb/>
In the past,Thompson has<lb/>
served as the interim chancellor at<lb/>
North Carolina A&amp;T and vice<lb/>
president of academic affairs at<lb/>
Shaw University in Raleigh.<lb/>
Thompson titled his address "A<lb/>
Legacy of Service<lb/>
"King used civil rights to ad-<lb/>
dress the issue oi human rights<lb/>
he said, speaking of King's person-<lb/>
ality.<lb/>
Thompson spoke of recent<lb/>
events and asked the audience if<lb/>
"we in America read)' for the new<lb/>
world order?" He spoke of the so-<lb/>
cial problems that plague the<lb/>
United States; citing that a child<lb/>
horn in Bangladesh has a longer<lb/>
life expectancy than a child born in<lb/>
Harlem The child in Bangladesh<lb/>
he said, can expect tolive.it least 40<lb/>
years.<lb/>
"What are we as a nation go-<lb/>
ing ti do with our problems?" he<lb/>
asked<lb/>
He offered as a solution, fol-<lb/>
lowing the principals of King -<lb/>
love and acceptance oi other<lb/>
people'scultures. Thompson urged<lb/>
the audience to forgive old griev-<lb/>
ances, and to embrace an enemy.<lb/>
He urged people to let their<lb/>
antagonists know that they are not<lb/>
trying to repay the injustice payed<lb/>
upon you by them, but are<lb/>
struggling for justice for their op-<lb/>
pressors as well, he said, quoting<lb/>
King<lb/>
In closing, Thompson asked<lb/>
the audience to not just celebrate<lb/>
the legacy of King, but to work<lb/>
each day to continue it.<lb/>
See Awards, page 8<lb/>
INSIDE THURSDAY<lb/>
Editorial 4<lb/>
Bush should have given<lb/>
sanctions time to work, but<lb/>
now we must to support our<lb/>
troops<lb/>
Features 7<lb/>
Rev. Billy C Wirtz relieved<lb/>
war-time stress lor a crowd at<lb/>
The Attic Jan 17<lb/>
Sports 11<lb/>
Richmond Spiders hand Pi-<lb/>
rates their fifth consecutive<lb/>
CAA loss<lb/>
Clarified b<lb/>
Comics 10<lb/>
<pb facs="00058259_0003"/><lb/>
Qftiz i?mt (HutBlxnxun<lb/>
Serving the East Carolina campus community since 1925<lb/>
V ?. 64 N.69<lb/>
Thursday, January 24, 1991<lb/>
Greenville, North Carolina<lb/>
Circulation 12,000<lb/>
14 Pages<lb/>
Iraqi missle attacks<lb/>
continue, terrorists<lb/>
strike around world<lb/>
s worst missile at<lb/>
. oked harsh<lb/>
orldw ideWodnes<lb/>
rrorism prompted<lb/>
n India tol aos<lb/>
in I ebanonpro ed<lb/>
?, vpkxion killed a<lb/>
? ? h A nedhnnk<lb/>
n the traditional<lb/>
indamentahsl<lb/>
Part) ot c,od<lb/>
norning blast o<lb/>
urs after a bomb<lb/>
n ti i mbass<lb/>
e damage but<lb/>
rko bombs ex<lb/>
? . ? iwoVS<lb/>
? h i stlav slightly<lb/>
employee and<lb/>
thesemi<lb/>
'? :? n v ro<lb/>
? bt hind notes<lb/>
lutionarv<lb/>
dei ground<lb/>
arrving out<lb/>
rdii  ?<lb/>
tessaid<lb/>
? - test! urkcv s<lb/>
? ? ghting left<lb/>
? ?  hed by<lb/>
ng Saddam<lb/>
.vtM.1i ? sping pong<lb/>
Peer health<lb/>
educators<lb/>
to counsel<lb/>
orginizations<lb/>
 Robin 1 Hittv<lb/>
?' VVritei<lb/>
I ealth<lb/>
;? izatu ms tor<lb/>
-nil. tor.<lb/>
igedmen<lb/>
feel they<lb/>
 ton vi<lb/>
tl ngto touch<lb/>
? le ilth Educa-<lb/>
tO dispel<lb/>
i'I happen-to-<lb/>
igh their<lb/>
sexuallv<lb/>
? i es, date<lb/>
AIDS,<lb/>
igand alcohol<lb/>
11 I r. ai hi d<lb/>
in und oik<lb/>
?? ith is that stu-<lb/>
be aware that<lb/>
e hi ks exist, but<lb/>
it know th"<lb/>
I rtant facts that make<lb/>
r I r a vi tim.<lb/>
cancer ol<lb/>
kb, N'i om<lb/>
r hi alth concern<lb/>
? ? - i. 25 year old men<lb/>
ram will discuss<lb/>
. ? rtant health risk-<lb/>
? . i ollege male<lb/>
? uld km ?w like testicular<lb/>
? ? ii ination, risks tor<lb/>
?? i ' . sexually trans-<lb/>
it! I I seases informa-<lb/>
? ? ntra eptives,<lb/>
ilth tati tii sfi rmen,and<lb/>
? prs<lb/>
Anestimatedoneinfive<lb/>
i  women will become<lb/>
a 11 tint ot sexual assault. A<lb/>
program discussing date<lb/>
aquaintanee rape and its in-<lb/>
n 'asei ?n o (liege campuses<lb/>
in be given by Lt. Keith<lb/>
h no ol E( U Public Safety.<lb/>
Men arc encouraged to at-<lb/>
See Educators, page 2<lb/>
team toforgoa tournamentin lapan<lb/>
and I S cultural centers to close in<lb/>
India Even in the remote Laotian<lb/>
capital Vientiane the Australian<lb/>
Embassy shut dow n its social i lub<lb/>
Anoiu metis ca lie<lb/>
ncvl to<lb/>
have placed bombs in the I s Em-<lb/>
bassy and two American banks in<lb/>
lakarta but scan hesat the locations<lb/>
turned up nothing<lb/>
In European cities,dail life was<lb/>
affected in other wavs Europeans<lb/>
haunted by memoriesof W orld War<lb/>
II hoarded food and some bought<lb/>
eas masks<lb/>
Travel agents in Europe and<lb/>
Asia reported a wave ol cancella-<lb/>
tions particularh b Vmcricansand<lb/>
other Westeners<lb/>
"Itis the worst i think thatanvot<lb/>
us can remember said Pawn<lb/>
Mc( ormick Dean acting adminis-<lb/>
trator ot the British Incoming lour<lb/>
Operators Association<lb/>
( prus normalh one of<lb/>
Europe smost popular holidav des-<lb/>
tinations, has been dropped from a<lb/>
crowing numberof Europeam bar-<lb/>
ter flights bet aus<lb/>
the Middle last<lb/>
Foreign Minisb r ! leorge<lb/>
Ln . u iaid the war could cost the<lb/>
rim islai   billion in lost tourism<lb/>
revenue mon per capita than any<lb/>
other nation 1 leblamed touropera-<lb/>
tors and insurers, who have hiked<lb/>
up rates on flights to Cyprus rbi<lb/>
being quite unfair<lb/>
ts proximitv to<lb/>
Students<lb/>
hold rally to<lb/>
support<lb/>
U.S. troops<lb/>
By Matt Mumma<lb/>
Assistant sports I ditoi<lb/>
Two H i student told<lb/>
people gathered .it .i rallv i<lb/>
mall  ? ? i. night to upport<lb/>
Ann, ,e h ops in the lull<lb/>
At the demonstration anet<lb/>
Sumner? and : I lardee sp ?ke to<lb/>
the crowd of 2 ?<lb/>
Ab ut 109 ol them signed a<lb/>
mass greeting i .iri whi h will bo<lb/>
sent to the troops The card was<lb/>
open tor an i ? l<lb/>
The rallv was organized by<lb/>
iusc" ???? i<lb/>
w as ti ? ? mm h nctativi i il<lb/>
and  ? ?? ?'? ; tl  II<lb/>
gen   i. '  r ipporl<lb/>
The i n v d wa<lb/>
and b 'isten ?us 1 he<lb/>
eIJ vH. -n rhn I ? s<lb/>
nthusiastic<lb/>
? ? I and<lb/>
ig ? as dis<lb/>
 nb-<lb/>
? ? <lb/>
n :<lb/>
Hodney Strickland ? ECU Photo Lab<lb/>
These students attended the rally held on the mall Wednesday night to voice their support tor U S<lb/>
soldiers involved in the Persian Gulf Conflict<lb/>
played n  ??? will<lb/>
hon at the top<lb/>
At several point i tl<lb/>
they chanted "U s A<lb/>
threw insults.it thosi ?? I<lb/>
up to demonstrati i t the wai<lb/>
A tew banners ? i mad I r<lb/>
tho occasion like<lb/>
Kill I lussein mstead<lb/>
ports Our Troops ?? - Ne-<lb/>
gotiations not Confi ntal<lb/>
and. "No Bio d for!<lb/>
for protest wa<lb/>
See Rally p ige<lb/>
permits to return<lb/>
By Shannon C opeland<lb/>
SUfl Writer<lb/>
E i. students may have rea<lb/>
son ti celebrate it a new proposal,<lb/>
which will reinstate noise pern I<lb/>
is passed bv the it . oun il<lb/>
i he propos.il was heard List<lb/>
Thursda) bythe( it) i ouncilata<lb/>
public hearing above theGreenville<lb/>
Police Station<lb/>
1 he revised ordinance will<lb/>
make it possible to obtain a noise<lb/>
chiel foi a fee I he musk or band<lb/>
will be able to plav tor tour hours<lb/>
. turdav,bul n ist<lb/>
spoke at thi hearing<lb/>
; ? hlem. Wecansil I -<lb/>
 : ?. bout problem '?'?<lb/>
need a solul<lb/>
I he committee that came up<lb/>
with thisproposal hasbeen neg ti<lb/>
ating with the city tor six nrv mths.<lb/>
1 his ommittee is made up ot Tho<lb/>
permit from the Greenville police mas and other campus and con<lb/>
n ?. eadci<lb/>
. ?:  i SI inn, the. omn I<lb/>
chair is also on the ity uncil<lb/>
? iginally against thenoise<lb/>
peri ? bul now she is the<lb/>
ttet - biggest supporter<lb/>
Said<lb/>
il should tell you som<lb/>
thing : ? aid.<lb/>
mas said he is nol looking<lb/>
? i Ii just a compromise<lb/>
Ihis is a citvwide problem,<lb/>
not lust students<lb/>
About 25 students showed up<lb/>
lice their opinior s and<lb/>
their support ol the new pi :<lb/>
?bout40 .re. nvlleri lentswen<lb/>
therel tl -opinion M n<lb/>
. I students ere I<lb/>
to hand se permil<lb/>
mas m I mpus pai<lb/>
ties will not return Hi wever, the<lb/>
noise level v ill not be lowered and<lb/>
students will be able to hav? i r<lb/>
nuts tt r parties<lb/>
I he committee discussed a<lb/>
landlord liability' proposal It<lb/>
would put pressure on the land<lb/>
lord to keep then tenant ron<lb/>
: ? ? loud<lb/>
Be! n thi i hihl<lb/>
a ? reon therenrers<lb/>
? tl ? <lb/>
? ngon the i ??? nei f pi<lb/>
ihe will be firw I<lb/>
intable<lb/>
Cityl<lb/>
stve to the students oi d<lb/>
feels good about the oul<lb/>
They will vote ruh?prcp ?sal<lb/>
at their next meeting at the first ol<lb/>
next month<lb/>
. w<lb/>
pon<lb/>
Rodney Strickland ? ECU Photo Lab<lb/>
AIDS<lb/>
The Student Hearth Center and Pitt County Memorial Hospitsl<lb/>
have information available on precautions against AIDS For<lb/>
details, call the health center weekdays from 8 am to 8 p m<lb/>
at 757-6841, or the hospital weekdays from 9am to 5 p m<lb/>
at 551 4100<lb/>
Fraternity celebrates Martin<lb/>
Luther King Holiday Monday<lb/>
By LaToya Hankins<lb/>
Staff Writer<lb/>
In a world ripped apart by<lb/>
war, the ECU Alpha Phi Alpha<lb/>
sponsored a pocket of peace in<lb/>
Hendnx Theater on Ian. 21. The<lb/>
organization held their seventh<lb/>
annual Martin Luther King r.<lb/>
I eadership Award Ceremony at<lb/>
7 30 p.m<lb/>
To begin the program, the Rev.<lb/>
Kenneth I lammond of Shiloh Bap<lb/>
tist church rendered a prayer. He<lb/>
asked that theaudionceprove, that<lb/>
in spite of the present world situa-<lb/>
tion, "peace in not a dream, but a<lb/>
real possibility for one day<lb/>
Chapter president R.L.<lb/>
Beeman r. extended a welcome in<lb/>
which he honored King bv saying<lb/>
he was the greatest champion oi<lb/>
racial equality the world had ever<lb/>
known. A proclamation issued by<lb/>
(.reenville Mayor Nancy Jenkins,<lb/>
namingthekinghohdav, wasread<lb/>
by North Carolina's Miss Black and<lb/>
Gold lTara Bulluck.<lb/>
Timothy Inman ottered a tnb<lb/>
ute to his fraternit) brotners b<lb/>
quoting King as saying  earn to<lb/>
live together as brother- or perish<lb/>
together as tools " i n that note, the<lb/>
MassChoirol Farmville took the<lb/>
stage and sang three songs bring<lb/>
ing theaudieivetoitsteet Follow-<lb/>
ing thechoir's performance, E U s<lb/>
chancellor, Richard Eakin took the<lb/>
podium to introduce die speaker.<lb/>
Chancellor ?. Icon F Thompson ot<lb/>
Winston Salem State University.<lb/>
In the pastThompson has<lb/>
served as the interim chancellor at<lb/>
orth Carolina A&amp;T and vice<lb/>
president ot academic affairs at<lb/>
Shaw University in Raleigh<lb/>
Thompson titled his address A<lb/>
Legacy of Service<lb/>
"King used civil rights to d<lb/>
dress the issue oi human rights<lb/>
he said, speaking of King's person-<lb/>
ality.<lb/>
Thompson spoke oi recent<lb/>
events and askii the audience it<lb/>
"we in America ready tor the new<lb/>
world order?" 1 le spoke of the so-<lb/>
cial problems that plague tin<lb/>
United States; citing that a i hild<lb/>
horn in Bangladesh has a l<lb/>
lifeexpectarv than a child bom in<lb/>
Harlem The child in Bangladesh<lb/>
he said, i an expect toliveat least -h-1<lb/>
years<lb/>
"What .ire we as a nati i c.o<lb/>
ing to do with our problems?" he<lb/>
asked<lb/>
I le offered as a solution fol-<lb/>
lowing the principals ol King<lb/>
love and acceptance ol Other<lb/>
people'scultures Thompson urged<lb/>
the audience to forgive old griev-<lb/>
ances and to embrace an enemy.<lb/>
He urged people to let their<lb/>
antagonists know that the are not<lb/>
trying to repay the injustice payed<lb/>
upon you b them, but are<lb/>
struggleing tor justice tor their op-<lb/>
pressors as well he said, quoting<lb/>
King<lb/>
In closing. Thompson asked<lb/>
the audience to not iist celebrate<lb/>
the legacy of King, but to work<lb/>
each da to continue it.<lb/>
See Awards, page 8<lb/>
INSIDE THURSDAY<lb/>
Editorial 4<lb/>
Bush should have given<lb/>
sanctions time to work, but<lb/>
now we must to support our<lb/>
troops<lb/>
Features 7<lb/>
Rev Billy C Wirtz relieved<lb/>
war-time stress for a crowd at<lb/>
The Attic Jan 17<lb/>
Sports 11<lb/>
Richmond Spiders hand Pi-<lb/>
rates their fifth consecutive<lb/>
CAA loss<lb/>
Classified b<lb/>
Comics10<lb/>
<pb facs="00058259_0004"/><lb/>
2 <lb/>
HI?e taat Carolinian January 24, 1991<lb/>
Yolanda King<lb/>
ECU Briefs<lb/>
Yolanda King to speak at church's<lb/>
unity banquet in Rocky Mount<lb/>
Yolanda King, daughter of<lb/>
slain civil rights activist Dr.<lb/>
Martin Luther King Jr will be<lb/>
the featured speaker at the St.<lb/>
Paul A. M. E. Zion Church's<lb/>
Ufltty banquet on Feb. 2. The<lb/>
banquet will beat theCarlcton<lb/>
House Restaurant in Rockv<lb/>
Mount, at 6 pm<lb/>
Invitations are still avail-<lb/>
able on a first come, first serve<lb/>
basis by calling 446-0385.<lb/>
Ms. King was born in<lb/>
Montgomery, Ala two<lb/>
weeks before Rosa Parks<lb/>
refused to give up her seat on a bus; an action that triggered the<lb/>
movement that ultimately desegregated the South.<lb/>
She has been active in the civil rights struggle for human<lb/>
rights all of her life.<lb/>
The oldest child of Or. King and Coretta Scott King, she has<lb/>
participated in numerous civil and human rights demonstrations<lb/>
a nd has spoken before countless religious, educational, civic and<lb/>
human rights groups.<lb/>
Pitt County Memorial Hospital<lb/>
offers three free parenting classes<lb/>
Titt County Memorial Hospital is offering a series of three<lb/>
free parenting classes each month, all designed to teach parents<lb/>
how to safely take care of themselves and their baby.<lb/>
Classes meet on the first three Monday evenings of each<lb/>
month from 7 p.m. to 9 p.m. at the XU Birthing Center<lb/>
classroom. The next series of classes begins Feb. 4. The first two-<lb/>
hour class covers basic infant care, including bathing, dressing<lb/>
and safety. The second two hour class, Feb. 11, focuses on care of<lb/>
the mother, including what to expect after giving birth, changes<lb/>
in relationships, emotional needs and family planning. The third<lb/>
class. Feb. IS covers breastfeeding and is Optional.<lb/>
The c! isses are free, but participants must register by calling<lb/>
the PCMH nursing office at 551-4470. Parents should plan to<lb/>
attend earlv in the third trimester of pregnancy. To be eligible,<lb/>
mothers must plan to deliver at Pitt County Memorial Hospital,<lb/>
Compiled from staff reports<lb/>
1991 summer school scheduled to<lb/>
maintain shortened work week<lb/>
ECU Will base its 1991 summer school schedule on the<lb/>
energy-Saving, compressed 4 12 day work week that the uni-<lb/>
versity observed last summer<lb/>
Energy conservation efforts last summer saved the univcr-<lb/>
sitv approximately $240,om<lb/>
t rs recognized that in certain areas deviation from the<lb/>
schedule will be necessary said Pr Marline Springer, vice<lb/>
chancellor of academic affairs. In such cases, the problems will be<lb/>
worked out in ways that will not compromise the students<lb/>
learning experience "<lb/>
F.CU enrolls approximately 10,000 students in two sessions<lb/>
of summer school each year .<lb/>
CompilcJ from Ft U News Rnnui report<lb/>
Crime Scene<lb/>
Students cited for shooting fire-<lb/>
works out of Belk Hall window<lb/>
Mn. 18<lb/>
1335 Third Street and Reade Circle: investigated breaking<lb/>
and enteringand larceny of a vehie'e Threoothorofficersassisted.<lb/>
1624 Public Safety: completed a report of an assault.<lb/>
1629? Third Streeet and Reade circle (freshman lot): took a<lb/>
report of breaking and entering of a student's vehicle.<lb/>
 836?Public Safety: took a report of a hit and run that<lb/>
occurred in the small lot south of Brewster Building.<lb/>
2(08 Fleming Residence Hall: took a report from a resident<lb/>
of -uspicious activity in the past days in the area of Fifth Street<lb/>
2052 ?Slay Residence Hall: took a report of damage to a<lb/>
marble partition in the bathroom on the third floor.<lb/>
2312?Jenkins Fine Arts Center (west): subjects i idingkate<lb/>
boards were identified and advised of the policy on skateboards.<lb/>
2350?Belk Residence Hall: assisted the residence hall staff<lb/>
with damage to fire extinquisher box.<lb/>
Jin.19<lb/>
0244?White Residence Hall, male subjects refusing to leave<lb/>
building; two non-r.tudents banned from campus and one student<lb/>
issued a campus citation.<lb/>
0300- Fletcher Residence Hall, loud subjects on second noor<lb/>
turned over to residence hall staff for disposition<lb/>
1510- Mendcnhall Student Center: investigated a report of<lb/>
male exposing himself on the ? ccond floor Subject was gone<lb/>
upon arrival.<lb/>
2051 ?Eighth and Ninth Streets, two male subjects were<lb/>
banned from campus.<lb/>
2119?Tenth Street (south of Umskad Residence Flail): as-<lb/>
sisted Greenville police with an automobile accident.<lb/>
2150?Belk Residence Hall: students shooting fireworks out<lb/>
of their windows were givrn citations.<lb/>
0102?Belk Residence Hall: assisted a Greenville policeofficer<lb/>
with escorting an intoxicated female student home.<lb/>
0119 Fifth Street and Read e Circle: subject advised to leave<lb/>
campus for urination in public<lb/>
0241 ?Gotten Residence Hall: subject, identified asa resident's<lb/>
ex-boyfriend ?dvised to leave campus for knocking on her<lb/>
window.<lb/>
1428?Clement Residence Hall: responded to breaking and<lb/>
entering and larceny to a vehicle.<lb/>
Jan.21<lb/>
1342- Mendenhal! Student Center: transported a subject to<lb/>
Public Safety Back-up was provided.<lb/>
Jan.22<lb/>
0222 -Garrett Residence Hall: found bathroom ransacked<lb/>
and found attempted arson in lau.idry room.<lb/>
1920?Jones Residence Hall (south): student given state ci-<lb/>
tation for speeding and failure to stop at a stop sign<lb/>
2017?Jones Residence Hall: fire alarm activated by aerosal<lb/>
spray. Damage was done to the locking mechanism.<lb/>
Ctt?? cm to t?k?? tmm ?tf Mai ECU FaMfc Safety lop.<lb/>
Marine Corps looks into<lb/>
validity of nine reservist<lb/>
conscientious objectors<lb/>
CAMP LEJEUNE, N.C (AP)<lb/>
? The Marine Corps has begun<lb/>
conducting hearings to determine<lb/>
whether nine Bronx-based rcserv-<lb/>
istsare sincere in their objections to<lb/>
killing.<lb/>
The hearings began Tuesday<lb/>
at the home of the 2nd Marine Di-<lb/>
vision, which has troops stationed<lb/>
near the Kuwaiti border where they<lb/>
could be among the first to see<lb/>
combat if a ground war begins in<lb/>
the Persian Gulf.<lb/>
"When they joined the Ma-<lb/>
rines all of these people certified<lb/>
that they were not conscientious<lb/>
objectors said Ron Kuby, an at-<lb/>
torney who works with civil rights<lb/>
lawyer William Kunstler. "They<lb/>
had given no sent his thought about<lb/>
war, the concept of war<lb/>
Kuby said the men now beheve<lb/>
it is wrong to kill, some reaching<lb/>
the realization in college classes<lb/>
paid by military benefits.<lb/>
Michael Marsh, a counselor<lb/>
with the War Resisters League in<lb/>
New York City, said his office has<lb/>
received more than 966 calls since<lb/>
the Persian Gulf deployments be-<lb/>
gan Among the 121 calls his office<lb/>
received last week, two were from<lb/>
captains, and oneeach fronts, major<lb/>
and a lieutenant colonel with 29<lb/>
yean Ol active duty experience<lb/>
working in a hospital.<lb/>
"Most don't have a miscon-<lb/>
ception oi what the military is<lb/>
about Marsh said. "What they<lb/>
didn't realize is what it means to<lb/>
kill a person, to actually pull that<lb/>
trigger<lb/>
"They pump all this money<lb/>
into advertising and focus on<lb/>
money or college, training,<lb/>
comraderv. discipline, teamwork.<lb/>
Values, very good values. In the<lb/>
end they make it sound likecollege<lb/>
with pay<lb/>
Air Force It Col. Rick Oborn,<lb/>
a Pentagon spokesman,discounted<lb/>
Marsh'sclaimsoi large numbers of<lb/>
soldiers seeking conscientious ob-<lb/>
jector status.<lb/>
If somebody at a big rally<lb/>
says they're going to apply and<lb/>
then thev never till out the paper-<lb/>
work, then we don't count them<lb/>
Oborn said.<lb/>
He said that in lWO,210mem-<lb/>
bersot the armed services applied<lb/>
for the status Of those, 141 were<lb/>
approved, eight were discharged,<lb/>
Educators<lb/>
Continued from page 1<lb/>
tend as well as women. To sched-<lb/>
ule a program, call Knox at 757-<lb/>
6266.<lb/>
Because med ica I technology is<lb/>
changing and advancingeveryday,<lb/>
it is important for women to keep<lb/>
up to date with the latest health<lb/>
facts for women, information on<lb/>
breast self-examination, pap<lb/>
smears, premenstrual syndrome,<lb/>
osteoporosis and toxic shock syn-<lb/>
drome are among the topics mat<lb/>
can be discussed.<lb/>
These two programs an? tar-<lb/>
geted for sororities and female<lb/>
residence halls.<lb/>
For students who worship the<lb/>
sun or the tanning bed, a program<lb/>
can begi ven to te?ch studentsabout<lb/>
the effects of ultraviolet rays, tips<lb/>
for safcrsuntanningand factsabout<lb/>
the sun protection factor.<lb/>
A 30-minute video on sex,<lb/>
drugs and alcohol is available for<lb/>
coed groups. This video is designed<lb/>
to teach college students about<lb/>
pregnancy, AIDS and drug and<lb/>
alcohol abuse<lb/>
AIDS is rapidly becoming one<lb/>
of America's worst epidemics. A<lb/>
program focusing on this problem<lb/>
discusses facts and fiction about<lb/>
the HIV epidemic and provides<lb/>
current informaiton from the<lb/>
Centers for Disease Control.<lb/>
Perhaps two of the greatest<lb/>
health problems for college-aged<lb/>
students are pregnancy and sexu-<lb/>
ally transmitted diseases. This<lb/>
program can teach studentsabout<lb/>
basic, responsible methods of con-<lb/>
traception, safer sex and the latest<lb/>
facts surrounding STDs. This pro-<lb/>
gram is also available for coed<lb/>
groups.<lb/>
To set up a program for your<lb/>
organization, call the Peer Health<lb/>
Educators at 757-6794 three weeks<lb/>
in advance.<lb/>
our agreed to serve in non-combat<lb/>
roles. Other cases were still pend-<lb/>
ing, he said.<lb/>
Oborn said had no informa-<lb/>
tion on the number of applications<lb/>
that have been filed since the end<lb/>
of December.<lb/>
The Marine hearings, which<lb/>
are closed to the public, were being<lb/>
held by Lt. Col. Frank Tauches. He<lb/>
will make a recommendation to<lb/>
the men's commanding officer<lb/>
who, in turn, will make a recom-<lb/>
mendation to the commandant of<lb/>
the Marine Corps.<lb/>
Kuby said each soldier would<lb/>
be questioned two or three hours<lb/>
by a Marine officer.<lb/>
If the men are found to be sin-<lb/>
cere conscientious objectors they<lb/>
may recciveadisc ha rge, Kuby said.<lb/>
However, some of the men may be<lb/>
tried on charges of unauthorized<lb/>
absence, he said. None of the men<lb/>
yet have been charged with the<lb/>
offense.<lb/>
The nine are: Cpl. John Issac,<lb/>
1-anceCpl. Wayman McWhite,Cpl-<lb/>
Keith Jones, all of Manhattan; Pfc<lb/>
Samuel Lwin, Queens; Pfc. Colin<lb/>
Bootman, Bronx; Sgt. David<lb/>
Bobbin, Staten Island; Cpl. Enrique<lb/>
Gonzalez, Yonkcrs; PrivateMarcus<lb/>
Black well, Brooklyn; and Private<lb/>
Marquis Lcacock, White Plains,<lb/>
N.Y.Theirages were not available.<lb/>
The men belong to the 25th<lb/>
Marine Regiment, based at Fort<lb/>
Schuyler in Bronx, N.Y. Eight of<lb/>
the nine belong to one company,<lb/>
Fox Company, an infantry unit<lb/>
made up of about 150 reserve sol-<lb/>
diers.<lb/>
Hearings for three of the men,<lb/>
Lwin, Jones and Bobitt, were<lb/>
scheduled Tuesday. More hearings<lb/>
were scheduled for the rest of the<lb/>
week. Kuby said the men are being<lb/>
kept in a barracks designated for<lb/>
soldiersapplying for conscientious<lb/>
objector status.<lb/>
TOM TOSS OUTLET STORE<lb/>
NOW SERVING<lb/>
PANAMA JACK TEE S5 99<lb/>
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510 N. Greene St.<lb/>
Greenville, NC<lb/>
830-1779<lb/>
Have you discovered the<lb/>
Missing Link?<lb/>
No, not that missing link! Have you discovered<lb/>
the missing link to meaning and fulfillment in life?<lb/>
At Christ Presbyterian Church, we believe that<lb/>
this missing link can be found, through a right<lb/>
relationship with the One who created you<lb/>
Come and discover for yourself this Sunday.<lb/>
A JO Worship 9:45 Sunday School for 1&amp; aces 11 OO Worsh.n rui rh.lA? <lb/>
Nursery 7 tf sorv.es Mec?nK a, .he Cohort KKSS wStSStS<lb/>
C Chnsi Presbyterian Church<lb/>
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Just to Smoke a Camel.<lb/>
OPERATION<lb/>
JANiunr is.??- 7 ooratEAX<lb/>
I' I A<lb/>
Available at ?<lb/>
University Book Exchange ? cHor 'n Print ??<lb/>
The Surf Report 100 cotton T-Shirts<lb/>
AthlSPcWorld (both locations) For DerInlbca!75Wltt<lb/>
Rally<lb/>
Continued from page 1<lb/>
fore we took action, now is the time<lb/>
forsupport'sdid ECU student Mike<lb/>
Dyer referring to the protesters of<lb/>
the war.<lb/>
Paul Hagwood, who was<lb/>
holding the "No Blood forOil" sign<lb/>
said, "I support the troops, but I<lb/>
don't support the war<lb/>
Some who attended to shew<lb/>
their support for the troops found<lb/>
the protesters distasteful and<lb/>
shouting matches developed<lb/>
As the peoplebegan todisperse,<lb/>
a few groups argued the r opinic ns<lb/>
and during Sumner's speech .1 tew<lb/>
yelled at the protesters to leave<lb/>
America.<lb/>
"I don't like what (the protest-<lb/>
ers) say but I defend their right to<lb/>
say it Sumner said.<lb/>
Hi wever, she said, the rt -<lb/>
for the rally must remain clear. She<lb/>
said it was to show the American<lb/>
troops in theGulf that the ireg<lb/>
suppo rted.<lb/>
We are here to acknowledge<lb/>
the utmost sacrifice that our troops<lb/>
are making for us Sumner said<lb/>
during her speech.<lb/>
She said the possibility of death<lb/>
is not a sacrifice to be taken lightlv<lb/>
"Our troops need all the sup-<lb/>
port they can get ex-pilot jotl<lb/>
Hardee said "They have been<lb/>
trained toendureeverything. But a<lb/>
soldier's worst nightmare is to gel<lb/>
aptured md that is happening<lb/>
ne,ht now. "his )?- what our troops<lb/>
need to see<lb/>
Many students showed up out<lb/>
. t respect for family and friends<lb/>
from whom they are separated.<lb/>
ECU student Hut ton Cobb<lb/>
came to the rally because he has<lb/>
many friends who arc stationed in<lb/>
the Gulf<lb/>
Chrissy Davis said she came to<lb/>
the rallv because some ot her rela-<lb/>
tives are in the Middle East<lb/>
"Manv nursing students have<lb/>
tamilv in the Middle East, that is<lb/>
M hv we are here todu ' Sumner<lb/>
said  would like to thank all<lb/>
those students who came out<lb/>
Another rallv is planned for<lb/>
Jan. 25, outside the Student Store<lb/>
' from 5 p.m. tofc p.m.<lb/>
SIPPC<lb/>
R<lb/>
all size batten<lb/>
rionj<lb/>
pre-sweetencdj<lb/>
The<lb/>
trol<lb/>
Cash don<lb/>
These doj<lb/>
JL<lb/>
Get ail<lb/>
latest n<lb/>
the Per<lb/>
at<lb/>
Ce<lb/>
B<lb/>
&amp;<lb/>
ejV!<lb/>
Greem<lb/>
Shoppi<lb/>
75<lb/>
Student &amp; Fac<lb/>
Ove<lb/>
Country Love<lb/>
Frozen<lb/>
Ice Milk<lb/>
!2 Gallon<lb/>
Carton<lb/>
99tf<lb/>
Delta<lb/>
Paper<lb/>
Towels<lb/>
2 for $1.00<lb/>
Minut)<lb/>
Fresh<lb/>
Jtil<lb/>
12 Galh<lb/>
$11<lb/>
Del Monte<lb/>
Canned Vegtsbles<lb/>
Cut or French<lb/>
Green Beans,<lb/>
Garden Peas,<lb/>
Mixed Vegtables,<lb/>
Cut or Cream<lb/>
Style Corn,<lb/>
Spinach<lb/>
8 oz. can 29tf<lb/>
Bud<lb/>
J2-<lb/>
Cans<lb/>
$<lb/>
tA<lb/>
Gol<lb/>
Banl<lb/>
lb<lb/>
21? iMMt-STNEtT<lb/>
now o? oneemwuts kst huts<lb/>
QUMTITV MQMTS KUCMift.<lb/>
I 4<lb/>
Store Hours:<lb/>
Open Sundays 12 Noon - 7 pm<lb/>
Moaday - Saturday 8 am - 8:30 pm<lb/>
<pb facs="00058259_0005"/><lb/>
Uiftg fcafit (Earoltnian January 24,1991 3<lb/>
togs oimn store<lb/>
NOW SERVING<lb/>
ii<lb/>
u discovered the<lb/>
sine Link?<lb/>
'? S  ?,<lb/>
? - -?? T<lb/>
I lave you dis overed<lb/>
fulfillment m life?<lb/>
nhurt h we believe that<lb/>
i iund thi ,) right<lb/>
? ()n. ? wh m reated vou.<lb/>
' s Sunday.<lb/>
? ? '? M'rn'i Churrh<lb/>
' ? i immI Sb-tb66<lb/>
Miles ??<lb/>
a Camel.<lb/>
j<lb/>
<lb/>
&amp; P :<lb/>
v<lb/>
iiwte<lb/>
AERT STORM<lb/>
19M-70O RMES1L<lb/>
6 color screen print on<lb/>
100 cotton T-Shirts<lb/>
R?r Dealer Info call 754176<lb/>
Rally<lb/>
Continued from page 1<lb/>
tore MFC tiHk ,u lion, now is the time<lb/>
tor supportMidB( UstudcrriMike<lb/>
Dy?l rtferring to the protestors ol<lb/>
the w.ir<lb/>
Paul Hagwood, who was<lb/>
holding the "No Mood tori JB" sign<lb/>
sikl I Support the troops, bvit 1<lb/>
don't support the war<lb/>
Some who attended to show<lb/>
their support tor aSe troopi found<lb/>
the protesters distasteful snd<lb/>
shouting matches developed<lb/>
As the people began todispcrse,<lb/>
,i tou groupssrgued their opinions<lb/>
?nd during Stunner's speech .t tew<lb/>
yelled .it the protesters to leave<lb/>
Amuth.i<lb/>
I don't like wh.it (the protest<lb/>
its siv but I defend their right to<lb/>
s.n it Sumnef said<lb/>
 lowever, she said, the reason<lb/>
lor the rail) must remain clear She<lb/>
said it w.?s to show the American<lb/>
troops in thc lulf that the) aregladly<lb/>
supported<lb/>
We oro here to Acknowledge<lb/>
the utmost sacrifice th.it our troops<lb/>
,ur making tor us. Sumner ssid<lb/>
Jurmg hei sHHh.<lb/>
She snd the possibility of death<lb/>
is not .i sscriflce to be token lightly<lb/>
Wir troops need all the sup<lb/>
port they can get ex pilot loo<lb/>
i lardec s.mi I he) have been<lb/>
trained to end ureevery thing Bui .i<lb/>
soldier's worst nightmare is to gel<lb/>
captured ?nJ that is happening<lb/>
right now I Ins is w hat our troops<lb/>
need to see<lb/>
M.im students showed up out<lb/>
ot respect foi family snd friends<lb/>
iron whomthc) are separated<lb/>
I (. 1 tudenl I lutton Cobb<lb/>
nut- to the talk because he has<lb/>
mam 't lends who are stationed in<lb/>
the (.uit<lb/>
 hnss Davis said she came to<lb/>
the rail) because some oi her rela-<lb/>
tives arc in the Middle f ast<lb/>
Main nursing students have<lb/>
famil) in the Middle I ast. that is<lb/>
w hy c sre here today Sumnei<lb/>
said I would hkr to thank all<lb/>
those students who came out<lb/>
Anotlu'i rail) is planned tor<lb/>
Ian 25, outside the Student Store<lb/>
1 from 5 p m toh p m<lb/>
A?-<lb/>
24 Thur. iadies Night. Uve Entertainment. Ladies in FREE!<lb/>
25 Fri Joe Distefano-Jazz<lb/>
$2.(X) Vodka Collins and Tequila Sunrises<lb/>
26 Sal I.ightin'Wells Blues<lb/>
$2 (X) Jamaican Dust and Blue Hawaiian<lb/>
SUPPORT YOUR LOCAL TROOPS<lb/>
Friday, 25 January 1991 8:00-5:00<lb/>
In front of Student stores<lb/>
All donations are welcomed.<lb/>
Soldiers have requested these items:<lb/>
all sie batteries blank VCR tapes canned foods<lb/>
Stationary, pens, pencils current music tapes<lb/>
pre sweetened Kool-aid mix whetstones to sharpen knives<lb/>
These items will be sent to local<lb/>
troops serving your country.<lb/>
Dependent families need:<lb/>
Diapers, baby formula and food<lb/>
Cash donations to assist with rent and heat costs.<lb/>
These donations will be distributed to needy local<lb/>
families.<lb/>
NEWMAN<lb/>
Catholic Student Center<lb/>
Would Like to<lb/>
Welcome New and Returning Students<lb/>
and<lb/>
Invite You To Join Us In Worship<lb/>
famous Mass Schedule For Soring Session:<lb/>
Sunday 11:30 am. Ledonia Wright Building<lb/>
8:30 pm, Newman Center<lb/>
Wednesday 5:30 pm, Newman Center<lb/>
953 East 10th Street<lb/>
(At the foot of College Hill Drive)<lb/>
Greenville. NC 27836-2605<lb/>
757-3760<lb/>
For information about these and other programs sponsored by the Newman Center,<lb/>
Call or visit the center daily between 8:30 am and 11:30 pm.<lb/>
Fr. Paul Vaeth, Chaplain and Campus Minister (757-1991)<lb/>
WAR<lb/>
Get all of the<lb/>
latest news o'<lb/>
the Persian Gull"<lb/>
at<lb/>
Central<lb/>
Book<lb/>
&amp; News<lb/>
open Hi 9 30 pn 1 d.?) J vsa"<lb/>
Greenville Square<lb/>
Shopping Center<lb/>
756-7177<lb/>
I ho Daily Reflector<lb/>
USA Today<lb/>
The News cV: Observer<lb/>
The Richmond limes<lb/>
The Washington Post<lb/>
The New York Times<lb/>
The Baltimore Sun<lb/>
The Chicago Tribune<lb/>
-The Atlanta Journal<lb/>
The Greensboro Record<lb/>
-Hut<lb/>
DELIVERY<lb/>
MEDIUM<lb/>
Cheese Pizza17.75<lb/>
Cheese and 1 ToppingSH.55<lb/>
( heese and 2 Topping$9-35<lb/>
Cheese and J loppings$10.IS<lb/>
I seta Additional Topping$.<lb/>
SPR IAITV PIZZAS<lb/>
c hnac Lowes PluSio.is<lb/>
Moat UlHIl$10.IS<lb/>
I'cpporonl Losers$10.IS<lb/>
Supreme$10. IS<lb/>
Super Supreme$ 10.9S<lb/>
LAHGE<lb/>
$995<lb/>
$10.90<lb/>
$11.HS<lb/>
S12JM<lb/>
$.95<lb/>
$12. MO<lb/>
$12.SO<lb/>
$12.80<lb/>
$12.HO<lb/>
$13 75<lb/>
GREAT PIZZA HUT PIZZA<lb/>
DELIVERED! 752-4445<lb/>
PEUYERY HOURS<lb/>
SUNTWL'RS. 4 PM TO MIDNIGHT<lb/>
FRI. ft SAT. 4 PM TO 1:00 AM<lb/>
COUPON<lb/>
FREE DELIVERY!<lb/>
LIMITED DELIVERY AREA<lb/>
DELIVERY<lb/>
ANY LARGE PIZZAOF YOUR CHOICE<lb/>
FOR THE PRICE OF A MEDIUM!<lb/>
COUPON FOR PIZZA HIT DELIVERY ONLY AND EXPIRES 2591<lb/>
NOT GOOD IN CONJUNCTION WITH ANT OTHER DISCOUNT<lb/>
Student &amp; Faculty Savings at<lb/>
Overtoil's<lb/>
Country Love<lb/>
Frozen<lb/>
Ice Milk<lb/>
!2 Gallon<lb/>
Carton<lb/>
99tf<lb/>
Delta<lb/>
Paper<lb/>
Towels<lb/>
2 for $1.00<lb/>
Minute Maid<lb/>
Fresh Orange<lb/>
Juice<lb/>
12 Gallon Carton<lb/>
$1.49<lb/>
Camellia's Skim<lb/>
Milk<lb/>
12 gal. paper<lb/>
carton990<lb/>
FREE SNEAK PREVIEW<lb/>
?<lb/>
STEVE MARTIN<lb/>
Del Monte<lb/>
Canned Vegtsbles<lb/>
Cut oi French<lb/>
Green Beans,<lb/>
Garden Peas,<lb/>
Mixed Vcgtablcs,<lb/>
Cut or Cream<lb/>
Style Corn,<lb/>
Spinach<lb/>
8 oz. can 29tf<lb/>
Budweiser<lb/>
) 2-12 Oz.<lb/>
Cans Carton<lb/>
$6.39<lb/>
Golden<lb/>
Bananas<lb/>
lb23<lb/>
Cottonelle Toilet<lb/>
Tissue<lb/>
4 roll pkg 88<lb/>
Limit Two<lb/>
Something Funny Is Happening; In LA.<lb/>
OVERTQN'S<lb/>
 ,<lb/>
?iifiruir<lb/>
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i f<lb/>
HOW 0? CftUNVfcU'l MST MATS<lb/>
QUANTITY MONTt M&amp;UVtO<lb/>
Store Hours.<lb/>
Open Sundays 12 Noon - 7 pm<lb/>
Moaday - Saturday 8 am - 8:30 pm<lb/>
Pray for Peace<lb/>
Prices Effective Tuesday January 15<lb/>
through Saturday January 19,1991<lb/>
lill<lb/>
FREE MOVIE POSTERS<lb/>
TUESDAY, JANUARY 29<lb/>
7:00 PM<lb/>
HENDRIX THEATRE<lb/>
PASSES AVAILABLE AT<lb/>
MENDENHALL STUDENT<lb/>
CENTER INFO DESK<lb/>
PRESORTED BY<lb/>
The Student Union<lb/>
Films Committee<lb/>
<pb facs="00058259_0006"/><lb/>
j discovered the<lb/>
;ins; Link?<lb/>
s<lb/>
vered<lb/>
' n life?<lb/>
ve that<lb/>
ght<lb/>
: you.<lb/>
i,<lb/>
s hurdi<lb/>
Miles ? ? ?<lb/>
le a Camel.<lb/>
j<lb/>
-<lb/>
wr;<lb/>
ffiRT ST<lb/>
1991-TOO P.M<lb/>
6 color screen print on<lb/>
100?r cotton T-Shirts<lb/>
For Dealer Info call 758-4176<lb/>
atE fcaBt igaroHntan January 24.1991<lb/>
Rally<lb/>
Continued from page 1<lb/>
fore we took action, now is the time<lb/>
foi support saidE( I student Mike<lb/>
Dyei referring to the protesters of<lb/>
the war.<lb/>
Paul Hagwood who was<lb/>
holding the NoBtoodforCXI sign<lb/>
said I support the troops, but l<lb/>
don I Mipjvtt the war<lb/>
Some who attended to show<lb/>
then support tor the tuvps found<lb/>
the protesters distasteful and<lb/>
shouting mat hes developed<lb/>
s the people began todisperse<lb/>
a few groupsargued theiropinions<lb/>
and during Sumnor s speei h .1 few<lb/>
yelled .u the protesters to leave<lb/>
America.<lb/>
I don t like w hat (the protest<lb/>
ers sa but I defend their right to<lb/>
sa it, Sumner said<lb/>
However she said thereason<lb/>
? erall must remain clear. She<lb/>
said it was to show the American<lb/>
troopsinthet lulfthatthe aregladh<lb/>
supported<lb/>
We are here t. acknowledge<lb/>
the utmost sacrifice that our troops<lb/>
are making tot us Sumner said<lb/>
dui inghei speech<lb/>
Shesaid the possibility of death<lb/>
i not a sacrifice to be taken lightly.<lb/>
( H11 troops need .ill the sup<lb/>
port tiu' can get ex pilot on<lb/>
nd I"he havi boon<lb/>
? d I endun -er thine I<lb/>
. r's worst nighti re is I<lb/>
i tun d ind thai . penmg<lb/>
? , ? iw i his is w hat our troops<lb/>
need to si 1<lb/>
Mam ? ht iw ii up out<lb/>
pect tor fai ind friends<lb/>
' n I ire set trated<lb/>
? lent I luttonobb<lb/>
. because he has<lb/>
: ? tioned 11<lb/>
tht Gull<lb/>
?? M ddk? i ast<lb/>
nursinj students have<lb/>
:  M 1st, that is<lb/>
? ? da Sumnet<lb/>
 I k to thank all<lb/>
lenl ? ime out<lb/>
v ? ; inned tor<lb/>
p ? 24 Thur. Ladies Night. Live Entertainment. Ladies in FREE!<lb/>
IP- ! 25 Fri Joe Distefano-Jazz<lb/>
$2 00 Vodka Collins and Tequila Sunrises<lb/>
VCL 26 Sat Lightin Wells-Blues<lb/>
???' $2 00 Jamaican Dust and Blue Hawaiian<lb/>
SUPPORT YOUR LOCAL TROOPS<lb/>
Friday, 25 January 1991 8:00-5:00<lb/>
In front o' Student stores<lb/>
All donations are welcomed.<lb/>
Soldiers have requested these items:<lb/>
all size batteries blank VCR tapes canned foods<lb/>
stationary, pens, pencils current music tapes<lb/>
pre sweetened Kool-aid mix whetstones to sharpen knives<lb/>
These items will be sent to local<lb/>
troops serving your country.<lb/>
Dependent families need:<lb/>
Diapers, baby formula and food<lb/>
Cash donations to assist with rent and heat costs.<lb/>
These donations will be distributed to needy local<lb/>
families.<lb/>
W A R<lb/>
f :<lb/>
Gel all of the<lb/>
latest news of<lb/>
the Persian Gulf<lb/>
at<lb/>
Central<lb/>
Book<lb/>
&amp; News<lb/>
til 9 10 pin " J.i j week<lb/>
Greem ille Square<lb/>
Shopping Center<lb/>
756-7177<lb/>
I he Daih Reflector<lb/>
I SA Todav<lb/>
he News &amp;Observer<lb/>
The Richmond Times<lb/>
The Washington Post<lb/>
The No York Tin<lb/>
The Baltimore Sun<lb/>
The Chicago fribunc<lb/>
The Atlanta Journal<lb/>
1 he Greensboro Record<lb/>
Student &amp; Faculty Savings at<lb/>
Overton's<lb/>
Country Love<lb/>
Frozen<lb/>
Ice Milk<lb/>
! 2 Gallon<lb/>
Carton<lb/>
99c<lb/>
Delta<lb/>
Paper<lb/>
Towels<lb/>
2 for $1.00<lb/>
Minute Maid<lb/>
Fresh Orange<lb/>
Juice<lb/>
12 Gallon Carton<lb/>
$1.49<lb/>
Camellia's Skim<lb/>
Milk<lb/>
12 gal. paper<lb/>
carton99<lb/>
Del Monte<lb/>
Canned Vegtsbles<lb/>
Cut oi French<lb/>
Green Beans,<lb/>
Garden Peas,<lb/>
Mixed Vegtabtes,<lb/>
Cut or Cream<lb/>
Style Corn,<lb/>
Spinach<lb/>
8 oz. can 2?H'<lb/>
Budweiser<lb/>
J2- 12 Oz.<lb/>
Cans Carton<lb/>
$6.39<lb/>
Golden<lb/>
Bananas<lb/>
lb230<lb/>
Cottonelle Toilet<lb/>
Tissue<lb/>
4 roll pkg 88tf<lb/>
Limit Two<lb/>
OVEETON'S<lb/>
lit MHVlSStRCi'<lb/>
howc of qmbmui s 1st muts<lb/>
ouamtity rights rischvio<lb/>
Store Hours:<lb/>
Open Sundays 12 Noon - 7 pm<lb/>
Monday - Saturday 8 am - 8:30 pm<lb/>
Pray for Peace<lb/>
Prices Effective Tuesday January 15<lb/>
through Saturday January 19, 1991<lb/>
NEWMAN<lb/>
Catholic Student Center<lb/>
Would Like to<lb/>
Welcome New and Returning Students<lb/>
and<lb/>
Invite You To Join Us In Worship<lb/>
Cam?us Mass Schedule r or Spring ScaiBK<lb/>
Sunday 11:30 am, Ledonia Wright Building<lb/>
8:30 pin. Newman Center<lb/>
Wednesday 5:30 pro, Newman Center<lb/>
953 East MM h St reel<lb/>
(At the foot of College Hill Drive I<lb/>
Greenville. NC 27836-2605<lb/>
757-3760<lb/>
For information about these and other programs sponsored hv the Newman (enter.<lb/>
Call or isit the center dail between 8:30 am and 11:39 pm.<lb/>
Kr. Paul Vaeth. Chaplain and Campus Minister (757 1 <lb/>
-Hut<lb/>
DELIVERY<lb/>
Mi lM M<lb/>
( hrcnc l'i.i$7.75<lb/>
Cheese mm! 1 Popping Ss.ss<lb/>
( hcesc and J ropjrtngs s' M<lb/>
 liiisc and 'i toppings hi.ls<lb/>
I ach additional toppings s"<lb/>
mm i i rv PIZZAS<lb/>
( hecsc I its IMun<lb/>
? HI IS<lb/>
Mi.? Lovers$10.15<lb/>
Pepperoni I oversS1Q.15<lb/>
SupremeSlO.15<lb/>
Super Supreme io.l)S<lb/>
IARC1<lb/>
$9.95<lb/>
sums<lb/>
$12 BO<lb/>
S 95<lb/>
s 1 SI I<lb/>
S12JM)<lb/>
S 1 J Hi I<lb/>
S 12 Ml<lb/>
$13.75<lb/>
GREAT PIZZA HUT PIZZA<lb/>
DELIVERED! 752-4445<lb/>
peuvery HQiaa<lb/>
Sl.N. THl RS. i PM TO MIDNIGHT<lb/>
FRI. SAT. I PM TO 1:01) AM<lb/>
COUPON<lb/>
FREE DELIVERY!<lb/>
LIMITED DELIVERY AREA<lb/>
ANY IARGE PIZZA OF YOUR CHOICE<lb/>
FOR THE PRICE OF A MEDR AU<lb/>
COUPON FOR PIZZA HIH DELIVERY OJWA A NO EXPIRES J 5 91<lb/>
NOT GOOD IN CONN NCTION WITH AN OTHER DISCOl NT<lb/>
FREE SNEAK PREVIEW<lb/>
FREE MOVIE POSTERS<lb/>
TUESDAY, JANUARY 29<lb/>
7:00 PM<lb/>
HENDRIX THEATRE<lb/>
PASSES AVAILABLE AT<lb/>
MENDENHALL STUDENT<lb/>
CENTER INFO DESK<lb/>
PRESENTED BY<lb/>
The Student Union<lb/>
Films Committee<lb/>
<pb facs="00058259_0007"/><lb/>
I the<lb/>
i ?<lb/>
"<lb/>
 <lb/>
- N<lb/>
J<lb/>
! <lb/>
?V -r<lb/>
? ?<lb/>
 Miles<lb/>
le a Camel.<lb/>
t<lb/>
x I<lb/>
<lb/>
<lb/>
&amp;'<lb/>
eht storm<lb/>
1991-7-00 RME.SX<lb/>
6 color screen print on<lb/>
100$ cotton T-shirts<lb/>
I 'fir Drain Info c.ill 758-4176<lb/>
aiic fcafif vlarulinuui j,?v  24 799 3<lb/>
Rally<lb/>
Continued from page 1<lb/>
k ??. is the time<lb/>
? IcntMiki<lb/>
lostors ol<lb/>
24 Hun I adies Night I ive I ntertainment 1 adies in FRI I<lb/>
25 Fri lor I )istefano Jazz<lb/>
$2 (X) odka Collins and requila Sunrises<lb/>
? Sal 1 ightin Wells Blues<lb/>
$2 (X) Jamaican Dust and Blue Hawaiian<lb/>
?<lb/>
.<lb/>
SUPPORT YOUR LOCAL IROOPS<lb/>
Friday, 25 Januar 1991 8:00-5:00<lb/>
In front of Student stores<lb/>
All donations are welcomed.<lb/>
Soldiers have requested these items:<lb/>
batteries blank VCR tapes canned foods<lb/>
stationary, pens, pencils current music tapes<lb/>
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<pb facs="00058259_0008"/><lb/>
Serving the East Carolina campus community since 1925<lb/>
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I he I ttSi Carolinian has serve.I the L.ist Carolina campus community sur 1.emphasizing mlormation that directly affects<lb/>
I'XT'students During the ECU school year, I he East Carolinian publishes twice .1 week with aiuul.it ion of 2J00O.The East<lb/>
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Rational origin I he masthead editorial in each edition does not necessarily represent the views ol one individual, but, ralhcr.<lb/>
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publication Letters should be addressed to The Editor, The East Carolinian, Publications UUIr ECU, Greenville, N.C<lb/>
27834; 01 call (919) 7S7 6oo<lb/>
Opinion<lb/>
Page 4, Thursday, January 24, 1991<lb/>
U.S. must rally around troops<lb/>
American support necessary to defeat Saddam<lb/>
?s. we approach the end ot our hrst week .it<lb/>
w,u with Saddam Hussein and Iraq, speculation<lb/>
abounds that this will not be a war of merely a tew<lb/>
weeks Rather, it appears that it will take months and<lb/>
possibly more than a vear to resolve<lb/>
Battle lines have been drawn, but the war<lb/>
being waged is not exclusive to the Middle East,<lb/>
rhere is a conflict within our own herders one that<lb/>
makes its own headlines evert da)<lb/>
I lowever, this battle will be decided by the<lb/>
general public specifically, these Americans who<lb/>
support theai lions taken against Iraq and those who<lb/>
co net.<lb/>
Perhaps more powerful than the military<lb/>
tones based overseas, this conflict will ultimately<lb/>
decide the outcome Ol our undeclared war with Iraq.<lb/>
Whether or not our country supports our president<lb/>
and our troops will most certainly be a major factor<lb/>
when the turning point to this crisis arrives<lb/>
And although about 200 ECU students<lb/>
voiced then support at a rally Wednesday night on<lb/>
the mall, an additional crowd ot about 40 or 30<lb/>
students were there to protest "Operation Desert<lb/>
Storm "<lb/>
Either through support or apathy, we have<lb/>
placed our elected representatives into off ice to carry<lb/>
out the will (.i the majority, and like it or not, the<lb/>
majority has spoken<lb/>
Now is not the time tor protest. That must be<lb/>
saved lor the next elections Now we must support<lb/>
our young men and women who have put their lives<lb/>
on the line and their families on hold.<lb/>
Let's Be Adamant<lb/>
United Nations should protect Kuwait<lb/>
By Derek McCullers<lb/>
I Jitorul C oiumnist<lb/>
A military analyst stated re-<lb/>
centlv that the Gulf War could<lb/>
cost the I inited St.ites over 50,(X)0<lb/>
soldiers It could also claim the<lb/>
lues (t even more civilians<lb/>
through terrorist actions.<lb/>
TheGulf Crisis will be looked<lb/>
upon as the critical event of the<lb/>
bush administration. He must<lb/>
carefully weigh the benefits, costs<lb/>
and consequences of this war.<lb/>
(ienerallv, Mr. Bush has done<lb/>
an acceptable job as president<lb/>
However, the major flaw I see<lb/>
concerning his character is his se-<lb/>
crecy.<lb/>
J<lb/>
 )ther anahStS (and as a po-<lb/>
litical science major I consider<lb/>
nu self an analyst) have noted his<lb/>
lack oi ability to effectively com<lb/>
municate with members of Con-<lb/>
gress tnd the American people,<lb/>
and frankly, this makes me ner-<lb/>
vous.<lb/>
Some time ago I wrote an ar-<lb/>
ticle about the firing of General<lb/>
Pugan I believe that this man<lb/>
was fired because he spoke the<lb/>
truth. I ie talked about our plans<lb/>
to bomb Bagdad and Saddam<lb/>
Hussein'sstronghold in a possible<lb/>
assassination attempt<lb/>
As a black conservative, I<lb/>
support many of the efforts and<lb/>
initiatives of George Bush. How-<lb/>
ever, I have some concerns about<lb/>
the militar) buildup in Saudi<lb/>
Arabia<lb/>
Ihe first concern is for the<lb/>
young men and women who are<lb/>
over there. Two of my neighbors<lb/>
and classmates, Wilbert and Chris<lb/>
l ogg, are serving in Saudi Arabia<lb/>
If we learned anything from<lb/>
Vietnam, it should have Ken the<lb/>
high price of an undeclared warm<lb/>
the name of "democracy<lb/>
These young men will be as<lb/>
confused as their predecessors in<lb/>
the Vietnamonflkt.<lb/>
They will find themselves in<lb/>
the midst of a people who may not<lb/>
want them there or who have<lb/>
grown tired ot their occupation.<lb/>
The harsh environment maycause<lb/>
a lack of moraleand posstbhcause<lb/>
the chain of command to become<lb/>
disrupted. Finally, they may be<lb/>
unsure ot the reason they are<lb/>
fighting, and war may be over<lb/>
whelming burden to their psyche<lb/>
at such a young age<lb/>
My next concernsare our goals<lb/>
or reasons for being involved<lb/>
From what I cm tell we have three<lb/>
main objectives. First of all we<lb/>
want a complete withdrawal or<lb/>
forcing of Iraq's troops from Ku-<lb/>
wait<lb/>
Secondly, we want to end<lb/>
Iraq's march toward nuclear ca-<lb/>
pability (possibly by removing<lb/>
Saddam Hussein from power).<lb/>
Finally, we want to restore the<lb/>
regional balance of power in the<lb/>
Middle Fast (again, possibly by<lb/>
removing Saddam Hussein from<lb/>
power).<lb/>
I have no problem with these<lb/>
goals My problem is with the<lb/>
means being used to achieve the<lb/>
ends We have reached the time<lb/>
when the United States can no<lb/>
longer attord to bo the protector<lb/>
and sole arbitrator of the free<lb/>
world<lb/>
I he tree world has expanded<lb/>
to include Europe and many other<lb/>
nations. Therefore, we need tocre-<lb/>
ate a broad new alliance of so-<lb/>
called protectors" or "policemen"<lb/>
to include the nations . NATO,<lb/>
the Warsaw Pact and the United<lb/>
Nations, let them interfere in this<lb/>
situation<lb/>
We can ill-afford to get into<lb/>
the explosives and quicksand of<lb/>
Middle Eastern politics; an area<lb/>
which is very confusing to the<lb/>
people of the West.<lb/>
Since the sanctions were not<lb/>
effective, then the U.N. should<lb/>
have sent troops in (under it's flag,<lb/>
not ours) to force Saddam out.<lb/>
We would then have been a<lb/>
participant, not an instigator, of<lb/>
such actions. This solution would<lb/>
have been the best for America<lb/>
and the free world.<lb/>
We should concentrate our<lb/>
millions and billions of dollars on<lb/>
other efforts, such as the citizens<lb/>
of America who are hostages or<lb/>
"guests" to racism, homelessness<lb/>
and poverty to which there must<lb/>
be a liberation.<lb/>
 IN RECORD NUMJO 3HOW<lb/>
SUPFWsT FOE THE AflEPW mcoPS<lb/>
On the Fringe<lb/>
Oddmakers favor Bills by 6, Patriots by 412<lb/>
By Tim E. Hampton<lb/>
I liton.il Columnist<lb/>
Gambling book-makers and<lb/>
stock brokers have relished this<lb/>
week for the last fivemonths. Since<lb/>
the coinciding starts of the NFL<lb/>
preseason and the Gulf Crisis,<lb/>
predictors of odds and fate have<lb/>
anxiously awaited this week's<lb/>
prime time clashes<lb/>
Whether it be a last second<lb/>
I lail Mary bomb or a launch t t .i<lb/>
Patriot missile, it is scary how I as<lb/>
Vegas and Wall Street seem to<lb/>
resemble one another these davs.<lb/>
In these parallel pits of lust,<lb/>
the concern is not necessarily<lb/>
linked to who wins the aerial<lb/>
showcase or the battle in the<lb/>
trenches, but rather who wins the<lb/>
bet.<lb/>
En Las Vegas Ihe proverbial<lb/>
Cityo' Sin gangers are knuck-<lb/>
ling down as the New York Giants<lb/>
and the Buffalo Bills readv them-<lb/>
J<lb/>
selves for Sunday's Super Bowl<lb/>
XXV.<lb/>
Before kick-off of the gaudy,<lb/>
truly American spectacular in<lb/>
Tampa Bay, billionsof dollars will<lb/>
be wagered on everything from<lb/>
the coin flip to the number of times<lb/>
Lawrence Taylor will sack Jim<lb/>
Kelly Depending on which clan<lb/>
destine bookie one talks to, the<lb/>
number of player injuries may be<lb/>
bet on, as well.<lb/>
On Wall Street, "post-<lb/>
Milkenian" stock brokers glue<lb/>
their faces to the Cable News Net<lb/>
work (CNN), listening to the play-<lb/>
by-play from Baghdad and Saudi<lb/>
Arabia and watching the instant<lb/>
replay of the latest interception -<lb/>
missile interception that is.<lb/>
Although the fact that Patriot<lb/>
missiles have gunned down nine<lb/>
Iraqi Scud missiles is reassuring<lb/>
to both the Allied forces on the<lb/>
front line and the foHtsback home,<lb/>
the Stock market has taken an-<lb/>
other stance on the recently found<lb/>
security blanket: betson the Patriot<lb/>
are a sate investment.<lb/>
Stock prices m Raytheon, the<lb/>
makersof the Patriot, jumped four<lb/>
and an halt points Monday, as the<lb/>
investors jumped on the news ot<lb/>
the anti-missile projectiles' sui cess<lb/>
rate<lb/>
And I really can't blame the<lb/>
speculators,ifIhada few$100,000.<lb/>
I'd probablv add Raytheon to my<lb/>
potent portfolio<lb/>
But the rage on Raytheon may<lb/>
just be the beginning of a sick trend<lb/>
geared toward profiting off the<lb/>
war. Will share prices in the mak-<lb/>
ers of the F-15 begin to escalate if<lb/>
Iraqi anti-aircraft artillery becomes<lb/>
proficient at hitting targets? The<lb/>
analysts have already calculated<lb/>
the possible income from such a<lb/>
scenario.<lb/>
Will investors in the cruise<lb/>
missile reap the benefits from up-<lb/>
scaled production as that arsenal<lb/>
becomes slowly depleted? The<lb/>
accountants are predicting a rush<lb/>
It's only the first quarter in the<lb/>
"Showdown In the Cult' and the<lb/>
betters are working up  t ?<lb/>
side -wagers. "Hey, loc, has that<lb/>
body-bag corporation moved up<lb/>
the big board todav,<lb/>
(n a lighter note, lets tdlk<lb/>
football. Gamblers an al<lb/>
ing on defense, and the abi .<lb/>
heat seekers to pi ni li iti<lb/>
Tampa, the two defense t<lb/>
to watch are New rl<lb/>
Lawrence Taylor <lb/>
Buffalo's Bruce Smith BS<lb/>
the greatest lincbx keroftl<lb/>
maybe ewer BS is them<lb/>
ing defender during tht 9<lb/>
paign<lb/>
Some sav i I has ?.<lb/>
prime MostsayBSninshi :?-<lb/>
too much and has .i t i ?:?<lb/>
speak his initials<lb/>
( ,ive the edge tO 1.1<lb/>
predicted 1 tackles, two sa -<lb/>
tumble recovery and an mtei<lb/>
tion for a touchdown (W I<lb/>
support our former Tar Heel!<lb/>
general )<lb/>
While the Buffalo<lb/>
tack may have an<lb/>
Thurman Thomas, flv<lb/>
the trenches will be wot<lb/>
Giants. Offensive plo ?<lb/>
the air should waver in th<lb/>
ndvantspv. Ihr Gtam' ap<lb/>
team forces will keep !<lb/>
guard<lb/>
If you bet take tht<lb/>
thesix points, Buffalo wil itbtow<lb/>
'em out. If you prav <lb/>
boys come home s h n. so t hat the.<lb/>
may meet the I iiants i<lb/>
Disneyland<lb/>
Voters love new 'Jeopardy' dice game<lb/>
By Bill Egbert<lb/>
Editorial Columnist<lb/>
Hi there! Welcome to<lb/>
Ukmmtam Lives int JEOPARDY, the<lb/>
exciting war rationale game where<lb/>
YOU, the home viewer, roll the<lb/>
irondiceand try tofigureout (after<lb/>
the fact) whv our soldiers are in<lb/>
the Gulf!<lb/>
 On a roll of:<lb/>
2-The New World Order 1<lb/>
(from Hasbro): I his is by far our<lb/>
noblest rationale, in which this war<lb/>
proves that with the Cold War<lb/>
behind us, the United Nations can<lb/>
act as a peacekeeping world gov-<lb/>
ernment.<lb/>
And if America (bless our<lb/>
virtuous hearts) has to be the UN's<lb/>
teeth, so be it. Dictators beware if<lb/>
the Security Council casts its eyes<lb/>
on YOU.<lb/>
There are two big problems<lb/>
with this rationale: Wars rarely do<lb/>
what you tell them to; and, after<lb/>
our last laser-guided incisor sinks<lb/>
in Hussein's pantleg, all America<lb/>
will be able to offer the UN will be<lb/>
George Washington's wooden<lb/>
dentures, because we'll be too poor<lb/>
to get our teeth recapped.<lb/>
3-Sanctions Shmanctions,<lb/>
Lef s Kick SomeTowelhead Butt:<lb/>
According to this rationale, sanc-<lb/>
tions were destined to fail from<lb/>
the sta rt, becau se most of the Thi rd<lb/>
World wouldn't be able to sustain<lb/>
them long enough for them to<lb/>
work.<lb/>
And besides, only<lb/>
pantywaists worry about eco-<lb/>
nomic factors. Hussein needed to<lb/>
"get his ass kicked (Ahh, the<lb/>
silken words of our eloquent<lb/>
leader. Surely Orpheus incarnate.)<lb/>
4-Primate Masculinity<lb/>
Syndrome (PMS): It's George's<lb/>
time of the month. But if he was<lb/>
really a warmonger, he would've<lb/>
set the deadline at Aug. 15.<lb/>
5- If We Talk the Talk, We<lb/>
Gotta Walk the Walk: Basically,<lb/>
Bush talked tough. We didn't stop<lb/>
him, and Hussein didn't blink<lb/>
Our hand was forced and<lb/>
we had to go through with it as a<lb/>
matter of national prestige<lb/>
Again, maybe, but it's not<lb/>
much consolation, and it won't<lb/>
sound go(xi in the historv books.<lb/>
6-The Pulitz Surprize:<lb/>
Sometime next wm, a Geraldo<lb/>
investigative report will reveal that<lb/>
Ted Turner manipulated the<lb/>
whole thing to boost CNN's rat-<lb/>
ings.<lb/>
Don't blame Ted, though<lb/>
jane Fonda made him do it (One<lb/>
of them commie plots, ya know.)<lb/>
7-Black Gold, Texas Tea:<lb/>
I low could we allow such a vola-<lb/>
tiledictator to sit on so much of the<lb/>
world'soil supply? Why, hecould<lb/>
"dictate recession to the world<lb/>
now couldn't he?<lb/>
Well, no. Even now,<lb/>
Hussein doesn't control enough<lb/>
oil to dictate world oil prices. The<lb/>
Saud family reserves that pre-<lb/>
rogative for themselves.<lb/>
Protected by a UN garrison,<lb/>
Saudi Arabia could overproduce<lb/>
enough to push Saddam Oil Co.<lb/>
so deep into the red that Richard<lb/>
Kiam could buy the companv.<lb/>
8-Curb the Aggressor if we<lb/>
didn't roll in and crush his war<lb/>
machine, Hussein would annex<lb/>
theentire Arabian Peninsula, drive<lb/>
the Israelis into the sea, and turn<lb/>
the Suez Canal into the most ex-<lb/>
pensive ride at Crazy Saddam's<lb/>
Red Sea Water Park.<lb/>
Besides, we appeased that<lb/>
little Nazi bastard and what did<lb/>
that get us, Bucko? A costly war,<lb/>
that's what. We wouldn't want<lb/>
that, now would we?<lb/>
9-Dr. War: FDR said that "it<lb/>
was Dr. War that cured the De-<lb/>
pression, not Dr. New Deal<lb/>
War means higher produc-<lb/>
tion in heavy industry, more job<lb/>
openingsOhearmed forces havea<lb/>
helluva turnover r.it ?<lb/>
wards, sales ot consumer .<lb/>
skyrocket bei aus. every!<lb/>
wants to get back to a prosj -<lb/>
cushy life.<lb/>
Heck, it a World ?"?<lb/>
pull us out of the.r. it I ? pre-<lb/>
sion, a prolonged ground :ait<lb/>
the Middle East should fl<lb/>
out of this penny ante t ? nonsc<lb/>
downturn and mayb<lb/>
tidv profit to biHt huh?<lb/>
I he problem is tii.i-<lb/>
needstobelvtkeduph. ??<lb/>
government who can affi r a top<lb/>
into debt up to its earlobes jnJ<lb/>
we're already snorkelwu in the<lb/>
S&amp;I. cesspool.<lb/>
0-S'obody Talks to the I<lb/>
S. of A. Like That, Buddv: Aaj<lb/>
little upstart who take- on the<lb/>
American Eagle d imn well b ?'<lb/>
be ready to ?ake some rumps I<lb/>
some guy at work said he was<lb/>
gonna pluck vour eyes out, yos ?<lb/>
knock him on his ass, tin:<lb/>
11 or 12-Geez, I Don 1<lb/>
Know, Man. Ask Our King ? 1<lb/>
Mean President: Onlv half of al<lb/>
vote, we couldn't find the Persian<lb/>
Gulf on a paint-by-numbev map,<lb/>
and we wouldn't know whattodo<lb/>
with a democracy if it sat on our<lb/>
faces for two hundred vears<lb/>
We didn't see this war corn<lb/>
ing, and our soldiers are dyasfj<lb/>
because we fell asleep on our<lb/>
watch. Succumb tc denial Roll I<lb/>
again.<lb/>
Yes, that'snght. Wyou don't j<lb/>
like the one you roll, feel free to<lb/>
roll again! That's the fun of thi$<lb/>
game.<lb/>
Since the military refuses to J<lb/>
speculate, and the Administration<lb/>
sure ain't talkin you can play this<lb/>
game over and over again and<lb/>
you'll be right every time!<lb/>
Thank you for playing, and<lb/>
join us again at the next Pentagon<lb/>
briefing for Amrtc? Lit ?'<lb/>
JEOPARDY (a Warren-Monger<lb/>
pnxluction).<lb/>
Awards<lb/>
SEN!<lb/>
VALB<lb/>
Continued from pagel<lb/>
"We must fight for the life and<lb/>
survival of the great idea whose<lb/>
time had really come 2,(K)0 years<lb/>
ago he said<lb/>
After Thompsonconcluded his<lb/>
comments. ECU student leaders<lb/>
were honored. The Martin Luther<lb/>
King jr Student Leadership Award<lb/>
was given to Martin Blue A native<lb/>
ot I.eland.N C , Blue, a junior, is a<lb/>
biology major who currently has a<lb/>
3.3 grade point average He also<lb/>
serves as an assistant coordinator<lb/>
in Scott Residence Hall.<lb/>
Blue admits he was surprised<lb/>
at the award and urged others -<lb/>
especially "overachievers" as he<lb/>
describes himself to be true to<lb/>
themselves.<lb/>
TheOutstandingGreek Award<lb/>
was given to Anthony Rook, who<lb/>
serves as the president of Allied<lb/>
Blacks for Leadership and Equality<lb/>
and is the program chair for Alpha<lb/>
Phi Alpha. He is a senior majonng<lb/>
in criminal justice and social work<lb/>
The community serviceaward<lb/>
was given to Dr. Willie Hines, a<lb/>
dentist in the Greenville area.<lb/>
"So little done, so much to do<lb/>
he said<lb/>
Awards were also given out to<lb/>
theshidentsof Afncan descent who<lb/>
had the highest G.P.A.s in their<lb/>
class Awards were also given to<lb/>
the presidents of the eight African<lb/>
American Creek organizations.<lb/>
Allied Blacks kn i eadership and<lb/>
Equality, aeid the ECU Gospel<lb/>
Choir<lb/>
IV Larrv Smith, assistant vice<lb/>
chancellor for Minority Student<lb/>
Affairs closed out the program hv<lb/>
challenging everyone present to<lb/>
'Keep the dream alive<lb/>
i III<lb/>
Fly Me<lb/>
scr-<lb/>
ONLY 4? DAYS<lb/>
UNTIL<lb/>
SPRING BREAK!<lb/>
Fly<lb/>
Key<lb/>
The East Carolinian<lb/>
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roll again! (hat's the fun of this<lb/>
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spe ulatr and the Administration<lb/>
Mifeatoi ttalkin you can play tM<lb/>
Rarne over and ovet again aw<lb/>
you il rv right every time'<lb/>
Hunk you for plaving, ??<lb/>
join us again at the next Pentagon<lb/>
briefing tor (Amttitu Uf in)<lb/>
more job fEOMKDI (a Warren Monger<lb/>
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did<lb/>
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S1)C last (Haroltntan January 24, 1991(9<lb/>
Awards<lb/>
SEND YOUR MOTHER A<lb/>
VALENTINE'S DAY CARD.<lb/>
Continued from pagel<lb/>
"We must fight for the life ami<lb/>
survival of the great idea whose<lb/>
time had really come 2,(KK1 years<lb/>
ago he said<lb/>
Alter Thompsonconctuded his<lb/>
comments, LC"l I student leaders<lb/>
were honored. The Martin Luther<lb/>
Kinglr Student l oadorship Award<lb/>
was given to Martin Blue A native<lb/>
oi I.eland .N.( Blue, a )unior,isal<lb/>
biology major who currently has a<lb/>
3 s grade point average He also<lb/>
serves as an assistant coordinator<lb/>
in Scott Residence l la<lb/>
Blur admits he was surprised<lb/>
at the award a urged others<lb/>
especially "over.u hievers" as he<lb/>
describes himself to be true to<lb/>
themselves.<lb/>
TheOutstandingGreek Award<lb/>
was given to Anthony Rook who<lb/>
serves as the president oi Alliod<lb/>
Blacks for I eadershipand Equality<lb/>
and is the program( hair for Alpha<lb/>
Phi Alpha I lo is a senior majoring<lb/>
in criminal justice and social work<lb/>
Fh . ommun i ty service a ward<lb/>
was given to Dr. Willie Hines, a<lb/>
dentist in the (reenville area<lb/>
"So little done, so much to do<lb/>
he said.<lb/>
Awards were also given out to<lb/>
thestudentsof African descent who<lb/>
had the highest (i.P.A.s in their<lb/>
. lass Awards were also given to<lb/>
the presidents of the eight African<lb/>
American Greek organizations.<lb/>
Blacks it'i i eadership nd<lb/>
! qualit). and the ECU Gospel<lb/>
I heir<lb/>
Pr Larry Smith, assistant vice<lb/>
chancellor lor Minority Student<lb/>
Affairs closed out the program bv<lb/>
challenging everyone present to<lb/>
'Keep the dream alive<lb/>
Fri. Night ATTIC<lb/>
Classic RockPinklFloyd<lb/>
the Treehuggers Q<lb/>
ABORTION<lb/>
PfJlSON J AMD CONTDfJimAL CAM"<lb/>
FREE PREGNANCY<lb/>
TESTING<lb/>
M-F 8.80-4p.m.<lb/>
Sat 10-lp.m.<lb/>
Triangle Women's<lb/>
Health Center<lb/>
Call lor ft' ?'? ?'?" "?"<lb/>
l.tm Com fttmmmm i? 2C wmkM ?! f?i? ry<lb/>
1 -800-433-2930<lb/>
ONLY 45 DAYS<lb/>
UNTIL<lb/>
SPRING BREAK!<lb/>
Key West Spring Break Getaway<lb/>
The East Carolinian. UBE and American EagleAmerican Airlines will award the winner and a guest round<lb/>
trip transportation on American EagleAmerican Airlines to Key West from Greenville American Eagle -your<lb/>
connection to American Airlines hubs and other destinations worldwide -and seven nights accommodations<lb/>
provided by ITG Travel.<lb/>
Americanr<lb/>
AmericanAirlines'<lb/>
uJliU<lb/>
Hfej TRAVEL CENTER<lb/>
iM?iVr<lb/>
Tom Togs<lb/>
factory<lb/>
outlet store<lb/>
vfTH<lb/>
To enter: Fill out these Entry forms and Fake them to UBE. ITG Travel Greenville Aquarium, Chieo's,<lb/>
Tom Togs Factory Outlet Store or The New Deli<lb/>
Drawing to be held March 1, 1991 at UBE. Good Luck!<lb/>
?Facsimiles ot entries will not be accepted.<lb/>
Keep reading THE EAST CAROLINIAN for more chances to win.<lb/>
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Awards<lb/>
SEND YOUR MOTHER A<lb/>
VALENTINE'S DAY CARD.<lb/>
Seafood House and Oyster BanI<lb/>
CLIFFS<lb/>
Continued from pagel<lb/>
We must fighl foi the life .mil<lb/>
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i i had reall) ome 2,(XK) ears<lb/>
?n - In stul<lb/>
ttei i hompsoni orw ludedhis<lb/>
n i nts 1 v l student leaders<lb/>
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Fri. Night<lb/>
ATTIC<lb/>
Classte RockTinklFloyd<lb/>
the Treehuggers (j<lb/>
<lb/>
Shrimp<lb/>
Plate<lb/>
A Washinqton Highway iN C 33 El I Greenville North Carolina<lb/>
Phone 752 3172<lb/>
Mon. thru Thurs. Night ?<lb/>
IABORTION<lb/>
?KMsM M0COWMBITMI CAHf<lb/>
FREE PREGNANCY<lb/>
TESTING<lb/>
Mr 8:80 4p.tn<lb/>
Sat 10 1p.m.<lb/>
Triangle Women's<lb/>
Health Center<lb/>
ik toi 1 each rsi i<lb/>
1 u 1 11 E CI 1<lb/>
am Sniith assistan<lb/>
? n Mmorih Sti<lb/>
lost vi 1 ut the progra<lb/>
 evei v ne pi ?<lb/>
. the dream alive<lb/>
ONLY 46 DAYS<lb/>
UNTIL<lb/>
SPRING BREAK!<lb/>
Key West Spring Break Getaway<lb/>
The East Carolinian, IIBE and American EagleAmerican Airlines ? ill ;i? ard the winner and a guest round<lb/>
trip transportation on American EagleAmerican Airlines to Kcj Wesl (rom Greenville American Eagle youi<lb/>
connecuon to American Airlines hubs and other destinations world ide -and seven n.ghts accommodations<lb/>
pro ided b I l I ravel.<lb/>
American <lb/>
AmericanAirlines<lb/>
University "BooKE<lb/>
TRAVEL CENTER<lb/>
Tom Togs<lb/>
factory<lb/>
outlet store<lb/>
&amp;<lb/>
To enter: Fill out these Entry forms and Take .horn to UBE, ITG Travet,Greenvilte Aquarium, CWcos,<lb/>
Tom Togs Factor) Outlet Store or the Neu Deli<lb/>
Drawing to be held March I, 1991 at UBE. Good Luck!<lb/>
?Facsimiles of entries will not be accepted.<lb/>
Keep reading THE EAST CAROLINIAN for more chances to win.<lb/>
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She East (Carolinian January24, 1991<lb/>
Awards<lb/>
SENDYOI R MOTHER A<lb/>
VALENTINE'S DAY (' RD.<lb/>
Continued from pagrl<lb/>
 ? . t hi;hl Km the lift .?.<lb/>
? it uif.i vvhos<lb/>
mi ' i <lb/>
Mai tin I tithe<lb/>
ATTIC<lb/>
; Htfe CLIFF'<lb/>
Seafood House aid Oyster Bar<lb/>
f A Washington H yhway iN C 33 E?t GrMnvillC North Carolina f<lb/>
j i Phon? "S1 3172 V<lb/>
SPI ABORTION<lb/>
? . ?-? A FUISONA1 ??COMnDfeKTUU-CAlBS<lb/>
 n.itp<lb/>
I ri. Nielli<lb/>
Classic RockPinkjFloyd<lb/>
tlio Treehueeers<lb/>
FREE PRIX)NANCY<lb/>
TESTING<lb/>
M r 8 HO 4pm<lb/>
S.u 10 1 p in<lb/>
1 rutngle Women's<lb/>
Health (enter<lb/>
? ? afp'J?i?ni Ma a<lb/>
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1<lb/>
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ONLY 46 DAYS<lb/>
UNTIL<lb/>
SPRING BREAK!<lb/>
Key West Spring Break Getaway<lb/>
The Hast Carolinian. I BH and America1 Eagle nicrit<lb/>
trip transportation on American Ragle mei it an nii<lb/>
connection to American Airlines hit ik! other destinations worklwicie<lb/>
proided h I 1 (? I<lb/>
ard the winner and a guest round<lb/>
s to Ke Wesi Irom Greenville American Eagleyour<lb/>
lc and seven nights accoi<lb/>
nmotlation:<lb/>
American <lb/>
-??-<lb/>
AmericanAirlines<lb/>
IJnivcim Book Exriiangc<lb/>
TRAVEL CENTER<lb/>
!&amp;??<lb/>
a<lb/>
Tom Togs<lb/>
factory<lb/>
. ? e t store<lb/>
- -Vfr<lb/>
Po enter: Fill out these En.o forms and lake them to I HI. ITG rravel. Greenville Aquarium, Chicos.<lb/>
Tom Toss Factor) Outlet Store or 1 he Now Deli<lb/>
Drawing to be held March 1. 1991 al I BE. Good Luck!<lb/>
? I acsimiles ol entries w ill noi he accepted.<lb/>
Keep reading THE HAS! CAROl INIAN for more chances to win.<lb/>
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6<lb/>
SUi lEant Carolinian<lb/>
vLAbblrl<lb/>
J.IARY24. P.<lb/>
Januahy 2-4, 1991<lb/>
SERVICES OFFERED<lb/>
BAH WIAM'ARrY CRUSE Six<lb/>
: ? 5 79 Jamaica it Florida six<lb/>
- ??? roi S1W Panama<lb/>
i ?<lb/>
H XT. HOT' HOT! IAMAK A AND<lb/>
? N N ll HR SPRBMC BREAK<lb/>
? tstart : gat$479.0W<lb/>
. - . ? ? ? s! dl prices<lb/>
rties,<lb/>
C - . <lb/>
-PRIM. BREAK: I UV.<lb/>
sorBaha-<lb/>
i ? ? r yacht? '?<lb/>
- ? ? Easy<lb/>
- ' ? ? - ? ? 300)780-4<lb/>
RDPfcCX t SSING SERVICES<lb/>
- r? r. ? i ? isl<lb/>
Call Joan <lb/>
EFFICIENT ROOMS AVAILABLE<lb/>
SI 37.50month,all utilities furnished.<lb/>
W.Vtkfovh(xl. Perfect for student on<lb/>
a udgel v  i irry at 737-3543.<lb/>
APT. FOR RENT: Walk to ECU. 3<lb/>
bedroom, 1 bath. Call 752-2849.<lb/>
NEED LIVE-IN FEMALE ECU<lb/>
STUDENT to be company for eld-<lb/>
er, v lady in house. Call after 5:00<lb/>
p.m 758-1666.<lb/>
FOR RENT: 2 bedroom, 1 bath house,<lb/>
102 W 12th Street. $385mo, 1 mo.<lb/>
deposit, 1 year lease. Responsible<lb/>
tenants only. Call 756-9141.<lb/>
?? llll Ill ?????aBB???8??IB?<lb/>
student Income I i Returns<lb/>
pedb)<lb/>
Professionals Spccificall) tor<lb/>
College Students<lb/>
Pittard Perm<lb/>
Crone-<lb/>
.NCO?POUT?0<lb/>
HELP WANTED<lb/>
I<lb/>
; ' ime i i; in rowN<lb/>
.<lb/>
positions<lb/>
e neat<lb/>
d cn;ov<lb/>
- ?<lb/>
A&amp;aTTUI &amp; A<lb/>
?VJZ'DY ajuZ OARLAi<lb/>
 Beautiful Place io Live<lb/>
? AU New ?<lb/>
? And Rcatly I"o Real ?<lb/>
UNIVERSITY APARTMENTS<lb/>
2899 E "uh Slreel<lb/>
-Located Near ECU<lb/>
?V Major Shopping Cemen<lb/>
?Acwm rrom Highway Patrol Station<lb/>
Limned Offer S300 a i<lb/>
ontact J T. or Tommy Wi<lb/>
756 7815 or 330-1937<lb/>
Office open - Apt 8. 12 - 5 30pm<lb/>
?AZALEA GARDENS<lb/>
energy ciTk mm Inm waaw<lb/>
m vtoa?<lb/>
?a0.<lb/>
KcOTftLS.<lb/>
I Vdn O Mill Qak.<lb/>
Contact J T or rummy Will<lb/>
756-7S15<lb/>
OP SALE<lb/>
? Rl Ai(i OUTGOING? Do you<lb/>
1? ? I phoneTTfS<lb/>
?. it ester<lb/>
Vorkfoi K I<lb/>
.pending<lb/>
. 5or 757-<lb/>
wi t i i) seli t'iiiv-nn<lb/>
,i D? NTS I ? loSW hour<lb/>
? ! ?? ? campus Ren<lb/>
' ? M72 Est<lb/>
i,m v.(u:k i t i I tl vi PAY!<lb/>
i ime I .ill tor<lb/>
504-64 ?1 Ext.J<lb/>
ft COLtEl ItHtS Ml DEO A<lb/>
: ?? pend-<lb/>
Bftd von this position.<lb/>
11 ? 'A m - rhufS 3p mQp m ,<lb/>
p.m. Lf interested, con-<lb/>
Myrna Bunns at 757-2102.<lb/>
DISPLAY CLASSIFIED<lb/>
WHY RENT? Homes for $1.00<lb/>
Repos, Government giveaway pro-<lb/>
gram! For information, call (504)649-<lb/>
- exf R5920.<lb/>
H)R SALE: Great college car. 1981<lb/>
Plvmouth Sahon Wagon. Excellent<lb/>
ndibori Newtiresandbrakes. S850<lb/>
i? be? offer Call 756-4919 after 6<lb/>
p m<lb/>
FOR SALE: AT&amp;T computer IBM<lb/>
compatible, 20 MG hard drive, 1 meg<lb/>
RAM, mono monitor, word proces-<lb/>
? - md spreadsheet included. Call<lb/>
! ee at 7574972 and leave message.<lb/>
$m) neg.<lb/>
DISPLAY CLASSIFIED<lb/>
FOR SALE<lb/>
ULTIMATESPEAKER BOXES For<lb/>
car or house. 200 watts each. Con-<lb/>
tains 12" sub, mid, tweet SI50 for<lb/>
pair. 931-8155.<lb/>
JVCTAPEDECK: Rarely used 50<lb/>
931-8155.<lb/>
'89 LOTUS STRATOCASTER<lb/>
GUITAR with case Also Dean<lb/>
Markley Amplifier. Excellent condi-<lb/>
tion. $350 neg. 830-9293 Ask for<lb/>
Neil.<lb/>
TWIN BED M ATTR E?S A NT) BOX<lb/>
SPRINGS for sale. S60.00 or best<lb/>
offer Call 355-0971.<lb/>
FOR SALE 27' 12 speed bike with<lb/>
lock and chain. Queen size bed and<lb/>
frame. 4' flourescent Michctob beer<lb/>
light. Call Dan at 355-1642<lb/>
FOR SALE: 27"Schwinn WorldClass<lb/>
10 speed bike. Looks like new with<lb/>
Keystonitelock. RetailsoverS31500,<lb/>
will sell for $80.00. Call Deniseat 355-<lb/>
1647 after 5:00 p.m.<lb/>
PERSONALS<lb/>
JOIN ECU'S BEST CO-ED ORGA-<lb/>
NIZATION: The ECU Ambassa<lb/>
dors are holding Membership booths<lb/>
in front of the StudentStore and Men-<lb/>
denhall Jan. 28th, 29th, and 30th If<lb/>
you love parties, banquets, semi-<lb/>
formals, traveling, a close family,<lb/>
meeting the Chancellor, jlumm and<lb/>
other important people, then our i r<lb/>
ganization is for you! Come sign up<lb/>
and leam more!<lb/>
TO THE BROTHERS OF SIGMA<lb/>
TAUGAMMA: We had a great rime<lb/>
Friday night? Good luck with rush<lb/>
and we can't wait rill pre-downtown<lb/>
next Thursday? Ijove, the sisters and<lb/>
pledges of PI DELTA.<lb/>
iSPLAY CLASSIFIED<lb/>
(trgtsl Ubrtry of wmmmm in U 5<lb/>
iMittbttcts<lb/>
'Vdw Catalog Today wrtfi ViwMC w COO<lb/>
800-881 -9222<lb/>
O rush S? 00 to Mwrc latarmtiM<lb/>
T0U FWf<lb/>
MOT Utt<lb/>
FREE<lb/>
PREGNANCY<lb/>
TESTING<lb/>
Free &amp; anftde0f!tf<lb/>
Services &amp; CotmseHeg,<lb/>
( arolirttiPiigHW?j?5twta<lb/>
lUE.3fdStet<lb/>
The Lcc Building<lb/>
Greenville, MG<lb/>
Hours<lb/>
M-F 8:30 am-3pm<lb/>
Spring Break<lb/>
in<lb/>
Key West<lb/>
6 days, 5 nitihis<lb/>
3 days of<lb/>
Scub;i diving &amp; snorkeling.<lb/>
Only $39500 includes hotel<lb/>
&amp; diving! For more info call<lb/>
758 1444<lb/>
ALTERNATIVE MFAI, PI AN<lb/>
$1200 value for $49.95<lb/>
100 free meals at 10 fine restaurants<lb/>
??imfstfaics-mf:aN'<lb/>
Greenville Diners Club has it all<lb/>
CALL 757-1044<lb/>
for more info<lb/>
PERSONALS<lb/>
RUSH Phi Kap<lb/>
Spring Rush in Mendenhall Student<lb/>
Center )nti 22b J ?-J-u - ?<lb/>
night. R freshrrw ? - <lb/>
nightly. For moi rtfon I<lb/>
830-6767<lb/>
PI DELTA Chi Omq<lb/>
you to the ,rtek life!<lb/>
the best : ? rnewsoror<lb/>
ity! Lave, the sistt 4<lb/>
Chi Omega.<lb/>
CHI OMEGA would like to con-<lb/>
gratulate Etoaberl Hai a her<lb/>
engagement Love, Ihe sisters and<lb/>
pledges of Chi Omegi<lb/>
PI DELTA hwU Ms ?" ??k ev-<lb/>
eryonc nn cantpu n r making<lb/>
first week such a rr.it sura ssfi<lb/>
CHI OMEGA J<lb/>
tte hUtwulic sgpod v ? <lb/>
RUSH<lb/>
CONGRATULATIONS<lb/>
ners of th?- l'i Delta i<lb/>
Thursday: Cris A Lanffte, Lea<lb/>
Thomas, Laura Steffen. Matt Rozik,<lb/>
John Dildav, and Kevin ! v B?one<lb/>
EEE<lb/>
help '?? .? "?? . ready I<lb/>
riA SISTERS AND PLEEX ES<lb/>
apprec.t all )<lb/>
this ? -<lb/>
mak:<lb/>
ATTENTION!<lb/>
Sunday Bible Study<lb/>
9:45 A.M. ROOM 201<lb/>
Jarvis Memorial United<lb/>
Methodist Church<lb/>
510 S. Wanhington St.<lb/>
(Downtown, beside City Hall)<lb/>
Please join us in the College and<lb/>
Career Class as we learn to apply<lb/>
God word to our lives.<lb/>
Come grow with us!<lb/>
PERSONALS<lb/>
he Sig Ep would like to<lb/>
thank you for helping us out with<lb/>
Pish We're looking forward to par-<lb/>
g with you this semester.<lb/>
PSSMT! Hey. Sigma Nu I can<lb/>
mmS that charter, I can almost touch<lb/>
,i' Coming '?n to a Kingston Place<lb/>
near you<lb/>
DELTA ZETA would tike to con-<lb/>
.rnew pledges Wendy<lb/>
Davenport .Michele Dunefcky, Leigh<lb/>
Harm m, Melanie Morris and Nikki<lb/>
Richardson<lb/>
MONICA. Coa nson win-<lb/>
ning first runner up in the Greater<lb/>
Crecniile fxigcant. We arc proud of<lb/>
. tow, your rXita Zcta sisters.<lb/>
PI EDGES OF HA. We hmH like to<lb/>
teriieai mdeverj am of you for<lb/>
sticldi g w tth i1- through all the thick<lb/>
these pst six months! We<lb/>
. .  and think you are a<lb/>
. .  Ias?! I oe, the sisters"<lb/>
SK.MA NU WINTER COC KTA1L<lb/>
1AVA BIT' C ongrarulations Lee<lb/>
Rogers on vciir "Be?t Brother<lb/>
.? Ron Harris our HUdea<lb/>
Si: femmv Baker our<lb/>
Hidden Modd Lx-eCaidweli-Once<lb/>
again out of control lett Mahonev<lb/>
: who pul it all to-<lb/>
' . ri v Civetherestof<lb/>
? ir.a Allan Rutledge<lb/>
ration chairman. ChnsCarter<lb/>
C (tnc v-v more often! ! ?n Move -<lb/>
Ijookin' Sharp! Clay lowery Takt<lb/>
another drink David Ashford<lb/>
thought vou couldn't dance? Bnar<lb/>
"Pahk the cah" Murphy Always<lb/>
there when the party's good! Tedl<lb/>
Dunlap - Quit lyin' m your date wej<lb/>
budget MORE money next time7 And J<lb/>
Tom Glass We don t believe yourl<lb/>
babe was sick in bed O K That wa. <lb/>
a good beginning to the semester<lb/>
now Icfs get psyched for our 32nd<lb/>
Annual Superbowl Blast. Call Mr<lb/>
Sox for the tull low down<lb/>
THETACHI: Congratulationsonthf<lb/>
new house' Saturday night's hoasi<lb/>
w3rming partv was a blast' Glad wt<lb/>
got the opportunity to get to kr. .?<lb/>
vou guys' Let's do it again real <lb/>
Good luck with Rush' Low, tht?<lb/>
ters and pledges of riA<lb/>
LAST CHANCE FOR SIGMA NL<lb/>
RUSH TONIGHT' Come by the<lb/>
Kingston Place Clubhouse from 7 -<lb/>
to find out all you ever wanted I<lb/>
know about Sigma Nu. Low dues,<lb/>
short pledge period and no hazing<lb/>
Sound good' Call Tom at 752-5Z7J<lb/>
tor more information<lb/>
DISPLAY CLASS.FIED<lb/>
DISPLAY CLASSIFIED<lb/>
I Pi N ER<lb/>
N?? QW! I RSHIP<lb/>
ST It I 5H?VWGYa<lb/>
wtihq vun bj<lb/>
ADD AT W<lb/>
ACROSS FROM v I! !  ROW I<lb/>
RE! I At R -V<lb/>
I INI H SI RKhT<lb/>
?<lb/>
Id Dl ?' I WITH<lb/>
STUDEN1 i "v? l I PAIR!<lb/>
'? i) SI RVH <lb/>
' 152 21 ??<lb/>
Ko.l v( rvk i i , , ? tile, N<lb/>
! T SHIRTS<lb/>
! f-r.nt<lb/>
I Support Yoir<lb/>
1 I o. al W N T<lb/>
S B?ik<lb/>
Off<lb/>
, Ac:nr. i<lb/>
1 No<lb/>
per<lb/>
i Sl-ir V"ao?rilofrt the &amp;uaraUr?js(rf I<lb/>
-iiircs-4's. ?naer ranendmand dcbvny '<lb/>
1<lb/>
l V' jir. l.t'K .krtve, SH cotlor 50!<lb/>
?? j-hvc wM HJf leJIcrs and comes.<lb/>
irs ;nan WHfem bree-xlaic<lb/>
1 C -wi SI7jO(4 2 06 xe ?nd handlmg I<lb/>
N wfnn <lb/>
I Ad<lb/>
I ' ?<lb/>
HELP WANTED<lb/>
A?yaaaMa1aa<lb/>
? ? mmmmM rf ? to al . .<lb/>
raa ara (aat S? aaiaaa ?'ra toaa?<lb/>
?a?atolHlll f llll Claim<lb/>
L<lb/>
AMERICAN PASSAGE<lb/>
NETWORK<lb/>
1-800-727-6783<lb/>
S Vr<lb/>
Zip<lb/>
I SewJ?crfcj?a.P0233<lb/>
I &amp;nvHaf.NC ?<lb/>
I<lb/>
J<lb/>
K I HI (LA i)l V<lb/>
YACHT CHARTERS<lb/>
J<lb/>
Attn: ECU Students'<lb/>
It's not too soon to siart<lb/>
planning that Spring Break tnp<lb/>
Spend seven day of fun and sun<lb/>
on a sailing yacht in the<lb/>
Bahamas. Call anytime for detail<lb/>
1-800-447-2458<lb/>
50 States Seminars our nationally known<lb/>
organization is seeking an assertive, dynamic<lb/>
and motivated individual to teach and con-<lb/>
duct "No Money Down" real estate seminars<lb/>
in your area. You have seen these seminars<lb/>
on T.V now conduct them yourself.<lb/>
$3,000.00 to $6000.00 per month possible<lb/>
pt $10,000.00 to $15,000.00 possible ft.<lb/>
Don't Delay, Call today for an interview,<lb/>
(208) 342-0950 or (208) 338-9960.<lb/>
1 s I CAROLINA FRIENDS<lb/>
' hn ?? illtx i tull menita-r-hip meeting<lb/>
( Eait .irvlinaFncndon Monday. Jan.<lb/>
?em. inC.t BK81 Thi?.may<lb/>
If it opportunity to pick up T-<lb/>
shirts before they an' re sold Io other<lb/>
mrmbrr Trnmeetingsh'uldlastaboul<lb/>
bm hour If you are unable to attend.<lb/>
pleasei illKeneot umlitf.Ft FSecntary<lb/>
or your Director of SWtOM AnOM<lb/>
intiH'sttd in joining EC F this semester<lb/>
are also enouiragetl to attend! Persons<lb/>
intenMl in joining East C an ilina Fn-nds<lb/>
Nni Id i meby Brewster A 40? any time<lb/>
during the month on January Only a<lb/>
limited numbvrof voluntetTsian beac-<lb/>
.tptid this semester Undergraduate<lb/>
students must have completed 12 hours<lb/>
nd havr a 2.2 GPA. Open to all Mu-<lb/>
d-nts suff,facultyandalumni.ECrpairs<lb/>
CDlMI volunteers with elementary thil-<lb/>
dn n in I'itt County in order to provide<lb/>
positive adult role models For more in-<lb/>
formation, contact Dr. Linda Mooney or<lb/>
Susan Moran in the Department of Soci-<lb/>
ologyAnthropology, 757-6883.<lb/>
The School of Education's Fourth An-<lb/>
nual work study t np to Puebla, Mexico is<lb/>
scheduled for this spnng break. Don't<lb/>
miss the opportunity of a lifetime! All<lb/>
ECU students may apply Applications<lb/>
and further details are available in the<lb/>
Dean's Complex, School of Education,<lb/>
Speight Bldg.<lb/>
CHANCELLOR TASK FORCE ON<lb/>
RECYCLING<lb/>
The Chancellor Task Force on Recycling<lb/>
meets every third Thursday of the month<lb/>
in Room 2002 of the General Classroom<lb/>
Building at 3:30 p.m.<lb/>
WALT DISNEY WORLD COLLEGE<lb/>
PROGRAM<lb/>
Wait Disney World Co representatives<lb/>
will present an information session on<lb/>
the Wah Disney World College Program<lb/>
on Monday, Jan 28th at 7 p.m. Atten-<lb/>
dance at this presentation is required to<lb/>
interview for the SummerFall 91 Col-<lb/>
lege Program Interviews are scheduled<lb/>
for Tuesday, January 29,1991 at 8:30a.m.<lb/>
in the Co-op office. All majors are en-<lb/>
couraged toattend. Rr informational<lb/>
applications, please contact the Co-op<lb/>
office.<lb/>
FDUCATION MAIORS<lb/>
The Department of Speech-Language<lb/>
and Auditory Pathokigy (SLAP) will be<lb/>
providing the speech and hearing<lb/>
screening for all students eligible for ad-<lb/>
mission to Upper Division of Teacher<lb/>
Education on Mondav, Jan. 28th; Tues-<lb/>
day,Jaa29th;andWednesday,Jan.30th<lb/>
The Department will he testing from<lb/>
5?M?0 p. m. each da v NO A PPOINT-<lb/>
MENT IS NEEDED (first come basfc)<lb/>
TheSLAP Department is located in Belk<lb/>
Annex on Chark'sSteoi<lb/>
AMERICAN MARKETING.<lb/>
ASSOCIATION.<lb/>
Welcome back! We hope everyone had a<lb/>
wonderful Holiday Break and you a<lb/>
ready to hit the books again! The first<lb/>
1991 AMA meeting will be Thursday,<lb/>
Jan 24th at 330 p m. in 1031 GCB. The<lb/>
guest speaker is Mark Rosenburg of<lb/>
Rosenburgand Ass?viates Advertising,<lb/>
Inc. in Creenville. All faculty and stu-<lb/>
dents are wekome.<lb/>
CAidEyimisjystKmiiiRisi<lb/>
Andre Role's magic spectacular tonight,<lb/>
Wright Auditonum, 8:00 p.m. - tickets<lb/>
$3.00 for students and available at ticket<lb/>
ottoeorat door. !llusknand reality will<lb/>
collide - Don't miss it!<lb/>
ATTENTION<lb/>
Dona nor- for L?al National Guards-<lb/>
men will be accepted in front of the<lb/>
Student Stores Friday, Jan. 25th from<lb/>
8:00 a.m-500 p.m. All items will be<lb/>
accepted but these items have been re-<lb/>
quested: all size batteries, blank VCR<lb/>
tapes, canned foods, whetstones to<lb/>
sharpen knives, stationery, pens and<lb/>
pencils, current music tapes. Families of<lb/>
Guardsmen need: diapers, baby for-<lb/>
mula, food and cash donations to assist<lb/>
with rent and heat These donations will<lb/>
be distributed to needy local families.<lb/>
HEY YOU<lb/>
Enthusiastic individuals a re encouraged<lb/>
to come out and see what Angel Flight is<lb/>
allabout Angel Flight isanaltemativeto<lb/>
Creek hfe Rush is Jan. 30 through Feb<lb/>
1st at 7:00 p.m. Meet the Angels on the<lb/>
third floor of Wright Auditorium (be<lb/>
sicfcthe soda shop). Hope toseeya there<lb/>
GAMMA BETA PHI HONORS<lb/>
SOCIETY<lb/>
Welcome Back Gambits' Business as<lb/>
usual - Officers meet at 6:15 in Mender<lb/>
hall 244. SarrwroonxSameday! Be there<lb/>
or be square<lb/>
WATER POtP RKISTRATJQN<lb/>
ANppfiKiAiaSNernNC<lb/>
Registration for Water Polo will be hcM<lb/>
on Tuesday, Jan. 29th at 3:00 p.m BIO<lb/>
103. An officials meeting will be held on<lb/>
Wednesday, Jan. 20th at 7:00 p.mBIO<lb/>
N-102. For further information, call 77<lb/>
6387 or stop by 204 CristcnKiry Gym-<lb/>
nasium<lb/>
1 Rev. Billy C Wirtz<lb/>
relieves war-time s<lb/>
n show at the Atti<lb/>
Bv Stuart Oliphant<lb/>
ires Editor<lb/>
the Attic Jan. 17,<lb/>
rend Brfly C. Wirtz paces<lb/>
? -louslv smoking<lb/>
ring evangelistic<lb/>
!udes his "guar-<lb/>
i;L? you laid in<lb/>
hoes, Wirtz pre-<lb/>
niedy routine as<lb/>
the final ? tick a wav. Wirtz<lb/>
?udience, h(pinu<lb/>
reality of Desert<lb/>
stnn h ? ng on hint for a<lb/>
is not from the<lb/>
tl e t,nt that it's a<lb/>
fa se to home says<lb/>
Wirt Ongmalh from Aiken.S.C<lb/>
maidefi i Southern audi-<lb/>
' ? hts biggest challenge<lb/>
1 his s uiable consider -<lb/>
imv ?.?pus. if humor<lb/>
ootl i. IV hero commonly<lb/>
I seek Therefore<lb/>
in tht South Wirtz's material has<lb/>
meaennitep'ssioitityot working<lb/>
too well, leaving the audience<lb/>
I it<lb/>
fclnanufhilf theaad encegets<lb/>
:v fur th. I ' t the 40-watt<lb/>
indubting bubbling lava lamp.<lb/>
Rev. Rilh- i Wtrtai to take the<lb/>
stag<lb/>
tVirt' begins hi5 ad t?v <lb/>
mg a sooUtii s rnesody on<lb/>
hiskevKurd Noticing the solemn<lb/>
.itmosphen ivs "put the<lb/>
u aron hold and lot me take you to<lb/>
m world " With the war out of<lb/>
?. ,sv, .Vut ? ' lunches into an<lb/>
Cy. . f ? ; satire.<lb/>
d<lb/>
One of the sho<lb/>
ments occurs wh<lb/>
forms "Just Friend:<lb/>
his "Backslider's Ti<lb/>
lease "Just Friendsl<lb/>
ofa lilted leuer'sreaj<lb/>
request made by<lb/>
"let's just be fnenc<lb/>
to Wirtz, his mspir<lb/>
I 'i-nds" came fro<lb/>
cumstance. After br<lb/>
his gjrtfriend, VVir<lb/>
ildn'l break<lb/>
had a rotten f?kinl<lb/>
nother highli)<lb/>
performance is a<lb/>
"Honkv Tonk Hej<lb/>
the tale c4 a gpod<lb/>
38-D bra size.<lb/>
Jesse Helms is I<lb/>
W irtz s bizarre SCJ<lb/>
"Big jess sung to<lb/>
Bad lohn " git at<lb/>
i t les- experiertd<lb/>
leigh gav commur<lb/>
?i cording I <lb/>
Aug 22 edii<lb/>
Consfatatiort, Wirta<lb/>
of hJaaeH as a moi<lb/>
"It's like Brother<lb/>
meeting Mark Ru<lb/>
them had expenea<lb/>
chetielic 'hOs in the<lb/>
Wirtz.<lb/>
As the evenn<lb/>
end,itwasevid 1<lb/>
helped tremend ij<lb/>
Gulf-related stre!<lb/>
formance am ?<lb/>
Greenyilie netied<lb/>
his distinctive So<lb/>
Rev. Billy C Wirtz<lb/>
wise iwar-shockedlj<lb/>
with laughter<lb/>
Local haircuti.nq tegand, Linwood Baker shows his st<lb/>
the trade Baker r,as faced many obsticles on his wa<lb/>
Greenville barber<lb/>
experiences, pitf a<lb/>
i<lb/>
By Houg Morris<lb/>
Sports Editor<lb/>
-ty daddv always toW rr if<lb/>
vim mpm ? nw good service, he'll<lb/>
aomm hick Thafi hM Unwood<lb/>
Baker.owTX-t of Riker'sbarbershop<lb/>
does ,<lb/>
"1 give ? nw the best haircut<lb/>
that! know how<lb/>
!t vou mv.11 haircut, you can<lb/>
pay rive dollars and hellbedonein<lb/>
about Hve nuni.tcs<lb/>
M, however, you have a few<lb/>
hoursland wanf to k now how Baker<lb/>
became ? bartxi, vou can pay 50<lb/>
cents for a Ber? sit and ,isten to<lb/>
him talk. And he will talk-<lb/>
He will toll vou all the truths he<lb/>
has picked up horn work and Hfe<lb/>
overtheyears. He will tell youabout<lb/>
all the people he has met. Andjf<lb/>
- you're lucky, you might even nnd<lb/>
r out tow Itenerant a tarter.<lb/>
"I decided N go ? <lb/>
school because my daddy wanted<lb/>
me to get a trade "he said<lb/>
Once he hadj<lb/>
wanted to be a b<lb/>
cousin went to<lb/>
Norfolk, V a<lb/>
"When 1 wei<lb/>
Baker, "I asked<lb/>
hair in North Cai<lb/>
'son you can cut!<lb/>
want That was<lb/>
didn't tell me w?<lb/>
North Carolina ij<lb/>
North Carolina<lb/>
Baker gradi<lb/>
average and wei<lb/>
mouth, Va.<lb/>
There he lea<lb/>
oi barbering.<lb/>
someone's hair i<lb/>
but how to sell tl<lb/>
showing them<lb/>
how to sell sor<lb/>
remove the oil<lb/>
Baker said that<lb/>
setting that way <lb/>
"Setting lifc<lb/>
in my cor<lb/>
mat yet said<lb/>
<pb facs="00058259_0013"/><lb/>
Januah 24 7?<lb/>
January 24.1991<lb/>
GUie JEaat (Earultntan<lb/>
7<lb/>
PERSONALS<lb/>
rp I la I OWCI V<lb/>
k iu!v! shfordl<lb/>
ildr I dance? 1<lb/>
? Murph) Alw<lb/>
i party good!<lb/>
y :n hi youi date<lb/>
v ? Kl iiono next time?<lb/>
? d ' b Ik(<lb/>
w OK lh.it<lb/>
1 the M-mes<lb/>
, i bed !? t our v<lb/>
' CaB tM<lb/>
i hi itkmsonl<lb/>
ight's hou<lb/>
? ??? ?' (llad vi<lb/>
h . ' to kno<lb/>
oil ? rcalsoo<lb/>
I ove, thesii<lb/>
? 11<lb/>
il t FOR SIGMA Nl<lb/>
' I v o:r? bv tH<lb/>
- from <lb/>
CVC1 W .lilted<lb/>
 I iiw due<lb/>
ti d no haan<lb/>
DISPLAY CLASSIFIED<lb/>
HELP WANTED<lb/>
nffi<lb/>
ll ? ?? ?fir 0M<lb/>
L<lb/>
i wm if tfS '? ?? o t? ?Nw<lb/>
? - ???? rww ? '? loofctnaj e<lb/>
 ??' II 1fNl CMfH ??<lb/>
??(??? . -? ? ? -acxwt4? Kv<lb/>
r?ir MNrt?rf ?? huMlf tof(to<lb/>
 x. w ?? - ? 11h xtx-rt to ?wr<lb/>
?-? fl'trta rr? nirfi t-ftanta<lb/>
w '??? ' 3 and tWfcB<lb/>
tOT ?r? ? i?M trvtv4<lb/>
?i ic? rto ? n t?nq af?r<lb/>
a-ad I - :vn ino?Ta(lcr cal c<lb/>
? - mKH wl-wwx at?f?a?<lb/>
AMERICAN PASSAGE<lb/>
NETWORK<lb/>
1-800-727-6783<lb/>
1 , ?lll I4T<lb/>
KATHLEEN YOl NC<lb/>
rni r ii-rs<lb/>
11 i <lb/>
tarl<lb/>
Break trip<lb/>
? fun and sun<lb/>
. h hi mi the<lb/>
inyurrtc tor detail<lb/>
147 1c<lb/>
national!) known<lb/>
ssertive, dynamic<lb/>
' ach and con-<lb/>
state seminars<lb/>
en these seminars<lb/>
i them yourself,<lb/>
r month possible<lb/>
0.00 possible ft.<lb/>
 r an interview,<lb/>
208)338-9960.<lb/>
n<lb/>
bj for<lb/>
 assist<lb/>
?<lb/>
I ? in ?. ?-<lb/>
I<lb/>
iged<lb/>
?I FliH. ,<lb/>
? I'tr<lb/>
?? ? ? -1 is jn "Ui through Fob<lb/>
I Meet the Angels on the<lb/>
?'?nkbt Auditorium (be-<lb/>
tashoi I iopetoveya there<lb/>
1 VMM BHArHI HONORS<lb/>
s()( 1FTY<lb/>
- . I .dmrxt' iSuMness a<lb/>
IS meet at h 1 5 m Menden-<lb/>
? m Same day' Be there<lb/>
W Q IUHHO KK.ISTRAJ10N<lb/>
M)OIT( i.MSVUrTING<lb/>
nfo? Water Polo will be held<lb/>
(fa) an iNth at Mil pm, BIO<lb/>
V'1 'iImj Is meeting will be held on<lb/>
A.xinosddv Jan 20?h at 71X1 p.m.BIO<lb/>
I or turther information, call 7S7-<lb/>
I ? Mop by 2tW Chnstenbury C.ym-<lb/>
'JMiim<lb/>
! Kev. Billy C. Wirtz<lb/>
relieves war-time stress<lb/>
in show at the Attic<lb/>
Hv Stu irl Oliphant<lb/>
Assistant I , .Hires I ditor<lb/>
I ?<lb/>
h<lb/>
n.<lb/>
the Attie Ian 17.<lb/>
( Witt paces<lb/>
anxiously smoking<lb/>
nng evangelistic<lb/>
I ivies his "guar-<lb/>
e.et you laid in<lb/>
hoes, Wtrta pre<lb/>
- medy routine as<lb/>
ilu iin.il nun ties tick away. Wirtz<lb/>
ndience. hoping<lb/>
t n ithereahryol Desert<lb/>
i i inting on him tor a<lb/>
? ' ? re is not from the<lb/>
I hoi the fact that u s a<lb/>
e to home sn s<lb/>
v irt.( hrigin iU ti?m Aiken.S (<lb/>
11 on; i lei a Southern audi<lb/>
to be his 1 iggesl challenge<lb/>
i.i' t rst indabte consider<lb/>
topicsofhumoi<lb/>
i 'i ,i ti I1- hero commonly<lb/>
I 1 us k Therefore<lb/>
m tlu Suth Wirtz's material has<lb/>
One of the shows better mo-<lb/>
ments occurs when Wirtz per<lb/>
forms "lust Friends a song from<lb/>
his "Backslider's Tractor Pull" re<lb/>
lease "lust friends" tells the Story<lb/>
of a jilted lover's reaction to a small<lb/>
request made bv his girlfriend,<lb/>
let s just be friends According<lb/>
to Wirt, his inspiration for "lust<lb/>
Friends" came from a similar cir<lb/>
cumstance. After breakingup with<lb/>
his girlfriend, Wirtz thought, "it<lb/>
wouldn't break my heart it she-<lb/>
had a rotten t king Christmas<lb/>
Another highlight ot Wirt's<lb/>
performance is a song entitled<lb/>
'Honkj look Hermaphrodite<lb/>
the tale ot a good ole DO) with a<lb/>
;s D bra size.<lb/>
Jesse 1 lelms is alst a topic tor<lb/>
Wirtz's bizarre sense of humor.<lb/>
Big less sung to the tune ot "Big<lb/>
Bad lihn "givesa satirical account<lb/>
ot lesss experiences fc ith the Ra<lb/>
leigh gay community<lb/>
c cording to an article in the<lb/>
Am; 22 edition ot The Atlanta<lb/>
tneaenniteposstothtyot working Constitution, Wirtz likes to think<lb/>
too well, leaving the audience of himself as a musical humorist<lb/>
vhutr<lb/>
Meaoi tud encegets<lb/>
? n t ; thi I rd of the 40 watt<lb/>
undulating bubbling lava lamp.<lb/>
R . Bill)Wirt2 to take the<lb/>
stace<lb/>
Wii tz I ? art bi play-<lb/>
ing a soothin : melod) on<lb/>
his keyboard Noti ing the solemn<lb/>
I) s "put the<lb/>
w ai ?'ii hold and let metakevou to<lb/>
n ivorld With the war out ?(<lb/>
inches into an<lb/>
' 1 satire<lb/>
A<lb/>
"It's like Brother Pave Gardner<lb/>
meeting Mark Russell if Nth of<lb/>
them had experienced the psy<lb/>
chedelic '60s In their youth says<lb/>
Wirtz<lb/>
As the evening came to an<lb/>
end, it was evident that Wirtz had<lb/>
helped tremendously in relieving<lb/>
Gulf-related stress. Wirtz's per-<lb/>
formance came at a time when<lb/>
Greenville needed a laugh With<lb/>
his distinctive Southern raunch,<lb/>
Rev. Billvt. Wirtz made an other-<lb/>
w ise war shocked audience howl<lb/>
with laughter.<lb/>
r oj (nc &amp; RKlhtt Rs'v<lb/>
Jean Claude Van! lamme piavs the part otl yon mthe new Universal<lb/>
City Studios fiim'i lonhean I von finds himseN caught up m an<lb/>
illegal lighting ring in ordei to made enough money to get across<lb/>
country to help save his brother s untroubled tamily<lb/>
Van Danime broadens artistic limits in 'Lionhearf<lb/>
By lewis Coble<lb/>
Statt Writer<lb/>
ean-Claude Van Damme<lb/>
reaches to new heights in the<lb/>
movie "1 lonhrart ' The movie<lb/>
was supported by a decent plot<lb/>
that challenged Van Damme to<lb/>
do his best acting<lb/>
Van I lamme portrays I von.a<lb/>
member ot the French Foreign<lb/>
Legion. Lyon is forced to go<lb/>
? W.OJ so he can reach his seri-<lb/>
ously injured brother in Los An-<lb/>
geles. Lyon experiences several<lb/>
,d entures before he reaches New<lb/>
York<lb/>
Upon reaching New York,<lb/>
Lyon discovers that he can reach<lb/>
Los Angeles - ithout money and<lb/>
assistance. While wandering the<lb/>
streets ot .Y l.von stumbles on<lb/>
to an illegal bare-knuckles fij ht<lb/>
Lyon wins the tight and :s be-<lb/>
friended by loshua (Harrison<lb/>
Page), ii savvy; ex-streetrighter.<lb/>
loshua takes l.von to mut<lb/>
Cynthia (Deborah Rennard), the<lb/>
sexy, but tough doyenne of New<lb/>
York's illegal, bare knuckles un-<lb/>
derground fight circuit With<lb/>
Cynthia's help, Lyon literally<lb/>
tights his way O Los Angeles<lb/>
Upon reaching LA Lyon finds<lb/>
out that his brothe- is dead and<lb/>
has lett a widow and child.<lb/>
1 von continues to fightsothat<lb/>
he can provide for his sister-in-<lb/>
law and her bild. However,<lb/>
Cynthia hasset upa fight for Lyon<lb/>
that he can't win so that she can<lb/>
bet against him.<lb/>
loshua discovers Cynthia's<lb/>
plan and tnes to help Lyon, but<lb/>
Lyon insists on fighting. To make<lb/>
matters worse, two men from the<lb/>
French Foreign Legion have dis-<lb/>
See 'Lionheart page 9<lb/>
Harvard graduate illustrates life in<lb/>
The Cartoon History of the Universe'<lb/>
By Bill Egbert<lb/>
Statt Writer<lb/>
? Pno:o Oy ECU Pnoto iab. Ce.es;e Hottn<lb/>
I oral hafcaJlting togaraJ, t inwood Baker shows his shows one ot his younger customers the finer points ot<lb/>
the irade Bakea has taced many obsticles on his way to becoming one Greenville's barbers<lb/>
Greenville barber reflects on past<lb/>
experiences, pitfalls of a touchy trade<lb/>
By Pong Morris<lb/>
Sports Fditor<lb/>
v 1v iUdih always told ir if<lb/>
v.iu giv i man good service, he'll<lb/>
come Kid ' ("hal swfcH Lmwood<lb/>
Baker.ovMiei ot B.iker'slwrbershop<lb/>
does<lb/>
"I give ami the beat haircut<lb/>
that I know ho<lb/>
It con wed a ii.urc-uLyoucan<lb/>
pay hve dollars a n.1 he'll Iv done in<lb/>
atnul tiv mtnuka<lb/>
If, however, you have a few<lb/>
hours, and w.mt to V now how Baker<lb/>
became ? barb?i. vou can pay 50<lb/>
cen?s tir a Pepsi an-1 sit and listen to<lb/>
him talk Ami he will talk.<lb/>
?lewill ?etl vou all the truths he<lb/>
luis pcktxl up from work and life<lb/>
over the years Hou cllyouabout<lb/>
all the people he has met And if<lb/>
vou re hKky. vou might even find<lb/>
out ht?w he Ixvam. a barber.<lb/>
I deckl'ti Id go to barber<lb/>
school because my daddy wanted<lb/>
Ml to get a trade he said.<lb/>
Oikc he had divided that he<lb/>
wanted to be a barber, he and his<lb/>
cousin went to barber school in<lb/>
Norfolk, Va.<lb/>
"When 1 went up there said<lb/>
Baker, "1 asked the man 'can 1 cut<lb/>
hair in North Carolina' and he said<lb/>
'son you can cut hair wherever you<lb/>
want That was true, but what he<lb/>
didn't tell me was that 1 needed a<lb/>
North Carolina license to work in<lb/>
North Carolina<lb/>
Baker graduated with a 105<lb/>
average and went to work in Ports-<lb/>
mouth, Va.<lb/>
There he learned all the tricks<lb/>
of barber ing. Not how to cut<lb/>
someone's hair or shave their face,<lb/>
but how to sell them a shampxxi by<lb/>
showing them their dandruff, or<lb/>
how to sell someone a mud rack to<lb/>
remove the oil on then face. But<lb/>
Baker said that he didn't feel right<lb/>
selling that way.<lb/>
"Selling like that wasn't right<lb/>
in my conscience, but 1 didn' t know<lb/>
that vet said Baker. "We were<lb/>
taught that when your DOSS told<lb/>
vou to do something, you did it. It<lb/>
he told vou to put something on<lb/>
backwards, you didn't argue, you<lb/>
did it;and when hecameback later<lb/>
on and said you put that on back-<lb/>
wards, bov' vou'd say 'well, that's<lb/>
the wav vou told me to Nine times<lb/>
J J<lb/>
out of 10 he'll say 'yes, 1 did<lb/>
Baker finally deckled to start<lb/>
selling the way that he wanted to<lb/>
when a customer threatened hislife.<lb/>
"He came back in and put a<lb/>
pistol to my head Baker said, "He<lb/>
said: 'you tricked me buddy. You<lb/>
tricked me out of my money, but<lb/>
you gave good service The nian<lb/>
said: 'Son, you don't know what<lb/>
you've done, do you?<lb/>
The man said that what Baker<lb/>
had done was not selling but was<lb/>
reallva waytotrickamanoutothis<lb/>
money. "1 said 'I see what you<lb/>
mean Baker said. "He was my<lb/>
best customer from then on<lb/>
After working in Virginia for<lb/>
See Baker, page 8<lb/>
I arrvGomckisacartoonist. He<lb/>
writes and draws comic books But<lb/>
C.onickisnoordinarv cartoonist and<lb/>
hislatest projeriisnoordinarycomic<lb/>
hook Heisa Harvard graduate with<lb/>
a Bachelor of Science degree in<lb/>
mathematics 1 liscornicbookisTJK<lb/>
Cartoon Ht I ?. ht Um erst.<lb/>
Atter he graduated from<lb/>
Harvard in 1967, (-onick took off<lb/>
cross-country with a speed junkie<lb/>
w ho tlunkod out of college and liked<lb/>
to draw psychedelic cartoons. The<lb/>
experience inspired him. and after<lb/>
bouncing around tor a tew years as<lb/>
a grad student at Harvard and a<lb/>
research fellow at a mathematics<lb/>
institute in Bombav, Go nick decided<lb/>
to turn his life to his tnie calling:<lb/>
doodKng.<lb/>
I le made a pilgrimage to San<lb/>
Francisco and became a disciple of<lb/>
noted illustrator Gilbert Shelton<lb/>
(perpetrator of the Fabulous Furry<lb/>
Freak Brothers). Under the tutelage<lb/>
oi his gum, Gonick conceived of his<lb/>
ambitious project<lb/>
The result so far is the first seven<lb/>
volumes, covering the Big Bang to<lb/>
Alexander the Great, which have<lb/>
recently been published in one book<lb/>
by Doubleday. It shows the daunt-<lb/>
ing scope of Gonick's endeavor. To<lb/>
explain his subject matter, he had to<lb/>
become a relative expert in physics,<lb/>
chemistry, evolutionary biology,<lb/>
paleontology, biblical scholarship<lb/>
and ancient history.<lb/>
Each of the seven volumes is<lb/>
ambitious in its scope. VohimeOne,<lb/>
"The Evolution of Everything<lb/>
covers the Big Ring to the develop-<lb/>
ment of the first human beings.<lb/>
Volume Two, "Sticks and Stones<lb/>
illustTateshumiinevoluiorifomour<lb/>
firsi excursions onto the savanna to<lb/>
the invention of writing.<lb/>
Gonick's work is no t what many<lb/>
might envision when they think of<lb/>
cartoon-strip history. He spent<lb/>
Coming Up<lb/>
months researching each volume.<lb/>
An extensive (and illustrated) bibli-<lb/>
ography lists sources for further<lb/>
mad ing.<lb/>
Gonick doesn't pare down his<lb/>
facts to squeeze them into his comic<lb/>
strip. In fact, he includes new, little-<lb/>
known theories which haven't made<lb/>
it to most texttwks yet. For in-<lb/>
stance, we've all heard of the old<lb/>
See History, page 9<lb/>
Thursday<lb/>
ATTIC<lb/>
Aunt Momby<lb/>
NEW DELI<lb/>
draft night<lb/>
MENDENHALL<lb/>
Flatliners<lb/>
Friday<lb/>
ATTIC<lb/>
The Treehuggers<lb/>
NEW DELI<lb/>
No Reason to Hate<lb/>
CROCK'S<lb/>
The Farm<lb/>
MENDENHALL<lb/>
Flatliners<lb/>
Saturday<lb/>
ATTIC<lb/>
Quadra Nixx<lb/>
NEW DELI<lb/>
Dillon Fence<lb/>
O'ROCK'S<lb/>
Mary on the Dash<lb/>
MENDENHALL<lb/>
Flatliners<lb/>
Sunday<lb/>
MENDENHALL<lb/>
Breakfast Club<lb/>
TAMPA<lb/>
Super Bowl XXV<lb/>
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(hat 7:00 pm BI?<lb/>
irthcrmfbrm?tion,call 757-<lb/>
? p by 204 Christcnbury Cynv<lb/>
1 Rev. Uilly C. Wirtz<lb/>
relieves war-time stress<lb/>
in show at the Attic<lb/>
?liphant<lb/>
ir? 1 dttoi Atti an 17. Wii i pa es lOUSlj smoking . evangelistic '? ides his "guar<lb/>
.1 you laid in s Wirtz pre ? ed) routine as ? i k av ,e Wirtz i idien e, In ping ? ealit) of 1 Vsert on 1nni for a is m t from the fa t th.it ii s a i li me. s.n s<lb/>
?. iken S v mthern audi . i ? st challenge labh i insider ? r?oi  :o. ominonk e. k 1 beretore s material h.ts<lb/>
ssioihty ol working<lb/>
wel ihe audience<lb/>
id .tht its<lb/>
? 1 the 40 wati<lb/>
ava lamp,<lb/>
i tak the<lb/>
ii solemn<lb/>
tys 'put the<lb/>
One ot the shows better mo<lb/>
ments incurs when Wirt per<lb/>
forms "lust Friends a song from<lb/>
his backslider's Iractor Pull" re<lb/>
lease lust Friends" tells thestory<lb/>
of a jilted lover's reaction to a small<lb/>
request made by his girlfriend,<lb/>
let s just be friends " According<lb/>
to Wirtz, his inspiration tor "lust<lb/>
I nnds' i .une from a similar cir<lb/>
i umstance Afterbreakingup with<lb/>
his girlfriend, Wirt thought, it<lb/>
wouldn't break my heart it she<lb/>
? tten f kingTiristmas "<lb/>
nother highlight ot Wirtz's<lb/>
performance is a song entitled<lb/>
"Honkv look Hermaphrcxiite<lb/>
the tale i f a good 'ole bo w ith a<lb/>
"s D bra size<lb/>
lesse 1 lelms is also a topic tor<lb/>
Wirtz's bizarre sense of humor<lb/>
Big less, sung to the tune of "Big<lb/>
Rid ohn " givesa satirical account<lb/>
of Ii s' evperiein es w ith the Ra<lb/>
I i i ommunit<lb/>
  -rdinr. t( . an artn le in th<lb/>
 llg 22 edi 1 h Mi ? ?!<lb/>
i tnstituti  Wirt likes to think<lb/>
of luniselt as a musical humorist<lb/>
It's hke Brother Dave Gardner<lb/>
meeting Mark Russell if Nab of<lb/>
them had experienced the ps)<lb/>
c hedelic '60s in their youth says<lb/>
Wirtz<lb/>
As the evening came to an<lb/>
end, it was evident that Wirtz had<lb/>
helped tremendousl) in relieving<lb/>
Gulf-related stress Wirtz's per<lb/>
formance came at a rime when<lb/>
i nville needed a laugh With<lb/>
his distinctive Southern raunch<lb/>
Bill) Wirtz made another<lb/>
ise wai hoc ked audicn e howl<lb/>
a ith lauehter<lb/>
Kighl up i- ?<lb/>
Kintry to<lb/>
?. .) r- '? )?.<lb/>
? ??  ? ? . ' gel icross<lb/>
troubled fan .<lb/>
Van Danime broadens artistic limits in 'Lionhearf<lb/>
By Lewis Coble<lb/>
st.itt Writer<lb/>
lean C laucie m I amme<lb/>
reaches to rt? u heights in the<lb/>
mo ie "1 ionheart fne rm<lb/>
was suppoi '?<lb/>
thai i ha 1 amm I<lb/>
d o 1 bi '<lb/>
 <lb/>
mbei f tl<lb/>
 forced I<lb/>
 . i M , so he can reach his seri-<lb/>
ously injured brother in Los An-<lb/>
Lyon experiences several<lb/>
adventures befi rehe n "aches New<lb/>
York<lb/>
1 Ipon : ' :  '??? ork,<lb/>
I yon disi that he can reach<lb/>
! os Angeles v thout money and<lb/>
assistai i While wandering the<lb/>
streetsofN I yon stumbles on<lb/>
to an illegal bare kniK kles tu ht.<lb/>
Lvon wins the tiht and is be<lb/>
f r i end ed<lb/>
Page), .i sav v;ex-stroetl ter<lb/>
oshua take; 1 - i t meel<lb/>
( ynthia 11 1t.c<lb/>
sexy, but t ugh doyenne ot<lb/>
York's illega i -<lb/>
? ? II ? : ?<lb/>
Cynthia's hel tera<lb/>
' ' IS his  : . '??'?<lb/>
Upon rea n find<lb/>
cut that his ' '<lb/>
has lett a wi ' I child<lb/>
? ? uestofightsothal<lb/>
he can provide tor his sister-in-<lb/>
ti I her child. However.<lb/>
. nthia hassetupa fight for Lyon<lb/>
that he can t win se that she can<lb/>
- ? igainst him.<lb/>
hua disi o or- "ynthia's<lb/>
I tries to help Lyon, but<lb/>
:i fighting. To make<lb/>
matters worse, two men from the<lb/>
French Foreign 1 egion havedis-<lb/>
Se- Lionheart' page 9<lb/>
??<lb/>
Harvard graduate illustrates life in<lb/>
The Cartoon History of the Universe'<lb/>
By Bill Egbert<lb/>
sun Writer<lb/>
km<lb/>
.<lb/>
??d. l inwood Baker shows his shows one of his younger customers tt ? pointsol<lb/>
the trad ?' laced many obsticles on his way to becoming one Greenville s barbers<lb/>
Greenville barber reflects on past<lb/>
experiences, pitfalls of a touchy trade<lb/>
By Doug Morris<lb/>
Sports Editor<lb/>
? 1 dad Iv avstold it if<lb/>
od service, WH<lb/>
? l at I inwood<lb/>
i tker.owru rofP ka sbarbershop<lb/>
doei<lb/>
I the best harcut<lb/>
that I<lb/>
lircut, you cw<lb/>
edoll in ? idheTlbedonein<lb/>
,lxiit five mini<lb/>
It, howev r, you have a tew<lb/>
hours .mdv Wtt I n how baker<lb/>
heeame a bad er, . on can pav 50<lb/>
cents for a Pepsi and sit and listen)<lb/>
hmitalk And he  ill talk<lb/>
Mevvtll'eil v" i all the truths he<lb/>
tes picked - wmVandHfc<lb/>
overtneyeors i'? ? Mlellyouabout<lb/>
all the H-op he has nut And it<lb/>
you're ruck) xnight even find<lb/>
out himlw became a b?er.<lb/>
i decided I'd g to briber<lb/>
school bi- mm my daddy wanted<lb/>
metoert???d heaaid<lb/>
Once he had decided that he<lb/>
wanted to be a barber, he and his<lb/>
cousin went to barber school in<lb/>
Norfolk. 'a<lb/>
"When I went up there said<lb/>
Baker, "I asked the man 'can I cut<lb/>
hair in Northarohna' and he said<lb/>
son you can cut hair wherever you<lb/>
want That was true, but what he<lb/>
didn't tell me was that I needed a<lb/>
North Carolina license to work in<lb/>
orth Carolina<lb/>
Baker graduated with a 105<lb/>
average and went to work in Ports-<lb/>
mouth, Va<lb/>
There he learned .ill the tricks<lb/>
ot barbenng. Not how to cut<lb/>
someone's hair or shave their face,<lb/>
but how to sell them a shampoo by<lb/>
showing them their dandruff, or<lb/>
how to sell someone a mud pack to<lb/>
remove the oil on their face. But<lb/>
Baker said that he didn't fed right<lb/>
selling that way.<lb/>
"Selling like that wasn't nght<lb/>
in mvconscience, but 1 didn't know<lb/>
that vet sard Baker "We wen<lb/>
taught that when your boss told<lb/>
you to do something, i did it. It<lb/>
he told wu to put something on<lb/>
backwards, you didn't argue, you<lb/>
did it: and when he came back later<lb/>
on and said 'you put that on back-<lb/>
wards. Ixn' you'd say 'well, that's<lb/>
the wa you told mete Nine times<lb/>
out of lb he'll sav 'yes, I did<lb/>
Baker finally decided to start<lb/>
selling the way that he wanted to<lb/>
when a customer threatened his life.<lb/>
"I le came back in and put a<lb/>
pistol to mv head Baker vnd, He<lb/>
said: 'you tricked me buddy. Yon<lb/>
tricked me out of my money, but<lb/>
von gave good service Phe man<lb/>
said: Son, you don't know what<lb/>
you've dime, do you?<lb/>
The man said that what Baker<lb/>
had done was not selling but was<lb/>
really a wa tot nek a manoutof ins<lb/>
monev "I said I see what you<lb/>
mean. Baker said He was my<lb/>
best customer from then on<lb/>
After working in Virginia for<lb/>
See Baker page 8<lb/>
? Ginkkisaw.rt-?-mis! I i<lb/>
writi sand draws comicbooks But<lb/>
Gonickisnoordinan cartoonistand<lb/>
hislr-iest project is no ordinan comk<lb/>
ook.H il lar ii I graduates ith<lb/>
. , ? ? ?.<lb/>
tter hi '? d from<lb/>
Harvard in l Gonick took ott<lb/>
cross-countrv with a speed junkie<lb/>
m ho flunked) utof college and liked<lb/>
I. dr.iw psvchedelk cartoons l"he<lb/>
experience inspired him aixi after<lb/>
bouncing around for a tt . years as<lb/>
a grad student at I larvard and a<lb/>
research fellow at a mathematics<lb/>
institutein Bombay, knickdecided<lb/>
to turn his life to his true calling<lb/>
doodling<lb/>
1 le made a pilgrimage to Sin<lb/>
1 rancisco and became a disciple ot<lb/>
noted illutrator albert Shelton<lb/>
(perpetrator ot the Fabulous I urry<lb/>
freak Brothers). Liuier the tutelage<lb/>
of hisguni.C .onick con. eived of his<lb/>
ambitious project<lb/>
'Hie result so tar is the first seven<lb/>
volumes, covering the Big Bang to<lb/>
Alexander the Great, which have<lb/>
n entb been published in onebi ok<lb/>
by Doubteday. It shews the daunt<lb/>
ing stupe ot c ionick's endeavor. To<lb/>
explain bis subject matter, he had to<lb/>
become a relative expert in physics<lb/>
chemistry, evolutionary biology,<lb/>
paleontology, biblical scholarship<lb/>
and ancient history.<lb/>
Each of the seven volumes is<lb/>
THE CMtVOOP fUpFORyor-rHB<lb/>
From the B1C BANG<lb/>
to Alexander the Grrat<lb/>
Lar ry Gonick<lb/>
4?<lb/>
SI7 ??S'<lb/>
ft- i V r " tfi<lb/>
ambitious in its v ope. i ilume ()ne,<lb/>
"he i solution of Everything,<lb/>
covers the big Bang to f develop<lb/>
merit of the first human beings.<lb/>
Volume fwo, "Sticks and Stones<lb/>
illustrateshumanevofutionf omour<lb/>
tirsi excursions onto the savanna to<lb/>
the invention of writing<lb/>
(ionick'sworkisnot whatmanj<lb/>
might envision when they think of<lb/>
cartoon-strip history. He spent<lb/>
Coming Up<lb/>
months researching each volume.<lb/>
An extensive (and illustrated) bibli-<lb/>
ography lists sources for further<lb/>
reading.<lb/>
(,oiikk doesn't pare down his<lb/>
tacts to squeeze them into his comic<lb/>
strip In tact, he includes new. little-<lb/>
know nthtvnes which haven't made<lb/>
it to most textbooks yet. For in-<lb/>
stance, we've all heard ot the old<lb/>
See History, page 9<lb/>
Thursday<lb/>
ATTIC<lb/>
Aunt Momby<lb/>
NEW DELI<lb/>
draft night<lb/>
MENDENHALL<lb/>
Flatliners<lb/>
Fridav<lb/>
ATTIC<lb/>
The Treehuggers<lb/>
NEW DELI<lb/>
No Reason to I UtE<lb/>
CROCK'S<lb/>
The Farm<lb/>
MENDENHALL<lb/>
Flatliners<lb/>
Saturday<lb/>
ATTIC<lb/>
Quadra Nix.x<lb/>
NEW DELI<lb/>
Dillon Fence<lb/>
CROCK'S<lb/>
Mary on the Dash<lb/>
MENDENHALL<lb/>
Flatliners<lb/>
Sunday<lb/>
MENDENHALL<lb/>
Breakfast Club<lb/>
TAMPA<lb/>
Super Bowl XXV<lb/>
<pb facs="00058259_0015"/><lb/>
f<lb/>
1 ' <lb/>
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iilic lEast (Caruiiniau<lb/>
7<lb/>
Rev. Hilly C. Wirtz<lb/>
I- ves war-time stress<lb/>
si ,v at the Attic<lb/>
liphanl One of the shows better n<lb/>
ires I: Jiioi ments occurs when Wirtz pei<lb/>
forms fust Friends, asongfrom<lb/>
 " 17 his Ba kshder's 1 ra tor Pull rv<lb/>
ise "Just Friends" fells theston<lb/>
?. . tionroasn<lb/>
? ! made by his girlfriend<lb/>
t be friends c ording<lb/>
inspiration for usl<lb/>
n fi milai<lb/>
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? Iner<lb/>
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?<lb/>
Van Damme broadens artistic limits in 'Lionhearf<lb/>
) Lewis Coble<lb/>
?<lb/>
 ?<lb/>
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? e vei<lb/>
?<lb/>
?<lb/>
? .<lb/>
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: . ? ? Cvnthia<lb/>
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? I  O dlS-<lb/>
Lionheart paq- ?<lb/>
? , .<lb/>
Harvard graduate illustrates life in<lb/>
The Cartoon History of the Universe'<lb/>
B) Bill 1 gberl<lb/>
suit riter<lb/>
THE CMBPOOW HJTORjrTHB<lb/>
' O WlltT .<lb/>
-<lb/>
Il<lb/>
peneno ;<lb/>
? - ii<lb/>
? ? ?<lb/>
hi : trom<lb/>
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? i speed junkie<lb/>
M2i<lb/>
I Baker shows his shows one o! I . ?<lb/>
? . . ? . ? ? ? ? way to be omingom ireei barbei<lb/>
Greenville barber reflects on past<lb/>
experiences, pitfalls of a touchy trade<lb/>
! oi<lb/>
I<lb/>
i n, ,? he ha I dci ided tli.it he taugl t thai<lb/>
ted to be .i barber, he and his von tod omotl<lb/>
cousin wenl to barber school in he lold you In put something<lb/>
! Il<lb/>
t,U 1 ii  it Norfolk, i<lb/>
c he'l<lb/>
V 11.1 11 s<lb/>
; litor<lb/>
l i 'MMIl VM '111 11 ' Illlll -m r m x 'i hi pi' ?  ? ' " '<lb/>
bat kwards, you didn I argue you<lb/>
When I went ui there said did it; and when he came back later<lb/>
I mvd Baker, "I asked the man can I cut onand said -u put th.it onback<lb/>
.barbershop hair in North Carolina'and he said wards, boy'you "that's<lb/>
'son you an cut hair wherever you the way you told mi to Nine times<lb/>
haircut wantThat was true, but what he out of 10 he'll sa yes, I did<lb/>
didn't tfll me was thai I needed a Baker finalh dci ided to tart<lb/>
I u,an North Carolina license to work in selling the way that hi wanted to<lb/>
hedonein North Carolina whena isl er threatened hislife<lb/>
BakeT graduated with a 105 "He cam back in and pui a<lb/>
i few average and went to work in Ports pistol to my head Bakersaid Mi<lb/>
kei mouth, Va said 'you tricked me buddy You<lb/>
   i rhere he learned ill the tri ks tricked me oul ol my mono) hut<lb/>
IsiIlistento I barber.ng Not how to cut you gave gI service Ihe nun<lb/>
 , , . I(L someone's hair or shave their face, said Son you don't know whal<lb/>
nun t.??  . , i -<lb/>
,11 the truths he buthow to sell them a shampoo by you vedone doyou<lb/>
,Y and life showing, them thou dandruff, or fhe man said i<lb/>
rtoons i1 ?<lb/>
ind ifter<lb/>
h,mrv ingaround ? yearsas<lb/>
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research I I math mati s<lb/>
? ? . nickd led<lb/>
tun fe to Ins true ?<lb/>
id? i " imagi ' ? Sai<lb/>
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noted illustratoi iiltx rl<lb/>
erpeti f the I abulous i urn,<lb/>
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projec I<lb/>
Tieresult so far isthe first seven<lb/>
volumes, covering the Big ban to<lb/>
Alcxandi r the I Ireat, which have<lb/>
,ntl been published inoncbook<lb/>
In ! ubled i) Il shows thedaunl<lb/>
ing scope ol c ionick's endeavor. I o<lb/>
explain hissubje t matter, he had to<lb/>
be ? m .i relative expert in physk s<lb/>
chemistry. evolutional-) biolog)<lb/>
paleontoli igy, biblical s, holarship<lb/>
and aiii ienl histor .<lb/>
la, h ol tho seven volumes is<lb/>
Vrom the MC YAM<lb/>
to Alexander the Great<lb/>
Larry Gonick<lb/>
?b<lb/>
immk<lb/>
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tensive (and illustrated) biWi-<lb/>
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ck doesn't pare down his<lb/>
illustrateshumanevoluiionf:om(Xir ? l l ?squeeze them into his comic<lb/>
nrsi, :? ? ntotl tnp. In fact, he includes new, little-<lb/>
ttn ii ntion of wnhi<lb/>
(onick'sworkisnol<lb/>
might envision when the think ol<lb/>
cartoon-strip histon 1 le :<lb/>
Coming Up<lb/>
known theories which haven'tmade<lb/>
it ? most textbooks yet For m<lb/>
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i<lb/>
llyouaboul howtosellsornecmeamudpackto had dom was not selling but was<lb/>
met And it remove the oil on their face Bui reallyawaytotnckamanoutolhis<lb/>
ightevenfind Baker said that he didn't feel rigjht mone) I said I see what you<lb/>
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?,   I go to badvr "S-ll.ng like that wasn't right bestcustorm i fromthenon<lb/>
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e Baker page 8<lb/>
Thursday<lb/>
ATTIC<lb/>
Aunt Momby<lb/>
NEW DELI<lb/>
draft night<lb/>
MENDENHA1 1<lb/>
Flatliners<lb/>
1rid ay<lb/>
ATTIC<lb/>
The Treehuggers<lb/>
NEW DEI I<lb/>
No Reason to 1 late<lb/>
CROCK'S<lb/>
rhe Farm<lb/>
MENDENHA1 I<lb/>
Flatliners<lb/>
Saturday<lb/>
11K<lb/>
Quadra 'ixx<lb/>
1 W DEL!<lb/>
Dillon 1 ence<lb/>
O'RCK K S<lb/>
Mary on the Hash<lb/>
MENDENHA11<lb/>
Ratliners<lb/>
Sunday<lb/>
1t NDENHALL<lb/>
Breakfast Club<lb/>
TAMPA<lb/>
super Bowl XXV<lb/>
<pb facs="00058259_0016"/><lb/>
8 fllhg ggflt (Karitlftiiitti Jamuv Oa iqq1<lb/>
Campus Voice<lb/>
Do you feel that the conflict in<lb/>
the Persian Gulf is comparable to<lb/>
the conflict in Vietnam?<lb/>
Jennifer McClelland, Freshman<lb/>
Elementary Education<lb/>
"No, wc have more people in support of<lb/>
this war<lb/>
John Carawan, Sophomore<lb/>
History<lb/>
"No, the situation isdiffercnt. I don't think<lb/>
we'll lose as many people<lb/>
Larry King, Senior<lb/>
Psychology<lb/>
"No, we're there for a totally different<lb/>
purpose?trying to stopa madman. There's<lb/>
a generally positive response to this war<lb/>
Mike Harvey, Junior<lb/>
Political Science<lb/>
"Comparable yes, but certain elements are<lb/>
not. They arc both police actions. Also,<lb/>
there was UN support at the beginning of<lb/>
the Vietnam conflict<lb/>
Jeff Watson, Freshman<lb/>
History<lb/>
"No, there's a better reason for being there.<lb/>
Also, it won't be as long or suffer as many<lb/>
casualties. It is clearly stated why we're<lb/>
there<lb/>
?Compiled by Matthew D. Jones<lb/>
(Photos by Jill Cherry?ECU Photo Lab)<lb/>
Metal Notes<lb/>
Welcome to the firsglment of lCfe" NotftH&amp;year. On<lb/>
behalf of Metal Notes and myself, this week's Notes are dedi-<lb/>
cated to my father, brother and the rest of the armed forces<lb/>
serving our country in 'Operation Desert Storm If it wasn't for<lb/>
the armed forces securing our privileges as US. citizens, we<lb/>
wouldn't have the right to rock.<lb/>
Speaking of the situation in the Middle East, Poison has<lb/>
graciously sent 100,000 copies of their Flesh and Blood LP to the<lb/>
servicemen and scrvicewomen in Saudi Arabia and the Persian<lb/>
Gulf.<lb/>
And now. on with the news. Whitesnake bassist Rudy<lb/>
Sarzo hasa new band in the works. Tentatively called Sun King,<lb/>
the band features guitarist John Lowry, drummer Richard<lb/>
Danielson, keyboardist Doug Allen and singer Dan. Their music<lb/>
is described as "song-oriented commercial hard rock<lb/>
Guitarist Rcb Beach of Winger has issued an instructional<lb/>
video titled "Cutting Loose as did his bandmate Rod<lb/>
Morgenstein, who has a drum tape out called "Putting it all<lb/>
Together<lb/>
On Jan. 29, Armored Saint will releasea home video, "A Trip<lb/>
Thru Red Times And the Desperate Times video collection will<lb/>
include tapes from thrashdeathcore acts Napalm Death,<lb/>
Venom, Coroner, plus a compilation featuring Mordred,<lb/>
Watchtower, Kreator, Voi Vod and Celtic Frost. Also on this<lb/>
date, David Lee Roth's A Little Ain't Enough will make its debut.<lb/>
Every year on Dec. 14, Las Vegas rock fans will celebrate<lb/>
Slaughter Day in honor of the melodic metal band. Slaughter,<lb/>
according to the mayor of the ci ry. Mark Slaughter and company<lb/>
arc still making sales with their first record, Stick it to Ya, which<lb/>
has achieved multi-platinum status.<lb/>
Rap and metal have been making headlines together re-<lb/>
cently. 2 Live Crew is being sued by Van Halen's record com-<lb/>
pany for the unauthorized use of Eddie Van Halen's guitar riff<lb/>
from "Ain't Talkin' About Love" on one of their songs. And the<lb/>
nasty rappers ha ve been accused of using the beginning ri ff off of<lb/>
Guns-n-Roses "Sweet Child O Mine" on the same track. Also,<lb/>
the guitar riff from Roy Orbison's "Oh, Pretty Woman" is used in<lb/>
another 2 Live Crew tune.<lb/>
And if that wasn't enough, Tone Loc has agreed to pay a<lb/>
$40,000 fee for the unauthorized use of the riff in Van Halen's hit<lb/>
"Jamie's Cryin This, of course, was the alternative to being<lb/>
sued.<lb/>
Until next week, may God Bless the USA and all the men and<lb/>
women serving in Operation Desert Storm so we can all keep<lb/>
rockin' in the free world!<lb/>
?Compiled by "Dizzy" Deana Nevglotki<lb/>
Bits and Pieces<lb/>
War coverage displaces NBC soaps<lb/>
NBC is using Faith Daniels' reports on the Gulf war to<lb/>
heighten interest among women for her daytime news show, "A<lb/>
Closer Look which begins Jan. 28. It will have daily war<lb/>
coverage. NBCs daytime war coverage has included Daniels'<lb/>
reports on schoolchildren and war and a psychologist advising<lb/>
mothers on how to discuss war with their children.<lb/>
Magazines struggle for information<lb/>
The Gulf war has the newsweeklies on full alert. The usual<lb/>
long Saturday of writing and editing stretched into the night at<lb/>
Time and Newsweek as they struggled to cover the biggest war<lb/>
story since Vietnam. Both worked past usual deadlines this week<lb/>
to get the latest information into the issues.<lb/>
 , ac?frm?l mt, USATOOAYfAt Clf<lb/>
Practice caution when<lb/>
mixing cold medicines<lb/>
From Staff Report<lb/>
It's once again the time of year<lb/>
that stuffy noses and bothersome<lb/>
coughs will send millionsof people<lb/>
in search of relief. Believe it or not,<lb/>
an individual can developasmany<lb/>
as 200 colds in a lifetime. While<lb/>
some people will head tothedoctor<lb/>
at the first sign of a cold, many<lb/>
people will practice self-medica-<lb/>
tion ? meaning a visit to the<lb/>
pharmacy instead of the physician.<lb/>
But consumers whodon't read<lb/>
labels put themselves at risk for<lb/>
drug interactions caused by un-<lb/>
wisely mixing medications.<lb/>
"Drug interaction is the<lb/>
modification of the effect of one<lb/>
drug by another explains Dr.<lb/>
Daniel Hussar, Remington Pro-<lb/>
fessor of Pharmacy at the Phila-<lb/>
delphia College of Pharmacy and<lb/>
Science. "Although some drug<lb/>
interactions can be used positively<lb/>
by a physician, many diminish or<lb/>
negate the effectiveness or safety<lb/>
of one or both drugs<lb/>
According to Hussar, drug<lb/>
interaction may be a particular<lb/>
problem when combining cold<lb/>
medications with prescription<lb/>
drugs. "Oral decongestants are<lb/>
some of the most common medi-<lb/>
cations used to treat colds. They<lb/>
relieve nasal congestion by<lb/>
shrinking swollen blood vessels<lb/>
for easier breathing, but they also<lb/>
have the potential to interact<lb/>
negatively with other medica-<lb/>
tions said Hussar. "Forexample,<lb/>
a non-prescription oral deconges-<lb/>
tant may increase blood pressure<lb/>
and work against the action of<lb/>
medications that have been pre-<lb/>
scribed for the treatment of high<lb/>
blood pressure. Someone taking<lb/>
medication to treat high blood<lb/>
pressure or heart disease should<lb/>
consider a vaporizer or anexternal<lb/>
decongestant like Vicks VapoRub,<lb/>
which won't interact the way pills<lb/>
or other oral medicines can<lb/>
Hussar says that consumers<lb/>
can avoid drug interactions by<lb/>
becoming more knowledgeable<lb/>
about the medications they take,<lb/>
both prescription and over-the-<lb/>
counter. Hesuggeststhefollowing<lb/>
tips for safe self-midicating this<lb/>
cold season.<lb/>
? Read lables.<lb/>
? Talk with your doctor or<lb/>
pharmacist so that they are aware<lb/>
of all the medicines you are taking,<lb/>
prescription or over-the-counter.<lb/>
? Consider alternatives, such<lb/>
asexternal medications. Usea safe,<lb/>
effective external medication like<lb/>
Vicks VapoRub or a vaporizer,<lb/>
which won't interact the way pills<lb/>
or other oral medicines can.<lb/>
? Try to visit only one phar-<lb/>
macy. The more pharmacies you<lb/>
Baker<lb/>
Continued from page 7<lb/>
abou t three years, Baker decided he<lb/>
wanted to return to North Carolina.<lb/>
But he found out that his Virginia<lb/>
classes and apprenticeship did not<lb/>
certify him to cut hair in North<lb/>
Carolina. In order to be able to cut<lb/>
hair in North Carolina, he had to go<lb/>
back to school.<lb/>
He returned to school in<lb/>
Durham, but was not accepted im-<lb/>
mediately.<lb/>
They didn't like to have people<lb/>
come in from out of state Baker<lb/>
said. "They said 'son, you took<lb/>
money from North Carolina to Vir-<lb/>
ginia. Now we want some of that<lb/>
Virginia money herein NorthCaro-<lb/>
lina<lb/>
The school finally accepted<lb/>
Baker and he graduated. He went<lb/>
on to work a 36-month apprentice-<lb/>
ship in Bethel.<lb/>
After he was finished with his<lb/>
apprenticeship, he returned to<lb/>
Greenville to open his own barber<lb/>
shop. Baker said that people did not<lb/>
believe that he would be able to<lb/>
make any money in Greenville, be-<lb/>
cause nobody knew him.<lb/>
"Thebest advertisement is word<lb/>
of mouth Baker said. They say a<lb/>
person's mouth is like a (newspa-<lb/>
per). I rented a store behind the<lb/>
Pfggry Wiggly I stayed mere 15<lb/>
years<lb/>
Baker has moved one more time<lb/>
since then. He now owns a store<lb/>
near his house on Route 33 Just out-<lb/>
side of Greenville. He hasabig mir-<lb/>
ror so customers can make sure he<lb/>
cuts their hair the way they want it<lb/>
And when he cuts hair, he talks.<lb/>
use, the more difficult it is for a<lb/>
pharmacist to keep track of all the<lb/>
medications you take and their<lb/>
potential for interaction.<lb/>
? Organize a medication<lb/>
management system. Keep track<lb/>
of your medicine with a chart or<lb/>
other system.<lb/>
In celebration of Vicks<lb/>
VapoRub's 100 years of safe cold<lb/>
relief, the makers of VapoRub are<lb/>
offering a free brochure by Dr.<lb/>
Hussar on better medication<lb/>
management. For a copy, send a<lb/>
self-addressed, stamped envelope<lb/>
to: "Medication Management To-<lb/>
day P.O. Box 15329, Dept. M<lb/>
Stamford. CT 06902.<lb/>
Heroes Are Here Too<lb/>
Welcomes back the faculty<lb/>
and students<lb/>
?All card singles 25 off<lb/>
?All sets U)ri off<lb/>
?New comics in on Frida<lb/>
?All new comics 109 off<lb/>
?Whole line of comic and curd supplies<lb/>
?1991 Topps and Donruss 16.50 a box<lb/>
?1990 Fleer Basketball 19.95 a box<lb/>
116 E.Sth Street<lb/>
Across from The Sports<lb/>
7 5 7 094 8<lb/>
1109 Charles Blvd.<lb/>
Greenville NC<lb/>
758-4251<lb/>
Convenient Drive-Thru<lb/>
Jan. 15 through Jan. 31<lb/>
Present your ECU ID<lb/>
&amp; Receive 10 off all<lb/>
Regular Price cassettes<lb/>
and CDs<lb/>
Also: $2.00 Video Rentals with<lb/>
ECU ID<lb/>
"RUSH"<lb/>
Ti appa Mpha<lb/>
"A Step In The Right Direction"<lb/>
Winner of the 1990 Chancellor's Cup<lb/>
Athletic Championship<lb/>
?1989 National Chapter Excellence Award<lb/>
?1988-89 Most Improved Regional Chapter Award<lb/>
and Regional Chapter of the Year Recipients<lb/>
?1988-89 Interfraternity Council's Most Outstanding<lb/>
Fraternity Chapter Award<lb/>
Jan. 22nd: Meet the Brothers of 7HCA<lb/>
23rd: Meet the Ladies of XQ<lb/>
24th: Meet the Ladies of AAtt<lb/>
25th: Invitation only with AsA<lb/>
For Information Call 758-3152<lb/>
Rush will be held at the Pirate Club<lb/>
History<lb/>
"primordial soup" theory of the ori-<lb/>
gins of life, but in the first volume, in<lb/>
achaptercalled "SouporSandwich'<lb/>
Gonick inaandans the reader to i<lb/>
newer, more phusUe theory which<lb/>
states that life came about not as a<lb/>
soup,butasanopn faced sand<lb/>
(honestly)<lb/>
He even mention wa ko, fringe<lb/>
theories that sour neat late<lb/>
Morgan's "aquari ape"thi<lb/>
Gonick m ta&amp; which<lb/>
many textbooks overtook, present-<lb/>
ing new views trv, ml . rr?,st<lb/>
readers Volume . hoth<lb/>
a<lb/>
Lionhearr<lb/>
covered i  ,<lb/>
mined to bring hrn I K-k no matter<lb/>
what.<lb/>
Van Damn v.v<lb/>
eralmovi. u, the past ears,bul<lb/>
"Lionheart" lepn . nts the first<lb/>
movie with any true tthat v.<lb/>
Dtemme has acfa<lb/>
Daaiame'smoviesareai tionm -<lb/>
that center mamlv on his fighting<lb/>
ability. In thisn-<lb/>
tarsnotonhoi th it on the<lb/>
people live! : he movie e<lb/>
very similar te the hw T - ? m<lb/>
in itschara a r<lb/>
Van Don m tingimpn ted<lb/>
in the him f It a tualh had some<lb/>
very good scenesand i, ? .il -?me<lb/>
pronvseofbecorranga decent actor<lb/>
The svi?. with the sister in i.iw<lb/>
and niece were un good and dis<lb/>
played a tot of h<lb/>
Jean-Claude Van Damme first<lb/>
emend tin- pubiii eye as a Euro-<lb/>
pean karate hampi m. Van I temme<lb/>
was bom in Brussels, Belgium and<lb/>
began karati at age i I.<lb/>
old. Van<lb/>
Damme had obtained Ms black belt,<lb/>
won the Eun pean championship,<lb/>
and opened his own gvm.<lb/>
Hi (wever. Van Dammi had al-<lb/>
Jean Fagan will<lb/>
discuss Harriet<lb/>
Jacobs "Slave Girl"<lb/>
Bv I ara Ellington<lb/>
Staff Writer<lb/>
The Graduate Colloquium<lb/>
Program of Hast Carolina<lb/>
University's Department of Fnghsh<lb/>
is sponsoring the second annual Tag<lb/>
Ix-cture.<lb/>
The tc , ! - ties is a<lb/>
scholarship program in memor) I<lb/>
the late ' k and Mr.<lb/>
Creenvitte<lb/>
Dr. ean Fagan Yelltn, an English<lb/>
professoral Pacel niversityinNew<lb/>
York" "iiv, will discuss theautobio-<lb/>
graphnal book bv Harriet Jacobs<lb/>
"Incivlentsm the 1 ifcoi a Slavedrl<lb/>
Jacobs was -la' irl in Edenton,<lb/>
North Carolina, in ae mid 18 Qs<lb/>
Her book describes her life, includ-<lb/>
ing her relatir ?hip ithhermaster,<lb/>
herownfamilv.and her escape from<lb/>
slavorv after seven years i hiding<lb/>
in her grandmother s<lb/>
Written in 1861 under an<lb/>
anonymous name the book was<lb/>
laferargucd to be fat tuallvincornx:t<lb/>
Yellin will discuss her biographical<lb/>
research of Jacobs story, and her<lb/>
verification of the facts in the hook.<lb/>
Yellin wrote the foreword to the<lb/>
book in addition toaaJdang footnotes.<lb/>
Her presentation will include a slide<lb/>
show.<lb/>
The lecture wiil be held on<lb/>
Tuesday, Jamnm 22 at B:00 p.m. in<lb/>
the General Classroom Building<lb/>
1031 (ECU). Areccption will follow<lb/>
For further information, please<lb/>
contact Tom Shields, Department of<lb/>
English, 757-6715 or 757-6041.<lb/>
Save a Tree<lb/>
and recycle<lb/>
" this and<lb/>
J future<lb/>
editions<lb/>
of<lb/>
The Eiist<lb/>
(iroliiiian.<lb/>
ahoul<lb/>
the f<lb/>
and:<lb/>
ti -acr<lb/>
intelfe<lb/>
suffit<lb/>
Storwl<lb/>
S Kk<lb/>
Berta<lb/>
hi<lb/>
hi<lb/>
Con<lb/>
hon<lb/>
i tmi<lb/>
tainej<lb/>
Retm<lb/>
-I<lb/>
1<lb/>
ing '<lb/>
-<lb/>
I<lb/>
is prj<lb/>
but'<lb/>
<lb/>
?<lb/>
in h<lb/>
j<lb/>
I<lb/>
I<lb/>
j<lb/>
mo vi<lb/>
?I<lb/>
<pb facs="00058259_0017"/><lb/>
?s Are Here Too<lb/>
omes hack the faculty<lb/>
and students<lb/>
ippltes<lb/>
50 .1 ho<lb/>
KS<lb/>
&amp; 1 5th Sued jfifjjXfiS<lb/>
Din Ilk' Sports Pad <lb/>
 09 4 X<lb/>
.?<lb/>
1109 Charles Blvd.<lb/>
Greenville NC<lb/>
758-4251<lb/>
'onvenienl Drive-Thru<lb/>
null Jan<lb/>
lirECI ID<lb/>
09t off all<lb/>
31<lb/>
? ' C aSSCtteS<lb/>
Ds<lb/>
?o Rentals ith<lb/>
II)<lb/>
H"<lb/>
<lb/>
fttjpfia<lb/>
n Direction"<lb/>
Ihancellor's Cup<lb/>
pionship<lb/>
Kvellence Award<lb/>
jionai Chapter Award<lb/>
(he Year Recipients<lb/>
it's Most Outstanding<lb/>
er Award<lb/>
others of 71KA<lb/>
pies of XQ<lb/>
HeS ()f Jl<lb/>
fily with AsA<lb/>
all 758-3152<lb/>
ie Pirate Club<lb/>
History<lb/>
primofdMl soup" theory of theori-<lb/>
grnsof life, but in the first volume, in<lb/>
11 hapterealkxl "S ?uporSandwich<lb/>
( .onick introduces the reader Ion<lb/>
ivwrr iikwe plaiiMble theory which<lb/>
Stales that life came about not as a<lb/>
 up, butasanopm faced sandwich<lb/>
nt nesth)<lb/>
Heevenrn?n;innswacko,fringe<lb/>
theories thai sound neat, like Elaine<lb/>
Morgan's "aquatii ape" theory.<lb/>
( .nick im bdes details which<lb/>
? textbooks overlook, present-<lb/>
h  new views that will surprise most<lb/>
readers. VotumraSrxaiidSevenfbotfi<lb/>
"Lionheart"<lb/>
. ? ered I.von and they ate deter-<lb/>
mined to bring him ha k no matter<lb/>
what<lb/>
Van I tommel as starred in sev<lb/>
eral movie hi ttv iust so years, but<lb/>
I tonheart" represents the first<lb/>
movie with any true plot that Van<lb/>
: femme has led in Most ot Van<lb/>
to mote's movies are tion movies<lb/>
thai center mainly on his fighting<lb/>
ability !r this movie, the fUmcen<lb/>
t.TsnotnnK (.nthfights, but on the<lb/>
lives as well The movie is<lb/>
similar to the first Rocky" film<lb/>
in it- i hara ler<lb/>
diii XnniiK' s,? tingimproved<lb/>
in the film I Ie m tnallv had some<lb/>
very good scenesand showed some<lb/>
I ?n mise A becominga decent acti r<lb/>
i Im scenes with the sister m law<lb/>
and niece wen- very good .uxl dis<lb/>
?-I .i lot oi hear!<lb/>
lean laude Van I anwne tirst<lb/>
entered the public eye as a Euro<lb/>
:? inkaratei hampion.Vanl Damme<lb/>
?? in Brussels, Belgium and<lb/>
? . n karate al ige 11<lb/>
? '? r hew is20-years-old,Van<lb/>
? dhisbb kbolt.<lb/>
Europi an championship,<lb/>
and op ned hi: i ?wn gym.<lb/>
Hov  ? Van Darren hadal-<lb/>
Jean Fagan will<lb/>
discuss I larriet<lb/>
Jacobs 'Slave Girl1<lb/>
Kv I ara Mlington<lb/>
M.iff VVn.T<lb/>
rhe Gra luatc( ollolmum<lb/>
Program ol E i?.t Carolina<lb/>
1 nivi iMtv's ). partnlento! English<lb/>
isspons (ring the second annual Tag<lb/>
1 oi hire.<lb/>
 1 (, 1,? series is a<lb/>
iin men 'rv of<lb/>
the lati Di ' ' ?1 Ha rag of<lb/>
ilk<lb/>
1 ft lean Fagan 11Im.an English<lb/>
profi oral Pace Uni. ersity in New<lb/>
rt ? !?? ivifldi i u- the auto bio<lb/>
graph .i) b -ok b t1 irnrt lacobs,<lb/>
lr i l ntsin thel ifeifaStaveGirl<lb/>
, si,rrl in Edenton,<lb/>
Nortl ? an din i, in lie mid-1800s.<lb/>
I (or book di's. ribes hor life, mclud-<lb/>
errelal i :ihhi r master,<lb/>
? vnfamil md h? scape from<lb/>
. . ?  t .Mrs of hiding<lb/>
r grand n ?lhi i ?i lose!<lb/>
v. ritten in 1111 under an<lb/>
n mymous narm the book was<lb/>
later argued to hi fad tally incorrect.<lb/>
11m will discuss ht biographical<lb/>
research of Jacobs story, and her<lb/>
verification of the facts in the rxvok.<lb/>
Ihn wrote tho foreword to the<lb/>
book in addition to adding footnotes.<lb/>
I ler presentation will include a slide<lb/>
show<lb/>
The lecture will be hold on<lb/>
fuesday, fanuarj 22 al 8:00 p.m. in<lb/>
the General Classroom Building<lb/>
1031 (E U) A reception will follow.<lb/>
I or further information, please-<lb/>
contact Tom Shields, Department of<lb/>
English, 757-6715 or 757-6041.<lb/>
Save a Tree<lb/>
and recycle<lb/>
 this and<lb/>
? future<lb/>
editions<lb/>
of<lb/>
The East<lb/>
Carolinian.<lb/>
Continued from page 7<lb/>
aboutC.reece)giveyou a k lokbehind<lb/>
the facade of Athenian democracy<lb/>
and shine a scrutinizing light on the<lb/>
teachings of Scxrates<lb/>
To give you an indication of the<lb/>
intellectual integrity of this btxk,<lb/>
suffice it to say that the "Sticks and<lb/>
Stones" volume is a required text-<lb/>
b. ok foranthmpokgyclassesatboth<lb/>
Berkeley and Yale<lb/>
Although eruditcand thorough<lb/>
(he even has cartoon footnotes),<lb/>
(Jonick's work is by no means dry.<lb/>
His wit is sophisticated, his social<lb/>
commentary subtle but sharp<lb/>
Continued from page 7<lb/>
Gonick takes every opportunity to<lb/>
usn images of thr past to illuminate<lb/>
the present. For instance, in a foot-<lb/>
note about the Athenian class sys-<lb/>
tem, he points out that while it was<lb/>
possible for a member of the lowest<lb/>
Athenian social class to make one<lb/>
f i f th the income of one- of the- highest<lb/>
class, a fast food employee in con-<lb/>
temp rary Amencacan makcaslittlc<lb/>
asone tivo hundredth of the income of<lb/>
the average U.S. CEO.<lb/>
(ionick also brings out theirony<lb/>
in the history, itself. For instance,<lb/>
RamM-s the C.re.it was nearly de-<lb/>
feated in his only major battle (winning<lb/>
only by freak chance) yet because he<lb/>
built so many monuments to glorify<lb/>
himself, he's remembered as Egypt's<lb/>
most powerful pharaoh<lb/>
Gonick, who also has a cartoon-<lb/>
column in Discover magazine, calls<lb/>
himself the )ohn Madden of science,<lb/>
saying that they both try to make com-<lb/>
plex subjectswitertainingtounderstand.<lb/>
His book does just that. The Car<lb/>
toon History of the Universe presents<lb/>
solid, interesting knowlege in a light,<lb/>
humorous format. It's a breeze to read<lb/>
and informing as well.<lb/>
MzJElteLMwuiimian MM,RY P4.1991 $<lb/>
FOSDICK'S<lb/>
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tained a small part in the film "No<lb/>
Retreat, No Surrender" After that<lb/>
Van Damme Staned in the film<lb/>
Bloodsport which launched his<lb/>
career Since that time. Van Damme<lb/>
has starred in several films, includ<lb/>
ing "Black Eagle "Cyborg and<lb/>
"Kickboxer<lb/>
Deborah Rennard plays thesexy<lb/>
hulmanipiilativeC ynthia Rennard<lb/>
is probably better known tor hr<lb/>
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biitshealsostam1intheiilm"?(U<lb/>
Harrison Page portrays the ex<lb/>
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Lisa Penkin plays the widowed<lb/>
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films like "Ohoulies' nd  m;<lb/>
Shift She will be appearing in the<lb/>
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Even though "I lonheart" is Van<lb/>
Pamme's best film, in the sense of<lb/>
at ting ami plot, it is still ,i fiht<lb/>
movie. The movie is worth seeing,<lb/>
out it is a film that should be rented<lb/>
I<lb/>
A<lb/>
I<lb/>
I<lb/>
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pO ECU s<lb/>
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THURSDAY, JANUARY 24,1991 - 8:00PM<lb/>
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$3.00 STUDENT TICKETS CAN BE PURCHASED AT<lb/>
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Sponsored by: Campus Crusade<lb/>
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By I ini Hampton<lb/>
Staff a ? tei<lb/>
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skid ill I ?? nfercno<lb/>
losses ? ? ?<lb/>
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These Pirate fans lament yet another K<lb/>
extremery supportive of the men's<lb/>
despite the team s 9-7 record<lb/>
<pb facs="00058259_0019"/><lb/>
10<lb/>
tj fu- ?ast CEFarolfman Jani m 24. 1991<lb/>
Pirates lo:<lb/>
straight t<lb/>
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Corchian<lb/>
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W<lb/>
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These Pirate tan? lament yet anothei <lb/>
extremely supportive of the men s bi<lb/>
despite the team s 9-7 record<lb/>
<pb facs="00058259_0020"/><lb/>
<lb/>
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uUre SaBt Cflarnlinian<lb/>
January 24,1991<lb/>
We drew it you read it. that settles it<lb/>
nirds of prey<lb/>
Bv Parnell<lb/>
7<lb/>
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By Parnell<lb/>
He<lb/>
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It ,VU ?<lb/>
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Pirates lose fifth<lb/>
straight to<lb/>
Spiders, 71-64<lb/>
By I im Hampton<lb/>
Sutt Writer<lb/>
I nding a four minute scoring<lb/>
ught late in the second halt, the<lb/>
ond Spiders succeeded in<lb/>
E U's tull court press en<lb/>
64 victor) Wednesda)<lb/>
.i s oliseum<lb/>
rh Pirates are on five-game<lb/>
.ill five being conference<lb/>
including two straight<lb/>
out leading scorer Stevie<lb/>
rdst mi Suspended indefinitely<lb/>
b head coach Mike Steele.<lb/>
? dstmabosatoutinSaturday's<lb/>
A I ;mi and Marv.<lb/>
Stevfc said after the game that<lb/>
situation surrounding<lb/>
r I  s suspension remains<lb/>
unchanged Richardson, who aver-<lb/>
pomts, was benched after<lb/>
? it s loss to (leorge Mason<lb/>
14<lb/>
1 his isn'j easv tor me, I would<lb/>
- ? have 20 points on the floor<lb/>
en are some things you have<lb/>
i in your program which are<lb/>
v to d. ? Steele said about<lb/>
? ? hed sophomore<lb/>
? ? Mii ithout the services<lb/>
ardson, ECU hung, tough<lb/>
nd for ?8 minutes In<lb/>
? ? il two minutes the Spiders'<lb/>
ime in the form of Curtis<lb/>
nailed twofreethrows to<lb/>
? ith23, giving his team a six<lb/>
rity of the second<lb/>
the U im traded baskets with<lb/>
neither sule building more than a<lb/>
tour point lead. With five minutes<lb/>
remaining. Pirate reserve guard Jeff<lb/>
Perlich hit a soft umper in the lane<lb/>
to cut the Richmond lead to 59-<lb/>
Thecontest became messy from<lb/>
there as the teams traded turn ers<lb/>
on tour consecutive tnps d iwn the<lb/>
floor. In the end, Richmond COT<lb/>
verted free throws and the Pirate<lb/>
offensive frizzled out<lb/>
Although Steele felt that his<lb/>
team was limited otfensiveivdunng<lb/>
the game, he said the crux of the<lb/>
matter came down to missed op-<lb/>
portunities.<lb/>
"Jetf Perlich almost made the<lb/>
thret (pointer) to give us the lead<lb/>
and Ike Copeland missed a dunk<lb/>
which was a big play because not<lb/>
onlv does that give us back the lead.<lb/>
but it gets the crowd back in it<lb/>
Steele said.<lb/>
Adding another weapon to<lb/>
ECU'S outside shooting arsenal,<lb/>
Perlich responded by knocking m<lb/>
three of Shi from three-point land<lb/>
and totaling 11, his career high as a<lb/>
Pirate.<lb/>
In a sp.m ot two minutes mid-<lb/>
way through the second halt, I'orhch<lb/>
connected onatrey from the baseline<lb/>
to put ECt up by one. then hit a<lb/>
jumper from the other side to mark<lb/>
,i 52-49 lead with 9:10 left. Perhch<lb/>
proceeded to can another three-<lb/>
pointer to push ECU ahead once<lb/>
again<lb/>
.Spj Lose. pa0 1j3jj<lb/>
Caiast Hoffman ? ECU Photo Lab<lb/>
Freshman guard Lester Lyons drives down the baseline to tire one otf at the basket. Lyons has been<lb/>
consistently one of the top scored? for the Pirates this Season . .<lb/>
Corchiani enjoys season without Valvano<lb/>
; IGH AIM Chris<lb/>
seems to have regained<lb/>
 iril he lost last spring when<lb/>
? iveNorthCaro-<lb/>
? the treatment of<lb/>
n Valvano.<lb/>
 io di ? i ' back down from<lb/>
mvoneoran) thing, although there<lb/>
tirrx s ??. e wish he would I le's<lb/>
?. ilhng to t.ike on a whole team<lb/>
omprtitivespirit in him.<lb/>
 ila no s successor, Les<lb/>
nson<lb/>
The student bod) is relaxed,<lb/>
naches .in relaxed and the<lb/>
players, in turn, are relaxed<lb/>
Robinson said<lb/>
Alter Corchiani and the<lb/>
Wolfpac k lost a first round Atlan<lb/>
tic Coast Conference game to<lb/>
(.eorgialo hlast season,Com hiani<lb/>
siid th.it it alvano was forced to<lb/>
leave, he would go, too.<lb/>
Now,orchiani is the picture<lb/>
of i ontentment.<lb/>
"1 ust came to a very good<lb/>
decision I fell comfortable about<lb/>
and I'm happy 1 made that<lb/>
Corchiani said after Monday<lb/>
night's 89-76 victory over<lb/>
Marquette, which raised NX<lb/>
State's record to 9-4.<lb/>
Valvano was the lightning rod<lb/>
for controversy after allegationsof<lb/>
wrongdoing in his program ap-<lb/>
peared on thedust jacket of a soon-<lb/>
to be-published txxk, "Personal<lb/>
fouls in January 198 Those al-<lb/>
legations were published in a Ra-<lb/>
leigh newspaper When the hook<lb/>
was published, it led to further<lb/>
controversy revolving around<lb/>
Valvano s program and its rela-<lb/>
tionship to the academk (ommu<lb/>
nitv.<lb/>
The NCAA then slapped the<lb/>
school with a two-year probation<lb/>
after it was discovered that some<lb/>
players had sold their basketball<lb/>
shoes and complimentary game<lb/>
tickets. About one month after the<lb/>
198-90 season Valvano reached a<lb/>
financial settlement and left the<lb/>
school which he had led to a na-<lb/>
tional championship in 1983.<lb/>
Corchiani was upset with the<lb/>
way Valvano was treated and was<lb/>
rumored to be leaving. But a talk<lb/>
with Robinson soothed his temper<lb/>
and when practice began in Octo-<lb/>
ber,orchiani was ready for his<lb/>
dual season.<lb/>
' I his year has been fun<lb/>
Corchiani said. "We haven't had<lb/>
anv controversies. We can go to<lb/>
practice and enjoy ourselves. We<lb/>
can go through campus and enjoy<lb/>
ourselves. There's no bitterness<lb/>
around. We want to play basket-<lb/>
ball and go to school<lb/>
Corchiani started the season<lb/>
within reach of two ACT records,<lb/>
and after the Marquette game, he<lb/>
had them The 10 assists he had<lb/>
aeainst the Warriors gave him a<lb/>
career total of 8bl, four more than<lb/>
the mark set by Gravsor. Marshall<lb/>
of Clemson. That moved Corchiani<lb/>
to seventh on the all-time NCAA<lb/>
list.<lb/>
Corchiani also had four steals,<lb/>
tor a career total of 276, one more<lb/>
than the record set by Tyrone<lb/>
Bogues oi Wake Forest. The NC A A<lb/>
record for steals is 341, shared bv<lb/>
Michael Anderson of Drexel and<lb/>
Kenny Robertson, who played at<lb/>
New Mexico and Cleveland State.<lb/>
"Chris has had an unbeliev-<lb/>
ablecareeratNC.State Robinson<lb/>
said. "He's been an outstanding<lb/>
player for four years. He plays with<lb/>
a lot of emotion and just does so<lb/>
many good things tor a team "<lb/>
Lyons leads<lb/>
ECU in<lb/>
Freshman<lb/>
season<lb/>
By Tim Hampton<lb/>
Staff Writer<lb/>
Midwav through the first halt<lb/>
Of the ECU-George Mason game,<lb/>
ri rate freshmen guard Lester Lyons<lb/>
ran his defender in a foul line screen<lb/>
and cut through the lane.<lb/>
Eight feet from the basket,<lb/>
Lvonshadadecisionto make; either<lb/>
dish off or drive to the hole. His<lb/>
peripheral vision saw Mason'sV 11<lb/>
center Bvron Tucker coming from<lb/>
the left and b 230 forward Robert<lb/>
Dykes converging from the nght<lb/>
Taking off like a Harner jet,<lb/>
Lyons went airborne, cocked the<lb/>
basketball behind his head, evaded<lb/>
the outstretched hands of Tucker<lb/>
and rammed the ball down the<lb/>
cvlinder<lb/>
If thea' were anv doubters of<lb/>
Lyons' abihtv, the dunk left the crit-<lb/>
ics silent among the thunderous<lb/>
Minges crowd.<lb/>
In a tumultuous season for the<lb/>
Tirates thus tar, frosh sensation<lb/>
Lvons has provided ECU faithful<lb/>
with a gleam oi hope. Thrust into a<lb/>
leadership role, the 62, 1?0 guard<lb/>
has responded with senior-like in-<lb/>
stincts and enough dazzle to til! a<lb/>
high-light reel.<lb/>
Averaging 18 0 points per game<lb/>
and 2.1 steals, Lyons' tenacity is<lb/>
evident on bom ends ot the court.<lb/>
Not onlv a tough defender. Lyons<lb/>
combination of accurate outside<lb/>
shooting, quick first step and speed<lb/>
on the fast break make for a potent<lb/>
offensive force.<lb/>
But thesott-spoken Lyons says<lb/>
he doe? not strive to be the high-<lb/>
scorer, preferring instead to hound<lb/>
the opposition on defense1.<lb/>
"I don't think that I am an ex-<lb/>
plosive scorer, I just do what I do<lb/>
and do it quietly Lyons said "I<lb/>
work harder on the defensive end<lb/>
than on offense because- that is what<lb/>
Coach Steele looks for<lb/>
No matter how humble the<lb/>
eightcen-vear-old Lyons can be<lb/>
when describing himself, basketball<lb/>
minds are giving Lester praise<lb/>
abound.<lb/>
"Lester Lvons is ACC 'Atlantic<lb/>
Coast Conference) material said<lb/>
Ernie Nestor, George Mason's head<lb/>
coach "Needless to say, I wasquite<lb/>
impressed<lb/>
Hailing from Windsor NQ,<lb/>
Lvonsatfractsrcsidentsofhisnaivi<lb/>
Bertie County to each home Pirate<lb/>
See Lyons. Page 13<lb/>
Slowik, Lady tracksters look to depth for success<lb/>
By Jeff Craig<lb/>
Suff Writer<lb/>
The ECU women's track sea-<lb/>
son is about to take off This year<lb/>
however, things will ho a bit dif-<lb/>
ferent because the women will<lb/>
have a new coach to guide their<lb/>
way into battle.<lb/>
Coach Carol Slowik comes to<lb/>
ECU with a bright outlook for the<lb/>
team's future. She coached previ-<lb/>
ously at the University of Florida<lb/>
at Gainesville. She then decided<lb/>
to come here with her husband<lb/>
who is a football coach.<lb/>
Slowik is a very busy lady<lb/>
time at the Welcome Middle<lb/>
School.<lb/>
Although Coach Slowik has<lb/>
not seen the team in serious com-<lb/>
petition vet, she expressed confi-<lb/>
dence in her them: "They look<lb/>
good from what I have seen so<lb/>
far; however, the meets will tell<lb/>
me more"<lb/>
Slowik said that her team has<lb/>
good depth. "I'm only losing three<lb/>
seniors after the spring and the<lb/>
younger girls are showing prom-<lb/>
ise. Sophomore Denita Roseboro<lb/>
will be a contributing factor this<lb/>
year and in the years to come.<lb/>
Denita competes in the 100 and<lb/>
200 meter races and will also<lb/>
who, along with her coaching re-<lb/>
sponsibilities, also teaches part compete in relay sprints. Then<lb/>
there is Anne Mane Welch who<lb/>
will lead the long distance<lb/>
events<lb/>
While showing excitement<lb/>
about the upcoming season,<lb/>
Slowik also expressed some con-<lb/>
cerns she has about her team:<lb/>
"Track is a non-revenue sport<lb/>
with itsdrawbacks. Wedon't have<lb/>
the facilities to hold our own<lb/>
meets so that means we must<lb/>
travel, sometimes very far away.<lb/>
Traveling costs money and it's<lb/>
hard to do it on the limited bud-<lb/>
get<lb/>
This along with restrictions<lb/>
on scholarships makes it more<lb/>
difficult forSlowik to recruit high<lb/>
school track stars.<lb/>
"The girls have been active<lb/>
since October, so they will be<lb/>
ready for the competition<lb/>
Slowik said. "Because track is an<lb/>
outdoor sport the girls are at the<lb/>
mercy of the weather and that<lb/>
makes it more difficult to train.<lb/>
They do a good job, though, and<lb/>
I am looking forward to seeing<lb/>
what we can do"<lb/>
The season will last through<lb/>
April. If things go as planned,<lb/>
Slowik will take her team to the<lb/>
NCAA championship in May.<lb/>
"School work comes first and<lb/>
sports comes second in my book<lb/>
Slowik said.<lb/>
The first meet for the women<lb/>
is on Feb. 9.<lb/>
Lady Pirates fall to Richmond, 795 in CAA action<lb/>
By Kerry Nester<lb/>
Staff Writer<lb/>
The ECU Lady Pirates, riding<lb/>
high on a two game winning<lb/>
streak, fell to the University of<lb/>
Richmond Lady Spiders Monday<lb/>
night by a score of 79-65 at Minges<lb/>
Coliseum before a scarce crowd of<lb/>
265.<lb/>
The Lady Spiders were de-<lb/>
feated in their last cutting by the<lb/>
University of Tennessee, but<lb/>
looked very sharp behind the<lb/>
scoring of Amy Mallon, who had<lb/>
27 points.<lb/>
Playing without senior for-<lb/>
ward Sarah Gray, who was side-<lb/>
lined withakneeinjury,hampered<lb/>
the Pirates offensive attack. In<lb/>
games last season aganist Rich-<lb/>
mond, Gray had 32 and 22 points<lb/>
respectively. She is averaging 153<lb/>
points per game this season.<lb/>
The Lady Pirates won the<lb/>
opening tip-off, but were unable<lb/>
to capitalize on the fast break.<lb/>
Neither teamscored until the 1831<lb/>
mark, when ECU junior Tonya<lb/>
Hargrove scored underneath.<lb/>
After trading baskets for the<lb/>
first 10 minutes of the game,<lb/>
Mallon put the Spiders ahead 20-<lb/>
17 on an 18 foot jumper with 9:46<lb/>
remaining in the half.<lb/>
Janet Rodgerson came in off<lb/>
the bench to spark the Lady Pirate<lb/>
offensive with two baskets that<lb/>
brought the Pirates within three<lb/>
points at the 5:20 mark.<lb/>
This slowed down the Rich-<lb/>
mond momentum and kept the<lb/>
game close going in at halftime,<lb/>
with the Spiders leading 34-27.<lb/>
Hargrove scored on the first<lb/>
possession to open the second half<lb/>
pulling the Pirates to within five<lb/>
at 34-29.<lb/>
Aside from the Richmond de-<lb/>
fense which forced 10 first half<lb/>
Pirate turnovers. ECU hurt them-<lb/>
selves just as much by shooting 35<lb/>
percent from the field and 25 per-<lb/>
cent from the line. Richmond shot<lb/>
50 percent from the field and 56<lb/>
percent from the line.<lb/>
"Richmond's a good team<lb/>
said ECU Head Coach Pat Pierson.<lb/>
They hurt us with their good<lb/>
shooting and defense<lb/>
<pb facs="00058259_0021"/><lb/>
11<lb/>
j;Ih tEaat (Earulinian<lb/>
January 24.1991<lb/>
?<lb/>
-<lb/>
Ni<lb/>
Tsm<lb/>
(<lb/>
?1 -<lb/>
j I Pirates lose fifth<lb/>
straight to<lb/>
Spiders, 71-64<lb/>
 11 in I lampton<lb/>
iii-it I<lb/>
th.<lb/>
'<lb/>
u!i i iiMini; m?re man a<lb/>
tour point load With live minutes<lb/>
remaining Piraton ?? i guard left<lb/>
itt scoring Perlich hit a soft jumj  ??<lb/>
idhalf. the to cut the Richmond lead to ?M<lb/>
? on<lb/>
n. h<lb/>
Man<lb/>
?ii.Yl<lb/>
I<lb/>
"hocontest he<lb/>
? tl ? t? an tra led tin<lb/>
? ?  onsocutive tni ??- u trw<lb/>
five-game floot In the end Richmond i n<lb/>
conference verted free throws and the i it?<lb/>
g two straight offensive frizzled out<lb/>
rei Stevie Althi ugh Steele felt that<lb/>
ded indefinitely leamwaslimitedoffensivelvduring<lb/>
Mike Steele the game, he said the crux ot the<lb/>
Sarurdav s mattei came down to missed op<lb/>
portunities<lb/>
i tt Perlich almost madt the<lb/>
threi (potnt ? U gi us th lead<lb/>
:?? ? - I opi land missed .1 dunk<lb/>
which was a Ng plav because nor<lb/>
nlv d ? - ? ead<lb/>
.? Masoi il (get I ? en d Kii k<lb/>
Steele said<lb/>
. : '??. 11 tl 1 weapon to<lb/>
E S OUtsidi hool II -eiial<lb/>
erli I responded bv kno I 1<lb/>
.1:1 thro of so from three-point Kind<lb/>
1 n ? ind titalme 11 his ireei I iihasa<lb/>
ame thai<lb/>
1 ti<lb/>
? suspen' ? n ren taint<lb/>
? Rich irdson whoaver<lb/>
? 4<lb/>
 haselirn<lb/>
t Lose ; ii '3<lb/>
Freshman guard Lestei . Inves d ???? "? baseline to fir<lb/>
consistently one ot the top! 1 'or the. P ? itej " ??a on<lb/>
Celesle HoKman ? ECU Photo Lab<lb/>
eft at the basket. Lyons has r ? 1<lb/>
? '<lb/>
k ' Q<lb/>
Corchiani enjoys season without Valvano<lb/>
. . . . I . . .  l.l. I. i .  1 . .  I  I 1. 1 k . r.u ?r I, t 1 I . .1 Vjn I I, ill r ??  tl <lb/>
VJ<lb/>
<lb/>
i<lb/>
:? ? ? l is relaxi d<lb/>
ixed and the<lb/>
n turn, are relaxed,<lb/>
C hiani and the<lb/>
1 si round Mian<lb/>
Stati<lb/>
 t !<lb/>
i :<lb/>
'<lb/>
mtereno game n<lb/>
List season,) - hiani<lb/>
??. 1. ,<lb/>
ini picture<lb/>
? 1 very good<lb/>
:? ? rt ible about<lb/>
I indo that<lb/>
after Monday<lb/>
l. i v . ? o r<lb/>
ch raised N (<lb/>
M.<lb/>
legations were publish<lb/>
leigh new spapei V hen the l<lb/>
w as pubhshod it  '<lb/>
controverss rev<lb/>
 alvano s progi in<lb/>
honship to the a adi n<lb/>
nit<lb/>
I he NCAA then ipped<lb/>
st hool with a tw year prol it<lb/>
alter it was disci ? r 11 p at 1 ?<lb/>
players had sold then I 1 ketball<lb/>
shoo, and 1 omplimenl in garni<lb/>
the lightning rod tickets About one month after th?<lb/>
. ? . itterallegabonsol l989-90season,Valvanrreacheda<lb/>
wrongdoing in his program ap financial settlement and left the<lb/>
pearedon the dust jacket of a soon- school which ho had led to a na<lb/>
to-be-published book, "Personal tional championship m 198?<lb/>
Fouls 'in inuary 1989 Thoseal 'retuani was upset tl ?? ?<lb/>
was treated<lb/>
in red to be lea<lb/>
. ?? - : : nsoothed his temp 1<lb/>
: ,vhi n practice h<lb/>
? ? , 1, hiani .vas ri ad ti 1<lb/>
? ? : season.<lb/>
1 Ins year has beei tui<lb/>
1 1 ? hiani said 'We haven t had<lb/>
: itroversies 'At an g ? to<lb/>
prai in .0 d enjoyourx Ivi  We<lb/>
11 .0 thn ugh i ampusand en ?.<lb/>
ourselves, there's no bitterness<lb/>
around. V e want to pla) basket<lb/>
ball and g 1 to S hool<lb/>
( orchiani started the season<lb/>
within reach oi two Ac c records,<lb/>
,md after the Marquette game, he<lb/>
had them The 10 assists he had<lb/>
unst the Warriors cave him a<lb/>
in ? r total o! 861 four mi re than<lb/>
the mark set bra sonlarshall<lb/>
fClen : I hat mov l 1 hiani<lb/>
; seventh ? ?n th( all timi ' A A<lb/>
?<lb/>
( on hiani also had f ur steals<lb/>
for a career total ot 27 ni more<lb/>
than the re( ord -? I bv I yrone<lb/>
Bogues of Wake Forest rheN AA<lb/>
record tor steals is 41 shared b<lb/>
Michael Anderson ot Drexel and<lb/>
kenn Robertson, who played at<lb/>
New Mexico ,nd Cleveland State<lb/>
( hris has had an unbeliev<lb/>
able career a tN. State Robinson<lb/>
said. I lo s been an outstanding<lb/>
player for four years Heplayswith<lb/>
a lot ol ??motion and just does so<lb/>
manv good things for a team "<lb/>
Lyons leads<lb/>
ECU in<lb/>
Freshman<lb/>
season<lb/>
Bv Tim Hampton<lb/>
SuH Writer<lb/>
Midway through the first half<lb/>
f the ECU-George M n garni<lb/>
Pirate freshmen guai I. estcrl y ms<lb/>
ran hi; defei lerii il ?ullincsi 1 ?<lb/>
and cut through tl I. 1<lb/>
Eight feet fn m thi basl ? I<lb/>
1 yonshada h toi k thei<lb/>
dish rt or dnv ? the hole. I h?<lb/>
pcriphera 1 sa v 1 - n sh 1<lb/>
 enter BTon Tu? l r . unirig from<lb/>
the left and 6 7, 230forward Rob rt<lb/>
I )ykes converging h m the right<lb/>
raking ctf like a Harrier jet,<lb/>
Lyons went airborne cocked tht<lb/>
basketball K-hind his head evaded<lb/>
the outstretched hands ol !u ket<lb/>
and rammeii the ball down the<lb/>
cylinder<lb/>
If there vs.to ai . i.uibters ot<lb/>
Lyons' ability, the lunk left thecrit-<lb/>
ics siknt among the thunderous<lb/>
Mil .? ? ? d<lb/>
In a tumnh'ii uss isoni - the<lb/>
Pirates thus tar. frosh sensation<lb/>
Lvons has provided  ' faithful<lb/>
with a gleam of hop rhrustinti a<lb/>
1 idershii roll the " 2 16ft guard<lb/>
has responded with senior like in<lb/>
-?'i1 ? 11 I ei igl I ? ti till a<lb/>
? .<lb/>
Ai - ign g!8 :? ????<lb/>
and 2  steals Lvoiv tena tv is<lb/>
eident on both ? nds I " 1 url<lb/>
t onh .1 ti ugh d ?? ler, Lvoi<lb/>
 imbinatw no! ui .?? ut - 1<lb/>
shooting,qui kfirststej 11 I peed<lb/>
, n the fast break maV for a potent<lb/>
ffen ivei 1 ?<lb/>
But the sett sp -? ? ?? ays<lb/>
he does no strive to h tl higr<lb/>
a orer, preferring instead to hound<lb/>
the opposition on defense.<lb/>
1 don't think ? at in 11 ? <lb/>
pie rer, I just I ???; it :?<lb/>
and do it quietly ns said "1<lb/>
work hardi r 1 t: ? lefensivi end<lb/>
?'? in : ffcnsebi iu: thatu hat<lb/>
i. oach Steeli Ii oks I 1<lb/>
o matter how ; in bl( tin<lb/>
eighU en-year Id L ns cai be<lb/>
when describing hims I iskerl<lb/>
minds are giving Lester praise<lb/>
abound<lb/>
"Lester! yons is Ai '? I 1 I<lb/>
( oastonh reno n it na aid<lb/>
EmieNesti rk?orgi Mason'shead<lb/>
coach "Needlesstosa Iwasquite<lb/>
impressed<lb/>
Hailing from Windsor VC?.<lb/>
Lvonsattracts residents of hisnawvl<lb/>
Forte c ountv to each home Pirate<lb/>
See Lyons Page 13<lb/>
<lb/>
s?Pi<lb/>
By Parnell<lb/>
f?<lb/>
Slowik, Lady tracksters look to depth for success<lb/>
 fcfl C raii;<lb/>
see ? V : 'i '<lb/>
I he E ? ?nen's tra - ?<lb/>
son is about to taki<lb/>
however, things will be .1 bit dif-<lb/>
ferent because the women will<lb/>
have a new coach to guide their<lb/>
way into battle<lb/>
Coach C drol blou ik c omes to<lb/>
ECU with a bright outlook for the<lb/>
team's tutu re. sbioa( hod prove<lb/>
ouslv at the Universit) of Florida<lb/>
at Gainesville s!ie then decided<lb/>
t come here ? ith her husband<lb/>
who is a football (oach<lb/>
Slow ik is a er busy lady<lb/>
who, along with her coaching re-<lb/>
sponsibilities, also teaches part<lb/>
time at the Welconv Middle<lb/>
.?I<lb/>
Although 0.1. h Slowik has<lb/>
not seen the team in .serious com<lb/>
petition vet, - ressed confi<lb/>
 : them I e look<lb/>
I trm what 1 have soon so<lb/>
tur however the meets will tell<lb/>
me more<lb/>
Slowik said that her team lias<lb/>
gooddepth "I m only losing three<lb/>
seniors atter the spring and the<lb/>
younger girls are showing prom<lb/>
ise 'sophomore Denita Roseboro<lb/>
will be a contributing factor this<lb/>
year .w in the years to come.<lb/>
Denita competes in the 100 and<lb/>
200 meter races and will also<lb/>
compote in relay sprints. Then<lb/>
there is Anne Mane Welch who<lb/>
will lead the long distance<lb/>
events<lb/>
While showing excitement<lb/>
about the upcoming season,<lb/>
Slowik aKo expressed some con-<lb/>
cerns she has about her team:<lb/>
"brack is a non-revenue sport<lb/>
with it s draw backs We don't have<lb/>
the fat ilities to hold our own<lb/>
meets so that means we must<lb/>
travel, sometimes very tar away<lb/>
Traveling costs money and it's<lb/>
hard to y it on the limited bud-<lb/>
get'<lb/>
I'his along with restrictions<lb/>
(n scholarships makes it more<lb/>
difficult tor Slowik to recruit high<lb/>
school track stars<lb/>
"The girls have been active<lb/>
since October, so they will be<lb/>
ready for the competition<lb/>
Slowik said 'Because track is an<lb/>
outdoor sport the girls are at the<lb/>
mercy ol the weather and that<lb/>
makes it more difficult to train<lb/>
They do a good job, though and<lb/>
I am looking forward to seeing<lb/>
what we can Jo"<lb/>
The season will last through<lb/>
April It things go as planned<lb/>
Slowik will take her team to the<lb/>
'( AA championship in May<lb/>
School work comes first and<lb/>
sports comes second in my book<lb/>
Slowik said<lb/>
The tirst meet for the women<lb/>
is on Fob 9<lb/>
Lady Pirates fall to Richmond, 79-65 in CAA action<lb/>
By Kerry Ncster<lb/>
St.itt U nt.T<lb/>
The E I 1 u Pirates, riding<lb/>
high on l two game winning<lb/>
streak, fell to the I Iniversity of<lb/>
Richmond Lady Spiders Monday<lb/>
night by a scoreol Tu 65al Minges<lb/>
Coliseum before a si m e crowd of<lb/>
265.<lb/>
The 1 jJ "spiders were de-<lb/>
feated in their last out ting by the<lb/>
University of Tennessee, but<lb/>
looked very sharp behind the<lb/>
scoring of Arm Mallon, who had<lb/>
27 points.<lb/>
Playing without senior for-<lb/>
ward Sarah Gray, who was side-<lb/>
lined with a knee injury,hampered<lb/>
the Pirates offensive attack. In<lb/>
games last season aganist Rich-<lb/>
mond. (.rav had 2 and 22 points<lb/>
respectively. Sheisaveragingl5.3<lb/>
points per game this season.<lb/>
The Lady Pirates won the<lb/>
opening tip-oft, but were unable<lb/>
to capitalize on the fast break.<lb/>
Neither team scored until the 18:31<lb/>
mark, when ECU tunior Tonva<lb/>
Hargrove scored underneath.<lb/>
After trading baskets tor the<lb/>
first 10 minutes of the game.<lb/>
Mallon put the Spiders ahead 20-<lb/>
17 on an 18-foot lumper with QAt<lb/>
remaining in the half.<lb/>
fane! Rodgerson came in off<lb/>
the bench to spark the Lady Pirate<lb/>
offensive with two baskets that<lb/>
brought the Pirates within three<lb/>
points at the 5:20 mark.<lb/>
This slowed down the Rich-<lb/>
mond momentum and kept the<lb/>
game close going in at halftime,<lb/>
with the Spiders leading 34-27.<lb/>
Hargrove scored on the first<lb/>
possession to open the second half<lb/>
pulling the Pirates to within five<lb/>
at J4 29<lb/>
Aside from the Richmond de<lb/>
tense which forced 10 first half<lb/>
Pirate turnovers. ECU hurt them<lb/>
selves just as much by shooting 35<lb/>
percent from the field and 25 per<lb/>
cent from the line. Richmond shot<lb/>
50 percent from the field and 56<lb/>
percent from the line.<lb/>
"Richmond's a good team,<lb/>
said ECU Head Coach Pat Picrson.<lb/>
'They hurt us with their good<lb/>
shooting and defense<lb/>
<pb facs="00058259_0022"/><lb/>
I<lb/>
12 gi?g ?aat (garolfnian January 24, 1991<lb/>
Sports Briefs<lb/>
Carter leaves Giants for Dodgers<lb/>
Free-agent catcher Gary Carter, 36, accepted an invitation to<lb/>
join the Los Angeles Dodgers in spring training as a non-roster<lb/>
player. Carter, an 11-time All-Star, hit .254 with nine home runs<lb/>
and 11 RBI for San Francisco last season. Also, free-agent catcher<lb/>
Mike Heath signed a $2 million, two-year contract with the<lb/>
Atlanta Braves. Heath, 35, hit .270 with the Detroit Tigers last<lb/>
season.<lb/>
Cunningham named Playerof Year<lb/>
Philadelphia Eagles quarterback Randall Cunningham won<lb/>
the Maxwell Club's NFL Flavor of the Year award for the second<lb/>
time Tuesday, and the Los Angeles Raiders' Art Shell was named<lb/>
coach of the year. Cunningham passed for 3,466 yards and 30<lb/>
touchdowns with only 13 interceptions. He ran for 942 yards.<lb/>
Shell won the club's Farle "Greasy" Neale Award.<lb/>
Heightened security at Super Bowl<lb/>
The 73,000 fans expected at Sunday's Super Bowl XXV will be<lb/>
searched with hand-held metal detectors at 68 stadium gates.<lb/>
Among other security measures prompted by the Persian Gulf<lb/>
war: no radios, cameras and TV sets in the stadium. "We're<lb/>
confident the stadium itself is quite secure' said Bob Smith,<lb/>
Tampa public safety director.  I don't feel there are any loose<lb/>
ends<lb/>
Webb decides to enter NFL draft<lb/>
Running back Chuck Webb notified Tennessee football coach<lb/>
Johnny Major Tuesday that he will make himself available for the<lb/>
National Football League draft. Webb, a redshirt sophomore,<lb/>
gained 1,236yards in 1989, but missed 11 games last season with<lb/>
a knee injury. He has two years of eligibility left. Webb has until<lb/>
Feb. 1 to notify the NFL of his intentions.<lb/>
Hockey teams boast high salaries<lb/>
It pays well to play well during this period of unprecedented<lb/>
salar) nation in the National Hockey league. Thirty-three<lb/>
players, 16 more than last year,aremaking$500,000ormore. And<lb/>
manywl igned lucrati vedeals since last summer, indudingSt.<lb/>
Louis Bretl I full and Scott Stevens, Chicago's Chris Chehosand<lb/>
Stevel in r and Calgary's Al Maclnnis, are having big years.<lb/>
fyrigU lJ0 US TOOA1 rplr CaUtm Imkiimmliu Hifjil<lb/>
Ski Report<lb/>
NORTH i AROLINA<lb/>
Appalachian: Thirty six inch base. New machine-made<lb/>
Snow. Five slopes open. Packed powder surface. Night skiing.<lb/>
Cataloochie: Eighteen inch base. New machine-made snow.<lb/>
Two slopes open. Groomed surface. Night skiing.<lb/>
Fairfield-Sapphire: Sixteen inch base. New machine-made<lb/>
snow. Frozen Granular surface. Two slopes open. Night skiing.<lb/>
; Hound Ears: Ski wcekend0Mtv.<lb/>
Mi 111 Ridge: Twenty fourrncri'rjasc. Three slopes open. New<lb/>
machine made snow. Tacked powder surface. Night skiing<lb/>
onlv.<lb/>
Scaly Mountain: Eighteen inch base New machine-made<lb/>
STOW. Two slopes open. Packed powder surface. Night skiing<lb/>
only.<lb/>
' ' ? ? made snow.<lb/>
So- i ? ? , g .<lb/>
Ski H iwknesfc Pwenty eight inch base. New machine-<lb/>
made snow. Four slopes open. Powder surface. Night skiing.<lb/>
Sugar Mountain: Twenty two inch base. New machine-<lb/>
made sn . Eight slopes open. Packed powder surface. Night<lb/>
skiing.<lb/>
Wolf Laurel: Fwenty five inch base. New machine-made<lb/>
MOW. Four slopes open. Powder surface. Night skiing.<lb/>
VIRGINIA<lb/>
Bryce Resort. Twenty three inch base. New machine-made<lb/>
snow. Five slopes open. Groomed surface. Night skiing.<lb/>
Homestead. Twenty inch base New machine-made snow.<lb/>
Five slopes open. Packed powder surface. Night skiing.<lb/>
Massanutten: Twenty font inch base. New machine made<lb/>
snow. ! Wee slopes open. Groomed surface. Night skiing.<lb/>
Wintergreen: Twenty three inch base. Trace of new natural<lb/>
snow. New machine-made snow. Three slopes open. Groomed<lb/>
surface. Night skiing.<lb/>
WEST VIRGINIA<lb/>
Canaan Valley: Twenty six inch base. New machine-made<lb/>
snow. Eleven slopes open.Groomed surface. Night skiing.<lb/>
Silver Creek: Thirty one inch base. New machine-made<lb/>
snow. 10 slopes open. Groomed surface.<lb/>
Snowshoe: Twenty seven inch base. New machine-made<lb/>
snow. Twenty seven slopes open. Groomed surface.<lb/>
Timberline Twenty four inch base. New machine-made<lb/>
snow. Ten slopes open. Powder surface. Night skiing.<lb/>
Wintorplace: Twenty inch base New machine-made snow.<lb/>
Ten slopes open. Powder surface. Night skiing.<lb/>
GEORGIA<lb/>
Sky Valley: Fourteen inch base. New machine-made snow.<lb/>
Two slopes open. Powder surface. Night skiing.<lb/>
From A$totimttd Prtti Rrportt<lb/>
In the Locker<lb/>
Good, but not good enough<lb/>
Since Super Bowl I, three teams in sole possession of<lb/>
th? best regular-season records of the year didn't make<lb/>
it to the Super Bowl: m m<lb/>
I I<lb/>
Sourco USA TOD A<lb/>
Season Team Record<lb/>
1970 Minnesota 12-2<lb/>
1974 Oakland 12-2<lb/>
1987 San Francisco 13-2<lb/>
1990 San Francisco 14-2<lb/>
: USA TODAY research<lb/>
John Sherlock. USA TODAY<lb/>
Rogers steals spotlight<lb/>
for Wake Forest, ACC<lb/>
(AP)?It was the fi ve freshmen<lb/>
of North Carolina who grabbed all<lb/>
the attention at the start of the bas-<lb/>
ketball season, but Wake Forest's<lb/>
Rodney Rogers is stealing the<lb/>
spotlight.<lb/>
"I'm sure that Coach (Cean)<lb/>
Smith is very satisfied with his<lb/>
freshmen, as well he should be<lb/>
Wake Forest coach DaveOdom said<lb/>
Tuesday during the ACC's weekly<lb/>
t e I (. von ference The d i f ference, ob-<lb/>
viously, is opportunity. We needed<lb/>
Rodney to play quality minutes<lb/>
from the outset of each game and<lb/>
he's been able to do that rather<lb/>
successfully<lb/>
Rogers has started all 13 of<lb/>
Wake Forest's games this season.<lb/>
He's averaging 17.5 points and 8<lb/>
rebounds per game. Incomparison,<lb/>
North Carolina's class of 1994 ?<lb/>
Eric Montross, Cliff Rozier, Derrick<lb/>
Phelps.PatSullivanandBrianReese<lb/>
? arc averaging a composite 3.9<lb/>
pointsand 2.2 rebounds perouting.<lb/>
Both teams have support from<lb/>
their upperclassmen, and Odom<lb/>
thinks the help at Wake Forest has<lb/>
been the difference tor Rogers.<lb/>
"I think our upperclassmen<lb/>
have been able to show him some<lb/>
things which have made his job a<lb/>
Ktrleeasier'CXIomsaid. "But.still.<lb/>
he deserves credit tor shouldering<lb/>
the burden t rom hu mg to play ngh t<lb/>
from the outset.<lb/>
"But 1 think that's probably an<lb/>
unfair comparison when you talk<lb/>
about what he's done versus what<lb/>
North Carolina's freshmen have<lb/>
done @dom continued. "North<lb/>
Carolina does not need them all the<lb/>
time from the outset of the game<lb/>
Smith has been admiring<lb/>
Rogers since he piayedat Durham's<lb/>
Hillside High School.<lb/>
"Rodney, I thought,came on in<lb/>
his)unioryearmhighschoolSmith<lb/>
said<lb/>
North Carolina Statecoach Les<lb/>
Robinson savs the Feb. 7 makeup<lb/>
date for his game with North Caro-<lb/>
lina, one night after the teams meet<lb/>
i n Raleigh, is' 'the lesser of twoevfls<lb/>
The Wolfpackand theTar Heels<lb/>
were to have met in Chapel Hill on<lb/>
Jan. 16inatelevisedgarne.Butabout<lb/>
40 minutes before the 9 p.m. tipoff,<lb/>
officials of both schools postponed<lb/>
the game. They said the beginning<lb/>
of the allied air raid on Iraq and the<lb/>
hostilities in the Persian Gulf was<lb/>
not the time to play basketball.<lb/>
Robinson said if the WeJfpack<lb/>
had not taken that date, they might<lb/>
have been faced with a meeting<lb/>
during the week of Feb. 10 which<lb/>
would ha eaddedonecontestgame<lb/>
to a two-game road swing to Duke<lb/>
and Connecticut.<lb/>
Playing between the Duke and<lb/>
Connecticut dates would havegjven<lb/>
the Wolfpack the task of playing<lb/>
three top 25 teams in less than a<lb/>
week Robinson said that would<lb/>
have been "devastating for us at<lb/>
that stage as well<lb/>
"It wouldn't have been easy no<lb/>
matter when we played the game<lb/>
he said.<lb/>
With temperatures dipping<lb/>
below freezing and wind chills<lb/>
sendin ngsclosetozero,N.C.<lb/>
State tu.i led their tent city<lb/>
outside Rey . .ds Coliseum Mon-<lb/>
day night to get in line for their<lb/>
Duke tickets.<lb/>
And, Robinson made sure they<lb/>
didn't go hungry. He ordered piz-<lb/>
zas for a crowd estimated at about<lb/>
70 people around 10 p.m.<lb/>
"1 haven't gotten the final total<lb/>
yet. We started out at about 40or 50<lb/>
of them he said. "I'm afraid to see<lb/>
what the final tab is, but I'm going<lb/>
to have to write another check<lb/>
Virginia will be without guard<lb/>
Anthony Oliver for a while.<lb/>
diver, who carried the Cava-<lb/>
liers to an overtime victory over<lb/>
Nort h Ca rolma in last season's ACC<lb/>
tournament, suffered a broken bone<lb/>
in his right hand during Monday<lb/>
night's game against Davidson.<lb/>
Coach Jeff Jones said Oliver tried to<lb/>
play with theinjury,but finally came<lb/>
out of the game.<lb/>
In the first half, he scored 14<lb/>
points and finished with 16.<lb/>
"Anthony played better than<lb/>
anyone on our team last night<lb/>
Jones said. "He virtually was our<lb/>
entire offense in the first half. So<lb/>
we're going to miss Anthony<lb/>
Oliver was injured when he<lb/>
tried to make a steal and had his<lb/>
hand bent back.<lb/>
The loss of Oliver will mean<lb/>
more plaving time for Dirk Katstra,<lb/>
Cornel Parker and Tern' Kirbv.<lb/>
"Collectively, we'll be able to<lb/>
make up for not having Anthony in<lb/>
the lineup Jones said.<lb/>
Katstra will likely get more than<lb/>
his share of the load, Jones sug-<lb/>
gested, although he said Parker<lb/>
would likely be the replacement<lb/>
starter. Parker has been struggling<lb/>
and Kirbyisstill getting intoKisket<lb/>
ball condition after his football<lb/>
season.<lb/>
Maryland coach C.arv Williams<lb/>
isassessing life without guard Wall<lb/>
Williams. He broke a bone in his vy<lb/>
10 days ago.<lb/>
"We're trying to tind some<lb/>
things out about our team. I think<lb/>
they are working very hard. I'm<lb/>
very proud of this team in terms of<lb/>
their work effort Williams said.<lb/>
"We're still looking for waystosco re<lb/>
points<lb/>
Coach Williams said the team<lb/>
hasn't let up in its intensity, but he<lb/>
said an unknown is whether the<lb/>
team can generate enough offense<lb/>
to keep pace with the competition<lb/>
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Student Store Hast Carolina I<lb/>
f Kodak i<lb/>
Cclonvatcbi<lb/>
 System<lb/>
QUALITY<lb/>
FILMDEVELOPING<lb/>
mversit) Wrighi Building Greenville, NC 27858<lb/>
i . n<lb/>
?iii ib'jv jjbi o) rwmir<lb/>
Alpha Phi Omega<lb/>
SERVICE: BE A LEADER<lb/>
Rush Alpha Phi Omega<lb/>
National Service Fraternity<lb/>
CO-ED<lb/>
CO-ED<lb/>
?<lb/>
Open House 7-9 pm<lb/>
Monday January 28 and Tuesday Jam<lb/>
29 in the Mendenhall Multi-Purpose Room<lb/>
for anyone interested in pledging. Call<lb/>
Howard at 931-8526 for more information.<lb/>
Lyons<lb/>
Continued from page 11<lb/>
game. Included in the Minges'<lb/>
crowds is his mother Alice Lyonv<lb/>
Bennett<lb/>
"I decided to come to East<lb/>
Carolina because it was close to<lb/>
home and my parents would have<lb/>
a chance to come to the games<lb/>
Lyons said<lb/>
Lyons chose ECU over Akron,<lb/>
Virginia Commonwealth. North<lb/>
Carolina A&amp;Tand Richmond And<lb/>
Lester has not let the home folks<lb/>
down yet.<lb/>
Against Mason, Lyons was<lb/>
omnipresent. Knocking in 21 points,<lb/>
the guard pick-pocketed the Patri-<lb/>
ots four times, had two blocks and<lb/>
passed for four assists<lb/>
Two days earlier, on Jan. 12,<lb/>
Lyons went seven for 12 from the<lb/>
field and four for six from the three-<lb/>
point line to finish with 20 against<lb/>
James Madison<lb/>
But Lyons is hard to placate.<lb/>
Besides wanting to gain 15 pounds,<lb/>
Lyons says the work has yet to come.<lb/>
"As far as my work ethics, 1<lb/>
think I need to work harder on de-<lb/>
fense he said<lb/>
When asked what he aspires to<lb/>
accomplish on the court, Lvons said<lb/>
"I just want to be a part ot win-<lb/>
ning team<lb/>
<lb/>
Hai<lb/>
r<lb/>
GE<lb/>
USE HAI<lb/>
 1T'<lb/>
For more del<lb/>
qualify call A<lb/>
Lose<lb/>
Continued from page 11<lb/>
The first play of the game ? a<lb/>
Stanley Love steal and subsequent<lb/>
toy-up ? was indicative of the<lb/>
first half, a defensive struggle<lb/>
pitting ECU'S quick feet against<lb/>
Richmond bulk inside<lb/>
On several occasionsdun ng the<lb/>
half the Pirates used big defensive<lb/>
plays to fuel fast breaks<lb/>
Following a Tim Brown<lb/>
blocked shot, Love retrieved the<lb/>
loose ball and whizzed the ball to a<lb/>
breaking Lester Lyons who soared<lb/>
for a slam. Following the Lyons'<lb/>
jam, ECU took a 31-30 lead at the<lb/>
half.<lb/>
Pirate center Ike Copeland re-<lb/>
lumed to las year's torm with ag-<lb/>
gressively play on the low post,<lb/>
contributing 11 points which in-<lb/>
cluded five for seven shooting per-<lb/>
formance from the line ? an area<lb/>
where the sophomore has trouble<lb/>
thus far.<lb/>
But for Richmond, it was the<lb/>
play of Curtis Blair and Kenny<lb/>
Wood who keep the Pirate defense<lb/>
entangled.<lb/>
With the ability to shoot for the<lb/>
drive and penetrate Blairexploited<lb/>
the high post of the ECU zone<lb/>
"He(Blair)hitsomebigshots to<lb/>
keep us in range, but it was Wood<lb/>
who had the big shot in the end<lb/>
Richmond head coach Dick Tan-ant<lb/>
said.<lb/>
Richmond University 71<lb/>
(10-?,5-3)<lb/>
Tim Weathers. 2 A, 3, Kenny Wood, 7-<lb/>
11,1. Jim Springer. 4-7,13, Curtis Biair, ?<lb/>
21,23, EiweBurrough, 1-6,2, !im Shield-<lb/>
1-4, 2. Tcttv ConiHiiN 3<lb/>
East Carolina University 64<lb/>
7-?, 1-5)<lb/>
Stanley Love, 44,8, IkeCopeland, 3-6,<lb/>
11, Lester Lyons, 4-14,15. Robin House 1<lb/>
4,5, J?ff Pfcriidi. 4-7,11. Kevin Armstrong,<lb/>
1 -3,4, Dtirrefl Overton, 2-3,4, Tim Brown 2<lb/>
2.6<lb/>
i:<lb/>
SI<lb/>
II<lb/>
air<lb/>
B<lb/>
bet<lb/>
d<lb/>
m<lb/>
<pb facs="00058259_0023"/><lb/>
?i !<lb/>
?: 0 0<lb/>
DR I<lb/>
1 pi r in ks<lb/>
V U)<lb/>
DEVELOPING<lb/>
NG COUPON FOR A<lb/>
i<lb/>
TOFPRINTSJ<lb/>
ssmg<lb/>
rits<lb/>
u Order<lb/>
(<lb/>
Omega<lb/>
( O ED<lb/>
1A) pin a<lb/>
Tuesday Janulry<lb/>
i It i-Purpose Room<lb/>
pledging. Call<lb/>
Imore information.<lb/>
January24, 1991htt iSast (Earoltnian<lb/>
13<lb/>
Lyons<lb/>
Continued from page 11<lb/>
Mtne Inducted in the Minges'<lb/>
nvwoS is his mother Alice I .yens<lb/>
rVnnott<lb/>
"I decided to come to F.ist<lb/>
(irpima because it was dose lo<lb/>
hmr and my p.irents would have<lb/>
 , 'wnce to come to the games<lb/>
 ons said<lb/>
1 yens Chose ECU over Akron,<lb/>
Virginia Commonwealth North<lb/>
, i .vipi A&amp;T and Richmond .And<lb/>
Lester has not let the home folks<lb/>
down vet<lb/>
Against Mason, 1 yons was<lb/>
omnipresent. Knocking in 21 points,<lb/>
uard pkk-pocketed the Patri<lb/>
pts four times, had two blocks and<lb/>
passed for four assist<lb/>
Two days earlier, on fan 12,<lb/>
I yons went seven for 12 from the<lb/>
field and tour tor six from the three-<lb/>
point line to hmsh with 20 against<lb/>
lames Madison<lb/>
Put Lyons is hard to placate<lb/>
Besides wanting to gam 15 p unds,<lb/>
? mssays the work has yet tocome<lb/>
As tar as my work ethics, 1<lb/>
ihink 1 need to work harder on de<lb/>
tense he said<lb/>
When asked what he aspi res ft i<lb/>
acromplishon the court, Lyons said<lb/>
1 ust want to be a part ot win-<lb/>
ning team<lb/>
Happy 21st Birthday<lb/>
Kerri Williams<lb/>
Hanisfeefer<lb/>
wP&amp;<lb/>
HBP<lb/>
WHY WAIT<lb/>
FOR YOUR<lb/>
TAX REFUND<lb/>
WHEN YOU CAN<lb/>
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USE HAH BLOCK'S RAPID REFUND PROGRAM<lb/>
It's ;iiiilahle whether HJkR Block<lb/>
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IT'S FAST!<lb/>
Lor more details or to sec it you<lb/>
qualify call fkvR Block now.<lb/>
SWITCH TO OUR<lb/>
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Buyer's MarketMemorial Drive 756-1209<lb/>
University Square10th St. 757-2400<lb/>
SearsCarolina East Mall 355-9700<lb/>
Lose<lb/>
Quarters<lb/>
Continued from page 11<lb/>
Fhe first play ot the game a<lb/>
Stanley love steal and subsequent<lb/>
. -up was indicative of the<lb/>
first half, a defensive struggle<lb/>
pitting. ECU's quick feet against<lb/>
hmond bulk inside<lb/>
Ortseveraloccasionsduringme<lb/>
MM the Pirates used bit; defensive<lb/>
p ivs to fuel fast breaks<lb/>
Following a Tun Brown<lb/>
- eked shot. l.ove retrieved the<lb/>
osebafl and whizzed the ball lo a<lb/>
king Lester Lyons who soared<lb/>
i siam. Following the Lyons'<lb/>
wm ECU took a 31-30 lead at the<lb/>
Pirate center Ike Copefamd re<lb/>
tmnmi to last vear's form with ag<lb/>
gressively play on the low post,<lb/>
contributing 11 points which in-<lb/>
cluded five tor seven shooting per<lb/>
termanee from the line an area<lb/>
where the sophomore has trouble<lb/>
thus far<lb/>
But for Richmond, it was the<lb/>
plav of Curtis Blair and Kenny<lb/>
Wood who keep the Pirate defense<lb/>
entangled<lb/>
With theabihtv to shoot for the<lb/>
drive and penetrate BTairexploited<lb/>
the high post of the ? I zone.<lb/>
"He'Blair)hitsomebigshots to<lb/>
keep us in range, but it was Wood<lb/>
who had the big shot in the end<lb/>
Richmond head coach Dick Tarrant<lb/>
Richmond University 71<lb/>
(10-8,3-3)<lb/>
Tim Weathers 24, 3, Kennv Wood, 7<lb/>
II, i, Jim Springer. 4-7, 13, urtis Kiair. 9<lb/>
!3 Fupene Burroughs-6.2. lirnShicl.l-<lb/>
iorrvunmith 1"<lb/>
East Carolina University M<lb/>
(7-9, 1-5)<lb/>
Stanley Love, 44,8, lke 'oprland, 3-6,<lb/>
I  Lester Lyons. 4-14, 1 5 Kobin I iou ? I<lb/>
. 3, left Perhch, 4-7,11 Kc-vir Armstrong,<lb/>
" 3.4. Dan-ellOverton.? 3 ? fiBlBfOWl 2<lb/>
? h<lb/>
DOMINO'S<lb/>
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its FREE.<lb/>
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it - . <lb/>
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? Organically Grown<lb/>
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? Enhanced Natural<lb/>
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16 - 25 Count<lb/>
Jumbo Shrimp<lb/>
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Deli Fried<lb/>
Chicken<lb/>
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Borden<lb/>
Ice Cream<lb/>
Prices Good Through Tuesday, January 29,1991<lb/>
Prices in this ad effective through Tuesday. January 29.1991 in Pitt County Stores only<lb/>
We Peserv The Right To Limit Quantities None Sold lo Dealers We Uadty Accept Federal Food Stamps<lb/>
<pb facs="00058259_0024"/><lb/>
Dk i i<lb/>
?????????? ?????????.<lb/>
OPING<lb/>
NG COUPON FOR A<lb/>
i,<lb/>
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lucsclax Janiipry<lb/>
iIti-Purpose Room<lb/>
pledging. Call<lb/>
lino re information.<lb/>
January24, 1991 Mln ta?t ?arolinian<lb/>
Lyons<lb/>
Continued from page 11<lb/>
?arnc If luded u the Minges<lb/>
crowds is his mother Ali e I mid<lb/>
Bennett<lb/>
l decided lo come to l it<lb/>
 ? ma Ni ause it was lose t(<lb/>
fjprne and my parents would ha c<lb/>
, hance to come to the game<lb/>
:ts S,1ll1<lb/>
yonsehose EC Uover rkron<lb/>
naommonwealth North<lb/>
i i St rand Ri hmond nd<lb/>
has not let the home tolks<lb/>
vet<lb/>
Vgainst Mason, 1 ons was<lb/>
presenl Knot king in 21 points,<lb/>
? pi( k pocketed the iitn<lb/>
? times had two bio ksand<lb/>
rnvMi un font ,1-iM<lb/>
da) s earlier, ?n Ian 12<lb/>
- went seven tor 12 from the<lb/>
? mi Ifcnirf ? -i from lh? ;?<lb/>
 "v to finish with  against<lb/>
i Madison<lb/>
;ii' I yons is hard t ? plat.r<lb/>
Besides wanting h ? ?? tit I5p unds<lb/>
-s.n t!? work hasi ft<lb/>
s far ?s m work ethis 1<lb/>
?h.Mk ' need to work hardei i n de<lb/>
ferisc he iut<lb/>
When asked wh.it he aspires to<lb/>
? implishonthecourt 1 yonssaid<lb/>
1 niit wanl to be . pan ol v in<lb/>
, team '<lb/>
 Happy 21st Birthday<lb/>
Kerri Williams<lb/>
r<lb/>
m&amp;<lb/>
m<lb/>
WHY WAIT<lb/>
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SWITCH TO OUR<lb/>
LOWPRICESIN'91<lb/>
Lose<lb/>
rontinu?d from page 11<lb/>
? first : !?? ol the game .1<lb/>
? I ove steal and subsoquenl<lb/>
was ind? ati veof th<lb/>
li fensne StTU?<lb/>
? - I I I's qui Is feet against<lb/>
mond bulk inside<lb/>
N" s- erali?1 asionsduringtho<lb/>
Pirates used big defensivi<lb/>
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v. ? ,1 11 in Browi<lb/>
? s k.si shot I ove retrieved 11 u?<lb/>
 -1" and hizzed the ball h ? 1<lb/>
ik ing I ester i yons who soared<lb/>
lam Following the 1 yons<lb/>
I took -i ;l 0 lead .it the<lb/>
!V,itr renter Ike 1 opcland re<lb/>
turned to List ymn s form w itl<lb/>
ressiv 1 v play on the low <lb/>
tntributing I 1 points which in<lb/>
ktded five tor seven  1<lb/>
rmarv -? from the line an area<lb/>
where the sophorro re has troul<lb/>
?his tar<lb/>
Hut tor Richmond, it was the<lb/>
iv oturtis Bl.nr and Kt nn<lb/>
?h1 who keep the Pirate defense<lb/>
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With the ability to shoot tor tin<lb/>
l nve and penetrate Blaii 1 ??.<lb/>
- high post ol the I I zone<lb/>
He Rair) hit some big shots to<lb/>
keep 'is in range, but it was Wood<lb/>
ho h??d the big '?hot in the end,<lb/>
1 hmond head coach Dick 1 arrant<lb/>
s,tl(1<lb/>
RithmonJ I niosit 71<lb/>
110-8. t)<lb/>
TimWo.itr M ,KennyWood<lb/>
? im Spring 1, i1 urosSatf.<lb/>
' Eug?i?ium)ugh : 6 ?' fin SW<lb/>
irm I IX<lb/>
fast Carolint University M<lb/>
17-0. 13)<lb/>
Stanley Love, 44 B,lke' peland<lb/>
.sir t yons. 4 14 15 Robin I louse I<lb/>
i ? fefl iwhch 4-7,11 Kevir m n<lb/>
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DOMINO'S<lb/>
PIZZA<lb/>
SUPER BOWL SPECIAL<lb/>
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If your order docs not<lb/>
arrive within 30 minutes<lb/>
it's FREE.<lb/>
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Bowl Sunday ONLY<lb/>
between 5 p.m. and 9 p.m.<lb/>
. it<lb/>
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? Organically Grown<lb/>
Without Pesticides.<lb/>
? Enhanced Natural<lb/>
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? Organically -j<lb/>
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PtVll<lb/>
Nature's Light<lb/>
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Ice Cream<lb/>
V2 Gal<lb/>
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Pepsi Cola,<lb/>
Mountain Dew<lb/>
PliCC3 in this ad effective through Tuesday. January 29. 1991 in Put County Stores only<lb/>
Wc Reservi Th? Right To Limit Quanttks None bold fo Ucakis We Uacfly Accept Federal Food Stamps<lb/>
<pb facs="00058259_0025"/><lb/>
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<pb facs="00058259_0026"/>
</div></body></text></TEI>