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<p rend="align(centerbold)">[This text is machine generated and may contain errors.]</p>
<pb facs="00058276_0001"/>
?JE iEaHt (ftanrliman<lb/>
Serving the East Carolina campus community since 1925<lb/>
Vol.65 No.21<lb/>
Tuesday, April 2,1991<lb/>
Greenville, North Carolina<lb/>
Circulation 12,000<lb/>
10 Pages<lb/>
SGA Elections<lb/>
Candidate for President<lb/>
SGA Speaker to run unopposed<lb/>
Alex Martin<lb/>
By Shannan Copeland<lb/>
StJtl Writer<lb/>
Ale Martin, who will mn<lb/>
unopposed for Student Govern-<lb/>
ment Association president<lb/>
Wedneday, wants to strengthen<lb/>
actions between Green villeand<lb/>
ECU students.<lb/>
"W'v have .ni excellent rela-<lb/>
tionship with the administra-<lb/>
tion M.irtin said. "And I'd like<lb/>
to mine that to work the sime<lb/>
way with the city of Greenville.<lb/>
The city has to realize that<lb/>
we are mature young citizens<lb/>
and we have to realize that the<lb/>
decisions they make are for the<lb/>
benefit of Greenville<lb/>
Martin also slid he would<lb/>
like to stress voter registration<lb/>
among the students because city<lb/>
council elections arc approach-<lb/>
ing.<lb/>
Martin, a junior majoring in<lb/>
information processing, has<lb/>
Served with the SGA for over a<lb/>
 ear. 1 le was on the student wel-<lb/>
fare committee, the president's<lb/>
summer cabinet and he is pres-<lb/>
ently speaker oi the house<lb/>
Martin said he hopes to start<lb/>
a Irishman programcalled Purple<lb/>
Pages. It will consist ot about 40<lb/>
freshmen wh will serve as pages<lb/>
to theexecutive officers, the legis<lb/>
latureand the judicial branch.<lb/>
It is modeled after the parts<lb/>
within the Senate, he said<lb/>
"I'm aiming at getting the<lb/>
freshmen interested in the SGA<lb/>
he said. "And also opening them<lb/>
up to other opportunities the<lb/>
campus has to offer<lb/>
Martin said he would also<lb/>
like to begin a summer camp that<lb/>
would be a supplement to orien-<lb/>
tation.<lb/>
 le said he got the idea at a<lb/>
national conference from Texas<lb/>
A&amp;M<lb/>
"It's more of a long term<lb/>
goal he said. "It's verv popular<lb/>
at Texas but it took 30 vears to<lb/>
build<lb/>
The program would teach<lb/>
freshmen about different ECU<lb/>
traditionsand let everybody get<lb/>
to know one another, Martin<lb/>
said.<lb/>
Martin would also like to<lb/>
work with the Pirate Gub to<lb/>
bring Kick more traditions in<lb/>
sports.<lb/>
"I am really impressed with<lb/>
other schools that have tradi-<lb/>
tions to go along with athletics<lb/>
he said. "It is really good for the<lb/>
morale of the students<lb/>
Martin said he plans on<lb/>
holding forums once or twice a<lb/>
vear. At these forums, anyone<lb/>
may come and ask questions or<lb/>
state problems to the executive<lb/>
branch.<lb/>
As for the possible 50 per-<lb/>
cent parking fee increase: "I'll<lb/>
oppose it unless they can prove<lb/>
otherwise that we need this in-<lb/>
crease he said.<lb/>
Martin said he looks for-<lb/>
ward to working with the ex-<lb/>
ecutive branch, the legislature<lb/>
and the student body.<lb/>
"I will represent all students<lb/>
to the best of my ability he<lb/>
said.<lb/>
Some of his campus activi-<lb/>
ties include the ECU Board of<lb/>
headers, the SGA Transit Board<lb/>
and the Fine Arts Funding<lb/>
Board.<lb/>
Candidate for Vice-President<lb/>
Black to stress relations with city<lb/>
By LeClair Harper<lb/>
Assistant News Fditor<lb/>
Student lovemment Asso-<lb/>
ciation Pav Representative<lb/>
Robin Black will be running<lb/>
unopposed tor SGA vice presi-<lb/>
dent Wednesday.<lb/>
In her role86 vice president<lb/>
for SGA, one oi her main goals is<lb/>
to work wi th minorities to make<lb/>
the campus loss segregated.<lb/>
Black, a junior communica-<lb/>
tions major from Greensboro,<lb/>
also hopes to help get freshmen<lb/>
more involved in SGA and to<lb/>
improve relations with the city<lb/>
of Greenville.<lb/>
She sud that she plans to<lb/>
attend the city council meetings<lb/>
with the president.<lb/>
"I don't think (the city) re-<lb/>
alizes how important ECU is to<lb/>
Greenville she said. "(I want<lb/>
to) show the city that we're here<lb/>
to make Greenville a better<lb/>
place.<lb/>
Black said she hopes UI work<lb/>
with campus recycling and possi-<lb/>
bly find a way to work with Gre-<lb/>
enville in setting up a recycling<lb/>
plan.<lb/>
Black also wants to improve<lb/>
relations with students and fac-<lb/>
ulty.<lb/>
"I think (the faculty) need to<lb/>
be encouraged to cater more to<lb/>
the students she slid.<lb/>
She wants faculty members<lb/>
that students consider good<lb/>
teachers to work with the rest of<lb/>
the faculty to improve education.<lb/>
Black is a member oi Sigma<lb/>
Sigma Sigma Sorority and is vice<lb/>
president for the Panhellenic<lb/>
Council. She also works with<lb/>
Purple Pride, a program for fresh-<lb/>
men to increase minority aware-<lb/>
J<lb/>
ncss, and the ECU Board of Lead-<lb/>
ers, an organization of minority<lb/>
leaders.<lb/>
She said her ability to work<lb/>
Robin Black<lb/>
with people, her new ideas, and<lb/>
her ability to get jobs done will<lb/>
enable her to boa successful SGA<lb/>
vice president<lb/>
After grad ua tion, Black hope<lb/>
to work in advertising. She is<lb/>
also interested in law.<lb/>
"I'm planning on going to<lb/>
law school, but that's a while in<lb/>
the future she said.<lb/>
Candidate for Secretary<lb/>
Incumbent to run without opposition<lb/>
Katie Carstens<lb/>
By LaToya Hankins<lb/>
Staff Writer<lb/>
Incumbent Katie Carstens,<lb/>
a junior marketing major from<lb/>
Eden, N.C is running Unop-<lb/>
posed for secretary of the Student<lb/>
Government Association elec-<lb/>
tion on April 3.<lb/>
Her duties will include tak-<lb/>
ing minutesat all SGA meetings,<lb/>
keeping the roll books up to date<lb/>
and appointing legislators to<lb/>
committees as space becomes<lb/>
available.<lb/>
She became interested in stu-<lb/>
dent government in her sopho-<lb/>
more year through a friend.<lb/>
Carstens served as a legisla-<lb/>
tor until she wasappointed by the<lb/>
Speaker of the House Alex Mar-<lb/>
tintoserveoutthe term ofa former<lb/>
secretary.<lb/>
After getting to know the job<lb/>
and the people, she felt secure<lb/>
enough to run for re-election.<lb/>
She has mixed feelings about<lb/>
running unopposed.<lb/>
'It is sort of sad that out of<lb/>
16,000 students that there is not<lb/>
that much interest in student<lb/>
government, "she said. 'There are<lb/>
three executive officers running<lb/>
unopposed. That is not a very<lb/>
good representation<lb/>
Her goals for the upcoming<lb/>
year are varied. She hopes to in-<lb/>
crease student involvement in<lb/>
SGA expand activities in the leg-<lb/>
islation and increase awareness<lb/>
of what the SGA does.<lb/>
"A lot of things that are re-<lb/>
ported don't get reported in the<lb/>
right way she said.<lb/>
She also plans to work with<lb/>
unopposed presidential candi-<lb/>
date Alex Martin on plans to<lb/>
integrate freshmen into student<lb/>
government.<lb/>
She has hopesof improving<lb/>
students' relationship with ECU<lb/>
Public Safety and theGreenville<lb/>
City Council.<lb/>
Martin is looking forward<lb/>
to working with Carstens in his<lb/>
new role. T couldn't function<lb/>
wi thout her he said. "She does<lb/>
more than a secretary. She is<lb/>
very instrumental in running<lb/>
the legislation<lb/>
In her spare time, Carstens<lb/>
works as a nanny for a family<lb/>
with three children. She wishes<lb/>
that she had time to be involved<lb/>
in more activities, but with<lb/>
studying and SGA, "There is<lb/>
not enough hours in the day for<lb/>
me to accomplish everything<lb/>
Candidates for Treasurer<lb/>
Hillard stresses experience in race<lb/>
Eric Milliard<lb/>
By Jim Rogers<lb/>
Staff Writer<lb/>
Eric Hilliard,a candidate for<lb/>
Student Government Associa-<lb/>
tion treasurer in Wednesday's<lb/>
election, has held four positions<lb/>
in the SGA and was one of two<lb/>
legislators nominated for Legis-<lb/>
lator of the Year for 1990-91.<lb/>
"I know how things work<lb/>
said Hilliard, a junior Finance<lb/>
major.<lb/>
If elected to the SGA Trea-<lb/>
surer position. Hilliard wants to<lb/>
create the position of ECU audi-<lb/>
tor. This person would be in<lb/>
charge of checking all of the re-<lb/>
ceipts from groups receiving<lb/>
money from the SGA to ensure<lb/>
the money is spent only for what<lb/>
it was intended.<lb/>
Hilliard said that there<lb/>
should bea moredefinablecriteria<lb/>
for student groups seeking monev<lb/>
from the SGA. He said a way to<lb/>
better educate student groups<lb/>
aboutSG A fund allocation should<lb/>
be set up, such as a weekly infor-<lb/>
mation table set in front of the<lb/>
Student Store.<lb/>
Hilliard would like to raise<lb/>
the maximum amount of money<lb/>
available through SGA student<lb/>
loans from the current limit of<lb/>
$25 to $50.<lb/>
"The loan limit should re-<lb/>
flect inflationary rates Hilliard<lb/>
said. He said the rising costs of<lb/>
text books is justification for the<lb/>
change.<lb/>
Hilliard also expressed in-<lb/>
terest in creating a council of<lb/>
Recreational Services represen-<lb/>
tatives who would be in charge<lb/>
of funds for club sport teams<lb/>
such as Ultimate frisbee, rugby<lb/>
and lacrosse.<lb/>
Hilliard was sophomore<lb/>
class president in 1989-90 and is<lb/>
serving as the SGA representa-<lb/>
tive for solkitation and canvass-<lb/>
ing.<lb/>
Beamer looks to Treasurer's future<lb/>
By Jim Rogers<lb/>
Staff Writer<lb/>
Junior Garv Beamer, candi-<lb/>
date for Student Government<lb/>
Association treasurer, said<lb/>
building for the future and stu-<lb/>
dent service are the key issues<lb/>
facing the next treasurer.<lb/>
"I am looking ahead to the<lb/>
year 2000 Beamer said.<lb/>
Beamer, a finance major<lb/>
from Mount Airv, believes the<lb/>
SGAshould "make more money<lb/>
from money" through invest-<lb/>
ments.<lb/>
He said last year the SGA<lb/>
investment return was less than<lb/>
4 percent. Beamer would like to<lb/>
see this increase to 8 percent by<lb/>
making investments such as<lb/>
certificates of deposit.<lb/>
Beamer slid the SGA should<lb/>
also solicit more money from ECU<lb/>
alumni like other schools in the<lb/>
state do.<lb/>
This extra money could be<lb/>
putinaseparatcaccount and used<lb/>
for a matching funds program,<lb/>
Beamer said.<lb/>
The matching fu nds program<lb/>
would be a way for student<lb/>
groups to raise money on cam-<lb/>
pus and the SGA would match a<lb/>
certain percentage of the funds<lb/>
raised.<lb/>
This will increase service to<lb/>
the student body and give stu-<lb/>
dent groups a new way to be<lb/>
awarded money, Beamer said.<lb/>
Beamer said the student loan<lb/>
limit of $25isappropriatebecause<lb/>
it allows the SGA to service as<lb/>
many students as possible with<lb/>
lia.<lb/>
Gary Beamer<lb/>
the $6000 allotted each semester<lb/>
for loans.<lb/>
Beamer feels he is well-<lb/>
suited for the office.<lb/>
"I've got what it takes to<lb/>
make a difference Beamer said.<lb/>
Fry to support students in allocation<lb/>
By Jim Rogers<lb/>
Staff Writer<lb/>
Michelle Fry<lb/>
Michelle Fry, a sophomore<lb/>
Speech, Language and Auditory<lb/>
Pathology major, said that sup-<lb/>
porting students will be her main<lb/>
concern if she is elected Student<lb/>
Government Associa tion treasurer<lb/>
on Wednesday.<lb/>
Fry said the SGA treasurer's<lb/>
most important job will be to listen<lb/>
and make fair decisions concern-<lb/>
ing the allocation of money.<lb/>
Fry said that history should<lb/>
not be a factor in deciding how<lb/>
much money a groupor organiza-<lb/>
tion is allocated, because every<lb/>
group's needs change each year.<lb/>
"It needs to be decided on a<lb/>
basis of need Fry said.<lb/>
Fry, of Fremont, N.C, pres-<lb/>
ently serves as the Residence Hall<lb/>
Association treasurer for the 1990-<lb/>
91 year.<lb/>
She said that her posi tion with<lb/>
the RH A hasallowed her to inter-<lb/>
act with the SGA and tiecome<lb/>
familiar with the duties of the<lb/>
SGA treasurer.<lb/>
If elected, Fry hopes to keep<lb/>
the SGA running smoothly by<lb/>
making judgements to support<lb/>
students.<lb/>
Fry sees the SGA Treasurer<lb/>
position as a challenge.<lb/>
New honor society to hold inductions<lb/>
By Carrie Armstrong<lb/>
Staff Writer<lb/>
Omicron Delta Kappa, one of<lb/>
ECU's newest honor societies will<lb/>
be inducting approximately 40<lb/>
members on April 14.<lb/>
On March 25, Omicron Delta<lb/>
Kappa became an official campus<lb/>
organization after a three-year en-<lb/>
deavor to become established at<lb/>
ECU.<lb/>
According to the organization's<lb/>
historical records, Richard Edwards,<lb/>
the executive assistant to the chan-<lb/>
cellor, began working to form an<lb/>
Omicron Delta Kappa Circle on Omicron Delta Kappa exists<lb/>
campus in the fall of 1987,and in the primarily to recognize student<lb/>
fall of 1988 a seriousattempt to form scholars who ha veachieved special<lb/>
a chapter was undertaken. distinction in leadership. To be eli-<lb/>
Eight ECU employees who are gible for membership a student<lb/>
ODK members were located and must meet the following minimum<lb/>
met several times during that fall<lb/>
semester to plan and outline the<lb/>
necessary steps to seek national<lb/>
recognition. Student nominees were<lb/>
sought out ? 36 of whom were<lb/>
invited to a reception hosted by the<lb/>
Chancellor on March 15,1989. Af-<lb/>
terwards, the students met several<lb/>
times to work on a formal petition<lb/>
for a charter.<lb/>
requirements:<lb/>
? Two semesters as a full-time<lb/>
student at ECU.<lb/>
? Junior, senior or graduate<lb/>
standing.<lb/>
? A minimum cumulative<lb/>
grade point average of 3.00 if an<lb/>
undergraduateor3.80ifagraduate.<lb/>
? Exemplary character as evi-<lb/>
See Honor, page 2<lb/>
INSIDE TUESDAY<lb/>
Editorial<lb/>
 4 Features<lb/>
5 Sports<lb/>
n<lb/>
It is up to students to make<lb/>
Greenville's recycling project<lb/>
successful.<lb/>
Val Kilmer recreates the legend<lb/>
of Jim Morrison in the feature<lb/>
film The Doors<lb/>
( lasMtied ?' <lb/>
In baseball, the Pirates beat<lb/>
Jacksonville 6-4 and tied them<lb/>
in a ram-shortened game.<lb/>
- ?.<lb/>
<pb facs="00058276_0002"/><lb/>
2 BI?e Emit (Harolfnfan April 2, 1991<lb/>
-<lb/>
CRIMP SENE<lb/>
Officers investigate report of assault<lb/>
on female at Minges Coliseum<lb/>
March 27<lb/>
1538- Harrington Field: assisted another officer pertaining toa<lb/>
tight between the players and coaches. Same was settled by staff<lb/>
members.<lb/>
1854 - Minges Coliseum (pool area): investigated a suspicious<lb/>
person report. Terson was gone on arrival.<lb/>
2055?Public Safety: took a report of an assault on a female<lb/>
relating to above suspicious person incident at 1854. Two officers<lb/>
were called out for same.<lb/>
0128 -Eighth and Cotanche streets: student given verbal warn-<lb/>
ing for speeding and driving left of center. Student was advised to<lb/>
park vehicle for having consumed a quantity of alcohol.<lb/>
0217 -Scott Residence Hall courtyard: responded to a brawl.<lb/>
Subjects were located and a report was filed.<lb/>
March 28<lb/>
1729?Belk Residence Hall: investigated a hit and run report. A<lb/>
minor accident Report was filed.<lb/>
2342?Fifth Street and Forest Hill Drive: non-student issued<lb/>
(ampus citation for moving violations. Subject was turned over to<lb/>
friends for transportation.<lb/>
0028 -Evans and 14th streets: stopped a motorist at the request<lb/>
of a .reenville officer. Driver was turned over to GFD officer for<lb/>
 .e.st.<lb/>
0118 Belk Residence Hall (northwest): stopped a motorist for<lb/>
speeding. Student was charged with driving while intoxicated and<lb/>
e tpired driver's license.<lb/>
0120 College Hill Drive and 14th streets: stopped student for<lb/>
I eding. Same was charged with DVV1.<lb/>
0244 -Belk Residence Hall: assisted residence hall staff in locat-<lb/>
11 ig subject that had broken out the glass of a fire box. Were unable<lb/>
to locate subject.<lb/>
0518 ?Third and Reade streets and Fifth and Reade streets:<lb/>
three vehicles found to have driver's side windows broken out.<lb/>
In vestigatorscalled out for possiblebreakingand enteringof vehicles.<lb/>
March 29<lb/>
192( -Public Safety: took a communicating threats report.<lb/>
0327 -Cotten Residence Hall: campus citations issued to male<lb/>
subject and female resident for visitation violation.<lb/>
March 30<lb/>
0022?Aycock Residence Hall (east): administrative campus<lb/>
v itation given to student for breech of security.<lb/>
0424?AustinBuilding(west):investigated report of unknowns<lb/>
 andalizing a bike rack.<lb/>
March 31<lb/>
2110 Scott Residence Hall: investigated an explosive device<lb/>
thrown in the area.<lb/>
2223 Clement Residence Hall: investigated a weapon viola-<lb/>
tion. The weapon was not found.<lb/>
Crime Scene is Uken from official ECU Public Safely Log.<lb/>
Media Board to survey<lb/>
students on yearbook<lb/>
By Shannan Copeland<lb/>
Staff Writer<lb/>
The main thing it might effect<lb/>
is whether there will be a magazine<lb/>
format said Fran Frazier, chair<lb/>
On Wednesday and Thursday, person of the media board.<lb/>
students will have the opportunity<lb/>
to fill out a survey on how they feel<lb/>
about the yearbook situation.<lb/>
On these days, there will be a<lb/>
booth in front of the student store<lb/>
from 9 a.m. until 1 p.m.<lb/>
The media board members,<lb/>
who drew up the survey, will man<lb/>
the booth and tally up the results on<lb/>
Sunday.<lb/>
Frazier said other schools, in<lb/>
eluding UNC Charlotte, use this<lb/>
format.<lb/>
The magazine format is not<lb/>
bulky like the old yearbook, Frazier<lb/>
said.<lb/>
Frazier said they are looking to<lb/>
find out if the new style appeals to<lb/>
students and if students are willing<lb/>
to produce it.<lb/>
SG A gives out $3,332 during<lb/>
10-minute meeting Monday<lb/>
By Shannan Copeland<lb/>
Staff Writer<lb/>
Two organizations received<lb/>
money in Monday night's Student<lb/>
Government Association meeting.<lb/>
Phi Sigma Tau, a national phi-<lb/>
losophy honor society, received<lb/>
$2,000.<lb/>
The honor society will hold a<lb/>
Honor<lb/>
dejwte on the effects of war in the<lb/>
Middle East on April 9.<lb/>
The Occupational Therapy<lb/>
Student Organization received<lb/>
$1332. They plan to use the monev<lb/>
they received to attend a conference<lb/>
in Cincinnati.<lb/>
In other business, the SGA<lb/>
passed a constitution for the Hospi-<lb/>
tality Management Association<lb/>
Continued from page 1<lb/>
denced by the submission of three<lb/>
character references, at least two of<lb/>
which must be from faculty or staff<lb/>
members of ECU.<lb/>
? The achievement of special<lb/>
distinction in at least one of five<lb/>
major areas of leadership.<lb/>
'Teople axv nominated bv 01-<lb/>
therdeansordepartnvntheadsand<lb/>
then those people are asked to fill<lb/>
out an application which basically<lb/>
asks GPA and extracurnailar ac-<lb/>
tivities" said Jeff Skillen, who will<lb/>
be inducted on April 14. "Then a<lb/>
commit tee within the group judges<lb/>
it against this point system that the<lb/>
nationals gives us. It's based on a<lb/>
five point system judging leader-<lb/>
ship, athletic ability, artistic ability<lb/>
? that sort of thing. The point of<lb/>
OPEN-MIC NIGHT<lb/>
TONIGHT<lb/>
8:00 PM<lb/>
STUDENT UNION<lb/>
in the<lb/>
UNDERGROUND<lb/>
(Basement of Mendenhall)<lb/>
?<lb/>
Come out for some great entertainment and<lb/>
help us decide who's best.<lb/>
This is the UNDERGROUND'S last<lb/>
show of the year!<lb/>
Free Admission and Refreshments<lb/>
Door Prizes!<lb/>
Brought to you by the<lb/>
Student Union Coffeehouse Committee.<lb/>
STUDLNl UNION<lb/>
Omicron Delta Kappa is to get as<lb/>
wide a cross section of the univer-<lb/>
sity as we possibly can.<lb/>
"What we do is, for example,<lb/>
under leadership if you are the<lb/>
president of a club, or student gov-<lb/>
ernment president you get five<lb/>
points he said. 'The vice presi-<lb/>
dent of a club gets four points, sec-<lb/>
retary ofa club receives three points,<lb/>
and soon. Then wegodowneachof<lb/>
the headings and total up the<lb/>
number of points, and x number of<lb/>
piMntsequalsadmissionintoODK<lb/>
Skillen said the committee that<lb/>
judges potential members is set up<lb/>
on an ad hoc basis comprised of<lb/>
three members and the faculty ad-<lb/>
visor and because of the point sys-<lb/>
tem used to induct members, Omi-<lb/>
cron Delta Kappa is a very selec<lb/>
circle.<lb/>
Tve met a lot of people in it<lb/>
(ODK) that I otherwise wouldn't<lb/>
ha ve met Skillen said. "Everybody<lb/>
is so much into what they're doing,<lb/>
and when you get to this level, ev-<lb/>
erybody is so busy and such a per-<lb/>
fectionist in their own right that you<lb/>
would never meet them outright<lb/>
Skillen said the organization<lb/>
does community service activities,<lb/>
such as helping with the scholar's<lb/>
weekend that the university has for<lb/>
select high school students in April.<lb/>
The society will help to provide<lb/>
housing for that event and make<lb/>
follow-up phone calls to judge the<lb/>
students' reaction to the university.<lb/>
Katherine Jetter, president of<lb/>
the society and nvmber of the char-<lb/>
ter group, said before the organiza-<lb/>
tion got early support from Chan-<lb/>
cellor Eakin, who was a member of<lb/>
ODK at Bowling Green University.<lb/>
Jetter said ODK members can<lb/>
nominate other students as poten-<lb/>
tial members because they tend to<lb/>
know of students who would meet<lb/>
ODK's criteria. However, a nomi-<lb/>
nation from a member does 1 I<lb/>
guarantee that student membership<lb/>
intothe society.They still have t og<lb/>
through the application and point<lb/>
system process.<lb/>
Jetter said that what makes<lb/>
ODK unique is that, "unlike other<lb/>
honor organizations it recognizes<lb/>
leadershi p as the strong poi nt other<lb/>
than just scholastic ability<lb/>
Cbtudent<lb/>
jvernment<lb/>
Association<lb/>
APPLICATIONS<lb/>
are currently being<lb/>
accepted for<lb/>
seats on the<lb/>
Honor Board<lb/>
and the position of<lb/>
Attorney General.<lb/>
Applications are<lb/>
available in the SGA<lb/>
office (upstairs<lb/>
Mendenhall) or<lb/>
209 Whichard.<lb/>
For more information,<lb/>
contact<lb/>
Maria DeNoia<lb/>
at 757-4184.<lb/>
Communists cl<lb/>
Albania's first<lb/>
TIRANA, Albania (AV,<lb/>
( ornmunists charted victory Mon-<lb/>
day in Albania's first free election in<lb/>
more than hi) years, saying they<lb/>
would win about two-thirds of the<lb/>
seats in a new parliament<lb/>
The main opposition group<lb/>
conceded it would fall short of (Dic-<lb/>
ing the Communists bum power,<lb/>
but predicted the party would fall<lb/>
within months in Albania, which<lb/>
? - List haa ?<lb/>
muruststr nghold.<lb/>
N ffi lal results from Sunday -<lb/>
voting wore released<lb/>
??' I - municabc ?? ; rimi-<lb/>
alkan na-<lb/>
tion, v.h) h is stn<lb/>
neariyahalf-centuryofStalinist<lb/>
rile and international i? 1 ition<lb/>
<lb/>
ernbarrassingdefeats. The Alba<lb/>
; resident and party teada<lb/>
-<lb/>
apital tea little kn<lb/>
and the f ireign minister i. st as well<lb/>
Xbehl,?? a entral I ?<lb/>
mitteesecretaryofthf Pan<lb/>
the Communist! pred<lb/>
fftcial results would give the partY<lb/>
fc? ittw thirds of the 250seal<lb/>
People's Assembly parlui<lb/>
mi said the results w<lb/>
important victor) I thi part)<lb/>
that sh. ?wed K ? 1 ? .<lb/>
He said the (<lb/>
willing to cooperate 1<lb/>
hon in parliar<lb/>
a new president ar<lb/>
titution<lb/>
But Sab Berish<lb/>
the main opp<lb/>
Party, told about<lb/>
I<lb/>
with the I<lb/>
TheDf<lb/>
in at least!<lb/>
in the capita of 1<lb/>
pro! 1 nir I<lb/>
 . .<lb/>
( .<lb/>
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pi I<lb/>
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lei ? ? : .<lb/>
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Director of<lb/>
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John E Semelsbeiger II<lb/>
Repi<lb/>
i )avid<lb/>
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1 atric t<lb/>
Production Manager<lb/>
Mary Piland<lb/>
DISP1 AY ADVERTISING<lb/>
per column inch gr<lb/>
National$6.00<lb/>
local Open Rate $5.00<lb/>
Bulk Contract<lb/>
Discounts Available<lb/>
Business 1 lours: Monday - Fridav c)<lb/>
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develop<lb/>
take or<lb/>
Ther<lb/>
means<lb/>
For Information Contact: Captain Gary B. Lear<lb/>
<pb facs="00058276_0003"/><lb/>
ght taut Carolinian April 2, 1991 13<lb/>
HI<lb/>
;<lb/>
be a<lb/>
i<lb/>
d to survey<lb/>
yearbook<lb/>
"The main thing it might effect<lb/>
is whether there will bo a magazine<lb/>
format said Fran Frazier, chair-<lb/>
person erf tho media board.<lb/>
Praziet nik! other schools, In-<lb/>
cluding UNC Charlotte, use this<lb/>
format<lb/>
The magazme format is not<lb/>
bulky like the old yearbook, Frazier<lb/>
,r said they are looking to<lb/>
? the new style appeals to<lb/>
,nd it students ate willing<lb/>
to produce it<lb/>
ut $3,332 during<lb/>
neeting Monday<lb/>
effects of war in die<lb/>
d ? cn April 9.<lb/>
I itional Therapy<lb/>
zation received<lb/>
to use the money<lb/>
??end a conference<lb/>
iti<lb/>
? s ness, the SGA<lb/>
?nfortherfoepi-<lb/>
enl ssociation.<lb/>
tued from page 1<lb/>
mber of the char-<lb/>
said before tho organiza-<lb/>
port from Chan-<lb/>
was rnemberol<lb/>
i reen University.<lb/>
n members can<lb/>
? students as poten-<lb/>
bers because thev tend to<lb/>
 a who would meet<lb/>
nteria Il wever, a nomi-<lb/>
n a merrier does not<lb/>
nt membership<lb/>
?? ha veto go<lb/>
n and point<lb/>
- said that what makes<lb/>
unlike other<lb/>
ns it recognizes<lb/>
 the strong point other<lb/>
? . ll "illtV<lb/>
ident<lb/>
ernment<lb/>
sociatior)<lb/>
ICATIONS<lb/>
urrently being<lb/>
xepted for<lb/>
leats on the<lb/>
lonor Board<lb/>
he position of<lb/>
irney General.<lb/>
lications are<lb/>
tble in the SGA<lb/>
ice (upstairs<lb/>
ndenhall) or<lb/>
?9 Whichard.<lb/>
ore information,<lb/>
contact<lb/>
aria DeNoia<lb/>
it 757-4184.<lb/>
Communists claim victory in<lb/>
Albania's first free election<lb/>
TIRANA, Albania (AP) ?<lb/>
Communists claimed victory Mon-<lb/>
day in Albania's first free election in<lb/>
more than 60 years, saying they<lb/>
would win about two-thirds of the<lb/>
seats in a new parliament.<lb/>
The main opposition group<lb/>
conceded it would fall short of forc-<lb/>
ing the Communists from power,<lb/>
but predicted the party would fall<lb/>
within months in Albania, which<lb/>
was Europe's last hard lino Com<lb/>
nuinisl stronghold.<lb/>
Nootticul resuHshomSunday s<lb/>
voting were released. Transporta-<lb/>
tion and communicationare primi-<lb/>
tive in the impoverished Balkan na-<lb/>
tion, which is struggling to emerge<lb/>
from nearly a halfentur) -ot Stalinist<lb/>
rule and international isolation<lb/>
TheCcmmurusts suffered some<lb/>
embarrassing cfefeats. The Albanian<lb/>
president and party leader, Rami ?<lb/>
Alia, lost his parliamentary race in<lb/>
Ihecapital toa little know nengineer,<lb/>
and the foreign ministei lost as well.<lb/>
XheKI Ghoni, a Central Com-<lb/>
mittee secretary of the Party ot Labor<lb/>
the Communist' predicted<lb/>
. 'tticial results would give the party<lb/>
about two-thirds of the 250 seats ina<lb/>
now People's Assembly parliament<lb/>
Ghoni said the results were an<lb/>
important victor) few the part)<lb/>
that showed it "enjoys the full trusl<lb/>
of the peopk<lb/>
He said the Communists are<lb/>
willing to cooperate with the opposi-<lb/>
tion in parliament, which is to name<lb/>
a new president and adopt a new<lb/>
constitution<lb/>
But Sali Berisha, a co-leader of<lb/>
the main opposition Democratic<lb/>
Partv, told about 3,000 supporters at<lb/>
a rally "there will be no coalition"<lb/>
with the Communists.<lb/>
'rheDemocratshad an early lead<lb/>
in at least 20of the 29 voting districts<lb/>
in the capital of Tirana, according to<lb/>
preliminary unofficial results based<lb/>
on partial returns and opposition<lb/>
sources.<lb/>
Ghoni said the Communists<lb/>
generally won 30 to 40 percent of the<lb/>
vote in the capital. Earlier results<lb/>
indicated the Communists would<lb/>
prevail in the countryside and the<lb/>
opposition would capture the does.<lb/>
AskedaboutAlia'stuture Ghoni<lb/>
sud Aha would continue to load the<lb/>
party. Sources said Alia won only<lb/>
about one third ii the vote in his<lb/>
parliamentary contest.<lb/>
Democratic Party supporters<lb/>
predicted they would ultimately<lb/>
prevail despite the election results.<lb/>
"Yesterday, we marked not a<lb/>
Democratic victory, but a victory for<lb/>
democracy' said partv co-leader<lb/>
GramozPashko "The( ornmunists<lb/>
who sucked our blood for 46 years<lb/>
aivtinisliod Withintvonii. nth- th. )<lb/>
MEET THE CANDIDATE<lb/>
Gary BEAMER<lb/>
will be in pieces<lb/>
'The democratic forces will be<lb/>
decisive in the futmvlifein Albania<lb/>
Berisha told the crowd at the party's<lb/>
rally. '1 f we could n't win completely<lb/>
todav, we shall gain it completely<lb/>
alter some months<lb/>
"liwn with the dictatorship<lb/>
the crowd responded.<lb/>
Alia, 66, took power in 1985 fol-<lb/>
lowingthedeathotAlbania'sStalinist<lb/>
h under, Enver Hoxha. He legalized<lb/>
opposition parties and called the<lb/>
elections after huge pro democracy<lb/>
protests and an exodus that began<lb/>
last when asylum-seekers began<lb/>
storming embassies.<lb/>
The voting was described by<lb/>
Western observers as free, though<lb/>
tainted by continued Communist<lb/>
domination over the media and gov-<lb/>
ernment, there were no reports of<lb/>
election -related violence.<lb/>
Some opposition leaders, how-<lb/>
ever, raised accusations of ballot<lb/>
fraud and other problems. Aspokes-<lb/>
man for the 1 lemocrats, Gene Polio,<lb/>
said he had received reportsof police<lb/>
intimidation ot Democratic candi-<lb/>
dates and supporters, unsealed bal-<lb/>
lot boxes, andommunist posters<lb/>
and suckers on the wallsoi polling<lb/>
stations<lb/>
The official ATA news agency<lb/>
said 95 percent of the 1.9 million<lb/>
cligil '?? voti rs turned out.<lb/>
for SGA Treasurer<lb/>
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John F. Sanelsberger D<lb/>
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David Bailey<lb/>
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Tim Peed<lb/>
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Mary Piland<lb/>
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<pb facs="00058276_0004"/><lb/>
Sire 3aat (Carolinian<lb/>
Serving the East Carolina campus community since 1925<lb/>
Joseph L. Jenkins Jr General Manager<lb/>
Michael D. Albuquerque, Managing Editor<lb/>
Blair Skinner, News Editor<lb/>
Matt King, Features Editor<lb/>
Matt Mumma, Sports Editor<lb/>
Amy Edwards, Copy Editor<lb/>
LeClair Harper, Asst. News Editor<lb/>
Stuart Oliphant, Asst. Features Editor<lb/>
Kerry Nester, Asst. Sports Editor<lb/>
Jason Johnson, Copy Editor<lb/>
Doug Morris, Editorial Production Manager Larry Huggins, Circulation Manager<lb/>
Jeff Parker, Staff Illustrator Stuart Rosner, Systems Engineer<lb/>
Chris Norman, Darkroom Technician Phong Luong, Business Manager<lb/>
Carl a Whitfield, Classified Ads Technician Deborah Daniel, Secretary<lb/>
The Eist Carolinian has served the East Carolina campus community since 1925, emphasizing information that directly affects<lb/>
ECl I students. During the ECU school year, The East Carolinian puhlishcs twice a week with a circulation of 12,(KX). The East<lb/>
Carolinian reserves the right to refuse or discontinue any advertisements that discriminate on the basis of age, sex, creed or<lb/>
national origin. The masthead editorial in each edition does not necessarily represent the views of one individual, bui, rather,<lb/>
is a majority opinion of the Editorial Board. The East Carolinian welcomes letters expressing all points of view. Letters should<lb/>
be limited to 250 words or less. For purposes of decency and brevity. The East Carolinian reserves the right to edit letters for<lb/>
publication, letters should be addressed to The Editor, The East Carolinian, Publications Bldg ECU, Greenville, N.C ,<lb/>
27834; or call (919) 757-6366.<lb/>
Opinion<lb/>
Page 4, Tuesday, April 2, 1991<lb/>
City recycling plan set to begin<lb/>
On Wednesday at 6 a.m the city of<lb/>
i ireenville will begin its most aggressive<lb/>
md extensive recycling program to date.<lb/>
City sanitation workers will begin col-<lb/>
.ecting recyclable materials ? newspapers,<lb/>
aluminum cans, cardboard and plastic ? in<lb/>
a new public works' project.<lb/>
The goal of this pilot project is to reduce<lb/>
the a mount of unrecycled materials disposed<lb/>
in area landfills each year.<lb/>
And the beauty of the project, apart<lb/>
trom the obvious "greener environment"<lb/>
benefits, is that it will not cost taxpayers any<lb/>
additional money to implement.<lb/>
In fact, it will cost $3,000 less (per capita)<lb/>
to recycle these materials than it would cost<lb/>
to dump them in a landfill.<lb/>
The project will run for a six-month<lb/>
'rial period (on a bi-monthly basis) in the<lb/>
following-neighborhoods:<lb/>
?On the first and third Wednesday of<lb/>
each month, in the Greenville Terrace,<lb/>
Moyewood, College View, West<lb/>
Meadowbrook and Chatham Circle neigh-<lb/>
borhoods.<lb/>
?On the second and fourth Wednesday<lb/>
of each month, in the East Meadowbrook,<lb/>
Johnston Heights, Colonial Trailer Park,<lb/>
Wilson Acres and Green Springs neighbor-<lb/>
hoods.<lb/>
It is more than a coincidence that stu-<lb/>
dents account for the majority of the residents<lb/>
under observation in this project. As the<lb/>
younger generation, we are the force behind<lb/>
the current movement to create a better<lb/>
environment.<lb/>
Now we must concentrate our efforts<lb/>
on making this project as successful as pos-<lb/>
sible. Af terall, this is what many of us have<lb/>
wanted for so long.<lb/>
City officials have alreadv said if the<lb/>
program is a success, plans will be made to<lb/>
increase the project's scope to cover all Gre-<lb/>
enville residents for another trial period of<lb/>
18 months.<lb/>
We need to prove to city officials and<lb/>
the communitv that we are more than just<lb/>
visitors in their environment; we are equal<lb/>
partners in a desire to create a new atmo-<lb/>
sphere of cooperation.<lb/>
The city has placed the future of<lb/>
curbside recvcling in our hands. It is up to us<lb/>
to follow through on what we have re-<lb/>
quested.<lb/>
 yitttmHrHHtP STlltX-NTS AT EASTCAROUHA<lb/>
S L UNIVERSITY'S CAMAiS TO FlHO OUT NMT T?CV<lb/>
JrttfT TO WEAR ON TH?IR COLUC? ftApiOl<lb/>
YOU CAN hear all<lb/>
( That on -me OTHER<lb/>
 STATOtiS PWW77<lb/>
HrtAT AWUT<lb/>
COU?GEW$Cf<lb/>
<lb/>
WZMB, new rock 'n' roll deserve chance<lb/>
By Matt King<lb/>
Editorial Columnist<lb/>
The other day, a friend of<lb/>
mine told me that he couldn't<lb/>
imagine anyone enjoying WZMB,<lb/>
our campus radio station. Fine.<lb/>
The next day I was working<lb/>
outside with another friend who<lb/>
ktvps the radio tuned to WRDU (a<lb/>
local station of a lesser magnitude<lb/>
than WZMB). When he went to<lb/>
getlunch I took theopportunity to<lb/>
changetheradiostationtoWZMB.<lb/>
When my friend returned<lb/>
and realized what had happened<lb/>
he said, "What station is this?"<lb/>
Theanswer wasobviousso I didn't<lb/>
reply.<lb/>
His next statement, as he<lb/>
marched over to the radio to<lb/>
change the dial was, "I ain't<lb/>
iistenin' to no goddamn ya-ya<lb/>
music I chuckled and kept<lb/>
working.<lb/>
Often, after someone hears<lb/>
me verbally bash some retarded<lb/>
rock dinosaur, like Boston for ex-<lb/>
ample, they will ask me, "Well,<lb/>
what kind of music do you like?"<lb/>
In years gone by I might have<lb/>
said any of a number of things.<lb/>
In 1981 I might have said<lb/>
Punk Rock. Circa 1983 it might<lb/>
have been New Wave. I probably<lb/>
would have said Alternative Rock<lb/>
in 1985. A year or two later I would<lb/>
have called it College Music.<lb/>
For a while, the whole idea<lb/>
of what to call the music I like<lb/>
puzzled me, until it came to me<lb/>
one day.<lb/>
The music used in WZMB's<lb/>
format can only becal led one thing<lb/>
? rock 'n' roll.<lb/>
Not only is it rock'n'roll, but<lb/>
it is rock 'n' roll coming from<lb/>
musicians who play it and record<lb/>
it the way rock 'n' roll was origi-<lb/>
nally started.<lb/>
Think about it. When rock<lb/>
music started, parents hated it.<lb/>
Narrow-minded people thought<lb/>
it was weird, and most musicians<lb/>
in the industry had to work non-<lb/>
stop to make any kind of decent<lb/>
living.<lb/>
Nowadays, the bands that<lb/>
most people consider to be rock<lb/>
stars(Rolling Stones, Eric Clapton,<lb/>
Phil Collins, The Law, Peter<lb/>
Gabriel, Heart, Van "Hagar<lb/>
David Lee Roth and the Grateful<lb/>
Dead just to name a few?I won't<lb/>
even mention the metal bands)<lb/>
know that no matter what they<lb/>
put in the record stores, people<lb/>
will flock to it.<lb/>
Where's the inspiration you<lb/>
say? There is none.<lb/>
I don't want to say that bands<lb/>
like the Rolling Stones aren't ca-<lb/>
pable of making good rock 'n' roll,<lb/>
because they have done it in the<lb/>
past. But at this mega-millionaire<lb/>
stage in their career it is only a<lb/>
possibility, not a probability.<lb/>
The real rock musicians are<lb/>
out there everywhere, wri ting and<lb/>
recording every day and playing<lb/>
every night.<lb/>
The real present-day rock<lb/>
musicians put out two albums and<lb/>
tour three times every 18 months.<lb/>
The real rock musicianscan't<lb/>
smash their guitars on stage be-<lb/>
cause they only have one.<lb/>
I could easily list 20 of these<lb/>
bands, but you can listen to WZMB<lb/>
for an hour and hear them your-<lb/>
selves.<lb/>
Their are two reasons that I<lb/>
suggest that you listen to this "new<lb/>
music" being played on college<lb/>
radio:<lb/>
First, it truly is great music<lb/>
that will blow a breath of fresh air<lb/>
into any CD library.<lb/>
And second, you had better<lb/>
get used to it now because in 20<lb/>
years it will be blasting ou t of your<lb/>
16-year-old's bedroom.<lb/>
Average SAT Score vs. Percentage of Students<lb/>
Taking SAT (1989)<lb/>
Mirrimum Wag<lb/>
Maxwell's Silver Hammer<lb/>
Raising SAT scores ignores problem<lb/>
By Scott Maxwell<lb/>
Editorial Columnist<lb/>
Everybody remembers. Out<lb/>
of all 50 states plus the District of<lb/>
This doesn't prove that<lb/>
North Carolina doesn't have the<lb/>
nation's lowest SAT scores, but it<lb/>
makesonesuspicious. I remember<lb/>
that in my Florida high school,<lb/>
which prided itself on regularly<lb/>
doesn't look like we had thou<lb/>
it did.<lb/>
(There's a big ironv h. -<lb/>
the way. Citizens anrj - <lb/>
around the country ? inclu<lb/>
to be fair, The East Carohnw.<lb/>
Columbia, North Carolina's 1989<lb/>
Scholastic Aptitude Test scores having'the highest SAT scores in apparently are too po<lb/>
were the lowest.<lb/>
Never mind that we had<lb/>
been 30th out of 51 just the year<lb/>
before. Taking last place was the<lb/>
laststraw,and lawmakersdecided<lb/>
to take action. Those SAT scores<lb/>
had to go up.<lb/>
Cut to 1991. They're still<lb/>
debating what to do, and the whole<lb/>
thing is getting increasingly wor-<lb/>
risome. Some of their plans are<lb/>
simply battling. For instance, one<lb/>
scheme would withhold driver's<lb/>
licenses from students who<lb/>
dropped out ot high school.<lb/>
This approach has plentv of<lb/>
fatal flaws, not the least of which<lb/>
is that it won't raise SAT scores.<lb/>
Students who drop out of high<lb/>
school are not generalb- those<lb/>
whose SAT scores would be sig-<lb/>
nificantly above average.<lb/>
fortunately, most proposals<lb/>
make more sense. Limiting the<lb/>
number of hours students can<lb/>
work while attending school, for<lb/>
instance, and expanding the<lb/>
availability of advanced place-<lb/>
ment courses, stand a betterchance<lb/>
oi improving standardized test<lb/>
results. (They ought to have con-<lb/>
sidered changing thecurnculum's<lb/>
emphasis from mastering skills to<lb/>
mastering thinking, or instilling<lb/>
in students a love of learning for<lb/>
its own sake, but for some reason<lb/>
no such proposals areon the table.)<lb/>
But in the midst of all this<lb/>
raise-the-SAT-scoresemi-hvstena,<lb/>
one small fact has been over-<lb/>
looked. Believe it or not, in 1989,<lb/>
North Carolina didn't have the<lb/>
lowest SAT scores in the nation!<lb/>
What we did have was the<lb/>
lowest average SAT score. But<lb/>
there's more to comparing SAT<lb/>
scores than looking at the average.<lb/>
Among cther things, one also<lb/>
needs to consider the percentage<lb/>
of students in each state who took<lb/>
the test.<lb/>
A graph of the raw data (like<lb/>
the one beside this column) hints<lb/>
that, asa general trend, the smaller<lb/>
the percentage of students in a<lb/>
state who took the test, the better<lb/>
that state's average. Statistical<lb/>
analysis confirms what the eye<lb/>
suggests: there's a strong correla-<lb/>
tion here.<lb/>
the county, students who were grounded in math to detect s-<lb/>
high academic achievers were the claim that North Carolinas I<lb/>
encouraged to take the SAT and average SAT score was the nati<lb/>
students who didn't do as well in lowest, is misleading I w<lb/>
school were not encouraged. I also<lb/>
know that this selective encour-<lb/>
agement was not practiced at other<lb/>
high schools in the county.<lb/>
I suspect that something<lb/>
similar is happening on a national<lb/>
scale. I'll bet that in Iowa, the state<lb/>
with the highest averageS AT score<lb/>
and the second-lowest percentage<lb/>
of students taking the test, guid-<lb/>
ance counselors habitually en-<lb/>
courage top students ? and only<lb/>
top students ? to take the SAT.<lb/>
Further, I'll bet that this dtx-sn't<lb/>
regularly happen here in North<lb/>
Carolina.<lb/>
At any rate, it'sa sale bet that<lb/>
if only a few of the students in a<lb/>
state are taking the test, those<lb/>
students are generally higher<lb/>
achievers than the average. So in<lb/>
states like Iowa, the students who<lb/>
take the test are probably not a<lb/>
representative sample but rather<lb/>
are toward the high end of the<lb/>
bell-shaped curve, and states like<lb/>
North Carolina are getting more<lb/>
representative samples.<lb/>
Think of it this wav. Sup-<lb/>
pose all states were asked to take a<lb/>
sample oi their population and<lb/>
report the average income of the<lb/>
sample. Suppose further that Iowa<lb/>
sampled the richest five percent of<lb/>
its population, and NorthCarolina<lb/>
sampled any 57 percent ? even<lb/>
its richest 57 percent.<lb/>
Unsurprisingly, we'd probablybe<lb/>
led to believe that Iowa was a much<lb/>
richer state than North Carolina.<lb/>
Iowa may indeed be a richer<lb/>
state than North Carolina, and its<lb/>
students may also get higher SAT<lb/>
scores. But in neither case can we<lb/>
conclude this is true simply from<lb/>
what we have observed here; all<lb/>
we really know is that in both<lb/>
cases Iowa's top five percent does<lb/>
better on average than North<lb/>
Ca rolina'stop57 percent. Bigdeal.<lb/>
Taking into account the per-<lb/>
centage of individuals sampled in<lb/>
each state is a step toward pro-<lb/>
ducing a more accurate picture,<lb/>
and at least with SAT scores we<lb/>
begin to find that the real picture<lb/>
have seen it myself it it .?. ren'tfot<lb/>
a statistics professor hen<lb/>
comparatively speaking I n<lb/>
at math.)<lb/>
It's almost painful to have1<lb/>
point this out, since educati m<lb/>
form in this state is long -<lb/>
bv any measure. It's temptr <lb/>
to leave the legislators a ne a<lb/>
refrain from pointing out thti<lb/>
they're doing what they're doing<lb/>
for all the wrong reasons<lb/>
Still, it must be done Sn<lb/>
seemingly low SAT scores wen<lb/>
the motivation for reform, <lb/>
likelv that the goal of R I rm n<lb/>
be raising the SAT scores<lb/>
This is bad because 'it n A<lb/>
improving education incidental-<lb/>
if reform improves education, s<lb/>
much the better, but it must filS<lb/>
and foremost improve standard-<lb/>
ized teM scores<lb/>
In fart, we're alreadv seeing<lb/>
signs that this is the cast practi-<lb/>
cally all the reforms are aimed it<lb/>
the students who take the 5A1<lb/>
high school students, i- if educa-<lb/>
tion at the elementary and<lb/>
high school levels were irrelevart<lb/>
Conversely, we risk devalu-<lb/>
ing improvements in education<lb/>
that don't lead to better s- T vons<lb/>
If, by some wild chance. Nor!<lb/>
Carolina's schools wore to Star)<lb/>
teaching students how to thai<lb/>
how to creatively apply know<lb/>
edge, how to spot flaws in argu-<lb/>
ments, and so on ? SAT scores<lb/>
might stay the same, even though<lb/>
graduates were much better edu-<lb/>
cated.<lb/>
As it happens, we may not<lb/>
run into either of these problem<lb/>
for quite some time. It's likelv that<lb/>
few of the proposed education<lb/>
reforms will come to fruition, since<lb/>
recent budget cuts mean fewfl<lb/>
teachers as well as, read mv lips<lb/>
no new textbooks.<lb/>
But when la wmakersdo start<lb/>
trying to improve North Carolina <lb/>
schools ? whether it's next ye<lb/>
or next decade ? don't let them<lb/>
get away with just producing<lb/>
bigger numbers.<lb/>
Letter To The Editor<lb/>
Reader finds<lb/>
humor in Gulf<lb/>
War column<lb/>
To The Editor:<lb/>
I would like to reply to an<lb/>
editorial by Mr. Darek<lb/>
McCuller's titled "Gulf War il-<lb/>
lustrates oppression of blacks<lb/>
I enjoyed the editorial a<lb/>
great deal and found it highly<lb/>
humorous, but 1 am unclear on<lb/>
Mr. McCullers thinking on<lb/>
certain points.<lb/>
As a member of the prob-<lb/>
lematic, dominating, Anglo-<lb/>
Saxon manipulators, I recog-<lb/>
nize tha t blacks often are treated<lb/>
unjustly by individuals, but I<lb/>
doubt we are planning this in-<lb/>
justice in a great spooky con-<lb/>
spiracy.<lb/>
I currently am unaware<lb/>
of who our secret leaders are as<lb/>
I am just an "American exten-<lb/>
sion Perhaps Mr. McCullers<lb/>
could point them out for us.<lb/>
Also could he please tell<lb/>
me if Gen. Colin Powell is se-<lb/>
cretly in on it and betraying his<lb/>
race; he seemed pleased with<lb/>
the results in the Middle East.<lb/>
Mr. McCullers also de-<lb/>
mand to let the Middle East have<lb/>
an "Arab conclusion but at the<lb/>
same time, he included a desire<lb/>
for a U.N. contingency force of<lb/>
50,000-100,000 troops. Are these<lb/>
troops to be all Arabs?<lb/>
Since we whites can't be<lb/>
trusted, can we use Africans and<lb/>
African Americans from the<lb/>
United Nations?<lb/>
If so, how does this sit with<lb/>
Mr. McCuller's distaste for the<lb/>
African Americans' "dispro-<lb/>
portionate numbers" of "sweat,<lb/>
blood and toil" represented in<lb/>
the coalition forces.<lb/>
By the way, the last infor-<lb/>
mation I got on American casu-<lb/>
alties in the war showed more<lb/>
killed or injured "Anglo Sax<lb/>
ons" than African Americans<lb/>
so this must have been propa-<lb/>
ganda from our secret leaders.<lb/>
Gee, these guys are really on<lb/>
top of details.<lb/>
And concerning his ref-<lb/>
erence to Thomas Jefferson, the<lb/>
Virginia slaveholder makes a<lb/>
great role model, considenng<lb/>
be was mad at the British for<lb/>
not returning over 8,000<lb/>
American slaves after the<lb/>
Revolutionary War,<lb/>
In conclusion, as a mem-<lb/>
ber of the most evil race to ever<lb/>
walk the earth, I have one last<lb/>
question. McCullers states<lb/>
"this will not be the case in the<lb/>
future" asa warning, but if this<lb/>
is true, exactly what kind and<lb/>
humane new world is it he is<lb/>
predicting?<lb/>
Mark Adams<lb/>
Graduate student<lb/>
History Education<lb/>
WASHINGTON (AP) ? Mil-<lb/>
lions of Americans began earning<lb/>
larger paychecks Monday as the<lb/>
federal minimum wage jumped by<lb/>
45 cents an hour to $425, but orga-<lb/>
nized labor said the boost falls well<lb/>
short of lifting many workers out of<lb/>
poverty.<lb/>
"They can't support a family<lb/>
on this and in many cases can't<lb/>
support themselves said Rudy<lb/>
Oswald, chief economist of the AFL-<lb/>
ClO, which wants the base wage<lb/>
increased to $5.75 an hiur by April<lb/>
1994.<lb/>
The increase in the minimum<lb/>
wage from $3.80 an hour is the<lb/>
second step of a two part increase<lb/>
Congress enacted in 199 after a<lb/>
longand fierce battle with the White<lb/>
House. President Bush had vetoed<lb/>
an earlier version heconsidered tc<lb/>
hard on businesses.<lb/>
The first stepl<lb/>
took effect a year<lb/>
minimum wage wj<lb/>
hour to$3.80. It wc<lb/>
in nearly a decade<lb/>
About3millio<lb/>
the minimum waj<lb/>
higher-paid wor<lb/>
benefit because tH<lb/>
pressure on empk <lb/>
wages by comparJ<lb/>
Sen Edward<lb/>
Mass hairmano<lb/>
and Human Resoi<lb/>
called the 4<lb/>
Roofs increase, <lb/>
low-wage workei<lb/>
"Just to resl<lb/>
intheReagai I<lb/>
should be $5.1!<lb/>
Kennedy said<lb/>
close the gap :nj<lb/>
tinuingexploitati<lb/>
Serb clan announc<lb/>
BELGRADE, Yugoslavia (AP)<lb/>
? AnethnicSerbencIavein Croatia<lb/>
said Monday it was seceding from<lb/>
the pro-Western republic to )oin<lb/>
Serbia The declaration by Krajuu<lb/>
further increased tensions m Yu-<lb/>
goslavia, where two people died in<lb/>
a weekend clash.<lb/>
Krajina'sdecisiontoanneAiLselt<lb/>
to Serbia, Yugoslavia's largest and<lb/>
most populous republic, was an-<lb/>
nounced at a rally by kra jink's<lb/>
president, Milan Batik, and broad<lb/>
cast by l'? li-<lb/>
the capital i ?<lb/>
Serbia.<lb/>
The six- <lb/>
followed a i .<lb/>
Croatian police<lb/>
who were ? <lb/>
tional Park.)<lb/>
Croatian poi<lb/>
21 other ? j<lb/>
1 went) - "j<lb/>
Army tanks<lb/>
nel carriers<lb/>
388<lb/>
330<lb/>
979<lb/>
715<lb/>
595<lb/>
278<lb/>
578<lb/>
RouS "C? starting<lb/>
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laies not included Resections appty<lb/>
Fares sojec: so change Ore ways and<lb/>
'acjity 'ares available WcxX Study AoTac<lb/>
procrarrs Intefnationa. Student 4 Tiacne-<lb/>
ID.EURAIL PASSES ISSUED ON<lb/>
THE SPOT!<lb/>
FREE Student Travel Catalog:<lb/>
Council T<lb/>
1703 Ninth SUcct 6-9<lb/>
Durham, NC 87705<lb/>
919 286 4664<lb/>
?tf? lEast<lb/>
is now accepting applicatii<lb/>
? Assistant Ne<lb/>
? Assistant Feaj<lb/>
? Copv Editor<lb/>
? Editorial Pro)<lb/>
? Director of A)<lb/>
? Business Mai<lb/>
? Advertising<lb/>
. Typesetter<lb/>
? Staff Writer<lb/>
Anyone interested should apply in persj<lb/>
located on the second floor of the Pubi<lb/>
Deadline for applications is April<lb/>
AMERICA'S FAVC<lb/>
COMPl<lb/>
save<lb/>
i<lb/>
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I<lb/>
- we had thought!<lb/>
- a big irony here, <lb/>
i ns and med<lb/>
try including,<lb/>
; 05i Caroiiman<lb/>
.ire too poorlvj<lb/>
th to detect whvj<lb/>
North Carolina's!<lb/>
? i the nations!<lb/>
Jing. I wouldn't,<lb/>
? ? .t weren 11 r<lb/>
? fessor here, and!<lb/>
 speaking I'm goo :<lb/>
? painful to have to<lb/>
nee education re-<lb/>
e is long overdue!<lb/>
It'sh mptingjustj<lb/>
. - itors alone and<lb/>
I ointing out mat<lb/>
hat thev're doing<lb/>
? r iMns.<lb/>
ii be done. Since<lb/>
litres were<lb/>
? t reform, it's<lb/>
? reform u ?<lb/>
res.<lb/>
? isf it makis<lb/>
-incidental<lb/>
? iucation, so<lb/>
? t must first<lb/>
. e standard<lb/>
n idv seeing<lb/>
iso pracb-<lb/>
re aimed a:<lb/>
ike the SAT.<lb/>
? is it educa-<lb/>
iry and junior<lb/>
? re rrelevant<lb/>
? risk devaln<lb/>
? i m education<lb/>
. -r SAT scores<lb/>
inee. North<lb/>
5 were to start<lb/>
?show to thini<lb/>
- apply knovvl-<lb/>
? fl iws in argu-<lb/>
5AT scores<lb/>
?:ieven though<lb/>
 better edu-<lb/>
? - s we may not<lb/>
f these problems<lb/>
? It'slikelythat<lb/>
- posed education<lb/>
n tofruition,since<lb/>
Igel cuts mean fewer<lb/>
II as. read my HpS,<lb/>
oks.<lb/>
. a hen la wma kcrs do sta rt<lb/>
 pj veNorthCarolin.1 J<lb/>
whether it's next year<lb/>
ie ? don't let them<lb/>
i ? iv with just producing<lb/>
 - ? imbers<lb/>
? ? ?<lb/>
c ulk ?killed or lnrured "Anglo Sax-<lb/>
than African Americans<lb/>
?ellso this must have been propa-<lb/>
b 1da from our secret leaders.<lb/>
lying histhese guvs are really on<lb/>
?. ithtop of details.<lb/>
And concerning his Tcf-<lb/>
A ??nce to Thomas lefferson, the<lb/>
:ist ha ?Virginia slaveholder makes a<lb/>
but at thegreat role model, considering<lb/>
he was mad at the Bnbsb. for<lb/>
? eo(not returning over 8,000<lb/>
Ire theseAmerican slaves after the<lb/>
Revolutionary Way<lb/>
can t beIn conclusion, as a mem-<lb/>
cansandber of the most evil race to ever<lb/>
rom thewalk the earth, I have one last<lb/>
question. McCullers states<lb/>
issitwith"this will not be the case in the<lb/>
e for thefuture "asa warning, but if this<lb/>
"dispro-is true, exactly what kind and<lb/>
f "sweat,humane new world is it he is<lb/>
rnted inpredichng?<lb/>
ast infor-Mark Adams<lb/>
pan casu-Graduate student<lb/>
fed moreHistory Education<lb/>
(She gagt (EaroHnian April 2, 1991 5<lb/>
Minimum Wage raised to $42:<lb/>
WASHINGTON (AP) ? Mil- The first step of the increase poor he said, promising that his<lb/>
Uons of Americans began earning took effect a year ago, when the committee will take up minimum<lb/>
larger paychecks Monday as the minimumwagewentfrom$3.35an wage legislation this year or next,<lb/>
federal minimum wage jumped by hourto$3.80.Itwasthefirstincrease Business executives dismissed<lb/>
45 cents an hour to $425, but orga- in nearly a decade. the need for another boost in the<lb/>
nized labor said the boost falls well About3 million Americanseam minimum wage, and the White<lb/>
short of lifting many workers out of the minimum wage. But millions of House indicated it probably would<lb/>
poverty. higher-paid workers also may oppose another increase.<lb/>
'They can't support a family benefit because the boost could put<lb/>
on this and in many cases can't pressureonemployerstoboosttheir<lb/>
support themselves said Rudy wages by comparable amounts.<lb/>
Oswald, chiefeconomist of the AR Sen. Edward M. Kennedy, D-<lb/>
ClO, which wants the base wage Mass cha'rmanof the Senate Labor<lb/>
and Human Resources Committee,<lb/>
increased to $5.75 an hour by April<lb/>
1994.<lb/>
The increase in the minimum<lb/>
wage from $3.80 an hour is the<lb/>
second step of a two-part increase<lb/>
Congress enacted in 1989 after a<lb/>
longand fierce battle with the White<lb/>
House. President Bush had vetoed<lb/>
an earlier version he considered too<lb/>
hard on businesses.<lb/>
" don't know what kind of<lb/>
dream world they're in John<lb/>
Meritt, a senior vice president of<lb/>
Hardee's restaurants, said of the<lb/>
advocates of another increase.<lb/>
"When (the cost oO your labor<lb/>
islation that had not been intro-<lb/>
duced. But he said the administra-<lb/>
tion continues to maintain that an<lb/>
increase in the minimum wage<lb/>
translates into job losses.<lb/>
The 1989 law also created a<lb/>
below-minimum "training wage"<lb/>
for teen-agers holding theirfirst jobs,<lb/>
but Labor Department figures in-<lb/>
dicate hardly any businesses are<lb/>
using it The training wage rose<lb/>
from$335anhourto$3.62Monday.<lb/>
For a minimum-wage em-<lb/>
ployee working 40 hours a week,<lb/>
Trooper kills man attempting<lb/>
to steal unmarked patrol car<lb/>
called the 45-cent raise an "April<lb/>
Fool's increase, well Mow what<lb/>
low-wage workers deserve<lb/>
"Just to restore the ground lost<lb/>
in the Reagan years, the minimum<lb/>
should be $5.15 an hour today<lb/>
Kennedy said. Congress should<lb/>
close the gap and end "this con-<lb/>
tinuing exploitation of the working<lb/>
component goes up, it ultimately Monday's 45-cent increase means a<lb/>
gets passed on to the consumer raiseofabout$18aweek,oraweekly<lb/>
Meritt said. Headded that if another income of $170.<lb/>
wage increase were enacted soon, The $8,500 annual income for a<lb/>
"We'd probably be out of business fulltime minimum-wage worker<lb/>
at some point would be about $1,400 less than the<lb/>
White House spokesman poverty line for a family of three, or<lb/>
Stephen Hart said the administra- what the government calculates a<lb/>
tion could not take a stand on leg- family must pay for basic needs.<lb/>
naru on ousinesses. unuingexpioiuiiiuuui uit- mpn ?? 0 , - - 9<lb/>
Serb clan announces secession from Yugoslavia ?<lb/>
. . . . . .  i:j,1 ( ri-aral rffort if anv.<lb/>
BELGRADE, Yugoslavia (AP)<lb/>
? An ethnic Serbenelavein Croatia<lb/>
said Monday it was seceding from<lb/>
the pro-Western republic to join<lb/>
Serbia. The declaration by Krajina<lb/>
further increased tensions in Yu-<lb/>
goslavia, where two people died in<lb/>
a weekend clash.<lb/>
Krajina'sdecision to annex itself<lb/>
to Serbia, Yugoslavia's largest and<lb/>
most populous republic, was an-<lb/>
nounced at a rally by Krajina's<lb/>
president, Milan BabtC, and broad-<lb/>
cast by Belgrade radio. Belgrade is<lb/>
the capital of Yugoslavia as well as<lb/>
Serbia.<lb/>
The secession announcement<lb/>
followed a clash Sunday between<lb/>
Croatian police and ethnic Serbs<lb/>
who were occupying Plitvice Na-<lb/>
tional Park. One of the Serbs and a<lb/>
Croatian policeman were killed, and<lb/>
21 other people were injured.<lb/>
Twenty-nine Serbs were arrested.<lb/>
Armv tanks and armored per<lb/>
sonnel earners were deployed on<lb/>
key intersections, bridges and<lb/>
around the main office of the na-<lb/>
tional park, which borders Krajina<lb/>
and is about 60 miles south of<lb/>
Croatia's capital, Zagreb, the Yu-<lb/>
goslavian news agency Tanjug re-<lb/>
ported.<lb/>
The clash came only days after<lb/>
the leadersof the two republics held<lb/>
a private meeting and reportedly<lb/>
agreed to settle their differences<lb/>
peacefully.<lb/>
It was not immediately clear<lb/>
what practical effect, if any, the<lb/>
Krajina declaration would have.<lb/>
There is no territorial link be-<lb/>
tween Krajina, which is near the<lb/>
northern Adriatic coast and entirely<lb/>
within Croatia, and Serbia.<lb/>
However, if the Serbian lead-<lb/>
ership accepts the declaration, an-<lb/>
other confrontation could follow<lb/>
between Croatia, which has ties to<lb/>
the West, and Serbia, which is con-<lb/>
trolled by the renamed Socialists,<lb/>
formerly the Communists.<lb/>
GOLDSBORO (AP) ? A<lb/>
state Highway Patrol trooper<lb/>
shot and killed a man he caught<lb/>
breaking into his unmarked<lb/>
patrol car, authorities said<lb/>
Monday.<lb/>
Trooper Robert Thaxton<lb/>
caught a man breaking into his<lb/>
Ford Mustangpatrolcararound<lb/>
midnight Sunday, said Cuyler<lb/>
Windham, senior assistant di-<lb/>
rector of the State Bureau of In-<lb/>
vestigation. The shooting oc-<lb/>
curred at Thaxton's home in the<lb/>
Wayne County community of<lb/>
Pinkney.<lb/>
"An individual broke into<lb/>
the trooper's automobile<lb/>
Windham said. "And when the<lb/>
trooper confronted the indi-<lb/>
vidualorindividualsintheyard,<lb/>
that's when the individual was<lb/>
shot and ran<lb/>
Stacy Eugene Hamm, 21, of<lb/>
the Nahunta area was declared<lb/>
dead on arrival at Wayne Me-<lb/>
morial Hospital, a hospital<lb/>
spokesman said.<lb/>
The trooper was not in ju red,<lb/>
Windham said.<lb/>
Windham said Thaxton<lb/>
heard what he thought were<lb/>
shots being fired outside his<lb/>
home.<lb/>
When Thaxton looked out<lb/>
the window, he saw a man tak-<lb/>
ing objects out of his unmarked<lb/>
Ford Mustang patrol car. A win-<lb/>
dow in the car had been smashed.<lb/>
Thaxton grabbed his gun<lb/>
and went outside to investigate.<lb/>
Windham said the man either<lb/>
approached or jumped at the<lb/>
trooper from behind the car with<lb/>
an object in his hand. Thaxton<lb/>
fired one shot and the man ran.<lb/>
Hamm was later found 1,000<lb/>
feet away on N.C. 581. He had a<lb/>
bullet wound in his chest.<lb/>
A second subject may have<lb/>
been involved, Windham said.<lb/>
The case was turned over to<lb/>
the SBI because a law enforce-<lb/>
ment officer was involved.<lb/>
Windham said the investi-<lb/>
gation could be completed in the<lb/>
next few days. The information<lb/>
will be turned ovr to the District<lb/>
Attorney's office.<lb/>
Thaxton, a four-year veteran<lb/>
of the patrol, has been assigned<lb/>
to Wayne County for less than a<lb/>
year, said Highway Patrol Sgt.<lb/>
DO. Dixon of the local office.<lb/>
Hamm had a record of con-<lb/>
victions dating back to 1985, ac-<lb/>
cording to Wayne County court<lb/>
records. They included break-<lb/>
ing, entry and larceny of a motor<lb/>
vehicle; felonious larceny; driv-<lb/>
ing while impaired, and assault<lb/>
with a deadly weapon.<lb/>
Rouv! Tnrw starting;<lb/>
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J-team can do for you:<lb/>
? Change Your Oil<lb/>
? Replace Your oil filter<lb/>
? Lube Chassis<lb/>
? Check A Fill Transmission,<lb/>
Differential, Brake, tower Suing.<lb/>
Washer and Battery Fluids<lb/>
? Check Wiper Blades<lb/>
? Inflate Tires to Proper Pressure<lb/>
? Vacuum Interior<lb/>
? Wash the Windows<lb/>
? Check Air Filler System<lb/>
FIRST<lb/>
ANNUAL<lb/>
ks"G TRAFFIC INJURY AND PREVENTION PROGRAM<lb/>
? and the GkarviIleAthleticClub<lb/>
GREENVILLE ATHLETIC CLUB A?4<lb/>
Raquetball Tournament<lb/>
April 12th, 13th &amp; 14th<lb/>
Location: Greenville Athletic Club<lb/>
140 Oakmont Drive<lb/>
Greenville, NC 756-9175<lb/>
Entry Fee: First Event $25.00 Second Event $10.00<lb/>
rriyrfrariKre Entries must be received by 12 noon, April 8th<lb/>
Entry forms may be obtained at the Greenville Athletic Club. No<lb/>
phone entries.<lb/>
Award, Awards to 1st, 2nd and consultaion winners in each division<lb/>
 wasner anu oauay nuno .<lb/>
1 126 SE Greenville Blvd. 756-25TOoilJm Saty<lb/>
Hospitality. Food and beverages for entrants ail weekend<lb/>
Greenville Athletic Club will be donating all proceeds<lb/>
from entry fees to the Traffic Injury Prevention Program<lb/>
and its efforts to decrease motor vehicle deaths in<lb/>
Pitt County.<lb/>
Special thanks to the following for their contributions:<lb/>
Greenville Athletic Club Boulevard Bagel<lb/>
WRQR<lb/>
CPTs<lb/>
COKE<lb/>
Harris Teeter<lb/>
Sweet Caroline's<lb/>
Food Lion<lb/>
Mike's Margaux's<lb/>
Annabelles<lb/>
Chico's<lb/>
Dunkin Donuts<lb/>
PTA Pizza<lb/>
SMITHKLINE BEECHAM<lb/>
Overton's Sports Center<lb/>
Smithfields<lb/>
Taco Bell<lb/>
McDonald's<lb/>
Grandaddy Rossers<lb/>
Subway <lb/>
Shabop's<lb/>
Riverside Steak Bar<lb/>
The Fizz<lb/>
Final Score<lb/>
Fosdick's<lb/>
Szechuan Garden<lb/>
<pb facs="00058276_0006"/><lb/>
6<lb/>
CETlie iEast (garoHntan<lb/>
April 2, 1991<lb/>
OLAowlritUo<lb/>
SERVICES OFFERED<lb/>
WORD PROCESSING SERVICES:<lb/>
Term papers dissertations, letters,<lb/>
resumes, manuscripts, projects. Fast<lb/>
'urn around. Call Kvsn 756 9255<lb/>
niMNC, Call 355 J611 after 530<lb/>
p.m or leave message SI J5 page,<lb/>
ndudes proofreading, spelling,<lb/>
grammar check Familiar with all<lb/>
formats Over 15 years experience<lb/>
WANTED TO BUY<lb/>
l ED CASH? Graduating? Sellour<lb/>
cruiserlCaU Artat830 0137and k ax e<lb/>
rtessage<lb/>
 FOR RENT<lb/>
iUBLEASI EFFICIENCY Ringgi Id<lb/>
rowers Option to take over leas<lb/>
fall S260mont! r ail ibleMaj I<lb/>
?, 58 B15 Great location<lb/>
WANT FEMA1? NON-SMOKI R<lb/>
to share 1 '3of "cpenses (SI I; plus<lb/>
phone and ' ntwobedroom<lb/>
ipai tment tor summer and; or next<lb/>
? Bl.<lb/>
w 1 ED TO St HI EASE ver)<lb/>
ict one bedrcx m apt. from May<lb/>
ist You then have option to<lb/>
tno eout resign a one year leaseor<lb/>
 i $255 m<lb/>
, utilities, washer and di i<lb/>
ook ij E I bus stop, nice apart<lb/>
i , ? complex. Call 1 isa at 758-<lb/>
Sl ' 6<lb/>
 Ml.Mil E parrment to sublet<lb/>
for summer rhree bedroom, Wil-<lb/>
son Acres 4 blocks from campus<lb/>
v  before pril4 Phone758 6283<lb/>
sk foi (in<lb/>
ROOMM ME WANTED Maleor<lb/>
FOR RENT<lb/>
house, fully furnished. Five miles<lb/>
from campus, SlOOmonth plus 1<lb/>
3 utilities and deposit. Call 355-<lb/>
7282. Available now!<lb/>
APARTMENT FOR SUMMER<lb/>
SESSIONS. Femalewanted toshare<lb/>
nice throe bedroom, 2 1 '2 bath<lb/>
apartment WD,DW,AC. Access<lb/>
to pool and tennis courts! Call im-<lb/>
mediately! 355-3988, Elizabeth.<lb/>
DOUB1 EWIDE TRAI1 IK on pri-<lb/>
vate lot for rent in area Call 459-<lb/>
9355 after 5:30 p m.<lb/>
ROOMMATE WANTED Look-<lb/>
ing for male non-smoker to share 2<lb/>
bedroom fully furnished apartment<lb/>
tor summer Close to campus. Call<lb/>
Kevin or Brian at i55 8372<lb/>
SOMEONE NEEDED to share<lb/>
townhouse apartment "wo bed-<lb/>
room, 1 12 bath, fully furnished,<lb/>
need only to bring bedroom furni-<lb/>
ture. Responsible mah student,<lb/>
SI75month plus 1.2 utilities SV<lb/>
0388<lb/>
HELP WANTED<lb/>
1 h<lb/>
euroom<lb/>
? AU N<lb/>
NIVERSm tfARTfoENTS<lb/>
?Located Sei<lb/>
. j,u tbuppu<lb/>
? rsl From Mighw.i. 'ui' I Sui ??.<lb/>
I imd OfTei ; ? ? uh<lb/>
v -ioia  T ,r t-Tunv Wuliaim<lb/>
?y 'Hi  J <lb/>
"  w) Kft i<lb/>
?AZ WE t. Kl?l MS<lb/>
 ? ?? .KM . ? I<lb/>
  ??-? -? -? ?  ?(m lrv<lb/>
.  spmita .?- 120 a ?<lb/>
.rf ? .v II Hi -v. ?<lb/>
utt Xpwim ? ? ?<lb/>
niaa ? A m<lb/>
FOR SALE<lb/>
FENDERGUITARAMP Deluxe85.<lb/>
758-0464<lb/>
Ml sr SALE IMMEDIATELY:<lb/>
Men's Raleigh 10 speed bike; $60,<lb/>
Women's Huff) 12 speed bike $35;<lb/>
gas grill w 'tank, $40; window unit<lb/>
A C works great, $100; and IBM PC<lb/>
clone w2 floppy disk drives, 640K.<lb/>
Will accept best offer for all items.<lb/>
Call 758-7099 for details<lb/>
SCHW1NN WORM) SPORT 12<lb/>
speed, black. Good condition S100<lb/>
negotiable. 830-3601 ask for Paul<lb/>
HELP WANTED<lb/>
BRODY'S is accepting applications<lb/>
for part-time sale positions in Juniors<lb/>
and Accessories Enthusiastic indi-<lb/>
viduals who enjoy fashion and can<lb/>
work flexible hours should apply<lb/>
Brady's: The Plaza, Monday through<lb/>
Wednesday 1-4 p.m.<lb/>
BABYSITTER NEEDED for sum<lb/>
mer Monday-Friday, 9-3 p.m. begin-<lb/>
ning May 9th. Own transportation<lb/>
needed. 757-0629.<lb/>
SUMMER INTERNSHIP Find out<lb/>
what IBM Xerox and Fortune 500<lb/>
comp ' ke about our summer<lb/>
program II saving over $5j000, in-<lb/>
valuable career experience, building<lb/>
your resume, and college credit ap-<lb/>
peal to you call for an interview to-<lb/>
dayv919) 19-2 13<lb/>
CLASSIFIED ADS TECHNICIAN<lb/>
needed foi summer sessions andor<lb/>
tall semester MadntoshMicrosoft<lb/>
Word experience helptul. Apply in<lb/>
person al : : ? MroHnktn on call<lb/>
758-7652 aftei 5 K) p.m.<lb/>
NANNY OPPORTUNTriES San<lb/>
Francisco-1 girl-$175week Chi-<lb/>
cago-newborn-$175week; Con-<lb/>
necticut-twins S250 'week; Boston<lb/>
infant-$160week; Virginia-2 chil-<lb/>
dren-$200week Many positions<lb/>
available. One year commitment<lb/>
necessary Call 1-800-937-NANl<lb/>
HELP WANTED: King Sandwich<lb/>
will be accepting applications<lb/>
Wednesday and Thursday, April 1<lb/>
and 2 from 230-5:00 p.m. only. Full<lb/>
and part-time jobs pply in person<lb/>
only. No phone a<lb/>
EARTHSAFE Part-time sales Sign<lb/>
m tei I o ism rtolds for recycling pick-<lb/>
up and earn $100. Help save the<lb/>
envin nmeni and earn good money,<lb/>
HELP WANTED<lb/>
too. CallCliff at757-3063forappoint-<lb/>
ment.<lb/>
WHAT ARE YOUR PLANS FOR<lb/>
THE SUMMERGoing to stay in<lb/>
Greenville, going to Summer School?<lb/>
Brady's currently has sales positions<lb/>
available in Juniors and Mens that<lb/>
will run through the summer and<lb/>
into the fall. Fill your free time with<lb/>
a part-time position with Brody's and<lb/>
Brady'sforMen. ApplyBrody's,The<lb/>
PERSONALS<lb/>
NEW ENGLAND BROTHERSIS-<lb/>
TER (AMI'S MASSACHUSETTS<lb/>
Mah-Kee-Nac for BoysDanbee for<lb/>
C Srls Counselor portions for Pro<lb/>
gram Specialists: All Team Sports,<lb/>
especially Baseball, Basketball, Field<lb/>
Hockey, Softball, Soccer and Volley-<lb/>
baU;25Tennisopenings;also Archery,<lb/>
Rifler Weight's litness and Biking;<lb/>
other openings include Performing<lb/>
Arts, Fine Arts. Newspaper, Photog-<lb/>
raphy, Cooking, Sewing, Roller-<lb/>
skating, Rocketry, Ropes, and Camp<lb/>
Craft; All Waterfront Activities<lb/>
(Swimming, Skiing, Sailing,<lb/>
Windsurfing anoeKayaking). In-<lb/>
quire: Mah-Kee-Nac03( ?YS) 190Lin-<lb/>
den Avenue, Glen Ridge, NJ 07028<lb/>
Call 800 753 9118 DanbeeCGIRLS)<lb/>
16 Horseneck Road, Montvilte, NJ<lb/>
7 45 Call ' 301 776520<lb/>
DISPLAY CLASSIFIED<lb/>
HEADING FOR EUROPE THIS<lb/>
SUMMER? Jet there anytime with<lb/>
A1RHITCH ? for $160 from the East<lb/>
Coast! (Reported in NY Times &amp;<lb/>
Lefs Go!) AIRHITCH ? 212-864-<lb/>
2000.<lb/>
SORORITIES, FRATERNITIES &amp;<lb/>
GRADUATES: Now is the time to<lb/>
get your tuxes and gowns altered<lb/>
and tailored for spring formats and<lb/>
graduation. We also do dressmak-<lb/>
ing. 30 years experience and fast<lb/>
dependable service. Call 3550354<lb/>
M F 90-5-30,2421 Sharles Street,<lb/>
(ireenville.<lb/>
?X PLEDGES: Keep up the gcxxi<lb/>
work You guvs are on the ball. The<lb/>
light al the end of the tunnel is getting<lb/>
brighter. Push harder and you'll start<lb/>
to shme Word' The Brothers<lb/>
LOST: Male cat, white with black<lb/>
and gray Siamese markings. Blue<lb/>
eyes. Answers to Casper. It ; ?<lb/>
know of whereabouts, call 752-8930<lb/>
VOTI FOR FJUCHILUARD i r<lb/>
SGA REASURER on Wed . April<lb/>
3rd The ONLY candidate with SGA<lb/>
experience<lb/>
PERSONALS<lb/>
OPEN MIC NIGHT Come out to<lb/>
the Underground Open Mic Nij<lb/>
and check out some ot E I J's bands<lb/>
and comedians. The show is tonight<lb/>
in the Underground (Basement of<lb/>
Mendenhall)at5-00p m Admissions<lb/>
and refreshmentsare fret ? red<lb/>
by the Student Union Coffo<lb/>
Committee<lb/>
WHEN ITS MM I: FOB Rl<lb/>
PARTY, you should 1<lb/>
go. Cometo803Hoi kerl<lb/>
tit Pit aj i idogrov ? ?<lb/>
wild and the Pi Kaj<lb/>
Especially com<lb/>
gonna toga all nighl St ?<lb/>
ready for Annual Toga I<lb/>
wear nothing under<lb/>
we're gonna do I<lb/>
TOME BE I AIM EDGE i SSOI<lb/>
riA: Youguysare K P<lb/>
up the good w k!<lb/>
to Friday night! 1 ? ?<lb/>
Il.V<lb/>
DISPLAY CLASSFISD<lb/>
DISPLAY CLASSIFIED<lb/>
r<lb/>
Ringgold Towers<lb/>
 . 1 aking I cases fa ugusi<lb/>
1991 ' bedroom, 2 bedroom, &amp;<lb/>
Efftcenc) Apartments,<lb/>
CAI I 752-2865<lb/>
1<lb/>
BUY ONE i<lb/>
GET ONE!<lb/>
FREE I<lb/>
BLEND IN;<lb/>
PytNT SAl r<lb/>
ECU Biolog) lub<lb/>
Wednesday April<lb/>
Thursda) April<lb/>
7:30 am - l:00pn<lb/>
<lb/>
FAST FUNDRA1S1NG PRO-<lb/>
CRAM SlOOOinjustoneweek Earn<lb/>
up toSlOOOfor your campus organi-<lb/>
ation Plus a chance at ;o(RX) more'<lb/>
rHaprogram works! Noinvestme; :<lb/>
needed G ? 932-0928 Ex! S<lb/>
t sk si MMER I MP1 OY-<lb/>
Ml M fisheries Earn -<lb/>
DISPLAY CLASSIFIED<lb/>
i ree transportabor<lb/>
I Board! ('wrSAX<lb/>
erience necessary<lb/>
Ki?<lb/>
Mal ? ' ?<lb/>
male. For 68-page employment<lb/>
manual send $8.95 to M&amp;1 Research,<lb/>
Bo, 84008, Seattle, WA 98124-Satis-<lb/>
n Guaranteed.<lb/>
WANDSWORTH<lb/>
COMMONS<lb/>
WIlliJ-SNEWES ? ' v<lb/>
INM .11 I AMU V HCM Si- G<lb/>
<lb/>
i , to! 0 md s"1<lb/>
r gy cffk " ' ' u ? ?<lb/>
 "<lb/>
i. H MC  MM<lb/>
<lb/>
lu Rt .ill ? I '?" i'P<lb/>
758-4711<lb/>
OPEN I NDER<lb/>
MAN ()-KSHIIJ<lb/>
Sill 1 SERVING YOU<lb/>
withca i rn Bi'<lb/>
WD l! SPRODUCTS<lb/>
i R( iss I R( i! 11,1 Rl M <lb/>
l STAURAJSl<lb/>
II I I 1 M k I I I<lb/>
Hi DIS 01 NT WITH<lb/>
?11 DIM ID ON REPAIRS<lb/>
) sl K ICb<lb/>
L<lb/>
316 E. 10th St. 758-0000<lb/>
cxp. 4-15-91<lb/>
xJ&amp;W' Biolo<lb/>
11 i<lb/>
Ro? m S<lb/>
J<lb/>
If you're<lb/>
Pregnant<lb/>
and need help making choices<lb/>
?Free, confidential prolessioi<lb/>
pregnancy counseling<lb/>
?Financial assistance<lb/>
?Help select adoptive family<lb/>
I<lb/>
?? I IHltl MKVl<lb/>
KOAl ?k I' I (ireenv ille, NC<lb/>
1-800-632-1400<lb/>
y The Children's Home Society<lb/>
of North Carolina<lb/>
 1 A United Way Agency<lb/>
Wi  ? '? .i??S<lb/>
GOLDEN GlRl TRYOUTS<lb/>
Attention interested daiKers(who<lb/>
can dazzle and sparkle) Become<lb/>
.i p,irt of the 1991 KCU RxtKill<lb/>
Spirit! Share the spotlight by per-<lb/>
forming with the Euist Carolina<lb/>
Pirates during the 1941 kxnball<lb/>
season. The GOl DEN GIRLS<lb/>
DANCE LINE will hold tryouts<lb/>
April 13-14; 9 a.nv-4 p.m SaUir-<lb/>
dav and 1 p m.4 p.m. Sunday in<lb/>
Memorial Gym. For more infor-<lb/>
mation, call 757-6962.<lb/>
ginning April 3, 1991. Room as-<lb/>
signments will be made in the<lb/>
Department of University Hous-<lb/>
ing, 201 Whiohard Building, April<lb/>
3 and 4. Ehe rent for a term of<lb/>
summer sehtxtl is $175 (Gotten,<lb/>
Memingand!arisHalls$210)for<lb/>
a semi-private room and $2n)<lb/>
(Gotten, Fleming and aris 1 lalls-<lb/>
-$3tKl) for a private room Resi-<lb/>
dence halls to be used for summer<lb/>
schcxM are: Gotten and Fleming<lb/>
(women); lamsmen); Slay (co-<lb/>
ed).<lb/>
STEC1A1 OLYMPICS<lb/>
The 11 Greenville 1'itt Co. Spe-<lb/>
Otympks Spnng Games will<lb/>
be held on April 19th at E. B.<lb/>
Ayoxk Jr. 1 ligh School in Green-<lb/>
ville (rain date: April 24). Volun-<lb/>
teers are needed to help serve as<lb/>
budcHeschaperones for the Spe-<lb/>
cial Olympics. Volunteers must<lb/>
he able to work all day from 4<lb/>
j m -2 pm (The first (Mies there<lb/>
will be assigned a position) An<lb/>
orientation meeting will he held<lb/>
on April 17 in Old loyner Library,<lb/>
nxm 221 from S6(X) p.m. Free<lb/>
lunches and volunteer t-shirrs will<lb/>
be provided the day of the games<lb/>
to all volunteers who have at-<lb/>
tended the orientation session. For<lb/>
more information, contact Lisa<lb/>
Mills at 8304551.<lb/>
SUMMERSOiQQI. 1991<lb/>
RQQMEESEBYAT1QRS1GR-<lb/>
HPJNEQBMATJLQfc!<lb/>
Residence Hall room payments for<lb/>
Summer School 1991 will be ac-<lb/>
cepted in the Cashier's Office,<lb/>
Room 105, Spilman Building, be-<lb/>
ECl! SCHOOL OEMLJSJC<lb/>
April 37ECU Jazz Festival fea-<lb/>
turing jazz greats Ethel Ennis and<lb/>
Earl Arnett with the ECU Jazz En-<lb/>
semble, under the direction of<lb/>
Carroll Dashiell. The Festival will<lb/>
feature masterclasses, open re-<lb/>
hearsals and two concerts. Con-<lb/>
certs are April 5th at 9:00 p.m. in<lb/>
the A J Fletcher Recital hall and<lb/>
April 7th at 8:15 p.m. in Wright<lb/>
Auditorium. All events are free<lb/>
and open to public. For more in<lb/>
formation, call 757-6331.<lb/>
EDUCATION AL LOANS<lb/>
AVAILABLE<lb/>
Three educational loan programs<lb/>
for North Carolina residents at-<lb/>
tending colleges in or out of state<lb/>
and for nonresidents attending<lb/>
college in North Carolina are<lb/>
available through College Foun-<lb/>
dation, Inc. These loan programs<lb/>
are funded by North Carolina<lb/>
banksandotherinvestors. Stafford<lb/>
Loans are for dependent or inde-<lb/>
pendent studentsand are based on<lb/>
financial need. Supplemental<lb/>
Ixvins are for independent self-<lb/>
supporting students are are not<lb/>
based on financial need PLUS<lb/>
Loans are for parents of depen-<lb/>
dentstudentsandarenot based on<lb/>
financial need. For more informa-<lb/>
tion, writeCollegeFoundation Inc<lb/>
Z100YonkersRoad,P.O.Box12100<lb/>
Raleigh, NC 27bO5-210O, or call<lb/>
(919)8214771.<lb/>
STLJDY ABROAD<lb/>
EXCHANGE PRQGRAMS<lb/>
The Office of International Pro-<lb/>
grams is still accepting applica-<lb/>
tions for summer study abroad<lb/>
programs as well as exchange<lb/>
programs for the academic year<lb/>
1991-1991 Students mav apply for<lb/>
studies at Leicester Polytechnic<lb/>
(England), Acadia University<lb/>
(Nova Scotia, Canada) or other<lb/>
semesteracademic year pro-<lb/>
grams. Applications for the Na-<lb/>
tional Student Exchange are also<lb/>
being accepted for students who<lb/>
want to spend an exciting semes-<lb/>
ter or year at oneof over99colleges<lb/>
or universities in the U.S. If you<lb/>
think you might have trouble get-<lb/>
ting the classes you need at ECU,<lb/>
consider an exchange to another<lb/>
campus! Come by Brewster Ml7<lb/>
to pick up an application or call<lb/>
757-6769 for further information<lb/>
on the programs available.<lb/>
MCTUGQFWAR<lb/>
Join in the fun at ECU'S Annual<lb/>
Barefoot on the Mall and show<lb/>
your support to the Ronald<lb/>
McDonald House. Recreational<lb/>
Services is sponsoring a McTug of<lb/>
War competition. Get your team<lb/>
of ten members (male, female, co-<lb/>
red together and get psyched for<lb/>
an afternoon of McTugof War fun!<lb/>
A minimum of $1.00 donation per<lb/>
participant is requested. For fur-<lb/>
ther information, contact Kendra<lb/>
Curtis at 757-6387 or stop by 204<lb/>
Christenbury Gym.<lb/>
SiNSATTONALSClYIEI<lb/>
ACRQBAnCREVUE<lb/>
The Sensational Soviet Acrobatic<lb/>
RevuecomestoECU April 2,1991,<lb/>
Wright Auditorium,8:00p.m. Call<lb/>
Central Ticket Office at 757-4788.<lb/>
Sponsored by the Student Union<lb/>
Minority Arts Committee.<lb/>
HABITAT FiQAHliMANir<lb/>
Habitat for Humanity is having an<lb/>
information meeting on Tuesday,<lb/>
April 2 at 7:00 p.m. in Rawl, Room<lb/>
130. We will discuss activities of<lb/>
the ECU Chapter along with ex-<lb/>
plaining the purpose of Habitat.<lb/>
Everyone is invited! If interested,<lb/>
and can't attend, contact Mark at<lb/>
757-3356 or Kim at 752-2930.<lb/>
CANOETADDLE2<lb/>
learn beginningand intermediate<lb/>
instruction on the Tar River in<lb/>
Canoeing and Kayaking. ECU<lb/>
Recreational Services will bespon-<lb/>
soring a workshop on April 4 from<lb/>
3:00-6:00 p.m. Interested partici-<lb/>
pant should meet at Christenbury<lb/>
Gymat2:30p.m. The cost is $4.00<lb/>
students and $5.00faculty, staff<lb/>
and guests. Get ready to roll, tip<lb/>
and have some fun! For further<lb/>
information, call 757-6911.<lb/>
$100 fee tor this vaccination<lb/>
STOJiSMOKlNG<lb/>
Kick the habit! The Student Health<lb/>
Service offers a Stop Smoking pro-<lb/>
gram free of charge. For more<lb/>
information or to sign up, call 757-<lb/>
6794. The program starts on April<lb/>
2nd.<lb/>
SQFTBALL HQMIRUJS<lb/>
DERBY<lb/>
Derby days are here! Registration<lb/>
for the Softball Home Run Derby<lb/>
will be on Tuesday, April 2 at 5.00<lb/>
p.m. in BIO 103 All interested<lb/>
individuals must attend this<lb/>
meeting. For further information,<lb/>
call 757-6387 or stop by 204<lb/>
Christenbury Gym.<lb/>
OJUMmMEETJMi<lb/>
Greenville Society of Friends,<lb/>
Philip Mitchell, Clerk, 355-7230.<lb/>
Meeting for Worship9 a.m. Sun-<lb/>
days. First Day School of Chil-<lb/>
dren-9a.m.Sundays. Visitorsand<lb/>
children welcome. "Ye Are My<lb/>
Friends" John 15:14. Pot luck ev-<lb/>
ery second Sunday, 12 noon, Uni-<lb/>
tarian Universalist Fellowship<lb/>
Hall, 1110 Arlington Blvd Comer<lb/>
of Sunset (one bkx east of Me-<lb/>
morial Drive).<lb/>
IMMUNIZATION CLINIC<lb/>
Immunization Clinic being held at<lb/>
the Student Health Center-Up-<lb/>
date your tetanus now! Available<lb/>
without appointment. Tuesday<lb/>
and Thursday, April 2 and 4,1991,<lb/>
from 8:00 am. to 11:30 a.m. and<lb/>
1:00 p.m. to 4:00 pm. There is a<lb/>
April 2,1991<lb/>
I<lb/>
FCU SURVEY<lb/>
During the week ot A; I<lb/>
survey ot student opini<lb/>
stractionwulbeoonducteda<lb/>
Questionnaires will be distributed<lb/>
indasseswithenioBmenb<lb/>
than five All students will 1<lb/>
the opportunity to exj u-<lb/>
ions on the teaching effectr I<lb/>
of their instructors, he ?<lb/>
willbeconductedduringvL<lb/>
and will take approximately 15<lb/>
minutes to complete Student<lb/>
participation is voluntary anil no.<lb/>
identities are requested Insti<lb/>
tors have been requested to lea e<lb/>
the classroom while the questi<lb/>
nairesarebeingcompletvd Res<lb/>
of the survey will bectistril ute<lb/>
instructors after final grades have<lb/>
been posted. The teaching effe<lb/>
nvenessquestionnaire w-as cni ted<lb/>
by the Facultv Senate Commit ?<lb/>
for Teaching Effectiveness and th-<lb/>
OfficeotPlanningand lnstm iti<lb/>
Research. Theresultiofthesunev,<lb/>
along with other information and<lb/>
factors, are used for administra-<lb/>
tiveevaluationof theinstruct irb)<lb/>
the supervising administi<lb/>
within the department or di vi-<lb/>
STUDENT UNION<lb/>
EEQDLICTJOISIS<lb/>
The Student Union ProducHons<lb/>
Committeeand the Residence Hall<lb/>
Association will be sponsoring<lb/>
Casino NighL Monday, April 8th<lb/>
at 8:00 p.m. in the Mulu-Purpose<lb/>
RoomofMendenhall. WmaVCR!<lb/>
Oliver St<lb/>
By Michael Albuquerque<lb/>
Managing f ditor<lb/>
Twent) dfrom<lb/>
the Earth,and im Morrison still<lb/>
holds the p werl<lb/>
diences with h mysl fe I. ?<lb/>
of splendor and<lb/>
der ingmenl - ?<lb/>
tainki<lb/>
in .in eeril) ithent<lb/>
Morrison, I I<lb/>
manneri<lb/>
OllVtT<lb/>
"The ! v - '<lb/>
ultn<lb/>
AHI<lb/>
y<lb/>
?<lb/>
Va1 - -<lb/>
and captures If<lb/>
i<lb/>
Val Kitmer unleashes a pateme I<lb/>
infamous concert in New Haven Conn<lb/>
Local man becoi<lb/>
NADTO area prl<lb/>
Bv Matt King<lb/>
Fatures Editor<lb/>
The Easter weekend celebra-<lb/>
tions began early tor Terobal <lb/>
Emmetstein when earlv on March<lb/>
28 he received word that he had<lb/>
been voted North Carolina Chapter<lb/>
president of The National Associa-<lb/>
tion of Deaf Telephone Operators<lb/>
(NADTO).<lb/>
Emmetstein signed that he was<lb/>
overwhelmed withexponentialjo)<lb/>
"1 cant wait to tell my mother he<lb/>
wrote on a small piece of paper<lb/>
One look at Emmetstein's stu-<lb/>
dio apartment lets a visitor know<lb/>
thatheismtheprcsenceofonewho<lb/>
navs painstaking attention to de-<lb/>
tail The room is dust free, and it<lb/>
smells like something between a<lb/>
lemon and a lilac, a lemlac.<lb/>
The small kitchen area is a<lb/>
model of efficiency, all the small<lb/>
appliances are mounted to the un-<lb/>
derside of cabinets. A canpener,<lb/>
coffee maker, electnc juicer and a<lb/>
horizontal knife rack levitate 12<lb/>
inches off the counter.<lb/>
The small sink glistens and<lb/>
there is not a dish of any type in<lb/>
sight. At the end of the six-or-so feet<lb/>
of counter space there is an empty<lb/>
area, where in another time there<lb/>
might have been a dishwasher.<lb/>
ranged p:<lb/>
van<lb/>
 psej<lb/>
trom viej<lb/>
matching<lb/>
seat on the<lb/>
Two<lb/>
complete!<lb/>
Against tl<lb/>
phone<lb/>
EfiunetsM<lb/>
phone. It<lb/>
chairs on <lb/>
The<lb/>
GompuM<lb/>
it looks<lb/>
plugged <lb/>
same de<lb/>
job.<lb/>
The<lb/>
the sou rx<lb/>
andtrar<lb/>
screen.<lb/>
he typcsi<lb/>
chine ar<lb/>
ized voiq<lb/>
"It<lb/>
when!<lb/>
ground I<lb/>
He<lb/>
thing coj<lb/>
comput<lb/>
simply:<lb/>
<pb facs="00058276_0007"/><lb/>
April 2, 1991<lb/>
?' ' v0- ,?<lb/>
??-?<lb/>
? .?Xvv im ?:?<lb/>
PERSONALS<lb/>
ope 1HS OPEN MIC N1GH1 Come i tto<lb/>
? out son<lb/>
lians. Thes<lb/>
ground I<lb/>
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ini.M<lb/>
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DISPLAY CLASSIFIED<lb/>
PLANT SALi<lb/>
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JIFIED<lb/>
ONI<lb/>
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3<lb/>
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?regnant<lb/>
I help making choices<lb/>
Free, confidential<lb/>
pregnancy "<lb/>
Financial wtstaiiHJ<lb/>
Help select adoptrve family<lb/>
10-632-1400<lb/>
Children's Home Society<lb/>
of North Carolina<lb/>
A United Way Agency<lb/>
i<lb/>
it in<lb/>
IL HI<lb/>
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to , I . ss<lb/>
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tend this requested lr I<lb/>
nrbrmarjon, tors have been requested to k<lb/>
4 ? om bilethe i<lb/>
will be di; I<lb/>
fter final<lb/>
4 The beat I ing<lb/>
sttonnairewascn<lb/>
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along ith other inform iti n<lb/>
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KdComer the supervising administr<lb/>
east of Me within the department or di vi<lb/>
TINC,<lb/>
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CLINIC.<lb/>
eingheldat<lb/>
( enter-Up-<lb/>
Available<lb/>
 Tuesday<lb/>
.nd4,1991,<lb/>
JO a.m. and<lb/>
There is a<lb/>
STUDENT UNION<lb/>
I'KODUCTIONS<lb/>
Hie Student Union Pnx.1i<lb/>
Committeeand the Residence Hall<lb/>
Association will be iponjorlng<lb/>
Casino Night, Monday, April Hth<lb/>
at Sffl pm. in the Miilti -Purpose<lb/>
RoomofMendenhall. WinaVCR!<lb/>
April 2,1991<lb/>
(Bhz lEagt (garoHnian<lb/>
7<lb/>
Oliver Stone recreates the Lizard King<lb/>
Bv Michael Albuquerque<lb/>
Managing Editor<lb/>
Twenty years removed from<lb/>
the Earth, and Jim Morrison still<lb/>
holds the power to captivate au-<lb/>
diences with his mystic lifestyle<lb/>
oi splendor and excess.<lb/>
I beKeve in a prolonged<lb/>
derailment of the senses to ob-<lb/>
1 i in kn m ledge Val Kilmer says<lb/>
in an eerily authentic copv of<lb/>
Morrison, both in voice and<lb/>
mannerisms.<lb/>
Oliver Stone's new movie.<lb/>
The Doors delivers precisely<lb/>
what the original Lizard King ut-<lb/>
tered some 23 years ago. The en-<lb/>
tire movie overwhelms you with<lb/>
its roller-coaster ride through the<lb/>
excesses of Morrison's life ? and<lb/>
ultimate death.<lb/>
Although some people, in-<lb/>
cluding many critics, complain<lb/>
that Stone has created nothing<lb/>
more than a 2-hour music video.<lb/>
Stone realized that, to a large ex-<lb/>
tent, that's exactly what<lb/>
Morrison's life was.<lb/>
The endless sex, drugs and<lb/>
rock 'n' roll depicted in "The<lb/>
Doors" are merely consequences<lb/>
Photo Courtesy of 1 rt-Star Pictures<lb/>
. al Kilmer displays a striking resemblance to rock's grand shaman<lb/>
and captures the singer's self-destructive essence perfectly<lb/>
of Morrison's attitude toward life<lb/>
and death,and theexperiencesthey<lb/>
hold.<lb/>
"I am interested in anything<lb/>
about revolt, disorder, chaos<lb/>
especially activity that seems t-<lb/>
have no meaning he once said<lb/>
"It seems to me to be the road<lb/>
toward freedom ?external revolt<lb/>
is a wav to bring about internal<lb/>
freedom. Rather than starting in-<lb/>
side, I start outside reach the<lb/>
mental through the physkaL"<lb/>
Interspersed with background<lb/>
music (predominantly original<lb/>
Doors' material), Stone creates cf-<lb/>
fective,and often painful,seenesof<lb/>
tension and rnadnessat a blistering<lb/>
pace.<lb/>
The music is as timelv and<lb/>
fresh today as it was 20 years ago<lb/>
and suppliesanexcellent backdrop<lb/>
for some unforgettable concert<lb/>
scenes.<lb/>
Unfortunately, between the<lb/>
boozing, womanizing and pill<lb/>
popping, Stone leaves very little<lb/>
time for any character d? vetop<lb/>
nient tor Kilmer, or an vot the i tin r<lb/>
actors for that matter.<lb/>
Morrison often described<lb/>
himself as a sensitive individual<lb/>
hidden bv the face oia clown, win i<lb/>
at the most crucial moment would<lb/>
alwavsappear to ruin the moment.<lb/>
Such is the life ofoneof the last true<lb/>
rock stars ? a star that was des-<lb/>
tinedtofallbyhisveryownactkin.<lb/>
However, the break-neck<lb/>
speedofTheDoors" leaves Kilmer<lb/>
little time to show us this or any<lb/>
other clues to unlock the secretst i<lb/>
Morrison and his cohorts.<lb/>
Never mind that the mov ie is<lb/>
titled alter the band. St me doesn't<lb/>
Photo Courtesy ot Tn-Slar Pictures<lb/>
Val Kilmer unleashes a patented. Morrison scream and leaps into action as The Doors begin their<lb/>
infamous concert in New Haven. Conn with "Back Door Man<lb/>
Photo Courtesy ot Tri-Star Pictures<lb/>
In concert Jim Morrison (Val Kilmer) defiantly expresses his contempt for the establishment - "You're<lb/>
all a bunch of fuckm' slaves This leads to frequent run-ms with the law<lb/>
even bother to let the other band<lb/>
members have more than a few<lb/>
pan shots per scene.<lb/>
Ihis is a one-man show, and<lb/>
Kilmer plays it to the hilt. Accord-<lb/>
ing to members of the him crew,<lb/>
Kilmer sent memos to everyone<lb/>
involved with the project, request-<lb/>
ing he be referred to only as im.<lb/>
In fact, throughout the movie,<lb/>
he keeps you wondering if maybe<lb/>
Morrison isn't really alive, circa<lb/>
1969, and playing the lead role.<lb/>
Asa result, we are only given<lb/>
glimpses of some equally tme act-<lb/>
ing by others, specifically Kyle<lb/>
MacLachlan (of Twin Peaks"<lb/>
tame) as keyboardist Ray<lb/>
Manzarek and Meg Ryan as<lb/>
Pamela Courson, Morrison's<lb/>
common law wife.<lb/>
Stone provides no answers as<lb/>
to why lohn I Vnsmore (played by<lb/>
Kevin Dillon I frequently becomes<lb/>
upset with Morrisonandhis'woris<lb/>
ethics" or why Robby Krieger<lb/>
(played by newcomer Frank<lb/>
Whaley) is so influenced by the<lb/>
Lizard King.<lb/>
Equally battling are the rea-<lb/>
sons tor Morrison's self-destruc-<lb/>
tive nature. Again Stone gives us<lb/>
little background. We are merely<lb/>
outside observers in Morrison's<lb/>
rush tii his inevitable death ?just<lb/>
as all those close to him were.<lb/>
While the movie retains its au-<lb/>
thentic tv for the most part, Stone<lb/>
uses his artistic license whenever<lb/>
and wherever the mood stnkes<lb/>
him.<lb/>
The scene involving<lb/>
See Stone, page 8<lb/>
Photo Courtesy ot Tri-Star Pictures<lb/>
Jim Mornson and common-law wife Pamela Courson (Meg Ryan)<lb/>
attend a Eurosnob bash hosted by famed artist Andy Warhol<lb/>
Local man becomes<lb/>
N ADTO area president<lb/>
By Matt King<lb/>
Features Editor<lb/>
The Easter weekend celebra-<lb/>
tions began early for Percibal .<lb/>
Emmetstein when early on March<lb/>
28 he received word that he had<lb/>
been voted North Carolina Chapter<lb/>
president of The National Associa-<lb/>
tion of Deaf Telephone Operators<lb/>
(NADTO).<lb/>
Emmetstein signed that he was<lb/>
overwhelmed with exponential joy.<lb/>
"I can't wait to tell my mother he<lb/>
wrote on a small piece of paper.<lb/>
One look at Emmetstein's stu-<lb/>
dio apartment lets a visitor know<lb/>
tha t he is i n the presence of one who<lb/>
pays painstaking attention to de-<lb/>
tail. The room is dust free, and it<lb/>
smells like something between a<lb/>
lemon and a lilac, a lemlac.<lb/>
The small kitchen area is a<lb/>
model of efficiency, all the small<lb/>
appliances are mounted to the un-<lb/>
derside of cabinets. A can-opener,<lb/>
coffee maker, electric juicer and a<lb/>
horizontal knife rack levitate 12<lb/>
inches off the counter.<lb/>
The small sink glistens and<lb/>
there is not a dish of any type in<lb/>
sight. At the end of the six-or-sofeet<lb/>
of counter space there is an empty<lb/>
area, where in another time there<lb/>
might have been a dishwasher.<lb/>
Now, there are six, neatly ar-<lb/>
ranged plastic containers that hold<lb/>
various recyclable materials.<lb/>
A pseudo-closet hides the bed<lb/>
from view and there are two<lb/>
matching chairs and a small love<lb/>
seat on the hardwood floors.<lb/>
Two walls are covered with<lb/>
completely full book shelves.<lb/>
Against the fourth wall there is the<lb/>
phone machine that allows<lb/>
Emmetstein to communicate on the<lb/>
phone. It stands next to one of the<lb/>
chairs on a modest cherry desk.<lb/>
The machine is called the<lb/>
Computelephone voice generator,<lb/>
it looks much like a phone that is<lb/>
plugged into a computer and is the<lb/>
same device Emmetstein uses at his<lb/>
job.<lb/>
The Compuphone interprets<lb/>
thesoundsthatcomeoverthe phone<lb/>
and translates them into words on a<lb/>
screen. When Emmetstein replies<lb/>
he types his message into the ma-<lb/>
chine and it generates a computer-<lb/>
ized voice to send to a caller.<lb/>
"It works very well, except<lb/>
when there is a great deal of back-<lb/>
ground noise signs Emmetstein.<lb/>
He explains that when some-<lb/>
thing comes over the phone that the<lb/>
computer does not understand it<lb/>
simply shows four x'son the screen.<lb/>
See NADTO, page 8<lb/>
Web-shooter confronts<lb/>
reptile in McFarlane epic<lb/>
By Cliff Coffey<lb/>
Staff Writer<lb/>
appearance. A voodoo witch that<lb/>
was Kraven's lover dupes<lb/>
Spidemian into believing that he is<lb/>
soei ng Kra ven back from the grave.<lb/>
The witch wants SOWS sort of re-<lb/>
Todd McFarlane is considered<lb/>
the "hottest" artist in comic books<lb/>
today.Sopopularinfactthathewas venge on Spiderman, though the<lb/>
given the chance to start his own reader is unsure of what -<lb/>
title, and take on Marvel Comics<lb/>
biggest character, Spiderman. Todd<lb/>
McFarlane took the chores of writ-<lb/>
ing, penciling, and inking the newest<lb/>
of five Spiderman titles, simpK<lb/>
called SPIDERMAN, and it bevame<lb/>
the largest selling issue of any comic<lb/>
ever published<lb/>
Spiderman is lured into track-<lb/>
ing a blood-thirsty killer, who is<lb/>
actually the I Jard in the powers of<lb/>
the witch. Doom drums pound<lb/>
louder and louder inside<lb/>
Spidemun's liead ashegrowscloser<lb/>
to finding the witch. The story car-<lb/>
ries Spidemian into Kraven's old<lb/>
ThenewSpidermantitlestarted house, which explodes violently,<lb/>
with a five-issue story that allowed Throughout the tale, Spiderman<lb/>
the writing ability of Todd wonderswhyheiscaughtupmthis<lb/>
McFarlane to be seen. McFarlane battle, and not even in the end does<lb/>
used two old foes of Spiderman to he get any answers. Afterhedeteats<lb/>
begin the series, the Lizard and the Lizard and the witch, the witcn<lb/>
Kraven. The Lizard began as a uses her voodoo powers and disap-<lb/>
doctorwhowastryingtofindaway pears with the Lizard. This leaves<lb/>
to grow his arm back by using the Spiderman to continue wondering<lb/>
regenerationabilityof lizards. When why the whole episode happened,<lb/>
he finally developed a serum, he and wondering when he will come<lb/>
failed to test it before he used it and under attack from them again.<lb/>
turned himself into a giant lizard.<lb/>
The Lizard has been shown as<lb/>
slowly goingmore and more insane,<lb/>
andinSPDERMi4Nl,heisshown<lb/>
without any human rationality.<lb/>
Kraven, who was shown killed<lb/>
a couple of years ago, makes an<lb/>
The story, called Torment<lb/>
shows McFarlane'sbest work in the<lb/>
comic book medium. His style is<lb/>
allowed to be spread out all over<lb/>
each page. His caricature style is<lb/>
very pleasing to the eye, but his art<lb/>
See Spiderman, page 8<lb/>
<pb facs="00058276_0008"/><lb/>
PERSONALS<lb/>
ant<lb/>
l help making choices,<lb/>
LiX<lb/>
0-632 14<lb/>
bit I'lM I NION<lb/>
propi noNs<lb/>
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loom hall Wii<lb/>
4 7 2.7997<lb/>
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7<lb/>
Oliver Stone recreates the Lizard King<lb/>
B Michael Albuquerque<lb/>
Managing Editor<lb/>
t years removed from<lb/>
. ind im Morrison still<lb/>
the power to captivateau-<lb/>
es with Ins mystk lifestyle<lb/>
dor .md excess.<lb/>
? licve in a prolonged<lb/>
? ? sciN's to ob<lb/>
 alKiln ? i r<lb/>
i rily authentic copy ot<lb/>
tx th in voi e and<lb/>
ins.<lb/>
r Stone new movie,<lb/>
I oors vii livers precisel)<lb/>
wh.it the original Lizard Kingut<lb/>
tered some 23 years ago. The en-<lb/>
tire movie overwhelms you with<lb/>
its roller coaster rule through the<lb/>
ex esses ot Morrison's life and<lb/>
ultimate death.<lb/>
Although some people, in-<lb/>
cluding many critics, complain<lb/>
that Stone has created nothing<lb/>
more than a 2 hour musk video<lb/>
Stone realized that toalargeex<lb/>
tent, that's exactl) what<lb/>
Morrison's lite was.<lb/>
rhe endless sex, drugs and<lb/>
rock n roll depicted in "Th?<lb/>
Doors" are merelv consequences<lb/>
ot Morrison's attitude toward<lb/>
anddeath.andtheexperience;<lb/>
hold<lb/>
I am intere te I<lb/>
about revolt, disordi i I i<lb/>
espet tallv a tivity th tl ' ?<lb/>
have no meaning he one -<lb/>
"It seems to me to be th n id<lb/>
toward freedom external revolt<lb/>
is a way to bone, ah nit i<lb/>
freedom Rather thai<lb/>
side 1 start i mtside I '<lb/>
mental through the physi al<lb/>
Interspersed wit<lb/>
music  r I n<lb/>
 vi irs' matei<lb/>
tii rive,and often painful,scenesof<lb/>
tensionand ma.In.?? sat iblistering<lb/>
i<lb/>
fresh toda i<lb/>
andsupplic  ? ?<lb/>
for s me nnton<lb/>
Photo Cour1?sy ot Tn-Star P.cturas<lb/>
? . ays a sfi - i resemblance to rocks grand<lb/>
?  singer's self '? I live essence pert '<lb/>
; and<lb/>
entl<lb/>
ttal<lb/>
s enes<lb/>
I nteitunati-h . n the<lb/>
boozing womani; ing i<lb/>
popping Stone leavi<lb/>
? ? an chat<lb/>
n ? ??, <lb/>
ictoi<lb/>
Morrison often eli<lb/>
himself as a sensitive indiv ulna:<lb/>
hidden h thefaceol icl ?? who<lb/>
at the m -t i n<lb/>
alw i. s ipyx artoruii tl<lb/>
Si histhelifi foi fth<lb/>
nxk sars a Stai<lb/>
tii edl fallb<lb/>
wever, t<lb/>
peedol Th I -<lb/>
little -<lb/>
? . lues to un - ?<lb/>
Morrison and his <lb/>
Photo Cour-osy ct Tn Star Pictures<lb/>
?? rison (Val Kilmer) defiant expo ?<lb/>
r his leads to frequent in<lb/>
titled aftt rthel<lb/>
?<lb/>
Photo Courtesy o! Tri 3' ?r P<lb/>
 ? a( rtenled, Morrisoi ? ?? ,nto<lb/>
?? n rjew Haven, Conn with Back Door Man<lb/>
? ? ?<lb/>
r to let the ether band<lb/>
members ha e more than a few<lb/>
tsper scene.<lb/>
1 his is a one-man show, and<lb/>
it to the hilt. Accord-<lb/>
i mbers of the film crew,<lb/>
Kilmer sent monies to everyone<lb/>
I with the project, request-<lb/>
. ben ferred toonly as im<lb/>
out)<lb/>
? nderingif ma ?<lb/>
? ? rison isn't reilh air. ? i<lb/>
and playing the lead role<lb/>
 .1 :<lb/>
' I i ?<lb/>
? ? . ? fkrally K.<lb/>
 in Teaks"<lb/>
tame as keyl oardist Raj<lb/>
I Mi ? ??<lb/>
? ? ? ? f c<lb/>
, . I .   rsas<lb/>
? ? n plaved by<lb/>
tlyh nes<lb/>
' ' ? : ' I is verk<lb/>
? Frank<lb/>
: the<lb/>
ffling are the rea-<lb/>
' ' rison's sell destruc-<lb/>
in gain St res us<lb/>
? . kground. We are merely<lb/>
.ervers in Morrison's<lb/>
ith just<lb/>
? close te him were<lb/>
? themo' k retainsitsau-<lb/>
? r the most part. Stone<lb/>
 : -  henever<lb/>
rever the mood strikes<lb/>
, e involving<lb/>
Stone page 8<lb/>
Photo Courtesy ot Tn-Star<lb/>
Jim Morrison and "n ???? ??"<lb/>
attend a Eurosnobt i ted by fa arttst And<lb/>
Pictures<lb/>
Ryan<lb/>
Local man becomes<lb/>
N ADTO area president<lb/>
By Matt King<lb/>
1 ltures I ditOI<lb/>
I"he Easter weekend cctebra<lb/>
began early for Percibal .<lb/>
EmmetStein when early on March<lb/>
- ; ? received word that he had<lb/>
 iorthCarolma( hapter<lb/>
l nt of The National Assocfai-<lb/>
I ; leaf Telephone Operators<lb/>
' DTO)<lb/>
Emmetstein signed that he was<lb/>
rwhelrnedwithexponentialjoy.<lb/>
m'l wait to tell my mother he<lb/>
wrote on a small piei eof paper.<lb/>
f ne look at 1 mmetstem's stu<lb/>
Ik) apartment lets a visitor know<lb/>
that he is inthepresnof one who<lb/>
painstaking attention to de-<lb/>
tail The room is dust free, and it<lb/>
smells like something between a<lb/>
lemon and a lilac, a lemlac.<lb/>
rhe small kitchen area is a<lb/>
model of efficiency, all the small<lb/>
appliances are mounted to the un-<lb/>
derside of cabinets. A can-opener,<lb/>
cofftv maker, electric juicer and ?<lb/>
horizontal knife rack levitate 12<lb/>
inches off the counter.<lb/>
The small sink glistens and<lb/>
there is not a dish of any type in<lb/>
sight Atthcendofthesix-or-sofeet<lb/>
of counter space there is an empty<lb/>
area, where in another time there<lb/>
might have been a dishwasher.<lb/>
Now, there are six, neatly ar-<lb/>
ranged ptastk containers that hold<lb/>
various recyclable materials<lb/>
A pseudo closet hides the bod<lb/>
from view and there are two<lb/>
matching chairs and a small love<lb/>
seat on the hardwood floors<lb/>
Two walls are covered with<lb/>
completely full hook shelves.<lb/>
Against the fourth wall there is the<lb/>
phone machine that allows<lb/>
Emmetstein to communicate on the<lb/>
phone. It stands next to one ot the<lb/>
chairs on a modest cherry desk.<lb/>
The machine is called the<lb/>
( omputelephone voice generator,<lb/>
it looks much like a phone that is<lb/>
plugged into a computer and is the<lb/>
same device Emmetstein uses at his<lb/>
job.<lb/>
The C.ompuphone interprets<lb/>
thesou ndsthatcomeoverthc phone<lb/>
and translates them into wordson a<lb/>
screen. When EmmetStein replies<lb/>
he types his message into the ma-<lb/>
chine and it generates a computer-<lb/>
ized voice to semi to a caller.<lb/>
"It works very well, except<lb/>
when there is a great deal of back<lb/>
ground noise signs Emmetstein<lb/>
He explains that when some-<lb/>
thing comes over the phone that the<lb/>
computer does not understand it<lb/>
simply shows four x'son the screen.<lb/>
See NADTO, page 8<lb/>
Web-shooter confronts<lb/>
reptile in McFarlane epic<lb/>
S.  . n.ln.l , ;ti h th.l<lb/>
By Cliff Coffey<lb/>
Stjff Writer<lb/>
odd McFarlane isconsidered<lb/>
the "hottest" artist in comic books<lb/>
today Sopopularin fact hat he w as<lb/>
given the chance to start his ,<lb/>
title, and take on Marvel Comic-<lb/>
biggest character. Spiderman odd<lb/>
McFarlane took the chores of writ<lb/>
ing, penciling, and mkim; the newest<lb/>
of five Spiderman titles, sim I<lb/>
niwt SPIDERMAN. and it bet ame<lb/>
thelargestseUingissuei fan) comic<lb/>
ever published.<lb/>
ThenewSpidenivintitlestarted<lb/>
with a five-issue story that allow ed<lb/>
the writing ability of I odd<lb/>
McFarlane to be seen. McFarlane<lb/>
used two old foes of Spiderman to<lb/>
begin the series, the Lizard and<lb/>
Kraven. The Lizard began as a<lb/>
doctor who was trying to find a way<lb/>
to grow his arm back by using the<lb/>
regeneration ability of lizards. When<lb/>
he finally developed a serum, he<lb/>
failed to test it before he used it and<lb/>
turned himself into a giant lizard<lb/>
The Lizard has been shown as<lb/>
slowlygoingmoreand more insane,<lb/>
andinSPDERMANl,heisshown<lb/>
without any human rationality.<lb/>
Kraven, who was shown killed<lb/>
a couple of years ago, makes an<lb/>
appearance A voodoo witch that<lb/>
. Kraven's I. v r dupes<lb/>
kerman into believing mat heis<lb/>
seeinj -he grave<lb/>
The witch wants some sort of re-<lb/>
venge on Spidem hough tl'<lb/>
reader is unsure of what it IS.<lb/>
Spiderman is hoed into track-<lb/>
ing a blood thirsty killer, who is<lb/>
actuall) the I iard in tho powers ot<lb/>
me witch Doom drums pound<lb/>
loudei and ! uder inside<lb/>
SpkJi m lashegrowsdoaer<lb/>
 Bndinj the witch Hie story car<lb/>
rk s Spiderman into Kraven's old<lb/>
house, which explodes violently.<lb/>
Throughout the tale Spiderman<lb/>
wonders why heiscaughtupinAis<lb/>
battle, and not even in thecnul does<lb/>
hegetanv answers Alter he defeats<lb/>
me Lizard and the m itch, the witca<lb/>
uses her voodoo powersand disap-<lb/>
pears with tlx- I izard This leaves<lb/>
Spiderman to continue wondering<lb/>
why the whole episode happened,<lb/>
and wondering when he will come<lb/>
under attack from them again.<lb/>
The story, called 'Torment<lb/>
shows McFarlane'sbest work in the<lb/>
comic book medium. His style is<lb/>
allowed to be spread out all over<lb/>
each page. His caricature style is<lb/>
very pleasing to the eye, but his art<lb/>
See SpkJerman, page 8<lb/>
<pb facs="00058276_0009"/><lb/>
PERSONALS<lb/>
99<lb/>
5l)c lEaat Ularuliuiau<lb/>
7<lb/>
Oliver Stone recreates the Lizard King<lb/>
h.iel Mbuquerque<lb/>
I diloi<lb/>
'i mn ih.1 in im<lb/>
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Itl ' pi ru?l I I- r M ??? I<lb/>
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lounted to the un<lb/>
? ?. t cabinets A can opener,<lb/>
coffei maker, ekctrk juicer and a<lb/>
horizontal knife rack levitate 12<lb/>
m off the counter<lb/>
11 small sink glistens an,i<lb/>
m. re is not a dish of any type in<lb/>
Sight Attheendotthesixor sofeet<lb/>
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area, where hi another time there<lb/>
might have been a dishwasher<lb/>
itii<lb/>
edplast<lb/>
? ? ii ?<lb/>
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from view and there an I<lb/>
mati hing i hair ? and a sma I ? ?<lb/>
4 H on the hardwood fit i<lb/>
rwo walls ire c cred<lb/>
(omplctely full I 1 helvi<lb/>
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tsteint the<lb/>
phone It ? tai<lb/>
: n a i lest erry desV<lb/>
I he mai hine i called the<lb/>
( omputelepht ne ?? ? '??? ? t,r-<lb/>
it looks mu h like a phone that is<lb/>
 luggi d into icomputei ind is the<lb/>
hi . dev iceEmmetsteii ? it his<lb/>
I<lb/>
I heomj upl inteq rets<lb/>
the uM.isth.it. on ovei thephone<lb/>
and translates them into words on a<lb/>
st reen When I mmel t in replies<lb/>
he types his me age into the ma<lb/>
chine and it generatesa i omputer<lb/>
ii .I voice to send toa aller<lb/>
' it works very well, except<lb/>
when then- is a great deal of ba k<lb/>
ground noise signs 1 rnmetstein<lb/>
He explains that when some<lb/>
thi ng tomes o vir the phone that the<lb/>
computer does not understand it<lb/>
simplvshowstourx'sonthes. reen<lb/>
See NADTO page 8<lb/>
Web-shooter confronts<lb/>
reptile in McFarlant epic<lb/>
to<lb/>
gr<lb/>
nt<lb/>
bit<lb/>
Bylittoffe<lb/>
st.itt V i ,t. I<lb/>
??<lb/>
?? ? ai tist in comi b<lb/>
the cha ' tart I<lb/>
ii,l taki i Mai i i<lb/>
tt hai ? ?<lb/>
m"? 1 arlane t ok thechon<lb/>
ing penciling,and inkii<lb/>
ol '  Spidi rman I<lb/>
.ailed<lb/>
ever published<lb/>
rhcnewSpiderman titles!<lb/>
with a five issui story that ail.<lb/>
the writing abilit) of fodd<lb/>
M Farlane to be seen M<lb/>
used twold foes ? rman to<lb/>
begin the series, the Lizard<lb/>
Kraven I he I izard I<lb/>
doctor who was trying to find i<lb/>
to grow his arm back by using the<lb/>
regeneratkmabiliryoflizards When<lb/>
he finally developed a serum, he<lb/>
failed to test it before he used it and<lb/>
turned himself into a giant lizard<lb/>
The Lizard has Ken shown as<lb/>
slowly goingmore arid rnoreinsane,<lb/>
andinSPfDEJ?MANl,hetsshown<lb/>
without any human rationality<lb/>
Kraven, who was shown killed<lb/>
a couple Of wars ago, makes an<lb/>
I<lb/>
the<lb/>
ll It is.<lb/>
I into t<lb/>
l<lb/>
. , ? o is<lb/>
. wers oi<lb/>
- pound<lb/>
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iven's old<lb/>
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S id rman<lb/>
vonderswh . ? tupinthis<lb/>
. intl end da<lb/>
rs tt- i hedeteats<lb/>
the 1 izard and the wit h the wit. i<lb/>
uses her voodoop iwersand dtsap<lb/>
pears with the I izard rhis leaves<lb/>
Spiderman I ww dering<lb/>
whv the whole episod happened<lb/>
and wondering when he will come<lb/>
under attack from mem again.<lb/>
I "he Story calked torment<lb/>
showsMcFariane sbestwockmthe<lb/>
comic book medium. His style -<lb/>
allowed to be spread out all ovei<lb/>
each page His caricature style is<lb/>
very pleasing to the eye, but his art<lb/>
See Spiderman page 8<lb/>
<pb facs="00058276_0010"/><lb/>
I<lb/>
<lb/>
&amp; (Blic gngt Haroinjan?April 2, 1991<lb/>
April 2,1991<lb/>
Russians invade ECU Campus; circus comes to Hendrix<lb/>
'This is not your planet monkey -boy<lb/>
Buckaroo Banzai comes to Mendenhall<lb/>
This week the Student Union Films Committee, ever on the<lb/>
quest of t1mating,enrkhinganci entertaining the ECU community,<lb/>
presents iwptfw gn.it week of films. "Powaqqatei "The Fresh-<lb/>
man" and "The Adventures of Buckaroo Banzai" are this week's<lb/>
free flicks screening at fondrix Theatre.<lb/>
"Powaqqatsi" is ((dfrey Reggio's long -awaited follow up to<lb/>
his unique masterpiece, "Koyaanisqatsi Although clearly a com-<lb/>
panion piece to the earlier film, 'Towaiq.itsi" (a Hop term for'life<lb/>
consuming life") does not so much repeat "Koyaanisqatsi" as<lb/>
compliment if, standing as a distinct work.<lb/>
"Powaqqatsi" centers in the relationship Ix't ween humans and<lb/>
the environment, concentrating more OB the human side of the<lb/>
equation<lb/>
Marlon Brando makes Matthew Brnderick and offer he can't<lb/>
refuse m The Freshman a kooky offbeat comedy that's been<lb/>
dubbed the college comedy hit of 1990<lb/>
Brando, in a hilarious send-up of his "Godfather" mleas Don<lb/>
Corteone, pkrysa powerful organised i rime leader with an eligible<lb/>
daughter (Penelope Ann Miller). Matthew Broderick is the idealistic<lb/>
,)tw ambitious NYlI fn hman whose academic career gi ts off to a<lb/>
Kid start when he's conned out of all lus belongings just one hour<lb/>
after he at rives in New York His situation changes dramatically<lb/>
when Brando in his first starring role siiu e WSO gives him a part-<lb/>
time )oband offers to show him the popes.<lb/>
Then are so many reasons to love The Freshman that it's<lb/>
imp ssiMeto now where to begin. So much of the film's appeal is<lb/>
derived if m it- fresttnes rhat it m uki be unfab to divulge any<lb/>
inoreii.toniuitioii.iUittheplot.Suffueittosuythatiteali.irtlthat<lb/>
,ilmst Steals the show.<lb/>
Sunday night bungs a special showingoi thecuhdasak The<lb/>
Adventure, oi Buckaroo Banai-Across the Eighth 1-Hinension<lb/>
PeterVVellerrKohHop' )playsBuckanKKmAii, equal pa rtsphysi-<lb/>
eist, neuro surgeon, nxk singer and cult hero, vvho plunges into a<lb/>
heart stopping, hilarious adventure when he enters the Eighth<lb/>
Dimension Tht mtaByofi the wall, Ham action-packed comodv<lb/>
also stars John Lithgow, EBen Barkinand Jeff c .oldbhim.<lb/>
"Pnwaqqatsi 'willbeslovnionWednesday,Aprfl vvOOpm.<lb/>
The Fnhnian" screens Thursday, Friday and Saturday nights,<lb/>
April 4, 5 and o. also at iV pm The outrageous 'Adventures of<lb/>
Buckaroo Banzai wiB be featured Sunday sight April 7at 8:00pm.<lb/>
Admission to these and all Student Union films is free with a valid<lb/>
student IP. <lb/>
The Student 1 Inion him Committee thanks iist Coast Musk<lb/>
and Video for use of their t.ifx-s in the review of the-se films.<lb/>
ECU News Bureau<lb/>
The So viet Acrobatic Revue will<lb/>
1 perform at ECU Tuesday, April 2,<lb/>
in Wright Auditorium, beginning<lb/>
at 8 p.m.<lb/>
The event is sponsored by the<lb/>
ECU Student Union Minority Arts<lb/>
Committee.<lb/>
The 27-member troupe?con-<lb/>
tortionists, clowns and acrobats ?<lb/>
edy<lb/>
Secttor,markeringdirector at ECU'S<lb/>
Mendenhall Student Center. This<lb/>
will be a truly exciting evening for<lb/>
the entire family he said.<lb/>
TheSoviet Acrobatk Revuehas<lb/>
won world-wide acclaim on its in-<lb/>
ternational tours, and its members<lb/>
have been praised for their dexter-<lb/>
willprescntl7actsfeaturingmagic, ity and graceful re-creations of the<lb/>
wire-walking, juggling and com- Russiancircustraditionwruchdates<lb/>
back to the time of the czars. throughout the United States<lb/>
Theshowisdesignedtoappeal The star performers include Canada, with a concludingjperfor-<lb/>
toallagegroups,accordingtoSruart acrobat VTadmirSerov,designated mance in Philadelphia scheduled<lb/>
as Russia's National artist, his ac-<lb/>
robat wife Irina Serova, mime artist<lb/>
Anatoly Elizariev, juggler Ahmed<lb/>
Dianov and a father-son tightrope<lb/>
team, Nuhtar and Shamhal<lb/>
Abakarov, who perform blind-<lb/>
folded on the high wire.<lb/>
On this tour, the troupes' sec-<lb/>
ond tour of North America, the re-<lb/>
vue is appearing in 65 cities<lb/>
Stone<lb/>
for late May.<lb/>
Advance tickets for the Soviet<lb/>
Acrobatic Revue's ECU perfor-<lb/>
mance are $10 for the general pub<lb/>
lie, $8 for ECU faculty and staff and<lb/>
$6 for ECU students and youth. All<lb/>
tickets sold at the door will be $10<lb/>
Tkketsarea vailableat the ECU<lb/>
Central TicketOffke in Mendenhall<lb/>
Student Center.<lb/>
Continued from page 7<lb/>
Manzarek's wedding party has<lb/>
drawn the most flak, from Manzarek<lb/>
himself, as absolute fabrication but<lb/>
probably does portray an accurate<lb/>
representation of the lovehate re-<lb/>
lationship Morrison and Courson<lb/>
had for each other.<lb/>
Considering how willingly<lb/>
Manzarek and the rest of The Doors<lb/>
accepted $750,000 for the movie<lb/>
rights, he shouldn't be complaining<lb/>
ton much.<lb/>
Another unfortunate error oc-<lb/>
curs when Stone portrays Courson<lb/>
asmoreorlessa victim of Morrison's<lb/>
brutally abusive nature ? a claim<lb/>
that has been refuted by those close<lb/>
to the band.<lb/>
Although Stone plays it other-<lb/>
wise, it seems they were equally<lb/>
mean and spiteful toward each<lb/>
other.<lb/>
To Stone's credit, he ignores<lb/>
themyth that Morrison really didn't<lb/>
die in a Parisian bathtub on July 3,<lb/>
1971. (Probably more likely is<lb/>
Courson's confession to long-time<lb/>
Door'sfriend Danny Sugerman that<lb/>
Morrison overdosed on heroin she<lb/>
gave him that evening.)<lb/>
Another nice touch is the way<lb/>
Stone portrays "death" in almost<lb/>
every scene in the movie. (Pay close<lb/>
attention to the bald Indian in the<lb/>
beginning of the movie and ho w he<lb/>
keeps getting closer to Morrison<lb/>
throughout the show.)<lb/>
The movie gives fans an excel-<lb/>
lent way to visually experience The<lb/>
Doors, especially for those too<lb/>
young to remember it first hand.<lb/>
And when you combine this<lb/>
NADTO<lb/>
with some excellent background<lb/>
material, namely Sugerman'sbooks<lb/>
No One Here Gets Out Alive, Won-<lb/>
derland Avenue and The Doors: An<lb/>
Illustrated History, you can get a<lb/>
pretty good idea of what The Doors,<lb/>
and the '60s were all about.<lb/>
Ultimately, Krieger summed<lb/>
the movie up best in a recent inter-<lb/>
view with Guitar Schcxil magazine.<lb/>
"Anybody who was portrayed<lb/>
in it is probably going to hate it, but<lb/>
1 think the fans will probably like<lb/>
it he said.<lb/>
Continued from page7<lb/>
"Usually it is not a problem<lb/>
unless someone's dialect is so bad<lb/>
that nothing but four X's come up<lb/>
on the screen types Emmctstem.<lb/>
Emmetstein has worked for<lb/>
Carolina Telephone for 16 years.<lb/>
For the first 10 years he tells that he-<lb/>
was a data procissor for the coin<lb/>
pany. ITicn, in 1985, this new tele-<lb/>
communications device allowed<lb/>
Spiderman<lb/>
him to fulfill a childhood da-am.<lb/>
"Ever since I was a little child I<lb/>
wanted to be like Sara on the Andy<lb/>
Griffith show, helping people and<lb/>
getting paid for it signs<lb/>
Fmmetstcin.<lb/>
Emmetstein has been a mem-<lb/>
ber of NADTO since the organiza-<lb/>
tions beginning in 1986.<lb/>
"1 was just a plain-Jane due<lb/>
paying member for five years, as a<lb/>
matter of fact, I've only been to two<lb/>
of the their conventions explains<lb/>
Emmetstein.<lb/>
He explained how one of<lb/>
NADTCs national representatives<lb/>
called up and offered him the job.<lb/>
"It was like a dream come true,<lb/>
I almost popped I was so excited<lb/>
he signed.<lb/>
Emmetstein got the job because<lb/>
the old area president woke u p one<lb/>
day and could hear, so naturally he<lb/>
wasn't eligible anymore.<lb/>
Emmetstein is a living testa-<lb/>
ment who proves that all good<lb/>
things come to those who wait.<lb/>
To Percibal J. Emmetstein w?<lb/>
say congratulations and a happy<lb/>
belated April Fool's Day.<lb/>
Continued from page 7<lb/>
in Spiderman was never in ques-<lb/>
tion. Fie has proven his ability time<lb/>
and again. Starting his run on DC<lb/>
Comics INFINITY INC he moved<lb/>
to Marvel Comics and THE HULK.<lb/>
On THE HULK his popularity be-<lb/>
gin. He then moved to THE<lb/>
AMAZING SPIDERMAN,and from<lb/>
mere he made comic book hist' ry<lb/>
in becoming the writerartist of the<lb/>
biggest selling comic in history. I lis<lb/>
first issue of THE HULK (330) is<lb/>
selling at S20, his first issue of THE<lb/>
MAZING SPIDERMAN (298) is<lb/>
selling at $52, and only eight-<lb/>
months-old, SPIDERMAN 1 is<lb/>
selling up to $46.<lb/>
Thewritingof Todd McFarlane<lb/>
has come under much criticism,<lb/>
even though he admitted that the<lb/>
first few issues would be timid and<lb/>
short of plot lines, readers thrashed<lb/>
his first issue, which mostly con-<lb/>
sisted of beautiful artwork and very<lb/>
little story.<lb/>
While it is true that the<lb/>
writing for the first issue was poor,<lb/>
McFarlane admitted to that. The<lb/>
fact tnathiswritingabiliry improved<lb/>
immensely over the five-issue story<lb/>
lineof Torment and is now better<lb/>
than a few writers that are currently-<lb/>
writing comics. McFarlane uses<lb/>
stark realism tocarry hisstctriesand<lb/>
does not avoid controversial issues<lb/>
to make his poi nt. While his wn ting<lb/>
hasa way to go to be considered one<lb/>
of the best writers in comics, at the<lb/>
pace that he is improving, it won't<lb/>
be too long.<lb/>
STUDENT UNION<lb/>
STUDENT UNION<lb/>
ECU Student Union<lb/>
Making'W Things Happen At ECU<lb/>
Program Hotline 757-6004<lb/>
?All you can eat<lb/>
shrimp and trout<lb/>
$4.95<lb/>
"1<lb/>
71<lb/>
L<lb/>
AWBMJOTAMEAL<lb/>
(919)758-0327<lb/>
105 Airport Road<lb/>
M-Th llain-Spm F-Sat llam-9pm Sun UPJ<lb/>
pAVID's<lb/>
AUTOMOTIVE<lb/>
foreign I Domestic<lb/>
PABTS ? SfRVICf<lb/>
:s prvijrl if ar kept .vcrniiiH<lb/>
510 N. CreeneSt.<lb/>
Greenville, NC<lb/>
830-1779<lb/>
i<lb/>
y<lb/>
 ?<lb/>
? ??-?<lb/>
i <lb/>
Student I Inion Productions Committee<lb/>
and The R.H.A. present<lb/>
CASINO NIGHT<lb/>
TRY YOUR LUCK AT POKER, BLACKJACK,<lb/>
ROULETTE and CRAPS!<lb/>
PRIZES will be auctioned off at the end!<lb/>
-Admission is EREE and refreshments provided<lb/>
WHEN? Monday, April 8th from 8-10:30 pm<lb/>
WHERE? Mendenhall Multipurpose room<lb/>
:This Week At Hendrix Theatre<lb/>
 QUALITY FILM DEVELOPING<lb/>
?o?<lb/>
Center<lb/>
3y<lb/>
SUPER SAVING COUPON FOR A<lb/>
T FREE <lb/>
 I<lb/>
j second set of prints <lb/>
? with every disc or roll of color print film brought in for processing <lb/>
 offer good through April 15, 1991<lb/>
ECU Student Store Wright Bldg. 4x6 Prints not included<lb/>
Greenville NC 27858 Coupon Must Accompany Order<lb/>
gdden 2gy; National Honor Society;<lb/>
?FSOKNKXNU FIW A IXIK.HTFUl COMEDY<lb/>
Wed April 3 8 pm<lb/>
POWAQQATSI<lb/>
ItCADVDfnABi<lb/>
rHE <lb/>
FRESHMAN<lb/>
Thurs-Sat<lb/>
April 4-6 8pm<lb/>
rx<lb/>
Sun April 7 8 pm<lb/>
ECU ID oh Cumimt Films Pass is Required fob Admission<lb/>
iil<lb/>
 <lb/>
?Chartering reception is April 23, 1991<lb/>
'Two scholarships will be presented to<lb/>
outstanding junior and senior members<lb/>
'Career assistance including over 150<lb/>
corporations with career opportunities<lb/>
Deadline to Join: April 10, 1991<lb/>
Pirate batsm<lb/>
By Owen Cox<lb/>
Suff Writer<lb/>
ECUpickedupa much-needed<lb/>
6-4 baseball win against the na-<lb/>
tionally ranked Jacksonville Dol-<lb/>
phins Thursday night.<lb/>
The Pirates, keyed by a strong<lb/>
pitching performance by juruorTom<lb/>
Moye, rallied after an early deficit<lb/>
to come back against a strong Jack-<lb/>
sonville club<lb/>
Coach Gary Overtd<lb/>
the Pirate effort: 'Th.j<lb/>
ths year that is a<lb/>
We needed a wi<lb/>
opponent and w?. .<lb/>
However ,hePirat<lb/>
early 1-0. Dolphin<lb/>
Marc Manni I<lb/>
third on a wild pit I<lb/>
another wild pitch<lb/>
added anothi - <lb/>
fifth tot . adv;<lb/>
r ?<lb/>
-<lb/>
w<lb/>
?<lb/>
Scott Robinsondelivers a pitch in the second game aga.n<lb/>
due to rain in the eighth inning and ECU was held to a 7<lb/>
Crew team p<lb/>
By Nicole Pratt<lb/>
Staff Writer<lb/>
The ECU Crew Team found<lb/>
-outhard work pay-off last weekend<lb/>
KyhtfUheycqrnethcgTie wjh a bronze<lb/>
medal t'rom"tnc Aupista Invita-<lb/>
tional Regatta in Augusta, Co<lb/>
John JuAiitis. David Burnette.<lb/>
Tom Barrv. Mike McCuiley. and<lb/>
jStephanJeCmwy competed in the<lb/>
novice four event and came in firs!<lb/>
in their heat, allowing them to ad-<lb/>
vance to the finals.<lb/>
They beat out Michigan State,<lb/>
Augusta College and Georgia Tech<lb/>
in the preliminaries and wen!<lb/>
against Tampa, Florida Institute ot<lb/>
Technology and the University oi<lb/>
Tennessee-Chattanwga in the fi-<lb/>
nals.<lb/>
in i<lb/>
neck-in-neck<lb/>
mark, where UP -<lb/>
their second winds<lb/>
and finish within tJ<lb/>
other. ECl<lb/>
second s a fter Ta m pa <lb/>
409 '<lb/>
S<lb/>
Karen Ja<lb/>
Shanm<lb/>
women s j<lb/>
UTC, Tulai"<lb/>
placed third in th?.<lb/>
time of about I <lb/>
The Augusta C<lb/>
finished this cent ij<lb/>
utesbut still ad <lb/>
because they won tj<lb/>
one other scho<lb/>
said. She said UI<lb/>
Irates claim first pi.<lb/>
By Gary Hurley<lb/>
Suff Writer<lb/>
The ECU Ultimate team won<lb/>
their first finals appearance of 1991.<lb/>
The Irates knocked off Columbia in<lb/>
the B-Bracket championship game<lb/>
of the Easter Eggstravaganza this<lb/>
past weekend in Wilmington.<lb/>
The tournament's competition<lb/>
consisted of both college and pro-<lb/>
fessional teams from Rhode Island<lb/>
to Florida. The Irates never lost to a<lb/>
college team but were knocked out<lb/>
of the A-Bracket by two pro teams.<lb/>
On Saturday, the hate's first<lb/>
$ game was against Suny Purchase.<lb/>
Purchase qualified<lb/>
nationals last<lb/>
to their reputal<lb/>
ECU won handily t<lb/>
6.<lb/>
"Weoutiasted tj<lb/>
throwing and defej<lb/>
player David Meivj<lb/>
about our chances<lb/>
Tournament this vi<lb/>
Philadelphia<lb/>
Double Secret. ga<lb/>
than they could hai<lb/>
the game went E<lb/>
they telll 5-5.<lb/>
In third round<lb/>
met Flordia'sVioJ<lb/>
4"<lb/>
Sale!<lb/>
Freshman catcher Lisa Corpew slides into second j<lb/>
Community Junior College.<lb/>
<pb facs="00058276_0011"/><lb/>
<lb/>
vIIk Cunt (liarolinian<lb/>
Apwl 2, 1991<lb/>
April 2, 1991<lb/>
Campus; circus comes to Hendrix<lb/>
ECU News Bureau<lb/>
edy.<lb/>
The Soviet Acrobatic Revue will<lb/>
perform at ECU Tuesday, April ?.<lb/>
in Wright Auditorium, beginning<lb/>
at 8 p.m.<lb/>
The event is sponsored by the the entire family he said<lb/>
"This is not your planet monkey -boy<lb/>
Buckaioo Banzai comes to Mendenhall<lb/>
!Tu week the Student Inion Films Committee ever on the<lb/>
quest of educating .ciuk him;and entertaining tlvl O community,<lb/>
presents another great week ot film- Towaqqatsi' "The Fresh-<lb/>
man" aixi The Adventures ot Buckaroo Banzai are this week's<lb/>
free flicks screening at Hendrix Theatre.<lb/>
Powaqqatsi" is  drrey Reggio's long awaited follow-up to<lb/>
s unique masterpiece TCoyaanisqatsi Although clearly a com-<lb/>
panion piecete theearlk rtilr Towaqqatsi (a ! lopi term ivr 'lite<lb/>
. onsuming life I do<lb/>
complii m nt '<lb/>
ECU Student Union Minority Arts<lb/>
Committee.<lb/>
The 27-member troupe ? con-<lb/>
tortionists, downs and acrobats ?<lb/>
will present 17actsfeaturingmagic,<lb/>
wire-walking, juggling and com<lb/>
back to the time of the czars.<lb/>
The show is designed to appeal The star performers include<lb/>
toallagegmups,according to Stuart acrobat VladrmrSerov, designated<lb/>
Secttor,marketingdirector at ECU'S as Russia's National artist, his ac-<lb/>
Mcndenhall Student Center. "This robat wife IrinaSerova, mime artist<lb/>
will be a truly exciting evening for Anatoly Elizariev, juggler Ahmed<lb/>
Dianov and a father-son tightrope<lb/>
Stone<lb/>
a .i<lb/>
? much repeat 'Koyaanisqatsi as<lb/>
distinct work<lb/>
If tther" role as Don<lb/>
kI r ith an eligible<lb/>
r, aqqatsi cenh rsontherelariorfc hip between humansand<lb/>
.  - nent concentrai r?g mo?e on me human side of the<lb/>
ition<lb/>
v - Matthew PnxWrick and offer he can't<lb/>
refuse in ' Freshman a hook) offbeat comedy that's been<lb/>
dubbed the - '?? get :  ol llXa<lb/>
Brai do :x .i ralarkuis ? 1.1 p I<lb/>
( Vflrtecme pi ivsa I i '?'? d i<lb/>
daughter(I n lopeAru v lilk r) Mattl??? Bnxlei krkisthekk ilistic<lb/>
andambiti u V.N' fi I i inwIioseaKradenuciareergetsoffloa<lb/>
had start w 11 n he's conned out of all h s belongings just onehoui<lb/>
irrivesinNi ??"? His situation changes dramatically<lb/>
whenBrando in his first starring role since 1980 eshimapart-<lb/>
time job ami offers tosl him me ropes<lb/>
 ? - to 1 ' - ? ' that it's<lb/>
imp ? b in ' chofl<lb/>
tod : v- ? tirtodh Igcany<lb/>
on . .?? i) rhatiti<lb/>
ium ipi-vialsli king??t tl? cult class I1k<lb/>
 ; ? ? Buckamo Banzai-Across the i ighth . ?imenskm<lb/>
PeterWi Robocop piaBucltfHPOolUnzai,equalpartsphysi-<lb/>
cist neun - irgeon nvk singer and cult hero, who plunges into a<lb/>
heart stt ??? ng hilarious adventure when hi' enters me Eighth<lb/>
Dimensi ? Ft th wall.Nzam action-packed corned<lb/>
also .? Barkii 1 lot r t ioktWurn<lb/>
. ,  tesda) "?? I Opm<lb/>
IheFivshman screens Thursday Frtdaj and Saturda) nights<lb/>
toriH 5 and 6. also at 811 pm The outrageous Adventures c4<lb/>
Buckar ' ? ? " I ' M '??"  ' '<lb/>
. ?, these and all Student Unkm films is free with a valid<lb/>
? lent ID ,<lb/>
Hk v thank l ? istMuik<lb/>
us, ?;? ? ?. iew oi these films.<lb/>
Manzarek's wedding party has<lb/>
drawn the most flak, from Manzarek<lb/>
himself, as absolute fabrication but<lb/>
probably does portray an accurate<lb/>
representation of the love hate re<lb/>
lationship Morrison and Courson<lb/>
had tor each other.<lb/>
Considering how willingly<lb/>
Manzarekand the rest ot The Doors<lb/>
accepted $750,000 tor the movie<lb/>
rights, he shouldn'tbecomplaining<lb/>
tor much<lb/>
Another unfortunate erroi<lb/>
curs when Stone portrays Coura m<lb/>
NADTO<lb/>
Mofll<lb/>
in<lb/>
. i<lb/>
-tsteti<lb/>
Usually it is not a p<lb/>
unless someone's dialed is<lb/>
that nothing but four X's a<lb/>
on the screen types Emm<lb/>
Emmetstein has ? rk I I i<lb/>
( arolina Telephone for<lb/>
For the first 10 years he tells that he<lb/>
was a data processor for tl<lb/>
pany rhen, in 1985 mist ? ?<lb/>
communications device<lb/>
Spiderman<lb/>
in Spiderman was never in ques-<lb/>
tion He has proven his ability time<lb/>
and again Starting hisrui iD<lb/>
ComicslNFlNrn IN ?-?<lb/>
to Marvel Comics and 77 fl ? . &amp;<lb/>
On THE Hlfl K hs popularity be-<lb/>
gan He then moved !<lb/>
AM V ISPIDl RW ,v- ii Ifi<lb/>
there he made comic be kh<lb/>
in becoming the writer artisti ftl<lb/>
STUDENT UNION<lb/>
STUDENT UNION<lb/>
ECU Student Union<lb/>
MakingY&amp;y Things Happen At ECU<lb/>
fA<lb/>
Program Hotline 757-6004<lb/>
f<lb/>
??V.c<lb/>
x<lb/>
Student Union Productions Committee<lb/>
and The R.il A present<lb/>
CASINO NIGHT<lb/>
TRY YOUR LUCK AT POKER. BLACKJACK,<lb/>
ROULETTE and CRAPS!<lb/>
?PRIZES w ill be auctioned off at the end!<lb/>
-Admission is FREE and refreshments provided<lb/>
WHEN? Monday, April 8th from 8-10:30 pm<lb/>
WHERE? Mendenhall Multipurpose room<lb/>
:This Week At Hendrix Theatre ?<lb/>
1 l?M??v II I m UK M MN Mil l? U? ?vlAIMJH<lb/>
Wed April 3 8 pm<lb/>
POWAQQATSI<lb/>
THE ACVEHTURB Of<lb/>
THE , <lb/>
FRESHMAN<lb/>
Thurs-Sat<lb/>
April 4-6 8pm<lb/>
IAN 1 Al<lb/>
Sun April 7 8 pm<lb/>
ECU ID or Current Films Pass is Required for Admission<lb/>
The Soviet Acrobatic Revuehas<lb/>
won world -wide acclaim on its in-<lb/>
ternational tours, and its members<lb/>
have been praised for their dexter-<lb/>
ity and graceful icoeaUora of the<lb/>
Russiancircus tradition whichdates<lb/>
team, Nuhtar and Shamhal<lb/>
Abakarov, who perform blind-<lb/>
folded on the high wire.<lb/>
On this tour, the troupes' sec-<lb/>
ond tour of North America, the re-<lb/>
vue is appearing in 65 cities<lb/>
throughout the United States and<lb/>
Canada, with a concluding perfor<lb/>
mance in Philadelphia scheduled<lb/>
for late May<lb/>
Advance tickets for the Soviet<lb/>
Acrobatic Revue's ECU perfor-<lb/>
mance are $10 for the general pub<lb/>
lie, $8 for ECU faculty and staff and<lb/>
$6 for ECU students and youth. All<lb/>
tickets sold at the door will be $10<lb/>
Ticketsareavailableat the ECU<lb/>
Central Ticket Office in Mendenhall<lb/>
Student Center.<lb/>
Continued from page 7<lb/>
asmoreorlessa victim of Morrison's<lb/>
brutally abusive nature ? a claim<lb/>
that has been refuted by the sedose<lb/>
to the band<lb/>
Although Stone plays it other-<lb/>
wise, u seems they were equally<lb/>
mean and spiteful toward each<lb/>
other.<lb/>
To Stone's credit, he ignores<lb/>
themyth that Morrison really didn't<lb/>
die iii a Parisian bathtub on luh <lb/>
1971. (Probably more hkelv is<lb/>
Courson's confession to long-time<lb/>
' vtsfriend DannySugerman that<lb/>
Morrison overdosed on heroin she<lb/>
gave him that evening.)<lb/>
Another nice touch is the was<lb/>
Stone portrays "death in almost<lb/>
every scene in the movie. (Tay close<lb/>
attention to the bald Indian in the<lb/>
beginrungof the movie and how he<lb/>
keeps getting closer to Morrison<lb/>
throughout the show.)<lb/>
The movie gives fans an excel-<lb/>
lent way to visually experience The<lb/>
Doors, especially for those too<lb/>
young to remember it first hand.<lb/>
And when vou combine this<lb/>
with some excellent background<lb/>
ma teria 1. na nu-1 y Sugerma n s books<lb/>
Ho One Here Gets Out Alive, Won-<lb/>
Jerland Avenue and The P'vr; An<lb/>
IBystnded History, you can get .?.<lb/>
pretty good idea of what The Doors.<lb/>
and the 60s were all about<lb/>
Ultimately, Krieger summed<lb/>
the movie up best in a recent inter-<lb/>
view with Gutter v i magazii<lb/>
"Anybodywh   i<lb/>
in it is probably going to hate it, hut<lb/>
1 think the fans will probably like<lb/>
it he said<lb/>
Continued from page 7<lb/>
him to fulfil a childhood dream<lb/>
"Eversmoel was a little child 1<lb/>
wanted tobe like Sara on the Andy<lb/>
i iriffith show . helping people and<lb/>
getting paid tor it signs<lb/>
Emmetstein<lb/>
Emmetstein has been a mem-<lb/>
ber of NA1ITTO since the organiza-<lb/>
tions beginning in llJv<lb/>
"1 was nist a phiin lane due<lb/>
paying member tor five years, as a<lb/>
matter of tact, I've only been to two<lb/>
oi the their conventions explains<lb/>
Emmetstein<lb/>
He explained how one of<lb/>
NADTO's national representatives<lb/>
called up and offered him the Kb.<lb/>
"It was like a dream come true.<lb/>
I almost popped ! was so excited<lb/>
he signed.<lb/>
Emmetstein got the pbbeca -<lb/>
theold area president woke upne<lb/>
day and could hear, s. i naturally he<lb/>
wasn't eligible anymore.<lb/>
Emmetstein is a living ?<lb/>
ment who proves that ail .<lb/>
things come to those who wait.<lb/>
To Percibal ! Emmetsteii<lb/>
say congratulati. us and a 1<lb/>
belated Apnl Fool's Day<lb/>
Continued from page 7<lb/>
biggest selling comk in history. I lis<lb/>
firsl  f i  ??<lb/>
;i ' :v atS first issueol THE<lb/>
MAZIS ERMAK 298) is<lb/>
selling at "2 and only eight-<lb/>
monthsold IMAN ?1 is<lb/>
selling up ft $46<lb/>
Thewritii Id Mel arlane<lb/>
has come under rmi I ism,<lb/>
even thouch he admitted that the<lb/>
first few issues would be timid and<lb/>
short oi plot lines, readers thrashed<lb/>
his first issue, which mostly con-<lb/>
ststedofbeauufu artwork and very<lb/>
little story.<lb/>
While it is true that the<lb/>
writing tor the first issue was poor,<lb/>
McFaitane admitted to that The<lb/>
factthatraswritingability improved<lb/>
orunenselyoveTthefive-issuestory<lb/>
BneofTormentand isnowbetl i<lb/>
thuin a few writers trvi! arecurrentlv<lb/>
writing comics McFarlane u<lb/>
stark realism toca rry his u <lb/>
does not avoid controversial is<lb/>
to rruike his point. While his wn ring<lb/>
hasawaytogotobeconsideredone<lb/>
of the best wrih rs incomi<lb/>
pace that he is impn ving, it <lb/>
rx- too long<lb/>
S <lb/>
?All you can eat<lb/>
shrimp and trout<lb/>
$4.95<lb/>
(919)758-0327<lb/>
105 Airport Road<lb/>
M Hi llain-8pm I- Sal llam-9pm Sun Llam-4pm<lb/>
0Mp$<lb/>
AUTOMOTIVE<lb/>
foftgn k Ocm?iiiC<lb/>
RABTS h SERVICE<lb/>
510 N. Creene St.<lb/>
Creenille. NC<lb/>
830779<lb/>
IS QUALITY FILM DEVELOPING<lb/>
?VxoVO<lb/>
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"f-<lb/>
FREE<lb/>
SUPER SAVING COUPON FORA<lb/>
I<lb/>
I<lb/>
 I<lb/>
I second set ot prints <lb/>
Iuiih ever) disc or roll of color pnnt film brought in for processing j<lb/>
offer good through Apnl 15.1991<lb/>
ECU Student Store Wnght Bldg<lb/>
Greenville NC 27858<lb/>
4h PrinLv not included<lb/>
Coupon Musi Accompam OrO<lb/>
Golden !Igv National Honor Society<lb/>
STUDENT UNION<lb/>
STUDENT UNION<lb/>
?Chartering reception is April 23, 1991<lb/>
?Two scholarships will be presented to<lb/>
outstanding junior and senior members<lb/>
?Career assistance including over 150<lb/>
corporations with career opportunities<lb/>
Deadline to Join: April 10, 1991<lb/>
Fixate batsm<lb/>
By Owen Co<lb/>
Staff Writer<lb/>
ECU pi- ked<lb/>
h-4 baseball wii<lb/>
tionallv ranki-vi ? ?<lb/>
phmsThursc! a)<lb/>
The Pirates key<lb/>
pitchingpc-rt. ?<lb/>
Move, rallu-1 al<lb/>
to come bad<lb/>
sonvilleclub<lb/>
I<lb/>
W<lb/>
Scxin Rob<lb/>
due to r3 <lb/>
Crew team p<lb/>
By Nicole Pratt<lb/>
Stjtt V-<lb/>
The ECU Ci<lb/>
out hard ? -<lb/>
whlh4t ii <lb/>
nvda "   ' '<lb/>
tiona<lb/>
lohr<lb/>
Tom Bai<lb/>
novice I<lb/>
in their heat a<lb/>
vanceti the!<lb/>
Thej<lb/>
Aug<lb/>
in the pre<lb/>
against I<lb/>
Technok<lb/>
Tennessei ?<lb/>
ruih<lb/>
Irates claim first pi<lb/>
Bv Gary Hurle)<lb/>
sun Writet<lb/>
The ECU I<lb/>
their first I<lb/>
Thebatesknocked N<lb/>
the B-Bradket dh<lb/>
ot the Easter Eggsb ivagai<lb/>
past weekend in Wilmn<lb/>
ThetoumaTJi<lb/>
consistti ot Knh coflegE<lb/>
Sessional tc. nsft<lb/>
to Florida The Irates -u ?- a<lb/>
eoBege team but were k<lb/>
oflheA-Bradketb)<lb/>
On Saturda) e irate -<lb/>
$ game was ainst Him Pun 9<lb/>
?<lb/>
?<lb/>
Phil<lb/>
thar<lb/>
met I<lb/>
I<lb/>
L<lb/>
Safe!<lb/>
Freshman catcher Lea Corpew slides into second<lb/>
Community Junior College<lb/>
<pb facs="00058276_0012"/><lb/>
I<lb/>
April 2, 1991<lb/>
SMfg lEast (garpltnian<lb/>
9<lb/>
comes to Hendrix<lb/>
v cz?irv<lb/>
:ers include<lb/>
? V designated<lb/>
1 artist his ac-<lb/>
Iva. mime artist<lb/>
gder Ahmed<lb/>
son hghtrope<lb/>
li -hamhal<lb/>
ferform blind-<lb/>
throughout the United Suites and<lb/>
Canada, with a concluding perfor-<lb/>
mance in Philadelphia scheduled<lb/>
tor late Mav<lb/>
Advance tickets tor the Soviet<lb/>
Acrobatic Revue's ECU perfor-<lb/>
mance are $10 tor the general pub<lb/>
be $8 tor ECU tau!t and statt and<lb/>
o for ECU students aixl vouth. All<lb/>
tickets sold at the door will be $10<lb/>
ricketsareavailableattheECU<lb/>
tralTk IcetOfficeinMendenhall<lb/>
? Center<lb/>
Continued rom page 7<lb/>
, ?? . ???  ? kground<lb/>
. iugerman'sbooks<lb/>
.  ? ? , r. n<lb/>
. ?<lb/>
 Doors<lb/>
immed<lb/>
c ?  iest in a re ent inter-<lb/>
, .? i a ? ? ne<lb/>
. orti ?yed<lb/>
ngtohateil but<lb/>
1 thinV probably like<lb/>
Continued trom page 7<lb/>
:?1 lilse<lb/>
ipone<lb/>
ilK he<lb/>
ii .??? ire<lb/>
tcstas<lb/>
tgooq<lb/>
.<lb/>
-in we<lb/>
ind a 1vippy<lb/>
Continued trom page 7<lb/>
n. W'tter<lb/>
n i urrently<lb/>
me uses<lb/>
?? ricsand<lb/>
'  IJ U( ?<lb/>
?? s .nrmg<lb/>
-it redone<lb/>
YAMUc,<lb/>
?<lb/>
AUTOMOTIVE<lb/>
toiiQn &amp; Dom?ltiC<lb/>
PARTS i SIBVICI<lb/>
830-1779<lb/>
FILM DEVELOPING<lb/>
inter ,?-<lb/>
Satiny-<lb/>
ink <lb/>
FRIK<lb/>
i<lb/>
i<lb/>
ik1 set ot prints I<lb/>
ighl in tor processing i<lb/>
m<lb/>
I<lb/>
4x6 Prints not included<lb/>
Coupon Musi Accompany Order<lb/>
I lowor Society<lb/>
April 23, 1991<lb/>
ie presented to<lb/>
senior members<lb/>
luding over 150<lb/>
er opportunities<lb/>
pril 10, 1991<lb/>
PORTS<lb/>
Pirate batsmen pick up two against Dolphins<lb/>
By Owen Cox<lb/>
Staff Writer<lb/>
: c I pickedupa much-needed<lb/>
baseball win against the na-<lb/>
 ranked Jacksonville Dol-<lb/>
ns rhursday night.<lb/>
he Pirates, keyed by a strong<lb/>
? ingperfcmrtancebyjuniorTom<lb/>
rallied after an early deficit<lb/>
a k against a strong lack<lb/>
dub<lb/>
Coach Gary Overton said about<lb/>
the Pirate effort: "This is the win<lb/>
this year that is a shot in the arm<lb/>
We needed a win over a quality<lb/>
opponent and we got that tonight<lb/>
HoweverJhe Pirates, fell behind<lb/>
early 1-0. Dolphin leadofi batter,<lb/>
Marc Marini doubled, moved to<lb/>
third on a wild pitch, then scored on<lb/>
another wild pitch. Jacksonville<lb/>
added another run in the top of the<lb/>
fifth to take a 241 advantage.<lb/>
In the bottom of the fifth, the<lb/>
Pirate Kits came alive. They sent 10<lb/>
men to the plate and got some help<lb/>
from the jacksonvilledefenseasthey<lb/>
scored four runs in the bottom half<lb/>
of the frame. Move, who also was<lb/>
the designated hitter, lead off the<lb/>
inning with a double. ChadTriplett<lb/>
then reached on an error.<lb/>
(ilvnn Bock reached first on a<lb/>
catcher's interference call to load<lb/>
the bases Pat VVatkins singled to<lb/>
Celeste Hootfman ? ECU Photo Lab<lb/>
Scott Robinsondelivers a pitch in the second game against Jacksonville on March 29. The game was called<lb/>
?to rain in the eighth inning and ECU was held to a 7-7 tie<lb/>
center, scoring Moye. Barry Narron<lb/>
then singled to center allowing<lb/>
Triplett and Beck to score. After a<lb/>
David Leisten flyout,Tommy Eason<lb/>
was intentionally walked to load<lb/>
the bases.<lb/>
John Gaststruckout,and Corey<lb/>
Short walked to drive in the fourth<lb/>
Pirate run of the inning. Moye, who<lb/>
led of the inning, grounded to third<lb/>
to end the inning.<lb/>
The Pirates added two more<lb/>
runs, on Corey Short's two RBI<lb/>
single, to go ahead 6-2.<lb/>
Jacksonville was not finished,<lb/>
however, they hit Moye for two<lb/>
runs as four consecutive Dolphin<lb/>
batters reached.<lb/>
Lyle Hartgrove relieved Moye,<lb/>
and got the next Jacksonville batter<lb/>
to ground into a double play to<lb/>
preserve a two run lead. Hartgrove<lb/>
then retired the side in order in the<lb/>
ninth to get his first saveof the year<lb/>
On offense, Eason went 1-2,<lb/>
VVatkins went 21 and Narron was<lb/>
2-5 with two runs batted in. Short<lb/>
also had two runs Kitted in for the<lb/>
Pirates.<lb/>
Move, who is now 3-1, allowed<lb/>
six hi.sand three earned runs, while<lb/>
walking one batter and hitting one<lb/>
with a pitch. Moye also had seven<lb/>
Strikeouts including four in the first<lb/>
inning.<lb/>
"Tom Moye had hisbest outing<lb/>
of the vear CoachOverton said of<lb/>
Move'sperformance.Headdedthat<lb/>
Move may have ran out of steam<lb/>
because he was doubling as the<lb/>
designated hitter and had to run the<lb/>
bases.<lb/>
ECU had to scratch and claw in<lb/>
their next game that afternoon to<lb/>
come away with a 7-7 tie agai nst the<lb/>
Dolphins.<lb/>
The game was called in the<lb/>
eighth due to showers and became<lb/>
the Pirates first tie this season.<lb/>
The Pirates jumped to an early<lb/>
lead with a run in the bottom of the<lb/>
first. The bottom of the second also<lb/>
brought some runs for the Pirates.<lb/>
Chad Triplett struckout to start<lb/>
the inning. Glynn Beck singled to<lb/>
center. Pat VVatkins followed with a<lb/>
single to left. After Barry Narron<lb/>
reached on a fielder's choice, David<lb/>
1 listen singled to left b i bring home<lb/>
Beck.<lb/>
The Pirates second run st ored<lb/>
when Narron crossed home just<lb/>
before Leisten wastagged out en a n<lb/>
attempted steal.This put the Pirates<lb/>
up 3-0.<lb/>
Jacksonville woke up in the top<lb/>
of the third, rocking Pirate starter<lb/>
Jamie Bell. The Dolphins pushed<lb/>
across six runs on tour hits and<lb/>
were helped bv three walks and<lb/>
two Pirate errors to take the lead, 6-<lb/>
3. In the inning the Dolphins<lb/>
roughed up two Pirate pitchers.<lb/>
Jacksonvilleadded another run<lb/>
in the fifth to make it a 7-3 ballgame.<lb/>
ECU scored three times in the<lb/>
sixth to cut the lead to one. Triplett,<lb/>
Beck and VVatkins had consecutive<lb/>
singles. Narron reached on a field-<lb/>
ers choice and moved up when the<lb/>
pitcher for Jacksonville threw the<lb/>
ball away for an error. Both Beck<lb/>
and VVatkins scored on the throw<lb/>
Leisten sacrificed Narron to<lb/>
third. Tommy Eason then grounded<lb/>
sharply to the second basemanwho<lb/>
threw out Narron as he was trying<lb/>
to score. John Gast closed out the<lb/>
inning by flying to right.<lb/>
The seventh inning brought the<lb/>
rain as well as the tying run for the<lb/>
Pirates. Corey short struckout to<lb/>
lead off the inning Tom Moye<lb/>
walked, and Triplett singled. Beck<lb/>
then reached on an error which al<lb/>
lowed Moye to score the tying run.<lb/>
VVatkins grounded out to second<lb/>
for the final out<lb/>
In the top of the eighth, with<lb/>
one out and a Dolphin runner on<lb/>
third, the game was halted because<lb/>
of rain. Play resumed about twenty<lb/>
minutes later with Jacksonville<lb/>
scoring two runs to take a 9-7 lead.<lb/>
Due to the rain, play was sus-<lb/>
pended for good during the Pirate<lb/>
half of the inning. Since the Pirates<lb/>
did not complete their at bat, the<lb/>
score reverted back to the last<lb/>
completed inning, the seventh, in<lb/>
which the score was still 7-7.<lb/>
At the plate, the Pirates were<lb/>
paced by Beck and VVatkins, both<lb/>
were 3-4. Leisten and Triplett also<lb/>
chipped in two hits a piece as the<lb/>
Pirates banged out 12 hits.<lb/>
Sophomore right-hander<lb/>
Howard Whitfield turned in a<lb/>
strong outing in relief as he went<lb/>
three scoreless innings allowing<lb/>
only one hit. He gave the Pirates a<lb/>
chance bv holding the Dolphins in<lb/>
check.<lb/>
With the tie ECU'srecord went<lb/>
to 15-9-1. The Pirates faceN.C State<lb/>
Udav in Raleigh.<lb/>
team pulls<lb/>
Augui<lb/>
By Nicole Pratt<lb/>
Staff Writer<lb/>
The ECU Crew Team found<lb/>
: rd w( rk paysoff last weekend<lb/>
hevcamehqrne withabronae<lb/>
!al from the Augusta Invit.i<lb/>
ti nal Regatta in Augusta, (la.<lb/>
ohn uzaitis, David Burnette,<lb/>
.i Barry, Mike McCuUey, ami<lb/>
phanieCreaseycompeted in the<lb/>
icefi iurevent and came in first<lb/>
their heat, allowing them to -<lb/>
v ance to the finals<lb/>
"hey beat out Michigan State,<lb/>
. sta C oDege and Georgia Tech<lb/>
the preliminaries and went<lb/>
 i nst ampa, Florida Institute ot<lb/>
nology, and the University ot<lb/>
ei nessee-Chattanooga in the fi-<lb/>
L'TC, Tampa and ECU were<lb/>
neck-in-neck until the 1500-meter<lb/>
mark, where U IX and Tampa got<lb/>
their second winds to pull awav<lb/>
and finish within two seconds of<lb/>
each other. E I finished about 10<lb/>
secondsafter Tampa and FIT about<lb/>
4(1 seconds aftt r EG<lb/>
Sam Carter, Ang a n,<lb/>
KarenJacobeily,Jennifer i irderand<lb/>
Shannon Nobles rao I in the<lb/>
women's novice four enl igainst<lb/>
L rC,Tulaneand Jacksonville and<lb/>
placed third in their heat with a<lb/>
time of about 13 minutes<lb/>
The Augusta College women<lb/>
finished this event mover 14 min-<lb/>
utes but still advanced to the finals<lb/>
because they won their heat (only<lb/>
one other school was in it art r<lb/>
Niid.Slies.iid it theoffk<lb/>
time, E I' would have been in the<lb/>
finals.<lb/>
Schools came trom as far as<lb/>
Wisconsin and Canada, and all of<lb/>
the Ivy League teams but one were<lb/>
present. National teams from<lb/>
( anada .md Russia also competed<lb/>
in the regatta. The Canadian men's<lb/>
and women's teams beat the Kus-<lb/>
si. i teams in the international eight<lb/>
e ent.<lb/>
: I i hosted i scrimmage<lb/>
against Skidmore College. N.C.<lb/>
state and UNC-Wilmington on<lb/>
March 21 and was victorious in two<lb/>
of three events.<lb/>
The ECU women borrowed an<lb/>
eight shell and a coxswain from<lb/>
Skidmore and beat them bv 22 sec-<lb/>
onds. It was the first time ECU had<lb/>
four of them and raced.<lb/>
The ECU men faced upagamst<lb/>
N.C. State and Skidmore in a four<lb/>
event and finished the 1,000-meter<lb/>
course in 3:39:94, marking another<lb/>
victory for the Pirates. N.C. State<lb/>
a nd Skid more crossed theTirusrili he<lb/>
22 and 48 seconds later.<lb/>
Four of the ECU women com-<lb/>
peted in a four event against fresh<lb/>
crews from Skidmore and UNC-W<lb/>
and lost to Skidmore by a mere<lb/>
eight-tenths of a second.<lb/>
ECU rowing coach Tom Allan<lb/>
said he is pleased with the accom-<lb/>
plishments his team so far. Seven of<lb/>
the 14 team members have only<lb/>
been rowing since January. ECU<lb/>
has races set up for every weekend<lb/>
until final exams. Thev will be row-<lb/>
Beeman breaks<lb/>
athletic stereotyp<lb/>
By Colleen Kirkpatrick<lb/>
Suit Wiit.f<lb/>
iais<lb/>
11 w ed in an eight and the first, time ing at Duke this weekend.<lb/>
first<lb/>
By Gary Hurley<lb/>
Staff Writer<lb/>
The ECU Ultimate team won<lb/>
their first finals appearance of 1991.<lb/>
The I rates knocked off Columbia in<lb/>
the B-Bracket championship game<lb/>
of the Easter Eggstravaganza this<lb/>
past weekend in Wilmington.<lb/>
1 Tie tournament's competition<lb/>
consisted of both college and pro-<lb/>
fessional teams from Rhode Island<lb/>
to Florida. The Irates never lost to a<lb/>
college team but were knocked out<lb/>
(4 the A-Bracket by two pro teams.<lb/>
On Saturday, the hate's first<lb/>
game was against Suny Purchase.<lb/>
Purchase qualified tor collegiate<lb/>
nationals last year but failed topla)<lb/>
to their reputation, in Wilmington<lb/>
ECU won handily by a score ol 13<lb/>
6.<lb/>
"Weoutlastedthem in running,<lb/>
throwing, and defense, "said Irate<lb/>
player David Melvin, "It says a lot<lb/>
about our chances for the National<lb/>
Tournament this year<lb/>
Philadelphia's pro team,<lb/>
Double Secret, gave the I ra tes more<lb/>
than they am Id handle. Nothing in<lb/>
the game went ECU'S way, and<lb/>
they fell 15-5.<lb/>
In third round action the Irates<lb/>
met Flordia's Vicious Cycle for the<lb/>
second tune this season Vicious<lb/>
v. alked past the Irates in Miami but<lb/>
in North Carolina, the game was<lb/>
harder fought.<lb/>
Vicious Cycle controlled half-<lb/>
tinv with a thav point lead, 8-5.<lb/>
The Irates fought Kick and tied the<lb/>
score al 11. An Irate drop in the<lb/>
endone would have put ECU in<lb/>
the lead Instead Vicious capital-<lb/>
ized on the turnover and lead 12-11.<lb/>
From there the game went<lb/>
downhill forthelrates.Viciousused<lb/>
FCL"s untimely turnovers, includ-<lb/>
ing a dropped "pull the equiva-<lb/>
lent of a kick-off in football, to win<lb/>
15-11.<lb/>
The Irates finished the day as<lb/>
they started, with a win. Their sec-<lb/>
ond win was over Raleigh's Bnck.<lb/>
Strong play by Tom Acoi, Chad<lb/>
Russette, David Melvin and Dave<lb/>
Graheck led to the Irate victory.<lb/>
Sundav'sfirstgamewasagainst<lb/>
Virginia Tech's Fresh Produce.<lb/>
Again the Ira tes had no trouble with<lb/>
a college team, rolling to a 15-6 vic-<lb/>
tory. The Irates only allowed one<lb/>
point scored against them in the<lb/>
second half.<lb/>
For the championship game,<lb/>
ECU faced Columbia, South Caro-<lb/>
lina. Columbia jumped out 2-0 and<lb/>
See Irates. page 10<lb/>
Robert Lee Beeman II, the<lb/>
outside linebacker tor the ECU<lb/>
football team, graduated in De-<lb/>
cember with a GPA oi a 4.0<lb/>
Beeman majored in Industrial<lb/>
Technology with a minor in<lb/>
Business.<lb/>
Beeman, from Montgomery<lb/>
Al began playing football at<lb/>
ECU as a freshman after being<lb/>
in the Marine Corps for three<lb/>
and one-half years. He lettered<lb/>
three out of four years and was<lb/>
awarded with the most presti-<lb/>
gious award that an athlete can<lb/>
receive this past year. He had<lb/>
been voted by the coaches and<lb/>
players as The Most Outstand-<lb/>
ing Male Scholar Athlete. He<lb/>
also held the position oi Team<lb/>
Captain this season and was<lb/>
given the jerry T. Brooks Award.<lb/>
Beeman was awarded for<lb/>
his scholastic as well as his ath-<lb/>
leocachievement. He wasgiven<lb/>
the Omega Psi Phi Award, the<lb/>
Kappa Alpha Psi Award, and<lb/>
the Richard Broad hurst Award.<lb/>
He has also become a nominee<lb/>
for a national graduate school<lb/>
fellowship for $7,000 given by a<lb/>
national academic honor soci-<lb/>
ety.<lb/>
V<lb/>
R.L. Beeman<lb/>
Beeman's success can be at-<lb/>
tributed to his families support,<lb/>
including his daughter, Jacquetta<lb/>
and his drive to see black<lb/>
Americans succeed.<lb/>
"If it wasn't for Jacquetta, I<lb/>
probable wouldn't try so hard<lb/>
Beeman said. "I think it would<lb/>
be a shame tor me not to come to<lb/>
school and do my best. I took<lb/>
advantage of every opportunity<lb/>
to study and get the most out of<lb/>
my classes<lb/>
He said that he found the<lb/>
secret to academic success was<lb/>
reading hismaterial beforeclass.<lb/>
Besides playing football,<lb/>
Beeman is a member of Alpha<lb/>
Phi Alpha Fraternity at ECU and<lb/>
See Beeman, page 10<lb/>
Williams, Welch lead track teams at N.C. State<lb/>
By Rick Chann<lb/>
Staff Writer<lb/>
:<lb/>
i<lb/>
<lb/>
Safe!<lb/>
Freshman catcher Lisa Corpew slides into second base in an exhibition game against Hutchmson<lb/>
Community Junior College.<lb/>
TheMen'sand Women'sTrack<lb/>
Teams competed at the Raleigh re-<lb/>
lays held at North Carolina State<lb/>
University this past Friday and Sat-<lb/>
urday.<lb/>
Rainy conditions on Friday<lb/>
forced an hour and a half delay in<lb/>
the running events and moved the<lb/>
field events to Saturday.<lb/>
The pool rainy conditions were<lb/>
less than ideal for the sprints but the<lb/>
distance events saw many competi-<lb/>
tors take advantage of these condi-<lb/>
tions to turn some fast times.<lb/>
Many of the times were good<lb/>
enough to qualify many of the ath-<lb/>
letes for the NCAA Championship<lb/>
meet.<lb/>
Friday's sprinting events were<lb/>
the trials for the finals to be held on<lb/>
Saturday. Brian Williamsgot things<lb/>
started for ECU by running the 1 IO-<lb/>
meter high hurdles in 14.61 and<lb/>
advancing to the finals.<lb/>
The women then got their turn<lb/>
in the 100-meter dash. Sophomore<lb/>
Danita Roseboro ran 12.25 and<lb/>
moved on to the finals.<lb/>
Also competing in the 100-m<lb/>
dash were Joy Dorsey, running a<lb/>
12.89 and Sherry Hawkins, running<lb/>
a 13.61.<lb/>
After the 1 12 hour delay be-<lb/>
cause of thunder and lightning the<lb/>
runningeventsresumed with Udon<lb/>
Cheek running a 53:64 in the 400<lb/>
meter Intermediate Hurdles, which<lb/>
earned him the right to compete in<lb/>
the finals.<lb/>
The distance events then took<lb/>
over for the rest of the night. First up<lb/>
was the 4x1500-meter Relay, which<lb/>
saw the team of Theresa Marini,<lb/>
Catherine Norstrand, Marianne<lb/>
Marini and Gretchen Harley com-<lb/>
pete with a time of 20:46 for 9th<lb/>
place.<lb/>
Anne Marie Welch competed<lb/>
in the 5000-meter (3.1miles)with a<lb/>
time of 18:47. Kyle Sullivan then<lb/>
stepped on to the track for the long<lb/>
and fast, 25 lap 10,000-m (6.2 miles)<lb/>
race.<lb/>
The runners took advantage of<lb/>
weather conditions to runsomc fast<lb/>
times. Four runners lead by Bob<lb/>
Henes of NCSU ran under 29 min-<lb/>
utes and qualified for the NCAA<lb/>
meet. Sullivan ran a personal best<lb/>
with his time of 32:54.<lb/>
Saturday's events were lead off<lb/>
by the Men's 5000-meter, in which<lb/>
Ricky Chann ran a 16:25 and Matt<lb/>
Morris a 16:42. The men's sprint<lb/>
team then took over with Williams<lb/>
competing in the 110-meter high<lb/>
hurdle finals with a fourth place<lb/>
finish of 14:49.<lb/>
The4xl 00 relay wasdomina ted<lb/>
by ECU. Ike Robinson lead off by<lb/>
giving ECU the lead which was<lb/>
never challenge as the baton based<lb/>
to Damon Desue, Junior Davis, and<lb/>
brought home for the victory over<lb/>
See Track, page 10<lb/>
<pb facs="00058276_0013"/><lb/>
<lb/>
comes to Hendrix<lb/>
czars.<lb/>
mers include<lb/>
v, designated<lb/>
artist, his ac-<lb/>
va, mime artist<lb/>
iggter Ahmed<lb/>
-son tightrope<lb/>
nd Shamhal<lb/>
?rtorm bhnd-<lb/>
vire.<lb/>
troupes' sec-<lb/>
kmenca, the ri1-<lb/>
m 65 cities<lb/>
throughout the United States and<lb/>
Canada, with a concluding perfor-<lb/>
mance in Fniladelphia scheduled<lb/>
for late May.<lb/>
Advance tickets for the Soviet<lb/>
Acrobatic Revue's ECU perfor-<lb/>
mance are $10 for the general pub-<lb/>
lic, $8 for ECU faculty and staff and<lb/>
$t for ECU students and youth. All<lb/>
rickets sold at the door will be $10<lb/>
Ticketsare availableat the ECU<lb/>
Central Ticket Office in Mendenhall<lb/>
Student Center.<lb/>
Continued from page 7<lb/>
on heroin she<lb/>
fctg.)<lb/>
i jch i the way<lb/>
Itn in .ilmot<lb/>
en ic- (Pav dose<lb/>
Id Indian in the<lb/>
I . i'and how he<lb/>
to Morrison<lb/>
ans an excel<lb/>
fexperienceThe<lb/>
r those too<lb/>
first hand<lb/>
'mbino this<lb/>
years, as ,i<lb/>
een to two<lb/>
? explains<lb/>
ros<lb/>
iim tlu<lb/>
i.itn'<lb/>
Ovl<lb/>
d be timid and<lb/>
adorstb.rashoi<lb/>
:h mostly con-<lb/>
I work and von<lb/>
true that the<lb/>
? ? rhe<lb/>
; oil<lb/>
e-issuestorv<lb/>
"1<lb/>
with some excellent background<lb/>
material, namdySugeiTnan'sbooks,<lb/>
No One Hew Gets Out Alive, Won<lb/>
i venue and The Doors: An<lb/>
,?? lory you can got a<lb/>
pretty good idea ol what The Ivrs<lb/>
anvl tho 60s were 11 about.<lb/>
Ultimately, Krieger summed<lb/>
the movie up best in a recent inter-<lb/>
view withGuitai Si : ?' magazine.<lb/>
"Anybody w ho was portrayed<lb/>
in it is probably going to hateit but<lb/>
! think the tans will probably like<lb/>
it ho said<lb/>
Continued trom page 7<lb/>
Emmetstein gotthejobbecaust<lb/>
the old area president woke up one<lb/>
day and could hear, s1 naturally he<lb/>
wasn't eligible anymore<lb/>
Emmetstein is a living testa-<lb/>
ment who proves that all good,<lb/>
things come to those who wait<lb/>
To Percibal ! Emmetstein we<lb/>
s.n congratulations and a happy<lb/>
belated April Fool's Day<lb/>
Continued trom page 7<lb/>
line of'Tormentand is now better<lb/>
than a few writers that arocurrentlv<lb/>
writing comics. McFarlane uses<lb/>
stark realism to carry his storiesand<lb/>
does not avoid o ntroversial issues<lb/>
tomaiehis point. While his writing<lb/>
hasa way to go to be considered one<lb/>
ol the Ix'st writers in comics, at the<lb/>
pace that he is in . i<lb/>
be to<lb/>
it won't<lb/>
I-1<lb/>
t<lb/>
oUP's<lb/>
am-4pm<lb/>
AUTOMOTIVE<lb/>
? ingn k Dom?StiC<lb/>
PARTS k SIKVICI<lb/>
510 N. Creene St.<lb/>
Greenville, NC<lb/>
830-1779<lb/>
WWtTTWTW<lb/>
FILM DEVELOPING<lb/>
inter<lb/>
FREE<lb/>
FOR A<lb/>
1<lb/>
I<lb/>
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lond set ol prints I<lb/>
ol Dolor print film brought in f( r processing ?<lb/>
eood through April 15, 1991<lb/>
4x6 Prints not included<lb/>
Coupon Must Accompany Order<lb/>
Honor Society<lb/>
April 23, 1991<lb/>
le presented to<lb/>
senior members<lb/>
uding over 150<lb/>
jer opportunities<lb/>
pril 10, 1991<lb/>
April 2, 1991<lb/>
olhg 4Eaat (Jlarultnian<lb/>
9<lb/>
SPORTS<lb/>
Pirate batsmen pick up two against Dolphins<lb/>
By Owen Cox<lb/>
Staff Writer<lb/>
ECU picked upa much-needed<lb/>
tv4 baseball win against the na-<lb/>
tionally ranked Jacksonville Dol-<lb/>
phins Thursday night.<lb/>
The Pirates, keyed by a strong<lb/>
pi tchi ng performance by juniorTom<lb/>
Move, rallied after an early deficit<lb/>
to come back against a strong Jack-<lb/>
sonville club.<lb/>
Coach Gary Over ton sa id about<lb/>
the Pirate effort: "This is the win<lb/>
this year that is a shot in the arm.<lb/>
We needed a win over a quality<lb/>
opponent and we got that tonight<lb/>
However,he Pirates, fell behind<lb/>
early 1-0. Dolphin leadoff batter.<lb/>
Marc Marini doubled, moved to<lb/>
third on a wild pitch, then scored on<lb/>
another wild pitch. Jacksonville<lb/>
added another run in the top of the<lb/>
fifth to take a 2-0 advantage.<lb/>
In the bottom of the fifth, the<lb/>
Pirate bats came alive. They sent 10<lb/>
men to the plate and got some help<lb/>
from the Jacksonvilledefenseasthey<lb/>
scored four runs in the bottom half<lb/>
of the frame. Moye, who also was<lb/>
the designated hitter, lead off the<lb/>
inning with a double. Chad Triplett<lb/>
then Reached on an error.<lb/>
Glynn Beck reached first on a<lb/>
catcher's interference call to load<lb/>
the bases. Pat Watkins singled to<lb/>
center, scoring Moye. Barry Narron<lb/>
then singled to center allowing<lb/>
Triplett and Beck to score. After a<lb/>
David Leistenflyout, Tommy Eason<lb/>
was intentionally walked to load<lb/>
the bases-<lb/>
John Gast struckou t, and Corey<lb/>
Short walked to drive in the fourth<lb/>
Piraterunof theinning. Moye, who<lb/>
led of the inning, grounded to third<lb/>
to end the inning.<lb/>
The Pirates added two more<lb/>
runs, on Corey Short's two RBI<lb/>
single, to go ahead 6-2.<lb/>
Jacksonville was not finished,<lb/>
however, they hit Moye for two<lb/>
runs as four consecutive Dolphin<lb/>
batters reached.<lb/>
Lyle Hartgrove relieved Moye,<lb/>
and got the next Jacksonville batter<lb/>
to ground into a double play to<lb/>
preserve a two run lead. Hartgrove<lb/>
then retired the side in order in the<lb/>
ninth to get his first save of the year.<lb/>
On offense, Eason went 1-2,<lb/>
Watkins went 2-4 and Narron was<lb/>
2-5 with two runs batted in. Short<lb/>
also had two runs batted in for the<lb/>
Pirates.<lb/>
Moye, who is now 3-1, allowed<lb/>
sixhi;sarid three earned runs, while<lb/>
walking one batter and hitting one<lb/>
with a pitch. Moye also had seven<lb/>
strikeouts including four in the first<lb/>
inning.<lb/>
'Tom Moye had hisbest ou ting<lb/>
of the year Coach Overton said of<lb/>
Move's performance. He added that<lb/>
ECU had to scratch and claw in third. Tommy Eason then grounded<lb/>
their next game that afternoon to sharply to the second basemanwho<lb/>
come away with a 7-7 tie against the<lb/>
Dolphins.<lb/>
The game was called in the<lb/>
eighth due to showers and became<lb/>
the Pirates first tie this season.<lb/>
The Pirates jumped to an early<lb/>
lead with a run in the bottom of the<lb/>
first. The bottom of the second also<lb/>
brought some runs for the Pirates.<lb/>
Chad Triplett struckout to start<lb/>
threw out Narron as he was trying<lb/>
to score. John Gast closed out the<lb/>
inning by flying to right.<lb/>
The seventh inning brought the<lb/>
rain as well as the tying run for the<lb/>
Pirates. Corey short struckout to<lb/>
lead off the inning Tom Moye<lb/>
walked, and Triplett singled. Beck<lb/>
then reached on an error which al-<lb/>
lowed Moye to score the tying run.<lb/>
the inning. Glynn Beck singled to Watkins grounded out to second<lb/>
center. Pat Watkins followed with a for the final out.<lb/>
single to left. After Barry Narron In the top of the eighth, with<lb/>
reached on a fielder's choice, David one out and a Dolphin runner on<lb/>
l-eisten singled to left tobringhome third, the game was halted because<lb/>
Beck. of rain. Play resumed about twenty<lb/>
The Pirates second run stored minutes later with Jacksonville<lb/>
when Narron crossed home just scoring two runs to take a 9-7 lead,<lb/>
before Leisten was tagged out on an Due to the rain, play was sus-<lb/>
attempted steal. This put the Pirates<lb/>
up 3-0.<lb/>
Jacksonville woke up in the top<lb/>
of the third, rocking Pirate starter<lb/>
Jamie Bell. The Dolphins pushed<lb/>
across six runs on four hits and<lb/>
were helped by three walks and<lb/>
two Pirate errors to take the lead, 6-<lb/>
3. In the inning the Dolphins<lb/>
roughed up two Pirate pitchers.<lb/>
JacksonvHleadded another run<lb/>
in the fifth to make it a 7-3 ballgame.<lb/>
ECU scored three times in the<lb/>
sixth to cut the lead to one. Triplett,<lb/>
Beck and Watkins had consecutive<lb/>
singles. Narron reached on a field-<lb/>
ers choice and moved up when the<lb/>
Celeste Hoottman ? ECU Photo Lab<lb/>
Scott Robinsondelivers a pitch in the second game against Jacksonville on March 29. The game was called<lb/>
due to rain in the eighth inning and ECU was held to a 7-7 tie.<lb/>
Moye may have ran out of steam pitcher for Jacksonville threw the<lb/>
because he was doubling as the ball away for an error. Both Beck<lb/>
designated hitterand had to run the and Watkins scored on the throw.<lb/>
bases. Leisten sacrificed Narron to<lb/>
pended for good during the Pirate<lb/>
half of the inning. Since the Pirates<lb/>
did not complete their at bat, the<lb/>
score reverted back to the last<lb/>
completed inning the seventh, in<lb/>
which the score was still 7-7.<lb/>
At the plate, the Pirates were<lb/>
paced by Beck and Watkins, both<lb/>
were 3-4. Leisten and Triplett also<lb/>
chipped in two hits a piece as the<lb/>
Pirates banged out 12 hits.<lb/>
Sophomore right-hander<lb/>
Howard Whitfield turned in a<lb/>
strong outing in relief as he went<lb/>
three scoreless innings allowing<lb/>
only one hit. He gave the Pirates a<lb/>
chance by holding the Dolphins in<lb/>
check.<lb/>
With the tie ECU'S record went<lb/>
to 15-9-1. The Pirates face N.C. State<lb/>
today in Raleigh.<lb/>
team pulls third in Augui<lb/>
By Nicole Pratt<lb/>
Staff Writer<lb/>
The ECU Crew Team found<lb/>
i at hard work pay-off last weekend<lb/>
u vti cajTghqrjne wjh afaronae<lb/>
? edal from' trie Augusta TnvTta-<lb/>
ti rial Regatta in Augusta, Ga.<lb/>
lohn Juzaitis, David Burnette,<lb/>
I m Barry, Mike McCulley, and<lb/>
StephanieCreasey competed in th.<lb/>
novice four event and came in first<lb/>
in their heat, allowing them to ad-<lb/>
vance to the finals.<lb/>
They beat out Michigan State,<lb/>
Augusta College and Georgia Tech<lb/>
in the preliminaries and went<lb/>
against Tampa, Honda Institute of<lb/>
Technology, and the University of<lb/>
Tennessee-Chattanooga in the fi-<lb/>
nals.<lb/>
UTC, Tampa and FCU were<lb/>
neck-in-neck until the 1500-meter<lb/>
mark, where UTC and Tampa got<lb/>
their second winds to pull away<lb/>
and finish within two seconds of<lb/>
each other. ECU finished about ID<lb/>
seconds after Tampa and FIT about<lb/>
40 seconds after ECU.<lb/>
Sam Carter, Angie Brown,<lb/>
Karen Jacobellv. JenniferCorderand<lb/>
Shannon Nobles raced in the<lb/>
women's novice four event against<lb/>
UTC, Tulane and Jacksonville and<lb/>
placed third in their heat with a<lb/>
time of about 13 minutes.<lb/>
The Augusta College women<lb/>
finished this event in over 14 min-<lb/>
utes but still advanced to the finals<lb/>
because they won their heat (only<lb/>
one other school was in it ), Carter<lb/>
said. She said if theotficials went b<lb/>
time, R U would have been in the<lb/>
finals.<lb/>
Schools came from as far as<lb/>
Wisconsin and Canada, and all of<lb/>
the Ivy League teams but one were<lb/>
present. National teams from<lb/>
four of them and raced.<lb/>
The ECU men faced up against<lb/>
N.C. State and Skidmore in a four<lb/>
event and finished the 1,000-meter<lb/>
course in 33954, marking another<lb/>
victory for the Pirates. N.C. State<lb/>
Canada and Russia also competed aiSkidrrKrccrossedthe7i<lb/>
in the regatta. The Canadian men's 22 and 48 seconds later.<lb/>
first<lb/>
By Gary Hurley<lb/>
Staff Writer<lb/>
The ECU Ultimate team won<lb/>
their first finals appearance of 1991.<lb/>
The Irates knocked off Columbia in<lb/>
the B-Bracket championship game<lb/>
of the Easter Eggstravaganza this<lb/>
past weekend in Wilmington.<lb/>
The tournament's competition<lb/>
consisted of both college and pro-<lb/>
fessional teams from Rhode Island<lb/>
to Horida. The Irates never lost to a<lb/>
college team but were knocked out<lb/>
of the A-Bracket by two pro teams.<lb/>
On Saturday, the Irate's first<lb/>
j game was against Suny Purchase.<lb/>
Purchase qualified for collegiate<lb/>
nationals last year but failed to play<lb/>
to their reputation, in Wilmington.<lb/>
ECU won handily by a score of 13<lb/>
6.<lb/>
"Weoutlasted thenun running<lb/>
throwing, and defense, "said Irate<lb/>
player David Melvin, "It says a lot<lb/>
about our chances for the National<lb/>
Tournament this year<lb/>
Philadelphia's pro team.<lb/>
Double Secret, gave the Irates more<lb/>
than they could handle. Nothing in<lb/>
the game went ECU's way, and<lb/>
they fell 15-5.<lb/>
In third round action the Irates<lb/>
met Hordia's Vicious Cycle for the<lb/>
and women's teams beat the Rus-<lb/>
sian teams in theintemationaleight<lb/>
event.<lb/>
ECU hosted a scrimmage<lb/>
against Skidmore College, N.C.<lb/>
State and UNC-Wilmington on<lb/>
March21 and was victorious in two<lb/>
of three events.<lb/>
The ECU women borrowed an<lb/>
eight shell and a coxswain from<lb/>
skidmore and beat them by 22 sec-<lb/>
onds. It was the first time ECU had<lb/>
i wed in an eight and the first time<lb/>
second time this season. Vicious<lb/>
walked past the Irates in Miami but<lb/>
in North Carolina, the game was<lb/>
harder fought.<lb/>
Vinous Cycle controlled half-<lb/>
time with a three point lead, 8-5.<lb/>
The Irates fought back and tied the<lb/>
score at 11. An Irate drop in the<lb/>
endzone would have put ECU in<lb/>
the lead. Instead Vicious capital-<lb/>
ized on the turnover and lead 12-11.<lb/>
From there the game went<lb/>
downhill for thelrates. Vicious used<lb/>
ECU's untimely turnovers, includ-<lb/>
ing a dropped pull the equiva-<lb/>
lent of a kick-off in football, to win<lb/>
15-11.<lb/>
Four of the ECU women com-<lb/>
peted in a four event against fresh<lb/>
crews from Skidmore and UNC-W<lb/>
and lost to Skidmore by a mere<lb/>
eight-tenths of a second.<lb/>
ECU rowing coach Tom Allan<lb/>
said he is pleased with the accom-<lb/>
plishments his team so far. Seven of<lb/>
the 14 team members have only<lb/>
been rowing since January. ECU<lb/>
has races set up for every weekend<lb/>
until final exams. They will be row-<lb/>
ing at Duke this weekend.<lb/>
The Irates finished the day as<lb/>
they started, with a win. Their sec-<lb/>
ond win was over Raleigh's Bnck.<lb/>
Strong play by Tom Acoi, Chad<lb/>
Russette, David Melvin and Dave<lb/>
Graheck led to the Irate victory.<lb/>
Sunday'sfirstgamewasagainst<lb/>
Virginia Tech's Fresh Produce.<lb/>
Again the Irates had no trouble with<lb/>
a college team, rolling to a 15-6 vic-<lb/>
tory. The Irates only allowed one<lb/>
point scored against them in the<lb/>
second half.<lb/>
For the championship game,<lb/>
ECU faced Columbia, South Caro-<lb/>
lina. Columbia jumped out 2-0 and<lb/>
See Irates, page 10<lb/>
Beeman breaks<lb/>
athletic stereotype<lb/>
By Colleen Kirkpatrick<lb/>
?-? Sutf Writer ??<lb/>
Robert Lee Beeman II, the<lb/>
outside linebacker for the ECU<lb/>
football team, graduated in De-<lb/>
cember with a GPA of a 4.0.<lb/>
Beeman majored in Industrial<lb/>
Technology with a minor in<lb/>
Business.<lb/>
Beeman, from Montgomery<lb/>
Al began playing football at<lb/>
ECU as a freshman after being<lb/>
in the Marine Corps for three<lb/>
and one-half years. He lettered<lb/>
three out of four years and was<lb/>
awarded with the most presti-<lb/>
gious award that an athlete can<lb/>
receive this past year. He had<lb/>
been voted by the coaches and<lb/>
players as The Most Outstand-<lb/>
ing Male Scholar Athlete. He<lb/>
also held the position of Team<lb/>
Captain this season and was<lb/>
given the Jerry T. Brooks Award.<lb/>
Beeman was awarded for<lb/>
his scholastic as well as his ath-<lb/>
letic achievement. He was gi ven<lb/>
the Omega Psi Phi Award, the<lb/>
Kappa Alpha Psi Award, and<lb/>
the Richard Broadhurst Award.<lb/>
He has also become a nominee<lb/>
for a national graduate school<lb/>
fellowship for $7,000 given by a<lb/>
national academic honor soci-<lb/>
ety.<lb/>
y<lb/>
R.L. Beeman<lb/>
Beeman's success can be at-<lb/>
tributed to his families support,<lb/>
indud ing hisdaughter, Jacquetta<lb/>
and his drive to see black<lb/>
Americans succeed.<lb/>
"If it wasn't for Jacquetta, I<lb/>
probable wouldn't try so hard<lb/>
Beeman said. "I think it would<lb/>
be a shame for me not to come to<lb/>
school and do my best. I took<lb/>
advantage of every opportunity<lb/>
to study and get the most out of<lb/>
my classes<lb/>
He said that he found the<lb/>
secret to academic success was<lb/>
reading his material beforeclass.<lb/>
Besides playing football,<lb/>
Beeman is a member of Alpha<lb/>
Phi Alpha Fraternity at ECU and<lb/>
See Beeman, page 10<lb/>
Williams, Welch lead track teams at N.C. State<lb/>
By Rick Chann<lb/>
Staff Writer<lb/>
Dail Rm4 ? ECU Photo Lab<lb/>
Safe!<lb/>
Freshman catcher Lisa Corpew slides into second base in an exhibition game against Hulchinson<lb/>
Community Junior College<lb/>
TheMen'sand Women'sTrack<lb/>
Teams competed at the Raleigh re-<lb/>
lays held at North Carolina State<lb/>
University this past Friday and Sat-<lb/>
urday.<lb/>
Rainy conditions on Friday<lb/>
forced an hour and a half delay in<lb/>
the running events and moved the<lb/>
field events to Saturday.<lb/>
The pool rainy conditions were<lb/>
less than ideal for the sprints but the<lb/>
distanceeventssaw many competi-<lb/>
tors take advantage of these condi-<lb/>
tions to him some fast times.<lb/>
Many of the times were good<lb/>
enough to qualify many of the ath-<lb/>
letes for the NCAA Championship<lb/>
meet.<lb/>
Friday's sprinting events were<lb/>
the trials for the finals to be held on<lb/>
Saturday Brian Williams got things<lb/>
started for ECU by running the 110-<lb/>
meter high hurdles in 1441 and<lb/>
advancing to the finals.<lb/>
The women then got their turn<lb/>
in the 100-meter dash. Sophomore<lb/>
Danita Roseboro ran 12.25 and<lb/>
moved on to the finals.<lb/>
Also competing in the 100-m<lb/>
dash were Joy Dorsey, running a<lb/>
12.89 and Sherry Hawkins, running<lb/>
a 1341.<lb/>
After the 1 1 2 hour delay be-<lb/>
cause of thunder and lightning, the<lb/>
runningevents resumed withUdon<lb/>
Cheek running a 53:64 in the 400<lb/>
meter Intermediate Hurdles, which<lb/>
earned him the right to compete in<lb/>
the finals.<lb/>
The distance events men took<lb/>
over for the rest of the raght.Firstup<lb/>
was the4xl500-meter Relay, which<lb/>
saw the team of Theresa Marini,<lb/>
Catherine Norstrand, Marianne<lb/>
Marini and Gretchen Hariey com-<lb/>
pete with a time of 20:46 for 9th<lb/>
place.<lb/>
Anne Marie Welch competed<lb/>
in the 5000-meter (3.1miles)with a<lb/>
time of 18:47. Kyle Sullivan then<lb/>
stepped on to the track for the long<lb/>
and fast, 25 lap 10,000-m (6.2 miles)<lb/>
race.<lb/>
The runners took advantage of<lb/>
weather conditions to run some fast<lb/>
times. Four runners lead by Bob<lb/>
Henes of NCSU ran under 29 min-<lb/>
utes and qualified for the NCAA<lb/>
meet. Sullivan ran a personal best<lb/>
with his time of 3254.<lb/>
Saturday'sevents were lead off<lb/>
by the Men's 5000-meter, in which<lb/>
Ricky Chann ran a 1625 and Matt<lb/>
Morris a 16.42. The men's sprint<lb/>
team men took over with Williams<lb/>
competing in the 110-meter high<lb/>
hurdle finals with a fourth place<lb/>
finish of 14:49.<lb/>
The4xl OOretoy wasdominated<lb/>
by ECU. Ike Robinson lead off by<lb/>
giving ECU the lead which was<lb/>
never challenge as the baton based<lb/>
to Damon Desire, Junior Davis, and<lb/>
brought home for the victory over<lb/>
See Track, page 10<lb/>
<pb facs="00058276_0014"/><lb/>
10 Hire ?qgt (flarolfnian April 2, 1991<lb/>
Pirate golfers show character against top schools Irates<lb/>
Maginnes takes fourth, leads team to sixth overall<lb/>
Continued from page 9<lb/>
By Francis Vaughn<lb/>
SUf f Writer<lb/>
The ECU golf team played in<lb/>
the 22nd annual Furman<lb/>
IntcirollegiateQilftounumentthis<lb/>
past weekend .Seven ot the 24 teams<lb/>
entered were rated in the top 20 in<lb/>
the country<lb/>
Last year's poor performance<lb/>
by the Pirates in the tournament<lb/>
ended their hopes ol advancing to<lb/>
the NCAA tournament A similar<lb/>
performance would hurt them this<lb/>
year.<lb/>
The first day brought heavy<lb/>
rains and thunderstorms for most<lb/>
of the golfers. Fortunately, the first<lb/>
day of play was cancelled before<lb/>
the Pirates teed off. This made the<lb/>
golf tournament 36 holes instead of<lb/>
54.<lb/>
The Pirates took advantage of<lb/>
the rain out and posted a five over<lb/>
par 293 in the first round. They<lb/>
trailed leader South Carolina by<lb/>
eight shots. Senior Co-captain John<lb/>
Maginnes paced the Pirates with a<lb/>
three under par 69. He trailed first<lb/>
round leader Carl Paulson of South<lb/>
Carolina by one shot.<lb/>
"We finally put ourselves in<lb/>
position to win a big tournament.<lb/>
ITie past few tournaments we had<lb/>
been fighting from behind after bad<lb/>
starts said Head Coach Hal<lb/>
Morrison. "The kids showed a lot of<lb/>
poseand character on thcgolf course<lb/>
today. They are learning to control<lb/>
themselves better after bad shots.<lb/>
I'm really pleased the way they<lb/>
handled the good with the bad<lb/>
The Pirates got off to a bad start<lb/>
the final day but showed their ma-<lb/>
turity and patience to shoot a three<lb/>
over par 291.The Pi rates finished in<lb/>
sixth place losing to South Carolina<lb/>
by seven shots.<lb/>
David Duval of Georgia Tech<lb/>
captured the individual honor with<lb/>
a six under par total of 158. John<lb/>
Maginnes finished tied for 4th with<lb/>
a three under par total of 141. The<lb/>
Sophomore tandem of Mike "The<lb/>
Worm" Feague and Ryan "Pretty<lb/>
Boy" Pema each chipped in with<lb/>
72's the last day. Feague finished<lb/>
with 145 and Perna with 147 fin-<lb/>
ishing 11th and 15th respectively.<lb/>
The Pirates greatly improved<lb/>
their chances to go to the NCAA<lb/>
tournament this coming weekend.<lb/>
They have won threeof the last four<lb/>
since Coach Morrison has been at<lb/>
ECU. The Conference tournament<lb/>
will be held in Wilson at Wilson<lb/>
Country Club beginning Friday<lb/>
April 5.<lb/>
Tarkarrian faces toughest loss against Duke<lb/>
INDIANAPOLIS (AP) Time<lb/>
didnothmgtohe.il krrv arkanian's<lb/>
agony.<lb/>
A day after his team missed the<lb/>
best shot it will ever have .it his<lb/>
kctball greatness, the pain felt by<lb/>
the UNLV coach had only deep<lb/>
ened.<lb/>
And the knowledge that he's<lb/>
facing NCAA sarw tions and losing<lb/>
fourstarterstromtlu-dose knit team<lb/>
that won 45 straight games ever<lb/>
two seasons didn 11<lb/>
"I'll never have a group like<lb/>
this again i.i inian said. 'This<lb/>
was a very spev ial group of kids.<lb/>
They did everything well .ill y ear.<lb/>
Tarkanian was nearly incon-<lb/>
solable Sunday, emerging briefly<lb/>
from his hotel to escort Larry<lb/>
fohnson to pick up his U.S. Basket-<lb/>
ball Writers Association player of<lb/>
the year award at a local hotel.<lb/>
The night had done nothing to<lb/>
dim the memory of a great lost<lb/>
chance, with dreams of an<lb/>
undefeated season and a second<lb/>
consecutive national titie shot down<lb/>
in a semifinal loss to Puke.<lb/>
His Kunnin' Rebels, the bas-<lb/>
ketball juggernaut that was sup-<lb/>
posed to win it all, never even made<lb/>
it to the final game.<lb/>
"It's worse today Tarkanian<lb/>
said. "I just keep replaying it over<lb/>
and over in mv mind "<lb/>
Nearly as distraught vs.is<lb/>
lohnson, who uttered lh ight<lb/>
words during the televised cer-<lb/>
emony but was in no iihhh.1 to dis-<lb/>
cuss the details of the 79-77 loss.<lb/>
Johnson signed autographsand<lb/>
bantered with fans, then made ar-<lb/>
rangements 10 go to lunch with<lb/>
Shaquille O'Neal of LSU, another<lb/>
nominee for the writers' award.<lb/>
"1 le can barely talk, he's hurt-<lb/>
mgso much inside Tarkanian said<lb/>
of his star forward.<lb/>
Johnson's hurt may have been<lb/>
compounded by hisdecision to pass<lb/>
the ball to Anderson Hunt rather<lb/>
than launch his own 3-pointer or<lb/>
drive to the basket to try and tie the<lb/>
game in the final few seconds.<lb/>
I hr two-time All-American, the<lb/>
centerpiece of UNLV's success,<lb/>
brought the ban up court for the<lb/>
final trvand was briefly open before<lb/>
passing to 1 hint for a desperation<lb/>
Beeman<lb/>
shot that clanged off the run.<lb/>
"We had the ball in the hands<lb/>
of our best player in the open court<lb/>
and he gave it up' Tarkanian said.<lb/>
"Larry had a gcxxl chance to create<lb/>
something, but he gave the ball up.<lb/>
But without Lirrv we don't even<lb/>
get here. 1 le's carried this team for<lb/>
two years<lb/>
Losing was an unfamiliar ex-<lb/>
perience for Johnson, whose team<lb/>
had gone more than a year since its<lb/>
last defeat<lb/>
"Once you suffer a loss, you<lb/>
don't want t talk basketball he<lb/>
sud. "You don't want to turn on a<lb/>
TV, to look at a newspaper<lb/>
Would he pass to Hunt again if<lb/>
given a second chance?<lb/>
"I don't know he replied.<lb/>
Continued from page 9<lb/>
held the position ol president of the<lb/>
ETA NU chapter In November, he<lb/>
was named "heC ollegiate Brother<lb/>
of the Year for the state of North<lb/>
Carolina<lb/>
Heals, held the highestGPA<lb/>
in his fraternity. 1 le recently has<lb/>
been named Southern Region<lb/>
Brother of the Year which ten k place<lb/>
m Jackson, Miss and consisted of<lb/>
members ot Alpha Phi Alpha from<lb/>
seven different states competing for<lb/>
National Collegiate Brother ot the<lb/>
Year, which will he held in Balti-<lb/>
more<lb/>
Beeman is an active member in<lb/>
his church. I le speaks to the youth<lb/>
group about "the importance of<lb/>
staying in high 9choo1 and going to<lb/>
college He is also planning on<lb/>
helping with the church Easter egg<lb/>
hunt this weekend.<lb/>
Beeman helps out with the<lb/>
Greenville Community Shelter<lb/>
RxkI of I Iomeless Program. He ex-<lb/>
plained how his fraternity held a<lb/>
party in which people could be ad-<lb/>
mitted for half price it they brought<lb/>
a can of icmkI.<lb/>
Bee ma n sud I n my spa re ti me<lb/>
I enjoy listening to music and being<lb/>
one of the fellows<lb/>
His plans for the future include<lb/>
The East Carolinian is the students' newspaper<lb/>
played out the half with their two<lb/>
point lead intact, 7-5. The two teams<lb/>
traded pointsin the second half and<lb/>
in a game to 13, the Irates found<lb/>
themselves down 12-10.<lb/>
Goal line defense by Chris Hall<lb/>
and Keith Lewis denied Columbia<lb/>
the score and allowed ECU'S of-<lb/>
fense into the the game at 12. This<lb/>
sent the game to a point lap of 15 or<lb/>
win by two points.<lb/>
Again Columbia scored then<lb/>
the Irates matched them. With a<lb/>
score tied at 14, the next point would<lb/>
decide the winners of the game.<lb/>
Columbia turned the frisbee<lb/>
over a couple of times but so did<lb/>
ECU on a couple of pick calls. E ven-<lb/>
attending law school possibly at<lb/>
Harvard University or The Univer-<lb/>
sity of Virginia. Beeman said that<lb/>
being a lawyer will be his way of<lb/>
contributing to society.<lb/>
His long term ambitions con-<lb/>
sist of becoming an Ambassador to<lb/>
a African Nation and a U.S. Con-<lb/>
gressman.<lb/>
"1 doall I can do Beeman said<lb/>
1 don'tUke set tlingforsecond best"<lb/>
Track<lb/>
tuahy a Gary Hurley hammer to<lb/>
Ken Earley finished the game 15-14<lb/>
in the Irate's favor.<lb/>
"With the collegiate season<lb/>
around the comer, a finals victory<lb/>
means even more to us, " com-<lb/>
mented Irate Steve Walser.<lb/>
The team awarded Tom Acoi<lb/>
the most valuable player award for<lb/>
the tournament. Runner up was<lb/>
Tony Quill for his play against Co-<lb/>
lumbia.<lb/>
Now the team prepares to head<lb/>
to Pennsylvania for an Ivey League<lb/>
College Tournament. On Apnl 13<lb/>
and 14, the Irates will bequalifying<lb/>
for the 1991 collegiate nationals at<lb/>
Va. Tech.<lb/>
Continued from page 9<lb/>
St. Augustines, and NCSU.<lb/>
The sprinters also dominated<lb/>
the 4x200 relay by leading from<lb/>
wire to wire.<lb/>
The relay was once again lead<lb/>
off bv Robinson who teamed with<lb/>
Davis, Desue, and Brian Irvin to<lb/>
once again defeat 2nd place NCSU<lb/>
for 1st place in 1:23.4.<lb/>
The women tracketeers were<lb/>
lead by Roseboro in Saturday<lb/>
events. Roseboro ran in the KX)-<lb/>
meter dash finals, finishing4th with<lb/>
a time of 12.22.<lb/>
She then lead off in both the 4<lb/>
xlOO, and 4x200 relays. The 4x100<lb/>
relay team of Roseboro, Joy Dorsey,<lb/>
Diane Jacobs, and Sherry Hawkins<lb/>
finished 6th in their heat in the time<lb/>
of 49:47.<lb/>
Dance Around And Bare<lb/>
Your Tan For Hundreds Of<lb/>
These Dirty Old Men.<lb/>
Tuesdays<lb/>
March 19; 26<lb/>
April 2 9<lb/>
Finals:<lb/>
v 16<lb/>
Weekly Prizes:<lb/>
Winner?$100<lb/>
Runner Up$25 Gilt Certificate<lb/>
Final Prizes:<lb/>
 nner?S3c.<lb/>
Runner Up?$150<lb/>
X<lb/>
HILTON<lb/>
INN<lb/>
Ft rJays<lb/>
M irch 22 29<lb/>
? 5 '2 19 26<lb/>
Finals:<lb/>
May 3<lb/>
Weekly Prizes:<lb/>
 -ner-SiOO<lb/>
Final Prizes:<lb/>
W mer-OOO<lb/>
P -s A F'ee Saturday N p<lb/>
Stay AtTheHHrjri<lb/>
For more<lb/>
information call 355-5000<lb/>
Phi Mu Alph Sinfonia Fraternity of America<lb/>
Zeta Psi Chapter<lb/>
The Student Union Minority Arts Committee<lb/>
in conjunction with<lb/>
The East Carolina Jazz Ensemble<lb/>
Present<lb/>
the 1931 Eastern IM.C. Jazz Festival<lb/>
featuring<lb/>
vocalist Ethel Entlis - April 3-7<lb/>
AJ Fletcher Music School,<lb/>
for more info call 757-6851<lb/>
Ethel Ennis Earl Arnette<lb/>
?Schedule of Events<lb/>
April 3rd 2 PM Open Rehearsal -Boom 101-<lb/>
Ethel EnnisECU Jazz Ensemble<lb/>
April 4th 11 AM Lecture -Room 101-<lb/>
Ethel Ennis "Women in Jazz, Jazz Vocalists"<lb/>
1 PM Lecture -Room 101-<lb/>
Earl Arnette "Music Business"<lb/>
April 5th 9 PM In Concert -AJ Fletcher Recital Hall-<lb/>
Ethel Ennis with the East Carolina University<lb/>
Jazz Ensemble<lb/>
April 6th Jazz Ensemble Day -ECU Central Campus Mall<lb/>
10 AM ECU Jazz Bones,<lb/>
directed by George Broussard<lb/>
10:45 AM ECU Contemporary Jazz<lb/>
Ensemble, directed by Paul Tardrf<lb/>
11.45 AM ECU Jazz Ensemble (B),<lb/>
directed by Dennis AJIeman<lb/>
1:30 PM University of District of Columbia,<lb/>
directed by Calvin Jones<lb/>
2:30 PM TBA<lb/>
3:30 PM ECU Jazz Ensemble (A),<lb/>
directed by Carrol Dashieil<lb/>
In case of rain, activities wil begin at 1.30 PM in the Fletcher<lb/>
School of Music Recital Hall.<lb/>
CONCERT<lb/>
April 7th ECU Jazz Ensemble<lb/>
8:15 PM<lb/>
Wright Auditorium<lb/>
<pb facs="00058276_0015"/><lb/>
10 Site ?aat (CarolinianApril 2, 1991<lb/>
Pirate golfers show character against top schools Irates<lb/>
Maginnes takes fourth, leads team to sixth overall<lb/>
Continued from page 9<lb/>
By Francis V.mghn<lb/>
StJtt Wiil.r<lb/>
l"ho ECU goM team played in<lb/>
the 22nd annual 1 urman<lb/>
IntercoltegJatc( iolf tournament this<lb/>
past (weekend Se enoi the 24 teams<lb/>
entered wen? ratixi in the top 20 in<lb/>
the country<lb/>
last year's pooi px rformanoe<lb/>
bv the Pirates in the tournament<lb/>
ended their hopeso( advancing to<lb/>
the NCAA tournament A similar<lb/>
performance w cmld hurl them tins<lb/>
year<lb/>
rhe hi t ) ? ' heavy<lb/>
rains and thi i most<lb/>
of the golfers. Fortunately, the first<lb/>
day ot play was cancelled before<lb/>
the Pirates teed off. This nwde the<lb/>
goll tournament 36 holes instead of<lb/>
54.<lb/>
l"he Pirates took advantage of<lb/>
the rain out and posted a five over<lb/>
par 293 in the first round. They<lb/>
trailed leader South Carolina by<lb/>
eight shots. Senior Co-captain lohn<lb/>
Maginnes paced the Pirates with a<lb/>
three tinder par 69. 1 le trailed first<lb/>
round leader Carl Paulson of South<lb/>
Carolina by one shot.<lb/>
"We finally put ourselves m<lb/>
position to win a big tournament<lb/>
I"he paM tew tournaments we had<lb/>
been fighting from behind after bad<lb/>
starts' said Head Coach Hal<lb/>
MorrisonThe kids showed a lot of<lb/>
poseand character on the golf course<lb/>
today. They are learning to contml<lb/>
themselves better after bad shots.<lb/>
I'm really pleased the way they<lb/>
handled the good with the bad<lb/>
The Pirates got off to a bad start<lb/>
the final day but showed their ma-<lb/>
turity and patience to shwt a three<lb/>
over Mr 2 1 The Pirates finished in<lb/>
sixth place losing to South Carolina<lb/>
by seven shots.<lb/>
David Duval of Georgia Tech<lb/>
captured the individual honor with<lb/>
a six under par total of 158. )ohn<lb/>
Maginnes finished tied for4th with<lb/>
a three under par total of 141. I"he<lb/>
Sophomore tandem of Mike "The<lb/>
Worm" Feague and Ryan "Pretty<lb/>
Boy" Pema each chipped in with<lb/>
72's the last day. league finished<lb/>
with 14 and Perna with 147 fin-<lb/>
ishing 11th and 15th respectively.<lb/>
The Pirates greatly improved<lb/>
their chances to go to the NCAA<lb/>
tournament this coming weekend.<lb/>
They have won three of the last four<lb/>
since Coach Morrison has been at<lb/>
ECU. TheConference tournament<lb/>
will ho helil in Wilson at Wilson<lb/>
Country lub beginning Friday<lb/>
April 5<lb/>
Tarkanian faces toughest loss against Duke<lb/>
INDIAN 11 ime<lb/>
dldnothi:ii ian s<lb/>
agony<lb/>
A dav aft! inissedthe<lb/>
host shot iit has<lb/>
ketbail grcdtni?<lb/>
the UNL<lb/>
ened<lb/>
And t he's<lb/>
facing V<lb/>
fourstarti-?<lb/>
that won 1? ovei<lb/>
two seasi<lb/>
Til ?ki<lb/>
this agj<lb/>
was a veiit kids<lb/>
They did (year<lb/>
rarkaii<lb/>
solablc v-<lb/>
trom hi???<lb/>
ohnson to pick up his 11 S. Basket<lb/>
hall Writers Association player ot<lb/>
the year award at a local hotel<lb/>
rhe night had done nothing to<lb/>
dim the memory ol a great lost<lb/>
chance, with dreams ol an<lb/>
undefeated season and a second<lb/>
consecutivenationaltitleshotdown<lb/>
in a semifinal loss to Duke<lb/>
1 iis Kwnnm Rebels, the has<lb/>
ketbail juggernaut that was sup<lb/>
po ied to win it all, never even made<lb/>
it tv- tin' final game<lb/>
t ? worse toda)  larkanian<lb/>
said I jusl keep rcpla ing it i v i !<lb/>
and over in my mind<lb/>
. ,ui as distraught was<lb/>
(ohnson, who utlerr h, dghl<lb/>
words during fhe televised cer<lb/>
emonv but was m no mood to dis-<lb/>
cuss the details ot the 79 77 loss<lb/>
Johnson signed autographsand<lb/>
bantered with fans, then made ar-<lb/>
rangements to go to lunch with<lb/>
Shaquille O'Neal ot LSU, another<lb/>
nominee tor the writers' aw.ird.<lb/>
"1 le can barely talk, he's hurt-<lb/>
ing so much inside Tarkanian said<lb/>
of his star torward<lb/>
ohnson's hurt may have been<lb/>
compounded by hisdecision to pass<lb/>
the ball to Anderson Hunt rather<lb/>
than launch his own 3-pointer or<lb/>
drive to the basket to try and tie the<lb/>
game in the final few seconds<lb/>
fhetwo timeAIl American,the<lb/>
centerpiece of UNLV's success,<lb/>
brought tlv ball up court ka the<lb/>
final try and was briefly open before<lb/>
passing to 1 hint tor a desperation<lb/>
Beeman<lb/>
shot that clanged off the rjm.<lb/>
"We had the ball in the hands<lb/>
ot our best player in the open - ourt<lb/>
anil he gave it up larkanian said.<lb/>
"Larry had a good i nance to create<lb/>
something, hit he gave the ball up.<lb/>
But without ! .it we don't even<lb/>
get here. He's carried this team tor<lb/>
two years<lb/>
Losing was an unfamiliar ex-<lb/>
perience tor fohnson, whose team<lb/>
had gone more than a year since its<lb/>
last defeat<lb/>
"Or e you suffer a loss, you<lb/>
don t want 1.1 ilk basketball, he<lb/>
said i v?u don't want to turn on a<lb/>
TV, to took at a nevspaper<lb/>
Would he pass to! hint again il<lb/>
given a second - haix e?<lb/>
"1 don't know he replied.<lb/>
Continued from page 9<lb/>
held the p ' t of the<lb/>
ETAN1 chaptet i iber he<lb/>
was nan1' . I<lb/>
of the Year I te of North<lb/>
Carolina<lb/>
He a<lb/>
in his fraten u entlv has<lb/>
been nan<lb/>
Brotheri I -<lb/>
in lacks, : V<lb/>
members of A<lb/>
r<lb/>
i ol<lb/>
from<lb/>
seven different statescompeting for<lb/>
ationalollcgiatc Brother ol the<lb/>
Year whi? h will be held in Balti-<lb/>
more.<lb/>
IV eman is an active member in<lb/>
his church He speaks to the youth<lb/>
?? ?up aS ut the importance ol<lb/>
sta ing in high school and going to<lb/>
college I le i also planning on<lb/>
helping with thehun h Easter egg<lb/>
hunt this weekend.<lb/>
Beeman helps out with the<lb/>
Greenville Community Shelter<lb/>
Food of H nieless Program. 1 ieex-<lb/>
plained how his fraternity held a<lb/>
parts in whk h people could K- ad-<lb/>
mitted tor halt price it they brought<lb/>
a can ol food<lb/>
Beeman said, "In my spare time<lb/>
1 enjov listening to music and being<lb/>
one of the fellows<lb/>
11 is pi.uis tor the future include<lb/>
attending law school possibly at<lb/>
Harvard University or TheUn . ? i<lb/>
sity ol Virginia. Beeman said that<lb/>
being a lav ver will be his way of<lb/>
contributing to so tetv<lb/>
1 hs long ti rm ambitions con-<lb/>
sist of  in Ambassad<lb/>
a Afri an 'ahi n and a U5.1<lb/>
gressman<lb/>
"Idoall lean - - said.<lb/>
" I don't likes i ? indbest<lb/>
The East Carolinian is the students' newspaper<lb/>
played out the half with their two<lb/>
point lead intact, 7-5.The two teams<lb/>
traded pointsin the second half and<lb/>
in a game to 13, the Irates found<lb/>
themselves down 12-10.<lb/>
Coal line defense by Chns 1 lall<lb/>
and Keith Lewis denied Columbia<lb/>
the score and allowed ECU'S of-<lb/>
fense into the the game at 12 This<lb/>
sent the game to a point lap of !5or<lb/>
win by two points.<lb/>
Again Columbia scored then<lb/>
the (rates matched them. With a<lb/>
SCOrebedat 14, the next point would<lb/>
decide the winners of the game<lb/>
Columbia turned the frisbee<lb/>
over a couple of times but 50 did<lb/>
ECU on a couple of pick calls. Even-<lb/>
Track<lb/>
tually a Garv Hurley hammer to<lb/>
Ken Earley finished the game 15-14<lb/>
in the Irate's favor.<lb/>
"With the collegiate season<lb/>
around the comer, a finals victory<lb/>
means even more to us, " com-<lb/>
mented Irate Steve Walser.<lb/>
The team awarded Tom Acoi<lb/>
the most valuable plav r award h r<lb/>
the tournament. Runner up was<lb/>
Tony Quill for his play against Co-<lb/>
lumbia.<lb/>
Now the team prepares to hea<lb/>
to Pennsylvania for an Key U<lb/>
College Tournament. On April P<lb/>
and 14, the Irates will bequalifying<lb/>
tor the bWi collegiate nationals at<lb/>
Va. Tech.<lb/>
Continued from page 9<lb/>
St. Augustines, and NCSU.<lb/>
The sprinters also dominated<lb/>
the -l x ?tm relay by leading from<lb/>
wire to wire.<lb/>
The relay was once again lead<lb/>
off by Robinson who teamed with<lb/>
Davis, Desue, and Brian Irvin to<lb/>
once again defeat 2nd place N( SU<lb/>
for 1st place in I 234<lb/>
Tie women tracketeers were<lb/>
lead bv Roseboro in Saturdays<lb/>
events. Roseboro ran in the<lb/>
meter dash finals, Rnishing4th v. I<lb/>
a time of 12.2<lb/>
She then lead off in both the 4<lb/>
xlOO, and 4x200 relays Hie 4. ?<lb/>
relay team ot Ri seboro,J y I)?rsi y.<lb/>
1 harte aeobs, and Sherry t lav. -<lb/>
finished6th in their heat in the time<lb/>
ol 49:47.<lb/>
Dance Around And Bare<lb/>
Your Tan For Hundreds Of<lb/>
These Dirty Old Men.<lb/>
? ??<lb/>
etUpt!<lb/>
Finals-<lb/>
Weekly Prizes<lb/>
A<lb/>
Final Pnzes:<lb/>
<lb/>
X<lb/>
HILTON<lb/>
INN<lb/>
!<lb/>
Finals:<lb/>
Weekly Prizes:<lb/>
Final Prizes;<lb/>
CYY<lb/>
? c<lb/>
ryS H r<lb/>
tg  - ?<lb/>
For more<lb/>
information call 355-5000<lb/>
Phi Mu Alph Sinfonia Fraternity of America<lb/>
Zeta Psi Chapter<lb/>
The Student Union Minority Arts Committee<lb/>
in conjunction with<lb/>
The East Carolina Jazz Ensemble<lb/>
Present<lb/>
the 1391 Eastern IM.C. Jazz Festival<lb/>
featuring<lb/>
vocalist Ethel Ennis-April 3-7<lb/>
AJ Fletcher Music School,<lb/>
for more info cali 757-6851<lb/>
Ethel Ennis Earl Arnette<lb/>
?Schedule of Events<lb/>
April 3rd 2 PM Open Rehearsal -Room 101-<lb/>
Ethel EnnisECU Jazz Ensemble<lb/>
April 4th 11 AM Lecture -Room 101-<lb/>
Ethel Ennis "Women in Jazz, Jazz Vocalists"<lb/>
1 PM Lecture -Room 101-<lb/>
Earl Arnette "Music Business"<lb/>
April 5th 9 PM In Concert -AJ Fletcher Recital Hall-<lb/>
Ethel Ennis with the East Carolina University<lb/>
Jazz Ensemble<lb/>
April 6th Jazz Ensemble Day -ECU Central Campus Mall<lb/>
10 AM ECU Jaz2 Bones,<lb/>
directed by George Broussard<lb/>
10:45 AM ECU Contemporary Jazz<lb/>
Ensemble, directed by Paul Tardif<lb/>
11:45 AM ECU Jazz Ensemble (B),<lb/>
directed by Dennis Alleman<lb/>
1:30 PM University of District of Columbia,<lb/>
directed by Calvin Jones<lb/>
2:30 PM TBA<lb/>
3:30 PM ECU Jazz Ensemble (A),<lb/>
directed by Carroll Dashtell<lb/>
In case of rain, activities will begin at 1:30 PM in the Fletcher<lb/>
School of Music Recital Hall.<lb/>
CONCERT<lb/>
April 7 th ECU Jazz Ensemble<lb/>
8:15 PM<lb/>
Wright Auditorium<lb/>
<pb facs="00058276_0016"/><lb/>
10 elic fcmU (Taruliuian April 2, 1991<lb/>
Pirate golfers show character against top schools rates<lb/>
Continued from page 9<lb/>
Machines takes fourth, leads team to sixth overall<lb/>
Bv Fran is aughn<lb/>
SUM Writer<lb/>
lhc K I o it tram played in<lb/>
the 22nd annual I urman<lb/>
intercoDegiati ncntthis<lb/>
pest weekend Itearrts<lb/>
enti-md vscn the top 20 in<lb/>
the count<lb/>
Last ui! . ? martee<lb/>
by the Pii imcnl<lb/>
ended th<lb/>
the NCAA I milar<lb/>
performan i<lb/>
year<lb/>
rhe '<lb/>
ram and I<lb/>
oi thegotfers Fortunately, the tirst<lb/>
day ot plav was cancelled before<lb/>
the Pir.iti-s teed ofl rhas made tin-<lb/>
goM tournament ViKiUiastead ot<lb/>
-<lb/>
The Pirates took advantage ot<lb/>
the rain out and posted a five over<lb/>
par 293 in the tirst round They<lb/>
trailed leader tith Carolina by<lb/>
eight shots. Senioro captain John<lb/>
Maginnes paced the Pirates with a<lb/>
three under par 69 1 c trailed first<lb/>
round leader t arl Paulson of South<lb/>
i arolina bv one hot<lb/>
We finally put ourselves hi<lb/>
position to wm ,i big tournament,<lb/>
past tew tournaments we had<lb/>
been righting from behind after bad<lb/>
starts said Head Coach Hal<lb/>
Morrison. Ihe kids show iti a lot of<lb/>
poseandchafilCler on Itegptf course<lb/>
today. They are learning to control<lb/>
themselves better after bad shots.<lb/>
I'm really pleased the wav thev<lb/>
handled the good with the bad<lb/>
Ihe Pirates got oft fto a Kid start<lb/>
the final dav but shower! their ma-<lb/>
turity and patience to shoot a three<lb/>
over par 21 The Pi rates finished in<lb/>
sixth place losing to Smth Carolina<lb/>
bv seven shots<lb/>
David Duval ot Georgia Tech<lb/>
captured the individual honor with<lb/>
a six under par total of 158 John<lb/>
Maginnes finished tied tor4th with<lb/>
a three under par total of 141 Ihe<lb/>
Sophomore tandem of Mike Ihe<lb/>
Worm Feague and Kyan "Pretty<lb/>
Boy" I'erna i.k h chipped in with<lb/>
72s the last day Feague finished<lb/>
with 14 and IVrna with 147 fin-<lb/>
ishing 11th and lth respectively<lb/>
llu i'li.e id) improved<lb/>
their than to go to the AA<lb/>
tournament this coming weekend.<lb/>
They have won three of th<lb/>
sinceo.n li Mi rrist m has bei i al<lb/>
hi 1 he Conl e tournament<lb/>
will be held in  il ion at W<lb/>
( ountrv i I i<lb/>
April 5<lb/>
Tarkanian faces toughest loss against Duke<lb/>
INDI N.<lb/>
didnotl<lb/>
agon<lb/>
<lb/>
N-st shot<lb/>
kctba<lb/>
the 1 ? .<lb/>
ened<lb/>
Ami<lb/>
?<lb/>
four start i<lb/>
that wo;<lb/>
twos<lb/>
-<lb/>
this <lb/>
was t ?<lb/>
llu . 1 .<lb/>
-<lb/>
-<lb/>
fn n <lb/>
Beeman<lb/>
held the p<lb/>
N-<lb/>
vsas nan'<lb/>
in hi '<lb/>
been r<lb/>
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in Jacks i<lb/>
men ?<lb/>
letailsot the 79  loss<lb/>
sh ?t that<lb/>
lohnson to pick up his 1 S Basket<lb/>
ball Writei '? sociatioi i lyei I Johnson signed autographsand<lb/>
the year award at a local bantered with fans, then made ar- ofoui -<lb/>
Ihe night had done nothing to rangements to go to lunch with andh ? msaid<lb/>
dim the memorv of a great lost liHe O'Neal oi LSU, another "Larryhad i I<lb/>
rice, with dreams ot an nominee for the writers'award. sometl tl ? I "It up<lb/>
undefeated season and a &amp; rely talk he'shurt- But vvitl<lb/>
tsecutivenati omu hinsideTarkaniansaid<lb/>
? ike. ot has star forward twi .<lb/>
His Runnin Rebels, the ba hnsoi l.urt mav have been<lb/>
mpoundedbyhisdecisiontopass perici - - '<lb/>
'? nderson 1 hint rather had . trsn<lb/>
than. laun. h his own i pointer or iasl d' '<lb/>
. el - the basket totn and tieth<lb/>
the I til ? ds<lb/>
?r M nn, .m,tin<lb/>
gemaul that ?-??<lb/>
 , ? revei<lb/>
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t keep rej<lb/>
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Nearly a hsti<lb/>
Mn.<lb/>
word I<lb/>
n hi<lb/>
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I ?? ? . . Ifl<lb/>
: ? ? ant I I -<lb/>
said I<lb/>
TV, to look at anev ; pei<lb/>
? ? ?<lb/>
:<lb/>
? ? ? ? cd cer<lb/>
enterpu ? ol ! L v s sui<lb/>
brought ii up court tor the<lb/>
finaltrvand was briefly open before gh<lb/>
? . hint tor a dcsperati I ?<lb/>
Continued from page 9<lb/>
mpel<lb/>
? ? . ' ?'?<lb/>
Beeman helps out with the attend chool p<lb/>
tl<lb/>
?<lb/>
? int thi fVeekei I<lb/>
mmunity Shelter<lb/>
I in Ball Food of I Pi gram. 1 lee<lb/>
 ?  ins fraternity held, a <lb/>
membi rn partvin . ? - : ? uld be ad<lb/>
? . ed for half price it they bn<lb/>
rtan. e . ' a .an of f(XXJ<lb/>
ngto Bcvmansaki'lnmysparetime<lb/>
nning oi i ng to music and I ?<lb/>
asti r egg one oi the fellows<lb/>
forth futurcinclude<lb/>
? ?<lb/>
His<lb/>
ti<lb/>
The East Carolinian is the students' newspaper<lb/>
played out the halt with their two<lb/>
point lead intact, 7-5 The two teams<lb/>
traded pointsinthesecondhatfand<lb/>
in a game to 13, the Irates found<lb/>
themselves down 12 in.<lb/>
( ,oal bnedefonsi bv hrisHaB<lb/>
and Keith 1 ewis denied i olumbia<lb/>
the score and allowed H IPs of<lb/>
tense into the the game at 12 This<lb/>
sent the game to a point lap of 15or<lb/>
win by two points.<lb/>
Againolumbia scored then<lb/>
the Irates matched them With a<lb/>
score bed at 14, the next point v.<lb/>
1. the winners of the gai<lb/>
( olumbia turned the frisbee<lb/>
irr .1 . ouple ol times but so did<lb/>
I i U i mai i tuplei if p fc calls i<lb/>
Track<lb/>
tually a (,arv Hurley hammer to<lb/>
Ken Earley hnished the' game 1S-14<lb/>
in the I rate's favor<lb/>
"With the collegiate season<lb/>
around the comer, a finals vi I I ?<lb/>
means even more to us,<lb/>
men ted Irate Steve Walser<lb/>
The team awarded Tom A i<lb/>
the most valuable player award t r<lb/>
the tournament Runner up w is<lb/>
I onv Quill tor his plav against <lb/>
lumbia<lb/>
Now the team prepai I<lb/>
to Pennsylvania for an Ivey b<lb/>
College Tournament. On April 13<lb/>
dnd 14, the Irates wiD<lb/>
t. r the 1991 collegiate nal<lb/>
rech<lb/>
Continued from page 9<lb/>
?t V ind N<lb/>
The sprinter - loi<lb/>
?:? ; ? 10 relay by I id<lb/>
I<lb/>
off b on who teamed with<lb/>
?<lb/>
I place NCS1<lb/>
ieboro in S<lb/>
events. Roseboro ran in tht<lb/>
? ? ? ish finals I<lb/>
a tune of 1? f<lb/>
She then lead off ml<lb/>
. ? and 4x2O0i<lb/>
. team or; eboi - - ?<lb/>
? e Jacobs, an I rry H<lb/>
finished 6th in th i I<lb/>
f 49:47<lb/>
Dance Around And Bare<lb/>
Your Tan For Hundreds Of<lb/>
These Dirty Old Men.<lb/>
<lb/>
Weekly Prizes<lb/>
Final Prizes<lb/>
X<lb/>
MILTON<lb/>
INN<lb/>
0 (!<lb/>
Finals<lb/>
 ?<lb/>
Weekly Prizes<lb/>
Final Prizes<lb/>
- -?<lb/>
1 II<lb/>
information call 355-5000<lb/>
Phi Mu Alph Sinfonia Fraternity of America<lb/>
Zeta Psi Chapter<lb/>
The Student Union Minority Arts Committee<lb/>
in conjunction with<lb/>
The East Carolina Jazz Ensemble<lb/>
Present<lb/>
the 1991 Eastern IM. C. Jazz Festival<lb/>
featuring<lb/>
vocalist Ethel Ennis-April 3-7<lb/>
AJ Fletcher Music School,<lb/>
for more info call 757-6851<lb/>
Ethel Ennis Earl Arnette<lb/>
?Schedule of Events<lb/>
April 3rd 2 PM Open Rehearsal -Room 101-<lb/>
Ethel EnnisECU Jazz Ensemble<lb/>
April 4th 11 AM Lecture -Room 101-<lb/>
Ethel Ennis "Women in Jazz, Jazz Vocalists"<lb/>
1 PM Lecture -Room 101-<lb/>
Earl Arnette "Music Business"<lb/>
April 5th 9 PM In Concert -AJ Fletcher Recital Hall-<lb/>
Ethel Ennis with the East Carolina University<lb/>
Jazz Ensemble<lb/>
April 6th Jazz Ensemble Day -ECU Central Campus Mall<lb/>
10 AM ECU Jaz2 Bones,<lb/>
directed by George Broussard<lb/>
10:45 AM ECU Contemporary Jazz<lb/>
Ensemble, directed by Paul Tardif<lb/>
11:45 AM ECU Jazz Ensemble (B),<lb/>
directed by Dennis Alleman<lb/>
1:30 PM University of District of Columbia,<lb/>
directed by Calvin Jones<lb/>
2:30 PM TBA<lb/>
3:30 PM ECU Jazz Ensemble (A),<lb/>
directed by Carroll Dashiell<lb/>
In case of rain, activities will begin at 1:30 PM in the Fletcher<lb/>
School of Music Recital Hall. <lb/>
CONCERT<lb/>
April 7th ECU Jazz Ensemble<lb/>
8:15 PM<lb/>
Wright Auditorium<lb/>
<pb facs="00058276_0017"/>
</div></body></text></TEI>