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<pb facs="00058277_0001"/>
Stye i?nBt (Earvlxmnrx<lb/>
Serving the East Carolina campus community since 1925<lb/>
Vol.65 No.22<lb/>
Thursday, April 4, 1991<lb/>
Greenville, North Carolina<lb/>
Circulation 12,(XX)<lb/>
12 Pages<lb/>
Eric Hillard wins SGA treasurer election<lb/>
By I eClair I larper<lb/>
sistant News t ditoi<lb/>
? ?<lb/>
ird won the elei<lb/>
irer Wednesday with<lb/>
votes<lb/>
illiarH <lb/>
xiidb<lb/>
I ni<lb/>
iii<lb/>
uii i sanu<lb/>
eived 78 votes<lb/>
e unopposed can-<lb/>
counted since one<lb/>
-t 1 pero<lb/>
Alex Martin<lb/>
Robin Black<lb/>
1 lections chair Brvnd.ileisler not turnout todoanvthineabout it<lb/>
said she was disappointed in the<lb/>
ti i ? imoul because she 1<lb/>
n plaints about candidates run-<lb/>
nun; unopposed, but students do<lb/>
Three hundred ninerv eight<lb/>
out of 16,000 is pretty pitiful she<lb/>
said.<lb/>
1 lilhard agreed v ith (leisler<lb/>
Scientists study Gulf Stream<lb/>
Researchers test for return of Red Tide<lb/>
B I.<lb/>
Special to<lb/>
ie Baile)<lb/>
 ast Can linian<lb/>
itbreakol<lb/>
with h;ps that frequently travel<lb/>
through the (lull Stream conduct-<lb/>
ing other forms ol researt h<lb/>
"The take water samples tor<lb/>
red bde ?? ? - - " fi h usand periodically send them back<lb/>
rred.n striction tome rester said. She then ana-<lb/>
f fishn lyzes them for diseased cells and<lb/>
ree i ? reports her findincs to marine i "<lb/>
mon<lb/>
Red tide outbreaks arv most<lb/>
immon in waters off of Florida<lb/>
;st from earlv summer through I i<lb/>
nacvcli that runsannually to<lb/>
once in 14 years, the poisonous al<lb/>
gaebloomsare transported insl i<lb/>
The 1987 red tide outbreak off<lb/>
the toast of Northarolina was the<lb/>
first occurrence of the species n I<lb/>
f lacksonville, Fla.<lb/>
this case, a - tr ng inshore<lb/>
intrusion by the ill h im along<lb/>
the ' rthC arolina i tl i ed the<lb/>
to the shor<lb/>
Phvsical t.u tors sin h i  r l?<lb/>
: ?? ? ? . mortal<lb/>
? ? ion i - lufort,<lb/>
rteret<lb/>
urn<lb/>
: temp ratures<lb/>
then ?<lb/>
. . .<lb/>
iffe ted tl ? I ?? I  ? ; lon-<lb/>
gevity of the hi ?i<lb/>
? it According loai ffii In port<lb/>
? ? ? bv the National Marine Fisheries<lb/>
during the 1987red tide, there were<lb/>
forma 48 casesofshellfish poisoning from<lb/>
Over 5 000a res I si. Ill<lb/>
harvesting waters were Icsed,and<lb/>
the economic loss to the coastal<lb/>
communities was estimated at $23<lb/>
million<lb/>
. it onl v did the red hdecause<lb/>
ntai nal ns, but it re ilted in<lb/>
the fear that all s il xlswerepoi-<lb/>
soi ed in some way said Patricia<lb/>
s ler, ?n ei ? ? nrro ntal health<lb/>
program : ? - i ? . ththel vision<lb/>
. - nmental Health in<lb/>
' ' n head On.<lb/>
I i .i g ie pi iduces se eral<lb/>
p ons vvhu h cai mulate in<lb/>
? ? iin Kinds ol shelll<lb/>
rs ii . lams are<lb/>
tedby I redtid<lb/>
area I ov? ler said.<lb/>
"People didn't realize  I<lb/>
crabs shrimp and othci types of<lb/>
fish wen af I<lb/>
A moipi -ram. m<lb/>
0 Nal nal Ma-<lb/>
rine i ishw ries, is ii i ? r ition.<lb/>
Al ng witl ester's res- irch,<lb/>
North ? i has a hi t-line<lb/>
with Florida to di cuss am dev I<lb/>
oj ?? ents<lb/>
"It Florid bloom or any<lb/>
important infcrmationaboutit,then<lb/>
thev contact us fester said.<lb/>
Spaces still available for ECU-Sorbonne classes<lb/>
Foreign Language Department offers summer classes in France<lb/>
Speri.il to TTie I ast Carolinian<lb/>
Spaces are still available for the<lb/>
EastC arolina I fruversity-Sorbonne<lb/>
1W1 Summer Program in Tans,<lb/>
accord ing to 1 H Martin Schwarz, of<lb/>
the Department of Foreign Lan-<lb/>
guages and Literatures who will<lb/>
direct this year's group.<lb/>
Ino program will take place<lb/>
during the second summer session,<lb/>
June 27-Aug. 2. Participating stu-<lb/>
dents can earn six semester hoursof<lb/>
credit<lb/>
The total cost ' f 'he pros im.<lb/>
exclusiveof lunch and dinner meals,<lb/>
will cost approximately $2,600.<lb/>
Schwarz has said this year's<lb/>
program will Ix verv exciting. Stu-<lb/>
dents will take a language course<lb/>
(after a placement exam) at the<lb/>
Sorbonne and a culture and civili-<lb/>
zation course taught bv the program<lb/>
director.<lb/>
The latter course will include<lb/>
study visits to several museums,<lb/>
cathedrals, monuments, thet peras,<lb/>
tin -liters and moviesand Versailles.<lb/>
Students also have the option<lb/>
of substituting an independent<lb/>
Study course for one of the above<lb/>
courses.<lb/>
Participants will be hve to travel<lb/>
on weekends For those who do not,<lb/>
then will be optional organized<lb/>
activities in and around Pans.<lb/>
Scholarships are available for<lb/>
qualified students with an Apnl 15<lb/>
deadline tor submission. There are<lb/>
also spaces available for non-stu-<lb/>
dents who wish to participate on a<lb/>
noncredH basis.<lb/>
For more information, contact<lb/>
Stephanie Evancho's office in<lb/>
Brew vr A-117, or call 757-676.<lb/>
Eric Hillard<lb/>
"It could have been a lot<lb/>
higher 'he said "1 think the prob-<lb/>
lem was with the two different trea-<lb/>
surer ele tions<lb/>
1 le said he didn't think manv<lb/>
thought tl ey needed to come up<lb/>
with a nes way of handling the<lb/>
elections<lb/>
He said a new program pn-<lb/>
post bv president eld t Alex Mar<lb/>
tin should heli "mg more stu-<lb/>
dents mvt ?lved in elei Hi ns<lb/>
"1 hop- that it will create more<lb/>
parbopal ? nschool.notjustbCA,<lb/>
but in s, h  ' lilliard said.<lb/>
Milliard's goals as treasurer<lb/>
im ludecreatingthepositionofE U<lb/>
auditor, definii  more clearly the<lb/>
criteria for student groups seeking<lb/>
mone ? h n and irv reasing<lb/>
the arm ml f SGA 1 from $25<lb/>
Katie C arstens ,ri-<lb/>
people realized then' was an elec- Martin was ui ; : - ed in h -<lb/>
tion today Tl i pecial election for bid forSl.A presidcnt,as was vice<lb/>
presidential candid in Bla V<lb/>
and incumbei I '?? n ' irv Katie<lb/>
treasurer that wascani elled caused<lb/>
confusion among student he said<lb/>
Hilhard also said that he Carstcns.<lb/>
Coll?en Haimbaugh ? ECU Photo Lib<lb/>
Dr Oyeieye Oyediran spoke at ECU last Wednesday on the political<lb/>
history of his home country, Nigeria<lb/>
Yearly pap smears can detect cancer<lb/>
Nigerian<lb/>
professor<lb/>
speaks on<lb/>
choices<lb/>
By Staccy I.ippincott<lb/>
Special to The fast Carolinian<lb/>
A professor from Nigeria sakl<lb/>
thathiscountry'sgovcrnmentnee' is<lb/>
more than an institutional svstcm<lb/>
to make democracy w rkatale I<lb/>
Wednesday at fenkins line Art<lb/>
Center<lb/>
Pr i )yeleyeh ediran, the<lb/>
Thomas v Rivers Distinguished<lb/>
Visiting   ssor I r ? mat<lb/>
Studies, spoke on "Parliamentary<lb/>
and Presidential Systems of G<lb/>
emment: rheNigerianExperience<lb/>
It was the professi r s iurth public<lb/>
lecture at ECU<lb/>
(Vcdiran discussed whether<lb/>
the parliamentary or presidential<lb/>
(Pntish or American) system of<lb/>
government is Km tor democratic<lb/>
development in the Ihird World<lb/>
According to Oyediran, hying<lb/>
to bring a democratic government<lb/>
to the Third World has intrigued<lb/>
manv political scientists. Since 1960,<lb/>
whenNigeria gained independence<lb/>
Britain, Nigeria hastriedh ith<lb/>
the parliamentary d presidential<lb/>
See Nigerian page 3<lb/>
By Catherine Bush<lb/>
Peer Health Educator<lb/>
I lave vou had your yearly Pap<lb/>
smear?<lb/>
All females who are sexually<lb/>
active or over the age of 18 should<lb/>
have a Tap smear at least once a<lb/>
year unless told otherwise by their<lb/>
physician.<lb/>
The process is simple and can<lb/>
be performed by a doctor or a nurse<lb/>
practitioner. A speculum is placed<lb/>
in the vagina to hold the vaginal<lb/>
wallsopen so that the cervix may be<lb/>
seen.<lb/>
The actual smear is done by<lb/>
wiping a smooth spatula over the<lb/>
cervix to get a sample of cells. The<lb/>
cells are then examined in a labo-<lb/>
ratory by a specialist.<lb/>
A Pap smear is done to see<lb/>
what type of changes are taking<lb/>
place in the cervix. Pap smears can<lb/>
detect early cervical cancer, genitals<lb/>
warts(aindyloma), some infections,<lb/>
and cellular changesldysplasia) that<lb/>
can lead to cancer if untreated.<lb/>
The following can result from a<lb/>
Pap smear:<lb/>
? No evidence of abnormal<lb/>
cells. Only normal cells are present.<lb/>
? No evidence of cancerous<lb/>
cells. Cells are essentially normal<lb/>
buy show a few chances, usually<lb/>
due to inflammation. I"hese abnor-<lb/>
malities frequently remrn to nt rmal<lb/>
following appropriate treatment.<lb/>
? Cellular abnormalities con-<lb/>
sistent with a precancerous condi-<lb/>
tion. These may be due to an infec-<lb/>
tion, warts, or dysplasia. A<lb/>
colposcopy (close look at thecervix)<lb/>
will be performed and if any visible<lb/>
lesions are present they can be<lb/>
biopsied and treated<lb/>
? Cellular abnormalities con-<lb/>
sistent with a severe precancerous<lb/>
condition. Colposcopy and appro-<lb/>
priate treatment will be performed<lb/>
as needed.<lb/>
? Cellular abnormalities asso-<lb/>
ciated with an invasive cancerous<lb/>
condition. Treatment is needed.<lb/>
If you have an abnormal Pap<lb/>
smear vou will be notified bv your<lb/>
physician or health care provider<lb/>
and asked to return to discuss vour<lb/>
Pap results and appropriate treat-<lb/>
ment.<lb/>
keep in mind that an abnormal<lb/>
Tap di not necessarily mean can-<lb/>
cerous tissue is present. There may<lb/>
bean infection or even an incont ru-<lb/>
sive Vp smear.<lb/>
The following can help prevent<lb/>
inconclusive 1'ap smear:<lb/>
? PV not douche for 3 days<lb/>
before having your Pap smear<lb/>
? Do not use anv medicine or<lb/>
foam that gtx?s inside your vagina<lb/>
for 3 days before having your Vap<lb/>
smear.<lb/>
? Do not have sex for 24 hours<lb/>
before having vour Pap smear.<lb/>
The Student HealthCenterdoes<lb/>
give Pap smears at a reduced price<lb/>
A Pap and pelvic examination costs<lb/>
$15.<lb/>
To make an appointment, you<lb/>
should call at least three weeks<lb/>
ahead of time. Be sure to keep your<lb/>
appointment or call a few days<lb/>
ahead if a cancellation is needed.<lb/>
Do not schedule vour appomt-<lb/>
mentdurmgvi m ii Minsk ualperiod.<lb/>
For moi ? information call the<lb/>
Student Health Center at 7377)4<lb/>
or come bv the Student Health<lb/>
Center Resource Room.<lb/>
INSIDE THURSDAY<lb/>
Editorial<lb/>
New basketball coach Eddie<lb/>
Payne should have time to<lb/>
establish a winning program.<lb/>
Features 7<lb/>
The Soviet Acrobatic Revue,<lb/>
performed in Wright Auditorium<lb/>
Tuesday<lb/>
Classified 6<lb/>
Sports 9<lb/>
ECU Pirates lose to NC<lb/>
State Wolfpack 13-6 in<lb/>
baseball Tuesday<lb/>
Comics 12<lb/>
<pb facs="00058277_0002"/><lb/>
20JI?e ?aat (Earoltnian April 4,1991<lb/>
crjmfS'ene<lb/>
Public Safety officers unable to locate<lb/>
suspicious subject at Minges Coliseum<lb/>
April 1<lb/>
0900?ROTC Building: went to locate a subject with the flag.<lb/>
013?MingesColiseum: responded toa report of a male subject<lb/>
making obscene gestures toward females. Subject was gone on<lb/>
arrival<lb/>
0939?Harrington Field: checked on a suspicious subject, pos-<lb/>
sibly the one from 0913. Incident was cleared.<lb/>
1128?Minges Coliseum: responded to a report of a suspicious<lb/>
male subject returning to the area (reference to 0913). Were unable<lb/>
to locate subject.<lb/>
1202?Charles and Ninth streets: assisted Greenville police<lb/>
with a traffic accident.<lb/>
1247?Greene Residence Hall (east): responded to a report of<lb/>
damage to a vehicle.<lb/>
1455?Minges Coliseum: responded to a report of larceny of<lb/>
scuba equipment.<lb/>
1635?Public Safety: took a report of a bicycle larceny that had<lb/>
occurred at the Biology Building.<lb/>
2055?Jones Residence Hall (southwest): arrested a motorist for<lb/>
dnving while intoxicated.<lb/>
211fv?Mendenhall Student Center (west): issued a verbal<lb/>
warning for driving on the sidewalk.<lb/>
2133?Location unknown: issued a campus citation for driving<lb/>
45 mph in a 15 mph zone.<lb/>
2214?-College Hill Drive and 10th Street: student given verbal<lb/>
warning for driving on the wrong side of the street<lb/>
0052?College Hill Drive: state citation was given for expired<lb/>
registration.<lb/>
0140?14th and 12th streets: investigated report of suspicious<lb/>
activity by two subjects.<lb/>
0148- ?14th Street: transported one subject to the magistrate's<lb/>
office for having a concealed weapon on campus.<lb/>
April 2<lb/>
1504 -Tyler Residence Hall: responded to a report of a male<lb/>
subject, currently banned, in the lobby. Non-student charged with<lb/>
trespassing.<lb/>
1911?McGinnis Auditorium: investigated smoke in the cos-<lb/>
tume shop. Same was caused by an experiment.<lb/>
2116?Fletcher Residence Hall: responded to report of loud<lb/>
music. Same was not found.<lb/>
2155?Fleming Residence Hall (south): campus citation issued<lb/>
to student for speeding.<lb/>
2205 -Aycock Residence Hall (east): state citation issued for no<lb/>
operator's license.<lb/>
2316?Jones Residence Hall: responded to a vehicle on fire.<lb/>
Same was a small fire that did not require the fire department.<lb/>
0053?Garrett Residence Hall (north): campus citation given to<lb/>
student for speeding.<lb/>
0227?Garrett Residence Hall: investigated a visitation viola-<lb/>
tion on the third floor. Subject was gone on arrival.<lb/>
? Crime Seme it taken from official Public Safety Log<lb/>
The E.G. U. School of Music presents:<lb/>
"An Evening of Original Compositions"<lb/>
By:<lb/>
Michael B. Dixon<lb/>
composer<lb/>
In Recital<lb/>
TUESDAY, APRIL 9, 1991<lb/>
at 8:15 PM<lb/>
in Wright Auditorium<lb/>
free admission<lb/>
open to the public<lb/>
New Adventures program educates, builds confidence in outdoors I Archaeologists narrow<lb/>
By Kendra Curtis<lb/>
Special to The East Carolinian<lb/>
The New Ad ventures Program<lb/>
is an experiential education pro-<lb/>
gram within an outdoor adventure<lb/>
setting.<lb/>
The program was started in<lb/>
1985 when the Pitt County Mental<lb/>
Health Department and ECU com-<lb/>
bined efforts to establish what was<lb/>
then referred to as theRopesCourse.<lb/>
The course, located on six acres<lb/>
of wooded area behind the Allied<lb/>
Health Building, was run though<lb/>
the Leisure Sciences Department<lb/>
until the spring of 1990 when it<lb/>
became part of the program at<lb/>
Recreational Services.<lb/>
Currently, the course is under<lb/>
the direction of Kathleen Hill, who<lb/>
is the Assistant Director of Fitness<lb/>
and Outdoor Recreation for Recre-<lb/>
ational Services. Assisting Hill is a<lb/>
groupof eight instructors who have<lb/>
been working with the program for<lb/>
over a year, and 14 new instructors<lb/>
who have just finished a 40-hour<lb/>
training program.<lb/>
Training for the instructors in-<lb/>
cludes CPRfirst aid certification,<lb/>
technical training, group process-<lb/>
ing and on-the-job experience.<lb/>
One of the main objectives the<lb/>
instructors focus on in the program<lb/>
isdevetopinginterpersonal qualities<lb/>
suchascourageand prideinoneself.<lb/>
The program also focuses on<lb/>
developinginterpersona! skills such<lb/>
as working with others, communi-<lb/>
this unusual experience.<lb/>
The program is open to all ECU<lb/>
students, faculty, and staff as well<lb/>
as to the surrounding community.<lb/>
There have already been 300 par-<lb/>
ticipants in the program since last<lb/>
summer including fraternity<lb/>
groups, work units on campus, Pitt<lb/>
cation and cooperation. By taking County Mental Health Department<lb/>
groups of eight or 14 people at a personnel and athletic teams,<lb/>
time through the course and going In order to go throughout the<lb/>
through orientationdebriefing program, call 757-6387 three to four<lb/>
sessions prior to and after the "ex- weeks prior to the desired date. A<lb/>
perience individuals are able to fee which varies in accordance with<lb/>
explore their feelings about them- thetypeofgroupgoingthroughthe<lb/>
selves and others in relationship to course is required as well<lb/>
College of Charleston students study PTL scandal<lb/>
COLUMBIA, S.C.(AP) ? Col-<lb/>
lege of Charleston students are us-<lb/>
ing the Jim Bakker fraud scandal to<lb/>
learn about business ethics. A law-<lb/>
suit against PTL's new owner,<lb/>
MorrisCenillo,could add achapter<lb/>
to their studies.<lb/>
Gary Tid well said Tuesday his<lb/>
business course, "Ethics and Evan-<lb/>
gelism focuses on the defunct n<lb/>
ligious empire's questionable busi-<lb/>
ness practices ? the things that<lb/>
earned Bakker a federal prison sen-<lb/>
tence.<lb/>
"We look at PTL from the em-<lb/>
bryonic stages right up to the<lb/>
criminal trial" in 1989, he said.<lb/>
The moral of Ethics and Evan-<lb/>
gelism is that unethical business<lb/>
practicesdon'tpavoff. "Thisshows<lb/>
you can't do things thataredumb<lb/>
Tid well said.<lb/>
Cerullo, who rebaptized it New since 1989, when Bakker was tried<lb/>
Heritage US.A. and sentenced. There is no text-<lb/>
Tidwcll said he spent Monday book, but rather a 770-page collec-<lb/>
in Columbia poring through court<lb/>
documents in the Cerullo case.<lb/>
Cerullo's Malaysian business<lb/>
partners, who own 51 percent of<lb/>
New Heritage, sued him for selling<lb/>
$300 and $1,000 discount cards for<lb/>
theme park attractions and hotel<lb/>
rooms.<lb/>
They said they never got any<lb/>
money from the discount cards,<lb/>
even though they own 51 percent of<lb/>
the attractions for which discounts<lb/>
were offered.<lb/>
A hearing on that case is<lb/>
scheduled for April 15 in Colum-<lb/>
bia. Tidwell's class will be there.<lb/>
"Ours is not to try to engage<lb/>
ourself in bashing the conduct" of<lb/>
religious empires, he said. '1 just<lb/>
Cerullo's dealings appear teach a business course. Hopefully<lb/>
similar to the way Bakker did the students learn the ability to be<lb/>
business, Tidwell said. The PTL skeptical in business<lb/>
estate was purchased last fall by Tidwell has taught the course<lb/>
tion of trial court documents and<lb/>
PTL promotional brochures.<lb/>
Students watch videotapeclips<lb/>
of PTL Club programs featuring<lb/>
Bakker and his wife Tammy. They<lb/>
also attended Bakker's trial in<lb/>
Charlotte, N.C. A field trip to the<lb/>
2,200-acre Christian theme park<lb/>
near Fort Mill is required.<lb/>
The students analyze PTL's<lb/>
businessand promotionaldealsthat<lb/>
were inconsistent with ethical<lb/>
business practices, Tidwell said.<lb/>
"We look at not only how Mr.<lb/>
Bakker committed fraud,butalsoat<lb/>
the different levels of the PTL or-<lb/>
ganization he said, adding that<lb/>
auditors, board members and fi-<lb/>
nancial officers shared the blame<lb/>
for the PTL fiasco.<lb/>
"What I conclude and what the<lb/>
class concludes is that if the real<lb/>
culprits were asked to stand up, it<lb/>
would be a room full of people. For<lb/>
one reason or another they didn't<lb/>
do the right thing he said.<lb/>
The overselling of hotel space<lb/>
was the core of Bakker's convic-<lb/>
tions on fraud and conspiracy<lb/>
charges.<lb/>
Bakker sold 152,000 fully paid<lb/>
lifetime lodging partnerships pro-<lb/>
ducing $158 million.<lb/>
In exchange for payments of<lb/>
$1,000 or more, contributors were<lb/>
promised free lodging during an-<lb/>
nual trips.<lb/>
Tidwell previously worked in<lb/>
the enforcement division of the Se-<lb/>
curities Exchange Commission in<lb/>
Washington, investigating ac-<lb/>
counting fraud and insider fraud<lb/>
cases.<lb/>
He said his course has been a<lb/>
hit ever since he first started teach-<lb/>
ing it. The course will be taught this<lb/>
summer and is limited to 30 stu-<lb/>
dents. "It's already sold out with<lb/>
pre-registra tion<lb/>
SJlje SaHtfflarritman<lb/>
Advertising<lb/>
Representatives<lb/>
David Bailey<lb/>
Greg Jones<lb/>
Tim Peed<lb/>
Patrick Pitzer<lb/>
Director of<lb/>
Advertising<lb/>
John K Se-melsberger II<lb/>
Production Manager<lb/>
Mary Piland<lb/>
DISPLAY ADVERTISING<lb/>
per column inch<lb/>
National$6.00<lb/>
Local Open Rate $5.00<lb/>
Bulk Contract<lb/>
Discounts Available<lb/>
Business I lours: Monday - Friday 9:00 - 5:00<lb/>
757-6366<lb/>
$29<lb/>
oo<lb/>
<lb/>
EYE<lb/>
EXAM<lb/>
Introducing<lb/>
Stock and Custom Ribbons<lb/>
from Greenville Graphics<lb/>
Now you have a source for those special oc ,<lb/>
casions when only a ribbon will complete t <lb/>
celebration. !<lb/>
Ribbons have touched all our lives at on j<lb/>
time or another. From spelling bees to tracV ,<lb/>
meets, Bible studies to County Fairs, ribbons <lb/>
have become part of the American way of lift j<lb/>
and now Greenville Graphics can supply stocV <lb/>
and custom printed ribbons to fit almost an<lb/>
occasion.<lb/>
When only a ribbon will do, see<lb/>
1310 E. 10th St. ? Greenville<lb/>
Phone 752-0123 ? Fax 752-0620<lb/>
? linn<lb/>
m<lb/>
MM<lb/>
rrnrv!<lb/>
AND BUY ONE<lb/>
GET ONE FREE!<lb/>
The Optical Palace has joined the<lb/>
Optometric Eye Care Center Family<lb/>
To celebrate, we are offering you:<lb/>
-a complete professional eye exam<lb/>
for $29 (contact lens exams and<lb/>
fittings extra)<lb/>
AND<lb/>
-Buy one pair of glasses at regular<lb/>
price and get a second pair free<lb/>
Call our office to schedule your $29 eye exam, or<lb/>
just stop by to check out our wide selection of<lb/>
frames.<lb/>
Offer valid through April 26, 1991<lb/>
(Some restrictions apply)<lb/>
oHOMenuc<lb/>
?Y?CAR?C?KT?R<lb/>
PA<lb/>
YOU'LL LIKE THE WAY WE CARE FOR YOUR EYES<lb/>
YOU'LL LIKE THE WAY WE CARE FOR YOUR EYES<lb/>
Dr. Lewis L. 703 E. Greenville Blvd. Gary Hams<lb/>
?ae? 756-4204<lb/>
Optometrist<lb/>
Licensed<lb/>
Optician<lb/>
The Student Union Productions Committee<lb/>
And The RHA Present<lb/>
Try your luck at poker,<lb/>
blackjack, roulette,<lb/>
and craps!<lb/>
CeSfoW<lb/>
 Prizes H be auctioned off<lb/>
(You could even win a VCR )<lb/>
-Admission is FREE and refreshments are provided!<lb/>
Monday, April 8th at 8pm<lb/>
in the Mendenhall Multipurpose room<lb/>
Qotden &amp; v Notiono? Honor Society<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/>
ST. ANN'S BAY, Jamaica (AP)<lb/>
? Archeologists believe they may<lb/>
soon find the 500-year-old remains<lb/>
ofrwoshipsChristopherColumbus<lb/>
and his crew lived on for more than<lb/>
a year while marooned on Jamaica.<lb/>
The caravels, the Capitana and<lb/>
the Santiago de Palos, were the last<lb/>
ships Columbus commanded and<lb/>
would be the first recovered.<lb/>
Columbus abandoned the ves-<lb/>
selsfastened side-by-sideon a beach<lb/>
when he and his crew of 115 were<lb/>
rescued from Jamaica on July 29,<lb/>
1504, at the end of his ill-fa ted fourth<lb/>
voyage. He died in Spain two years<lb/>
later.<lb/>
The Capitana and the Santiago<lb/>
de Palos are thought to be buried<lb/>
under water, mud and sand at St.<lb/>
Ann's Bay on Jamaica's northern<lb/>
coast about 45 miles northwest of<lb/>
Kingston. Attempts to find the ships<lb/>
began in the 1930s.<lb/>
Now, with sonar and probing<lb/>
equipment and research of histori-<lb/>
cal documents, nautical archaeolo-<lb/>
gists have narrowed the search to a<lb/>
relatively small portion of the Day.<lb/>
They hope to recover at least<lb/>
some the ships' a-mains by next<lb/>
year, the 500th anniversary of Co-<lb/>
lumbus' first voyage.<lb/>
Nigerian<lb/>
systems of government.<lb/>
The parliamentary system oi<lb/>
government was used first,because<lb/>
of the strong influences of the Brit-<lb/>
ish government.<lb/>
After 1979, Nigerians debated<lb/>
about if the presidential system of<lb/>
government would be better than<lb/>
their current system.<lb/>
One point of argument was<lb/>
whether the failure of the British<lb/>
parliamentary system was due to<lb/>
the men who operated the system<lb/>
or due to the public.<lb/>
In 1979 Nigeria experimented<lb/>
Project directoj<lb/>
of the Institute of h<lb/>
ologvatTexasA&amp;M<lb/>
his chances, "on a'<lb/>
an eght<lb/>
Parrentbelievej<lb/>
good of finding well<lb/>
remains because t<lb/>
aground in soft sedj<lb/>
low water.<lb/>
St. Ann's Bav i<lb/>
coral reef, but the<lb/>
altered over the ct<lb/>
canes, eart ho, uakt-<lb/>
positsof sand and<lb/>
On a recent v<lb/>
Ywone Edwards<lb/>
National Heritage<lb/>
in the project, saw<lb/>
shi ps could be a bo<lb/>
the island<lb/>
Notonh<lb/>
J<lb/>
the first recovered<lb/>
bus ship, thev wol<lb/>
from a known carat<lb/>
The sail i<lb/>
speed and maneul<lb/>
pelled much Span<lb/>
guese exptor<lb/>
16th centuries, but<lb/>
about how they a el<lb/>
No architecturl<lb/>
caravel have bee<lb/>
with the Am? -<lb/>
tern of governmei<lb/>
way the executive<lb/>
shtuted. But in lwd<lb/>
power of trie parliai<lb/>
returned, and it<lb/>
power until iZ<lb/>
Ovediran di<lb/>
takes more than justj<lb/>
svstem to run a govei<lb/>
government require<lb/>
presidential and par!<lb/>
of government.<lb/>
Ovediran state!<lb/>
was a variable labl<lb/>
The East Carolinian is now a<lb/>
forget-me-not cards, but we<lb/>
Please make all deliveries to the<lb/>
Building, across fro<lb/>
.?<lb/>
R A<lb/>
<pb facs="00058277_0003"/><lb/>
(Efte lEaBt (Carolinian April 4,1991 13<lb/>
fidence in outdoors I Arcliaeologists narrow search for Columbus' ship<lb/>
the<lb/>
r.im<lb/>
thi unusual experience<lb/>
I "he program in open to all ECU<lb/>
students facuh) and staff as well<lb/>
? ?unding community.<lb/>
here have alread) been VX) par-<lb/>
in the program since last<lb/>
irti luding fraternity<lb/>
rk units on campus, Pi?<lb/>
it Health Department<lb/>
, . J ithletk teams.<lb/>
ler hi go throughout the<lb/>
' tvW7threetorbur<lb/>
. . , desired date. A<lb/>
sin accordance with<lb/>
Ding through the<lb/>
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 people tor<lb/>
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. ;aid<lb/>
? hotel space<lb/>
akker s convic-<lb/>
onspiracy<lb/>
m' fully paid<lb/>
lerships pro-<lb/>
? pa ments of<lb/>
? ibutors were<lb/>
 during an-<lb/>
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ion of theSo-<lb/>
mmission in<lb/>
hgating ac-<lb/>
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ie presented to<lb/>
senior members<lb/>
iding over 150<lb/>
er opportunities<lb/>
pril 10, 191<lb/>
ST. ANN'S BAY, Jamaica (AP)<lb/>
? Archoologists believe thev may<lb/>
soon find the 500-year-old remains<lb/>
erf two shipsChristopherCohirnbua<lb/>
and his crew lived on for more than<lb/>
a year while marooned on Jamaica.<lb/>
The caravels, the Capitana and<lb/>
the Santiago de Palos, were the last<lb/>
ships Columbus commanded and<lb/>
would bo the first recovered.<lb/>
Columbus abandoned the ves-<lb/>
sels fastened sido-bv-sideon a beach<lb/>
when he and his crew of 115 were<lb/>
rescued from Jamaica on July 29,<lb/>
1504,at the end of his ill-fated fourth<lb/>
voyage. 1 ledied in Spain two years<lb/>
later.<lb/>
The Capitana and the Santiago<lb/>
de Palos are thought to be buried<lb/>
under water, mud and sand at St.<lb/>
Ann's Bay on Jamaica's northern<lb/>
coast about 45 miles northwest of<lb/>
Kingston Attempts to find the ships<lb/>
began in the 1930s.<lb/>
Now, with sonar and probing<lb/>
equipment and research of histori-<lb/>
cal documents, nautical archaeolo-<lb/>
gists have narrowed the search to a<lb/>
relatively small portion of the bay.<lb/>
Thev hope to recover at least<lb/>
some the ships' remains by next<lb/>
year, the 500th anniversary ol Co-<lb/>
lumbus' first voyage.<lb/>
Project director James Parrent<lb/>
of the Institute of Nautical Archae-<lb/>
ologvatTexas A&amp;M University rates<lb/>
hischanees, "ona scale of oneto 10,<lb/>
an eight<lb/>
Parrent believes thechancesare<lb/>
good of finding well-preserved hull<lb/>
remains because the caravels ran<lb/>
aground in soft sediment and shal-<lb/>
low water.<lb/>
St. Ann's Bay is sheltered by a<lb/>
coral reef, but the beach has been<lb/>
altered over the centuries by hurri-<lb/>
canes, earthquakes, erosk n and do-<lb/>
posits of sand and sediment.<lb/>
On a recent visit to the site,<lb/>
Ywone Edwards of the Jamaica<lb/>
National Heritage Trust, a partner<lb/>
in the project, said the Columbus<lb/>
ships could be a boon to tourism on<lb/>
the island.<lb/>
Not onlv would the remains be<lb/>
the first recovered from a Colum-<lb/>
bus ship, thev would be the first<lb/>
from a known caravel, Parrent said.<lb/>
The sailing vessel, noted for its<lb/>
speed and maneuverability, pro-<lb/>
pelled much Spanish ,md Portu-<lb/>
guese exploration in the 15th and<lb/>
16th centuries, but little is known<lb/>
about how thev were built.<lb/>
No architectural plans of the<lb/>
caravel have boon found. Parrent<lb/>
Nigerian<lb/>
systems of government.<lb/>
The parliamentary system of<lb/>
government was used first .because<lb/>
of the strong influence's of the Brit-<lb/>
ish government.<lb/>
After 1979, Nigerians debated<lb/>
about it the presidential system of<lb/>
government would be better than<lb/>
their current system.<lb/>
One point of argument was<lb/>
whether the failure of the British<lb/>
parliamentary system was due to<lb/>
the men who operated the system<lb/>
or due to the public.<lb/>
In 17 Nigeria experimented<lb/>
with the American presidential sys-<lb/>
tem of government because oi the<lb/>
way the executive power was con-<lb/>
stituted. But in 1983, the mil.iaiy<lb/>
power of the parliamentary system<lb/>
returned, and it plans to stay in<lb/>
power until 1992.<lb/>
Ovediran discovered that it<lb/>
takes more man just the institutional<lb/>
system to run a government A stable<lb/>
government requires more than the<lb/>
presidential and parliament systems<lb/>
of government.<lb/>
Ovediran stated that Nigeria<lb/>
was a vanable lab tor democracy<lb/>
hopes to learn much about the<lb/>
vessel's design and technical capa-<lb/>
bilities, possibly settling some of the<lb/>
scholarly debate about its role in<lb/>
Europe's expansion.<lb/>
Artifacts could also provide<lb/>
new insights into shipboard life in<lb/>
the early 16th century and the ways<lb/>
of the Arawak Indians who traded<lb/>
with Columbus, the archaeologist<lb/>
said.<lb/>
Columbus' fourth voyage be-<lb/>
gan from Spain on April 3, 1502,<lb/>
withfourcaravelsand a crew of 140.<lb/>
He was looking for a western pas-<lb/>
sage to the Orient and its gold, silk<lb/>
and spices.<lb/>
Having abandoned two of his<lb/>
leaky caravels off Panama, Colum-<lb/>
bus deliberately ran the Capitana<lb/>
and the Santiago de Palos aground<lb/>
on Jamaica and built huts on them to<lb/>
house the crew while they awaited<lb/>
rescue.<lb/>
The stranded Europeans, their<lb/>
numbers reduced to 116, survived<lb/>
for one vear and five days on fcxxi<lb/>
provided bv local Arawaks.<lb/>
Thev were rescued by two ships<lb/>
summoned from neighboring<lb/>
Hispaniola, which is now the island<lb/>
shared bv 1 laid and the Dominican<lb/>
Republic.<lb/>
Continued from page 1<lb/>
and a new project ism the works for<lb/>
a suitable democratic system of<lb/>
government.<lb/>
'The project has advanced, "<lb/>
sivs Ovediran. "The road is nar-<lb/>
row, the gtvils aw clear, and the<lb/>
determination is ever present<lb/>
Ovediran began his 12- month<lb/>
professorship in January. As a<lb/>
graduate of the University of lin-<lb/>
den and the University of Pitts-<lb/>
burgh, he is the author of seven<lb/>
bxxiksand articles on Nigerian poli-<lb/>
ties. He has also served on govern-<lb/>
mental commissions in Nigeria.<lb/>
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The East Carolinian is now accepting flowers, candy and<lb/>
forget-me-not cards, but we have to be home by 11 p.m.<lb/>
Please make all deliveries to the second floor of the Publications<lb/>
Building, across from Joyner Library.<lb/>
i I i<lb/>
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<pb facs="00058277_0004"/><lb/>
Stye ?a0f (Earolmian<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, Nm Editor LeClair Harper, test. News Editor<lb/>
Matt King, Features Editor Stuart Oliphant, test. Features Editor<lb/>
Matt Mumma, Sports Editor Kerry Nester, Asst. Sports Editor<lb/>
Amy Edwards, Copy Editor 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/>
Carla Whitfield, Classified Ads Technician Deborah Daniel, Secretary<lb/>
Ti ?aCwmiu has served the East Caroh <lb/>
ECl I students Dunng the ECU school year. The East Carolinian publishes twice a week wah a c.rculation of 12,000. The East<lb/>
C arohman reserves the nght to refuse or d.scontmue any advertisements that discnminate on the bas.s of age. sex. creed or<lb/>
national origin. The masthead ed.tonal in each edition does not necessarily represent the v.ews of one individual but rather<lb/>
is a majority opinion of the Editorial Board. The East Carolinian welcomes letters expressing all points of v.ew Utters should<lb/>
be limited to 250 words or has. For purposes of decency and brevity. The East Carolinian reserves the right to edit letters for<lb/>
pubhcat.on. Utters 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, Thursday, April 4, 1991<lb/>
Payne must be given time to develop<lb/>
With appointment of Eddie Payne as the new<lb/>
head basketball coach last week, the university has<lb/>
official closed the book on Mike Steele's coaching<lb/>
career at ECU.<lb/>
It seems Mr. Steele was just another in the<lb/>
string of here-a-while-and-then-gone coaches that<lb/>
began in the mid70s. And it is this string that has<lb/>
been plaguing the Pirate basketball program for the<lb/>
past two decades.<lb/>
This is not to say that the Athletic Department<lb/>
was not justified in its decision to fire Mr. Steele,<lb/>
although they never did make their reasons public.<lb/>
However, Mr. Steele's time here is finished,<lb/>
and we should look at what our new coach has to<lb/>
offer. And Mr. Payne's list of accomplishments is<lb/>
rather impressive:<lb/>
? In Charlotte at East Mecklenburg in High<lb/>
School he earned all-city, all-county and all-state<lb/>
honors during his senior vear.<lb/>
? He was a walk-on at Wake Forest University<lb/>
(1 970-73), where he later earned a scholarship and, in<lb/>
his senior year, was named Wake Forest's Most<lb/>
Valuable Player, received the Wake Forest Out-<lb/>
standing Athlete Award and was selected for the<lb/>
Atlantic Coast Conference All-Tournament team.<lb/>
?He played professionally in France (1973-74).<lb/>
? He served three years as a graduate assistant<lb/>
coach at Clemson University (1975-78) while work-<lb/>
ing toward hi? Masters of Education degree.<lb/>
? He was head coach and athletic director at<lb/>
Truett-McConnell College in Georgia, where he led<lb/>
the team to the league championship with a 25-5<lb/>
record and wasnamed Georgia JuniorCollegeCoach<lb/>
of the Year by the Atlanta Tip-Off Club.<lb/>
? He was assistant coach at ECU (1979-81)<lb/>
under Larry Gilman (1979) and Dave Odom (1980-<lb/>
81), During that time, the Pirates went an even 40-40.<lb/>
? He was head coach and Athletic Director at<lb/>
Belmont Abbey college (1981-86) where he compiled<lb/>
a 103-52 win-loss record and was twice selected<lb/>
NAIA District 26 coach of the year (1984 and 1986).<lb/>
? He comes to the Pirate program from South<lb/>
Carolina where he spent the last five years as an<lb/>
assistant coach under George Fclton, also a former<lb/>
assistant coach at ECU.<lb/>
The biggest question in the minds of Pirate<lb/>
fans, of course, is will he be able to make ECU win.<lb/>
Only rime will tell.<lb/>
But, perhaps more importantly ishow long will<lb/>
he stav.<lb/>
Since 1974 only two coaches, Mr. Steele and<lb/>
Charlie Harrison, have been at ECU for more than<lb/>
three years. Mr. Harrison staved from 1982-1986<lb/>
with a 51-92 record and coached the worst season<lb/>
that Pirate basketball has ever faced: the 1983-84<lb/>
season when the Pirates went 4-24 (.143).<lb/>
This trend contributes to theargument that Mr.<lb/>
Steele was not given enough time to turn the ECU<lb/>
program around.<lb/>
It takes more than a couple of years to build a<lb/>
winning basketball program.<lb/>
Coaches need to recruit good plavers, teach<lb/>
them how to plav at the college level and allow them<lb/>
to grow into their talents. And it is harder for coaches<lb/>
to recruit good players to a program that does not<lb/>
have a winning tradition. This type Or commitment<lb/>
takes more than three or four seasons.<lb/>
Not since Tom Quinn (1966-73) has an ECU<lb/>
basketball coach been given enough time to take<lb/>
control of the team and turn it around. Mr. Quinn<lb/>
started with a team that had gone 32-45 over the<lb/>
previous three years and created a winning ECU<lb/>
basketball tradition.<lb/>
So how long will Mr. Payne be here? Unfortu-<lb/>
nately, there are no soothsayers in Eastern North<lb/>
Carolina jumping forward to answer, so we will<lb/>
have to wait and see.<lb/>
It would be a Pirate dream-come-true if Mr.<lb/>
Payne turns out to be as good as Howard Porter<lb/>
(1947-58), the wmningest Pirate basketball coach of<lb/>
all time, who never had a losing season in his entire<lb/>
tenure as coach.<lb/>
But if the ECU basketball program does not<lb/>
instantly pick up and the Pirates are not Colonial<lb/>
Athletic Association champions next year, Mr. Payne<lb/>
should be allowed some time to show his true mettle.<lb/>
Letters To The Editor<lb/>
ECU student<lb/>
questions cause<lb/>
of problems<lb/>
To The Editor:<lb/>
After reading the Letters<lb/>
To The Editor section in the<lb/>
March 25 issue, I was inspired<lb/>
to write about Mr. Ronald<lb/>
Mercer's No. 1 grievance<lb/>
against ECU.<lb/>
I agree that if the light in<lb/>
the commuter parking lot was<lb/>
of f then it certainly should ha ve<lb/>
been on.<lb/>
At the same time, it was<lb/>
dark outside; was this student<lb/>
so oblivious to hisher sur-<lb/>
roundings that heshecould not<lb/>
see the car's headlights? This is<lb/>
a horrendous problem on ECU's<lb/>
campus.<lb/>
Students, thelifeline of this<lb/>
(and all other) universities, walk<lb/>
through this campus like they<lb/>
are in another world, taking for<lb/>
granted that drivers will see<lb/>
them and stop.<lb/>
It's absolutely amazing to<lb/>
me that more students aren't hit<lb/>
bycarsonthiscampusasa result.<lb/>
This is a common occur-<lb/>
rence in all parking lots, but it is<lb/>
very prominent in front of and<lb/>
behind Brewster Building,<lb/>
where there are a lot of students<lb/>
coming to and from the dorms.<lb/>
I, myself, have witnessed<lb/>
a student crossing 10th Street<lb/>
during the 1 p.m. lunch hour<lb/>
when traffic is very heavy, and<lb/>
this student never once looked<lb/>
anywhere but straight ahead<lb/>
? causing several cars to (lit-<lb/>
erally) hit their brakes.<lb/>
Of course, we all know<lb/>
that pedestrians always have<lb/>
the right of way, no matter<lb/>
where you are, but if Mr.<lb/>
Mercer is so concerned about<lb/>
ECU "sweeping things under<lb/>
the rug maybe he should<lb/>
think twice about the cause of<lb/>
some of ECU's problems.<lb/>
Julie Toler<lb/>
Physics Department<lb/>
Lets Be Adamant<lb/>
Euro-centric thinking promotes 'Big Lie'<lb/>
By Darek McCullers<lb/>
Editorial Columnist<lb/>
In one reader's response to<lb/>
one of my recent articles, she made<lb/>
a statement that generally articu-<lb/>
lates the white way of thinking.<lb/>
It is indicative of what a<lb/>
prominent Indian author calls the<lb/>
Big Lie. It is a Euro-centric way of<lb/>
viewing things. It is the notion<lb/>
that all good things came from the<lb/>
White Anglo Saxon Protestant.<lb/>
This is the notion that Afri-<lb/>
can-Americans and other majori-<lb/>
ties (the people of color in this<lb/>
world are a majority) owe this op-<lb/>
pressive and hypocritical minor-<lb/>
ity everything that is good. This<lb/>
notion will not stand up to the<lb/>
facts.<lb/>
It seems ironic that white<lb/>
people always seem to think that<lb/>
they have theanswerforevervone<lb/>
else's problem, but thev can't see<lb/>
their own.<lb/>
In one of mv classes, a stu-<lb/>
dent pointed out the irony in the<lb/>
governments proposed solution<lb/>
to African problems of famine and<lb/>
scarcity<lb/>
Thegovemment had a multi-<lb/>
faceted proposal that included<lb/>
encouraging the use of modem<lb/>
technology, "correct" govern-<lb/>
mental policies and encouraging<lb/>
the small farmer.<lb/>
The irony is that this white-<lb/>
controlled government has failed<lb/>
the small farmer here in America.<lb/>
The use of technology in America<lb/>
has made it impossible for the<lb/>
small farmer to exist.<lb/>
This government's policies<lb/>
are not beneficial to most of its so-<lb/>
called citizens. They considered<lb/>
correct policies to be reducing or<lb/>
eliminating social services, con-<lb/>
verting from food crops to cash<lb/>
crops (this goes to pay off foreign<lb/>
debt and does not put food in the<lb/>
mouths of Africans) and conver-<lb/>
sion to a so-called democratic and<lb/>
capitalist system of government.<lb/>
These stringent require-<lb/>
ments are put upon the African<lb/>
nations before they can receive<lb/>
money from the International<lb/>
Monetary Fund of the World Bank,<lb/>
which receives 25 percent of its<lb/>
funding from the United States, or<lb/>
the U.S. Agency of International<lb/>
Development.<lb/>
Itcameout in class that many<lb/>
of these strings that they attach<lb/>
are easy and proper to obtain by a<lb/>
developed nation, but not for one<lb/>
that is underdeveloped.<lb/>
These conditions are inap-<lb/>
propriate and only perpetuate the<lb/>
dependency of these African na-<lb/>
tions to the Western powers of<lb/>
exploitation, domination, and co-<lb/>
lonialism.<lb/>
Indian author Alvin Josephy<lb/>
brings out the fallacy of the white<lb/>
man's presuppositions in his book<lb/>
Red Power.<lb/>
While talking about the<lb/>
white man's method of oppres-<lb/>
sion, he states, "Hedhewhite man)<lb/>
has recognized (the problems)<lb/>
though usually not recognizing<lb/>
that he created them himself and<lb/>
has tried an unending variety of<lb/>
methods to solve them. The<lb/>
methods have had one goal in<lb/>
common: solution, to the white<lb/>
man, meant forcing (people of<lb/>
color) into the mainstream of the<lb/>
dominant culture's way for life ?<lb/>
turning them into a white<lb/>
This book is excellent be-<lb/>
cause it exposes and breaks down<lb/>
the case for the Big Lie.<lb/>
This reader commented that,<lb/>
"Most of the rights and responsi-<lb/>
bilities claimed and enjoyed by<lb/>
today's African-Americans origi-<lb/>
nate in notions of law and justice<lb/>
conceived and practiced bv the<lb/>
Anglo-Saxon. . All the world we<lb/>
call "free "owes an enormous debt<lb/>
to Anglo-Saxon culture. There are<lb/>
two problems that make this ar-<lb/>
gument typical of the Big Lie.<lb/>
An accurate portrayal for<lb/>
history would reveal that the<lb/>
legacy of freedom goes back to the<lb/>
tribal structure, where the chief of<lb/>
whatever the titular head was<lb/>
called, was an instrument of the<lb/>
people and not a dictator to the<lb/>
people. This structure was used<lb/>
by Africans and Native Ameri-<lb/>
cans.<lb/>
Josephy stated, "To Vitona,<lb/>
Crotius, Locke, Montaigne,<lb/>
Montesquieu, Boltaire and<lb/>
Rousseau, (who were the reat<lb/>
white political thinkers) Indian<lb/>
liberty and self government pro-<lb/>
vided a new polcstar in political<lb/>
thinking This is t he true origin of<lb/>
democracy.<lb/>
The second part otthe fallacy<lb/>
is how we think about freedom<lb/>
The whites seem to thin tnat<lb/>
freedom exists in the absence rj<lb/>
slavery and Jim-Crowism These<lb/>
people do not understand that<lb/>
freedom is not tied tocourt rulings<lb/>
and legislation.<lb/>
Freedom can't be defined<lb/>
through an abstract concept such<lb/>
as opportunity. It is about power<lb/>
Clvde Warrior, who was the<lb/>
president of the National Indian<lb/>
Youth Council in 17, made an<lb/>
eloquent crv in his statement titled<lb/>
"We Are Not Free"<lb/>
He said, "There was great<lb/>
material deprivation in thoJavy<lb/>
but our old people felt rich because<lb/>
they were free.  We are poor in<lb/>
spirit because we are not tree ?<lb/>
free in the most basic sense ot the<lb/>
word. We are not allowed to make<lb/>
those basic human choices and<lb/>
decisions about out personal lite<lb/>
and about the destinv of our<lb/>
communities which is the mark of<lb/>
free mahire people  Our lives<lb/>
pass us by without our desires w<lb/>
aspirations havinganv eftext We<lb/>
are not free. We do not make<lb/>
choices.  We are the poor<lb/>
Therefore, I sav that it is time<lb/>
for the people of color to awaken<lb/>
It is time to promote unitv.<lb/>
We must recognize that we<lb/>
are a nation and exercise the<lb/>
principles of Black Nationalism<lb/>
That is to say that we take control<lb/>
of the politics, economics and<lb/>
education for our communities<lb/>
This is the method by which we<lb/>
will obtain our freedom.<lb/>
Campus Spectrum<lb/>
Vice Chancellor responds to recent editorial<lb/>
1 wish to correct several er- torial, however, was the statement<lb/>
rors of fact contained in your thatl500,000worthoflightinghad<lb/>
March 28, 1991 editorial regard- been paid out of the Traffic and<lb/>
ing the proposed vehicle registra- Parking Fund. This is absolutely<lb/>
tion fee increases. untrue.<lb/>
1 appreciate your opinion TheGeneralAdministration<lb/>
that user fees should indeed be<lb/>
expended in a manner directly<lb/>
related to the services being pur-<lb/>
chased. While not every expense<lb/>
clearly falls into one category or<lb/>
in any significant way under the<lb/>
current fee structure<lb/>
We must also now go back<lb/>
and improve the appearance of<lb/>
existing lots with attractive land-<lb/>
scaping even though some believe<lb/>
that campus beau tit icarion isa tnll<lb/>
we should ignore. I do not share<lb/>
that opinion.<lb/>
Pa vi ng existing d i rt lo ts costs<lb/>
approximately $1,000 per space<lb/>
including landscaping, lighting<lb/>
and curbing.<lb/>
This is cheap compared to<lb/>
parking decks which will cost ap-<lb/>
B tO<lb/>
of UNC provided stateappropria<lb/>
tions of $500,000 to re-lamp the<lb/>
entire campus to improve safety<lb/>
with a large portion of those funds<lb/>
being used to enhance lighting in<lb/>
another, certainly the principle our parking lots<lb/>
should apply. In addition, the campus in-<lb/>
Indeed, bookkeeping and vested $78,000 of non-parking<lb/>
management controls have been funds to expand the project to the .k  .<lb/>
significantly improved to cause point necessary. Residence halls ?x,nL7y$10 o????<lb/>
eachexpensetocomeundermuch and athletics paid for specific construct<lb/>
closer scrutiny in the future. I am lighting associated with their fa-<lb/>
personally making that commit- cilities above that.<lb/>
Not one penny of traffic<lb/>
funds were used for this major<lb/>
improvement that most definitely<lb/>
addresses the concerns of those<lb/>
individuals parking on our cam-<lb/>
pus.<lb/>
The proposed '  &amp;inaf WUI ae<lb/>
behavior"oncampusforthosewho vehicle registration feeTis'wiuV jV<lb/>
adhere to the rules and to impose out a doubt an issue requiring rn???L. 8 ' "<lb/>
Hte ?i j Huinng committee encourages students,<lb/>
dete,consultationandcornrnon faculty and staff tobm.t con-<lb/>
sense. oh, .?<lb/>
ia? l structive recommendations re-<lb/>
land EL2T n tmpUS' 8Mdln? Proposed fee struc-<lb/>
SZT  "andor?odsfortmprov<lb/>
dennal or commercial property<lb/>
ment.<lb/>
Regarding last year's in-<lb/>
crease in fines, the motivation was<lb/>
not merely to bring our fines in<lb/>
line with other institutions (al-<lb/>
though that was a result), it was to<lb/>
encourage appropriate parking<lb/>
Certainly we have many op-<lb/>
tions, but each has a cost.<lb/>
We have a choice of living<lb/>
with the conditions we have to-<lb/>
day and seeing them steadily<lb/>
worsen or we can make a bold<lb/>
step forward and fund a progres-<lb/>
sive program that will deal effec-<lb/>
higher penalties for those who<lb/>
disregard the rights of others and<lb/>
in the process increase costs of<lb/>
enforcement.<lb/>
Your reference to meter col-<lb/>
? jj.<lb/>
lections being used for a "couple Vacant land is at a premium,<lb/>
of Public Safety cookouts" does Parking must compete<lb/>
not indicate that the amount refer- against the need for additional fa-<lb/>
enced was approximately $10 to cilities.<lb/>
$15 and occurred under a prior When land becomes avail-<lb/>
administration, able we must be in a position to<lb/>
The major error in your edi- purchase it, and we cannot do so<lb/>
ng parking on campus.<lb/>
Please take advantage of that<lb/>
opportunity while the consulta-<lb/>
tion process is occurring.<lb/>
Richard Brown<lb/>
v?ceChancelloTfor<lb/>
Rainess Affairs<lb/>
Displaced K<lb/>
freezing, st<lb/>
DIANA, Iraq APi . Fleeing<lb/>
government foro - ??<lb/>
branded<lb/>
Wednesday in snow-capped<lb/>
mountajj  . Itt.r<lb/>
fworkerss<lb/>
porte .<lb/>
:? ire<lb/>
-<lb/>
libonal homeland<lb/>
? i<lb/>
gees have ptk<lb/>
border, but<lb/>
not allowed ,<lb/>
Refuj <lb/>
Turf<lb/>
T ? I<lb/>
column I<lb/>
streli ?<lb/>
aloi<lb/>
mounts<lb/>
? -<lb/>
I<lb/>
irr<lb/>
?<lb/>
-<lb/>
A n ? ?? <lb/>
? ' ? ?<lb/>
? indmany<lb/>
?<lb/>
A<lb/>
? ii<lb/>
unsi.<lb/>
<lb/>
es parts<lb/>
? rAM3 I ? ????? MO ? Jr<lb/>
'? ?  ? - ? ? - ? ?? 00<lb/>
? I  iraMti "??" ? -?<lb/>
? - MRM HWIOi ? ?r   . ? t - .<lb/>
KKatMMl ??- m ttw ?rwmc &amp;<lb/>
- a?<lb/>
 -<lb/>
mc T R K F<lb/>
Smoked<lb/>
Turkey Breast<lb/>
5-oz. Pkg.<lb/>
Thompson White<lb/>
Seedless Grapes<lb/>
GOLDEN RIPE<lb/>
Dole<lb/>
Bananas<lb/>
IN THE DAIRY CASE" CHILLED<lb/>
Minute Maid<lb/>
Orange Juice<lb/>
FRITO LAV<lb/>
Chee-tos or<lb/>
Chee-tos Lights<lb/>
NONRETURNABLE BOTTLE,<lb/>
CAFFEINE FREE DIET COKE.<lb/>
CAFFEINE FREE COCA COLA CLASSIC.<lb/>
Diet Coke or<lb/>
Coca Cola Classic<lb/>
$109<lb/>
Utr.<lb/>
IPAK 12-0Z. CANS<lb/>
iJ<lb/>
<pb facs="00058277_0005"/><lb/>
?<lb/>
MOKWAVS<lb/>
.n UP Fo.<lb/>
n just<lb/>
Too FAX f<lb/>
Sr?e gaat (Carolinian April 4, 1991 5<lb/>
V- ?-?<lb/>
<lb/>
promotes 'Big Lie'<lb/>
I<lb/>
pectrum<lb/>
 i iu tatof to thel<lb/>
?Mn hire was usedl<lb/>
' Native A men -<lb/>
ited To Vitoria,<lb/>
ke Montaigne<lb/>
Mire and<lb/>
were the great<lb/>
kers) Indian!<lb/>
mi men t prcv<lb/>
estar in political)<lb/>
the Horignof<lb/>
? t the fallacy<lb/>
- ut freedom. <lb/>
seem to think tnat<lb/>
i n the absence of<lb/>
? - .ism These<lb/>
rstand that<lb/>
(tied! mifl rulings<lb/>
li ' be defined<lb/>
?? i I "i i pt such<lb/>
It ibout power<lb/>
A .irner who was the<lb/>
inal Indian<lb/>
in ' 3?7, made an<lb/>
? itcment ti tlcxi<lb/>
- as great<lb/>
? II thosedays,<lb/>
? ? H nth because<lb/>
? poor in<lb/>
X tree<lb/>
- ? ? i - nse ot the<lb/>
I tO make<lb/>
?. ik rs and<lb/>
ersonal life<lb/>
destiny of our<lb/>
the mark of<lb/>
pie it lives<lb/>
r 1'M res or<lb/>
?tit t We<lb/>
not make<lb/>
??. poor<lb/>
: 'i I viv that it istime<lb/>
r to awaken<lb/>
? rm '? unity<lb/>
? re ognize that we<lb/>
ind - re ise the<lb/>
f Black N ahonalism<lb/>
? i? a. take control<lb/>
ei onomtCS and<lb/>
ur . immunities.<lb/>
? (hod by which we<lb/>
A ir freedi m<lb/>
ds to recent editorial<lb/>
:<lb/>
?tth. M<lb/>
' ghttngin<lb/>
- in<lb/>
non-park<lb/>
le project to the<lb/>
Residence halls<lb/>
for sp- ifii<lb/>
with their fa<lb/>
inv of tratti,<lb/>
for this major<lb/>
tost definitely<lb/>
Eerns of those<lb/>
g on our cdm-<lb/>
d in rease in<lb/>
t es is with<lb/>
Isue requiring<lb/>
i and common<lb/>
Irhan campus,<lb/>
J sides hv resi<lb/>
rcial property<lb/>
jprvmium.<lb/>
ist compete<lb/>
additional fa-<lb/>
romes avail-<lb/>
? position to<lb/>
cannot do so<lb/>
in any sigi ifit ant way under the<lb/>
? '? ? "r-n hire<lb/>
. t ,iso now go hack<lb/>
improve the appearance of<lb/>
? th attractive land-<lb/>
though some believe<lb/>
pus beautincationisa frill<lb/>
? ! Ao not share<lb/>
pinion<lb/>
i ? e; existing dirt lots costs<lb/>
r $1,000 per space<lb/>
indsi aping, lighting<lb/>
and curt<lb/>
this is (heap compared to<lb/>
? . leeks whit h will cost ap-<lb/>
proximately $10,000 per space to<lb/>
construi t<lb/>
( erfainlv we have many op-<lb/>
tions, but each has a cost<lb/>
?'?? have a choice of living<lb/>
with the conditions we have to-<lb/>
day and seeing them steadily<lb/>
worsen or we can make a bold<lb/>
step forward and fund a progres-<lb/>
sive program that will deal effec-<lb/>
tively with our problems.<lb/>
The Parking and Traffic<lb/>
 ommittee encourages students,<lb/>
faculty and staff to submit con-<lb/>
structive recommendations re-<lb/>
garding the proposed fee struc-<lb/>
ture and or methods for improv-<lb/>
ing parking on campus.<lb/>
Please take advantage of that<lb/>
opportunity while the consulta-<lb/>
tion process is occurring.<lb/>
Richard Brown<lb/>
Vice Chancellor for<lb/>
Business Affairs<lb/>
Displaced Kurdish refugees<lb/>
freezing, starving in Iraq<lb/>
DIANA, Iraq (AP) Fleeing<lb/>
mment forces, several million<lb/>
Kurdish refugees were stranded<lb/>
Wednesday in snow-capped<lb/>
mountains without food or shelter,<lb/>
? workers said Many were re<lb/>
d dying of starvation and ex-<lb/>
po ure<lb/>
-al<lb/>
'?Vl1 e exodus has<lb/>
en ptied map r cities in their<lb/>
I were trying<lb/>
- ? border but ap-<lb/>
i this I  n 25<lb/>
i - ercalled<lb/>
the<lb/>
i to three rr<lb/>
li<lb/>
.<lb/>
ng in the<lb/>
ditions.<lb/>
a hit hare ??<lb/>
avc run<lb/>
?eofthe<lb/>
perl irrned<lb/>
- -<lb/>
 led<lb/>
-<lb/>
? ?led<lb/>
phot ? litt1<lb/>
hanci - ival.<lb/>
A ? ? n I Hana said<lb/>
. lied i t<lb/>
' i ' nd posure,and many<lb/>
? <lb/>
ft usands ? - ?.<lb/>
gees have piled up by the Iranian<lb/>
border, but "our neighbors have<lb/>
not allowed a single person in<lb/>
Refugees a a also trying to get into<lb/>
Turkev<lb/>
The refugees formed a solid<lb/>
column of more than o) miles<lb/>
stretching from theoutskirtsot Hrbil<lb/>
along twisting roads into the<lb/>
mountains as far as Diana. Thev<lb/>
were packed hghtlvintoall manner<lb/>
of vehicle, some riding in carts, still<lb/>
others on mules.<lb/>
Whole families trudgedon foot,<lb/>
carrying whatever they could. Chil-<lb/>
dren .is y iung as age 5 carried ba-<lb/>
bies strapped to their backs One<lb/>
paraplegic was being laboriously<lb/>
pushed uphill in a wheelchair.<lb/>
Refugees said thev had been<lb/>
.itt.i. ked by helicopter gunships n<lb/>
?? r way oul of Erbil, which rs310<lb/>
s north of Baghdad, and many<lb/>
were killed.<lb/>
! hey pleaded with foreign re-<lb/>
pt rt rs for help, each echoing the<lb/>
same appeal:<lb/>
"We ni-ed help. The helicop-<lb/>
ters are killing us. Wehaveno food.<lb/>
We will d ? Why is the I nited Ma<lb/>
tit ns doing nothing to help us?"<lb/>
said a young woman engineer, hi r<lb/>
vok e (hoking with emotion.<lb/>
Fhe Kurds' month-old upns-<lb/>
ing was launched in the wake ol<lb/>
Iraq's defeat in the Persian Gulf<lb/>
War. It was the latest in a series ot<lb/>
unsuccessful rebellions thiscenfury<lb/>
by Kurds seeking autonomy in their<lb/>
ancestral homeland, whichencom-<lb/>
passes parts of Iran, Turkey, Iraq<lb/>
and Syria.<lb/>
In New York on Tuesday,<lb/>
France sought to focus attention on<lb/>
the Kurds' plight with a proposal<lb/>
that the United Nations push for<lb/>
pom talks between the Iraqi gov-<lb/>
ernment and rebels it has fought<lb/>
since being defeated by the US-led<lb/>
allied coalition.<lb/>
That would include the Shiite<lb/>
Muslims in southern Iraq.<lb/>
But discussion on the proposal<lb/>
was postponed until after the Secu-<lb/>
rity Council votes on a resolution<lb/>
setting stiff terms for a permanent<lb/>
cease-fire in the Persian Gulf War.<lb/>
Turkey, facing a flood of<lb/>
Kurdish refugees, also sought a so-<lb/>
lution to the bloodshed but the<lb/>
United States did not appear to be<lb/>
offering any proposals or issuing<lb/>
any warnings that might end the<lb/>
strife<lb/>
Washington has urged Iraqis<lb/>
to topple Saddam Hussein. But it<lb/>
has turned down rebel pleas for<lb/>
military and hum.init.inan aid. not<lb/>
wishing to be drawn into Iraq's in-<lb/>
ternal turmoil.<lb/>
Rebels have repeatedly accused<lb/>
members of the U.Sled allies, es-<lb/>
pecially the United States, of aban-<lb/>
doning them hv not enforcing the<lb/>
temporary cease-fire Kin on Iraq<lb/>
using its aircraft tor military mis-<lb/>
sions.<lb/>
The official Iraqi News Agencv<lb/>
predicted Tuesday that a few mote<lb/>
days would beenoughtostampout<lb/>
the fighting in the north with<lb/>
Kurdish rebels.<lb/>
Rodney Siren and? ECU Photo Lab<lb/>
Just playing it safe<lb/>
Although he was running unopposed. Student Government Association presidential candida'e<lb/>
Alex Martin, who is currently the speaker of the house, campaigned near the polls Wednesday.<lb/>
Copy of Declaration of Independence found<lb/>
NEWYORK(AP) A pristine<lb/>
copy of the Declaration ot Inde-<lb/>
pendence printed on July 4, 177ft,<lb/>
was discovered tucked behind a<lb/>
painting bought for 54 at a flea<lb/>
market and may fetch more than SI<lb/>
million, an auction house saj s.<lb/>
Arhiladi Iphuihnano llanaivst<lb/>
bought the old, torn painting of a<lb/>
country scene two summers ag i in<lb/>
Adamstow n. Pa because he liked<lb/>
the wood frame, said David Redden,<lb/>
vice president of Sotheby's, which<lb/>
authenticated the document<lb/>
When tin. man removed the<lb/>
painting, the frame fell apart and he<lb/>
found a tolded-up document. Red-<lb/>
den said.<lb/>
SPRING<lb/>
apvt ?:??'tcir- 'mot adn"mm:?ana<lb/>
? ?, ? ?i .?. ??? ?MM?mc' ??"<lb/>
. .  , - - . ?. a W n.?ad" '<lb/>
??, ;m ? .s-Hm <lb/>
-t$ rttft iBfl ?-?MNMMl'?rtuctrvg<lb/>
? rf r ? ? ft x??? ? .?<lb/>
tf4Wl t?r- ? ?? ? ? ??adpn i<lb/>
I- ?M<lb/>
-?-rMM<lb/>
<lb/>
MR T'JRKEY<lb/>
Smoked<lb/>
Turkey Breast<lb/>
6-01. Pkg.<lb/>
with Low Prices<lb/>
And More<lb/>
IN THE DELI-PASTRY SHOPPE<lb/>
WHITE OR WHEAT<lb/>
Fresh Baked<lb/>
Kaiser Rolls<lb/>
6-Ct. 12-M.<lb/>
Thompson White Q Q 0<lb/>
Seedless Grapes . wv<lb/>
GOLDEN RIPE .<lb/>
Dole 9 $1<lb/>
Bananasw ibs JL<lb/>
"IN THE DAIRY CASE" CHILLED <lb/>
Minute Maid O $9<lb/>
Orange Juiceim-oz. w<lb/>
FRITO LAY <lb/>
Chee-tos or QQ<lb/>
Cheetos Lightsa?, irw<lb/>
NONRETURNABLE BOTTLE,<lb/>
CAFFEINE FREE DIET COKE,<lb/>
CAFFEINE FREE COCA COLA CLASSIC,<lb/>
Diet Coke or A<lb/>
Coca Cola Classic<lb/>
$109 <lb/>
"When wedxscussed the value,<lb/>
he was completely stunned Red-<lb/>
den said.<lb/>
Sotheby'seshmated thecopv is<lb/>
?wor1h$800jOOOk$1 IwriSkm. Ihe<lb/>
auction house will otfer it tor sale<lb/>
June 4. In January Ism1, another<lb/>
cop of the Declaration of Indepen-<lb/>
dence sold for a mcord $139 mii-<lb/>
bon<lb/>
The owner wishes to remain<lb/>
anonymous and turned down an<lb/>
interview request relayed bv<lb/>
Sotheby's.<lb/>
Redden said the document is<lb/>
one oi 24 known su ryi ving copies I li<lb/>
the Declaration of Independence<lb/>
madebva Philadelphia printer, John<lb/>
LXinlap, on the day theContini<lb/>
press adopted the declaration.<lb/>
rhe document ts 1512 inches<lb/>
bv H V4 inches oi slightly yel-<lb/>
lowed rag paper printed in black<lb/>
ink.<lb/>
"Here was the most important<lb/>
single printed page m the world in<lb/>
the most spectacularly beautiful<lb/>
condition said Redden<lb/>
It took one sect ?id to know it<lb/>
was ne,ht. But what rea"v aston-<lb/>
ished us was the conchtior - so<lb/>
fresh, SO clean<lb/>
Redden speculated Dunlap<lb/>
printed 200 copies for distribution<lb/>
to government leaders, the Armv<lb/>
and throughout the 13colonies.<lb/>
H Z <lb/>
 All von can e;it<lb/>
shrimp and trout<lb/>
$4.95<lb/>
h<lb/>
M-Ili<lb/>
VjALjOfAMEAL<lb/>
(919)758-0327<lb/>
105 Airport Road<lb/>
am-8pm F-Sal liam-9pm Sun ll;un-4pm<lb/>
2-Ltr.<lb/>
MAK 12 07 CANS<lb/>
<pb facs="00058277_0006"/><lb/>
6<lb/>
SI?e gast (Sarultnuin<lb/>
April 4, 1991<lb/>
'? : .&amp;-?$: y yjxS'iV  V:  <lb/>
SERVICES OFFERED<lb/>
WORD PROCESSING SERVICES<lb/>
rerm papers, dissertations, letters<lb/>
resumes, manuscripts, projects. Fast<lb/>
rum around Call loan 756-9255.<lb/>
TYPING Call 155-3611 after 5:30<lb/>
p m or leave message. S1.35page,<lb/>
includes proofreading, spelling,<lb/>
grammar check Familiar with all<lb/>
formats (.h?t 15 years experience<lb/>
FOR RENT<lb/>
Want female non-smoker<lb/>
to share I 3 ol expenses (SI 13 plus<lb/>
phone and utilities) on two bedroom<lb/>
apartn i nt foi summer and 'or next<lb/>
APARTMENT HK SUMMER<lb/>
SI SSIONS Female wanted to share<lb/>
m, 2 1 '2 bath<lb/>
?nt W D, DW AC Access<lb/>
us courts! Call im-<lb/>
!?.<lb/>
i U  i IV;<lb/>
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DOl BLEW1D! 1KA1LER on pri-<lb/>
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iftei 5 V p m<lb/>
ROOMMATE WANTED: Looking<lb/>
: ma r non sm ker to share 2 bed-<lb/>
oom, fullv furnished apartment for<lb/>
summer. Qosetocampus. Call Kevin<lb/>
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ROOMMATE WANTED to sharca<lb/>
i bedroom townhouse, Siw<lb/>
FOR RENT<lb/>
month plus 1 3 utilities. Nonsmoker<lb/>
preferred Call 355-0966.<lb/>
LOOKING FOR a female non<lb/>
smoking roommate who is neat and<lb/>
responsible, willing to pay half of<lb/>
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NEED TWO female roommates to<lb/>
share Georgetown apt Prefer non-<lb/>
smoker CSl2750month plus utili-<lb/>
ties). Needed during May. Ask for<lb/>
Karen at 752-1585.<lb/>
ROOM AVAILABLE Fir River,<lb/>
S150month plus 1 2 utilities, 1 1 2<lb/>
bath, fully furnished, C Available<lb/>
for both summer terms. Call Eric at<lb/>
830-5206.<lb/>
NET DEI) One or two people to<lb/>
sublet apartment I bednm Lose<lb/>
to campus, possil leto release<lb/>
S255.00month : us ul ties Call<lb/>
757-0609 AsP '<lb/>
FOR SALE<lb/>
Will accept best offer tor all items<lb/>
Call 758-7099 for details.<lb/>
EOR SALE Brand new moped and<lb/>
helmet (used only " months'). 57 r<lb/>
Workout equipment S-1 All ex<lb/>
penses paid vacation package for two<lb/>
in me Florida resort of your choice for<lb/>
5 days4 nights, $200 Call 355-6284<lb/>
and leave message.<lb/>
HELP WANTED<lb/>
ALASKA SUMMER EMPLOY-<lb/>
MENT: fisheries. Earn 5,l<lb/>
month. Free transportation! Room<lb/>
and Board! Over 8,000openings No<lb/>
experience necessary. Male or Fe-<lb/>
male. For 68-page emplo<lb/>
manual, send $8.95 toM&amp;L Research,<lb/>
Box 84008, Seattle, VVA 98124 Saris<lb/>
faction Guaranteed<lb/>
BABYSITTER NEEDED foi<lb/>
mer Mondavi rida - I:<lb/>
ning Ma 9th. c vw ?<lb/>
needed. 757-0629.<lb/>
HELP WANTED<lb/>
p ind earn $100 Help saw the<lb/>
nonmenl and earn gixxi money,<lb/>
 CalK  i?7 1063 for appoint-<lb/>
ment<lb/>
WHAT ARE YOUR FLANS EOR<lb/>
1HI SUMMER Going to stay in<lb/>
Greem e.goinj to Summer School?<lb/>
! od) s currently has sales positions<lb/>
a able in unkirs and Mens that<lb/>
run through the summer and<lb/>
the tall Rll your free time with<lb/>
rrx position with Brody'sand<lb/>
 I 'vHrody'sJhe<lb/>
igh V'ednoiav.<lb/>
0 v s to<lb/>
Plaza, M01<lb/>
iD.m<lb/>
?<lb/>
AVAILABLE: Apai<lb/>
for summer. 3 he.<lb/>
Acres, 4 blocks to ran<lb/>
April 4, ask tor im<lb/>
t to sublet<lb/>
m, Wilson<lb/>
( all fcx fore<lb/>
sHl<lb/>
? N ?<lb/>
MURS1I, APARTMENTS<lb/>
j <lb/>
od ?" - - ? j ? uh<lb/>
???-i I 'inn A. iimi<lb/>
VZALEX GARDENS<lb/>
" r r . n i)WM IIIWlllll<lb/>
" - - ? ? ' - &amp;VV1 <lb/>
? s . ? a ?<lb/>
ROOMMATE WANTED: Male or<lb/>
female student wanted to share 3<lb/>
bedroom house.fully furnished. Five<lb/>
miles from campus, SUV plus 1 J<lb/>
utilities and deposit Call 355-7282<lb/>
Available now!<lb/>
SOMEONE NEEDED to share<lb/>
townhouse apartment Two bed-<lb/>
room, 1 12 bath, fully furnished,<lb/>
need only to bring bedroom furni-<lb/>
ture. Responsible male student<lb/>
$175moplus 12utilities 831 0388<lb/>
SUMMER INTERNSHIP t<lb/>
what IBM, Xerox an 1 Fortu<lb/>
companies like ah ?? <lb/>
program. It saving ovi r S5 ?<lb/>
valuable career experiei ce,l .  2<lb/>
your resume, and college credit ap-<lb/>
peal to vou, call for an interview to-<lb/>
day (919) 249 2211<lb/>
CLASSIFIED ADS IK HNICIAN<lb/>
needed for summer sessions an<lb/>
fall semester. Must tx enrolled is<lb/>
ECU student. Perfect job for 1 1  si<lb/>
Broadcasting or foumalism majors<lb/>
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Apply in person at The East Carolinian<lb/>
or call 758-7652 after 5 H n m<lb/>
PERSONALS<lb/>
HEADING FOR EUROPE THIS<lb/>
MMER? ?, anytime with<lb/>
? r S160 from the East<lb/>
tied ir 'Y Times ft<lb/>
1 AIRIinCH S 212-864-<lb/>
rOMORROVV, IKACEY IS 22!<lb/>
Happ) Birthdav, rracey! ILoveYoul<lb/>
Loveal ?: s Mike.<lb/>
ALPHAPHI'S I ietpsyched forfor-<lb/>
????? 1 night ton member.<lb/>
THETA (HI &amp; SIC; EP We would<lb/>
" ' thank tl : you who have<lb/>
ped us 0 ? u I ousc during<lb/>
' " ' ? ' ri work is greatly<lb/>
?. theZetas.<lb/>
DISPLAY CLASSIFIED<lb/>
PERSONALS<lb/>
ZTA: It all started last Saturday night,<lb/>
etas, dates and all?looi<lb/>
siht. "Off to Washington we<lb/>
shouted, as the bus roiled 1 togear<lb/>
with Steve "Hall"ing ? o irdesb-<lb/>
nation grew near Wearrived (inone<lb/>
piece), all now feelii g might)<lb/>
then we danced and part<lb/>
was time AJlon thebus,and read) to<lb/>
go home, when Pam ? rt ill and prayed<lb/>
to the "porcelain throne Now tl ?<lb/>
party is over only memories of I<lb/>
remain with usofZTA( 'ockta ' '?'<lb/>
GRI I Ks<lb/>
GreekWe k! It sj 1 gl t aBLAST!<lb/>
Love, the Sigmas<lb/>
COME ONE! COME Al U II A 5<lb/>
First Annual h r?nis ind <lb/>
touman ent for the Ass<lb/>
Retarded Citizens. It's it I<lb/>
a.m. , April 1<lb/>
R( gisteri ow! Info I f nt<lb/>
Store'til2 OFridav. Del<lb/>
DISPLAY CLASSIFIED<lb/>
PERSONALS<lb/>
at boom Prizes will be av irded<lb/>
TO( TOGA! TOGA! ?-<lb/>
nual l1 Kappa Phi Toga All<lb/>
? v Bus ride? I<lb/>
??- - ? - -pr.lMh7-<lb/>
No b ?? es ; lease<lb/>
BROTHERS AND PLEDGES (i<lb/>
SIGMA NU usl 1 '? w ??-?<lb/>
gr ???: ate everyone on an INTEN ;<lb/>
job keeping everything .?. thu ??<lb/>
- ? . ? this semester Altl<lb/>
tl ngl isn'tworked ?????<lb/>
work and pers vei t ? <lb/>
: ? forn aking n proud to<lb/>
be a Sigma NuH SinoereU " ?<lb/>
DISPLAY CLASSIFIED<lb/>
Kinggold Inwrfs<lb/>
WANDSVVOR1<lb/>
((MM( )s<lb/>
( <lb/>
; 'v- S<lb/>
FOR SALE<lb/>
FENDER GUITAR AMP<lb/>
as 0464.<lb/>
Wuxe<lb/>
MUST SALE IMMEDIATELY<lb/>
Men's Raleigh 10 s-Xd bike; S60,<lb/>
Women's Huffy 12 speed bike S35<lb/>
gas grill w, tank,  wii<lb/>
A c works great, SI 0 ar<lb/>
clone w2 flopp disk drives<lb/>
dow<lb/>
I IBM PC<lb/>
640K<lb/>
NANNY OPPORTT<lb/>
Francisco-1 girl SI7!<lb/>
cago-newborn-S175<lb/>
necticut-twinsS25fl<lb/>
infant S160week; <lb/>
dren-S200week. M<lb/>
available One yeai<lb/>
necessary. Call 1-800<lb/>
EARTHNAEE Part-ti<lb/>
up ten households for<lb/>
NTTIIS San<lb/>
1 n v<lb/>
s) v<lb/>
: t s<lb/>
1 <lb/>
If you're<lb/>
Pregnant<lb/>
and need help making choices<lb/>
?Free, confidential professional<lb/>
pregnancy counse<lb/>
'Financial assistance<lb/>
?Help select adoptive family<lb/>
1-800-632-1400<lb/>
The Children's Home Society<lb/>
of North Carolina<lb/>
A United Way Agency<lb/>
FREE<lb/>
PREGNANCY<lb/>
TESTING<lb/>
! ree v C01 I v 1<lb/>
Services &amp; Cvwn<lb/>
' .imim;i Pregnano?iit 1<lb/>
757-0005<lb/>
in r. 31 ; sti :<lb/>
The I ec Building<lb/>
Cjreein ille. i<lb/>
lUrs<lb/>
.<lb/>
GQLDEN GIRL TRYOUTS<lb/>
Attention interested dancers (who<lb/>
can da; ). and sparkle) Become<lb/>
part ol the 1991 ECU Football<lb/>
Spirit! Share the spotlight by per-<lb/>
ming with the Hast Carolina<lb/>
Pirates during the 11 football<lb/>
?asoi rhe CX)I DEN GIRI S<lb/>
1 INE will hold trvouts<lb/>
April 13-14; 9 .1 m A p.m. Satur-<lb/>
day and 1 p.m. 4 p.m. Sunday in<lb/>
Memorial Gym. For more infor-<lb/>
mation, call 757 6982<lb/>
bi'JLCMLQLrMPJCS<lb/>
The 1991 Greenville-Pitt Co. Spe-<lb/>
cial Olympics Spring Games will<lb/>
le held on April 19th at E. B.<lb/>
Aycock Jr. High School in Green-<lb/>
ville (rain date: April 24). Volun-<lb/>
teers are needed to help serve as<lb/>
buddieschaperones for the Spe-<lb/>
cial Olympics. Volunteers must<lb/>
be able to work all dav - from 9<lb/>
a m -2 p.m. (The first ones there<lb/>
will be assigned a position). An<lb/>
orientation meeting will be held<lb/>
on April 17 in Old Jovner Library,<lb/>
nxm 221 from 5-6:()0 p.m. Free<lb/>
1 nrhandvolunteert-shirtswill<lb/>
be provided the day of the games<lb/>
to all volunteers who have at-<lb/>
tended theorientutionsession. For<lb/>
more information, contact Lisa<lb/>
Mills at &amp;0-4551<lb/>
IMMUNIZATION OJN1C<lb/>
Immunization Clinic being held at<lb/>
the Student Health Center-Up-<lb/>
date your tetanus now! Available<lb/>
without appointment. Thursday,<lb/>
April 4, 1991 from 8.00 a.m. to<lb/>
1130 a.m. and from 1:00 p.m. to<lb/>
100 p m. There is a $200 fee for<lb/>
tl.h vaccination.<lb/>
?0SQiC2QLiiLMUSlC<lb/>
April 3-7-ECU Jazz Festival fea-<lb/>
turing jazz greats Ethel Ennis and<lb/>
Earl Amett with the ECU Jazz En-<lb/>
sembte, under the direction of<lb/>
( arroll 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. I. 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/>
EDUCATIONAL 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/>
banksand other investors. Stafford<lb/>
Loans are for dependent or inde-<lb/>
pendent students and are based<lb/>
on financial need. Supplemental<lb/>
Loans are for independent self-<lb/>
supporting students are are not<lb/>
based on financial need. PLUS<lb/>
Loans are for parents of depen-<lb/>
dent students and are not based<lb/>
on financial need. For more infor-<lb/>
mation, write College Foundation<lb/>
Inc 2100 Yonkers Road, P.O. Box<lb/>
12100, Raleigh, NC 27W5-2100,or<lb/>
call (919) 8214771.<lb/>
STUDY ABROAD<lb/>
EXCHANGE PROGKAMS<lb/>
The Office of International Pro-<lb/>
grams is still accepting applica-<lb/>
tions for summer study abroad<lb/>
programs as well as exchange pro-<lb/>
grams for the academic year 1991 -<lb/>
1992. Students may 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 a t one of over 99 col leges<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' Comeby Brew ster A <lb/>
ti pick up an application or call<lb/>
757-6769 tor further information<lb/>
on the programs available.<lb/>
MCTUG OF WAR<lb/>
loin in the fun at ECU'S Annua<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 McTug ol War<lb/>
fun! AminimumofSl -OOdonation<lb/>
per participant is requested. For<lb/>
further information, contact<lb/>
Kendra Curtis at 757-6387or stop<lb/>
by 204 Christenbury Gvm.<lb/>
ECU5IUDENISURVEY<lb/>
During the week of April 8-15, a<lb/>
survey of student opinion of in-<lb/>
struction will be conducted at<lb/>
ECU. Questionnaires will be dis-<lb/>
tributed in classes with enroll-<lb/>
ments greater than five All stu-<lb/>
dents will have the opportunity to<lb/>
express opinions on the teaching<lb/>
effectiveness of their instructors.<lb/>
The survey will be conducted<lb/>
during class time and will take<lb/>
approximately 15 minutes to<lb/>
complete. Student participation is<lb/>
voluntary and no identities are<lb/>
requested. Instructors have been<lb/>
requested to leave the classnxim<lb/>
while thequestionnairesarebeing<lb/>
completed. Results of the survey<lb/>
will be distributed to instructors<lb/>
after final grades have been posted.<lb/>
The teaching effectiveness ques-<lb/>
tionnaire was created by the Fac-<lb/>
ulty Senate Committee for Teach-<lb/>
ing Effectiveness and the Office of<lb/>
Planning and Research. The re-<lb/>
sults of thesurvey,along with oOier<lb/>
information and factors, are used<lb/>
for administrative evaluation of<lb/>
the instructor by the supervising<lb/>
administrator within the depart-<lb/>
nu nl or division.<lb/>
COME DANCFj COME EAT!<lb/>
COME PLAY?<lb/>
? ' you ust can'l sleep. Lawn<lb/>
party to kick oft Rl iA week. Fea-<lb/>
tured bands and D.J. Free food.<lb/>
. omeeniov<lb/>
RESIDENT HALL<lb/>
ASSOCIATION<lb/>
I he Resident l lall Association fil-<lb/>
ing dates for offices in House<lb/>
Council and RH A are? April 15th-<lb/>
April 18th. There will bean inter-<lb/>
est session held April 15th at 5:00<lb/>
p.m. in the social room of<lb/>
MendenhaU. Resident Hall Asso-<lb/>
ciation elei tions will be from 9<lb/>
am 4p m. in each Residence Hall.<lb/>
Any questions, call 7574709.<lb/>
STUDENT NORIH<lb/>
CAROLINA ASSOCJAJ1QN<lb/>
0! EDUCATORS<lb/>
SN( Al- End-of-the- Year Gala will<lb/>
be Wednesday, April 10 at 5:00<lb/>
p m. in Speight 313. We will be<lb/>
honoring the seniors and electing<lb/>
new officers. There will also be<lb/>
refreshments and prizes! All Edu-<lb/>
cation majors are invited to join<lb/>
the fun.<lb/>
STUDENTSEQRJJiE<lb/>
MOTH U EARTH<lb/>
Students tor the Mother Earth will<lb/>
be meeting tonight at 5:30 in<lb/>
Mendenhall Student Center. We<lb/>
will be discussing plans for Bare-<lb/>
foot on the Mall and Earth Day! If<lb/>
you re interested in helping out,<lb/>
please attend!<lb/>
COMPOSER IN CONCERT<lb/>
?Performances on Keyboards!<lb/>
'Improv dance group performs<lb/>
ballet! Two works performed<lb/>
by wind ensemble and chorus!<lb/>
All composed by one person?<lb/>
Come see for yourself-Michael B.<lb/>
Dixon, composer in concert at<lb/>
Wright Auditorium, lues v-<lb/>
9, at 8:15.<lb/>
STUDENT IJNKffl<lb/>
PRODUCTIONS<lb/>
The Student Union Productions<lb/>
Cornrnitteeand the Residence Hall<lb/>
Association will he sponsorr<lb/>
Casino Night, Monday, April 8th<lb/>
al 8:00 p.m in the Multi-Purpose<lb/>
Room oi Mendenhall. ir your<lb/>
luck at winning a VCR or other<lb/>
prizes<lb/>
ADISCLT A BASKET<lb/>
Shine up your frisbees because<lb/>
registration for frisbeegoJf will be<lb/>
held on Tuesday, Apnl 4 (1t 5 on<lb/>
p.m. in BIO 103. All interested<lb/>
individuals must attend this<lb/>
meeting! For further information<lb/>
call 757-6387 or stop bv 204<lb/>
Christenburv Gvm.<lb/>
EOLLAWSOaETi:<lb/>
There will be a Law Society meet-<lb/>
ing April 8,1991 at 5:15p.m. in 218<lb/>
Ragsdale. Please attend: We will<lb/>
beelectingnew officers! SubPartv<lb/>
NCTEAOTLNG HOLLOW 5<lb/>
Attention Sophomore Fellows:<lb/>
Departure for the trip to New Bern<lb/>
and Tryon Palace is scheduled for<lb/>
12T5 p.m. on Apnl 8 All sopho-<lb/>
mores are asked to meet the bus in<lb/>
front of Speight. Utters concern-<lb/>
ing the trip should be in your mail-<lb/>
boxes.<lb/>
SEMQR INFORMATION<lb/>
CaMJVIIITEE<lb/>
Extra! Extra! Read all about it!<lb/>
Class rings, caps and gowns and<lb/>
most importantly information on<lb/>
the " slept with the Senior CW<lb/>
T-shirts and concert on Wednes-<lb/>
day,May8,1991. Where vou might<lb/>
ask, can I do this? Thursday, April<lb/>
4,1991 from 9 a.m4 p.m. in MSC<lb/>
Multi-PurposeRoom. Botha men's<lb/>
and women's class ring will be<lb/>
drawn for at 4 p.m. Sponsored by<lb/>
'? ns and IC I Studi 1 I S res<lb/>
For more information call <lb/>
4711<lb/>
PHI At PHA THETA HISTOR<lb/>
HONOR SOCIEH<lb/>
I he Phi Alpha Theta I n<lb/>
Honor Socu t along wi I th<lb/>
Women's Studies Pi 1<lb/>
<lb/>
sponsoringalectureon v man's<lb/>
Role in Public 1 hstorv" to be c<lb/>
bv Dr Fdie Mayo Curator ol<lb/>
litical History, American Hisl 1<lb/>
Museum, Smithsonian Insl<lb/>
The date is April 5 at 3:00 in<lb/>
Brewster B-201. Everyone is wel-<lb/>
come to attend.<lb/>
PAR TQRTHE COURSE<lb/>
Recreational Services will be<lb/>
sponsoring a golf classic tor the<lb/>
spring semester. Registration v<lb/>
take place on Wednesday, Apr<lb/>
10 at 5:00 pm in BIO 103<lb/>
CQURL SAND AND SEA!<lb/>
Its a new Intramural Sport! Ex-<lb/>
perience the thrill of volleyball on<lb/>
all terrains! Registration ior all-<lb/>
terrain volleyball will held on<lb/>
Wednesday, April 10 at 530 p m<lb/>
in BIO 103 Remember, a repre-<lb/>
sentative fmn each team must at-<lb/>
tend this meeting. For further in-<lb/>
formation call 757-6387 or stop K<lb/>
204 Chnstenbury Gvm. Get your<lb/>
team together to "tackle the de-<lb/>
ments" with Recreational Services<lb/>
All-Terrain Volleyball!<lb/>
ffiQMVJQLENIMHAVTQR<lb/>
LCU Recreational Services is<lb/>
sponsoring a wellness seminar<lb/>
entitled "Defending Yourself from<lb/>
Violent Behavior Public Safety<lb/>
Chief Keith Knox will be sharing<lb/>
felf-defense tips on April 10 from<lb/>
5:00-6.00 Do y0ursejf a favor d<lb/>
stop by this informative seminar<lb/>
n-eeo. harge. For further infor-<lb/>
mation call 757-6387.<lb/>
April 4,1991<lb/>
Soviet aero<lb/>
turn Wright<lb/>
into red cir<lb/>
By Heather Modli<lb/>
Stjff VVritfr<lb/>
??'???<lb/>
of this at horn <lb/>
. ime over th? ?  . -<lb/>
h  begai<lb/>
Tuesday i . ? ? ??  - ?<lb/>
ditoriun ?? ?<lb/>
Acn bal Res .? ?? : ? ?<lb/>
mime, contort i I acrol<lb/>
ms perfon ?? ? ? .<lb/>
<lb/>
.v had inattraci for a<lb/>
grouf s, and th ? ? <lb/>
the troupe with a si<lb/>
Mime At at . Elizarie a ?<lb/>
termed threi id lunnetl<lb/>
and heck tedl<lb/>
? . Especially entcrl<lb/>
were his 1 portraya<lb/>
The Artist ? jsioan" and<lb/>
"The Surgeon<lb/>
The "Mam. -srkas" anci "Rus-<lb/>
sian Folk Game -<lb/>
theaudieno  nbinabonoi<lb/>
nigglingarn ??<lb/>
pxTt'ormer VTadimir ,rr???? <lb/>
nized as Russia s Mationa '?-?<lb/>
wowed theau liencewithl<lb/>
and good humor<lb/>
Tamaraand ? ? - . ?<lb/>
ToetryinM I ? received audi-<lb/>
ence appn . per<lb/>
formed with ? .<lb/>
in sync with one mot!<lb/>
was evid nt in tl ? ?<lb/>
andthegyn . I ? ? ?<lb/>
their mover?<lb/>
'? ta ier Bei<lb/>
glingr itineappealed<lb/>
tK' children - .<lb/>
frunordift vitha<lb/>
soco - ??<lb/>
he wielded his ? . I the<lb/>
children on tl<lb/>
Corsi Irina V<lb/>
derrw<lb/>
ibilm- and dexterih<lb/>
Swan roul r perfon<lb/>
inspired i . ains<lb/>
from the aud<lb/>
'<lb/>
?.<lb/>
<lb/>
'<lb/>
<lb/>
<lb/>
'<lb/>
 .?<lb/>
aDir- ? ?<lb/>
with his ? ?  j<lb/>
changes<lb/>
cultivate a g <lb/>
withii  ?<lb/>
?<lb/>
? ? ? addei<lb/>
?<lb/>
mce<lb/>
mainta i<lb/>
.<lb/>
? i<lb/>
dance. "<lb/>
their hand<lb/>
drums ?<lb/>
-<lb/>
a lull bei n<lb/>
- n , ilkers he<lb/>
madev ?<lb/>
like<lb/>
the<lb/>
?<lb/>
sack-look<lb/>
Ir ? I<lb/>
Ghost Rider cru<lb/>
By Cliff Coffey<lb/>
sutr Writei<lb/>
One's poj possi-<lb/>
Uybejudj<lb/>
that person has ln n s, tl ugh,<lb/>
popularity is deten ?' ? the<lb/>
special appearances a ractei<lb/>
makts in other comics Ts bi<lb/>
true. Ghost Ridens the uneon tested<lb/>
most popular character Marvel<lb/>
Comics has<lb/>
Ghost Rider, besides his own<lb/>
title, can be found in Spiderman<lb/>
numbershandThornumbers4<lb/>
and 430, Marvel Comics Presents<lb/>
numbers M thnuch 71, Punisher<lb/>
War Journal numbers IN and J<lb/>
Doet(r Strange number 28, Qoak<lb/>
and Dagger number 18, Guardians<lb/>
of the Galaxy number 13, Quasar<lb/>
number 23 .and Moon Knight num-<lb/>
ber 25. This list oi appearances is<lb/>
onlv partial and takes place over<lb/>
onlv two or three months<lb/>
In his own title, which is con-<lb/>
sidered to be one of the hottest com-<lb/>
ics on the market, the Ghost Rider<lb/>
ndes a herv motorcvele and pn<lb/>
tects innocents with a vigilant cru-<lb/>
- ?  ii<lb/>
-<lb/>
rin<lb/>
There an I<lb/>
?<lb/>
If the con<lb/>
supp <lb/>
ptishes the i<lb/>
makes the wh<lb/>
hevabie<lb/>
that<lb/>
rum inl<lb/>
burn-u it<lb/>
around I<lb/>
cycle that has<lb/>
did happen <lb/>
would come uncH<lb/>
able be as they<lb/>
happv endings, nol<lb/>
no complete under<lb/>
unflinching look a<lb/>
bellv of a big citv<lb/>
ThenewGho<lb/>
the old Ghost Rdl<lb/>
when? the compal<lb/>
old Ghost Rider wf<lb/>
Hell and the new<lb/>
Cure rate for genii<lb/>
NutTOfjf n? Skin C?r Institute<lb/>
Sexually transmitted diseases<lb/>
(STEXs) are big news items these<lb/>
davs. But one ot the most common<lb/>
SIP'S genital warts seems to have<lb/>
been lost from the headlines in favor<lb/>
of more critical pmblems such as<lb/>
AIDS. A recent study has given<lb/>
new information on the best treat-<lb/>
ment for this troubling condition.<lb/>
Genital warts (known medi-<lb/>
cally as condylomas) are caused by<lb/>
a specific virus, the human<lb/>
papillomavirus (HPV), and usually<lb/>
occur on the outside of the genitals<lb/>
and in the perianal and anal region.<lb/>
When treated early, genital warts<lb/>
mav clear up and<lb/>
viruscan linger so<lb/>
occasional or freqv<lb/>
In the past, od<lb/>
men treatments t<lb/>
wastheapphcatio<lb/>
podophvlhn, a cl<lb/>
from the May Apt<lb/>
Now, accordu<lb/>
view from the Cei<lb/>
Control (CDC),<lb/>
freezing genital wj<lb/>
nitrogen-is the<lb/>
therapy on the<lb/>
ations of efficacy,<lb/>
fects and recurrenj<lb/>
In the review<lb/>
noted that clinical I<lb/>
<pb facs="00058277_0007"/><lb/>
April 4, 1991<lb/>
I<lb/>
PERSONALS<lb/>
- res will be awarded<lb/>
 rOGA! 10 Aft.<lb/>
lestoeach<lb/>
' 11 pm only.<lb/>
n PLEDGES OF<lb/>
CW nesto con-<lb/>
1NTENSE<lb/>
? g within per-<lb/>
N though ev-<lb/>
ked it perfectly<lb/>
pi rs vcrance will<lb/>
1 rhankyou,<lb/>
ik ng me proud to<lb/>
ncerelv, Terrible<lb/>
OWLAY CLASSIFIED<lb/>
- v<lb/>
I<lb/>
i u i. i;<lb/>
i'RI .ANCY<lb/>
IF.STING<lb/>
Prcun.mcinter<lb/>
? (HUH<lb/>
Sti :c<lb/>
N<lb/>
il j.r<lb/>
s W wnpin<lb/>
A nu.N<lb/>
tE<lb/>
jt it'<lb/>
and<lb/>
n on<lb/>
lor (Lass<lb/>
Wednes-<lb/>
? on might<lb/>
iav,Apnl<lb/>
m in V1SC<lb/>
thamens<lb/>
g will he<lb/>
w sired bv<lb/>
it Stores<lb/>
call 757-<lb/>
: HISTORY<lb/>
50CU n<lb/>
? ? a i listory<lb/>
? with the<lb/>
ram will be<lb/>
i re on "Woman's<lb/>
to be given<lb/>
iratorofPo-<lb/>
 .Tiuin History<lb/>
 man Institute.<lb/>
ril 5 at 3 CO in<lb/>
rvorte is wel-<lb/>
: I ML COURSE<lb/>
en ices will be<lb/>
. it classic tor the<lb/>
en r Registration will<lb/>
Wednesday, April<lb/>
0 p.m. in BIO 1<lb/>
Aias.VNDANDSEAJ<lb/>
it imural Sport! F.x-<lb/>
? nil .)?'volleyball on<lb/>
itration for all<lb/>
- all will held on<lb/>
"?pnl 10 at S 30 p.m.<lb/>
Remember, a repre-<lb/>
e from each team must at-<lb/>
eting I or further in-<lb/>
757-6387 or slop by<lb/>
iry Gym. Get your<lb/>
' to "tackle the ele-<lb/>
- rational Services<lb/>
rrain Volleyball!<lb/>
ULILNDLNG YOURSELf<lb/>
ERQM VIOLENT BEHAViQR<lb/>
Recreational Services is<lb/>
sP"r i wellness seminar<lb/>
entitled "Defending Yourself from<lb/>
Violent Behavior Public Safety<lb/>
Chief Kath Knox will be sharing<lb/>
Selfdefense tips on April 10 from<lb/>
S-00-6 00 Do yourself a favor and<lb/>
st0P by this informative seminar<lb/>
free of charge. For further infor-<lb/>
mation call 737-6387.<lb/>
Apwl<lb/>
4.1991<lb/>
QJJte ?ast (gqrultnian<lb/>
Soviet acrobats<lb/>
turn Wright<lb/>
into red circus<lb/>
By Heather Modlin<lb/>
staff Writer<lb/>
? mt mber kids, don't try any<lb/>
if home Words to this effect<lb/>
t r tho loudspeaker before<lb/>
 began.<lb/>
ida night at Wnght Au-<lb/>
m the 27-member Soviet<lb/>
Revue, complete with a<lb/>
ntortionist and acrobahc<lb/>
? rformed 16actS from folk<lb/>
? tightrope walking. The<lb/>
? in attraction for all age<lb/>
md the audience honored<lb/>
ne with a standing ovation<lb/>
? nale<lb/>
me Anatoly Elizanev per-<lb/>
ree acts during the show,<lb/>
ghted the audience with<lb/>
Especially entertaining<lb/>
humorous portrayals of<lb/>
st, 'The Musician" and<lb/>
;rgeon<lb/>
i Matnoshkas" and "Rus-<lb/>
lk (tames" acts entertained<lb/>
. 1 ence with a combination oi<lb/>
?i nd energetjcdancing. Star<lb/>
 p) vr Vladimir Serov, recog-<lb/>
 is Russia's National Artist,<lb/>
d the audience with his skill<lb/>
1 humor<lb/>
I amara and Scigei Kothzrov's<lb/>
ry in Motion" received audi-<lb/>
roval. The couple per-<lb/>
d with ease, their movements<lb/>
. x wi th one another. Their skill<lb/>
evident in the graceful flow,<lb/>
? egymnasticabilityevidentin<lb/>
movements.<lb/>
Alexander Berenshtein's jug-<lb/>
- utineappealod especially to<lb/>
hildren. Although beset with<lb/>
r difficulties, his talent with a<lb/>
 cer Kill and the skill with which<lb/>
Yielded his batons, kept the<lb/>
iren on the edge of their seats.<lb/>
( ontortionist Irina Mulik<lb/>
??rated considerable flex-<lb/>
? and dexterity in her 'The<lb/>
routine Her performance<lb/>
I ired awe and sympathy pains<lb/>
fr m the audience. "How can she<lb/>
do that?" was a popular question.<lb/>
"Comedy Acrobats" Anatoly<lb/>
Zuzigov and Alexander Bahirev<lb/>
delighted the audience with their<lb/>
deceptively inep-t attempts at gym-<lb/>
nastic achievement. Their farcical<lb/>
routine amused the voung and old<lb/>
alike.<lb/>
The "Slack Wire" nmtinedem-<lb/>
onstrated the skill of Vladimir<lb/>
Serova and his wife Inna. His de-<lb/>
termined smile, as he rode unicvele<lb/>
across the wire with a table full of<lb/>
china balanced atop his head,<lb/>
thrilled theaudience. Hiscombined<lb/>
feat of balancing on his head on top<lb/>
oi the unicycle, which was atop the<lb/>
wire, and then pedaling across the<lb/>
wire, was definitely a crowd fa-<lb/>
vorite.<lb/>
Ana tohPituhim's "Magic with<lb/>
a Difference" engaged theaudience<lb/>
with his inexplicable wardrobe<lb/>
changes on stage and his ability to<lb/>
cultivate a garden on the stage<lb/>
within seconds.<lb/>
Anatoly Yamahanov's "Me<lb/>
and My Ladder" routine thrilled<lb/>
the audience. He fell twice, but his<lb/>
perserverance and ingenuity<lb/>
maintained the crowd's enthusi-<lb/>
asm.<lb/>
"Gopak a Ukrainian folk<lb/>
dance, had the audience clapping<lb/>
their hands in participation. The<lb/>
drums of "Caucasian Rhvthms"<lb/>
pleased theaudience and provided<lb/>
a lull before the "Dagestan Tight-<lb/>
rope Walkers" began.<lb/>
The father and son team of<lb/>
Shamhal and N'uhtar Avakarov,<lb/>
complete wi th thei r whi te mop wigs,<lb/>
made walkmgon the tightrope seem<lb/>
like walking on the ground. Whin<lb/>
the younger Abakarov fell while<lb/>
executing a forward roll on top of<lb/>
the ore, he picked himself up. Then,<lb/>
he put on a blindfold and a potato<lb/>
sack-looking garment and pro-<lb/>
ceeded to walk across the tightrope<lb/>
in the darkened auditorium. Really<lb/>
now, he didn't have anything to<lb/>
prove to us<lb/>
Easter Weekend<lb/>
becomes 'Gut Fesf<lb/>
Photo Cour??v ot Th? Sovi?? Acrobatic R?vu?<lb/>
The audience at Wright Auditorium was held captive by the troop of<lb/>
Russian acrobats that was on assignment at ECU this week<lb/>
The best part oi the routine OC-<lb/>
curred when the elder Abakarov<lb/>
appeared to have fallen from the<lb/>
tightrope from atop his precarious<lb/>
perch upon a drum.<lb/>
His scream was convincing,<lb/>
buy after his first two revolutions<lb/>
around the tightrope, suspended<lb/>
by his feet, we knew that it had been<lb/>
rehearsed.<lb/>
On the whole, the Acrobatic<lb/>
Revue was an enjoyabte experience<lb/>
tor children and adults who enjoy<lb/>
the thrill of theoreusat any age. The<lb/>
show had something for everyone<lb/>
to enjoy.<lb/>
Special to The Fat Carolinian<lb/>
The traditional Myrtle Beach<lb/>
"Bud Fest" was rather appropriately<lb/>
dubbed "Cut Fest" by a group of<lb/>
Appalachian State University stu-<lb/>
dents this past weekend. Although<lb/>
Budweiser no longer sponsors this<lb/>
Easter weekend celebration, it<lb/>
doesn't stop thousands of high<lb/>
school and college students from<lb/>
heading to North Mvrtle Beach for<lb/>
four days of constant partying.<lb/>
Although the weather was<lb/>
somewhat dismal, students from<lb/>
ASU to ECU, and UGA to UVA<lb/>
congrega ted on the notonousOcean<lb/>
Dnvcof North Myrtle Beach. Bright<lb/>
"no vacancy" signs lit upmost hotel<lb/>
windows, and houses all up and<lb/>
down "O.D were packed with<lb/>
young men and women clad in<lb/>
different university sweatshirts.<lb/>
Ocean Drive itself was backed up<lb/>
with cars carrying kids with one of<lb/>
two things on their minds: alcohol<lb/>
and sate sex.<lb/>
Alcohol was everywhere: in<lb/>
houses, hotel rooms (which gener-<lb/>
ally slept 4 to a bed and 6 to the<lb/>
floor),inbarslikeCrazyZack's,and<lb/>
on the beach. Ocean Drive was an<lb/>
aluminium can collector's dream.<lb/>
'There was no alcohol, and no<lb/>
arrests responded North Myrtle<lb/>
Beach Chief of Police, Charles<lb/>
Sendlcr, when asked about this<lb/>
"Bud Paradise 1 noted a bit of<lb/>
sarcasm in his tone as he laughed<lb/>
about it. 'To be honest, it was no<lb/>
different than anv other Easter<lb/>
weekend The police department<lb/>
increased the number oi officers on<lb/>
patrol trom 9 patrols per shift in the<lb/>
dead oi winter, to 45 patrols tor<lb/>
weekends like this one. "As usual<lb/>
he continued, "the kids come from<lb/>
everywhere, and we do our KM to<lb/>
keep things under control<lb/>
The Myrtle Beach police kept<lb/>
691 people under control, at least<lb/>
for a little while, as they carted them<lb/>
to jail for everything from alcohol<lb/>
violations to public fighting. Ac-<lb/>
cording to Sendler, several were<lb/>
taken downtown for offenses such<lb/>
as indecent exposure, assault on<lb/>
officers, simpledrugpossessionand<lb/>
shoplifting. Sendler said about 80<lb/>
percent of those arrested were vio-<lb/>
lating of South Carolina's alcohol<lb/>
laws, and most of them were un-<lb/>
derage drinkers. No alcohol was<lb/>
allowed in thestnvtsoron the beach.<lb/>
And for those that got caught, they<lb/>
paid a prettv pennv.<lb/>
Not onlv did the average of-<lb/>
fender spend about three hours in<lb/>
holding cellsat the fail waiting to be<lb/>
processed and freed, but they spent<lb/>
a lot of cash to get out. Students<lb/>
caught with an open container of<lb/>
beer on the streets opted for a $68<lb/>
ticket; liquor, a stiff $100; and alco-<lb/>
hol on the beach, $216. That'sa lot of<lb/>
monev to spend on one dnnk.<lb/>
As you may believe, ECU un-<lb/>
dergraduates were part of the<lb/>
commotion and arrests. One ECU<lb/>
sophomore busted for liquor pos-<lb/>
session claimed, "It was only a<lb/>
hundred bucks for an experience<lb/>
I'll never forget. It won't go on my<lb/>
record, and, to be quite honest, we<lb/>
had fun in the process " She said<lb/>
that she wouldn't want to go<lb/>
through it again, though.<lb/>
Four ECU men were appre-<lb/>
hended whilednnkingbeennacar<lb/>
on Ocean Drive. "I poured mvbeer<lb/>
out on the floorboard. They couldn't<lb/>
bust me, so I had to bail everybody<lb/>
else out<lb/>
Another ECU junior was in-<lb/>
tercepted while trying to purchase<lb/>
beer with a fake l.D. She too, was<lb/>
taken to thoNorth Myrtle Beach jail,<lb/>
and paid a $100 ticket. An ECU<lb/>
female wascharged with assault on<lb/>
an officer. Her bond was over $700.<lb/>
Not e verve ne wa s on t he streets.<lb/>
Those that rented houses were left<lb/>
alone bv the police. "We pretty much<lb/>
partied in the house and on the deck<lb/>
facing O.D. We all had a blast, and<lb/>
none of us got into any trouble. I've<lb/>
seen a lot of it in the past, so we Wept<lb/>
it contained to the property asmuch<lb/>
as we could said an ECU senior.<lb/>
An Appalachian State rugbv<lb/>
player claimed that he "got a kick<lb/>
watchingotherkidsgethngarrested<lb/>
in the street nght below me<lb/>
Renters west not the only ones<lb/>
in the houses. Rocky lohnson of<lb/>
See Gut, page 8<lb/>
crusades with Moon Knight<lb/>
By Cliff Coffey<lb/>
Staff Writer<lb/>
 hv's popularity could possi-<lb/>
. v nidged bv how many friends<lb/>
? person ha In Comics, though,<lb/>
ilarity is determined by the<lb/>
tal appearances a character<lb/>
makes in other comics. This being<lb/>
mie. Ghost Rideris the uncontested<lb/>
most popular character Marvel<lb/>
Comics has.<lb/>
Ghost Rider, besides his own<lb/>
title, can be found in Spiderman<lb/>
nu mbers 6 and 7, Thor numbers429<lb/>
and 430, Marvel Comics Presents<lb/>
numbers 64 through 71, Punisher<lb/>
War journal numbers 29 and 30,<lb/>
I v h tor Strange number 28, Cloak<lb/>
and Dagger number 18, Guardians<lb/>
of the Galaxy number 13, Quasar<lb/>
nu mber 23, and Moon Knight num-<lb/>
ber 25. This list of appearances is<lb/>
only partial and takes place over<lb/>
onlv two or three months.<lb/>
In his own title, which is eon-<lb/>
s.dered to be one of the hottest com-<lb/>
cson the market, the Ghost Rider<lb/>
ndes a fiery motorcycle and pro-<lb/>
tects innocents with a vigilant cru-<lb/>
eltv towards evil doers. Flc shows<lb/>
no mercv as he brutally returns the<lb/>
criminals pain a thousand fold.<lb/>
Howard Mackie scripts The<lb/>
Ghost Rider and uses gntty realism<lb/>
and harshness to attract readers.<lb/>
There are no silver linings in this<lb/>
comic, and none are to be expected.<lb/>
If the comic seems depressing, ifs<lb/>
supposed to be. It not only accom-<lb/>
plishes the depressant quality, it<lb/>
makes the whole situation more be-<lb/>
lievable.<lb/>
Ifs true that no man will ever<lb/>
rum into a leather clad skeleton that<lb/>
bums with the fires of hell and rides<lb/>
around fighting crime on a motor-<lb/>
cycle that has fire as wheels, but if it<lb/>
did happen, the situation that man<lb/>
would come under could believ-<lb/>
ably be as they appear here. No<lb/>
happy endings, no finished battles,<lb/>
no complete understanding, just an<lb/>
unflinching lookatlife in theunder-<lb/>
belly of a big city.<lb/>
The new Ghost Rider looks like<lb/>
the old Ghost Rider, only there is<lb/>
where the comparison ends. The<lb/>
old Ghost Rider was a demon from<lb/>
Hell, and the new one is not. Johnny<lb/>
Blaze, the host of theold one's spirit<lb/>
(Zarathos), has begun his hunt ot<lb/>
the new one, who is hosted in the<lb/>
bixlv of Dan Ketch. Dan Ketch has<lb/>
had many problems in dealing with<lb/>
being the host oi a demon such as<lb/>
the Ghost Rider anthat comic dc vs<lb/>
an excellent job of portraying his<lb/>
turmoil. The meeting of these two<lb/>
men has been hinted at for a few<lb/>
issues and they will collide in Ghost<lb/>
Rider number 14.<lb/>
As far as the guest appearances,<lb/>
thev have proven to be unsatisfac-<lb/>
tory as far as dipicting Ghost Rider<lb/>
as he is in his own title but, that is<lb/>
always the problem with guest ap-<lb/>
pearances.<lb/>
Most have used him asa quiet,<lb/>
actions-speak-louder-than words,<lb/>
vigilante that has no regard for<lb/>
sents His anger iTTigainst the<lb/>
wrongful doings to innocence, and<lb/>
it is shown passionately, but fails to<lb/>
give anv indication of depth. True,<lb/>
the comic is Moon Knight's, but<lb/>
does that realty allow for shallow<lb/>
treatment of anv character?<lb/>
There are several things that<lb/>
can make a character popular. One<lb/>
is that his own book sells very well,<lb/>
which indicates good stones, good<lb/>
artwork, or both. Another reason is<lb/>
that the character is mysterious and<lb/>
shrouded in mystery, or that the<lb/>
use of thecharacter in guest appear-<lb/>
ances is handled well enough to<lb/>
spark an interest in the character's<lb/>
own title. In Ghost Rider's case, all<lb/>
of these come into play.<lb/>
GhostRideris written brilliantly<lb/>
bv Howard M ackie and the art team<lb/>
Vieiiaiue null naa m f  -  .  . i<lb/>
damage or destruction of personal of avierSaltares(penols)and Mark<lb/>
property. While this is some what Texeira (inks) has produced some<lb/>
true, his personality goes much<lb/>
deeper and this is only shown in his<lb/>
own comic.<lb/>
Moon Knight number 25 is a<lb/>
rare threat in its use of Ghost Rider.<lb/>
His appearance is used as a vehicle<lb/>
for anger, which is what he repre-<lb/>
tects innocents with a vigilant cru- neuww? , - ?<lb/>
Cure rate for genital warts on nse<lb/>
 i,4???rr?-KiiiMV onstratcd cure rates with i<lb/>
NutrogfM Skin Car Institute<lb/>
Sexually transmitted diseases<lb/>
(STDs) are'big news items these<lb/>
davs. But one of the most common<lb/>
STDs genital warts seems to have<lb/>
ban lost from the headlines in favor<lb/>
of more critical problems such as<lb/>
AIDS. A recent study has given<lb/>
new information on the best treat-<lb/>
ment for this troubling condition.<lb/>
Genital warts (known medi-<lb/>
cally as condylomas) are caused by<lb/>
a specific virus, the human<lb/>
papillomavirus(HPV),and usually<lb/>
occur on the outside of the genitals<lb/>
and in the perianal and anal region.<lb/>
When treated early, genital warts<lb/>
may clear up and not return; but the<lb/>
viruscan linger, sometimes causing<lb/>
occasional or frequent recurrences.<lb/>
In the past, one the most com-<lb/>
mon treatments for genital warts<lb/>
onsrrated cure rates with podo-<lb/>
phyllin ranging from 22 percent to<lb/>
77 percent, with recurrence rates as<lb/>
high as 74 percent. The rates of<lb/>
complete clearance of genital warts<lb/>
of the most striking and memorable<lb/>
art that hasappeared in a while. The<lb/>
art of the book relatesdirectly to the<lb/>
mixxl of the wnting and that is rare<lb/>
in the comic medium. Since the<lb/>
origin of the new Ghost Rider is<lb/>
unknown fully, that mystery is fuel<lb/>
for attraction.<lb/>
The jury is still out on whether<lb/>
ornotthecharacterofthenewGhost<lb/>
Rider can survive the excessive at-<lb/>
tention given to him currently.<lb/>
COMING UP<lb/>
was the application of a drugcalled withcryotherapy are63to88percent<lb/>
podophyllin, a chemical extracted with recurrence rates much lower-<lb/>
from the May Apple plant. only 21 to 39 percent.<lb/>
Now, according to a recent re- "In one study, fewer treatments<lb/>
view from the Centers for Disease were required to eradicate the warts<lb/>
Control (CDC), cryotherapy-or with cryotherapy that with podo-<lb/>
freezine genital warts with liquid phyllin" says Katherine M.Stone,<lb/>
nitrogen-is the recommended M.D.Qirucal Research Investigator<lb/>
therapy on the basis of consider-<lb/>
ations of efficacy, cost, adverse ef-<lb/>
fects and recurrence rates.<lb/>
In the review, the researchers<lb/>
noted that clinical trials have dem-<lb/>
withtheCDC<lb/>
Although electrodesiccation<lb/>
(destruction of the lesions with con-<lb/>
trolled high frequency electric cur-<lb/>
See Warts, page 8<lb/>
Attic<lb/>
Thursday<lb/>
Rev.BiUyCWirtz<lb/>
Friday-<lb/>
Left Wing Fascists<lb/>
Saturday<lb/>
Sidewinder<lb/>
New Deli<lb/>
Thursday<lb/>
The Popes<lb/>
Friday<lb/>
Mind Over<lb/>
Matter<lb/>
Saturday<lb/>
Sex Police<lb/>
qRocks<lb/>
Friday<lb/>
The Mood<lb/>
Saturday<lb/>
Locals Only<lb/>
Mendenhall<lb/>
Thursday<lb/>
Friday<lb/>
Saturday<lb/>
The Freshman<lb/>
Sunday<lb/>
Buckaroo Banzai<lb/>
<pb facs="00058277_0008"/><lb/>
4 1991<lb/>
PERSONALS<lb/>
 irdtxi<lb/>
II ! IH.I.s OF<lb/>
.<lb/>
priuid t<lb/>
CPIAYCLASSFIED<lb/>
lv 1 1<lb/>
 (Y<lb/>
( inter<lb/>
v ?<lb/>
-PMl<lb/>
?res<lb/>
 HlslOKi<lb/>
Ml I<lb/>
I RSE<lb/>
? ?r the fral r- will<lb/>
sda Apnl<lb/>
vndsta: port! Ex ? volleyball on ? . - tor all<lb/>
held on<lb/>
it 5 )0 p m<lb/>
a an pre ? team must at ? irther in ' 187 r stop by<lb/>
? I let your ? the ele rw Services<lb/>
INO YOURSELF LLM BLILWIOR<lb/>
pril<lb/>
' ? ?<lb/>
than<lb/>
; will be<lb/>
! il Services is<lb/>
? llness seminar<lb/>
' ? ling Yourself from<lb/>
? ? ? i Public Safety<lb/>
' Keith Knox will be sharing<lb/>
' - tips on Apnl 10 from<lb/>
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informative seminar<lb/>
 ' barge hr further infor-<lb/>
mant ?  757-638<lb/>
A ri 4.799<lb/>
dhc East (CaruHntan<lb/>
7<lb/>
Soviet acrobats<lb/>
turn Wright<lb/>
into red circus<lb/>
1 leather Modlin<lb/>
Matt Writer<lb/>
h i kids don't tr any<lb/>
. Words to this effect<lb/>
idspeaker before<lb/>
ght at Wright An<lb/>
member Soviet<lb/>
C mplete with a<lb/>
? ? mist and ai robatk<lb/>
? rmod 16a tsfromfolk<lb/>
?? ; walking ITie<lb/>
ittra tion tor all age<lb/>
? . audi n. c honored<lb/>
i standing ov ation<lb/>
iti l Elizariev per-<lb/>
eactsd iring the show.<lb/>
? - ?. ?? e audience with<lb/>
. - - ?' . ? ntcrtaining<lb/>
n ? us portrayals of<lb/>
The Musician' and<lb/>
' ' itrioshkas" and "Ruv<lb/>
? s acts entertained<lb/>
with a combination of<lb/>
I nergeticdancing.Star<lb/>
? . tdimir Serov, recog-<lb/>
isia s National Artist<lb/>
mdience with his skill<lb/>
?nor<lb/>
ara and Seigei KotUzrov s<lb/>
n Motion' received audi-<lb/>
? . il rhe couple per-<lb/>
ease, their movements<lb/>
ne another. Their skill<lb/>
nt in the graceful flow,<lb/>
?? ? asticabilityevidentin<lb/>
n ents.<lb/>
zander Berenshtein's jug-<lb/>
o, pealed especially to<lb/>
1 though beset with<lb/>
. ties, his talent with a<lb/>
ind the skill with which<lb/>
? - batons, kept the<lb/>
the i ?dee of their seats.<lb/>
? rti nist Irina Mulik<lb/>
? ?? considerable flex-<lb/>
? ii uteriry in her "The<lb/>
? ? Her performance<lb/>
and svmpathv pains<lb/>
hence "I low can she<lb/>
do that was a popular question<lb/>
"Comedy Acrobats" Anatolv<lb/>
Zuzigov and Alexander Bahirev<lb/>
delighted the audience with their<lb/>
deceptively inept attempts at gym-<lb/>
nastic achievement ITtur farcical<lb/>
routine amused the young and old<lb/>
alike<lb/>
The Slack Wire" rout<lb/>
ine dem-<lb/>
onstrated the skill of Vladimir<lb/>
Senna and his wife Irina. His de-<lb/>
termined smile asherodeunicvcle<lb/>
,k ross the wire with a table full of<lb/>
china balanced atop his head.<lb/>
thrilled theaudience. Hiscombined<lb/>
feat of balancing on his head on top<lb/>
of theunicvcle. which was a top the<lb/>
wire, and then pedaling across the<lb/>
wire, was definitely a crowd fa-<lb/>
vorite.<lb/>
Anatolv Pituhim's"Magic with<lb/>
a Difference 'engaged theaudience<lb/>
with his inexplicable wardrobe<lb/>
changes on stage and his ability to<lb/>
cultivate a garden on the stage<lb/>
within seconds<lb/>
Anatolv Yamahanov's "Me<lb/>
and My Ladder" routine thrilled<lb/>
the audience. He fell twice, but his<lb/>
perserverance and ingenuity<lb/>
maintained the crowd's enthusi-<lb/>
asm<lb/>
"Gopak a Ukrainian folk<lb/>
dance, had the audience clapping<lb/>
their hands in participation, rhe<lb/>
drums ot "Caucasian Rhythms"<lb/>
pleased the audience and provided<lb/>
a lull before the "Dagestan Tight<lb/>
rope1 Walkers" began.<lb/>
The father and son team of<lb/>
Shamhal and N'uhtar Avakarov,<lb/>
complete with their whitemop wigs,<lb/>
made walkingen the tightrope seem<lb/>
like walking on the ground. When<lb/>
the younger Abakarov fell while<lb/>
executing a forward roll on top of<lb/>
theore, he picked himself up. Fhen,<lb/>
he put on a blindfold and a potato<lb/>
sack-looking garment and pro-<lb/>
ceeded to walk across the tightrope<lb/>
in the darkened auditorium Really<lb/>
now. he didn't have anything to<lb/>
prove to us.<lb/>
Easter Weekend<lb/>
becomes 'Gut Fesf<lb/>
The audience at Wn. I ?? . Woriui<lb/>
Russian acrobats that was on as?<lb/>
rhe best part f the i urine ex<lb/>
curred when the ? lei ikarov<lb/>
appeared to hav fa '?n the<lb/>
tightrope from atop his re trious<lb/>
perch upon a di<lb/>
1 jis sen am ivas o ?'<lb/>
buy after his first two n . itii ns<lb/>
around the tightrope, suspended<lb/>
Special to rht East Carolinian<lb/>
The traditional Mvrtle Bea h<lb/>
"BudFest" wasratherappropriately<lb/>
dubbed .ut Fest" by a group of<lb/>
Appalachian State University stu<lb/>
dents this past weekend Although<lb/>
Budweiscr no longer sponsors this<lb/>
Easter weekend celebration, it<lb/>
doesn t stop thousands of high<lb/>
st hool anvi college students from<lb/>
heading to North Mvrtle Beach tor<lb/>
tour days of constant partying<lb/>
Although the weather was<lb/>
s4-mewh.it dismal, students from<lb/>
As! to ECU, and UGA to UVA<lb/>
congregatedonthenotonous V can<lb/>
Driveof North MyrtleBeach Bright<lb/>
"novacar ' signslitupmost hotel<lb/>
windows, and houses all up ai I<lb/>
dov n "O.D were p i ked w it<lb/>
young men and women clad in<lb/>
different university sweatshirts<lb/>
Ocean Drive itself was backed up<lb/>
with cars carrying kids with one of<lb/>
two things on their minds al? ohol<lb/>
and. safe sex<lb/>
Alcohol was everywhere: in<lb/>
houses, hotel rooms which gener<lb/>
ally slept 4 to a bod aixi to the<lb/>
floor),inbarslikeCrazyZack's and<lb/>
on the beach. Ocean Drive was an<lb/>
aluminium can collector's dream.<lb/>
"There was no alcohol, d no<lb/>
arrests responded North Mvrtle<lb/>
Beach Chief of Police, Charles<lb/>
Sendlcr, when asked about this<lb/>
"Hud Paradise I noted a bit of<lb/>
sarcasm in his tone as he laughed<lb/>
about it To he honest, it was I<lb/>
different than any other Easter<lb/>
weekend The police department<lb/>
increased the number of officers on<lb/>
patrol from 9 patrols per shift in the<lb/>
dv,d of winh r, to 4 patrols ' i<lb/>
weekends like this one. "As usual<lb/>
he continued, "the kidscome from<lb/>
everywhere,and wedoourbest to<lb/>
keep things under control<lb/>
The Mvrtle Beach police kept<lb/>
jfeet we knew that it had been 691 people under control, at least<lb/>
 irsej for a little while, as they carted them<lb/>
(n the whole, the Ac robatic<lb/>
Photo Cour?sy at Tha Soviet AcroDatic Revu?<lb/>
 ? iptive by the troop of<lb/>
jnmenl it ;  this week<lb/>
B Cliff Coffey<lb/>
Staff Writer<lb/>
I<lb/>
 pularity could possi-<lb/>
 . how manv friends<lb/>
rsoi : is.ln omics,though,<lb/>
letermined by the<lb/>
ii ; . ir in es a character<lb/>
? n ither comics. This being<lb/>
. ?Rideristheuncontested<lb/>
popular character Marvel<lb/>
s has<lb/>
,host Rider, besides his own<lb/>
? he found in Spiderman<lb/>
n rs6aiKi7,Thorrtumbers429<lb/>
130, Marvel Comics Presents<lb/>
bers M thnuigh 71, Punisher<lb/>
- loumal numbers 29 and 30,<lb/>
? r Strange number 28, Cloak<lb/>
.v.er number 18, Guardians<lb/>
ialaxy number 13, Quasar<lb/>
hi r?1and Moon Knight num-<lb/>
I"his list of appearances is<lb/>
partial and takes place over<lb/>
two or three months.<lb/>
In his own title, which is con-<lb/>
? red to he one of the hottest com-<lb/>
r the market, the Ghost Rider<lb/>
le a fiery motorcycle and pro-<lb/>
pi 's innocents with a vigilant cru<lb/>
elty towards evil doers He shows<lb/>
no mercy as he brutally returns the<lb/>
cnminals pain a thousand fold.<lb/>
Howard Mackie scripts The<lb/>
Ghost Rider and uses gritty realism<lb/>
and harshness to attract readers<lb/>
There are no silver linings in this<lb/>
comic, and none are to ho expected<lb/>
If the comic seems depressing, it's<lb/>
supposed to be. It not only accom-<lb/>
plishes the depressant quality, it<lb/>
makes the whole situation more be-<lb/>
lievable.<lb/>
It's true that no man will ever<lb/>
mm into a leather clad skeleton that<lb/>
bums with the firesof hell and rides<lb/>
around fighting crime on a motor-<lb/>
cvcle that has fire as wheels, but if it<lb/>
did happen, the situation that man<lb/>
would come under could boliev-<lb/>
ably be as they appear here. No<lb/>
happv endings, no finished battles,<lb/>
no complete understanding just an<lb/>
unflinchinglookatlifeintheunder-<lb/>
belly of a big city.<lb/>
The new Ghost Rider iookslike<lb/>
the old Ghost Rider, only there is<lb/>
where the comparison ends. The<lb/>
old Ghost Rider was a demon horn<lb/>
Hell, and the new one is not johnny<lb/>
Blaze, the host of the oldn pint<lb/>
(Zarathos), has begi nt of<lb/>
the new one, who is ho ted 1 the<lb/>
biH.lv of I an Ket h. 1 an K?? h has<lb/>
had manv pn tblemsin dealing with<lb/>
being the host of a demon su h as<lb/>
theC .host Rider anthat comic does<lb/>
an excellent job of portraying his<lb/>
turmoil. The meeting ot these two<lb/>
men has been hinted at tor a few<lb/>
issuesand they will collide in Ghost<lb/>
Rider number 14<lb/>
Asfarastheguestappearances<lb/>
they have proven to be unsatisfac-<lb/>
tory as tar as dipicting (.host Rider<lb/>
as he is in his own title but, that is<lb/>
always the problem with guest ap-<lb/>
pearances.<lb/>
Most have used him asaquiet,<lb/>
actions-speak -louder-than words,<lb/>
vigilante that has no regard for<lb/>
damage or destruction of personal<lb/>
property. While this is some what<lb/>
true, his personality goes much<lb/>
deeper arid this is only shown in his<lb/>
own comic.<lb/>
Moon Knight number 25 is a<lb/>
rare threat in its use of Ghost Rider.<lb/>
His appearance is used as a vehn le<lb/>
for anger, which is what he repre-<lb/>
tects innocents with a vigilant cru- neu?uu??-?  <lb/>
Cure rate for genital warts on nse<lb/>
 i?,n.inMr.imhnti)n onstrated cure rates with i<lb/>
Nutrian? Skin Car Institute<lb/>
Sexually transmitted diseases<lb/>
(STDs) are big news items these<lb/>
lays But one of the most common<lb/>
r-s genital warts seems to have<lb/>
beenk -St I n ?n the headlines in favor<lb/>
I more critical problems such as<lb/>
AIDS A recent study has given<lb/>
new information on the best treat-<lb/>
ment for this troubling condition.<lb/>
Genital warts (known medi-<lb/>
cally as condylomas) are caused by<lb/>
a specific virus, the human<lb/>
pap,llomavirus(HPV),and usually<lb/>
occur on the outside of the genitals<lb/>
and in the perianal and anal region.<lb/>
When treated early, genital warts<lb/>
may dear upand not return; but the<lb/>
viruscan linger, sometimoscausing<lb/>
occasional or frequent recurrences.<lb/>
In the past, one the most com-<lb/>
mon treatments for genital warts<lb/>
was the application of a drug called<lb/>
podophyllin, a chemical extracted<lb/>
from the May Apple plant.<lb/>
Now, according to a recent re-<lb/>
view from the Centers for Disease<lb/>
Control (CDC), cryotherapy-or<lb/>
freezing genital warts with liquid<lb/>
nitrogen-is the recommended<lb/>
therapy on the basis of consider-<lb/>
ations of efficacy, cost, adverse ef-<lb/>
fects and recurrence rates.<lb/>
In the review, the researchers<lb/>
noted that clinical trials have dem-<lb/>
onstrated cure rates with podo<lb/>
phyllin ranging from 22 percent to<lb/>
77 percent, with recurrence rates as<lb/>
high as 74 percent. The rates of<lb/>
complete clearance of genital warts<lb/>
wnthciAothcrapvarco3to88 percent<lb/>
with recurrence rates much lower-<lb/>
onh21 to 39 percent.<lb/>
"Inone study, few er treatments<lb/>
were required to eradicate the warts<lb/>
with crvotherapy that with ptxlo-<lb/>
phyllin' says (Catherine M. Stone,<lb/>
M.DClinical Research Investigator<lb/>
with the CDC<lb/>
Although electrodesiccation<lb/>
(destruction of the lesions with con-<lb/>
trolled high frequency electnc cur-<lb/>
See Warts, page 8<lb/>
? isanenjoyablt ? perience<lb/>
? ? ? ?'  i  idults who enjoy<lb/>
IIoft ?'  '? gP 'v<lb/>
show had sometl tor everyone<lb/>
to enjoy<lb/>
n Knight<lb/>
sents His ai ? r is against the<lb/>
w rongful domc.s to innoccn e and<lb/>
it is shown passionately, but fails to<lb/>
give any indication of depth. I rue,<lb/>
the comic is Moon Knight's, but<lb/>
does that really allow tor shallow<lb/>
treatment of any character?<lb/>
! here an' several things that<lb/>
can nuke a (h iracter popular. One<lb/>
is that his own Ixxik sells very well,<lb/>
w hi h indicates gcxxi stories, good<lb/>
artwork,or both. Another reason is<lb/>
that the character ismysteriousand<lb/>
shrouded in mystery, or that the<lb/>
use of the character in guest appear-<lb/>
ances is handled well enough to<lb/>
spark an interest in the character's<lb/>
own title In (host Rider's case, all<lb/>
of these come into play.<lb/>
Ghost RidcTis written brilliantly<lb/>
by 1 toward Mackie and the art team<lb/>
of Javier Saltares(pencib)and Mark<lb/>
Texeira (inks) has produced some<lb/>
of the most striking and memorable<lb/>
art that hasappearedina while.The<lb/>
artofthebookrelatesdirecthtome<lb/>
minx! of the writing and that is rare<lb/>
in the comic medium. Since the<lb/>
origin of the new Chost Rider is<lb/>
unknown fully, that mystery is fuel<lb/>
for attraction.<lb/>
The urv is still out on whether<lb/>
ornotthechararterofthenewGhost<lb/>
Rider can survive the excessive at-<lb/>
tention given to him currently.<lb/>
to kuI tor everything from alcohol<lb/>
violations to public fighting Ac-<lb/>
cording to Sendler, several were<lb/>
taken dov ntown t. ?r offenses six h<lb/>
as indecent exposure, assault on<lb/>
officers, simpledrug possession and<lb/>
shoplifting Sendler said about HO<lb/>
percent of those arrested were vio-<lb/>
lating of South Carolina's alcohol<lb/>
laws, and most oi them wen- un-<lb/>
derage drinkers No alcohol was<lb/>
allowed in thestreets Ton the beach<lb/>
nd tor those that got caught, they<lb/>
paid a pretty penny<lb/>
Not only did tin' average of-<lb/>
fender spend about three hours m<lb/>
holding cells at the jail waiting to be<lb/>
pro. i-ssti and freed,but they spent<lb/>
,i lot of cash to get out Students<lb/>
i augl ' ??- ith a open container ot<lb/>
Nit on the streets opted tor a $68<lb/>
? ket; liquor, a stiff $100; and alco-<lb/>
onthelx ich $216 lhat'salotot<lb/>
m ?m v to spend on one drink.<lb/>
As vi u may believe, bed un-<lb/>
dergraduates were part ot the<lb/>
n and arrests t ne E( L<lb/>
 I more busted tor liquor pos-<lb/>
session claimed. It was only a<lb/>
hundred buck- tor an evpenenoe<lb/>
I'll nev r forget. It n'tg<lb/>
record, and. to be quite st, we<lb/>
had fun in tt pro ' il<lb/>
that she wouldn't want t i .<lb/>
through it again, though<lb/>
four ECU men were appte<lb/>
bended while drinking beer in a car<lb/>
on( Xvan Drive. "1 poured mvhoT<lb/>
out on the floorboard TheycoulcbVt<lb/>
bust me, so 1 had t hail everybody<lb/>
else out<lb/>
Ano her E U junior was in-<lb/>
tercepted while trin; to purchase<lb/>
beer with a fake IP She too, was<lb/>
? ikentotheNorthMyrtleBeachjail<lb/>
and paid a $100 ticket An ECU<lb/>
fi rnali ??? tscharged with assault on<lb/>
anofficer Herfxnd wasover$700<lb/>
Not even, one was. .nthestn1s<lb/>
Those that rented houses were left<lb/>
akmeby the p. lice. "We pretty much<lb/>
paruedinthehouseandonthedeck<lb/>
(icingO D We all had a blast and<lb/>
none of usgot intoany tnuble I've<lb/>
seen a lot of it in the past, so we kept<lb/>
itcontained to the property asmuch<lb/>
as we could, siid an ECU senior.<lb/>
An Appalachian State nighv<lb/>
player claimed that he 'got a kick<lb/>
hingotherkidsgetting arrested<lb/>
in the street right below me "<lb/>
Renters were not the only ones<lb/>
in the houses Rocky lohnson o<lb/>
See Gut. page 8<lb/>
COMING UP<lb/>
AtHc<lb/>
Thursday<lb/>
Rev. Billy C.Wirtz<lb/>
Friday<lb/>
Left Wing Fascists<lb/>
Saturday<lb/>
Sidewinder<lb/>
New Deli<lb/>
Thursday<lb/>
The Popes<lb/>
Friday<lb/>
Mind Over<lb/>
Matter<lb/>
Saturday<lb/>
Sex Police<lb/>
CXgocks<lb/>
Friday<lb/>
The Mood<lb/>
Saturday<lb/>
Locals Only<lb/>
Mendenhall<lb/>
Thursday<lb/>
Friday<lb/>
Saturday<lb/>
The Freshman<lb/>
Sunday<lb/>
Buekaroo Banzai<lb/>
<pb facs="00058277_0009"/><lb/>
8 ?ht gaat (Earollnfan<lb/>
April 4,1991<lb/>
White Lion releases Mane Attraction<lb/>
Let's jump right into the metal news with some info on new<lb/>
releases that should be hitting stores this month and in the months<lb/>
ahead.<lb/>
White Lion will be roaring back into the metal market this month<lb/>
with their fourth release (but only their third for Atlantic Records),<lb/>
Mane Attraction. Metal Church charges back with their new record,<lb/>
The Human Factor, out in stores now, along with Enuff 'Z Nuff and<lb/>
their new-found look and Strength LP. Other releases include Mr. Big's<lb/>
long-awaited second album. Lean Into It, and Bang Tango's Danciri<lb/>
on Coab. Both albums are due in May or late spring.<lb/>
Cinderella is set to begin their "Heartbreak Station" tour. Un-<lb/>
fortunately, the Philly boys tour plans fell through last month with<lb/>
the BulletBoys and Lynch Mob. Rumors have it that Nelson may be<lb/>
the opening act for the tour. Still riding high with their After the Rain<lb/>
LP, Nelson may have trouble mixing their fans with the Cinderella<lb/>
crowd. I'll definitely be there to check this one out. (It's kind of like<lb/>
having Trixter open up for Sepultura, huh?!?!?!?!) Metal Notes will<lb/>
keep you posted on up-and-coming dates in the North Carolina<lb/>
Virginia area.<lb/>
Ozzy Osboume is still working on his new opus, due out this<lb/>
year. He'll be getting help from Lemmy of Motorhead fame and, get<lb/>
this, Sinead O'Connor. Hey, it was bound to happen, especially after<lb/>
Aerosmith teamed up with Run DMC a few years ago.<lb/>
Watch out for Scatterbrain'snew video "Down With the Ships<lb/>
which con tains a medley of popularguitarriffs,and David Lee Roth's<lb/>
"Sensible Shoes<lb/>
Bassist Geezer Butler has repined Black Sabbath after his de-<lb/>
parture from OzzVs band last year.<lb/>
Steve Vai is currently producing the debut LP for Thomas<lb/>
McRocklin, the junior guitar wiz who played LittleStevie Vai in Vai's<lb/>
video "Audience is Listening<lb/>
Tyketto is a new foursome from the Big Apple that should be<lb/>
catching the metal industry's attention in the next few months.<lb/>
Comprised of vocalist Danny Vaughn, guitarist Brooke St. James,<lb/>
drummer Michael Clayton and bassist Jimi Kennedy, Tyketto will<lb/>
release Don't Come Easy on A&amp;M Records this month. The first<lb/>
videosingle will be for thecut "Forever Young which can be heard<lb/>
on radio stations across the country. If the vocals sound familiar, it's<lb/>
probably because you may have heard Vaughn sing for Pete Wav's<lb/>
1986 effort (after UFO) Waysted.<lb/>
Vile Existence, North Carolina's answer to deathcore, recently<lb/>
shot some promotional photosin a graveyard. The East Carolinian will<lb/>
probe deeper into the musical minds of the gruesome foursome in a<lb/>
future article. Stay tuned.<lb/>
Anthrax screamer Joey Belladonna recently sang the national<lb/>
anthem at the annual Truck and Tractor Pull at New York's Madison<lb/>
SquareGarden. Meanwhile,therestofthebandisgearingupfortheir<lb/>
first headlining tour in the States.<lb/>
Until next week, play it loud or don't play it at all!<lb/>
? Compiled by "Dizzy" Deanna Nevgloski<lb/>
Gut<lb/>
Continue from page 13<lb/>
5601 Ocean Drive, brought 2 of his<lb/>
college-aged children, 4 of their<lb/>
friends, and his wife to their North<lb/>
Myrtle Beach home last Friday. He<lb/>
likes the idea of everyone celebrat-<lb/>
ing on Ocean Drive. "I think it's<lb/>
great. I did it when I was in college<lb/>
and I bring my own kids down<lb/>
now The only thing that really<lb/>
bothers Johnson is all of the<lb/>
Warts<lb/>
rent) is as efficient as cryotherapy,<lb/>
electrodesiccation requires injection<lb/>
of anesthetic agents locally which<lb/>
may make many patients shy away<lb/>
from that procedure.<lb/>
Laser therapy and treatment<lb/>
with interferon has also been re-<lb/>
viewed. The results of treatment<lb/>
with interferon, which is much more<lb/>
"whooin' and hoUenri He's usu-<lb/>
ally in bed by midnight, and all of<lb/>
the yelling keeps him up. Johnson<lb/>
was also concerned about the<lb/>
throwing of beer cans in the streets.<lb/>
"Godown to the maindragof O.D'<lb/>
tomorrow he explained, "beer<lb/>
cans will be everywhere. If yall<lb/>
were smart, you'd save them and<lb/>
sell them for 24 cents a pound<lb/>
Continued from page 13<lb/>
April 4,1991<lb/>
expensive, have been much less im-<lb/>
pressive than other therapies. The<lb/>
resultsof laser surgery depend upon<lb/>
the skill of the surgeon. Laser<lb/>
therapy is also expensive, and not<lb/>
available in most treatment centers.<lb/>
Dr. Stone and her colleagues<lb/>
emphasize that people with genital<lb/>
warts should avoid sex.<lb/>
Thurs: Rev. Billy C. Wirtz<lb/>
ATTIC<lb/>
752-7303<lb/>
209 East<lb/>
Fifth Si.<lb/>
An Evening of<lb/>
outrageous music<lb/>
and comedy<lb/>
Fri: TOXIC POPSICLE &amp;i?rr?c rAstsr$<lb/>
(Sunshine alternative promotions)<lb/>
Sat:<lb/>
East<lb/>
Coast<lb/>
Powerhouse<lb/>
1. Jesus Jones ? Doubt<lb/>
2. Dinosaur, Jr. ? Green Mind<lb/>
3. R.E.M. ? Out of Time<lb/>
4. Pop Will Eat Itself ? Cure for Sanity<lb/>
5. Godfathers ? Unreal World<lb/>
6. Kitchens of Distinctions ? Strange Free World<lb/>
7. Drivin' &amp; Cryin' ? Fly Me Courageous<lb/>
8. Screaming Trees ? Uncle Anesthesia<lb/>
9. Dave Stewart &amp; The Spiritual Cowboys<lb/>
10. Royal Crescent Mob ? Midnight Rose's<lb/>
11. The Samples<lb/>
12. Rhythm Corps ? The Future's Not What It Used<lb/>
To Be<lb/>
13. Ride ? Nowhere<lb/>
May Grads: NO MONEY DOWN ON NEW CARS!<lb/>
Call ALEX LONG for details<lb/>
BUICK<lb/>
756-1877<lb/>
mazDa<lb/>
GRANT BUICK-MAZDA<lb/>
FOSDICKS<lb/>
1890 SEAFOOD<lb/>
756-2011<lb/>
Lunch only<lb/>
Small Shrimp<lb/>
Platter<lb/>
onlv<lb/>
$2.99<lb/>
Suft-Fri<lb/>
Beverage not included<lb/>
Expires: 4-25-91<lb/>
756-2011<lb/>
Buy one<lb/>
Regular Shrimp<lb/>
Platter at $6.50<lb/>
Get the 2nd<lb/>
Regular Shrimp<lb/>
Platter FREE<lb/>
Good anytime<lb/>
Hecragc not included<lb/>
Expires: 4-25-91<lb/>
Phi Mu Alpha Sinfonia Fraternity of America<lb/>
Zeta Psi Chapter<lb/>
The Student Union Minority Arts Committe<lb/>
in conjunction with<lb/>
The East Carolina Jazz Ensemble<lb/>
Present<lb/>
the 1991 Eastern N.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<lb/>
wwP<lb/>
m4j<lb/>
Pl ?-an?<lb/>
Ar<lb/>
?(&amp;?( St-141fm<lb/>
4 ,L<lb/>
Earl Arnette<lb/>
Since 1980, Mr.Arnett has free-lanced as a writer, producer and media<lb/>
consultant. He has produced two albums and numerous concerts for his singer wife, Ethel<lb/>
Ennis. From 1984 to 1988 he developed and operated Ethel's Place, an internationally<lb/>
known Baltimore restaurant and music club now known as blues ally. He is also an ad-<lb/>
junct, liberal arts faculty member at the University of Baltimore.<lb/>
International acclaim came to Ethel Ennis in 1958, when ? after a narjc .vide search?<lb/>
Benny Goodman selected her as the female vocalist for an all-star band which toured Western<lb/>
Europe and became the American highlight at the Brussels Worlds Fair. By the mid-1960's<lb/>
Ethel was the most celebrated jazz-oriented singer from Baltimore since Billie Holiday (who<lb/>
incidentally acknowledged her as "a musical singer with the great voice who doesn't fake)<lb/>
?Schedule of Events<lb/>
April 4th 11 AM Lecture -Room 101- Ethel Ennis 'Women in Jazz, Jazz Vocalists"<lb/>
1 PM Lecture -Room 101- Earl Arnette 'Music Business"<lb/>
April 5th 9 PM In Concert -AJ Fletcher Recital Hall- Ethel Ennis with the East Carolina University Jazz Ensemble<lb/>
April 6th Jazz Ensemble Day -ECU Central Campus Mall-<lb/>
10 AM ECU Jazz Bones, directed by George Broussard<lb/>
10:45 AM ECU Contemporary Jazz Ensemble, directed by Paul Tardif<lb/>
11:45 AM ECU Jazz Ensemble (B), directed by Dennis Alleman<lb/>
1:30 PM University of District of Columbia, directed by Calvin Jones<lb/>
2:30 PM TBA<lb/>
3:30 PM ECU Jazz Ensemble (A), directed by Carroll Dashlell<lb/>
In case of rain, activities will begin at 1:30 PM in the Fletcher School of Music Recital Hall.<lb/>
CONCERT<lb/>
April 7th ECU Jazz Ensemble 8:15 PM Wright Auditorium<lb/>
Pirates lo<lb/>
By Kerry Nester<lb/>
Assistant Sports Editor<lb/>
ECU traveled to Raleigh to take<lb/>
on theWolfpack Tuesday afternoon<lb/>
under crystal blue skies and a per-<lb/>
fect afternoon for baseball. The Pi-<lb/>
rates were trying to pick up their<lb/>
first win this season against a Big<lb/>
Four team.<lb/>
After much success the past few<lb/>
years against Atlantic Coast Con-<lb/>
ference teams, its somet hi ng special<lb/>
anytime ECU matches up against<lb/>
an ACC foe.<lb/>
Unfortunately for Pirate fans,<lb/>
ECU managed only five hits and<lb/>
dropped its 11 th game of the season<lb/>
to N.C. State.<lb/>
N.C. State jumped out to an<lb/>
early six-run lead after only two<lb/>
innings of play. ECU freshmen left-<lb/>
hander Johnny Beck surrendered<lb/>
two unearned runs in the first inning<lb/>
to theWolfpack off twoPirateerrors.<lb/>
In the second inning, N.C. State<lb/>
ca pi tal ized on fi ve hi ts, scori ng fou r<lb/>
runs, including a ground-rule<lb/>
double from Jeff Pierce and a solo<lb/>
home run from Steve Shi ngledecker.<lb/>
The Pirates finally got on the<lb/>
board with three runs coming in the<lb/>
fourth inning. N.C Sta te head coach<lb/>
Ray Tanner pulled starting pitcher<lb/>
Pierce halfway through the inning<lb/>
when ECU was gaining momen-<lb/>
tum.<lb/>
The Pirates got a single from<lb/>
leading hitter John Gast, a double<lb/>
Gallimore<lb/>
from Tommy 1<lb/>
before Wolff<lb/>
Shawn Senior I<lb/>
onslaught.<lb/>
With the i<lb/>
three runs, the<lb/>
the heat once i<lb/>
the fifth inninl<lb/>
double and a<lb/>
ECUaddet<lb/>
inning to cut tl<lb/>
PatCloughei<lb/>
home run ba<lb/>
inning for the<lb/>
11-4.<lb/>
The Pirate<lb/>
lay down an<lb/>
heading into t)<lb/>
inning stretch!<lb/>
runs off a wal<lb/>
doubles from<lb/>
Watkmstocutl<lb/>
runs.<lb/>
This force<lb/>
forN.CState.Jl<lb/>
in for Senior, ai<lb/>
Pirates withoui<lb/>
The final score!<lb/>
the Wolfpack.<lb/>
Forthegar<lb/>
five hits and!<lb/>
Wolfpack finisj<lb/>
hits and one a<lb/>
The PirateJ<lb/>
to practice berol<lb/>
headuptoRicr<lb/>
tant weekend I<lb/>
doubleheaderi<lb/>
follows on Sui<lb/>
Hunter Galiimore<lb/>
By Walt Hammett<lb/>
Special to the East Carolinian<lb/>
Coming soon to a football sta-<lb/>
dium near you "A Man Called<lb/>
Hunter No, it's not the senes on<lb/>
television. It is Hunter Gallimore's<lb/>
senior season with the Pirates.<lb/>
Gallimore, who plays wide re-<lb/>
ceiver, came to ECU as a walk-on<lb/>
from Hunt High School in Wilson.<lb/>
Gallimore felt he had the ability to<lb/>
go and play college football at the<lb/>
Division 1-A level after a few trips<lb/>
to the state championships at Hunt.<lb/>
Although the odd? were<lb/>
stacked against him, he would be-<lb/>
Jigib<lb/>
CINCINNATI (AP) ? Pete<lb/>
Rose is eligible to leave a halfway<lb/>
house later this week, but will have<lb/>
to work until midsummer to finish<lb/>
a 1,000-hour community service<lb/>
sentence for violating federal tax<lb/>
laws.<lb/>
TneformerCindnnari Redsstar<lb/>
and manager said in an interview<lb/>
published today that he enjoys his<lb/>
court-ordered work as a gym<lb/>
teacher's assistant at inner-city<lb/>
schools and has tried to help out in<lb/>
other ways.<lb/>
"I was sitting in the school of-<lb/>
fice my first day during a break and<lb/>
I told mem, Til answer the phone if<lb/>
you wish Rose told The Cincin-<lb/>
nati Enquirer. 'TU do anything<lb/>
Kizyzewski lead<lb/>
IrJDIANAPOLB(AP) ?You Perfect<lb/>
could do worse. "Somuchl<lb/>
You expected Hannibal about the bad I<lb/>
Tarkanianand merest of that sullen tonight you sal<lb/>
bunchfjomoutWestslashingand Kansas coach!<lb/>
burning through the college bas- 'These were<lb/>
ketball world and carrying all that you saw put<lb/>
ghtters back to Vegas again night"<lb/>
bated you got Duke. Ontopoft<lb/>
On April Fool's Night whine like I<lb/>
Squeaky dean Duke. Polite, it like<lb/>
Well-spoken. Pay its hotel bills, grandstand<lb/>
right down to the incidentals. Justwins<lb/>
come only the I<lb/>
history to plavl<lb/>
level, he choos<lb/>
Knowing<lb/>
difficult at p.n<lb/>
chose ECU ov<lb/>
ofitsreputatio<lb/>
walk-on has a<lb/>
red-shirtedmlj<lb/>
on to see hrrutel<lb/>
His first bi<lb/>
when he pi a v<lb/>
caught seven<lb/>
The highlight o<lb/>
Gallimore caug<lb/>
tion that setups<lb/>
South Carolina!<lb/>
After a yea<lb/>
action, Gallir<lb/>
ship; one of twe<lb/>
eam one.<lb/>
After ear<lb/>
Gallimore felt'1<lb/>
to work harck<lb/>
earned it ThiJ<lb/>
raised his lev<lb/>
proved to be <lb/>
yet<lb/>
Havingstal<lb/>
for eight gar<lb/>
in some ai<lb/>
Gallimore hadl<lb/>
yards, two touq<lb/>
erage of 21.2<lb/>
Rose, 49,<lb/>
month halfwi<lb/>
Friday, said<lb/>
community (<lb/>
the US. Bureai<lb/>
"At that<lb/>
with his case<lb/>
Hudson said.<lb/>
The same'<lb/>
uledtomake<lb/>
Binrringham,<lb/>
Levy, his bi<lb/>
Rose, bas<lb/>
leader, was;<lb/>
months in<lb/>
guilty to two<lb/>
report income. J<lb/>
Arthur Spit<lb/>
$50,000andoi<lb/>
<pb facs="00058277_0010"/><lb/>
i<lb/>
April 4,1991<lb/>
(51tc i?aHt (Carolinian<lb/>
19<lb/>
3<lb/>
mis lories<lb/>
uu. r.<lb/>
1 Mo Time<lb/>
Lit Itself<lb/>
rs<lb/>
1 Mritual C owboys ? -<lb/>
s ni; r ks'<lb/>
i , . i<lb/>
DICK'S<lb/>
18W SI MOOD<lb/>
i<lb/>
i<lb/>
? t wife, Ethel<lb/>
"nationally<lb/>
He an ad-<lb/>
Hal<lb/>
Wo<lb/>
By Kerry Nester<lb/>
Assistant Sports Editor<lb/>
E I traveled to Raleigh to take<lb/>
on the WolfpttckTueadayafternoon<lb/>
under crystal blue skies and a per-<lb/>
fect afternoon for baseball. The Pi-<lb/>
rates were trving to pick up their<lb/>
tn this season against a Pig<lb/>
? team.<lb/>
After much success the past few<lb/>
against Atlantic Coast Con-<lb/>
v teams, its something special<lb/>
me ECU matches up against<lb/>
foe<lb/>
nfortunately for Pirate fans,<lb/>
managed onlv five hits and<lb/>
?j ttsl lth game of the season<lb/>
? ' State.<lb/>
N C State jumped out to an<lb/>
six-run lead after only two<lb/>
psoi plav. ECU freshmen left-<lb/>
Icr lohnnv Bock surrendered<lb/>
a ? unearnedrunsinthefirstinning<lb/>
Wdrpack off two Pirate errors.<lb/>
the second inning, N.C. State<lb/>
zed on five hits, scoring four<lb/>
including a ground-rule<lb/>
from Jeff Tierce and a solo<lb/>
fromTommyEasonand threewalks<lb/>
before Wolfpack relief pitcher<lb/>
Shawn Senior could slow the ECU<lb/>
onslaught.<lb/>
With the lead trimmed to just<lb/>
three runs, the Wolfpack fumed up<lb/>
the heat once more with two runsin<lb/>
the fifth inning off two singles, a<lb/>
double and a sacrifice fly.<lb/>
ECU added one run in the si xth<lb/>
inning to ait the lead to 8-4. Then,<lb/>
Tat Clougherty popped a three-run<lb/>
home run blast in the bottom of the<lb/>
inning for the Wolfpack to make it<lb/>
11-1.<lb/>
The Pirates were not going to<lb/>
lay down and give up though;<lb/>
heading into the famed "seventh-<lb/>
inning stretch ECU scored two<lb/>
runs off a walk and back-to-hack<lb/>
doubles from C.lynn Beck and Pat<lb/>
Watkins to ait the lead to only five<lb/>
runs.<lb/>
This forced a pitching change<lb/>
forN.C. State. Jimmy Holland came<lb/>
in for Senior, and he finished off the<lb/>
Pirates without surrendennga run.<lb/>
The final score was 13-6 in favor of<lb/>
the Wolfpack.<lb/>
For the game, ECU had six mas,<lb/>
five hits and three errors The<lb/>
run fromSteveShingJedecker.<lb/>
rhe Pirates finally got on the<lb/>
board with three runscomingin the Wolfpack finished with 13 runs, 13<lb/>
-h inning. N.C. State head coach hits and one error<lb/>
The Pirates onlv have one uay<lb/>
to praaice before loading the bus to<lb/>
head up to Richmond for an impor-<lb/>
tant weekend of conference play. A<lb/>
doubleheader with William &amp; Mary<lb/>
follows on Sunday.<lb/>
Ka Tanner pulled starring pitcher<lb/>
Pierce halfway through the inning<lb/>
when ECU was gaining momen-<lb/>
The Pirates got a single from<lb/>
leading hitter John Gast, a double<lb/>
Da.I Ra?d ? ECU Phdo Lab<lb/>
Senior shortstop Berry Narron makes the tag on a stolen base attempt. Tuesday, ECU played N C State in Raleigh and lost 13-6 Junior catcher<lb/>
Tommy Eason went 2 for 5 with a double and a triple.<lb/>
allimore returns<lb/>
Hunter Gallimore<lb/>
By Walt Hammett<lb/>
Special to the East Carolinian<lb/>
iming sHn to a football sta-<lb/>
dium near vou "A Man Called<lb/>
I lunter No, it's not the series on<lb/>
ision It is Hunter Gallimore's<lb/>
senior season with the Pirates.<lb/>
Gallimore, who plays wide re-<lb/>
ceiver, came to ECU as a walk-on<lb/>
from Hunt High School in Wilson.<lb/>
Gallimore felt he had the ability to<lb/>
go and play college football at the<lb/>
Division 1-A level after a few trips<lb/>
to the state championships at Hunt.<lb/>
Although the odds were<lb/>
stacked against him, he would be-<lb/>
CINC1NNAT1 (AP) ? Pete<lb/>
Rose is eligible to leave a halfway<lb/>
house later this week, but will have<lb/>
to work until midsummer to finish<lb/>
a 1,000-hour community service<lb/>
sentence for violating federal tax<lb/>
laws.<lb/>
The former Cincinnati Redsstar<lb/>
and manager said in an interview<lb/>
published today that he enjoys his<lb/>
court-ordered work as a gym<lb/>
teacher's assistant at inner-city<lb/>
schools and has tried to help out in<lb/>
other ways.<lb/>
"1 was sitting in the school of-<lb/>
fice my first day during a break and<lb/>
comeonly the third player in Hunt's<lb/>
history to play at the Division 1-A<lb/>
level, he choose to trv it anyway.<lb/>
Knowing that this would be<lb/>
difficult at any school, Gallimore<lb/>
chose ECU over N.C. State because<lb/>
of its reputation as a school where a<lb/>
walk-on has a chance. After being<lb/>
red-shirted in 1987,Gallimore went<lb/>
on to see limited action in 1988.<lb/>
His first big year was in 1989,<lb/>
when he plavcd in all 11 games and<lb/>
caught seven passes for 131 yards.<lb/>
The highlight of this year was when<lb/>
Gallimore caught a 63-yard reeep-<lb/>
tion that set upa touchdown against<lb/>
South Carolina.<lb/>
After a year of seeing plenty of<lb/>
action, Gallimore earned a scholar-<lb/>
ship; one of two walk-ons in 1987 to<lb/>
earn one.<lb/>
After earning a scholarship<lb/>
Gallimore felt "even more pressure<lb/>
to work harder to show he had<lb/>
earned it This in turn must have<lb/>
raised his level of play and 1990<lb/>
proved to be Gallimorc's best effort<lb/>
vet.<lb/>
J<lb/>
Having started at wide receiver<lb/>
for eight games, Gallimore turned<lb/>
in some amazing statistics.<lb/>
Gallimore had 10 catches for 212<lb/>
yards, two touchdowns and an av-<lb/>
erage of 21.2 yards a catch, ECU<lb/>
was just finding out what kind of<lb/>
athlete it had.<lb/>
Now that Gallimore is in his<lb/>
senior season, the pressure to pro-<lb/>
duce nviv be even more that before.<lb/>
So he does everything he can to help<lb/>
the team.<lb/>
Besides plaving wide receiver,<lb/>
Gallimore also is a backup on the<lb/>
kick-off return team.<lb/>
"1 just want to catch every Kill<lb/>
and contribute to thespecial teams<lb/>
Gallimore said.<lb/>
Gallimore also feels that being<lb/>
a senior involves a lot of leadership<lb/>
"both on the practice field and in<lb/>
helping some of the other inexpe-<lb/>
rienced wide receivers to under-<lb/>
stand the offense<lb/>
Having been involved with the<lb/>
ECU football program since Bill<lb/>
Lewis came to the helm, Gallimore<lb/>
feels the need to end his senior year<lb/>
on a good note. Already the team<lb/>
has set two goals for the 1991 season.<lb/>
To raise their level of play and to<lb/>
win tight games, and to eam a<lb/>
chance to go to a bowl game.<lb/>
Although these goals might<lb/>
seem optimistic to some Pirate fans,<lb/>
these goals are attainable. With an<lb/>
experienced teamcomingback from<lb/>
the 1990 campaign, the Pirates ex-<lb/>
See Gallimore, page 10<lb/>
Surf team<lb/>
looks to<lb/>
erase<lb/>
stigma<lb/>
By Dustin Shearon<lb/>
Staff Writer<lb/>
Rose, 49, will finish his three-<lb/>
month halfway house sentence<lb/>
Friday, said Denny Hudson, the<lb/>
community corrections manager for<lb/>
the US. Bureau of prisons.<lb/>
"At that point,our involvement<lb/>
with his case will be completed<lb/>
Hudson said.<lb/>
The same day, Rose is sched-<lb/>
uled to make a paid appearance in<lb/>
Birmingham, Ala according toCal<lb/>
Levy, his business manager.<lb/>
Rose, baseball's all-time hits<lb/>
leader, was sentenced in July to five<lb/>
months in prison after he pleaded<lb/>
halfway house, must finish<lb/>
five inner-city elementary schools.<lb/>
When the school yearends June<lb/>
7, Rose is to finish his sentence<lb/>
working at a youth club. His pro-<lb/>
bation officer refused to say when<lb/>
Rose would finish his community<lb/>
service. But at his current 40-hou-<lb/>
per-week rate, Rose could finish by<lb/>
mid-July.<lb/>
Rose said he enjoys racing his<lb/>
young students in sit-ups.<lb/>
who works part-time at Turfway<lb/>
Park, a racetrack near Cincinnati.<lb/>
Since moving into the halfway<lb/>
house Jan. 7, Rose has made paid<lb/>
appearances at baseball card shows<lb/>
in New York and Connecticut and<lb/>
spoken a t a Q ncinnati country club.<lb/>
Levy declined to say how much<lb/>
Rose was paid.<lb/>
All of Rose's appearances are<lb/>
subject to approval by his federal<lb/>
'Theoldmancanstillbringit probation officer John Cole. Cole<lb/>
he told the Enquirer. The newspa<lb/>
per said he gave the interview last<lb/>
week.<lb/>
Rose, who has received treat-<lb/>
guilty to two counts of failing to<lb/>
.told them, TH answer the phone if reportincome.US.DistrictJudgeS. ment for a compulsive gambling<lb/>
vou wish  Rose told The Cincin- Arthur Spiegel also fined him disorder, said he still loves horses<lb/>
said he judged Rose's appearances<lb/>
appropriate for his celebrity status.<lb/>
Rose started work Jan. 14 as an<lb/>
elementary school gym teacher's<lb/>
aide. His duties have included su-<lb/>
pervising students as they got on or<lb/>
nab Enquirer. "I'll do anything $50,000and ordered him to work in and talked at length with a teacher off buses or as they ate breakfast at<lb/>
Krzyzewski leads 'clean' Duke team to NCAA<lb/>
1??  ru ic en nnacuimina and makes thp senseof the inevitable al<lb/>
INDIANAPOLIS (AP) ? You Perfect,<lb/>
could do worse. "So much time is spent talking<lb/>
You expected Hannibal about the bad things in sport, but<lb/>
Tarkanianand the rest of that sullen tonight you saw the good things<lb/>
bunch from out West, slashing and Kansas coach Roy Williams said,<lb/>
burning through the college bas- 'These were real student-athletes<lb/>
ketball world and carrying all that<lb/>
glitters back to Vegas again.<lb/>
Instead you got Duke.<lb/>
On April Fool's Night.<lb/>
Squeaky clean Duke. Polite.<lb/>
you saw put on a great show to-<lb/>
night"<lb/>
Ontopofthat,thecoachdoesn't<lb/>
whine like Dean Smith, doesn't lose<lb/>
it like Bobby Knight, doesn't<lb/>
Well-spoken. Pays, its hotel bills, grandstand like John Thompson,<lb/>
right down to the incidentals Just wins, baby. Mike Krzyzewski<lb/>
is so unassuming and makes the<lb/>
Final Four so often that he could be<lb/>
mistaken for the official caterer of<lb/>
the NCAA.<lb/>
But no more.<lb/>
"Mike got something off his<lb/>
back that never should have been<lb/>
there in the first place Williams<lb/>
said. "I mean winning tonight after<lb/>
not winning the so-called 'biggame'<lb/>
before<lb/>
The truth is, you could have<lb/>
lived with Kansas, but there was a<lb/>
sense of the inevitable almost from<lb/>
the outset Monday night.<lb/>
Just 2:15 into the game. Bobby<lb/>
Hurley motored past the midcourt<lb/>
line and saw the Jayhawks rocking<lb/>
back on their collective heels. So he<lb/>
shoveled a two-handed pass to the<lb/>
right of the basket that Grant Hill<lb/>
caught one-handed outside the<lb/>
backboard and in a single, swoop-<lb/>
ing motion, slammed through the<lb/>
goal.<lb/>
It was drawn up by a coach<lb/>
school.<lb/>
There have been no complaints<lb/>
about his work, district spokesman<lb/>
ohn Brunner said.<lb/>
Rose is to remain under the<lb/>
federal court's supervision for one<lb/>
vear from his January release from<lb/>
a federal prison camp in Marion, 111.<lb/>
Hehassold hissuburbanGncinnati<lb/>
house and plans to move to Boca<lb/>
Raton, Fla after his sentence ends.<lb/>
He has said he might go into the<lb/>
restaurant business and start a ca-<lb/>
reer in broadcasting.<lb/>
He was banned from baseball<lb/>
in August 1989 for gambling. He is<lb/>
eligible toretur to baseball but<lb/>
commissioner Fay Vincent has not<lb/>
said when that will be.<lb/>
from the working-class southwest<lb/>
side of Chicago, spotted and then<lb/>
started by a skinny street kid from<lb/>
Jersey and finished in fashion by<lb/>
another with an athletic pedigree<lb/>
from a well-to-do Virginia suburb.<lb/>
Forall its reputation asabastion<lb/>
of privilege and propriety, Duke<lb/>
flashed some soul, too. Perfect.<lb/>
Duke is precise, Duke is patient.<lb/>
Duke is quick, Duke is tough And<lb/>
Duke is the national champion be-<lb/>
See Krzyzewski, page 10<lb/>
Aftervearsof criticism the ECU<lb/>
surf club is making a change for the<lb/>
better.<lb/>
Many people around campus<lb/>
are not even aware that there is an<lb/>
ECU surf club. Mike Oakley and<lb/>
Tucker Rov are helping to rebuild<lb/>
the team that had existed for five<lb/>
vears now. Thev want to rebuild the<lb/>
image of the team and make it<lb/>
popular again as it once was before<lb/>
the 1987 team destroyed their<lb/>
reputation.<lb/>
During the 1987 surf season the<lb/>
Student Government loaned the<lb/>
team vans to go to a competition at<lb/>
Nags Head. When the team re-<lb/>
turned the vans, they had been van-<lb/>
dalized and an ECU-owned vidx<lb/>
recorder was stolen because of ir-<lb/>
rtsponsibility. Now Oakley, a<lb/>
freshman, and Roy are turning the<lb/>
teams reputation around.<lb/>
During Easter vacation the two<lb/>
a competed in Nags Head. Oakley<lb/>
placed fourth and Roy placed sev-<lb/>
enth in the Individual Senior Body<lb/>
Board competition which was<lb/>
sponsored by the Eastern Surf As-<lb/>
sociation.<lb/>
They had orginally gone to the<lb/>
contest to represent ECU but since<lb/>
there where only two surfers, and<lb/>
five are needed to enter as a team,<lb/>
they decided to enter as individu-<lb/>
als. Recently Oakley talked to the<lb/>
sponsor, and it turns out that the<lb/>
team did so well that the ESA is<lb/>
going to present ECU with a trophy<lb/>
for their success at the tournament.<lb/>
In the tournament the surfers<lb/>
are judged in hard carving, which<lb/>
are turns and curves in the waves,<lb/>
drop knee, 360 degrees, 720degTees<lb/>
and off the lip airs.<lb/>
The ESA has district contest in<lb/>
Virginia Beach, Nags Head and<lb/>
Atlantic Beach. The contest's final<lb/>
circuit starts in late spring and the<lb/>
final circuit is run by points. With<lb/>
the placing of each surfer in every<lb/>
contest, they are allotted points and<lb/>
at the end of the season the one with<lb/>
the most points become the ESA<lb/>
champion.<lb/>
The ECU team has meetings<lb/>
every week. Oakley said that cur-<lb/>
rently there are about a dozen<lb/>
members. He would like to see a<lb/>
See Surf, page 10<lb/>
<pb facs="00058277_0011"/><lb/>
April 4,1991<lb/>
3Ik lEaat (Carolinian<lb/>
19<lb/>
5<lb/>
BTlTT?7 ilr i 7Fi<lb/>
DIC<lb/>
S<lb/>
SI MOOD<lb/>
<lb/>
t<lb/>
1<lb/>
I<lb/>
I<lb/>
1<lb/>
<lb/>
I<lb/>
I<lb/>
I<lb/>
I<lb/>
I<lb/>
I<lb/>
1<lb/>
1<lb/>
1<lb/>
I<lb/>
I<lb/>
I<lb/>
Hall<lb/>
Wo<lb/>
By Kerry Nester<lb/>
sMtant Sports Fditor<lb/>
l i traveled to RaJeigh to take<lb/>
Wolfpack Tuesday afternoon<lb/>
rj stal blue skies and a per<lb/>
iftemoon tor baseball I"he Pi-<lb/>
tt ere trying to pick up their<lb/>
this season against .1 Big<lb/>
te im<lb/>
much success the past few<lb/>
nst Atlantic Coast Con-<lb/>
ims.its something special<lb/>
 ECU matches up against<lb/>
runateH for Pirate tans,<lb/>
iged only five hits and<lb/>
 lthgameof the season<lb/>
State<lb/>
itate jumped out to an<lb/>
 run lead after only two<lb/>
? pi n ECU freshmen left-<lb/>
ny Beck surrendered<lb/>
1 rnedninsinthotirst inning<lb/>
fpackofftwoPiratecrrors.<lb/>
;e ond inning ' C.State<lb/>
; onfivehits.seoringfouT<lb/>
luding a ground-rule<lb/>
? m left Pierce and a solo<lb/>
?? mSteveShingledecker.<lb/>
.rates finally gct on the<lb/>
throe runscoming in the<lb/>
 N.C State head coach<lb/>
r pulled starting pitcher<lb/>
halfway through the inning<lb/>
was gaining momen-<lb/>
1 rates got a single from<lb/>
itter lohn Cast, a double<lb/>
fmmTommy Fa son and three walks<lb/>
before Wolf pack relief pitcher<lb/>
Shawn Senior could slow the ECU<lb/>
onslaught.<lb/>
With the lead trimmed to )ust<lb/>
three runs, the Woltpack turned up<lb/>
the heat once more with two runs in<lb/>
the fifth inning off two singles, a<lb/>
double and a sacrifice fly.<lb/>
ECU added one run in the si xth<lb/>
inning to ait the lead to 8-4. Then,<lb/>
Pat Cloughertv popped a throe- run<lb/>
home run blast in the bottom of the<lb/>
inning for the Woltpack to make it<lb/>
11-4.<lb/>
The Pirates were not going to<lb/>
lay down and give up though;<lb/>
heading into the famed "seventh-<lb/>
inning stretch ECU scored two<lb/>
runs off a walk and back-to-back<lb/>
doubles from Clvnn Rock and Pat<lb/>
Watkinstocut the lead to only five<lb/>
runs<lb/>
This forced a pitching change<lb/>
forN.CState.Jimmyl lollandcame<lb/>
in for Senior, and he finished off the<lb/>
Pirates without surrendering a run.<lb/>
The final score was 13-6 in favor of<lb/>
the Woltpack.<lb/>
For the game, ECU had six runs,<lb/>
five hits and three errors The<lb/>
Woltpack finished with 13 runs. 13<lb/>
hits and one error<lb/>
The Pirates only have oix day<lb/>
to practice before toadingthe bus to<lb/>
head up to Richmond for an impor-<lb/>
tant weekend of conference play. A<lb/>
doublohoader with William &amp;Mary<lb/>
follows on Sundav.<lb/>
Oail RMd ? ECU Photo Lab<lb/>
Senior shortstop Berry Narron makes the tag on a stolen base attempt fuesday layed N C State in Raleigh and lost 13-6 Junior catcher<lb/>
Tommy Eason went 2 tor 5 with a double and a triple<lb/>
allimore returns<lb/>
i<lb/>
Hunter Callimore<lb/>
By Walt Hammett<lb/>
,il to the Fast Carolinian<lb/>
ioon to a football sta-<lb/>
? ? ir you "A Man Called<lb/>
f :? s not the series on<lb/>
It is 1 hinter (ialhmore's<lb/>
- ieason with the Pirates<lb/>
rm re. who plavs wide nv<lb/>
ame to ECU as a walk-on<lb/>
I int High School in Wilson.<lb/>
re felt he had the ability to<lb/>
1 play college football at the<lb/>
in 1-A level after a few trips<lb/>
ihestatecharnpfonshipsatHunt<lb/>
Although the odds were<lb/>
ked against him, he would be-<lb/>
come onlv the third plaver in 1 hint's<lb/>
history to play at the Envision 1-A<lb/>
level, he choose to try it anyway<lb/>
Knowing that this would be<lb/>
difficult at any school, Gallimore<lb/>
chose ECU over N.C State because<lb/>
of its reputation as a schtH'l where a<lb/>
walk-on has a chance After being<lb/>
red-shirted in 1987,Gallimore went<lb/>
on to see limited action in 1988<lb/>
His first big year was in 198 ?<lb/>
when he played in all 11 gamesand<lb/>
caught seven passes tor 151 yards,<lb/>
"he highlight of this sear was when<lb/>
Gallimore caught a 63-yard recep-<lb/>
tion that set upa touchdown against<lb/>
South Carolina.<lb/>
After a year of seeing plcnt) of<lb/>
action, Gallimore earned a scholar-<lb/>
ship; oneof two walk-ons in 1987 to<lb/>
earn one.<lb/>
After earning a scholarship<lb/>
Gallimore felt "even more pressure<lb/>
to work harder to show he had<lb/>
earned it This in turn must have<lb/>
raised his level of play and WlHl<lb/>
proved to be Gallimore's best effort<lb/>
yet<lb/>
Having started at wide receiver<lb/>
for eight games, Gallimore turned<lb/>
in some amazing statistics<lb/>
Gallimore had 10 catches for 212<lb/>
vards, two touchdowns and an av-<lb/>
erage of 21.2 yards a catch, ECU<lb/>
was just finding out vvh.it kind of<lb/>
athlete it had.<lb/>
Now that Gallimore is in his<lb/>
senior season, the pressure to pro<lb/>
dm e may be even more that before.<lb/>
St 1 hedoes everything he can to help<lb/>
the team.<lb/>
Besides plavim: wide receiver,<lb/>
Gallimore also is a backup on the<lb/>
kit k off return team.<lb/>
"1 ust want ti 1 . ate h every ball<lb/>
and contributeto the special teams<lb/>
Gallimore said.<lb/>
(iallimorealso feels that being<lb/>
,1 senior involves a lot of leadership<lb/>
!th on the practice field and in<lb/>
helping some of the other inexpe-<lb/>
rienced wide receivers to under-<lb/>
stand the offense<lb/>
1 laving been involved with the<lb/>
ECU football program since Bill<lb/>
1 ewiscame to the helm, Gallimore<lb/>
to Istheneed to end hissenioryear<lb/>
on a giKni note. Already the team<lb/>
hassettwogoalsforthel991 season.<lb/>
To raise their level of play and to<lb/>
win tight games, and to earn a<lb/>
chance to go to a bowl game<lb/>
Although these goals might<lb/>
seem optimistic to some Pirate fans,<lb/>
these goals are attainable. With an<lb/>
experienced teamcomingback from<lb/>
the Is) campaign, the Pirates ex-<lb/>
See Gallimore, page 10<lb/>
Surf team<lb/>
looks to<lb/>
erase<lb/>
stigma<lb/>
By Dustin Shearon<lb/>
Staff Writer<lb/>
Spike<lb/>
Jill Ch?rry ECU Photo Lab<lb/>
Three students play a heated game cf beach volleyball on<lb/>
Tyler Beach on the Hill.<lb/>
Rose, 49, will finish his three-<lb/>
month halfway house sentence<lb/>
Fndav, said Denny Hudson, the<lb/>
community corrections manager for<lb/>
the US. Bunau of pnsons.<lb/>
"At that point, our involvement<lb/>
with his case will be completed<lb/>
Hudson said.<lb/>
The same day. Rose is sched-<lb/>
uled to make a paid appearance in<lb/>
Birmingham, Alaaccording to Gal<lb/>
Lew, his business manager.<lb/>
Rose, baseball's all-time hits<lb/>
leader, was sentenced in July to five<lb/>
months in prison after he pleaded<lb/>
guilty to two counts of failing to<lb/>
. told them, THanswer the phone if reportincomcUS. District JudgeS<lb/>
vou wish Rose told The Cincin- Arthur Spiegel also fined him<lb/>
nab Enquirer. "I'll do anything $50,000and ordered him to work in<lb/>
halfway house, must finish<lb/>
CINATI (AP) - - Pete<lb/>
' is eligible to leave a halfway<lb/>
 later this week, but will have<lb/>
rk until midsummer to finish<lb/>
a 1,000-hour community service<lb/>
- once for violating federal tax<lb/>
laws.<lb/>
TheformerCinannati Redsstar<lb/>
and manager said in an interview<lb/>
published today that he enjoys his<lb/>
court-ordered work as a gym<lb/>
teacher's assistant at inner-city<lb/>
schools and has tned to help out in<lb/>
other ways.<lb/>
"I was sitting in the school of-<lb/>
fk e mv first day during a break and<lb/>
five inner-city elementary schools.<lb/>
When the school year ends June<lb/>
7, Rose is to finish his sentence<lb/>
working at a vouth club. His pro-<lb/>
bation officer refused to say when<lb/>
Rose would finish his community<lb/>
service. But at his current 40-hour-<lb/>
per-week rate, Rose could finish by<lb/>
mid-July.<lb/>
Rose said he enjoys racing his<lb/>
young snidents in sit-ups.<lb/>
'The old man can still bring it<lb/>
he told the Enquirer. The newspa-<lb/>
per said he gave the interview last<lb/>
week.<lb/>
Rose, who has received treat-<lb/>
ment for a compulsive gambling<lb/>
disorder, said he still loves horses<lb/>
and talked at length with a teacher<lb/>
who works part-rime at Turfway<lb/>
Park, a racetrack near Cincinnati.<lb/>
Since moving into the halfwav<lb/>
house Jan. 7, Rose has made paid<lb/>
appearances at baseball card shows<lb/>
in New York and Connecticut ond<lb/>
spoken at a Ci ncinnati country club.<lb/>
Lew declined to say how much<lb/>
Rose was paid.<lb/>
All of Rose's appearances are<lb/>
subject to approval by his federal<lb/>
probation officer John Cole. Cole<lb/>
said he Ridged Rose's appearances<lb/>
appropriate for his celebrity status.<lb/>
Rose started work Jan. 14 as an<lb/>
elementary school gym teacher's<lb/>
aide. His duties have included su-<lb/>
pervising students as they got on or<lb/>
off buses or as thev ate breakfast at<lb/>
Krzyzewski leads 'clean' Duke team to NCAA<lb/>
I  ?. . , ?r,v w r?? 1 ?r imAwnmmf and makes the sense of the inevitable al<lb/>
INDIANAPOLIS (AP) ? You<lb/>
could do worse.<lb/>
You expected Hannibal<lb/>
Tarkanianandtherestofthatsullen<lb/>
bunch from out West, slashing and<lb/>
burning through the college bas-<lb/>
ketball world and carrying all that<lb/>
glitters back to Vegas again.<lb/>
Instead you got Duke.<lb/>
On Apnl Fool's Night.<lb/>
Squeaky clean Duke. Polite.<lb/>
Well-spoken. Pays its hotel bills,<lb/>
right down to the incidentals.<lb/>
Perfect.<lb/>
"So much bme is spent talking<lb/>
about the bad things in sport, but<lb/>
tonight you saw the good things<lb/>
Kansas coach Roy Williams said.<lb/>
These were real student-athletes<lb/>
you saw put on a great show to-<lb/>
night<lb/>
On topof that, the coach doesn't<lb/>
whinelike Dean Smith.doesn't lose<lb/>
it like Bobby Knight, doesn't<lb/>
grandstand like John Thompson.<lb/>
Just wins, baby. Mike Krzyzewski<lb/>
is so unassuming and makes the<lb/>
Final Four so often that he could be<lb/>
mistaken for the official caterer of<lb/>
the NCAA.<lb/>
But no more.<lb/>
"Mike got something off his<lb/>
back that never should have been<lb/>
there in the first place Williams<lb/>
said. "1 mean winning tonight after<lb/>
not winning the so-called 'biggame'<lb/>
before<lb/>
The truth is, you could have<lb/>
lived with Kansas, but there was a<lb/>
sense of the inevitable almost from<lb/>
the outset Monday night.<lb/>
Just 2.15 into the game Bobby<lb/>
Hurley motored past the rrudcourt<lb/>
line and saw the Jayhawks rocking<lb/>
back on their collective heels. So he<lb/>
shoveled a two-handed pass to the<lb/>
right of the basket that Grant Hill<lb/>
caught one-handed outside the<lb/>
backboard and in a single, swoop-<lb/>
ing motion, slammed thnmgh the<lb/>
goal.<lb/>
It was drawn up by a coach<lb/>
SChOOl.<lb/>
There ha e been m ? complaints<lb/>
about his work district spokesman<lb/>
lohn Brunner said.<lb/>
Rose is to remain under the<lb/>
federal court s superv ision for one<lb/>
vear from his anuai y release from<lb/>
a federal prism camp in Marion, 111<lb/>
He has sold his suburban Cincinnati<lb/>
house and plans to move to Boca<lb/>
Raton, Ha after his sentence ends.<lb/>
He has said he might o into the<lb/>
restaurant business and start a ca-<lb/>
reer in broadcasting.<lb/>
He was banned fn m baseball<lb/>
in August 1999 for gambling. He is<lb/>
eligible toretur to baseball but<lb/>
commissioner Fay Vincent has not<lb/>
said when that will be.<lb/>
from the working-class southwest<lb/>
side of Chicago, spotted and then<lb/>
starttl bv a skinny street kid from<lb/>
Jersev and finished in fashion by<lb/>
another with an athletic pedigree<lb/>
from a well-to-do Virginia suburb<lb/>
Forall its reputation asa bastion<lb/>
of privilege and propriety, Duke<lb/>
flashed some soul, too. Perfect.<lb/>
I Xi ke is precise, Duke ispatient.<lb/>
LXike is quick, Duke is tough. And<lb/>
Duke is the national champion be-<lb/>
See Krzyzewski, page 10<lb/>
AfteryearsofcritJeismtheEC U<lb/>
surf club is nuking a change for the<lb/>
better<lb/>
Many people around campus<lb/>
are not even aware that there is an<lb/>
ECU surf club. Mike Oakley and<lb/>
Tucker Rov are helping to rebuild<lb/>
the team that had existed for five<lb/>
years now. They wantto rebuild the<lb/>
image of the team and make it<lb/>
popular again as it once was before<lb/>
the 1987 team destroyed their<lb/>
reputation.<lb/>
Du n ng the 1987 su rf season t he<lb/>
Student Government loaned the<lb/>
team vans to go to a competition at<lb/>
Nags c,k. When the team re-<lb/>
turned the vans, they had been van-<lb/>
dalized and an ECU-owned vid?<lb/>
recorder was stolen because of ir-<lb/>
rtsponsibility. Now Oakley, a<lb/>
freshman, and Roy are turning the<lb/>
teams reputation around.<lb/>
Dunng Easter vacation the two<lb/>
a competed in Nags Head. Oakley<lb/>
placed fourth and Roy placed sev-<lb/>
enth in the Individual Senior Body<lb/>
Board competition which was<lb/>
sponsored by the Eastern Surf As-<lb/>
sociation.<lb/>
Thev had orginally gone to the<lb/>
contest to represent ECU but since<lb/>
there where only two surfers, and<lb/>
hve are needed to enter as a team,<lb/>
thev decided to enter as individu-<lb/>
als. Recently Oakley talked to the<lb/>
sponsor, and it rums out that the<lb/>
team did so well that the ESA is<lb/>
goi ng to present ECU with a trophy<lb/>
for their success at the tournament.<lb/>
In the tournament the surfers<lb/>
are judged in hard carving, which<lb/>
are turns and curves in the waves,<lb/>
d rop knee, 360 degrees, 720 degrees<lb/>
and off the lip airs.<lb/>
The ESA has district contest in<lb/>
Virginia Beach, Nags Head and<lb/>
Atlantic Beach. The contest's final<lb/>
circuit starts in late spring and the<lb/>
final circuit is run by points. With<lb/>
the placing of each surfer in every<lb/>
contest, they are allotted points and<lb/>
at the end of the season the one with<lb/>
the most points become the ESA<lb/>
champion<lb/>
The ECU team has meetings<lb/>
every week. Oakley said that cur-<lb/>
rently there are about a dozen<lb/>
members. He would like to see a<lb/>
See Surf, page 10<lb/>
<pb facs="00058277_0012"/><lb/>
I<lb/>
4<lb/>
Krzyzewski<lb/>
Continued from MM ?<lb/>
cause Duke is all of those things at<lb/>
once.<lb/>
"As much as it was a failure for<lb/>
us doing what we wanted to do, it<lb/>
was Duke doing all of the things<lb/>
that they needed to do to win<lb/>
Williams said afterward, respect or<lb/>
numbness or bom stealing his voice.<lb/>
"They had an answer for ev-<lb/>
erything we did<lb/>
The Blue Devils con tested every<lb/>
UNLV every basket. By laying<lb/>
Gallimore<lb/>
bodieson Larry Johnson and Stacey<lb/>
Augmon until the Blue Devils had<lb/>
bruises as blue as the royal blue on<lb/>
their jerseys. Krzyzewski said the<lb/>
day after that one that senior Greg<lb/>
Koubek looked like he'd spent the<lb/>
previous night wandering through<lb/>
a minefield.<lb/>
Koubek wore the bruises like a<lb/>
badge of courage; after all, he came<lb/>
to the Final Four with Krzyzewski<lb/>
three straight years and came away<lb/>
each time empty-handed.<lb/>
Continued from page 9<lb/>
Montreal hosts MLAFs Barcelona Dragore Is?<lb/>
MONTREAL (AP) ? They<lb/>
booed the Canadian anthem,<lb/>
cheered Bjom Nittmo and gave<lb/>
American football a hero's welcome<lb/>
when the Montreal Machine played<lb/>
its first home game to a full house.<lb/>
The Montreal entry in the new<lb/>
World Leagueof American Football<lb/>
only failed to please on the<lb/>
scoreboard, where the visiting<lb/>
the Alouettes of the Canadian Foot- peandivisionwimBarcelona,Spain; the Forum,<lb/>
ball League folded from lack of fan Frankfurt, Germany, and London. 1 think playing in a for-<lb/>
interest in 1987. Eachteaminthespringleaguepbys eign country like Barcelona and<lb/>
In Monday nighf s only other 10 games. going through things like a long<lb/>
game, ending me second weekend Barcelona, showing no signs of road trip makes us a closer-knit<lb/>
of the new league, it was Frankfurt weariness of an 18-hour trip to team said wide receiver Gene<lb/>
Montreal and unfazed by a noisy Taylor, who caught touchdown<lb/>
crowd, spotted the Montreal Ma- passes of 21 and 5 yards from quar-<lb/>
chine a 10-0 lead, then scored 34 terback Scott Erney.<lb/>
10, San Antonio 3<lb/>
The Montreal crowd that<lb/>
greeted the Machine with a long<lb/>
standing ovation as it took the<lb/>
pect to reach their goals.<lb/>
With spring practice having<lb/>
already started, Gallimore is look-<lb/>
ing forward to the Annual Spring<lb/>
Game on April 20th.<lb/>
Gallimore feels that "the offense<lb/>
is really starting to come together<lb/>
and that the passing game is look-<lb/>
ing great With these kind of im-<lb/>
provements the Pira tes will be ready<lb/>
for their opening game in the fall<lb/>
against Illinois televised by ESPN.<lb/>
With a national television au-<lb/>
dience watching the Pirates in their<lb/>
first game of the season, Gallimore<lb/>
feels "that the team will need to stay<lb/>
focused and not let that kind of<lb/>
attention interfere with its prepa-<lb/>
ration<lb/>
Whether or not Gallimore will<lb/>
continue to astound people by his<lb/>
progress, the fact that he walked on<lb/>
at a Division 1-A school when the<lb/>
odds were against him is some thing<lb/>
that a lot of people in Eastern North<lb/>
Carolina will soon not forget.<lb/>
Barcelona Dragons won Monday American-sized lOO-by-50-yard<lb/>
nighf s game 34-10. field was loud and enthusiastic.<lb/>
"We have a good team, but 'Teople like American foot-<lb/>
unfortunately no defense said ball said Dumont<lb/>
Jean-Pierre Dumont, 26, of "I went to two or three Cana-<lb/>
Montreal, one of 53,238 spectators dian football games, but I'll be at all<lb/>
? the largest crowd in the WLAFs the games here<lb/>
two-weekexistence?whojammed The WLAF, owned by 26 of the<lb/>
OlympkStadiumforthe Machine's 28 National Football League teams,<lb/>
inaugural home match. was created last winter with 10<lb/>
It was the first official game of teams?six in the United States, the<lb/>
professional football in the city since Machine in Canada and a Euro-<lb/>
consecutive points. The triumph<lb/>
boosted Barcelona's record to 2-0<lb/>
and dropped the Machine to 1-1.<lb/>
Spectators were taken aback<lb/>
when, expecting the American an-<lb/>
them before the game, a brass band<lb/>
played Spain's anthem.<lb/>
The Machine's Americans then<lb/>
caught their first glimpseof Quebec<lb/>
nationalism when thecrowd booed<lb/>
"O Canada a common occurance<lb/>
at Olympic Stadium that oddly<lb/>
never happens for hockey games at<lb/>
Running back Paul Palmer<lb/>
added a 6-yard score, while Lydell<lb/>
Can bulled over from the 1 for the<lb/>
other Dragons' TD. Massimo Manca<lb/>
booted field goals of 42 and 25 yards.<lb/>
Emotionally charged by the<lb/>
roars of encouragement from an<lb/>
audience that seemed curiousabout<lb/>
the new league, the Machine took a<lb/>
10-0 lead in the first 11 minutes on<lb/>
Nittmo's45-yard field goal and a 1-<lb/>
yard touchdown plunge by<lb/>
Broderick Sargent<lb/>
Read The East Carolinian<lb/>
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Peer health educators are students helping students improve the quality of their<lb/>
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Qualifications<lb/>
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For more information call:<lb/>
Suzanne Kellerman<lb/>
Health Educator<lb/>
757-6794<lb/>
All majors eligible to apply.<lb/>
Informational meeting to be held on Wednesday April 10th at 3:15 in the<lb/>
Student Health Service Res. Room<lb/>
Pick up application forms at the SHS Health Education Dept.<lb/>
Deadline to apply is April 15th<lb/>
? ? if w<lb/>
ARE YOU HUNGRY?CHECK OUT THESE SPECIALS<lb/>
r<lb/>
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1 Bakery Muffin &amp;<lb/>
Reg. Coffee 990<lb/>
plus tax<lb/>
Up To 4 Offers Per Coupon<lb/>
Please present coupon before ordering. One coupon per customer per visit. Customer<lb/>
must pay and sales tax due. Offer not good in combination with any ether offers. Cash<lb/>
value 1100 of 1C Offer Jg f<lb/>
good at participating Hardee's<lb/>
restaurant's during regular<lb/>
breakfast hours through<lb/>
ApriiMjwiAllfCinds QLGoodStuf<lb/>
2 Sausage<lb/>
Biscuits 990<lb/>
plus tax<lb/>
Up To 4 Offers Per Coupon<lb/>
Please present coupon before ordering. One coupon per customer per visil Customer<lb/>
must pay and sales tax due. Offer not good in combination with any other offers. Cash<lb/>
value 1100 of 1? Offer WW 1 9<lb/>
good at participating Hardee's<lb/>
restaurant's during regular<lb/>
breakfast hours through<lb/>
April 30,1991 A11 Kinds of Good Stuff<lb/>
"I<lb/>
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Reg. Roast Beef<lb/>
Sandwich 99tf<lb/>
plus tax<lb/>
Up To 4 Offers Per Coupon<lb/>
Please present coupon before ordering. One coupon per customer per visit. Customer<lb/>
must pay and sales tax due. Offer not good in combination with any other offers Cash<lb/>
value 1100 of lc Offer j f<lb/>
good at participating Hardee's<lb/>
restaurant's after regular<lb/>
r<lb/>
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i<lb/>
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L<lb/>
breakfast hours through<lb/>
April 30, 1991<lb/>
r a <lb/>
All Kinds of Good Stuff<lb/>
14 IbrCheese-<lb/>
burger 990 p<lb/>
n<lb/>
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Up To 4 Offers Per Coupon<lb/>
Please present coupon before ordering. One coupon per customer per visit. Customer<lb/>
must pay and sales tax due. Offer not good in combination with any other offers. Cash<lb/>
value 1lOOofU Offer H 1f<lb/>
good at participating Hardee's<lb/>
restaurant's after regular<lb/>
breakfast hours through ?,? ?<lb/>
jgnjmdUKynds of Good Stuffs J<lb/>
J 'A<lb/>
fffgTDeTuxe<lb/>
Burger 990<lb/>
plus tax<lb/>
Up To 4 Offers Per Coupon<lb/>
Please present coupon before ordering. One coupon per customer per visit Customer<lb/>
must pay and sales tax due. Offer not goodin combination with any other offers. Cash<lb/>
value 1100 of It Offer MM ? f<lb/>
good at participating Hardee's<lb/>
restaurant's after regular<lb/>
i<lb/>
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All Kinds of Good Stuff"<lb/>
910 Cotanche Street<lb/>
6-11 Sun-Wed<lb/>
better rum out and would like to let<lb/>
everyone know ihatyou do not have<lb/>
to be a pro to join. He says the club<lb/>
is about fun, not just competition.<lb/>
The team has asked theStudent<lb/>
Government for money for their<lb/>
upcoming season. The money will<lb/>
help for entry fees, transportation<lb/>
Continued from<lb/>
and traveling<lb/>
team's new<lb/>
reputation,itl<lb/>
be approved for I<lb/>
Competition<lb/>
team to organize ail<lb/>
for the regionals i<lb/>
801-ES. College Road<lb/>
Wilmington, NC 28403<lb/>
800-365-8003<lb/>
Local 931-838 Ask for Stephanie<lb/>
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??WITH PURCHASE OF A REGULAR PRICE I<lb/>
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CAN ALSO ARRANGE OTHER SPECIAL GROU<lb/>
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We are a full-service Investment firm expl<lb/>
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One bonus to a customer.<lb/>
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<pb facs="00058277_0013"/><lb/>
jlona Dragons<lb/>
rv'ona spain,<lb/>
h1 Umdon<lb/>
eague plays<lb/>
g no signs of<lb/>
tir trip to<lb/>
iois<lb/>
Ma<lb/>
? triumph<lb/>
esat<lb/>
the Forum.<lb/>
I think plaving in a for-<lb/>
eign country like Barcelona and<lb/>
going through things like a long<lb/>
road trip makes us a closer-knit<lb/>
team said vvide receiver Gene<lb/>
raylof who caught touchdown<lb/>
passes of 21 and 5 jrawJs from quar-<lb/>
terback Scoff Frnev<lb/>
Running Kick Taul Palmer<lb/>
added a 6-yafd seoe, while I vdell<lb/>
( .it bulKxl over fflOfn the 1 tor the<lb/>
rDfagpns'Tt) Massimo Manca<lb/>
bt k ted field goals of 42 and 25 yards.<lb/>
Emotionally charged bv the<lb/>
encouragement from an<lb/>
naMhatXTrn-clounousahout<lb/>
w league the Machine took a<lb/>
id in the first 11 minutes on<lb/>
- 4 vard field goal and a 1-<lb/>
vard fouchdown plunge bv<lb/>
Broderk k Sargenl<lb/>
irolinian<lb/>
EDUCATOR<lb/>
the quality of their<lb/>
md assisting students<lb/>
?? have an edge<lb/>
<lb/>
 e<lb/>
 and<lb/>
KI( IIONi n: 5 m the  Dept.<lb/>
<lb/>
 Good stuff<lb/>
xe<lb/>
0<lb/>
 <lb/>
upon<lb/>
 ii itotrw i<lb/>
r nffei Ca in<lb/>
2BS<lb/>
?fSoodJtuff<lb/>
1<lb/>
I<lb/>
I<lb/>
I<lb/>
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I<lb/>
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I<lb/>
I<lb/>
I<lb/>
I<lb/>
I<lb/>
I<lb/>
J<lb/>
24 hrs Thurs-Sat<lb/>
t<lb/>
Surf<lb/>
(Ehc agt Carolinian April 4, 1991 11<lb/>
better mm out and would like to let<lb/>
everyone know that you do not have<lb/>
to he a pro to join. He says the club<lb/>
,s .lhout fun, not just competition.<lb/>
The team has asked the Student<lb/>
Government tor money for their<lb/>
upcoming season. The money will<lb/>
help for entry fees, transportation<lb/>
Contlnuft from M 9<lb/>
and traveling expenses. With the<lb/>
team's new success and revised<lb/>
reputation, it hopes the request will<lb/>
be approved for the new season.<lb/>
Competition will begin for the<lb/>
team to organize an A and B team<lb/>
for the regionals next month.<lb/>
Bo Jackson signs with Chicago White Sox<lb/>
801-ES. College Road<lb/>
Wilmington, NC 28403<lb/>
800-365-8003<lb/>
Local 931-8378 Ask for Stephanie<lb/>
TWIN TRAVEL &amp; CRUISES<lb/>
WANTS TO SEND YOU AWAY - ON A Fl IN SHIPCRl USE<lb/>
S J95O0 PER PERSON (PLUS PORT CHARGES $33.00 PP)<lb/>
SEPTEMBER 5TH, 12TH.OR 19TH 1991<lb/>
; HIS SPECIAL PRICE INCLUDES YOUR ROUNDTRIP AIRFARE<lb/>
FR( M WILMINGTON TO ORLANDO, PIER TRANSFERS, YOUR<lb/>
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ITINERARY<lb/>
THURSDAY<lb/>
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DAY AT SFA<lb/>
PORT CANAVERAL<lb/>
SARASOTA, Fla. (AP) ? Bo<lb/>
Jackson signed a one-year contract<lb/>
with the Chicago White Sox today,<lb/>
less than two weeksafter itappeared<lb/>
that a serious hip injury had ended<lb/>
his baseball career.<lb/>
Jackson's agent, Richard<lb/>
Woods, said there was nothing in<lb/>
the contract that would limit him<lb/>
from playing football again in the<lb/>
future. Jackson still is under contract<lb/>
to the Los Angeles Raiders.<lb/>
Jackson wasreleased last month<lb/>
by the KansasGty Royals. Financial<lb/>
terms were not disclosed.<lb/>
" feel like a caged animal<lb/>
Jackson said ata news conference at<lb/>
the White Sox's spring training<lb/>
camp.<lb/>
He said it was hard for him to<lb/>
get up each morning and pick up<lb/>
his crutches, which he calls "my<lb/>
other set of legs<lb/>
"I'd like to throw them in the<lb/>
garbage, but my doctor won't let<lb/>
me he said.<lb/>
The White Sox said they would<lb/>
try to determine by the All-Star<lb/>
break if he would be able to play<lb/>
this year. The contact also includes<lb/>
two option years for 1992 and 1993.<lb/>
Woods said Jackson picked the<lb/>
White Sox "because they were will-<lb/>
ing to be patient with him. Their<lb/>
attitude is if they get him this year,<lb/>
thafs OK, but if they get him down<lb/>
the road, thafs OK too<lb/>
It was not immediately known<lb/>
how much Jackson would get or<lb/>
how he would be paid if he did not<lb/>
play. But White Sox general man-<lb/>
ager Ron Schueler said the contract<lb/>
represented "a shared risk for both<lb/>
parties<lb/>
Woodssaid Jackson could have<lb/>
gotten more money, but that was<lb/>
not the deciding factor.<lb/>
"Wecould have gotten a hell of<lb/>
a lot more money if we had shopped<lb/>
him around like a free agent type of<lb/>
thing Woods said.<lb/>
The Atlanta Braves were one<lb/>
team interested in signing Jackon,<lb/>
but Braves general manager John<lb/>
Shuerholz said today Woods told<lb/>
him Jackson wanted to stay in the<lb/>
American League.<lb/>
Woods said other fators in the<lb/>
decision to sign with the White Sox<lb/>
were the medical staff and the team's<lb/>
on-field improvement last year. The<lb/>
White Sox were second to Oakland<lb/>
in the AL West in 1990.<lb/>
"Of all the teams in the league,<lb/>
the White Sox have the best chance<lb/>
of going out and getting the ring<lb/>
Jackson said. "It's not the fame, it's<lb/>
not the money, it's the chance to go<lb/>
outand get the world championship<lb/>
ring<lb/>
Woods said Jackson and his<lb/>
wife, Linda, decided last weekend<lb/>
on the White Sox. They came to<lb/>
Woodsand said, "We want the Sox<lb/>
Woodssaid.<lb/>
Jackson was released by the<lb/>
Royals on March 18 when team<lb/>
doctor Steve Joyce determined the<lb/>
28-year-old outfielder's football-<lb/>
related hip injury would not allow<lb/>
him to play baseball this season.<lb/>
Joyce had also expressed<lb/>
doubts about Jackson's ability to<lb/>
return to the baseball or football<lb/>
field ever again.<lb/>
But Dr. James Andrews, a<lb/>
leading orthopedic specialist in the<lb/>
athletic field.examined Jackson and<lb/>
did not rule out a return to pro<lb/>
sports<lb/>
Jackson has one year left on his<lb/>
$7.4 million contract with the<lb/>
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said the team will stick with him<lb/>
and expects Bo to be ready to play<lb/>
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"ACTIVE MILITARY FREE"<lb/>
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</div></body></text></TEI>