<?xml version="1.0"?><TEI xmlns="http://www.tei-c.org/ns/1.0" xmlns:xsi="http://www.w3.org/2001/XMLSchema-instance" xsi:schemaLocation="http://www.tei-c.org/ns/1.0 http://digital.lib.ecu.edu/tei/xsd/tei_P5.xsd"><teiHeader><fileDesc><titleStmt><title></title><author></author><respStmt><resp>Text encoded by</resp><name>Digital Collections</name></respStmt></titleStmt><publicationStmt><distributor>East Carolina University. J. Y. Joyner Library</distributor><address><addrLine>Digital Collections</addrLine><addrLine>Joyner Library, East Carolina University</addrLine><addrLine>East Fifth Street, Greenville NC 27858-4353 USA</addrLine></address><date>2012</date></publicationStmt><sourceDesc><bibl></bibl></sourceDesc></fileDesc><encodingDesc><samplingDecl><p>All quotation marks retained as data.</p><p>All end-of-line hyphens have been removed, and the trailing part of a word has been joined to the preceding line.</p><p>All smart quotes have been converted into straight quotes.</p></samplingDecl><classDecl><taxonomy xml:id="LCSH"><bibl>Library of Congress Subject Headings</bibl></taxonomy></classDecl></encodingDesc><profileDesc><creation><date></date></creation><langUsage xml:lang="en-US"><language ident="en-US" usage="100">English</language></langUsage><textClass><keywords scheme="#LCSH"><list><item></item></list></keywords></textClass></profileDesc></teiHeader><text><body><div type="other">
<p rend="align(centerbold)">[This text is machine generated and may contain errors.]</p>
<pb facs="00058314_0001"/>
Basically, it's hot 3<lb/>
Basic Instinct thrills audience with steamy love scenes.<lb/>
Get a job!<lb/>
Columnist describes how to capture dream jobs.<lb/>
14<lb/>
?he lEaHt (Earoltttiatt<lb/>
Serving the East Carolina campus ccnmunity since 1925<lb/>
Voi.66No.21<lb/>
Tuesday. March 31. 1992<lb/>
Grfenviue. North Carolina<lb/>
ClRCUlATION 12.000<lb/>
8 Pages<lb/>
SGA Election '92<lb/>
Brooks, Jones compete for presidential position<lb/>
Jonathan Brooks wants to be<lb/>
it t? man who get- things done .it<lb/>
 I i and one vn a he wants to<lb/>
make a change is b) improving<lb/>
relations with the 11 oft ireenv ille<lb/>
it he i- del ted . A president<lb/>
vs ith all oi these posith e<lb/>
c ents there is still mw hthatneeda<lb/>
to be done Bnxks said<lb/>
I le slid Kl i annol get anj<lb/>
thing done working against cit)<lb/>
hall.<lb/>
1 he politti S ol protest ,inii<lb/>
division will not work, have not<lb/>
worked and won't worli in 1992<lb/>
Brooke s.iui 11 ul,a afternoon at<lb/>
the SGA andidate -1 orum As<lb/>
S(I A president I will be an at rh e<lb/>
voice in city council debate which<lb/>
h,is not been done in the past<lb/>
Brooks said he v iews the job<lb/>
ot president as being a representa-<lb/>
tive of EC I tor the city and the<lb/>
state.<lb/>
Brooks admitted that he and<lb/>
his opponent, Courtney oneshave<lb/>
se eral similar goals tor the ottu e<lb/>
ot president, such as a new text<lb/>
hook buy h.n k program and re<lb/>
turning the Buccaneer yearbook,<lb/>
but Brooks means (t getting to<lb/>
those ends are ciuite different than<lb/>
ones<lb/>
"My opponent and I do not<lb/>
differ on that man points our<lb/>
main difference as candidates rests<lb/>
on my belief that an SGA presi-<lb/>
dent has to workaway from cam-<lb/>
pus' Brooks said<lb/>
Brooks said he ants to see a<lb/>
better representation ot minori-<lb/>
ties m SC.A and said the<lb/>
multicultural center is an eyesore<lb/>
which he will work to replace.<lb/>
"Anyonewho attends an S! A<lb/>
meeting will see that it anything<lb/>
minorities hae been shut out of<lb/>
the Sc.A and are not represented<lb/>
at ail  I intend to do something<lb/>
about that, " Brooks said.<lb/>
Brooks said he feels apathy in<lb/>
SiA is a problem at ECU. "Incen-<lb/>
tives are going to have to be made<lb/>
to get people involved so every-<lb/>
one will see what S( A can do for<lb/>
you<lb/>
Brooks has been active in state-<lb/>
wide politics since 1982. He has<lb/>
been a part of the youth advisor<lb/>
program for Gov Martin He is a<lb/>
member of Inter-Fraternity C oun-<lb/>
Cil, and was the chair ot external<lb/>
relations He is ,o a member ot<lb/>
Kappa Alpha social fraternity<lb/>
Candidates for Vice President<lb/>
Crystal Cross<lb/>
c rystalt ross is concerned with<lb/>
the lack of m oh ement in St .A and<lb/>
wants the apath) to end. she said<lb/>
Friday in a spttxh to the student<lb/>
body<lb/>
"If elected I will initiate a new<lb/>
system to recruit E( I students to<lb/>
become involved in SGA t ross<lb/>
slid<lb/>
C ross has been a member of<lb/>
many organizations on campus in-<lb/>
cluding Alpha Delta Pi social soror-<lb/>
ity, where she is the membership<lb/>
ihairperson She held the position<lb/>
of unior executive at-large and has<lb/>
been a member of the C reek C oun-<lb/>
cil for two years.<lb/>
It has always been mv con-<lb/>
cern to pay close attention to the<lb/>
ideas and opinions ot students, and<lb/>
to consider them each very impor-<lb/>
tant Cross said<lb/>
As vice-president she said she<lb/>
will be the president's right hand<lb/>
unman and would expect to be a<lb/>
representative for the students in<lb/>
any situation that the president<lb/>
could not fulfil.<lb/>
"SGA is for you Cross said<lb/>
"SGA members should be solely<lb/>
concerned wit the affairs of the<lb/>
student body. If elected SGA vice-<lb/>
president, I can make a positive<lb/>
c hange and difference on this cam-<lb/>
pus <lb/>
Sherry Smith<lb/>
Sherry A. Smith has been<lb/>
involved in SGA since her<lb/>
sophomore year when she was<lb/>
a day representative and she is<lb/>
now running for SG A vice-presi-<lb/>
dent.<lb/>
Other offices she has held<lb/>
include her current position as<lb/>
junior class president, sopho-<lb/>
more class vice-president and<lb/>
vice-chair for the screenings and<lb/>
appointments committee.<lb/>
This year she is junior class<lb/>
president and now she is serv-<lb/>
ing as chair for the screenings<lb/>
and appointments committee.<lb/>
Jonathan Brooks and Courtney Jones<lb/>
( ourtney ones, the current<lb/>
S( , A speaker of the legislature, is<lb/>
running for SC.A president and is<lb/>
hoping her experience will be an<lb/>
attribute to her ability to represent<lb/>
the E( I students well.<lb/>
Jones has been involved with<lb/>
S( .A tor three years. She served as<lb/>
chair of die rules and judiciary com-<lb/>
mittee tor one year and was her<lb/>
freshman class president.<lb/>
Some ot her a? tomplishments<lb/>
havemduded oh oordtoatorofthe<lb/>
biannual S .A leadership retreats,<lb/>
coordinator and moderator of the<lb/>
Double Funding SGA hearing the<lb/>
first of its kind to be held at ECU and<lb/>
coordin itorof the Si -A procedures<lb/>
committee anil the programming<lb/>
committee.<lb/>
Ideas and goals an? nothing if<lb/>
you have no experience to get them<lb/>
done, Jones said m a speech at<lb/>
Friday's &amp; !Aandidate's Forum.<lb/>
And 1 belie e I ha e the experience<lb/>
to di something with mine<lb/>
ones' ideas include a new text-<lb/>
book bu b.u ks stem, a vote on the<lb/>
city council tor the Sc.A president<lb/>
and bringing b.u k the ECU year-<lb/>
book<lb/>
Issues with the city, I agree<lb/>
with Mr Brooks 100 percent they<lb/>
need to be better Jones said. "And<lb/>
I've already been working on that.<lb/>
I've already met with the mayor,<lb/>
members of citv council, and Chief<lb/>
Hinman of the police department<lb/>
Some issues of change Jones<lb/>
said she has discussed with<lb/>
Greenville representatives is Hal-<lb/>
loween, the noise ordinance and<lb/>
SGA representative present at city<lb/>
council workshops.<lb/>
Jones said she is concerned that<lb/>
minority representation on SGA is<lb/>
low because few students know<lb/>
how to get involved in SGA. She<lb/>
said SGA has taken steps to solve<lb/>
this problem by forming a pnxre-<lb/>
dures committee to spread the word<lb/>
about involvement in SGA.<lb/>
lones sits on a committee to<lb/>
help plan the location and funding<lb/>
of the new multicultural center.<lb/>
She is a voting member of the<lb/>
Fine Arts Funding and the Transit<lb/>
Bauds. Among other positions she<lb/>
has held, Jones was a section leader<lb/>
of the jazz and the symphonic band,<lb/>
Some honors she has received<lb/>
are Most Outstanding Committee<lb/>
Member for the SGA rules and Ju-<lb/>
diciary committee for two years and<lb/>
a Pitt Countv scholarship recipient<lb/>
in iwi.<lb/>
Candidates for Secretary<lb/>
?n<lb/>
r<lb/>
"This student government<lb/>
experience has taught me ex-<lb/>
actly what 1 need to know to be<lb/>
vice-president Smith said.<lb/>
See it Big Keep it Simple<lb/>
(SIB-KIS) is the approach Smith<lb/>
and Courtney Jones are follow-<lb/>
ing to accomplish future goals<lb/>
such as a new parking lot.<lb/>
Smith said the concept is to<lb/>
fulfill the projects they attempt<lb/>
by doing the little obs such as<lb/>
creatingcommitteesand calling<lb/>
the right people in order to reach<lb/>
the large goal.<lb/>
"Remember Miss Jones and<lb/>
I have the commitment, dedica-<lb/>
tion and the patience to get these<lb/>
small things done that will get<lb/>
you as a student body big re-<lb/>
sults Smith said<lb/>
Smith received a best com-<lb/>
mittee member award in 1991<lb/>
and is a member of the Council<lb/>
of Student Organization Lead-<lb/>
ers, Golden Key National Honor<lb/>
Society and Sigma Sigma Sigma<lb/>
social sorority.<lb/>
She attended the Interna-<lb/>
tional Student Governments As-<lb/>
sociation leadership conference<lb/>
in Texas last month.<lb/>
1<lb/>
Lisa Berling<lb/>
Lisa Berting is a communica-<lb/>
tion major with a concentration in<lb/>
public relations. She has been in-<lb/>
volved in SC .A for two years and is<lb/>
on the screening and appointments<lb/>
committee.<lb/>
"I ha e timemanagemontskills<lb/>
and I'm also verv open minded to<lb/>
people's different opinions and be-<lb/>
liefs lierting said.<lb/>
Berting said she wants to in-<lb/>
crease student involvement by cre-<lb/>
ating a program sponsored by SGA<lb/>
but involving all other organiza-<lb/>
tions to have a dav where bcxths<lb/>
are set up representing all groups<lb/>
explaining their purposes and re-<lb/>
cruiting students.<lb/>
Berting has attended several<lb/>
leadership retreats in help her<lb/>
achieve her goals<lb/>
She said she wants to work with<lb/>
each of the tour SGA committees<lb/>
individually to end conflict and con<lb/>
fusion that sometimes occurs be-<lb/>
cause oi l.n k of communication.<lb/>
Berting has plans to intormthe<lb/>
sc ,A legislatureof city events sothe<lb/>
representative can inform the stu-<lb/>
dents<lb/>
"Ali these goals are realistic <lb/>
and I know SC.A can achieve these<lb/>
goals Berting said<lb/>
lnaddition to SC.A, Berting has<lb/>
been a member of lnter'arsit<lb/>
Chnstian Fellowship, the Student<lb/>
Pirate Club, Eas Carol.na Friends<lb/>
and works for The East Carolmuin as<lb/>
an advertising representative.<lb/>
She is an active member of Al-<lb/>
pha Omicron Ti social sorority, and<lb/>
has been her pledge class chaplain<lb/>
and is the current Panhellenic del-<lb/>
egate<lb/>
"Ever since I've been serving<lb/>
on SGA I've appreciated ECU even<lb/>
more Berting said. "I'm not run-<lb/>
ning for any glory- or a popularity<lb/>
contest. I'm running for this posi-<lb/>
tion because I have the dedication,<lb/>
experience and determination that<lb/>
I believe enables me to be the best<lb/>
candidate for SC.A secretary<lb/>
Tristin Jones<lb/>
Tristin one has held the posi-<lb/>
tion of secretary for all fouryearsin<lb/>
high school and said she feels this<lb/>
experience will enable her to be the<lb/>
best SGA secretary ECL students<lb/>
could chose.<lb/>
"If elected 1 will be a hard<lb/>
worker as well as very dedicated<lb/>
Jones said.<lb/>
Jones is a member of several<lb/>
organizations on campus and has<lb/>
volunteered for four charities in-<lb/>
cluding the American Red Cross<lb/>
and handicapped children.<lb/>
In the scxial sorority she be-<lb/>
longs to, Alpha Delta Pi, Jones has<lb/>
been chair of two committees and is<lb/>
the new member, education chair<lb/>
for next fall.<lb/>
Jones said her inexperience with<lb/>
SGA will not hinder her perfor-<lb/>
mance because she has expenence<lb/>
with time management and organi-<lb/>
zation she has gained from her other<lb/>
obligations and positions of man-<lb/>
agement.<lb/>
"1 feel as though I am a quali-<lb/>
fied candidate for SGA secretary<lb/>
Jones said. "I know I could fulfil my<lb/>
requirements if elected as well as<lb/>
accomplish a lot of new goals<lb/>
Candidates for Treasurer<lb/>
Heidi Hicks<lb/>
Heidi Hicks is a sophomore<lb/>
marketing major and a member of<lb/>
the SGA legislature and the only<lb/>
student on the ECU Credits Com-<lb/>
mittee, she is a candidate for SGA<lb/>
secretary.<lb/>
"1 feel that the SGA secretary is<lb/>
the main line of communication<lb/>
between the members and officers<lb/>
of SGA Hicks said.<lb/>
Her goal she said is to expand<lb/>
the communication to the entirestu-<lb/>
dent bcxly.<lb/>
"I will make it my job to make<lb/>
sure you know what is going on<lb/>
with the SGA Hicks said.<lb/>
Student participation and<lb/>
avvarenessisanothergcwl Hicks said<lb/>
she will strive to achieve as secre-<lb/>
tary<lb/>
She is a member of Alpha Xi<lb/>
Delta social sorority and iscurrentlv<lb/>
the scKial chair. Hicks said her abil-<lb/>
ity to belong to these organizations<lb/>
and hold a part-time job is an ex-<lb/>
ample of her time management<lb/>
skills.<lb/>
"I'm a person who doesn't take<lb/>
things lightly Hicks said. "Those<lb/>
of you who know me know I'm a<lb/>
hard worker<lb/>
Brad Osborne<lb/>
Brad Osborne has been on<lb/>
the SG A appropriations commit-<lb/>
tee for two years and is running<lb/>
for SGA Treasurer.<lb/>
He is assisting the present<lb/>
treasurer, Eric Hilliard, which he<lb/>
said he feels will create a smooth<lb/>
transition if elected treasurer.<lb/>
Some of his plans are to de-<lb/>
Scott Gottlieb is the second can-<lb/>
didate running for SGA treasurer.<lb/>
At press time, no further informa-<lb/>
tion was available.<lb/>
I<lb/>
velop an equal distribution of<lb/>
money to the organizations<lb/>
funded bv SGA, make available<lb/>
consultation appointments with<lb/>
groups to plan their budgets fora<lb/>
realistic estimate ot the finances<lb/>
SGA will give and improve the<lb/>
student loan situation.<lb/>
"Student loans were not be-<lb/>
ing paid back, thanks to Eric<lb/>
Hilliard we've gotten that down<lb/>
to almost zero people not paying<lb/>
back , I want to continue that<lb/>
Osborne said.<lb/>
He said he also wants to<lb/>
"make students aware that loans<lb/>
are available to everyone<lb/>
Osborne was the Student Pi-<lb/>
rate Club president for two years,<lb/>
was president of RHA one year,<lb/>
served on the Student Union<lb/>
Board of Directors for two years<lb/>
and has been in the Dining Ser-<lb/>
vice committee from his fresh-<lb/>
man year to the present time.<lb/>
All SGA profiles written by<lb/>
Julie Roscoe, assistant<lb/>
news editor.<lb/>
<pb facs="00058314_0002"/><lb/>
2 ?lit East (Earolintan March 31, 1992<lb/>
Greenville seeks to preserve<lb/>
historic college view area<lb/>
Yearbook folds<lb/>
Missouri University will stop publishing its 97-yef old year-<lb/>
book after this schtxil year has ended because of financial problems.<lb/>
Suzanne Holland, interim vice chancellor for student affairs<lb/>
made thedecisiontostop publishing the yearbook, Barbara Burlison,<lb/>
Savitar advisor, said the yearbook is approximately 145,000 in debt.<lb/>
"Until the letter comes down, it's not official Burlison said.<lb/>
"But the book was running a debt and though we were making<lb/>
headway, it wasn't a lot<lb/>
Vice chancellor position added<lb/>
The University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill will stxin<lb/>
reiastate the position of vice chancellor for graduate studies and<lb/>
research. The position was abolished in 1989 due to a lack of money.<lb/>
"The faculty has urged me to reinstate the position said<lb/>
Chancellor Taul Hardin.<lb/>
Mary SueColeman, ass?iate provost and dean of research, was<lb/>
chosen by Hardin to be promoted to vice chancellor Die Board of<lb/>
Governors and the Board of Trustees must approve Coleman's<lb/>
appointment before she is officially elected.<lb/>
Textile center opens<lb/>
N.C. State recently announced the establishment of a new<lb/>
Textile Center. The center is not a place, but an $8 million endow-<lb/>
ment from the federal government. The $8 million will be split<lb/>
between four schixMs with the purpose of "enhancing the competi-<lb/>
tiveness of the U.S. apparel industry<lb/>
David Buchanan, theCollegeof Textiles associate dean, said the<lb/>
funding will bring publicity and prestige to date as well as keeping<lb/>
classroom knowledge up to date<lb/>
Dorm residents more balanced<lb/>
A survey conducted bv the student development office at<lb/>
Appalachian State University revealed that students living on-<lb/>
campus may be more well rounded than those living off-campus.<lb/>
The survey found onampus students to be more involved<lb/>
with student activities, happier with their social lives and perform-<lb/>
ing slightly better academically.<lb/>
"Students that live on-campus are more exposed to other stu-<lb/>
dents and faculty, thus allowing them to grow socially' said ASU<lb/>
Vice Chancellor for Student Development, Dr Greg Blimling.<lb/>
The study also showed that students living in the dorms have a<lb/>
betterappreciation for university-sponsored art, musk and theater.<lb/>
Compiled b) Kliiatttth Shimmrl. Takrn from It's and othrr campus newspapers.<lb/>
By Marjorie Pitts<lb/>
Staff Writer<lb/>
In the first week of March,<lb/>
ECU students were asked to get<lb/>
the word out about the nomina-<lb/>
tion of College View to the Na-<lb/>
tional Register of Historic Places<lb/>
and to assist in improving the<lb/>
quality of life in the neighbor-<lb/>
hood.<lb/>
In December, the Greenville<lb/>
Historic Preservation Commis-<lb/>
sion officially recommended the<lb/>
College View area to the N.C.<lb/>
Historic Preservation Office for<lb/>
nomination to the National Reg-<lb/>
ister of Historic Tlaces.<lb/>
The National Register, main-<lb/>
tained by the National Park Ser-<lb/>
vice, is the nation's official list of<lb/>
districts, sites, and buildings sig-<lb/>
nificant in American history, ar-<lb/>
chitecture, and culture.<lb/>
The proposed College View<lb/>
Historic District will encompass<lb/>
approximately 350 houses, lo-<lb/>
cated in 31 blocks bounded by<lb/>
Holly Street, East First Street,<lb/>
Eastern Street and Fifth Street.<lb/>
The state approved the pro-<lb/>
posal at a January meeting and<lb/>
has forwarded the nomination<lb/>
to the federal government for fi-<lb/>
nal approval.<lb/>
Upon favorable review, Col-<lb/>
lege View should be placed on<lb/>
the National Register of Historic<lb/>
Tlaces in March or April 1992,<lb/>
becoming Greenville's first Na-<lb/>
tional Register Historic District.<lb/>
In a letter written by Mayor<lb/>
Nancy M. Jenkins and ECU<lb/>
Chancellor Richard E.Eakin, they<lb/>
thank the owners and tenants in<lb/>
the College View area, many of<lb/>
whom are staff and students of<lb/>
ECU, for their support of the<lb/>
nominationand ask fortheirhelp<lb/>
in neighborhood improvement<lb/>
efforts.<lb/>
In the letter, they say that<lb/>
"the city and the university share<lb/>
a common commitment to pre-<lb/>
serve, protect, and enhance the<lb/>
special community setting of the<lb/>
College View District<lb/>
Thecityand university want<lb/>
to encourage "responsible own-<lb/>
ership and tenant living<lb/>
"We are really pleased that<lb/>
the city asked us to help spread<lb/>
the word said Brooke Driskall,<lb/>
president of Alpha Delta Pi, a<lb/>
social sorority. "1 think it's im-<lb/>
portant that other students get<lb/>
this information from us so that<lb/>
we can let them know that we<lb/>
support this action<lb/>
Others helping to distribute<lb/>
the information are members of<lb/>
Sigma Phi Epsilon, Chi Omega,<lb/>
Alpha Omicron Pi, Sigma Sigma<lb/>
Sigma, and Delta Zeta.<lb/>
Designation of College View<lb/>
as a National Register Historic<lb/>
would officially recognize the<lb/>
neighborhood as having archi-<lb/>
tectural, historical, and cultural<lb/>
value worthy of preservation.<lb/>
Designation can also bestow<lb/>
eligibility for certain benefits,<lb/>
such as income tax incentives for<lb/>
rental or commercial properties<lb/>
within the district and protec-<lb/>
tion from state or federal projects<lb/>
which might adversely affect the<lb/>
neighborhood.<lb/>
"The city will offer strict en-<lb/>
forcement of laws and ordi-<lb/>
nances related to the area said<lb/>
Marvin Davis, assistant city man-<lb/>
ager.<lb/>
"The city recognizes that<lb/>
College View, as with any neigh-<lb/>
borhood, is an integral part of<lb/>
the city as a whole Davis said.<lb/>
"Having livable neighborhoods<lb/>
is a cornerstone for a strong vi-<lb/>
able city. Improvements in Col-<lb/>
lege View will also positively<lb/>
impact the entire city<lb/>
"As a whole the project went<lb/>
really well, and all the residents<lb/>
in the area were cooperative and<lb/>
glad to be a part of the efforts to<lb/>
help clean up Greenville said<lb/>
Driskall.<lb/>
215 E.Arlington Blvd.<lb/>
Greenville, N.C. 27858<lb/>
(919) 756-3301 (800) 682-7050<lb/>
1. Mendenhall Student Center<lb/>
2. Student Supply Store<lb/>
3. Croatan<lb/>
4. Bottom of College Hill Drive<lb/>
5. Belk Building (Allied Health)<lb/>
STUDENT CX)VERNMENT ASSOCIATION<lb/>
EXECUTIVE ELECTIONS<lb/>
WEDNESDAY, APRIL 1, 1992<lb/>
Bring you student I.D. and vote and possibly<lb/>
win this Schwinn Frontier Bike<lb/>
L<lb/>
Fight<lb/>
Apathy!<lb/>
Vote SGA<lb/>
Wednesday!<lb/>
The East<lb/>
Carolinian, like<lb/>
it, or recycle it!<lb/>
LISA<lb/>
eBERTINGe<lb/>
SGA<lb/>
SECRETARY<lb/>
NORTH TOPSAIL<lb/>
Ys4?C<lb/>
Presents<lb/>
6. General Classroom Building<lb/>
7. Jones Cafeteria<lb/>
8. Front Entrance of Joyner<lb/>
9. Between Jarvis Hall and Jenkins<lb/>
10. Health Science Library<lb/>
Must vote to enter, may enter only once<lb/>
at the poll in which you vote.<lb/>
Must have student I.D.<lb/>
Polls open 9am-6pm.<lb/>
CLARENCE CARTER ? THE BREEZE BAND<lb/>
THE BAND OF OZ ? NORTH TOWER<lb/>
DOUG CLARK &amp; THE HOT NUTS<lb/>
THE MAD HATTER, your MC<lb/>
EASTER WEEKEND?APRIL 18, 1992<lb/>
North Topsail Beach Airport (Gate opens 11:00 AM)<lb/>
TICKETS ON SALE AT<lb/>
EAST COAST MUSIC WRQR 94.3<lb/>
1109 Charles Blvd<lb/>
Phone 758-4251<lb/>
RADIO<lb/>
Phone: 830-0944<lb/>
$22.50 DAY OF SHOW S17 50 IN ADVANCE<lb/>
FOR TICKET &amp; ACCOMMODATION INFO 919 328-4745 1-800-359-4745<lb/>
EasLCacplifia 199U992<lb/>
Playhouse  ea<lb/>
son<lb/>
APRIL 2, 3, 4, 6. and 7 at 8:15 pjn.<lb/>
APRIL 5 at 2:15 pjn.<lb/>
I it Theatre Kor I ass Than V Moii So Bring A Date<lb/>
ECU STUDENTS: $4.50<lb/>
Call: 7"7-r829<lb/>
Coffeehouse:<lb/>
TONIGHT!<lb/>
NeiyPorter<lb/>
Musician<lb/>
The Underground<lb/>
8:00 P.M.<lb/>
Movies:<lb/>
'LaFemmeNktev'<lb/>
Wed. April 1<lb/>
?THELMA&amp;LOUISE"<lb/>
ThursFri&amp;Sat April2-4<lb/>
?TheHitcher"<lb/>
Sun April 5<lb/>
FORUM:<lb/>
HarveyWasseiman<lb/>
from Greenpeace<lb/>
How to Save<lb/>
thePlanet<lb/>
Tue&amp;Aprl7<lb/>
Henckix Theatre<lb/>
800 PM<lb/>
Barefoot<lb/>
is coming<lb/>
APRIL 23!<lb/>
Entertainment<lb/>
'Crucible't<lb/>
By Joe Horst<lb/>
Staff Writer<lb/>
On Apnl 2, the East Carolina<lb/>
Playhouse will present ijs fourth<lb/>
and last drama of the 1991-92 sea-<lb/>
son, Arthur Miller's "TheCrucible"<lb/>
"The Crucible" is Miller's per-<lb/>
sonal insight and passion into the<lb/>
Salem Witch Tnalsof 1692, thought<lb/>
10 parallel the McCarthy hearing<lb/>
of the 2()th Century<lb/>
Qccurnng on the trials' 300th<lb/>
anniversary the Playhouse's per-<lb/>
formances will chronicle Millar's<lb/>
story of theevents and characters of<lb/>
a generation that was consumed bv<lb/>
hystena, intolerance and greed. John<lb/>
Shearin, the director, -avs "This t-<lb/>
one of Miller's most powerful<lb/>
works. The play nngs out with the<lb/>
truth of the human condition<lb/>
The play illustrate- in detail the<lb/>
course of events of the witch trials,<lb/>
starting with vague suspicions and<lb/>
growing into the overwhelming<lb/>
insanity that end with 19 people<lb/>
being sent to the gallows to be<lb/>
hanged as witches. The theme be-<lb/>
ing, as Miller himself states, the<lb/>
"handing over of conscience to an-<lb/>
other, be it woman, the state, or<lb/>
terror propels the mam character-<lb/>
into internal conflict.<lb/>
Each of the 2J<lb/>
Crucible" wa- a I<lb/>
the events thai<lb/>
portrays the 00<lb/>
question of ha J<lb/>
and correct mo<lb/>
face of temptatul<lb/>
Sheann m<lb/>
Dionysian( ,n<lb/>
physical pleasui<lb/>
out no matter<lb/>
code will force it<lb/>
and even into q<lb/>
This moral<lb/>
ma)or participar<lb/>
extreme wa<lb/>
Abigail Vi<lb/>
Kelly VHaa-<lb/>
figure ? a J<lb/>
and the voung<lb/>
love with a mai<lb/>
These perform<lb/>
additional - (<lb/>
and Abigail that,<lb/>
"fleshes out Abt<lb/>
human<lb/>
lohn Proctol<lb/>
rft is -evn b<lb/>
typical trag i<lb/>
Proctor as "pem<lb/>
tempered, and<lb/>
having Lommitt<lb/>
mortal -in- in his<lb/>
tor maintain<lb/>
'Basic Instinct7<lb/>
By Ike Shibley<lb/>
Staff Writer<lb/>
Paul Verhoeven's la-t two film-<lb/>
were Robocop and Total Recall. With<lb/>
them, he transformed violence into <lb/>
an art form.<lb/>
With his latest effort, Basic In-<lb/>
stinct, Verhoeven must work with<lb/>
thecontemporary world rather than<lb/>
an imagined one of some distant<lb/>
future.<lb/>
In the process the violence is<lb/>
scaled down so as to appear realis-<lb/>
tic Unfortunately, despite this real-<lb/>
ism, Bask Instinct came across as<lb/>
less believable than either of the<lb/>
other pictures.<lb/>
The director tries diligently to<lb/>
elevate his characters above the<lb/>
much hyped but essentially barren<lb/>
script.<lb/>
Michael Douglas plays Nick<lb/>
Curran, a San Francisco cop with<lb/>
bad memories of shooting innocent<lb/>
tourists. His troubles with alcohol,<lb/>
drugs and smoking are well-docu-<lb/>
mented in the film, but the viewer<lb/>
never understands how Curran s<lb/>
past drove him to his many vices.<lb/>
Nor does thestor'exammeCurran's<lb/>
p-whe. Nick-<lb/>
ing, after thro<lb/>
wagon, i- p!ai<lb/>
mental examplel<lb/>
fascination witnl<lb/>
a murder easel<lb/>
needed informal<lb/>
tal -tate.<lb/>
The suspei tl<lb/>
for is Catherine<lb/>
Stonei, a novelii<lb/>
murder.<lb/>
Whenaretir<lb/>
dered exactly!<lb/>
Trammel's novi<lb/>
for questioning<lb/>
begins as Nick<lb/>
psychological gj<lb/>
other while freqj<lb/>
erotic sex<lb/>
Earlv in the<lb/>
relate- the plot<lb/>
est work. The <lb/>
falling for the wi<lb/>
eventuallv ged<lb/>
premise is satind<lb/>
being senou-<lb/>
Cathenne 5<lb/>
about the rock<lb/>
 ides the most i<lb/>
film.<lb/>
.? <lb/>
.43<lb/>
????,v:<lb/>
n<lb/>
UJednescI<lb/>
B<lb/>
A<lb/>
Progressive<lb/>
Donee Nigl<lb/>
10 Drofl<lb/>
$1.15 Tall Boys<lb/>
?2.50 Pitchers<lb/>
$ 1.00 Komik<lb/>
?Ladies Free til 1<lb/>
&amp;?<lb/>
<pb facs="00058314_0003"/><lb/>
2 vTfoe Caatifarolitlian March 31. 1992<lb/>
Greenville seeks to preserve<lb/>
historic college view area<lb/>
Yearbook folds<lb/>
Missouri University will slop publishing its r yeai old yeai<lb/>
book after tWsschotl year iSas ended because of finarM ial pn?blems<lb/>
Suzanne Holland, interim vice chancelloi foi student affairs<lb/>
madethedecbiontostoppublishingtheyeartKxik. Barbara Burlison,<lb/>
Savitar advisor, said the yearbook is approximately $45,tHl in debt<lb/>
L ntil the letter comes down it s not official Burlison -iui<lb/>
"Bui the hiH'k was running a debt and though we were making<lb/>
headway it wasn t a lot<lb/>
Vice chancellor position added<lb/>
Ihe University ot North . aroltna at c hapel Hill will soon<lb/>
reinstate the position of vice chancellor tor graduate studies and<lb/>
research Ihe position was abolished in 1989duetoa la kol money<lb/>
The faculty has urged me to reinstate the position, said<lb/>
i hancellor Paul Hardin.<lb/>
MarvSueCoteman a iate provost and dean o( resean h was<lb/>
chosen by Hardin to be promoted to vice c hancelloi 1 If Board of<lb/>
(rtnernors and the Board ot rrustees must approveoleman's<lb/>
appointment before she is officially elected<lb/>
Textile center opens<lb/>
N.C State recentJ) anmunced the establishment t .1 new<lb/>
Textile L enter. Ihe center 1- not a place but an $8 million endow-<lb/>
ment from the federal government Ihe -rs million will be split<lb/>
between tour schools with the purpose ol "enhar mi: thecompeti<lb/>
tiveness of the U.S apparel industr)<lb/>
David Buchanan, theoBegeoi Textiles associate dean saidthe<lb/>
t undine will bnng puhlii ityand prestige to date as well as keeping<lb/>
 la?room knowledge up todate<lb/>
Dorm residents more balanced<lb/>
A survey conducted b the student development office at<lb/>
Appalachian State University revealed that students living in<lb/>
campus may bo more well rounded than those h ing off campus<lb/>
Ihe survey found onampus students to be more involved<lb/>
with student activities happier with their social lives and perform<lb/>
ing slighth hotter academk all<lb/>
Students that live onampus are mere exposed to other stu<lb/>
dents and faculty thus alkiwing them to gnnv stKialh said W<lb/>
Vice hancellor for Student! )e ekpment I ft (ireg Blimling<lb/>
Ihe study also showed that students living in the dorms have a<lb/>
better appreciation for university sponsored art must andtheatei<lb/>
('(?mpilrd h f- liah Ih shimmrl I k n from CPS aiul atht i . ampus m wspapt n<lb/>
By Marjorie Pitts<lb/>
Staff Writer<lb/>
In the tir-t week of March,<lb/>
! I students were asked to get<lb/>
the word out about the nomina-<lb/>
tion of College View to the Na-<lb/>
tional Register ot Historic Places<lb/>
and to assist in improving the<lb/>
quality of life in the neighbor-<lb/>
hood<lb/>
In I Vi ember, the C ireenville<lb/>
Historii Preservation Commis-<lb/>
sion of fit lallv recommended the<lb/>
c ollege View area to the N.C.<lb/>
Historic Preservation Office tor<lb/>
nomination to the National Keg<lb/>
tstcr t I listori Places.<lb/>
1 he National Register, main<lb/>
tained In the National Park St<lb/>
 u e, is the nation's official list ot<lb/>
districts sites, ami buildings sig-<lb/>
nificant in American history, ar-<lb/>
chitec hire and 1 ulture<lb/>
I he proposedollege lew<lb/>
I listorit I )istri t will encompass<lb/>
approximately $50 houses, lo-<lb/>
cated in Jl blocks hounded by<lb/>
Holh Street, last first Street,<lb/>
Eastern Street and Fifth Street.<lb/>
I he state approved the pro-<lb/>
posal .it a lanuary meeting and<lb/>
has forwarded the nomination<lb/>
to the federal government for fi-<lb/>
nal appro .il<lb/>
I pon tax arable review, Col-<lb/>
lege View should be placed on<lb/>
the National Register o't I listoric<lb/>
ria.es in March or April 1992,<lb/>
becoming Greenville's first Na-<lb/>
tional Register Historic District.<lb/>
In a letter written bv Mayor<lb/>
Nam M lenkins and EC L<lb/>
c han ellor Rit hard I 1 akin, they<lb/>
thank the ovt ners and tenants in<lb/>
the ? ollege iew area, many of<lb/>
whom .ire statt and students of<lb/>
ECl tor their support of the<lb/>
nomination and ask tor their help<lb/>
in neighborhood improvement<lb/>
efforts<lb/>
In the letter the) -a that<lb/>
the 1 it and the university share<lb/>
a common commitment to pre<lb/>
serve, protect, and enhance the<lb/>
special community setting ot the<lb/>
College View District<lb/>
The city ami university want<lb/>
to entourage "responsible own<lb/>
ershtp and tenant living "<lb/>
"We are really pleased that<lb/>
the city asked us to help spread<lb/>
the word said Brooke Driskall,<lb/>
president of Alpha Delta Pi, a<lb/>
social sorority. "1 think it's im<lb/>
portant that other Students gel<lb/>
this information from us so that<lb/>
we can let them know that we<lb/>
support this action<lb/>
Others helping to distribute<lb/>
the information are members of<lb/>
Sigma Phi I psilon, Chi Omega,<lb/>
Alpha Omi ron Pi, Sigma Sigma<lb/>
Sigma, and Delta eta<lb/>
Designation ofollege iew<lb/>
as a National Register Historit<lb/>
would officially recognize the<lb/>
neighborhood as hamg archi-<lb/>
tectural, historical, and cultural<lb/>
value worth) of preservation.<lb/>
I designation can also bestow<lb/>
eligibility for certain benefits.<lb/>
such as income tax incentives for<lb/>
rental or commercial properties<lb/>
within the district .mil protec<lb/>
tion from state or federal projei ts<lb/>
which might ad erselyaffe tthe<lb/>
neighborhood<lb/>
I he city w ill otter stru t en<lb/>
forcement of laws and ordi<lb/>
nances related to the area said<lb/>
Marvin Davis, assistant city man<lb/>
ager.<lb/>
I he 1. itv re ognizes that<lb/>
College iew as w ith any neigh<lb/>
borhood, is an integral part of<lb/>
the (itv as a w hole. Day is said<lb/>
, mg livable neighborhoods<lb/>
is a cornerstone for a strong i<lb/>
able city. Improvements inol<lb/>
lege View will also positive!)<lb/>
impact the entire city<lb/>
As a u hole the project w ent<lb/>
reall) well, and all the resident -<lb/>
in the area were cooperative and<lb/>
glad to be a part of the efforts t<lb/>
help clean up Greenville said<lb/>
Driskall<lb/>
BICYCLE<lb/>
215 E, Arlington Blvd.<lb/>
Greenville, N.C. 27858<lb/>
(919)756-3301 (800)682-7050<lb/>
1. MendenhaJI Student Center<lb/>
2. Student Supply Store<lb/>
3. Croatan<lb/>
4. Bottom of College Hill Drive<lb/>
5. Belk Building (Allied Health)<lb/>
Fight<lb/>
Apathy!<lb/>
Vote SGA<lb/>
Wednesday!<lb/>
The East<lb/>
Carolinian, like<lb/>
it, or recycle it!<lb/>
STUDENT GOVERNMENT ASSOCIATION<lb/>
EXECUTIVE ELECTIONS<lb/>
WEDNESDAY, APRIL 1, 1992<lb/>
Bring you student I.D. and vote and possibly<lb/>
win this Schwinn Frontier Bike<lb/>
6. General Classroom Building<lb/>
7. Jones Cafeteria<lb/>
8. Front Entrance of Joyner<lb/>
9. Between Jarvis Hall and Jenkins<lb/>
10. Health Science Library<lb/>
Must vote to enter, may enter only once<lb/>
at the poll in which you vote.<lb/>
Must have student I.D.<lb/>
Poll open 9am-6pm.<lb/>
EBERTING:<lb/>
SECRETARY<lb/>
lot<lb/>
 w<lb/>
NORTH TOPSAIL<lb/>
Presents<lb/>
? CLARENCE CARTER ? THE BREEZE BAND<lb/>
? THE BAND OF OZ ? NORTH TOWER<lb/>
? DOUG CLARK &amp; THE HOT NUTS<lb/>
THE MAD HATTER .<lb/>
EASTER WEEKEND-APRIL 18. 1992<lb/>
North Topsail Beach Airport (Gate opens 11 00 AM)<lb/>
TICKETS ON SALE AT<lb/>
EAST COAST MUSIC<lb/>
WRQR 94.3<lb/>
1109 Charles Blvd RADIO<lb/>
Phone 758-4251 Phone 830-0944<lb/>
S22 50 DAY OF SHOW S150 IN ADVANCE<lb/>
- ! T 4 ACCOMMODATION INI 19 128-4745 1-800-359-4745<lb/>
APRIL 2. 5, 4, 6, and 7 at K:15 pjn.<lb/>
APRIL 5 at 2 IS Pj7i.<lb/>
I im theatre F"t 1? than Mmie" So Bring UaHl!<lb/>
Ml sl is M.50<lb/>
Call: 757-6829<lb/>
TONIGHT!<lb/>
Willy Porter<lb/>
Musician<lb/>
The Underground<lb/>
8:00 P.M.<lb/>
Movies:<lb/>
fLa Femme Nikita"<lb/>
Wed April 1<lb/>
'Thelma &amp; Louise"<lb/>
Thurs Fri &amp; Sal April 2-A<lb/>
n<lb/>
'TheHjtcher<lb/>
Sun April 5<lb/>
PORUNk<lb/>
Harvey Wasseiman<lb/>
from Greenpeace<lb/>
How to Save<lb/>
the Planet<lb/>
TuesApril7<lb/>
Hencfcix Theatre<lb/>
sm p.m.<lb/>
Barefoot<lb/>
is coming<lb/>
APRIL 23!<lb/>
Entertainment<lb/>
'Crucible't<lb/>
By joe Horst<lb/>
Stiff VNnlr<lb/>
- April .<lb/>
Playh ? i  ili present ijs fourth<lb/>
and last drama ol trie 1991 ? -<lb/>
son, Arthur Miller<lb/>
" Ihe c ru ible is Mil -<lb/>
sonal ii ? ?<lb/>
Salem Wit I liialsi ? :? ?. ??<lb/>
U) parallel d ? M<lb/>
 it the 2i ?<lb/>
anniversan the Plavhou -? . ? ?<lb/>
formances ?vill hi ni ?<lb/>
stor ftK<lb/>
?<lb/>
h) teria,inti ilerai .  ?<lb/>
?in, the dire toi<lb/>
of Miller ? ?<lb/>
rks Ihe plaj i<lb/>
truth ol the huma:<lb/>
Iheplav illu tral tailtl<lb/>
. oui - ? ? ? ?? ?<lb/>
starting wit!<lb/>
growing into th ? ? ?<lb/>
insanitv trvU end with 19 p<lb/>
being -ent to the gallo<lb/>
har .<lb/>
ing as Miner him I<lb/>
'handing i I<lb/>
- be it<lb/>
tern t ; - ? thei<lb/>
. .<lb/>
ml i internal<lb/>
-nth<lb/>
'Basic Instinct7<lb/>
c<lb/>
Bvlke Shible)<lb/>
Staff V ritei<lb/>
PaulVerhoe i1<lb/>
wereRoh. .7 and Tot A ??1<lb/>
them, he transformed<lb/>
an art form1<lb/>
Uith hi- latest eft I<lb/>
? ' Verhoe-en must v? rl<lb/>
the 1 cmtemporaryworl<lb/>
an imagined one 1 ?St <lb/>
future<lb/>
In the process th .<lb/>
scaled down so as ti ipp irn<lb/>
tk Unfortunateh :? -?. ?? ??<lb/>
ism Bflsu Insl nci anv 11<lb/>
le? believable than either 1 I? J<lb/>
?ther pictures<lb/>
Ihe director tne diligenth to<lb/>
elevate hi- characters above the<lb/>
much hvped but essentially bai<lb/>
script<lb/>
Michael Douglas plays v. 1<lb/>
Curran a San Francisco cop<lb/>
bad memories of shooting nnc<lb/>
tnun-t His troubles with<lb/>
drugs and smoking are we d ?<lb/>
mentevi in the' film but th.<lb/>
never understands ho Cun<lb/>
pa-t drove him to hi- rruin ?.<lb/>
Nor does the ston examineC urran -<lb/>
ml-j- v:<lb/>
? ?<lb/>
tiSR<lb/>
;?.<lb/>
V<lb/>
UJednesd<lb/>
t -<lb/>
IV'<lb/>
Mr'<lb/>
Progressivi<lb/>
Donee Nig<lb/>
10 Drof 1<lb/>
$1.15 Tall Boys<lb/>
$2.50 Pitchers<lb/>
$1.00Komik<lb/>
?Ladies Free til 1<lb/>
9<lb/>
lr?<lb/>
<pb facs="00058314_0004"/><lb/>
A<lb/>
iday!<lb/>
The East<lb/>
Carolinian, like<lb/>
it, or recycle it!<lb/>
BKRTINGE<lb/>
SGA<lb/>
SECRETARY<lb/>
RTER ? THE BREEZE BAND<lb/>
? NORTH TOWER<lb/>
K &amp; THE HOT NUTS<lb/>
IE MAD HATTER<lb/>
WEEKEND ?APRIL 18. 1992<lb/>
11 Beach Airport (Gate opens 11:00 AM)<lb/>
TICKETS ON SALE AT<lb/>
ST MUSIC WRQR 94.3<lb/>
RADIO<lb/>
830-0944<lb/>
N ADVANCE<lb/>
? 28 4 "45 1 800-359-4745<lb/>
icolina L991,1992<lb/>
ivnousc Reason<lb/>
&amp;KU?<lb/>
:??<lb/>
In 1692, witches were<lb/>
hunted in Salem.<lb/>
Three hundred years<lb/>
have not erased the horror.<lb/>
2, 3, 4. 6, and 7 at 8:15 pjm.<lb/>
PRll, 5 at 2.15 pjn.<lb/>
: Less ilian Vfoie So Bruin Date<lb/>
Ml Ml DENTS S4.5A<lb/>
ill: 757 6829<lb/>
Coffeehouse<lb/>
TONIGHT!<lb/>
WlLLyPOJRTER<lb/>
Musician<lb/>
The Underground<lb/>
8:00 PM.<lb/>
Movies:<lb/>
La Femme NmnA"<lb/>
Wed April 1<lb/>
'Thelma &amp; Louise"<lb/>
Thurs, Fri, &amp; Sat April 2-4<lb/>
'TheHjtchsr"<lb/>
Sun, April 5<lb/>
FORUM:<lb/>
Harvey Wasserman<lb/>
from Greenpeace<lb/>
How to Save<lb/>
thePlanet<lb/>
TuesApril7<lb/>
Hendrix Theatre<lb/>
8:00 RM.<lb/>
Barefoot<lb/>
is COMING<lb/>
APWL23!<lb/>
n<lb/>
Entertainment<lb/>
?lie SaHt (Earoliman<lb/>
March 31, 1992<lb/>
'Crucible' to bewitch audience with Salem trials<lb/>
By Joe Horst<lb/>
Staff Writer<lb/>
On April 2, the East Carolina<lb/>
Flayhouse will present ijs fourth<lb/>
ami last drama of the 1991-92 sea-<lb/>
son, Arthur Miller's "TheCrucible<lb/>
"The Crucible" is Miller's per-<lb/>
sonal insight and passion into the<lb/>
Salem Witch Trialsof 1692, thought<lb/>
to parallel the McCarthy hearings<lb/>
of the 20th Century.<lb/>
Occurring on the trials' 300th<lb/>
anniversary, the Playhouse's per-<lb/>
formances will chronicle Miller's<lb/>
Story of the events and cha racters of<lb/>
a generation that was consumed by-<lb/>
hysteria, intolerance and greed. John<lb/>
Shearin, the director, says "This is<lb/>
one of Miller's most powerful<lb/>
works. The play rings out with the<lb/>
truth of the human condition<lb/>
The play illustrates in detail the<lb/>
course of events of the witch trials,<lb/>
starting with vague suspicions and<lb/>
growing into the overwhelming<lb/>
insanity that end with 19 people<lb/>
being sent to the gallows to be<lb/>
hanged as witches. The theme be-<lb/>
ing, as Miller himself states, the<lb/>
"handing over of conscience to an-<lb/>
other, be it woman, the state, or<lb/>
terror propels the main characters<lb/>
into internal conflict.<lb/>
Each of the 22 characters in "The<lb/>
Crucible" was a real participant in<lb/>
the events that unfolded. Miller<lb/>
portrays the community with the<lb/>
question of having human dignity<lb/>
and correct moral behavior in the<lb/>
face of temptation.<lb/>
Shearin says "The character's<lb/>
Eionysian Greek god of carnal and<lb/>
physical pleasure urges will come<lb/>
out no matter what. Their moral<lb/>
code will force it into other outlets,<lb/>
and even into dangerous forms<lb/>
This moral code characterizes the<lb/>
major participants in various and<lb/>
extreme ways.<lb/>
Abigail Williams, played by<lb/>
Kelly DeHaas, is a bi-dimensional<lb/>
figure ? a vengeful, sadistic girl<lb/>
and the young girl passionately in<lb/>
love with a man who rejected her.<lb/>
These performances will have an<lb/>
additional scene between Proctor<lb/>
and Abigail that,inShearin'swords,<lb/>
"fleshes out Abby, makes her more<lb/>
human<lb/>
John Proctor, played by Win<lb/>
Craft, is seen by many as Miller's<lb/>
typical tragic hem. Miller describes<lb/>
Proctoras "powerful of body, even-<lb/>
tempered, and not easily led But<lb/>
having committed one of the most<lb/>
mortal sins in his philosophy, Proc-<lb/>
tor maintains an internal struggle<lb/>
with his conscience. In the end,<lb/>
Proctor's heroism is evident with<lb/>
his refusal to violate his relation-<lb/>
ship with God by making a dishon-<lb/>
est one with the State.<lb/>
Deputy Governor Danforth,<lb/>
played by Matt McCulloch, isa man<lb/>
who sees himself as a person driven<lb/>
and focused.<lb/>
"In his eyes he is right; he is<lb/>
driven by the State, but even more<lb/>
so by God McCulloch says.<lb/>
Danforth is the ultimate theocrati-<lb/>
cal authority when he enters the<lb/>
community, but even his respected<lb/>
decisions are influenced and<lb/>
swayed by the overall frenzy.<lb/>
Though all the characters are<lb/>
essential to the coherence of the<lb/>
plav, Reverend Parris, played by<lb/>
Donn Youngstrom, rounds out the<lb/>
major characters. Parris always be-<lb/>
lieved that he was persecuted and<lb/>
along with the rest of community,<lb/>
as Miller quotes, "never conceived<lb/>
that the chi Idren were anything but<lb/>
thankful for being permitted to walk<lb/>
straight, eyes slightly lowered,arms<lb/>
at the sides, and mouths shut until<lb/>
bidden to speak<lb/>
Shearin states that the ultimate<lb/>
question posed to these Puritans is<lb/>
whether their "moral soul is more<lb/>
important than their physical life<lb/>
McCulloch relates that the religious<lb/>
aspect of Puritan life is very strong<lb/>
in the play. "The only thing that<lb/>
they had to hold on to was their<lb/>
religion McCulloch says.<lb/>
Critics have raised many prob-<lb/>
lems inherent in Miller's "Crucible<lb/>
The script has very little depth of<lb/>
characterization in it; therefore, the<lb/>
intensity and ferocitv needed is al-<lb/>
most entirely left to the actors. The<lb/>
first scene sometimes overpowers<lb/>
any apparent motivation and the<lb/>
final scene changes points of view<lb/>
randomly. These two scenes, along<lb/>
with the explosive trial scene, will<lb/>
make or break the effectiveness of<lb/>
the play.<lb/>
The plav will run until April 7,<lb/>
with a matinee performance on<lb/>
April 5at2:15 p.m. All other perfor-<lb/>
mances start at 8:15 p.m. Two spe-<lb/>
cial high school matinees will be<lb/>
held on April 6 and 7 in addition to<lb/>
the night performances.<lb/>
Individual tickets are $750 for<lb/>
the general public and $450 for stu-<lb/>
dents with a valid ECU student I.D.<lb/>
The box office is open from 10:00<lb/>
a.m. until 4:00 p.m except on per-<lb/>
formance nights, when it closes at<lb/>
830 p.m. For more information or<lb/>
MastercardVisa ticket reserva-<lb/>
tions, call (919) 757-6829.<lb/>
'Basic Instincf displays vivid sexual scenery<lb/>
By Ike Shibley<lb/>
Staff Writer<lb/>
Paul Verhoeven's last two films<lb/>
were Robocop and Total Recall. With<lb/>
them, he transformed violence into<lb/>
an art form.<lb/>
With his latest effort, Basic In-<lb/>
stinct, Verhoeven must work with<lb/>
the contemporary world rather than<lb/>
an imagined one of some distant<lb/>
future.<lb/>
In the process the violence is<lb/>
scaled down so as to appear realis-<lb/>
tic. Unfortunately, despitethis real-<lb/>
ism, Basic Instinct came across as<lb/>
less believable than either of the<lb/>
other pictures.<lb/>
The director tries diligently to<lb/>
elevate his characters above the<lb/>
much hyped but essentially barren<lb/>
script.<lb/>
Michael Douglas plays Nick<lb/>
Curran, a San Francisco cop with<lb/>
bad memories of shooting innocent<lb/>
tourists. His troubles with alcohol,<lb/>
drugs and smoking are well-docu-<lb/>
mented in the film, but the viewer<lb/>
never understands how Curran's<lb/>
past drove him to his many vices.<lb/>
Nor does thestorvexamineCurran's<lb/>
psyche. Nick's decline into drink-<lb/>
ing, after three months on the<lb/>
wagon, is plaved up as a monu-<lb/>
mental example of Nick's growing<lb/>
fascination with a prime suspect in<lb/>
a murder case rather as much<lb/>
needed information about his men-<lb/>
tal state.<lb/>
The suspect whom Nick falls<lb/>
for is Catherine Trammel (Sharon<lb/>
Stone), a novelist writing about a<lb/>
murder.<lb/>
Whena retired rockstaris mur-<lb/>
dered exactly as detailed in<lb/>
Trammel's novel, she is bmught in<lb/>
for questioning. Thus the suspense<lb/>
begins as Nick and Catherine play<lb/>
psychological games with one an-<lb/>
other while frequently engaging in<lb/>
erotic sex.<lb/>
Early in their relationship she<lb/>
relates the plot elements of her lat-<lb/>
est work: The story of a detective<lb/>
falling for the wrong woman before<lb/>
eventually getting killed. The<lb/>
premise is satirical yet is played as<lb/>
being serious.<lb/>
Catherine's initial interrogation<lb/>
about the rock star's murder pro-<lb/>
vides the most entertainment in the<lb/>
film.<lb/>
 .<lb/>
?,v:<lb/>
The scene occurs in a barren<lb/>
cement- block room where a line-<lb/>
up platform stands behind glass.<lb/>
Catherine sits in front of the glass<lb/>
while five detectives question her.<lb/>
She brazenly replies to every ques-<lb/>
tion uttering expletives like prepo-<lb/>
sitions.<lb/>
At one point she slowlv<lb/>
uncrosses her legs to reveal the lack<lb/>
of undergarments beneath hershort<lb/>
dress. The detectives sitting oppo-<lb/>
site her stare in uncomfortable si-<lb/>
lence.<lb/>
Verhoeven punctuates the stac-<lb/>
cato repa rtee by cu tting q u ickly and<lb/>
frequently from questioner to<lb/>
questionee and back again.<lb/>
Clever camera angles, mostly<lb/>
in the opening forty minutes, pep-<lb/>
per thefilm. Several overhead shots<lb/>
early in the filn. provide an over-<lb/>
view of several scenes before the<lb/>
camera narrows its focus to close-<lb/>
ups of the characters.<lb/>
This is when the film should<lb/>
have picked up the tension but in-<lb/>
stead proved thedropping off point<lb/>
The sex in the film grows dull<lb/>
after the first few encounters be-<lb/>
tween Nick and Catherine. The<lb/>
erotic urgency leaves after their ini-<lb/>
tial encounter. The result is sex<lb/>
without substance, without sensu-<lb/>
ality, and without any real mean-<lb/>
ing in the context of the story<lb/>
The story supplies enough<lb/>
twists to beentertaining. The screen<lb/>
is littered with fake leads, surprise<lb/>
revelations and deceptiveclimaxes.<lb/>
At the riskof giving too much away,<lb/>
the audience actually smirked<lb/>
loudly at the ending<lb/>
The final scene, being tongue-<lb/>
in-cheek, leads one to favor the hy-<lb/>
pothesis that the film makers have<lb/>
created a satire. Yet Jerry<lb/>
Goldsmith's score sounds heavy-<lb/>
handed.<lb/>
The music is that of a senous<lb/>
film. The images, also, are that of a<lb/>
serious work. The violence seems<lb/>
real as opposed to the surreal kind<lb/>
in Verhoeven's last two efforts.<lb/>
The cast does a respectable job.<lb/>
George Dzunda providesgreatsup-<lb/>
port as Michael Douglas' partner.<lb/>
His cha racter rises above the stereo-<lb/>
typical role to which he should have<lb/>
been relegated in another cop movie.<lb/>
Sharon Stone sizzles at times<lb/>
but her character is inconsistent.<lb/>
Her smug, liberal attitudediesdown<lb/>
in some of her conversations. Since<lb/>
this fault lies in the script, she can<lb/>
not be held responsible for some of<lb/>
her mood changes .She does relish<lb/>
the role of a psychotic.<lb/>
Basic Instinct is basically enter-<lb/>
taining. Verhoeven has done much<lb/>
better work and there have been<lb/>
much better thrillers, but in the midst<lb/>
of a theatrical drought of passable<lb/>
entertainment, this will do.<lb/>
On a scale of one to ten, this film<lb/>
rates a 6.<lb/>
Wednesday<lb/>
v<lb/>
Progressive<lb/>
Donee Night<lb/>
10 Draft<lb/>
$1.15 Tall Boys<lb/>
$2.50 Pitchers<lb/>
$ 1.00 Kamikazes <lb/>
?Ladies Free til 10:30 ?<lb/>
Till<lb/>
E?F<lb/>
hn<lb/>
yyriMAX<lb/>
GREENVIUE,NC<lb/>
QAPW14-5,1992<lb/>
T HELIOS &amp; IRATESO<lb/>
sponsored by ecu recreational services<lb/>
no alcoholic beverages or glass allowed on playing fields<lb/>
Intramural Fields Located Adjacent to Ficklen Stadium<lb/>
Photo courtMy J.D. Whttmlra<lb/>
Abigail Williams (Kelly DeHaas), is a vengeful, sadistic girl passionately<lb/>
in love with the man who rejected her, John Procter (Win Craft).<lb/>
New company<lb/>
challenges Marvel<lb/>
By Cliff Coffey<lb/>
Staff Writer<lb/>
The largest comic company<lb/>
in the United States is under<lb/>
siege.<lb/>
Marvel Comics Group has<lb/>
lost several important creators<lb/>
in the past weeks to an inde-<lb/>
pendent comic publishing com-<lb/>
pany, Malibu Graphics.<lb/>
A move this strong is des-<lb/>
tined to have an impact<lb/>
unheralded m Marvel's history.<lb/>
Rob Liefeld, Todd<lb/>
McFarlane, Jim Lee and Erik<lb/>
Larsen are only a few of the<lb/>
eight creators who have re-<lb/>
signed from Marvel.<lb/>
When Liefeld began to<lb/>
work for Marvel he was "just<lb/>
another artist but people be-<lb/>
gan to notice him and desire<lb/>
more from him.<lb/>
Then Liefeld re-created ex-<lb/>
isting characters and turned<lb/>
them into a team, starting their<lb/>
own comic.<lb/>
Liefeld made history with<lb/>
Marvel characters by breaking<lb/>
the copy sales record with one<lb/>
issue.<lb/>
When X-Force hit the<lb/>
stands in July of '91 it sold over<lb/>
15 million copies. This broke<lb/>
the previous record, held by<lb/>
Todd McFarlane, of one mil-<lb/>
lion.<lb/>
Leifeld then made a Levi's<lb/>
501 commercial on the success<lb/>
of X-Force, but after only 11 is-<lb/>
sues of X-Force, Liefeld left.<lb/>
Jim Lee has been Marvel's<lb/>
golden child for close to a year.<lb/>
Lee was given the premium title<lb/>
of Marvel's line, X-Men.<lb/>
The writer, Chris<lb/>
Claremont, had logged over 15<lb/>
years of perfect service on the<lb/>
title but when Lee and<lb/>
Claremont couldn't see eye to<lb/>
eye, Marvel cut Claremont<lb/>
loose. Claremont had worked<lb/>
years to establish the charac-<lb/>
ters, new X-Men.<lb/>
After setting a new record<lb/>
for sales (over 3 million) and<lb/>
working less than one year on<lb/>
the title, Lee has left Marvel<lb/>
and signed on with Malibu.<lb/>
McFarlane, who quit mar-<lb/>
vel in October '91, has also<lb/>
signed on with Malibu, along<lb/>
with four other creators from<lb/>
Marvel.<lb/>
This surge of talent head-<lb/>
ing toward the independent<lb/>
market could mean the end of<lb/>
the reign of the "BigTwo Mar-<lb/>
vel and DC Comics.<lb/>
Marvel and DC Comics<lb/>
combined own over 80 percent<lb/>
of the comic market, but with<lb/>
Malibu having the top three<lb/>
money makers in the business<lb/>
working for them their share is<lb/>
assured of taking a bite out of<lb/>
the Big Two's share.<lb/>
Greenville's New Natural Foods Source<lb/>
offering<lb/>
Natural and Organic Groceries<lb/>
Wholesome Snacks &amp; Treats<lb/>
NaturalCruelty Free<lb/>
HealthBeauty Aids and Cosmetics<lb/>
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M ' ?<lb/>
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rffh<lb/>
Be sure to pick up your coupon for<lb/>
Hank's Homemade Ice Cream and<lb/>
enter the raffle for a dinner for two at<lb/>
Danyl's Restaurant when you turn in<lb/>
your completed Adviser Evaluation<lb/>
Survey form. See your adviser for<lb/>
registration advising and further<lb/>
information.<lb/>
<lb/>
?Huk'i<lb/>
41092,?<lb/>
Ice<lb/>
ID<lb/>
<pb facs="00058314_0005"/><lb/>
She<lb/>
You'll Get Nothing and Like It<lb/>
Serving the East Carolina campus community since 1925<lb/>
Tim C Hampton, General Manager<lb/>
Matthew D. Jones, Managing Editor<lb/>
Gregory E. Jones, Director of Advertising<lb/>
PBS attack comes from all sides<lb/>
Letters to t<lb/>
Jennifer Wardrep, Neus Editor<lb/>
Julie Roscoe, Asst. News Editor<lb/>
Lewis Coble, Entertainment Editor<lb/>
Dana Danielson, Asst. Entertainment Editor<lb/>
Michael Martin, Sports Editor<lb/>
Robert Todd, Assistant Sports Editor<lb/>
Jeff Becker, Copy Editor<lb/>
Blair Skinner, Copy Editor<lb/>
Richard Haselrig, Staff Illustrator<lb/>
Michael Albuquerque, Business Manager<lb/>
Larry Huggins, Circulation Manager<lb/>
Chantal Weedman, Layout Manager<lb/>
Steven Ollice, Classified Advertising Technician<lb/>
Chris Norman, Darkroom Technician<lb/>
Jean Caraway, Advertising Technician<lb/>
Deborah Daniel, Secretary<lb/>
By Parker Editorial ColumnistA<lb/>
The EMM Cawliman has served the East Carolina campus commun.ty since 1925. emphasizing information that affects FX U<lb/>
students The Efltl Carohman publishes 12.000 copies every Tuesday and Thursday The masthead editorial in each ed.t.on<lb/>
is the or.n.on of the Editorial Board. The East Carolinian welcomes letters expressing all points of view. Letters should be<lb/>
limited to 250 words or less. For purposes of decency and brevity. The East Carolinian reserves the right to edit or reject letters<lb/>
tor publication. Letters should addressed to The Editor, The East Carolinian. Publications Bldg ECU. Greenville. N.C .<lb/>
27838-4353. For more information, call (919) 757-6366<lb/>
Opinion<lb/>
Page 4, Thursday, March 31, 1992<lb/>
Brooks offers change to SGA<lb/>
The staff of The East Carolinian has<lb/>
wholeheartedly selected its candidates of<lb/>
endorsement for the 1992 Student Gov-<lb/>
ernment Association political positions.<lb/>
The following candidates were individu-<lb/>
ally determined to be the best candidates<lb/>
for their respective postions:<lb/>
PRESIDENT: Jonathan Brooks<lb/>
Brooks was selected based on his abil-<lb/>
ity to communicate and translate his po-<lb/>
sitions clearly. His lack of student gov-<lb/>
ernment experience will be counterbal-<lb/>
anced by his dealings in state politics.<lb/>
Also, his lack of experience gives him a<lb/>
fresh look at the workings of the student<lb/>
government system. Brooks' high level of<lb/>
determination along with the aforemen-<lb/>
tioned qualities seem to be the right com-<lb/>
bination for the demanding position of<lb/>
president of SGA.<lb/>
VICE PRESIDENT: Crystal Cross<lb/>
Cross was chosen over her counter-<lb/>
part partly for her decision and ability to<lb/>
run a single campaign. Even though it is<lb/>
not against SGA guidelines and regula-<lb/>
tions to run a joint campaign, one must be<lb/>
as strong as the other and not rely on one's<lb/>
past. In addition to the similar qualifica-<lb/>
tions of both vice presidential candidates,<lb/>
Cross' overall schedule is better suited to<lb/>
devote a proper amount of time to the<lb/>
position SGA vice president demands.<lb/>
TREASURER: Brad Osborne<lb/>
When one runs for political office, the<lb/>
least one can do is make hisher sched-<lb/>
uled appearances. In the event that some<lb/>
unforeseen circumstance may arise one<lb/>
should at least send a representative or<lb/>
contact the event office in advance to<lb/>
explain the absence. One of the main<lb/>
reason's for Osborne's endorsement stems<lb/>
from his opponent's absence at the March<lb/>
27 SGA forum. Osborne was also selected<lb/>
for his past involvement with the current<lb/>
treasurer and his knowledge of current<lb/>
events dealing with the SGA Treasurers'<lb/>
position. With a little more grooming<lb/>
from current SGATreasurer, Eric Hilliard,<lb/>
Osborne should contribute greatly to the<lb/>
1992 SGA staff.<lb/>
SECRETARY: Lisa Berting<lb/>
Berting's overall experience and<lb/>
dedication played key factors in her se-<lb/>
lection. She possesses the qualities so<lb/>
desperately needed to hold together such<lb/>
a diversed group of individuals. With<lb/>
her strong work ethic and easy-going<lb/>
personality, the 1992 Student Govern-<lb/>
ment Association should far exceed the<lb/>
expected goals.<lb/>
In the wake of the recent con-<lb/>
servative attack on the National En-<lb/>
dowment of the Arts, Public Televi-<lb/>
sion is being taken to task for its<lb/>
alleged liberal bias Though the gov-<lb/>
ernment pays but a fourth of PBS's<lb/>
funding, if the tax dollars cut off<lb/>
we'll be seeing Big Bird and cajun<lb/>
chef Justin Wilson in This Old Unem-<lb/>
ployment Line<lb/>
Though attention was origi-<lb/>
nally focused on the network's in-<lb/>
frequently-run documentaries con-<lb/>
cerning subjects like abortion and<lb/>
religion, now the real offenders are<lb/>
being exposed "Leftist" purveyors<lb/>
like The MacNeil-Lehrer Report, the<lb/>
Bill Movers series, and Charles<lb/>
Kuralt. That pinko Masterpiece The-<lb/>
atre OUghtl get it next<lb/>
Unfortunately, even the venue<lb/>
of censorship looks better than what<lb/>
opponents of government-sup-<lb/>
ported media have in mind? pull<lb/>
all the tax support and let PBS make<lb/>
the rest oi the money, or the indi-<lb/>
vidual programs can go hunting<lb/>
across the dial for new homes For<lb/>
most staples of Public Television,<lb/>
that means death. The Children's<lb/>
Television Workshop has looked<lb/>
intocommeraally relocating Sesame<lb/>
Street for years with no success<lb/>
Most of the shows featured on<lb/>
Public Television simply aren't<lb/>
popular enough to make it on net-<lb/>
work TV The average viewer still<lb/>
cannot watch a science-based fea-<lb/>
ture that lasts longer than two min-<lb/>
utes The statelv reserve of Austin<lb/>
City Limits cannot compete with Hee<lb/>
Hr'iv's scantily clad models and<lb/>
knock-knock jokes Most PBS pro-<lb/>
gramming needs an outlet that<lb/>
doesn't bow to the whims of public<lb/>
trend in the constant search for big<lb/>
bucks. It is nice that we have a chan-<lb/>
nel with some integrity Or do we7<lb/>
Recently the UNC-Center for<lb/>
Public Television held its bi-annual<lb/>
telethon that drums up viewer dol-<lb/>
lars to supplement sponsorship in-<lb/>
come "Festival 92" was very aware<lb/>
of the financial danger facing them,<lb/>
and responded accordingly In the<lb/>
manner that network television com-<lb/>
petes in sweeps weeks by featuring<lb/>
sex, violence and controversial sub-<lb/>
ject matter, so did PBS alter format<lb/>
with a barrage of Lawrence Welk ?<lb/>
the likes of which this world has<lb/>
never seen Shows of political na-<lb/>
ture such as Firing Line and The<lb/>
McLaughlin Group were temporarily<lb/>
replaced with every stock nature<lb/>
documentary and "up with people"<lb/>
type program the UNC affiliate had<lb/>
For two weeks PBS beca me the Fam-<lb/>
ily Channel sans Willard Scott<lb/>
promos.<lb/>
I myself disappointed one vol-<lb/>
unteer manning the phones by ex-<lb/>
plaining why I wouldn't be making<lb/>
a pledge, which she graciously prom-<lb/>
ised to pass on to one of the higher-<lb/>
ups If PBS is going to alter format<lb/>
for a "money audience" or give in to<lb/>
the pressure of a single group ? one<lb/>
that 1 dare say probably doesn't<lb/>
watch that much public television<lb/>
anyway, then I will have a hard time<lb/>
supporting them during this fund-<lb/>
ing debate<lb/>
This may have been a response<lb/>
solely endemic to North Carolina,<lb/>
but if this is our only outlet to that<lb/>
programming, then that is enough<lb/>
If PBS trusts their audience and is<lb/>
counting on the viewer's help, then<lb/>
they cannot cowtow to another, and<lb/>
possibly lesser, denominator<lb/>
Now some of you NOV A-hat-<lb/>
ing. Bill Moyers-despising taxpay-<lb/>
ers out there may be thinking like<lb/>
the pressure groups ? well, I don't<lb/>
watch that stuff or even like it, so<lb/>
why should I pay for it' My re-<lb/>
sponse is simple turnabout 1 don't<lb/>
like a lot of things the government<lb/>
funds, but 1 don't stop paying taxes<lb/>
now, do I? In direct respects, there<lb/>
are also many PBS shows I do not<lb/>
enjoy, yet I realize that many people<lb/>
do, and should be able to<lb/>
This is on one level, a problem<lb/>
of toleration Anyone bothered by<lb/>
the piddling amount of their taxes<lb/>
funding public television should, as<lb/>
John Frohnmeyer suggested to NEA<lb/>
cntics, worry about something that<lb/>
is really costing them money like<lb/>
the Savings and Loan fiasco<lb/>
But as the problem is said to<lb/>
be with news and educational-ori-<lb/>
ented programming, it exemplifies<lb/>
an age-old mi. conception Hardcore<lb/>
conservatives cannot distinguish<lb/>
unbiasednessfromliberalness That<lb/>
is historically proven by the nght-<lb/>
wmg's view of the news media as<lb/>
leftist, because of the tendency to<lb/>
report establishment in unobjectivr?<lb/>
fashion, which is not always flatter-<lb/>
ing<lb/>
Worse yet is the fear of mere<lb/>
ideas.<lb/>
Personally, I'll occasionally<lb/>
watch something that displays a<lb/>
viewpoint I do not agree with, if<lb/>
only to better understand the idea in<lb/>
order to argue against it Whether I<lb/>
see merit in it or not, I'm still learn-<lb/>
ing something Then again, maybe<lb/>
that's what we're really afraid of<lb/>
Watch out. National Public Ra-<lb/>
dio, they're coming for you next<lb/>
Maxwell's Silver Hammer<lb/>
Anti-drug campaign misleads viewers<lb/>
By<lb/>
Scott<lb/>
Maxwell<lb/>
Editorial<lb/>
Columnist<lb/>
On The Fringe<lb/>
Job market dismal, grad school OK<lb/>
By Tim E.<lb/>
Hampton<lb/>
Editorial<lb/>
Columnist<lb/>
While reading (yes, I can read,<lb/>
thank you very much) the JOBS OF-<lb/>
FERED section of the classifieds, this<lb/>
came into the vortex of vision:<lb/>
SOON-TO-BE COLLEGE<lb/>
CRADS: Job market looks pretty<lb/>
grim and down right bleak. If you<lb/>
can't find that 30K front office job,<lb/>
with perks like daily massages, free<lb/>
cappuchino and personal booths at a<lb/>
barbecue restaurant, then come work<lb/>
for us. Now hiring for monotonous<lb/>
work in a pickle factory at $4.45 an<lb/>
hour in beautiful poverty-stricken<lb/>
Eastern N.C. Free jar of pickles ev-<lb/>
ery week Apply at Exploitation<lb/>
Temporary Service<lb/>
A recent study estimates that<lb/>
of the 1 million college graduates in<lb/>
1992, only 40 percent will find jobs<lb/>
in the their preferred fields. The other<lb/>
600,000 will just have to pray they<lb/>
don't become caught in a pickle.<lb/>
So, in hopes that members of<lb/>
the class of 1992 don't become like<lb/>
one of my graduate friends who<lb/>
works as a floor mopper at a Pee<lb/>
Wee Herman theater, or another<lb/>
post-morter-board amico who is em-<lb/>
ployed by City Services (the sewer<lb/>
division), it is time to assemble "The<lb/>
I Want A Good Job Really Bad Hand-<lb/>
book "<lb/>
Consideration No. 1: Make<lb/>
sure the resume emphasizes those<lb/>
good qualities and doesn't mention<lb/>
the bad For example, under EXPE-<lb/>
RIENCE, follow this lead:<lb/>
1991 to Present<lb/>
Campus leader, with responsibili-<lb/>
ties of: planning nonviolent ice cream<lb/>
socials, and making sure eivrybody was<lb/>
harmonious.<lb/>
There is no need to point out<lb/>
that nothing was really accom-<lb/>
plished during your administration<lb/>
and corruption was swept under the<lb/>
carpet.<lb/>
Another example of 'Resume<lb/>
Beautification' falls under<lb/>
AWARDS<lb/>
Service Award from the ECU<lb/>
chapter ofMu Nu Omega for dedication<lb/>
and commitment.<lb/>
Here again, there is no need to<lb/>
write that the dedication involved<lb/>
breaking into apartments and beat-<lb/>
ing people up, or that the commit-<lb/>
ment was writing the check for the<lb/>
keg deposit.<lb/>
Remember that Resume Beau-<lb/>
tification works like Campus Beau-<lb/>
tification: bushes and bricks give the<lb/>
facadal illusion of no inept behavior<lb/>
or wrong doing.<lb/>
Consideration No. 2: Look<lb/>
Act like a conformist during the job<lb/>
interview. Personal demur should<lb/>
be as non-radical as possible with<lb/>
not even the hint of patchouli oil.<lb/>
Clothes should be of a dark, serious<lb/>
color that speak volumes of your<lb/>
willingness to be a faceless drone.<lb/>
Most employers are of the upper-<lb/>
class bourgeois, so lay hints that you<lb/>
are also a brainwashed Republican.<lb/>
Here is an example of this:<lb/>
EMPLOYER: "Mr. Loser, we<lb/>
have exponentially upgraded our<lb/>
employee's work environment in<lb/>
sector 7G. We call it Industrial Plant<lb/>
Beautification<lb/>
PEON (you): "Yes, I noticed I<lb/>
Really like plants and Bushes around<lb/>
here. You know, it reminds me of<lb/>
happy hour at Rabbit's where we<lb/>
drank BuschL I liked Australia, a lot<lb/>
of Bushmen down there "<lb/>
Consideration No 3. Sell your<lb/>
soul During the job interview, it is<lb/>
important to convey the willingness<lb/>
to do anything immoral (except sell-<lb/>
ing Amway) or unethical for the sake<lb/>
of a good salary Fudging account-<lb/>
ing records to hide a SI 50,000 disap-<lb/>
pearance of funds, No Problemo<lb/>
Entrapping employees with stolen<lb/>
candy bars. Hey I'll do it. Paying for<lb/>
a pig pickin' with company money,<lb/>
You Bet'ya.<lb/>
Consideration No 4: Cower to<lb/>
future employer until the Cadillacs<lb/>
comehome. This is the time in which<lb/>
to suck-up, have nose of brown, to<lb/>
have total humility and love total<lb/>
humiliation When pleading on<lb/>
hands and knees, remember to keep<lb/>
a Faustian conscience and say<lb/>
"Yesssss, you are correct sir ma-<lb/>
dame, I am a subservient low life at<lb/>
your beckoning call<lb/>
On the putting surface ? A<lb/>
little more than a month from now,<lb/>
the graduation ceremony will be<lb/>
held in Ficklen and people will be<lb/>
crying. Crying not so much for the<lb/>
cessation of the pain-filled years of<lb/>
NoDoz, bubble sheets and blue<lb/>
books, but because there ain't no<lb/>
jobs.<lb/>
In the worst case scenario (a<lb/>
business cliche, sorry), graduates<lb/>
send out resumes, interview for<lb/>
months on end until the point of<lb/>
frustration, until they become fix-<lb/>
tures of the Emerald City for years,<lb/>
living in shotgun shacks, working<lb/>
sub-par jobs and hanging out at<lb/>
Rabbit's. The extent of the four, five<lb/>
or six year's education is held to a<lb/>
slurred grovel of argumentation on<lb/>
topics as pertinent as One-Way<lb/>
streets and escalating fastfood prices.<lb/>
But then again, there is always<lb/>
graduate school. <lb/>
Their most famous ad goes like<lb/>
this: "This is your brain This is your<lb/>
brain on drugs Any questions7"<lb/>
That's fairly typical of the ad-<lb/>
vertisements produced by the omni-<lb/>
present Partnership for a Drug-Free<lb/>
America it's meant to scare, it's mis-<lb/>
leading, and it has no factual content<lb/>
Those PDFA ads that do have<lb/>
tactual content are usually incorrect<lb/>
Until 1987, the PDFA was running<lb/>
ads that purported to compare the<lb/>
brainwave activity of a "normal"<lb/>
teenager to a teen who was using<lb/>
marijuana, the user's brainwaves, as<lb/>
measured by EEC, were markedly<lb/>
flatter<lb/>
As it happens, the ad was a lie<lb/>
The brainwaves that the PDFA<lb/>
claimed were those of a marijuana-<lb/>
smoking teenager, were actually the<lb/>
brainwaves of a teenager who was in<lb/>
a coma Only after an angry outcry<lb/>
from doctors who could tell the dif-<lb/>
ference did the PDFA pull the ads<lb/>
The truth is, marijuana use in-<lb/>
creases brainwave activity Specifi-<lb/>
cally, marijuana use increases the<lb/>
smoker's alpha waves ? the<lb/>
brainwaves associated with relax-<lb/>
ation and creativity ? while he's<lb/>
under the influence.<lb/>
Another example. Until about<lb/>
a year ago, one of the doors in The<lb/>
East Carolinian was graced by a PDFA<lb/>
poster which claimed that illegal drug<lb/>
use costs American businesses $60<lb/>
billion per year.<lb/>
Wrong. To begin with, the<lb/>
PDFA's claim is based on a study<lb/>
carried out by the federal National<lb/>
Institute on Drug Abuse, which actu-<lb/>
ally claimed only that the use of ille-<lb/>
gal drugs costs American businesses<lb/>
$47 billion per year. (I guess the Part-<lb/>
nership just rounded up.)<lb/>
But John Horgan reported in<lb/>
the Apr. 2, 1990 issue of The New<lb/>
Republic ("Your Analysis is Faulty")<lb/>
that the NIDA study is flawed in<lb/>
several respects. When reviewed<lb/>
carefully, the study actually shows<lb/>
that drug use can't be said to cost<lb/>
American businesses any measurable<lb/>
amount.<lb/>
The NIDA study's flaws are<lb/>
too extensive to go into here; suffice<lb/>
it to say that, among other things,<lb/>
NIDA deliberately confuses correla-<lb/>
tion with causation. Horgan's article<lb/>
is thoroughly chilling and well-writ-<lb/>
ten; it's available in Joyner Library; I<lb/>
urge you to read it.<lb/>
The best that can be said of the<lb/>
PDFA poster is that its creators didn't<lb/>
bother to check the accuracy of their<lb/>
source; even then, they gratuitously<lb/>
added $13 billion to an already bogus<lb/>
figure.<lb/>
The May 1990 Scientific Ameri-<lb/>
can pointed out lies in another PDFA<lb/>
ad In "An Antidrug Message Gets<lb/>
Its Facts Wrong Horgan dissected a<lb/>
PDFA advertisement that claimed<lb/>
that "last year, 15 million Americans<lb/>
used cocaine ? and 5 million of those<lb/>
vho survived required medical<lb/>
helP" <lb/>
Horgan points out that NIDA,<lb/>
? which, as we've already seen,<lb/>
bends over backwards to exaggerate<lb/>
the effects of drug use ? estimated<lb/>
only 8 2 million cocaine users in 1989,<lb/>
about half of the PDFA's claim<lb/>
What's more, NIDA counted only<lb/>
62,141 medical emergencies involv-<lb/>
ing cocaine (and 3,300 deaths) So the<lb/>
PDFA's report of the "medical help"<lb/>
needed by cocaine users is wrong by<lb/>
at least two orders of magnitude<lb/>
Also, the PDFA's numbers im-<lb/>
ply that one out of three cocaine us-<lb/>
ers needs medical help Even if<lb/>
NIDA's statistics are correct ? al-<lb/>
ways a highly questionable assump-<lb/>
tion ? the actual figure is nearer to<lb/>
one out of 132.<lb/>
Counting free air time contrib-<lb/>
uted by individual radio and televi-<lb/>
sion stations across the country, the<lb/>
PDFA has a million-dollar-per-day<lb/>
ad budget to spend on ads like these.<lb/>
A million dollars' worth of lies, half-<lb/>
truths and assorted propaganda, each<lb/>
and every day.<lb/>
Now, ask one question: who<lb/>
stands to benefit most from a barrage<lb/>
of advertisements designed to scare<lb/>
people by exaggerating the dangers<lb/>
of illegal drugs?<lb/>
I can think of exactly three<lb/>
groups. Tobacco and alcohol compa-<lb/>
nies are one; legalizing other drugs<lb/>
would diminish the market for their<lb/>
products.<lb/>
What's more, if you focus on<lb/>
illegal drugs, you won't notice what's<lb/>
being done with the legal ones. In<lb/>
1990, according to annual actuarial<lb/>
information published by the office<lb/>
of the United States Surgeon Gen-<lb/>
eral, alcohol killed more than 28 times<lb/>
as many people ? 130,000 ? as did<lb/>
all illegal drugs put together. The<lb/>
only drug that's a bigger killer is<lb/>
tobacco, which killed 360,000 people.<lb/>
No wonder they want you to look in<lb/>
the other direction.<lb/>
Even after adjusting for the<lb/>
greater number of users of legal<lb/>
drugs, legal drugs are deadlier ?<lb/>
cocaine, for instance, is roughly twice<lb/>
as safe (or half as deadly) as alcohol.<lb/>
And that's not counting drugs in-<lb/>
volved in traffic accidents, in which<lb/>
alcohol figures prominently.<lb/>
Pharmaceutical companies also<lb/>
benefit from keeping illegal drugs,<lb/>
most of all marijuana, illegal Despite<lb/>
the Drug Enforcement Agency's<lb/>
claims to the contrary, medical and<lb/>
anecdotal evidence demonstrate that<lb/>
smoking marijuana is an effective an-<lb/>
tidote to nausea and other symptoms<lb/>
of cancer, glaucoma, and a long list of<lb/>
other ailments.<lb/>
Pharmaceutical companies<lb/>
produce pills that contain THC, the<lb/>
active ingredient in marijuana, which<lb/>
also relieve the symptoms. Some-<lb/>
times. Patients usually vomit up the<lb/>
THC pilla before they can take effect,<lb/>
wasting a lot of their money but fat-<lb/>
tening the drug companies' profits.<lb/>
Worse yet ? from the drug<lb/>
companies' point of view ? patients<lb/>
can grow their own marijuana, the<lb/>
drug companies can't patent it and<lb/>
profit from it the way they can patent<lb/>
and profit from their own pills<lb/>
It cannot be a coincidence that<lb/>
marijuana remains a Schedule I drug<lb/>
? a category reserved for drugs with<lb/>
no medical uses ? despite over-<lb/>
whelming evidence that it is benefi-<lb/>
cial<lb/>
The third group that benefits<lb/>
from a public scared of drugs is the<lb/>
rapidly expanding circle of drug-test-<lb/>
ing companies When you have con-<lb/>
vinced people that drugs lurk every-<lb/>
where, waiting to threaten theirlives,<lb/>
thev are more willing to allow and<lb/>
expand drug-testing programs<lb/>
The media can take credit for<lb/>
helping to fight the war on drugs, but<lb/>
they don't stand to benef it financially.<lb/>
And traffickers in illegal drugs stand<lb/>
to benefit from the war on drugs ?<lb/>
exactly as bootleggers benefited from<lb/>
Prohibition ? but they don't benefit<lb/>
from scare-type ads<lb/>
So the primary beneficiaries of<lb/>
the Partnership's ads are tobacco<lb/>
companies, alcohol companies, phar-<lb/>
maceutical companies and d rug-test-<lb/>
ing companies.<lb/>
And who funds the Partner-<lb/>
ship for a Drug-Free America7<lb/>
Overwhelmingly, it's tobacco<lb/>
companies, alcohol companies, phar-<lb/>
maceutical companies and drug-test-<lb/>
ing companies.<lb/>
I quote from an article titled<lb/>
"Condoning the Legal Stuff? Hard<lb/>
Sell in the Drug War written by<lb/>
Cynthia Cotts, from the Mar 9 issue<lb/>
of The Nation. Cotts studied the<lb/>
PDFA's 1991 tax return and discov-<lb/>
ered the following:<lb/>
"From 1988 to 1991, pharma-<lb/>
ceutical companies and their benefi-<lb/>
ciaries contributed as follows the J.<lb/>
Seward Johnson, Sr Charitable<lb/>
Trusts ($1,100,000), DuPont<lb/>
($150,000); the Procter &amp; Gamble<lb/>
Fund ($120,000); the Bristol-Myers<lb/>
Squibb Foundation ($110,000); John-<lb/>
son &amp; Johnson ($110,000); SmithKline<lb/>
Beecham ($100,000); the Merck Foun-<lb/>
dation ($75,000); and Hoffman-<lb/>
LaRoche ($50,000) "<lb/>
Not incidentally, Hoffman-<lb/>
LaRoche makes more than half a bil-<lb/>
lion dollars per year from its drug-<lb/>
testing operations. Cotts goes on to<lb/>
write:<lb/>
"Pharmaceuticals and their<lb/>
beneficiaries alone donated 54 per-<lb/>
cent of the $5.8 million the Partner-<lb/>
ship took from its top 25 contributors<lb/>
from 1988 to 1991. That 54 percent is<lb/>
conservative. It doesn't include do-<lb/>
nations from the tobacco and alcohol<lb/>
kings: The Partnership has taken<lb/>
$150,000 each from Philip Morris,<lb/>
Anheuser-Busch and RJR Reynolds,<lb/>
plus $100,000 from American Brands<lb/>
(Jim Beam, Lucky Strike)<lb/>
The Partnership for a Drug-<lb/>
Free America lies shamelessly. Its<lb/>
avowed aim is to get you scared of<lb/>
illegal drugs. And it's funded prima<lb/>
rily by companies mat financially<lb/>
benefit from your fear.<lb/>
Be mad as hell. <lb/>
Another response<lb/>
to Mandelker<lb/>
To the Editor<lb/>
After reading Dr Mandelke- -<lb/>
response to the letters from irate read-<lb/>
ers of The Eust CaieltniawJ feel it's my<lb/>
duty to respond to what he had to suv<lb/>
about me<lb/>
It seems that once again Dr<lb/>
Mandelker has misconstrued what he<lb/>
has read It doesn't occur to him that<lb/>
his warped opinion is what got him<lb/>
the responses he receded<lb/>
First of all, let me clarity that 1<lb/>
did not threaten to shoot or kill any-<lb/>
one, least of all someone as insignifi-<lb/>
cant to me as Dr Mandelker What 1<lb/>
said was people like him don't under-<lb/>
stand what rape is, and what it di ies u<lb/>
the victim Because people like him<lb/>
can't understand the big picture with<lb/>
the big words 1 volunteered some<lb/>
words that hirr and people like him<lb/>
could understand<lb/>
I'm not livstt - lent, and<lb/>
by no means a radical feminist, al-<lb/>
though I do classify myself as a femi-<lb/>
nist<lb/>
Women are starting to stai<lb/>
and defend themselves, verbally ?<lb/>
physically We've decided that we n<lb/>
not going to take any B S " from any<lb/>
idiot on the street or some man with a<lb/>
Ph.D who knows nothing ot what he<lb/>
talks about<lb/>
So don't insult our intelligence<lb/>
by saying that you said something<lb/>
different that what you origu<lb/>
wrote Because what you wrote Sp ??<lb/>
for itself<lb/>
I'm not afraid to stand by my<lb/>
words I know that I'm not going to<lb/>
shoot someone because they disagree<lb/>
with me, Dr Mandelker But 1 won't<lb/>
hesitate to "pop a few rounds" into<lb/>
someone frying to physically rape me<lb/>
So take the criticism like a de-<lb/>
cent human being and stop whining<lb/>
tiboutevery little article that cuts you<lb/>
down<lb/>
Sheleathea Wright<lb/>
Senior<lb/>
English<lb/>
Class president<lb/>
supports Jones<lb/>
To the Editor<lb/>
I've been involved with Student<lb/>
Covemmentforfiveyears From fresh-<lb/>
man class representative to student<lb/>
bodv president last year and senior<lb/>
class president thisvear, Ihaveleamed<lb/>
many valuable lessons along the way-<lb/>
One thing I have learned is to<lb/>
hold a great deal of respect for those<lb/>
people who sacrifice their time and<lb/>
efforts m servicetoother students They<lb/>
take the action and worry about the<lb/>
issues that affect us SO we don't have<lb/>
to<lb/>
Whether it's Student Govern-<lb/>
ment, Residence Hall Association, Stu-<lb/>
dent Union, or one of a number of<lb/>
organizations, their efforts often times<lb/>
go completely unnoticed<lb/>
Onesuch individual isCourmev<lb/>
Jones Her efforts through StudentGov-<lb/>
emmentand many other organizations<lb/>
have given her notice I have Watoned<lb/>
her experience and leadership ability<lb/>
grow over the past three vears in SGA<lb/>
Her hard work has b<lb/>
she now holds the higtj<lb/>
responsibility in the<lb/>
speaker This position hi<lb/>
trol over the branch 0<lb/>
ernrnent which alloc at<lb/>
your student fees to sti<lb/>
tiani and acts as your<lb/>
student issues She ha<lb/>
standing job at tins p?<lb/>
strafing her t.n.tfulnes<lb/>
I verv difficult role<lb/>
As boil ba ?<lb/>
student body president<lb/>
earned an that verj<lb/>
There is nothing mo<lb/>
you plan on being efl<lb/>
dent, than ha<lb/>
"know how" to I<lb/>
When you take off<lb/>
1<lb/>
tor someone to t <lb/>
on If you want I ?<lb/>
must ? ? ? . . - lund n<lb/>
to know vn hat admini<lb/>
ertainiss i <lb/>
what timer- I<lb/>
. in place ? - ?<lb/>
? avetokni i<lb/>
l<lb/>
 :th and can count<lb/>
kn<lb/>
crisis in S l<lb/>
hmd it, and h<lb/>
?? . ? ? ? i just pi<lb/>
where)<lb/>
km - ? '? <lb/>
aren't items j<lb/>
ute-<lb/>
the price thr igl ? J<lb/>
Court<lb/>
price Student body<lb/>
position you I<lb/>
resume Anyone h<lb/>
siboncan vou<lb/>
a position "t honor<lb/>
of extreme p. -<lb/>
countabilitytothest<lb/>
looks to you I<lb/>
ership WhetJ i<lb/>
and which di I<lb/>
pus, can all depenc<lb/>
ence and direction<lb/>
office<lb/>
With he-<lb/>
system and close w<lb/>
two student body p<lb/>
no question that G<lb/>
the ability to be an i<lb/>
dent It you would<lb/>
an open ear to) "I<lb/>
experience and abili<lb/>
about it, then 1 urc?<lb/>
support and vote tci<lb/>
tor Student Body Pn<lb/>
No matter who v<lb/>
vour student I D<lb/>
tiondav ' ? '<lb/>
 ?<lb/>
Jones sh<lb/>
support<lb/>
To the Editor)<lb/>
I am wr<lb/>
coming Student Go<lb/>
Onecandidate Ms<lb/>
aligned herself with j<lb/>
date, Mr BilIDansW<lb/>
mg in which Mr Da<lb/>
?lm 601MG<lb/>
UEAT TH I'<lb/>
Jt?,<lb/>
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rom all sides<lb/>
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counting Oil the viewers help, then<lb/>
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noss bh I- denominator<lb/>
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c Bill Moyers-despising taxpay-<lb/>
er's out there ma be thinking like<lb/>
the press i croups ? well, I don't<lb/>
w ? that stuff or even like it, so<lb/>
 pa) tor it1 My re-<lb/>
, . ? ? m  turnabout I don't<lb/>
c- the government<lb/>
? stop paving taxes<lb/>
hrect respects, there<lb/>
PBS shovi s 1 do not<lb/>
. -hat many people<lb/>
? in iblc to<lb/>
i level a problem<lb/>
. . , - lie bothered by<lb/>
o amount of their taxes<lb/>
?, , iston should, as<lb/>
,  - iggested to NEA<lb/>
? something that<lb/>
s realh sting them money like<lb/>
Sav c- and I oan fiasco<lb/>
, blem is said to<lb/>
ews I edu ational-ori-<lb/>
ng it exemplifies<lb/>
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? ves cannot distinguish<lb/>
? ess from I beralness That<lb/>
prove) by the right-<lb/>
? ? , news media as<lb/>
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nent n unobjectiv<lb/>
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M  ? ? , fear of mere<lb/>
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? agree with, if<lb/>
 ??and the idea in<lb/>
. t st il Whether I<lb/>
iot 1 m still leani-<lb/>
ng rhen again maybe<lb/>
t wen rt ill) afraid of.<lb/>
? ? -v. Public Ra-<lb/>
riff for vou next<lb/>
er Hammer<lb/>
isleads viewers<lb/>
? ? view ? patients<lb/>
aw n marijuana; the<lb/>
? patent it and<lb/>
? ? i ? i ?. . an -patent<lb/>
t Nil 1? ? wn pills<lb/>
<lb/>
schedule 1 drug<lb/>
?. ?. 1 ? r drugs with<lb/>
med '? spite over-<lb/>
e that it is benefi-<lb/>
? ? ? enefttf<lb/>
scared of drugs is the<lb/>
eofdrug-test-<lb/>
- ?? av e con-<lb/>
'?? h igs lurkevery-<lb/>
? ?? 'heirlives.<lb/>
? ? allow and<lb/>
testing pr c'ims<lb/>
?n take credit for<lb/>
. waror drugs,but<lb/>
. ? . ? t financially<lb/>
Itrafl - ? . :rugsstand<lb/>
?e war on drugs ?<lb/>
? ? ccer. benefited from<lb/>
?Pn ' it they don't benefit<lb/>
la)<lb/>
I<lb/>
i.<lb/>
<lb/>
I ?<lb/>
' . 'hree<lb/>
?<lb/>
I ?? ?- ?- ISS<lb/>
on<lb/>
it -<lb/>
? In<lb/>
actuarial<lb/>
the on e<lb/>
lurgeon Gen-<lb/>
1 than 2H times<lb/>
I as did<lb/>
ngether The<lb/>
?uer killer is<lb/>
; people<lb/>
fou to look in<lb/>
Snng for the<lb/>
sers of legal<lb/>
deadlier ?<lb/>
roughly twice<lb/>
ly) as alcohol<lb/>
ng drugs m-<lb/>
nts, in which<lb/>
lently<lb/>
smpaniesalso<lb/>
lillegal drugs,<lb/>
llqgal Despite<lb/>
nt Agency's<lb/>
medical and<lb/>
lonstrate that<lb/>
n effective an-<lb/>
tler symptoms<lb/>
kd a long list of<lb/>
II companies<lb/>
Itam THC, the<lb/>
?ijuana, which<lb/>
toms. Some-<lb/>
vomit up the<lb/>
fcan take effect,<lb/>
noney but fat-<lb/>
inies' profits,<lb/>
am the drug<lb/>
Qliie East Carolinian March 31, 1992 s<lb/>
Letters to the Editor<lb/>
? neficiariesof<lb/>
? ? Partnershi - ads .ire tobacco<lb/>
v. mpanies, phar-<lb/>
u . - mddrug-test-<lb/>
: who funds the I'artner-<lb/>
 America7<lb/>
Overwhelmingly, it's tobacco<lb/>
1 companies, phf;<lb/>
eutical companies and drug-test<lb/>
ng companies<lb/>
I quote from an article titled<lb/>
? ring the Legal Stuff7 Hard<lb/>
in the Drug War written by<lb/>
fts from the Mar 9 issue<lb/>
? I he I its studied the<lb/>
PDF A s 199 tax return and discov-<lb/>
ered the ' ? wing<lb/>
Ft -r 1988 to 1991, pharma-<lb/>
ceutical companies and their benefi-<lb/>
ciaries contributed as follows: the J.<lb/>
Seward Johnson, Sr , Charitable<lb/>
Tr s, . DuPont<lb/>
($1! the Procter &amp; Gamble<lb/>
Fund ($120,000); the Bristol-Myers<lb/>
Squibb Foundation (SI 10,000); John-<lb/>
son &amp; Johnson (5110,iXX)),SmithKline<lb/>
Beecham (S100,0tXl), the Merck Foun-<lb/>
dation ($75,000), and Hoffman<lb/>
La Roche ($50,000) "<lb/>
Not incidentally, Hoffman-<lb/>
LaRoche makes more than half a bil-<lb/>
lion dollars per year from its drug-<lb/>
testing operations Cotts goes on to<lb/>
write<lb/>
"Pharmaceuticals and their<lb/>
beneficiaries alone donated 54 per-<lb/>
cent of the S5 8 million the Partner-<lb/>
ship took from its top 25 contributors<lb/>
from 1988 to 1991 That 54 percent is<lb/>
conservative It doesn't include do-<lb/>
nations from the tobacco and alcohol<lb/>
kings The Partnership has taken<lb/>
$150,000 each from Philip Morris,<lb/>
Anheuser-Busch and RJR Reynolds,<lb/>
plus $100,000 from American Brands<lb/>
(Jim Beam, Lucky Strike)<lb/>
The Partnership for a Drug-<lb/>
Free America lies shamelessly. Its<lb/>
avowed aim is to get you scared of<lb/>
illegal drugs. And it's funded prima-<lb/>
rily by companies that financially<lb/>
benefit from your fear<lb/>
Be mad as hell. -<lb/>
Another response<lb/>
to Mandelker<lb/>
To the Editor<lb/>
After reading Dr Mandelker's<lb/>
-espouse to the letters from irate read-<lb/>
ers of The East Carolinian, 1 feel it's mv<lb/>
duty to respond to what he had to say<lb/>
about me<lb/>
It seems that once again Dr<lb/>
Mandelker has misconstrued what he<lb/>
?i i read It doesn't occur to him that<lb/>
his warped opinion is what got him<lb/>
the responses he received<lb/>
First of all, let me clarify that 1<lb/>
did not threaten to shoot or kill any-<lb/>
one least of all someone as msignifi-<lb/>
cant to me as Dr Mandelker What I<lb/>
said w as people like him don't under-<lb/>
hand what rape is, and what ltdoes to<lb/>
?he victim Because people like him<lb/>
in t understand the big picture with<lb/>
the big words, 1 volunteered some<lb/>
words that him and people like him<lb/>
could understand<lb/>
I'm not hysterical, violent, and<lb/>
by no means a radical feminist, al-<lb/>
though I do classify myself as a femi-<lb/>
nist<lb/>
Women are starting to stand up<lb/>
and defend themselves, verbally and<lb/>
physically We've decided that we're<lb/>
? going to take any "BS  from any<lb/>
dioton the street or some man with a<lb/>
Ph D who knows nothing of what he<lb/>
s about<lb/>
So don't insult our intelligence<lb/>
5 saying that vou said something<lb/>
different that what you originally<lb/>
 rote Because what you wrote spoke<lb/>
?or Itselt<lb/>
I'm not afraid to stand by my<lb/>
words 1 know that I'm not going to<lb/>
shoot someone because they disagree<lb/>
with me, Dr Mandelker But I won't<lb/>
hesitate to pop a few rounds" into<lb/>
someone trvmg to physically rape me.<lb/>
So take the criticism like a de-<lb/>
cent human being and stop whining<lb/>
about every little article that cuts you<lb/>
down<lb/>
Sheleathea Wright<lb/>
Senior<lb/>
English<lb/>
Class president<lb/>
supports Jones<lb/>
To the Editor<lb/>
I've been involved with Student<lb/>
Govern ment for five years From fresh-<lb/>
man class representative to student<lb/>
body president last year and senior<lb/>
class president thisyear, I ha velearned<lb/>
manv valuable lessons along the way<lb/>
One thing I have learned is to<lb/>
hold a great deal of respect for those<lb/>
people who sacnfice their time and<lb/>
efforts in service toother students They<lb/>
take the action and worry about the<lb/>
issues that affect us so we don't have<lb/>
to<lb/>
Whether it's Student Govern-<lb/>
ment, ResidenceHall Association, Stu-<lb/>
dent Union, or one of a number oi<lb/>
organizations, their efforts often times<lb/>
go completely unnoticed<lb/>
One such individual isCourtney<lb/>
Jonas HereffortsthnnjghStudentGov-<lb/>
emment and manyotherorganizahons<lb/>
have given her notice I have watched<lb/>
her experience and leadership ability<lb/>
grow over the past three years in SGA<lb/>
Her hard work has been awarded as<lb/>
she now holds the highest position of<lb/>
responsibility in the legislature, as<lb/>
speaker This position holdsdirectcon-<lb/>
trol over the branch of Student Gov-<lb/>
ernment which allocates $166,000 of<lb/>
your student fees to student organiza-<lb/>
tions and acts as your official voice on<lb/>
student issues She has done an out-<lb/>
standing job at this position, demon-<lb/>
strating her tacrfulness and fairness in<lb/>
a very difficult role.<lb/>
As I look back at my term as<lb/>
student body president last year, I also<lb/>
learned another very valuable lesson<lb/>
There is nothing more important, if<lb/>
you plan on being effective as Presi-<lb/>
dent, than having the experience and<lb/>
"know how" to make a difference.<lb/>
When you take office, with your one<lb/>
year term, you don't have time to wait<lb/>
for someone to tell you what's going<lb/>
on. If you want to be effective, you<lb/>
must hit the ground running You have<lb/>
hi know what administrators can help<lb/>
you on certain issues You have to know<lb/>
what University Committees are al-<lb/>
ready in place todeal with certain agen-<lb/>
das You have to know what individu-<lb/>
als in Public Safety, Business Affairs,<lb/>
Student Life, etc have a relationship<lb/>
with and can count on You have to<lb/>
know why we expenenced a budget<lb/>
ensis in SGA last year, the history be-<lb/>
hind it, and how you can prevent it in<lb/>
the future You just plain have to know<lb/>
'where you've been" if you want to<lb/>
know "where you're going " These<lb/>
aren't items you can leam in five min-<lb/>
utes These are attributes you must pay<lb/>
the price through experience<lb/>
Courtney Jones has paid the<lb/>
price Student body president is not a<lb/>
position you hold just to put on your<lb/>
resume. Anyone who has held the po-<lb/>
sition can vouch for that Although it is<lb/>
a position of honor, it is also a position<lb/>
of extreme personal sacnfice and ac-<lb/>
countability to the student body which<lb/>
looks to you for knowledgeable lead-<lb/>
ership WTietheryou"sink'or "swim<lb/>
and which direction you pull the cam-<lb/>
pus, can all depend on what experi-<lb/>
ence and direction you bnng to the<lb/>
office<lb/>
With her vast knowledge of the<lb/>
system and close work with the past<lb/>
two student body presidents, there is<lb/>
no question that Courtney Jones has<lb/>
the ability to be an outstanding presi-<lb/>
dent If vou would like someone with<lb/>
an open ear to your concerns and the<lb/>
expenenceand ability to do something<lb/>
about it, then 1 urge you to cast your<lb/>
support and vote for Courtney Jones<lb/>
for Student Body President on Apnl 1<lb/>
No matter who you support, bring<lb/>
vour student ID on campus on elec-<lb/>
tion day and let your opinion be heard<lb/>
Allen Thomas<lb/>
Senior Class President<lb/>
Jones should not<lb/>
support Dansey<lb/>
To the Editor<lb/>
1 am writing in regard to the up-<lb/>
coming Student Government elections<lb/>
Onecandidate, Ms Courtney Jones, has<lb/>
aligned herself with one mayoral candi-<lb/>
date, Mr Bill Dansey. Iattendeda meet-<lb/>
ing in which Mr Dansey stated that he<lb/>
had Ms. Jones working for him. I do not<lb/>
believe that a candidate for SGA presi-<lb/>
dent has any business getting involved<lb/>
in such a way with a mayoral candidate<lb/>
If Ms. Jones is so concerned with im-<lb/>
proving relations with the city, then<lb/>
why is she getting involved with a can-<lb/>
didate that in my opinion does not de-<lb/>
serve to be our mayor nor has a chance<lb/>
of winning?<lb/>
This brings up another topic of<lb/>
my concern Ms. Jones is being backed<lb/>
by our currentSGA president, Mr Alex<lb/>
Martin Mr Martin has yet attended a<lb/>
single city council meeting Is this<lb/>
"good" representation for East Caro-<lb/>
lina University? I think not!<lb/>
We need new leadership in our<lb/>
SGA leadership that is willing to work<lb/>
with the city of Greenville, not try to<lb/>
meddle in the affairs of city govern-<lb/>
ment Jonathan Brooks is the kind of<lb/>
leadership that we need. He will work<lb/>
with the city and the mayor whoever<lb/>
heshe may be We need a president<lb/>
that will represent all the students on<lb/>
campus, not a continuation oi under-<lb/>
representation I hope that the student<lb/>
txxiy realizes thisand will vote in accor-<lb/>
dance<lb/>
David Reid<lb/>
Sophomore<lb/>
Political Science<lb/>
Current secretary<lb/>
recommends Jones<lb/>
To the Editor:<lb/>
As the SGA Secretary for the<lb/>
past two years, I have had the experi-<lb/>
ence of dealing with every member of<lb/>
the legislature. This experience has<lb/>
enabled me to know just what it takes<lb/>
to run the Student Government Asso-<lb/>
ciation office. Theelection for the 1992-<lb/>
'93 executive officers is going to be<lb/>
held April 1, 1992. I am writing this<lb/>
letter to give you my opinion on who<lb/>
is the best person to fill the job as<lb/>
president of the Student Government<lb/>
Association, Ms. Courtney Jones.<lb/>
This year, 1 have had the oppor-<lb/>
tunity to work very closely with Ms<lb/>
Jones during her service as speaker of<lb/>
the legislature Her commitment to<lb/>
the SGA and her desire to serve her<lb/>
fellow students to the best of her abil-<lb/>
ity has been shown in the past three<lb/>
years that she has held a position in<lb/>
the SGA<lb/>
Working closely with the past<lb/>
two SGA Presidents, I have seen what<lb/>
is needed to be a competent and suc-<lb/>
cessful in the office as president I am<lb/>
positive that Courtney embtdies all<lb/>
the needed characteristics to be one of<lb/>
East Carolina's best SGA President<lb/>
This past yea r alone Ms Jones is<lb/>
speaker of the legislature, a vohng<lb/>
member of the Fine Arts Funding<lb/>
Board and a voting member of Transit<lb/>
Board She has also co-coordinated<lb/>
the two SGA Leadership Training<lb/>
Retreats, coordinated the SGA Proce-<lb/>
dures and SGA Programming Com-<lb/>
mittees, as well as organized and con-<lb/>
ducted the Double Funding Hearing<lb/>
A vote for Courtney Jones<lb/>
would be a vote for a hard working<lb/>
individual who is her for you, the<lb/>
students of East Carolina University!<lb/>
Sincerely,<lb/>
Katie Carstens<lb/>
SGA Secretary<lb/>
6R0WTU HAS S??N ftlWEO<lb/>
FROM THE PRESIDENTS FACM <lb/>
Letters to the Editor<lb/>
Berting deserves<lb/>
secretary position<lb/>
To the Editor<lb/>
For those students who are un-<lb/>
aware, the Student Government elec-<lb/>
tions are Wednesday There is a candi-<lb/>
date running who is concerned about<lb/>
vour awareness and involvementin stu-<lb/>
dent organizations on campus Due to<lb/>
her desire of informing me about SGA<lb/>
issues, I was challenged to become in-<lb/>
volved also.<lb/>
Lisa Berting has been an active<lb/>
memberofSCA forfwoyears Thispast<lb/>
yearalone, Ms Bertmg is active in SGA,<lb/>
a member of the Student Pirate Club, a<lb/>
sister in Alpha Om icnn Pi, a small group<lb/>
leader in Inter-varsity and on staff at The<lb/>
East Carolinian. With that m mind, it is<lb/>
important for us to elect a person who<lb/>
has the experience and leadership skills<lb/>
to handle the position of secretary.<lb/>
This year, 1 have had the oppor-<lb/>
tunity to work very closely with Ms<lb/>
Berting cm the Screenings Committee<lb/>
within SGA She is always willing to<lb/>
assistourchairman in any waypossible.<lb/>
Also, for the past semester, Ms Berting<lb/>
has been working with Katie Carsteus,<lb/>
the present SGA secretary By working<lb/>
with Ms Carsteus, she has acquired the<lb/>
knowledge necessary to serve as your<lb/>
sectary Thistypeof dedication proves<lb/>
she ls the best candidate for the job!<lb/>
Berting ls theonly nameyouneed<lb/>
to know for SGA secretary<lb/>
Kimberly Ross<lb/>
Junior Class Vice President<lb/>
Brooks works<lb/>
for change<lb/>
To the Editor:<lb/>
It is election ti me again at ECU,<lb/>
and regardless of the outcome, the<lb/>
election results for SGA President will<lb/>
dramatically affect our student body.<lb/>
Jonathan Brooks' main focus in<lb/>
his campaigning forpresidenthas been<lb/>
to actively work to improve relations<lb/>
between the university and theCity of<lb/>
Greenville, which can best be classi-<lb/>
fied now as awful. Mr. Brooks, unlike<lb/>
his predecessors, will participate in<lb/>
City Council debate, and already has<lb/>
a strong relationship with our current<lb/>
mayor, Mrs. Nancy Jenkins. Unlike<lb/>
his opponent, Mr. Brooks has not for-<lb/>
mally campaigned for any mayoral<lb/>
candidate, he instead has remained<lb/>
neutral without burning any bridges<lb/>
with Mrs. Jenkins or her opponents.<lb/>
If your concern in student gov-<lb/>
ernment is for more of the same mal-<lb/>
aise and stagnation, then vote for Mr.<lb/>
Brooks' opponent or you could stay<lb/>
at home. If you are ready for a change<lb/>
and are tired of inactivity and impo-<lb/>
tence, then vote for a NEW EXPERI-<lb/>
ENCE, vote Jonathan Brooks for SGA<lb/>
president<lb/>
LenDameron<lb/>
Economics<lb/>
Wholehearted<lb/>
support for Jones<lb/>
To the Editor:<lb/>
As a graduate student, a<lb/>
former SGA member, and a candi-<lb/>
date for City Council, I would like to<lb/>
extend my wholehearted support to<lb/>
Courtney Jones for President She<lb/>
exemplifies the ideals of responsi-<lb/>
bility and competence in govern-<lb/>
ment, two qualities that are always a<lb/>
necessity in any elected representative.<lb/>
Having been a student at East<lb/>
Carolina from 1985 to 1990 as an under-<lb/>
graduate, and having served on SGA as<lb/>
a day representative for two years, I<lb/>
have seen many people elected who<lb/>
had no business in Student Govern-<lb/>
ment. Most students do not realize the<lb/>
responsibility that the SGA has on this<lb/>
campus, nor do they realize the impact<lb/>
that SGA can, and has, had on the af-<lb/>
fairs cf thestudents and the University<lb/>
And the SGA need a strong, reliable<lb/>
president to lead it. Courtney Jones<lb/>
would be that president.<lb/>
Everyone at East Carolina knows<lb/>
that it is difficult to get any work done<lb/>
when you don't know what to do or<lb/>
how to do it. The same maxim applies<lb/>
to student government Ms Jones has<lb/>
several years experience in SGA, which<lb/>
would allow her to accomplish a great<lb/>
deal for the benefit of the student body<lb/>
Furthermore, Ms Jones has ex-<lb/>
cellent ideas on how to lead and help<lb/>
the student body. Two of the most im-<lb/>
portant are the bringing back of Hal-<lb/>
loween and working with the City<lb/>
Council. Halloween is an ECU tradi-<lb/>
tion, and that great tradition should be<lb/>
brought back That cannot be accom-<lb/>
plished properly unless the SGA works<lb/>
with the city Council, and Ms. Jones is a<lb/>
strong leader who would be able to<lb/>
work positively with the City Council<lb/>
for the advancement of the student in-<lb/>
terests and to better the relationship<lb/>
between the City and the university.<lb/>
Courtney would be able to do this eas-<lb/>
ily. She knows what the students need,<lb/>
and how to get what the students need<lb/>
And we need someone like her to go to<lb/>
the city and help the student interests<lb/>
Overall, there is no other candi-<lb/>
date who is as qualified to be student<lb/>
body president as is Courtney Jones<lb/>
She is one of the best student body<lb/>
leaders that East Carolina has had in all<lb/>
my time here. So on Apnl 1, bring your<lb/>
I.D. to a voting area and vote for<lb/>
Courtney Jones, the best choice!<lb/>
Porter Good<lb/>
Graduate Student<lb/>
Public Administration<lb/>
Jones best choice<lb/>
for president<lb/>
To the Editor<lb/>
After working unclose con tact with<lb/>
Courtney Jones I have come to the con-<lb/>
clusion mat she is the best candidate for<lb/>
the SGA presidency. She has been very<lb/>
involved in the SGA for the past two<lb/>
years and understands how every as-<lb/>
pect of how student government oper-<lb/>
ates. Courtney's motives in seeking the<lb/>
presidency are genuine and she is very<lb/>
committed to the university and its stu-<lb/>
dents.<lb/>
By the way, I am a member of the<lb/>
Greek system at ECU, yet I am casting<lb/>
my support for Courtney Jones. She has<lb/>
proven her dedication and is very famil-<lb/>
iar with our student government. The<lb/>
other candidate has never been involved<lb/>
in SGA and believes he can win on Greek<lb/>
support alone. Before you cast your bal-<lb/>
lot, I urge you to look at the track record<lb/>
of the two candidates. I believe you will<lb/>
find you wantCourtney Jones tobeyour<lb/>
SGAPresident<lb/>
Please get out and vote for<lb/>
Courtney Jones on April 1.<lb/>
Sean C. Smith<lb/>
SGA Attorney General<lb/>
f<lb/>
Reviewer's opinion<lb/>
of Cochrane unfair<lb/>
To the Editor:<lb/>
Congratulations By printing that<lb/>
ridiculous article on Tom Cochrane in<lb/>
the March 17 paper, you have elevated<lb/>
Jim Shamlin's idiocy and cultural big-<lb/>
otry to the level of editonal policy If<lb/>
you're going to con tin ue to publish dia-<lb/>
tribe like this, at least have the decency<lb/>
to print your publication on toilet paper<lb/>
so that people will pick it up with more<lb/>
realistic expectations.<lb/>
Mr Shamlin, 1 have this picture<lb/>
of you in my mind ? I figure you must<lb/>
be what, 11 or 12, nght7 Your parents<lb/>
probably patyourhead a lot and scratch<lb/>
you under your chin. "Cute little<lb/>
Jimmy they say Well Jimmy, they're<lb/>
lying Let me explain something cul-<lb/>
ture bashing isn't cute In fact, it's em-<lb/>
barrassing For someone in college who<lb/>
makes pretences to being a writer, it's<lb/>
pathetic. (And it doesn't constitute a<lb/>
musical reviewCanada ? let me see:<lb/>
Neil Young, Joni Mitchell, Bruce<lb/>
Cockbum, Robbie Robertson, novelist<lb/>
Saul Bellow, poets Daryl Hine and John<lb/>
McCrae ? God, Jimmy, you're nght!<lb/>
Just intellectually and musically barren<lb/>
tundra up there.<lb/>
I could pick your "review" apart<lb/>
part by insipid part, line by badly con-<lb/>
structed line, but that's really just too<lb/>
easy. Still, it's unfair to the album and<lb/>
artist in question to not rake your un-<lb/>
educated butt over the coals for some of<lb/>
this bilge. For starters, try to get the<lb/>
album title right in print It adds just a<lb/>
touch of credibility to things. And you<lb/>
could use it.<lb/>
Now then, you noted Capitol<lb/>
Records apparent pity for Mr. Cochrane<lb/>
by releasing this gosh-awful record<lb/>
upon the unsuspecting ("real") Ameri-<lb/>
can music scene where it will die a<lb/>
horrible, dust-ridden death in record<lb/>
retail outlets all across the country Fact,<lb/>
Jimmy: This album is four times plati-<lb/>
num in Canada. Cochrane's last one ?<lb/>
and all the Red Rider albums ? at-<lb/>
tained at least platinum status as well.<lb/>
Capitol Records wasn't taking much of<lb/>
a chance. Next time you open your<lb/>
mouth, Jimmy, instead of speaking ?<lb/>
dose it.<lb/>
As for us "trivia buffs" who re-<lb/>
member Red Rider's "Lunatic Fringe"<lb/>
and its "brief appearance" on thecharts<lb/>
a while back and its subsequent dip into<lb/>
obscurity?badcall,Jimmy. Really bad<lb/>
call. The song is an AOR staple Call<lb/>
WRDU: It's been on their playlist con-<lb/>
sistently since its release in 1981. Try<lb/>
another major market AOR station and<lb/>
you'll be a fool again. Research, Jimmy,<lb/>
is a good thing.<lb/>
Lyrics a problem for you? Too<lb/>
personal for you to understand?<lb/>
Mr. Cochrane's "most original "<lb/>
tune. The Secret is to Know When to<lb/>
Stop probably makes sense to only<lb/>
two people Made sense to me. Made<lb/>
sense to my friend Jeff over on Meade<lb/>
Street. My friend Joe in Boone thought<lb/>
itwaspretty great stuff, too Made sense<lb/>
to more than 400,000 Canadians. Go<lb/>
figure.<lb/>
This is hardlyfandl mean hardly)<lb/>
an exhausbvecrinqueof your noodling<lb/>
little article, but 1 think I've more than<lb/>
made my point I have no qualms with<lb/>
someone negatively reviewing what 1<lb/>
think of as a good album if it's a fair<lb/>
treatment of the music, but this stuff is<lb/>
ridiculous.<lb/>
Frank WRabey<lb/>
Graduate Student<lb/>
English<lb/>
<pb facs="00058314_0007"/><lb/>
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VOTE Chef Ra for S.G.A President!<lb/>
IT'S TIME FOR A CHANGE-Vote<lb/>
Jonathan Brooks SGA President<lb/>
TO THE SOUTH PADRE CREW: Padre<lb/>
was ablast, and the Pikes from Southern<lb/>
Miss were Leaches, they found us every-<lb/>
where - the bars, Mexico and the beaches.<lb/>
They were lots of fun and of course<lb/>
Courtney met her spouse; Imagine our<lb/>
surpnse - we met PIKAS with a house! To<lb/>
the Ruggers Bob, Bert, and Scott thanks for<lb/>
protecting us. and singing along with La-<lb/>
De La-De's on every drunken bus (Re-<lb/>
member Scott: stir those beans!) Charlies,<lb/>
Dunes, and Burmuda's will never be the<lb/>
same; with our songs. Limbo and Congo<lb/>
we made everyone else look lame! Tnna<lb/>
soon came down for a few days and par-<lb/>
tied nght along. She joined nght in on all of<lb/>
our obnoxius East Carolina songs Dana<lb/>
tried to keep order to much of her dismay;<lb/>
Wedrank tequila every sigleday Angela's<lb/>
limo service helped a lot when we were<lb/>
drunk, but there wasn't room for all of us<lb/>
so Leslie and Michelle passed out in the<lb/>
trunk' While Teme was busy doing in-<lb/>
verted keg stands; We found Mary and<lb/>
Melise passed out in the sand with beers in<lb/>
their hand Of course we can't forget about<lb/>
Jellv and her Mexican twin. She was so<lb/>
cute Not - with one eve out and one eye in.<lb/>
As we got on the plane and waved goodbye;<lb/>
we heard one guv say, "If girls at ECU are<lb/>
like that - I'll tranfere any da v<lb/>
ZTA The Shonev's" social was a blast!<lb/>
Let's do it again soon- AOPi<lb/>
LEADERSHIPTHATWILLWORK-Vote<lb/>
lonathan Brooks SGA President.<lb/>
AOPi "Betty" Beta Pi's: Keep up the good<lb/>
work' Not too much farther' Love the Sis-<lb/>
ters<lb/>
WAY TO GO AOPI SOFTBALL TEAM!<lb/>
Keep it up' Love the sisters and pledges<lb/>
SGA PRESIDENT REPRESENTS YOU -<lb/>
the students if ECU You elect someone<lb/>
who KNOWS how to get things done and<lb/>
has a history of working hard for you. Vote<lb/>
for experienced leadership. Vote for<lb/>
COURTNEY JONES tommorrow!<lb/>
VOTE BRAD OSBOURNE FOR SGA<lb/>
TREASURER: Bnng your ID Wednesday<lb/>
April 1st and Vote<lb/>
ELECT CRYSTAL CROSS FOR SGA<lb/>
VICE PRESIDENT: Bnng vour IDon April<lb/>
1st<lb/>
HEIDI HICKS: Good luck on the running<lb/>
for SGA Secretary' Your Alpha Xi Delta<lb/>
sisters are behind you all the way'<lb/>
VOTE FOR A NEW EXPERIENCE. Elect<lb/>
Crystal Cns.s for SGA Vice President. Bring<lb/>
your ID on April 1st<lb/>
SIGMA PHI EPSILON: The night started<lb/>
out for Alpha Xi nght, kidnapped by boy's<lb/>
on a Saturday night, we started off with a<lb/>
tequila shot, then to the back house, the<lb/>
more fun it got. Upside-down margaritas<lb/>
were poured. Limbo was played, nobody<lb/>
w as bored We had so much fun, let's do it<lb/>
again Love always your Alpha Xi friends.<lb/>
Love the sisters of Alpha Xi Delta.<lb/>
BRAD OSBOURNE FOR SGA TREA-<lb/>
SURER Bring your ID Wednesday April<lb/>
1st and vote.<lb/>
EFFECTIVE REPRESENTATION-Vote<lb/>
Jonathan Brooks SGA President.<lb/>
PERSONALS<lb/>
DISPLAi CLASSIFIED<lb/>
ALPHA PHI'S AND DATES: We came to<lb/>
the house for a chapter meeting, but little<lb/>
did we know they were deceiving We<lb/>
needed a date in a big hurry, those wout<lb/>
dates began to worry We piled on the bus<lb/>
with "Hard Times" in mind, this grad a<lb/>
date social was one of a kind Hope all<lb/>
those dates had a good time. Love, Alpha<lb/>
Phi.<lb/>
SAM MATHENY, SCOTT BROWN,<lb/>
AND ROB STEVENS: To the sexiest men<lb/>
there, we had a blast at the Delta Chi For-<lb/>
mal (and at the pool Party) Wish it could<lb/>
have lasted longer! We love y'all, Camille,<lb/>
Michelle, and Debbie.<lb/>
ELECT CRYSTAL CROSS FOR SGA<lb/>
V1CEPRESIDENT. BnngyourlDon April<lb/>
1st.<lb/>
ZTA It was great getting to know you all<lb/>
We had a good time Love AOPi<lb/>
LISA BERTINC: The choice of EXPERI-<lb/>
ENCE for SGA Secretary<lb/>
S1GM AS SUPPORT SHERI SMITH FOR<lb/>
SGA VICE PRESIDENT! Remember to<lb/>
bring vour ID Wednesday, April 1 and<lb/>
VOTE<lb/>
ALL PIRATE BELIEVING ECU STU-<lb/>
DENTS: Vote for LISA BERTINC for SGA<lb/>
SECRETARY- the ONLY candidate with<lb/>
real SGA expenence<lb/>
HHC: Thursday night was outta sight'<lb/>
Earlier I ask if you thought the w eather was<lb/>
nght, we took a vote and I got the green<lb/>
light The burgers and dogs weren't top of<lb/>
the line, but the class six made em' just fine.<lb/>
Later on, with beer in hand, we slammed to<lb/>
Metallica's "EnterSandman" Now wi thirty<lb/>
fish tank out of danger, congratulations to<lb/>
the PR's and new Rangers Conan<lb/>
VOTE FOR A NEW EXPERIENCE. Elect<lb/>
Crystal Cross forSG A Vice President Bnng<lb/>
your ID on Apnl 1st<lb/>
LISA BERTINC: Were behind you all the<lb/>
way for SGA Secretary' Good luck<lb/>
tommorrow in elections Love, the sisters<lb/>
of AOPi.<lb/>
ALPHA OMICRON PI: Had a great time<lb/>
out with you all Wednesday night. Let's do<lb/>
it again sometime Love, ZTA<lb/>
VOTE TOMMORROW! Jonathan Brooks<lb/>
SGA President<lb/>
KIM BUFFK1N, JENNY CLENDENIN,<lb/>
AND ROBYN SMOLEN: Congrats' You<lb/>
all will make terrific Rho Chi's' Love your<lb/>
Sigma sisters.<lb/>
PI KAPPA TAU: Cowboy hats, boots, coun-<lb/>
try music, and hay' A great time was had,<lb/>
whatmorecan we say'Thanks again! Dive,<lb/>
the Sigmas<lb/>
SIGMAS: Founder s Day is almost here'<lb/>
Get psyched'<lb/>
BRAD OSBOURNE FOR SGA TREA-<lb/>
SURER; Bring your ID Wednesday Apnl<lb/>
1st and VOTE<lb/>
ELECT COURTNEY JONES SGA PRESI-<lb/>
DENT. More experience Betterideas Nuff<lb/>
said'<lb/>
BERTINC: The ONLY name vou need to<lb/>
know for SGA SECRETARY<lb/>
SGA STANDS FOR STUDENT GOV-<lb/>
ERNMENT ASSOa ATION. This means<lb/>
that every student has a right and an obli-<lb/>
gation tii vote on Apnl 1st. Bring your<lb/>
student ID and enter the raffle for the<lb/>
mountain bike SGA is giving away!<lb/>
HEY WILDWOOD 34 kegs and one thou-<lb/>
sand people. Saturday is your day, try to<lb/>
beat us! From the fellas at 12th and Forbes.<lb/>
ROSES ARE RED VIOLETS ARE BLUE,<lb/>
Duke isn't sh-t compared to E C U! Wouldn't<lb/>
you like to be a pirate too!<lb/>
Happy 21st Birthday -<lb/>
LISA LEE WARREN L?<lb/>
PERFECT<lb/>
IMPRESSIONS<lb/>
HAIR SALON<lb/>
Located Near Harris Teeter<lb/>
University Center<lb/>
830-1987<lb/>
ia? caw a????<lb/>
(Vm<lb/>
WwnMcn<lb/>
Wet Cut?10.00?8.00<lb/>
SCBD?15.00?12.00<lb/>
Perm?45.00<lb/>
Color?S0.00<lb/>
Foil.?55.00<lb/>
"Where Perfection And Fara<lb/>
Imnrcaaaoaa Re ally Count<lb/>
?Our Mliau are Aperieaced<lb/>
aatd are coattauallv learaiag<lb/>
laaaeat aav atyira and tecaaauea.<lb/>
COURTNEY<lb/>
JONES<lb/>
S.G.A. PRESIDENT<lb/>
??<lb/>
Vote for Experience on April 1st!<lb/>
FAST CAROLINIAN<lb/>
CLASSIFIED RATES<lb/>
Students$2.00<lb/>
NonstudentsS3.00<lb/>
Display ads$5.50<lb/>
Deadline<lb/>
Friday 4 p,m? for Tuesday issue and<lb/>
Tuesday 4 p,m, for Thursday issue.<lb/>
FREE<lb/>
PREGNANCY<lb/>
TESTS<lb/>
Free &amp; Confidential<lb/>
Services &amp; Counseling<lb/>
Carolina Pregnancy Center<lb/>
757-0003<lb/>
111 E. 3rd Street<lb/>
The Lee Building<lb/>
Greenville NC<lb/>
Hours:<lb/>
Mon - Fri 8:30-3:00<lb/>
3<lb/>
hi<lb/>
9<lb/>
9<lb/>
u?<lb/>
c<lb/>
What is it about this per-<lb/>
son? Why do they attract<lb/>
you so? At one time or an-<lb/>
other, everyone finds that<lb/>
irresistible someone. What<lb/>
makes that magic? Why do<lb/>
they drive you crazy? The<lb/>
stars can shed some light<lb/>
on these questions. I can<lb/>
compare horoscopes forthe<lb/>
two of you: Is it in the stars,<lb/>
or are you star-crossed lov-<lb/>
ers? This 15 plus page re-<lb/>
port looks at each of your<lb/>
styles of relating and the<lb/>
relationship between you.<lb/>
It's so accurate you may<lb/>
not want to show it to your<lb/>
lover! Just send $20<lb/>
birthdates, places and<lb/>
times to:<lb/>
Heart Beat<lb/>
203 S. Berkeley Blvd.<lb/>
Suite 32<lb/>
Goldsboro, NC 27534<lb/>
Enclose CkMoney Order<lb/>
Visa - Mastercard number<lb/>
&amp; Exp date<lb/>
 Includes Postage &amp; Shipping<lb/>
Silie Sast (Earritman<lb/>
Applications are now being accepted for<lb/>
ADVERTISING SALES REPRESENTATIVES.<lb/>
? Candidates must have and maintain a minimum 2.0 G.P.A.<lb/>
? Must have own transportation<lb/>
Must be able to work at least the summer and fall of 1992<lb/>
Apply at Cooperative Education, second floor GCB<lb/>
or with The East Carolinian<lb/>
second floor publications bkjg<lb/>
ication Deadline is<lb/>
April 3. 1992<lb/>
Announcements<lb/>
THE GAY -LESBIAN<lb/>
i Social support, advocacy, activities Ev-<lb/>
i eryone welcome - gays, lesbians, bisexu-<lb/>
i alt, concerned family and friends Call<lb/>
! ECU counseling center 757-6661 for in-<lb/>
 formation regarding meeting time and<lb/>
place<lb/>
NEWMAN CATHQUC<lb/>
STUDENT CENTER<lb/>
The New man Catholic Student Catholic<lb/>
Center invites you to worship with them<lb/>
Sunday Masses 11 30a.m. and 8:30p.m.<lb/>
At the Newman Center, 953 E. 10th St<lb/>
Two houses from the Fletcher Music<lb/>
Building For more information contact<lb/>
Fr Paul Vaeth, 757-1991<lb/>
HEALTH<lb/>
FR0M0T10N<lb/>
AND WELL-BEING<lb/>
BACCHUS meeting Wednesday, April<lb/>
1,3 pm-4 p.m room 248, Mendenhall<lb/>
Student Center All committee members<lb/>
are urged to be in attendance.<lb/>
POSITIONS<lb/>
SOUGHT FOR 1993 REBEL<lb/>
Use your creative impulses to publish<lb/>
the 1993 student literary and visual arts<lb/>
magazine. The Rebel is seeking applica-<lb/>
tions for the following positions: Art Di-<lb/>
rector (10-month paid term). Assistant<lb/>
Editor (8-month paid term), Poetry Edi-<lb/>
tor (8-month paid term). Prose Editor (8-<lb/>
month paid term). Apply by April 15 to<lb/>
Media Board Office Secretary, Publica-<lb/>
tions Building (near library). All levelsof<lb/>
students encouraged to apply<lb/>
?VALUATIONS<lb/>
During the week of April 6-10, a survey<lb/>
of student opinion of instruction will be<lb/>
conducted at ECU. Questionnaires will<lb/>
be dishbuted in classes with enrollments<lb/>
greater than five. All students will have<lb/>
an opportunity to express opinions on<lb/>
the teaching effectiveness of their in-<lb/>
structors. The survey will be conducted<lb/>
during class time and will take approxi-<lb/>
mately 15 minutes to complete. Student<lb/>
participation is voluntary and no identi-<lb/>
ties are requested. Instructors have been<lb/>
requested to leave the classroom while<lb/>
the questionnaires are completed. Re-<lb/>
sults or the survey will be distributed to<lb/>
instuctors afier final grades have been<lb/>
posted The teaching effectiveness ques-<lb/>
tionnaire wascreated by the Faculty Sen-<lb/>
ate Committee for Teaching Effective-<lb/>
ness and the Offkeof Planning and Insti-<lb/>
tutional Research The results of the sur-<lb/>
vey, along with other information and<lb/>
.t<lb/>
factors,are used for administrativeevalu-<lb/>
ation of the instructor by the supervising<lb/>
administator within the department or<lb/>
division.<lb/>
SUMMER SCHOOL<lb/>
1992 ROOM RESERVATION SIGN-<lb/>
UP INFORMATION<lb/>
Residence hall room payments for Sum-<lb/>
mer School 1992 will be accepted in the<lb/>
Cashier's Office, Room 105, Spilman<lb/>
Building, beginning April 6,1992. Room<lb/>
assignments will be made in the Depart-<lb/>
ment of University Housing, 201<lb/>
Whichard Building, April 8-9. The rent<lb/>
for a term of summer school is $185<lb/>
(Cotton and Jarvis Halls?$225) for a<lb/>
semi-private room and $270 (Cotton and<lb/>
jarvis Halls?S315) for a private room.<lb/>
Residence halls to be used for summer<lb/>
school are Cotton(women);Jarvis(men);<lb/>
Slay (co-ed).<lb/>
ECU. FAMILY<lb/>
PRACTICE CENTER<lb/>
Winding Your Weigh Down, a nine week<lb/>
weight loss program will be held at the<lb/>
Family Practice Center beginning Thurs-<lb/>
day, April 9 from 5:15 p.m. to 6:15 p.m.<lb/>
Call Mary Memer at 551-5459 Monday<lb/>
through Friday from 8-5 to register or for<lb/>
more information. Class size is limited<lb/>
and a foe is charged.<lb/>
7<lb/>
STUDENT EXCHANGE<lb/>
ECU students Ifs not too late to apply<lb/>
for NSE, Leicester, England, or Acadia<lb/>
University for fallor spring replacements.<lb/>
The deadline is approaching so stop by<lb/>
the office NOW! Openings are still<lb/>
availableNew Mexico, Maine, Califor-<lb/>
nia, Utah, Nova Scotia, or England<lb/>
Spend an exciting semester or year in<lb/>
another state or country! And remem-<lb/>
ber, you only pay ECU Tuition! Come by<lb/>
and see the list of universities available.<lb/>
Contact Stephanie Evancho in Brewster<lb/>
A-l 17 or call 757-6769 for more informa-<lb/>
tion<lb/>
PUBLIC SERVICE<lb/>
ANNOUNCEMENT<lb/>
The merchant of Jones Industrial Park,<lb/>
Hwy. 264 northeast, Greenville wilt be<lb/>
hosting the second annual 'Frying for<lb/>
the Children" ballon rally Saturday, May<lb/>
2 from 2 p.m. until 9 p.m. The event will<lb/>
include helicopter rides, hot air balloon<lb/>
rides and other various attractions in-<lb/>
cluding live bands and local talent dem-<lb/>
onstrations. AU activities will take place<lb/>
at Jones Industrial Parkacross from Agri-<lb/>
Supply m Greenville. All proceeds from<lb/>
theevent will be donated to theChildren s<lb/>
hospital of EiMUm North Carolina dur-<lb/>
ingfte televised Ouldrsn'sMiracle Net-<lb/>
work Telethon May 30 and 31. To volun-<lb/>
teer or more information contact Beth<lb/>
Porter 919-757-3310.<lb/>
SENIOR SHOW<lb/>
Dawn Edwards exhibits her senior show<lb/>
in Environmental Design at the<lb/>
GreenviDeMuseumof Art. During March<lb/>
29 through April 5. Reception is Satur-<lb/>
day, April 4,1 p. m to 4 p.m.<lb/>
ECU BIOLOGY CLUB<lb/>
PLANT SALE! ECU Biology Club.Thurs-<lb/>
day and Friday, April 2-3 from 730 am<lb/>
to 1 p.m. in Roon BS111, Biology Green-<lb/>
house<lb/>
ECU SCHOOL<lb/>
OF MUSIC EVENTS FOR MARCH<lb/>
31-APR1L 6.1992<lb/>
TUES, MAR. 31?Jonathan Jolley, voice.<lb/>
Senior Recital (Fletcher Recital Hall, 7<lb/>
p.m free). THURS APR. 2?Eddie<lb/>
Turnage, string bass. Senior Recital<lb/>
(Fletcher Recital Hall,7 p.m free), and<lb/>
ECU Concert Choir, Brett Watson, direc-<lb/>
tor (Wright Auditorium, 815 p.m free).<lb/>
FRI, APR, 3?Dale Aucfon, saxophone.<lb/>
Graduate Recital (Fletcher Recital Hall, 7<lb/>
pm, fine). SAT. APR. 4?Horn Work-<lb/>
rinp(FletdieuskCenter,aiMay,757-<lb/>
6331). SUN APR 5?Faculty Concert<lb/>
featuring FritzGearhart, violin, and Paul<lb/>
Tardiff, piano (Fletcher Recital Hall, 3:15<lb/>
p.m, free), and Nicole Byrd, accompa-<lb/>
nying. Graduate Recital (Fletcher Recital<lb/>
Hall, 7 p.m, free) MON APR 6?The<lb/>
Percussion Players, Tony Cox and Stacey<lb/>
Loggire, directors (Fletcher Recital Had,<lb/>
8:15 p.m, free).<lb/>
ECU POETRY<lb/>
FORUM SET FOR APRIL 2<lb/>
GREENVILLE- The final spring semes-<lb/>
ter meeting of the ECU Poetry Forum,<lb/>
will be held Thursday, April 2, in MSC<lb/>
Room 247, at 8 p.m Dr. Peter Makuck,<lb/>
the forum's director, said listeners arc<lb/>
invited to attend. He said poets who<lb/>
would like some feedback on their po-<lb/>
ems should bring along five to seven<lb/>
copies.<lb/>
CHUCK YEAGER.<lb/>
ANniffYYIfCrRliV.MiP<lb/>
What do these people have in common?<lb/>
Answer. They could be coming to cam-<lb/>
pus next year to speak if you vioceyoor<lb/>
opinion TUESDAY MARCH 31 kit<lb/>
MendenhaU242atlpmCormt?torjart<lb/>
in the Student Union FORUM commit-<lb/>
tee. For more information call 7574711.<lb/>
Beck pitches<lb/>
By Robert S. Todd<lb/>
A?iUnt Sports Editor<lb/>
ECU pitcher Johnny Beck came<lb/>
within two outs of a no-hitter in the<lb/>
first game of a doubleheader<lb/>
against UNC-Wilmington The<lb/>
Pirates shot the Colonial Athletic<lb/>
Association leading Sea out of trie<lb/>
sky by scores of 1-0 and 3-2 and<lb/>
improving their record to 15-11<lb/>
Beck faced two batter ova<lb/>
the minimum, walking two and<lb/>
striking out seven UN(<lb/>
Wilmington's sole hit came on a<lb/>
bunt that died in the thick infield<lb/>
grass before third baeman Glvnn<lb/>
Beck or johnnv Beck could field<lb/>
and throw the ball in to first<lb/>
"It was a perfect bunt, "johnnv<lb/>
Beck said. "When he put it down I<lb/>
knew it wa: going to be good i<lb/>
could only hope it would mil foul "<lb/>
Beck imid<lb/>
ing was getting,<lb/>
enabling him tj<lb/>
balls and work<lb/>
ECU squ<lb/>
porturuties in ttj<lb/>
innings. The 11<lb/>
innept until thej<lb/>
extra- innings.<lb/>
Dave Leist)<lb/>
inning with a doi<lb/>
to third on Heal<lb/>
ball to third,<lb/>
struck out, Lee<lb/>
out to the seco<lb/>
the inning.<lb/>
Morse led<lb/>
ing first on a SJ<lb/>
taking secondoj<lb/>
Beck with on?<lb/>
caught trying ti<lb/>
Watkins strucki<lb/>
rung<lb/>
Roseboro, Lady Pirate<lb/>
By Rick Chann<lb/>
Surf Writer<lb/>
Over 21) schools from up and<lb/>
down the East Coast competed in last<lb/>
weekend's Raleigh Relays held on<lb/>
the campus of NC. State. The ECL<lb/>
women's track team sent several in-<lb/>
dividuals to the two-day meet ti I com-<lb/>
pete against s 'me oi the top compeu -<lb/>
tion in the hast.<lb/>
On Friday, Damta Rosebom ran<lb/>
the 100-meter dash finishing second<lb/>
mherheatwithabmeof 12.0 seconds<lb/>
In the 400-mt.er dash, Lauren Guy<lb/>
ran a 5937 w hKh mo ved her on to the<lb/>
finals held turj<lb/>
rana5V.4whichi<lb/>
ninth piace. Als<lb/>
dash, Marvina<lb/>
and loannelho<lb/>
Mar .<lb/>
finals were held,<lb/>
lessii Montgo<lb/>
ha fastest tun? cj<lb/>
Harlev compete<lb/>
ning a 527<lb/>
Freshman<lb/>
other fine perti<lb/>
competing in<lb/>
time of 1037<lb/>
eighth place ani<lb/>
'Girls of Summe<lb/>
Campbell tournal<lb/>
By Charles Mitchell<lb/>
Senior Staff Writer<lb/>
The Lad v Tirates bnught home<lb/>
first place honors this weekend as<lb/>
well as three individual awards<lb/>
LauraCmwder,LisaCoreprew and<lb/>
Jenny Parsons w ere selected to the<lb/>
All-Tournament Team. In addi-<lb/>
tion, Crowder was the recipient oi<lb/>
the Golden Glove award<lb/>
"The ladies plaved very well<lb/>
defensively and lennv pitched well"<lb/>
said Head coach Sue Manahan. And<lb/>
played well thev did. as the defense<lb/>
assisted in two shutouts and al-<lb/>
lowed just three runs in 28 innings.<lb/>
In game one against Wright<lb/>
State, Jenny Tarsons pitched five<lb/>
Linings while allowing )ust one hit<lb/>
In short relief Georgeann Wilke re-<lb/>
corded the save while preserving<lb/>
the shutout.<lb/>
In the two innings pitched<lb/>
Wilke allowed only one hit. From<lb/>
the plate, Crowder and Cheryl<lb/>
Hobson led the hitting attack while<lb/>
going 5-for-5 and Mor-4, respev<lb/>
tiveh Chanel Hooker also Swung<lb/>
ahotbatgoing2-for-4wimtwoRBl.<lb/>
In the Pirates second game of<lb/>
the tournament, Parsons pitched a<lb/>
complete game shutout against the<lb/>
host team Camels. Campbell did<lb/>
manage to slap out six hits but had<lb/>
all of their scoring attempts extin-<lb/>
guished by the<lb/>
the Girls of Sur<lb/>
The Lady<lb/>
get clutch hits<lb/>
most. Coreprev<lb/>
Parsons who oj<lb/>
of the contest<lb/>
Thedefeos<lb/>
seemed to rai?<lb/>
notch higher<lb/>
ThePiratt-<lb/>
si e Drake Li<lb/>
Parsons went<lb/>
allowing ust<lb/>
hits while Croi<lb/>
sive charge w ij<lb/>
tour assists<lb/>
ECL scoret<lb/>
aggTessieba-<lb/>
hitting Crown<lb/>
balls then stoU<lb/>
Ward then droi<lb/>
an RBI singie ttj<lb/>
Cheryl Ho<lb/>
athmwingerrcf<lb/>
after a success!<lb/>
fmm Wilke wj<lb/>
With runners<lb/>
Coreprew droij<lb/>
held which<lb/>
third to aOOOt<lb/>
the inning<lb/>
Inthefinaf<lb/>
the L ni ersit'<lb/>
See Car<lb/>
h<lb/>
All ECU Residence Hall Studerk<lb/>
allQIy<lb/>
1992<lb/>
Wednesday, Api<lb/>
Central Campu:<lb/>
4:00-6:00p:<lb/>
(Volleyball Tourney begins<lb/>
'<lb/>
d<lb/>
Ej<lb/>
CARNIVAL FUN<lb/>
Grand Prize awardi<lb/>
top Residence<lb/>
Sponsored by RHA and RccrcaUol<lb/>
<pb facs="00058314_0008"/><lb/>
DISPLAY CLASSIFIED<lb/>
t Birthday<lb/>
WARRKN k<lb/>
COURTNEY<lb/>
JONES<lb/>
S.G.A. PRESIDENT<lb/>
?????<lb/>
v Experience on April 1st!<lb/>
' 4<lb/>
<lb/>
.<lb/>
Y<lb/>
3Hf (Caralinum<lb/>
IE SENTATIVES.<lb/>
minimum 2 0 G.P A<lb/>
ner and fall of 1992<lb/>
<lb/>
?.<lb/>
mdPaul<lb/>
.  taJHaU.315<lb/>
? accompa-<lb/>
etcher Recital<lb/>
' ' ?. ?; ?? The<lb/>
? indStace)<lb/>
? . ? - talHaB<lb/>
FORUM SF1 FOR WRIL2<lb/>
e final spring semeS-<lb/>
 ?? 2 ? ? . ? etrj Forum,<lb/>
? . ? ? rsda) pril2 inMSC.<lb/>
I it 8 p.m. Dr IVtvr Maku k<lb/>
ItractOT said listeners .ire<lb/>
?? ? I He said potts who<lb/>
? ? some feedback on their po-<lb/>
EQft MFC Hd bring along five to seven<lb/>
?SIMM 111.<lb/>
aiLCKHAGEfL<lb/>
?AiNBUEVVlS OJUZZARD<lb/>
r m ? ? ? ? indWhat do these people have in common'<lb/>
line-? r Thev could be coming to cam-<lb/>
: m freelextyearto speak if you vkxeyow<lb/>
opinion TUESDAY MARCH Jl in<lb/>
Mendenha0242atl p m. Come tike part<lb/>
? ?? n rlin the Student Union FORUM commit-<lb/>
nter all-da 757-tee For more information cajl 77-4715<lb/>
Sports<lb/>
uJlje i?aat (Earolinian<lb/>
March 31, 1992<lb/>
7<lb/>
Beck pitches Bucs by Wilmington<lb/>
Bv Robert S. Todd<lb/>
Vvsi.sUnt Sports lititor<lb/>
E( L pitcher Johnny Beck came<lb/>
thin twooutsofa no-hitter in the<lb/>
l game ol a doubleheader<lb/>
unsl UNC-Wilmington. The<lb/>
ites shot meoionial Athletic<lb/>
n iation leading Sea out of the<lb/>
t? scores ot 1-0 and 3-2 and<lb/>
i ng their record to 15-11.<lb/>
leek faced two batters over<lb/>
Imum walking two and<lb/>
 out se en UNC<lb/>
gton s sole hit came on a<lb/>
? died in the thk k infield<lb/>
before third baseman Clvnn<lb/>
ik or johnny Rock could field<lb/>
1 throw the ball in to first<lb/>
tv, asa perh t bunt lohnnv<lb/>
? said When ho put it dov n I<lb/>
? it was going to be good 1<lb/>
nl hope it would mil toul<lb/>
Ikvk said the key to his pitch-<lb/>
mo, m ,is getting ahead in the count,<lb/>
enabling him to throw breaking<lb/>
balK and work the corners.<lb/>
ECU squandered scoring op-<lb/>
portunities in the first and fourth<lb/>
innings The Tirate offense was<lb/>
innept until their last at-bat before<lb/>
extra-innings.<lb/>
Dave leisten led of the first<lb/>
inning with a double and advanced<lb/>
to third on Heath Clark's ground<lb/>
ball to third. After Stancil Morse<lb/>
struck out, Lee Kushner grounded<lb/>
out to the second baseman to end<lb/>
the inning.<lb/>
Morse led the fourth off reach-<lb/>
ing first on a Seahawk error and<lb/>
taking second on a single bv C .1 vnn<lb/>
lkk with one out. Morse was<lb/>
v aught trying to steal third and Tat<lb/>
Watkins struck out to end the in-<lb/>
ning<lb/>
With runners on firt tno sec-<lb/>
ond, attempting to steal third takes<lb/>
the bat out of the hands of the<lb/>
batter and does not increase run<lb/>
scoring potential signifigantly.<lb/>
With one out, there .ire possibly<lb/>
two chances to score from second<lb/>
on a single An extra-base hit might<lb/>
clear the bases and produce a<lb/>
crooked inning.<lb/>
Davey Breeden, pinch-hitting<lb/>
for catcher C halrlie Mine's won<lb/>
the game for the Bucs.<lb/>
With a one out and a 2-Ocount,<lb/>
Breeden hit a sharp single oft the<lb/>
short stop's glove with the bases<lb/>
loaded. G. Be k and Watkins led<lb/>
off the inning v ith singles and ad-<lb/>
vance to second and third on a<lb/>
wild pitch. UNC-Wilmington<lb/>
brought in relief pitcher Brian<lb/>
Baucom to intentionally walk pinch<lb/>
hitter Iom Move 1 le then gave up<lb/>
the game w inning hit to Breeden.<lb/>
E L waited until their final at<lb/>
bat, again, to put the game away. In<lb/>
the top half ot the seventh inning,<lb/>
relief pitc her l.vle 1 lartgrove gave<lb/>
upa singles to theSeahawks center<lb/>
fielder Perry Currinand catcher<lb/>
c orey Broome, allowing the tving<lb/>
run to score<lb/>
In the bottom half of the in-<lb/>
ning, left fielder Chad Inplett<lb/>
walked and short stop Chad<lb/>
PiK kett putdow n .i bunt that UN( -<lb/>
Wilmington's pitcher tumbled<lb/>
I lines grounded out to the piu her<lb/>
and Leisten walked to load the<lb/>
bases.<lb/>
Second baseman Heath Clark<lb/>
won the game on a full-count single<lb/>
to left to sweep the double header<lb/>
and mo e the Pirates to 3-5 in the<lb/>
Colonial Athletk Association.<lb/>
Erskine College<lb/>
sweeps Pirates<lb/>
Roseboro, Lady Pirate tracksters finish well in Raleigh Relays<lb/>
By Rick Chann<lb/>
suff Writer<lb/>
- er 20 schools frvn up and<lb/>
. n the East C oastcomf etedinlast<lb/>
ekend's Raleigh Re'a' ? held on<lb/>
campus of NX State the ECU<lb/>
men s track team sent everal in<lb/>
? lalstothetwo-da) meettocom-<lb/>
i ? against some i t the u p c mpeti<lb/>
n in the1 ast<lb/>
ii 1 ndav DanitaRosebororan<lb/>
i -meter dash finishing sei ond<lb/>
err atwithatimeoi 12X)seconds.<lb/>
the 400-meter dash Lauren Guv<lb/>
I ?937 w hie h n ed her?m to the<lb/>
finals held Saturdav to the finals, she<lb/>
rana59.4 which was good enough for<lb/>
ninth place. Also in toe 400-meter<lb/>
dash, Marvina Hamilton ran a 1:05.6<lb/>
atxl kvinne Thornton ran a 1:10.2.<lb/>
Many of the top races and event<lb/>
finals were held In the 5j000meters,<lb/>
essica Montgornerv ran a 1934 and<lb/>
her fastest time of die vear.i etc hen<lb/>
H.irlev competed in the 1,500 run<lb/>
ning a 527<lb/>
Freshman Stacy Green had an-<lb/>
other fine performance at the meet<lb/>
competing in the 3,000 meters. 1 ler<lb/>
time of 1037 wa gixxl enough for<lb/>
eighth place and is only six seconds<lb/>
off the school record hold bv team-<lb/>
mate Anne Mane Welch.<lb/>
he schools top performance of<lb/>
tiie day came in the m itational 200.<lb/>
Roseboro placed third with a time of<lb/>
26.07. Justice said it was a good race<lb/>
for her, the time w asn t great because<lb/>
i t the headw in. but ttiero was S 'me<lb/>
gvxxi competition<lb/>
Senior Susan Schram made the<lb/>
finals of the shot put but fouled on all<lb/>
but one of her throws. I leronegixx.1<lb/>
throw was 42' hi 2iood enough<lb/>
for sixth place.<lb/>
Ihewomen's team will travel to<lb/>
Raleigh April 4 to compete to a meet<lb/>
Girls of Summer' win<lb/>
Campbell tournament<lb/>
By Ch.irles Mitchell<lb/>
Senior sun W riter<lb/>
Ihe I ady Pirates brought hi ?me<lb/>
first place honors this weekend as<lb/>
well as thnv individual awards.<lb/>
LauraCrowder 1 iic oreprewand<lb/>
enn Pars tns w ere seltx ted to the<lb/>
ament ream. In addi<lb/>
? ? ler was the n ipient ot<lb/>
? i ? ilo e av ard<lb/>
Ih,<lb/>
defensh <lb/>
IHea.<lb/>
adies placxl erj we<lb/>
. and Jenny pitched we<lb/>
at hSueManahan And<lb/>
? II tiie did as the defense<lb/>
d in two shutouts and al-<lb/>
-1 just three runs in 2 innings.<lb/>
In game one against Wright<lb/>
enn Parsons pitched five<lb/>
nings w hi le allow ingust one hit.<lb/>
snort rehet Georgeann Wilke re-<lb/>
I the save while preserving<lb/>
? shutout.<lb/>
In the two innings pitched<lb/>
lu alk wtxl onl) one hit From<lb/>
ite Crowder and Chc'rvl<lb/>
ibson ted toe hitting attack while<lb/>
.? J-for-5 mm 3-for-4, respec-<lb/>
hanel Hooker also swung<lb/>
tbatgoing2-for-4wimtwoRBl.<lb/>
In the Pirates second game oi<lb/>
? I ornament, Parsons pitched a<lb/>
plete game shutout against the<lb/>
? teamamels Campbell did<lb/>
anage to slap out six hits but had<lb/>
of their scoring attempts extin-<lb/>
guished hv the aggressive "D" of<lb/>
tiie C iris of Summer<lb/>
The Lad lir.ites continued to<lb/>
get clutch hits when needtl the<lb/>
nist c oreprew went2-for-3asdid<lb/>
Parsons w hocollei u the lone RBI<lb/>
ot the contest.<lb/>
The defense of the 1 k1 Pirates<lb/>
seemed to raise its level ust one<lb/>
notch higher<lb/>
he Pirates downed an aggres-<lb/>
sive Drake University team 3-2.<lb/>
Parsons went toe distance while<lb/>
allowing ust two runs on seven<lb/>
hits while Crowder ltl the defen-<lb/>
sive charge with six put outs and<lb/>
tour assists.<lb/>
ECU scored theirthreerunson<lb/>
aggressive base running and timely<lb/>
hitting Crowder drew a base on<lb/>
halls then stole second. Michelle<lb/>
Ward then drove Crowder in with<lb/>
an RBI single to right field.<lb/>
Cheryl I lobson reached first on<lb/>
a throwing error, then went to third<lb/>
after a successful suicide squeeze<lb/>
from Wilke which scored Ward.<lb/>
With runners on the corners,<lb/>
C oreprew drove a deep shot to left<lb/>
field which scored Hobson from<lb/>
third to account for the final run of<lb/>
the inning.<lb/>
In the final game, ECU tinik on<lb/>
toe University of MarylandBalti-<lb/>
See Campbell page 8<lb/>
All ECU Residence Hall Students Eligible<lb/>
Wednesday, April 1<lb/>
Central Campus Mall<lb/>
4:00-6:00pm<lb/>
(Volleyball Tourney begins at 3:OOpm)<lb/>
tfi<lb/>
<lb/>
!?<lb/>
AT<lb/>
s'Mr<lb/>
TS<lb/>
,MAS<lb/>
Grand Prize awarded to<lb/>
top Residence Hall<lb/>
Sponsored by R1LA and Recreational Services<lb/>
hosted by St Augustines.<lb/>
SeanC onnolh and Mark Mathis<lb/>
ran toe 5AX) finishing in 1M and<lb/>
h5 respectivdy. Rickv Charm ran<lb/>
3450 in the lt),(U) meters.<lb/>
Ihe metis track team competed<lb/>
in thnv events at the Florida Relays<lb/>
held Saturday. In the 400-meter<lb/>
hurdles, I, iniesRobbius placed eighth<lb/>
with a time of .f-d while Hamon<lb/>
DeSueran the 100-meterdashin 1055<lb/>
for ninth place<lb/>
Ihe 4x4i) relay team ran the<lb/>
fastest time bv any team trom orth<lb/>
( aroiina this year withatimeol tih.s<lb/>
aixl ,1 tourm place tinLsh.<lb/>
By Robert S. Todd<lb/>
Assistant Sports i ditor<lb/>
IU'sbaseball team will not<lb/>
soon torget the living Ikvt of<lb/>
ErskineColiege, from I HieWest<lb/>
Suitharoiina.<lb/>
E Ukst four straight games<lb/>
going into their doubleheader<lb/>
in Friday, and toe Pirates ex-<lb/>
tended the streak to six bv the<lb/>
end of the d Ihe Bins, 14-1 1<lb/>
on the year, lost to the Flying<lb/>
Fleet J (land 2-1.<lb/>
"We made a couple of mis<lb/>
tikes that wore very, ver) im-<lb/>
portant in the (first) game so<lb/>
ant ither tw ock ise l sses 1 lead<lb/>
coach (.ar CK'erton said. Ve<lb/>
seem to find ways to tose the<lb/>
close games and that's not a<lb/>
characteristk of last c aroiina<lb/>
baseball We've got t?? get out of<lb/>
that element<lb/>
Sixtv -fi e people hra txl die<lb/>
w ind and temperatu res t i w ah h<lb/>
game one EC I pitcher C Kven<lb/>
! i is pitched a complete game<lb/>
with four strikeouts, no walks<lb/>
and one earned run shortstop<lb/>
( had I nplett committed errors<lb/>
in the top of the sixth and se<lb/>
enth innings. Moth errors re-<lb/>
sulted in Flving Fleet runs<lb/>
I nplett s hand s w ereni t toe<lb/>
onh factor in the first loss '<lb/>
I rskine( ollege Misseii oppor-<lb/>
tunities tost the Pirates. ECU<lb/>
stranded nine runners on base<lb/>
and had runnuers in scoring po-<lb/>
sition fi ur times<lb/>
With two out in the bottom<lb/>
of the first inning, lee Kushner<lb/>
flied "lit dvp to left field. A<lb/>
strong wind, blowing in, kept<lb/>
the hall from making it past the<lb/>
warning track<lb/>
Ihe bottom oi the third in-<lb/>
ning lost its potontial when lead-<lb/>
off hatter I ave Leisten singieand<lb/>
was caught trying to steal sec-<lb/>
ond on the first pitch to the Pi-<lb/>
rates leading hitter, C ilynn Beck<lb/>
P k ft illt iwed with a single that<lb/>
would have put Leisten on third.<lb/>
I eft fielder Stvanc il Morse Hied<lb/>
deep to left which could have<lb/>
s? ored I eisten fnm third.<lb/>
Pne Buc were threatening<lb/>
in the bottom ii the sixth with<lb/>
runners on tip.t and second and<lb/>
one out. Pinch-hitter Iom Move<lb/>
lined to too second baseman who<lb/>
doubled up Heath Clark<lb/>
11 L lost toe second game in<lb/>
tri'nt o 23 die-hard fans who<lb/>
narowly escaped witnessing<lb/>
brskine pitcher Charlie<lb/>
Constantino throw a no-hitter.<lb/>
1 riplett's second-inning lead-off<lb/>
See Erskine page 8<lb/>
Intramural champions are crowned; the winners are:<lb/>
'Legit Contenders'<lb/>
Legit Contenders" won the Independent Gold All-Campus Crown<lb/>
'Ball Hogs'<lb/>
The Ball Hogs captured the Purple All-Campus Campionship<lb/>
nKA-A<lb/>
nKA-B<lb/>
Pi Kappa Alpha won the Fraternity Gold Championship<lb/>
Pi Kappa Alpha also took the Fraternity Purple Championship<lb/>
"CillVlIVIK A . . . .<lb/>
CillVIlVIK A, . . . .<lb/>
c;iiviiviK A<lb/>
REDNECK C;iRI<lb/>
T ??<lb/>
coupoiQ<lb/>
2forl<lb/>
Ed<lb/>
Get Two Sets of 3M w<lb/>
i Prints From Every Roll .<lb/>
I of Film Developed<lb/>
Receive ? ?ccond set of standard alxe<lb/>
3" print absolutely FREE frith jrour<lb/>
next roll of 35mm. dlac, 110 or 126<lb/>
color print film left for developing at<lb/>
our everyday low priceI C-41<lb/>
proceaa only - exclude larger 4" ilir<lb/>
print. Coupon must be attached to<lb/>
ouUlde of order envelope. Not valid<lb/>
with any other coupon offer.<lb/>
I S'JIP? April, April t3i??2 ? ? ? J<lb/>
ECU Student Stores<lb/>
Wright Bldft.<lb/>
<pb facs="00058314_0009"/><lb/>
8 ?he ?not(?arulinian<lb/>
March 31, 1992<lb/>
Box Scores<lb/>
Game 1<lb/>
L i. V ilminRh?i<lb/>
ah r h. hi hh<lb/>
lotata<lb/>
I a?t v mhnj<lb/>
ah t h bi hb ?<lb/>
1992 NCAA MEN'S BASKETBALL CHAMPIONSHIP<lb/>
Kansas(11<lb/>
LJTEPJ9<lb/>
MichifflnSU?)<lb/>
<lb/>
I'TEP<lb/>
Duke<lb/>
Dukll)<lb/>
<lb/>
.Cincinnati<lb/>
uc<lb/>
Duke<lb/>
l v,(rpi!utri 0 0 0 0 I t1 0 <lb/>
tj-4 ? Jn.4ma t1 0 0 0 i' i? 1 1<lb/>
I S 1-lmn tf,r V II N IK BH ?<lb/>
IFP  I l ? ?? ? 1 - V.<lb/>
I Game 2<lb/>
 rYtlrrl inuh'n<lb/>
ib r h hi hb<lb/>
Cincinnati (41<lb/>
Memphis St. (6)<lb/>
Arkansas G <lb/>
Cui. Ithu<lb/>
MIDWEST<lb/>
Memphis St<lb/>
USC (2<lb/>
Ukil<lb/>
MSU<lb/>
UC<lb/>
Duke<lb/>
Ohio St.<lb/>
Ohio St,<lb/>
? ?, k, ?<lb/>
-<lb/>
II 3 II 1 1<lb/>
jb t h hi bt-<lb/>
4<lb/>
, 1 S Wirminjtlir.<lb/>
0 0 0 110 1 !<lb/>
-i. .  . r<lb/>
I . H<lb/>
n SI ?. .<lb/>
I M VNianiniehr ir<lb/>
I J . jn nu<lb/>
M R IK BH s?'<lb/>
I Conn. (<lb/>
Alabama (?) i v,<lb/>
UNC 14)<lb/>
Ohio St.<lb/>
Michigan (hi SOUTHEAST<lb/>
Michigan<lb/>
ETSU 14<lb/>
ulant -(in<lb/>
Oklahoma St. (2<lb/>
ilhhmiSt<lb/>
Mich<lb/>
Mich<lb/>
lowa<lb/>
12L<lb/>
Seton Hall<lb/>
jMissoufiS)<lb/>
EAST<lb/>
Sc-ton Hall (4)<lb/>
Campbell<lb/>
Continued from page 7<lb/>
more C ountv Iheseasonand finished thee enine<lb/>
ECU ended the weekend tour- 2-Jbr-3 with five RBI<lb/>
namentwithabi?bang.samngl3 roday the Lad) Pirates (2 6)<lb/>
runs and finishing the tournament tra el toC V.ingeount) to take on<lb/>
undefeated. tn rarheelsoi I N( hapel Hill<lb/>
Stephanie Hobson and Parsons (25-8). UN( His ranked fourth in<lb/>
letlthePiratehittingattxuk. Hohson ft?e Southeast Region, two -puts<lb/>
went 2-for-3 with two RBI, as Par- aheadofEl I rhegame is sched<lb/>
sons notched her first home run of uled tor 3 p m<lb/>
UK<lb/>
n a Syracuse (6)<lb/>
U.Mass. ?<lb/>
LMass,(3)<lb/>
Kentucky<lb/>
Iowa St. (10)<lb/>
 Kentucky (2)<lb/>
UCLA<lb/>
IU<lb/>
UCLA CLA"I<lb/>
 Louisville (8)<lb/>
Erskine<lb/>
Continued from page 7<lb/>
MSl<lb/>
4<lb/>
 Mexico St (12)<lb/>
S.W.Louisiana(13)<lb/>
WEST<lb/>
single was al' the Bucs would he<lb/>
allowed. Constantine also walked<lb/>
SIX batters.<lb/>
The second half of the second<lb/>
inning was wasted. Triplet! anil<lb/>
(lark were on second and third<lb/>
with one out after a double steal<lb/>
Shortstop Chad Puckett popeI up<lb/>
to the second baseman and pinch<lb/>
hitter Moye ground outtopresen e<lb/>
the Erskine lead.<lb/>
The first two batters in the bot-<lb/>
tom of the third inning were aboard<lb/>
with right feilder! it Vs atk ins ,it the<lb/>
pi.He and no outs<lb/>
Watkins missed a buntattempl<lb/>
and Leisten was pi kedi n tr, ingto<lb/>
advance to third Watkins and<lb/>
Kushnt-r proceeded to grounded<lb/>
out anil end v. hat (i uld ha e rnvn<lb/>
a crooked inning.<lb/>
The oni) h i run? ame i tt an<lb/>
error In the Flying Fleet's first<lb/>
baseman Seth isetsberg.<lb/>
Fla. St.<lb/>
Georgetown (6,<lb/>
?a?<lb/>
IU<lb/>
Fk<lb/>
a. St (3)<lb/>
Indiana<lb/>
'SI 17)<lb/>
Indiana (2)<lb/>
UNC keeps win 'out of reach'<lb/>
Ti<lb/>
lv"<lb/>
Cro<lb/>
W<lb/>
tor .i complete wrap Up of I- C I<lb/>
sports in under 2 mintitt-s -<lb/>
rralh!<lb/>
By Jeanne Shaffer<lb/>
suff Wnt.T<lb/>
the women's soccer (luh met<lb/>
toe L c Pioneers inhapel Hill<lb/>
over the weekend Ihe Pioneers'<lb/>
strong defense kept ECU's loelle<lb/>
Pierce, loili Pittenhouse Miss)<lb/>
???None Alison Russell and Eileen<lb/>
?-v Moore working hard the entire<lb/>
game while Pirtt? goalkeeper<lb/>
aime nPieriep a dHloi'tofSO<lb/>
game minutes m goal<lb/>
Pierce defended the goal inly<lb/>
letting two balls get into the net I he<lb/>
hrst Pioneer goal sas on a<lb/>
?hninn<lb/>
breakaway bv Kim( rabbe and the<lb/>
second was .1 shot h arolyn<lb/>
1 larle that was too high for the 5<lb/>
ti x (t-2-inch Pien e U get her hands<lb/>
on<lb/>
Ihe Pirate offense also had to<lb/>
work hard to get by the Pioneers<lb/>
and the team finally succeeded by<lb/>
storing with 8:00 left in the name K<lb/>
liK'lle Pierce hut the goal was not<lb/>
enough for the Pirates as the tram s<lb/>
record drops to 0-2 3 for the season<lb/>
Outstanding offensive Pirate<lb/>
players wereMargitS) Ivester.Kerri<lb/>
( .rittiths, K'rr Myers ,n. Ann<lb/>
Warren. UNC Pioneer goalkeepers<lb/>
were leth Huber and s.irah Allen<lb/>
Goingir)forE( I goalkeeper Pierce<lb/>
was Bridget Kruse who also had to<lb/>
fight the Pioneer offense while in<lb/>
goal<lb/>
Overail,theE( L women'ssoc-<lb/>
ier 1 luh has lost three games on the<lb/>
seasonbyascoreof2-1 (totheN SL<lb/>
C luh, Jacksonville and UNC Pio-<lb/>
neers), anil tied tlie other two 4 4 to<lb/>
Raleighluh and 2-2 to L V<lb/>
Wilmington.<lb/>
I he team w ill plav in<lb/>
1 avetteville at 2 p.m Sunday, be-<lb/>
fore finishing the seasonal Virginia<lb/>
Tech on April UM2.<lb/>
i.r.1<lb/>
MALES AND FEMALES<lb/>
rOPUmCIPATEINTffflE<lb/>
?TH VNM ALGIEA1 I'IRVIKI'l RPU<lb/>
(iOI.IU'KJSKIV (, (H I l'Kh<lb/>
?MISS HAWAIIAN TROPIC<lb/>
SI vrwKIklNICONTES1<lb/>
MENS'BEST LKGS CONTEST<lb/>
ipsii 11 i?:<lb/>
H'M is m um M<lb/>
WIN CASH: 'STPcct Jioc ?ndpiace tso<lb/>
lulMlK Oi'KH HH MoKUV KMUl'A' III<lb/>
IM vim lip vhiki:ii, ?i 1 T 1S74UI<lb/>
Tt.i ? jv)iv.i 1 (JIM HIWM K1 A r n ?? t MMWIM<lb/>
ihl.MI'itl'X vMHI.i'lUM.I. i' vHUfNHi.l<lb/>
PLANT SALE<lb/>
ECU Biology Club<lb/>
Thursday April 2<lb/>
FridayApril 3<lb/>
7:30am- 1:00pm<lb/>
at the<lb/>
Biology<lb/>
Greenhouse<lb/>
1 RiKimS-Ul<lb/>
Spring swingpes t leady!<lb/>
Register for the following intramural sport golf<lb/>
competitions this semester!<lb/>
Frisbee Disc Golf<lb/>
Register: Tuesday, April 7 at 5:00pm in BtO 103<lb/>
I his is a one day tournament to be held April 8 on the<lb/>
 risbec Disc Golf Course loated by Harrington ! ield. <lb/>
person teams and individuals can compete.<lb/>
Golf Singles<lb/>
Register: Tuesday April 7 at 5"30poi in Hio 10<lb/>
This tournament will be held April It vr Is at the yden<lb/>
COuntry Club. Green fees: $H walk, $17 cart, he off<lb/>
times will be selected at this meeting.<lb/>
.aJ' Awards will be given k r fewest<lb/>
 putts per round!<lb/>
For details call ECU Recreational Services at 757-6387<lb/>
QWU&amp; FOOTBALL VIDEO<lb/>
1 RELIVE THE EXCITEMENT<lb/>
fe ecu OF THE 1991 SEASON!<lb/>
1 tfe? Order Your Highlight Video Todav<lb/>
 -f And Believe For A Lifetime<lb/>
- " CALL: 1-800-422-0240<lb/>
or<lb/>
Mail check or money order to:<lb/>
1991 Pirate Video &amp;<lb/>
P.O. Box 68618 n<lb/>
Indianapolis, IN 46268 '?.T<lb/>
$19 95$5 00 Shipping &amp; Handing INC Residents ado I<lb/>
Pirate Pride<lb/>
Commemorating the Pirate's<lb/>
Record-Breaking Season<lb/>
Great tasting Pirate Pride grape soda available only at UBh<lb/>
Slot knp for tatigating this fall. Limited supplies available.<lb/>
SH<lb/>
0<lb/>
516 South Cotanche ? Greenville, NC 2TO34 ? 919-75-l6<lb/>
mf<lb/>
tt<lb/>
ATTIC<lb/>
,752-7303 I 209 E. 5th St.<lb/>
1WED<lb/>
2 Shows<lb/>
Doors at 7 p.m &amp; 10 p.m.<lb/>
Sunday Live<lb/>
Comic Strip Live<lb/>
Evening at the Improve<lb/>
WRQR COMEDY ZONE CONCERT 11<lb/>
CARROT TOP<lb/>
CALL 752-7303 FOR TIX INFO<lb/>
<pb facs="00058314_0010"/><lb/>
8 (Hhe lEnat (Carolinian<lb/>
March 31, 1992<lb/>
Box Scores<lb/>
Game 1<lb/>
l l Vilminh'n<lb/>
OilltllTrlui Tb<lb/>
for) '<lb/>
?I. . n<lb/>
M. tui II<lb/>
Mrflrtdvdh<lb/>
? i a  -<lb/>
in<lb/>
Bt irdtM<lb/>
TI.I.<lb/>
v r ill<lb/>
KuriutH lb<lb/>
Bk lb<lb/>
MfatkM ft<lb/>
Injlrlt It<lb/>
ft Kftt M<lb/>
M A. I '<lb/>
total<lb/>
Ah r h hi bb ?o<lb/>
0 0 11<lb/>
: t! 0 i'<lb/>
: 0 0 0 0 l<lb/>
10 0 1 I<lb/>
21) 0 t ? i<lb/>
?h r h hi bb ?<lb/>
;? 1 1<lb/>
l si isitmtfckr 0 0 0 it i? t I it<lb/>
j i jnilnu l1 I 0 B 0 it 1 I<lb/>
i-ijv .iifni ? i? I v. l<lb/>
 3? i wi i s ' ii Moot<lb/>
l S ?.rmn?tin IP H K I" H SO<lb/>
4<lb/>
I<lb/>
I. . <lb/>
! 'vf ? in.lm<lb/>
V, . ,<lb/>
1M'  ? . HUP' wi ?. ? ??. to . 1 ? V I ?<lb/>
1992 NCAA MEN'S BASKETBALL CHAMPIONSHIP<lb/>
Kansas (1)<lb/>
UTEP(9)<lb/>
<lb/>
UTEP<lb/>
Duke<lb/>
MK'hifflnSt.(5)<lb/>
VCincinnati<lb/>
Cincinnati (4) <lb/>
Memphis St. (h)<lb/>
r w v Memphis St.<lb/>
AlkQ<lb/>
uc<lb/>
Duke<lb/>
MIDWEST<lb/>
?V<lb/>
Game 2<lb/>
l t V. ilmmRh.n<lb/>
N i h bi bb<lb/>
) 1 1<lb/>
I<lb/>
I<lb/>
l I<lb/>
'I - ki ?<lb/>
y ? <lb/>
tjl?<lb/>
I I ?t i Jn.linj<lb/>
ll! 1 1<lb/>
lb t h bi bb ?<lb/>
irk 21 4<lb/>
? i ?<lb/>
Mora i<lb/>
. (rf<lb/>
. ????<lb/>
iui? :i t ? :<lb/>
l V tYiJmmgtn U 0 10 10 1 2<lb/>
w ? j 0 0 0 I 1 0 1 <lb/>
i km . . . ih- I idk<lb/>
n?h ? r ' a? i , . H . bn It iik<lb/>
Mora SOt Bra . ? ?? I s I i . Ml ? <lb/>
 k. '?'? v M k. .s ?<lb/>
IS rt.lran.rhli IP II N IK HH ?<lb/>
- - .<lb/>
t Min law<lb/>
I I V I.<lb/>
Gi.Tah(7)<lb/>
ISC (2)<lb/>
Ohio St. (1)<lb/>
<lb/>
IkliiJL<lb/>
MSU<lb/>
UC<lb/>
Duke<lb/>
I" Conn. (M)<lb/>
<lb/>
Ohio St.<lb/>
Alabama (3) rivi<lb/>
UNC (4) )<lb/>
Ohio St.<lb/>
SOUTHEAST<lb/>
.Michigan<lb/>
?<lb/>
EISU(U)<lb/>
TulanedO<lb/>
Oklahoma St. (2<lb/>
OHahomaSt<lb/>
Mich<lb/>
Mich<lb/>
<lb/>
Puked)<lb/>
Iowa (9)<lb/>
Seton Hall<lb/>
Missouri 13<lb/>
Campbell<lb/>
Continued from page 7<lb/>
EAST<lb/>
S?<lb/>
Seton Hall (4)<lb/>
U.Mass. acuse(6)<lb/>
UK<lb/>
S<lb/>
Mass. (3)<lb/>
Kentucky<lb/>
<lb/>
Iowa St. (10)<lb/>
Kentucky (2)<lb/>
UCLA<lb/>
IU<lb/>
UCLA UCLML<lb/>
 Louisville (8)<lb/>
more County.<lb/>
ECU ended the weekend tour-<lb/>
nament with a big bang: scoring 13<lb/>
runs and finishing the tournament<lb/>
undefeated.<lb/>
Stephanie Hobson and Parsons<lb/>
ledthePiratehittingattack. Hobson<lb/>
went 2-for-3 with two RBI, as Par-<lb/>
sons notched her first home run of<lb/>
Erskine<lb/>
the season and finished theevening<lb/>
2-for-3 with five RBI.<lb/>
Today the Lady Pirates (23-6)<lb/>
travel to Orange County to take on<lb/>
the Tarheels of U'C-Chapel Hill<lb/>
(25-8). UN'C-CH is ranked fourth in<lb/>
the Southeast Region, two spots<lb/>
ahead of ECU. The game is sched-<lb/>
uled for 3 p.m.<lb/>
Continued from page 7<lb/>
MSU<lb/>
<lb/>
.MexicoSt(12)<lb/>
S.VV. Louisiana(13)<lb/>
WEST<lb/>
Fla<lb/>
Georgetown<lb/>
IU<lb/>
<lb/>
16)<lb/>
Fla. St. (3)<lb/>
Indiana<lb/>
<lb/>
LSI" (7)<lb/>
Indiana (2)<lb/>
single was al' he Bucs would be<lb/>
allowed. Constantine also walked<lb/>
six batters<lb/>
The second half of the second<lb/>
inning was wasted. Triplett and<lb/>
Clark were on second and third<lb/>
with one out after a double steal.<lb/>
Shortstop Chad Puckett poped up<lb/>
to the second baseman and pinch<lb/>
hitter Move ground out to preserve<lb/>
the Erskine lead.<lb/>
The firt two batters in the bot-<lb/>
tom of the third inning wereaboard<lb/>
with nght folder Pat Watkins at the<lb/>
plate and no outs.<lb/>
Watkinsmisseda buntattempt<lb/>
and Leisten was pa ked i 4i trying t I<lb/>
advance to third. Watkins and<lb/>
Kushner proceeded to grounded<lb/>
out and end what could have been<lb/>
acnxiked inning.<lb/>
The only ECU run came off an<lb/>
error by the Flying Fleets firsl<lb/>
baseman. Seth o-eNherg.<lb/>
UNC keeps win 'out of reach'<lb/>
Ti<lb/>
E<lb/>
rpr<lb/>
o<lb/>
Cr,<lb/>
lmun<lb/>
For a complete urap up of ECU<lb/>
sports in under 2 minutes -<lb/>
realU!<lb/>
Bv Jeanne Shaffer<lb/>
Stjff Writtr<lb/>
Ihe women's tKicr club met<lb/>
the UNC Pioneers in Chapel Hill<lb/>
over the weekend. Ihe Pioneers'<lb/>
strong defense kept ECU'S liM'lk'<lb/>
Pierce, lodi Pittenhouse, Missy<lb/>
Cone, Alison Russell and Eileen<lb/>
Moore working hard the entire<lb/>
game while Pirate goalkeeper<lb/>
Limit' m Piercep a .d si octoi i<lb/>
game minutes in goal<lb/>
Pierce defended the goal only<lb/>
letting two balls get into the net. The<lb/>
first Pioneer goal was on a<lb/>
breakaway by Kim Crabbe, and the<lb/>
second was a shot bv Carolyn<lb/>
Harley that was too high tor the 5-<lb/>
f(Ht-2-inch Pierce to get her hands<lb/>
on.<lb/>
The Pirate offense also had to<lb/>
work hard to get by the Pioneers<lb/>
and the team finally succeeded bv<lb/>
scoring with 8:00 U-tt in the game bv<lb/>
ItH'lle Pierce. But the goal was not<lb/>
enough for the Pirates as the team's<lb/>
record drops to 0-2-3 for the season.<lb/>
Outstanding offensive Pirate<lb/>
phivers were Margit Sylvester, Kern<lb/>
Griffiths, lerry Mvers and Amy<lb/>
Warren. UNC Pioneer goalkeepers<lb/>
were Beth Huber and Sarah Allen.<lb/>
Going in for ECU goalkeeper Pierce<lb/>
was Bridget Kruse who also had to<lb/>
fight the Pioneer offense while in<lb/>
goal.<lb/>
Overall, the ECU women's mk-<lb/>
cer club has lost three games on the<lb/>
season bvascoreof 2-1 (totheNCSU<lb/>
Gub, Jacksonville and UNC Pio-<lb/>
neers), and tied the other two 4-4 to<lb/>
Raleigh Club and 2-2 to UNC-<lb/>
Wilmington.<lb/>
The team will plav in<lb/>
Fayetteville at 2 p.m , Sunday, he-<lb/>
fore finishing the season at Virginia<lb/>
Tech on April llV-12.<lb/>
ilM<lb/>
MALES AND FEMALES<lb/>
TO PARTICIPATE IN THE<lb/>
91H ANNUAL CHEAT PIRATK PURPLE<lb/>
COLD PIGSKIN PIG-OUT. PARTY<lb/>
?MISS HAWAIIAN TROPIC<lb/>
SI NTAN-BIKIM CONTEST<lb/>
vnd<lb/>
MKNS' BEST LEGS CONTEST<lb/>
A.PRH ii. i?:<lb/>
H KLINSUDllM<lb/>
WIN CASH: ist poet sioo 2nd place ? $50<lb/>
TO Cm CSDKKl OYI MORV'ISHiUNHTloM Cll<lb/>
HI Mill HH MAKKEmC0mCtAT7ST4BI<lb/>
Ull HI ill (OMKimM iv; ? :o n id iimwui<lb/>
M?M? TOIT??H MM in! 1 Ml ?????. U IM.I IHI??UI<lb/>
niy?i<lb/>
PLANT SALE I<lb/>
ECU Biology Club<lb/>
Thursday April 2<lb/>
Friday April 3<lb/>
7:30am - 1:00pm<lb/>
at the<lb/>
Biology<lb/>
Greenhouse<lb/>
Room S-lll<lb/>
Spnng swingers get ready!<lb/>
Register for the following intramural sport golf<lb/>
competitions this semester!<lb/>
Frisbee Disc Golf<lb/>
Register: Tuesday, April 7 at 5:00pm in Bio 103<lb/>
This is a one day tournament to be held April S on the<lb/>
Frisbee Disc Golf Course located by Harrington Field. 4<lb/>
person teams and individuals can compete.<lb/>
Golf Singles<lb/>
Register: Tuesday, April 7 at 5:30pm in Bio 103<lb/>
This tournament will be held April 14 &amp; IS at the Avden<lb/>
Country Club. Green fees: 510 walk, S17'cart. Tee off<lb/>
times will be selected at this meeting.<lb/>
XP Awaidswillbegivenfariewesl<lb/>
 putts per rund!<lb/>
For details call ECU Recreational Services at 757-6387<lb/>
Pirate Pride<lb/>
Commemorating the Pirate's<lb/>
Record-Breaking Season<lb/>
Great tasting Pirate Pride grape smla available only at UBE.<lb/>
St(h k up for taUgating this fall. Limited supplies available.<lb/>
(?Vtfle FOOTBALL VIDEO<lb/>
1 RELIVE THE EXCITEMENT<lb/>
. ecu OF THE 1991 SEASON!<lb/>
 $&amp;- Order Your Highlight Video Today<lb/>
 : ;? And Believe For A Lifetime<lb/>
CALL: 1-800-422-0240<lb/>
or<lb/>
Mail check or money order to.<lb/>
1991 Pirate Video <lb/>
P.O. Box 68618 <lb/>
Indianapolis, IN 46268 Aeo<lb/>
$19 95 $5 00 Shipping &amp; Handling iNC Residents add 6 tax<lb/>
<lb/>
516 South Cotanche ? Greenville. NC 27834 ? 919-758-2616<lb/>
 ATTIC<lb/>
,752-7303 I 209 E. 5th St.<lb/>
2 Shows<lb/>
Doon it 7 p.m 4 10 p.m.<lb/>
Sunday Live<lb/>
Comic Strip Live<lb/>
1WEO Evening at the Improve<lb/>
WRQR COMEDY ZONE CONCERT 11<lb/>
CARROT TOP<lb/>
CALL 752-7303 FOR TO INFO<lb/>
<pb facs="00058314_0011"/><lb/>
8 ebc t;mu (Inrnlitmui<lb/>
March 31, 1992<lb/>
Box Scores<lb/>
Game 1<lb/>
11 . ?<lb/>
lime 2<lb/>
1992 NCAA MEN'S BASKETBALL CHAMPIONSHIP<lb/>
Kansas (1)<lb/>
UTEP(9)<lb/>
MemphbN ?"?<lb/>
Arkansas (3)<lb/>
in-T<lb/>
)uk<lb/>
Dukt'ili<lb/>
Cincinnati<lb/>
uc<lb/>
Duke<lb/>
MIDVV<lb/>
Memphis St<lb/>
c.1 ivi' ?"??<lb/>
US( 2)<lb/>
Ukvh<lb/>
MSU<lb/>
UC<lb/>
Duke<lb/>
Ohio Si<lb/>
All bam a (3)<lb/>
Ohio Si<lb/>
?<lb/>
i v<lb/>
Ohio St.<lb/>
Michigan<lb/>
(14)<lb/>
SOt rHEAST<lb/>
Michigan<lb/>
.ularu<lb/>
Oklahoma N 2<lb/>
MiixiiuH<lb/>
Mich<lb/>
Mich<lb/>
IowajW)<lb/>
SetonHall<lb/>
,Miouri(5)<lb/>
EAS1<lb/>
donllalii4i<lb/>
Campbell<lb/>
Continued from page 7<lb/>
more ount)  ' ' ! ??' '? ' ' !Mi<lb/>
I ended the weekend tour<lb/>
rwment with a big bang: scoring 13 loday the Lady Pirati<lb/>
runs and finishing the tournament fcravelto' rang?<lb/>
undefeated !l" rarheel of UN'1 ? I ??: ?I fill<lb/>
Stephanie Hobson and Parsons ??' - ??"? i<lb/>
ledttePiratehittingattack. Hobson the Southeast :<lb/>
went 2 for 5 with two RBI as Pat aheadi fl<lb/>
sims notched her first home run o( uled foi m<lb/>
UK<lb/>
L Mass ? ?L<lb/>
 L. Mass p)<lb/>
kentikk<lb/>
Iowa St fll<lb/>
Kontuckv 2<lb/>
U LA<lb/>
c 1 Ail<lb/>
UCLA<lb/>
IU<lb/>
Louisville (8)<lb/>
Erskine<lb/>
Continued from page 7<lb/>
single was al' ihe Bu s would be ton<lb/>
allowed Constantine also walked with nght fetldei atl<lb/>
six batters plate and ni<lb/>
rhe e i nl hall of the e ond ?'? ?<lb/>
inning vs.?- wasted friplett and andLi ?<lb/>
'R<lb/>
 MexkoSt(12<lb/>
sU LxnsBna(13)<lb/>
( lark were on second and third .1 mce 1 thu<lb/>
with 'nt' out aftei .i double steal ? pi<lb/>
Shortstop had Puckett poped up out u I<lb/>
to the second baseman and pinch<lb/>
hitter Move i;r iund out to preserve<lb/>
t!i. i r -km lead ? ' ? ' '<lb/>
Hi fn -t11 batters in the b it - "<lb/>
?.<lb/>
WES1<lb/>
Fla.St<lb/>
Uvrgt'town ft<lb/>
IU<lb/>
Fla.St ;<lb/>
SI<lb/>
Indiana<lb/>
ndiana<lb/>
UNC keeps win 'out of reach'<lb/>
Ik I I. SI<lb/>
H Jeanne Shaffer<lb/>
breakaway by Kim rabbi and the were Beth Huber and Sarah Allen<lb/>
second was a shot h arolvn GoinginforE( I poa I keeper Tiei i<lb/>
Harlev that was h I rth?  was Bridget Kruse who also had to<lb/>
women's soccer club met foot-2-inch Piero ' ? ? tr hands fight the Pioneer offense while in<lb/>
Ti<lb/>
the I V Honeers n ipel Hill<lb/>
ovei th' weekend Hie Pionet i<lb/>
li fense kept II s livlle<lb/>
Pierce Ih1i Pittenhouse 1i<lb/>
v s n ?? rking hard th?<lb/>
 ie, while Pirte j -<lb/>
Lotirtian lun"r m ' ? ? ? I<lb/>
ime minutes in g i<lb/>
Kor a complete wrap up of KC'I Pierce defended thi<lb/>
sports in under 2 minutes rtingtwoballsgetintothi el<lb/>
really, tnt Pioneer uim! was on i<lb/>
ni goal<lb/>
rhe Pirate offenst also had to ? erall thelI women's six<lb/>
- rk hard to get K the Pioneers cer lubhas kst three games on the<lb/>
ind the team finalh succeedeti b season by a score f2 l(tntheNCSI<lb/>
one Mison Russell and Fileen coringwithSKHeftinthegameb Iuh lacksonville and I V Pio<lb/>
loelle Pierce But the goal was not neers), and tied thi therrwo4-4to<lb/>
.????? ratesastheti am - Raleig ilub and 2 2 to i .<lb/>
- ? ? ?? fortheseason W ilmingt i<lb/>
Outstanding offensive Pirate rhe team will pla in<lb/>
rswereMargitS . ? ter.Kern Fayettevilleat 2 p.m Sunda be<lb/>
? ffiths ern Myers and Ann fore finishing the s ? i it Virginia<lb/>
Warren I N( Piineergtalkeepers fechon April It) 12<lb/>
PLANTSALE<lb/>
ECU Biolcv Club<lb/>
Thursday April 2<lb/>
I rida April 3<lb/>
7:30am - 1:00pm<lb/>
at tht<lb/>
fgsr Biology<lb/>
 ? Greenhouse<lb/>
RoomS-111<lb/>
(tyrte<lb/>
. i<lb/>
d<lb/>
FOOTBALL VIDEO<lb/>
RELIVE THE EXCITEMENT<lb/>
OF THE 1991 SEASON!<lb/>
Order Your Highlight Video Tod<lb/>
And Believe For A Lifetime<lb/>
CALL: 1-800-422-0240<lb/>
or<lb/>
Mail check or money order to<lb/>
1991 Pirate Video ?<lb/>
PO Box 68618<lb/>
Indianapolis, IN 46268<lb/>
<lb/>
 $&amp;&amp;<lb/>
J<lb/>
Pirate Pride<lb/>
Commemorating the Pirate s<lb/>
Record-Break ins Season<lb/>
Great tasting Pirate Pride qrape soda available only at I BE<lb/>
Stock up for tailgating this Jail. Limited supplies available.<lb/>
UrilversityiloolvExKhang?<lb/>
5l6SouthCotanche ? Gneenville. NC 27834 ? 919-758-2616<lb/>
ATTIC<lb/>
,752-7303 I 209 E. 5th St.<lb/>
1WED<lb/>
2 Shows<lb/>
Doors at 7 p.m &amp; 10 p.m.<lb/>
Sunday Live<lb/>
Comic Strip Live<lb/>
Evening at the Improve<lb/>
WRQR COMEDY ZONE CONCERT 11<lb/>
CARROT TOP<lb/>
CALL 752-7303 FOR TIX INFO<lb/>
<pb facs="00058314_0012"/>
</div></body></text></TEI>