<?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="00058320_0001"/>
Thank you ? the two most powerful words<lb/>
Scott Maxwell finds peace, says good-bye<lb/>
4<lb/>
Barefoot on the Mall lives again 7<lb/>
Fourteenth annual celebration sure to attract bin numbers<lb/>
?1?? ?aat ftar0limatt<lb/>
Serving the East Carolina campus community since 1925<lb/>
Vol.66 No.28<lb/>
Thursday. Aphu 23, 1992<lb/>
Grefnvillf, North Carolina<lb/>
Circulation 12.000<lb/>
12 Pages<lb/>
wound Other<lb/>
Woman to run police<lb/>
rhe campus police department at the<lb/>
I nn ersitv of North Carolina at C hapel till<lb/>
has hired the state s first woman police chief<lb/>
at the university e el<lb/>
AJanaEnnis currenth a Durham Police<lb/>
I Ypartment captain will take o er the posi-<lb/>
tion May 4<lb/>
"1 believe she will add a degree of<lb/>
prefessionalism l.t. Cl.u Williams of Uni-<lb/>
 ersity Police said (ver time, I think it will<lb/>
show that she will be a positive force in this<lb/>
department"<lb/>
Officials said Ennis' community-oriented<lb/>
policing will he an asset to I NC and are<lb/>
excited that she will be taking over the posi-<lb/>
tion<lb/>
Student sues NCAA<lb/>
A Washington State I niversity student<lb/>
is suing the N( A dec taring he was denied<lb/>
a fwtball scholarship because of unfair eligi-<lb/>
bility requirements<lb/>
KenMd - a place-kicker, was ruled<lb/>
ineligible foi irship in March because<lb/>
henev er ttok theS holastic Aptitude lest or<lb/>
American I rest both ol which are<lb/>
required nd . A rules.<lb/>
?? ?? on of McConkey's test scores<lb/>
I haves ured a 900 on I<lb/>
SA1 wi il ? the 7tX1 mark needed for<lb/>
scholarship eligibility, hisattome) saki<lb/>
In ordei t. apply for a waiver from the<lb/>
SA I requirement Mc onkey would need to<lb/>
ha e.i 1 i umulam egrade-pointa erage in<lb/>
high schiHil.he had ,i 2 9<lb/>
I he suit was tiled in I s I 'itrit tCourl in<lb/>
S inct M - was issued a tempo-<lb/>
restraining order that allows hhm to at<lb/>
tend spring pr.k tk e until the issue ? settled<lb/>
Students donate books<lb/>
Students .it Missouri University's medi-<lb/>
dhool recenth collected 400 used text-<lb/>
ks to send to underprivileged people in<lb/>
Africa<lb/>
rhe book dm e was held by ML schap-<lb/>
tei f the American Medical Student Assoc ia<lb/>
? ?<lb/>
"Many ol students' books end up sitting<lb/>
around going to waste said Candise Cope,<lb/>
the group's president. "They could he sold<lb/>
ba k to bookstores, but manv students don't<lb/>
even lIo th.it. Whv not send them to a place<lb/>
where they're actually going to be read7"<lb/>
New president chosen<lb/>
The chancellor of the University of Cali-<lb/>
fornia .it In ine was recently selected as the<lb/>
next president of the University of California<lb/>
s stem.<lb/>
I.uk V Pelt.is.in, 68, is .i constitutional<lb/>
scholar and has been chancellor of Irvine for<lb/>
eight ve.irs<lb/>
Pel tason will replace Dav id C a ril ner who<lb/>
decided to step down after the death of his<lb/>
?<lb/>
As chancellor, Peltason said he w.is de-<lb/>
termined to improve the Ir ine campus by<lb/>
recruiting ti p scholars and l mhling pri ate<lb/>
donations.<lb/>
Student sentenced<lb/>
I he last f six St. John's University stu-<lb/>
dentscharged in thesexual assault of a tem.ile<lb/>
student has been sentenced to three year's<lb/>
probation, community service anil ,i drug<lb/>
counseling program.<lb/>
The guilty plea entered bv Michael<lb/>
Calandnllo 2 '?. was a surpnse to those fol-<lb/>
lowing the uise because three of the suspects<lb/>
were acquitted last summer<lb/>
C a land nlloadmitted he gave the woman<lb/>
three drinks with vodka in them ami then<lb/>
forced her to perform oral sex.<lb/>
Compiled by Elizabeth Shimmet. Taken from CPS<lb/>
and other campus newspapers.<lb/>
Inside Thursday<lb/>
Crime Scene 2<lb/>
Editorial4<lb/>
Classifieds6<lb/>
EntertainmentII<lb/>
Comics9<lb/>
Sports 10<lb/>
<lb/>
New book swap starts Wednesday<lb/>
Bv Jennifer Ward rep<lb/>
i'l s Ed itor<lb/>
I he new book bu b.u k<lb/>
s stem that enables students to<lb/>
sell their textbooks tor more<lb/>
mone and bu textbooks tor<lb/>
less has finally become a real-<lb/>
ity Students will have access<lb/>
to the Student BookSy stem be-<lb/>
ginning April 29.<lb/>
'When I tirst heard about<lb/>
the system, I was sure it would<lb/>
work said loev lohnston,chair<lb/>
of the SC A book bu -backcom-<lb/>
mittee. " I he more I learned<lb/>
about it, the more I was sure<lb/>
lohnston and Stephen<lb/>
S haubach,designerofthes s<lb/>
tern, donated computers to start<lb/>
the proje t<lb/>
students van use each com-<lb/>
puter to input a list ot books<lb/>
the) w ish to sell or to obtain<lb/>
information about books the<lb/>
want to buy.<lb/>
A list of people w ho are<lb/>
selling (host books ami their<lb/>
phone numbers w ill be printed<lb/>
so that students may contact<lb/>
ow nersand set prices.Students<lb/>
will be harged $1 for each book<lb/>
entry, but the charge maj be<lb/>
eliminated once computers are<lb/>
bought. Schaubach said<lb/>
Both lohnsfon and<lb/>
Schaubach are confident that<lb/>
students will use the system.<lb/>
"I'm loo percent posith ?<lb/>
people will use it lohnston<lb/>
said "It's extra monev iist to<lb/>
make a few phone calls<lb/>
lohnston and Schaubach<lb/>
agree that the system may take<lb/>
a while to get oii the ground,<lb/>
since people must enter books<lb/>
into thestem befi re there<lb/>
are anv a ailable for buyers<lb/>
" I he tirst semester will be<lb/>
mostly ust entering in<lb/>
s haub.n h said. "But who<lb/>
knows, ue may get enough on<lb/>
the first day. It's in the ham! sot<lb/>
the students<lb/>
lohnston said the buy-back<lb/>
i ommittee i now trying to ac-<lb/>
quire lists of books that will be<lb/>
used from departments on<lb/>
campus. The StudentStores re-<lb/>
ceives lists direcHv from the<lb/>
departments and UBI pa I<lb/>
m he said<lb/>
1 erything is el n<lb/>
. ?? re iisf trying to get th<lb/>
lists lohnston said "U .<lb/>
know what book you need, that<lb/>
wimid help "<lb/>
immittee members will<lb/>
work the stem booth, which<lb/>
will be located in Mendenhall<lb/>
studententer, lohnston said<lb/>
workers will not be paid unless<lb/>
the project starts making<lb/>
See Books page 3<lb/>
Organization promotes<lb/>
disability awareness<lb/>
Chancellor Eakin serves as guinea pig<lb/>
Bv Amy Humphries<lb/>
St.itt Wntvr<lb/>
Walk'n in the rain<lb/>
Photo by Jill Cierry? ECU Photo Lab<lb/>
The week of rain should not dampen the spirits of ECU students for<lb/>
Barefoot on the Mall today The 14th annual event usually brings<lb/>
thousands out to enjoy spring weather, music and much more<lb/>
v han ellor Ri hard Eakin se eral ra<lb/>
dio and tele is ion personalities and I<lb/>
businessmen w ill assume" ph sical dis-<lb/>
abilities fora da<lb/>
' I hi'M'w ill in ludewheek hair simu-<lb/>
lations an.i hearing and isual impair-<lb/>
ment simulations saktSissv Lee-Elmore,<lb/>
a student in I v. el.pmental Disabilities<lb/>
Intervention and Research Program<lb/>
(Dl IRP)<lb/>
I i Mki' reated .n awareness ??? ? ?<lb/>
that  ill tal Ma) 4through '?' .<lb/>
DDIRP serves as an outlet for stu-<lb/>
dents And t.Kulry to discuss problems,<lb/>
solutions anil topics related to the .level<lb/>
opmentallv disabled<lb/>
Ihe( ban. el lor w ill never know the<lb/>
difficulties of a disabilities after iist tynf<lb/>
day of simulation but he m,u run into<lb/>
obstacles and learn what changes can be<lb/>
made to help the disabled I ee-Elmore<lb/>
said.<lb/>
The awareness week also includes a<lb/>
seminar on the Americans with Disabili-<lb/>
ties Act The Act was passed in u!v of<lb/>
10 and serves to mainstream the dis-<lb/>
abled into society. Because ot the Act,<lb/>
.improvements tor the disabled will be<lb/>
made in such areas as public sen. ices,<lb/>
employment transportation and telecom-<lb/>
munication<lb/>
Dr. Eakin will also addn d prob-<lb/>
??ii. ountered from being in a w heel-<lb/>
i hair<lb/>
<lb/>
ult  invited<lb/>
? ' emmar but anyone interested n<lb/>
-aid Richard ' lirecl<lb/>
l ipment l ? ? ?<lb/>
rion and Resean h Progi i mar<lb/>
will be held on May ' K n it d ?<lb/>
Ramada Inn on Crew<lb/>
?. ? . ?<lb/>
i  -? ? ni? dbal<lb/>
. . . -k.i: imj<lb/>
is usiialh apparent before age 22. I he<lb/>
disabilities are lifelong and usually limit<lb/>
one or more of the person's normal rune -<lb/>
lions siuh as self- are or mobilit<lb/>
The DDIRP seeks to improve ondi-<lb/>
tions tor the developmental disabled<lb/>
and their families There are programs to<lb/>
tram residential service providers to gi e<lb/>
care to the disabled<lb/>
he Interagencv Deaf-Blind Service<lb/>
Team, one program DDIRP offers, im-<lb/>
proves service for indi ktuals w ith visual<lb/>
and hearing impairments. Also,a study of<lb/>
thedisabled elderlv is in progress todeter-<lb/>
mine their need anil provide better care to<lb/>
them<lb/>
The DDIRP became an official organi-<lb/>
zation at ECU in the fall ol 1990<lb/>
Evaluations show how advisers rate with students<lb/>
By Marjorie Pitts<lb/>
Staff Writer<lb/>
During early registration,<lb/>
some advisers participated m<lb/>
optional adviser evaluations<lb/>
Those advisees who partici-<lb/>
pated rev ei ed one coupon for<lb/>
Hank's Ice (ream and got a<lb/>
dian. e to w in a dinner tor two<lb/>
at I i.irrvl's.<lb/>
I he winner of the 530 gift<lb/>
certificate to Darrvl's was<lb/>
April Mitchell a junior and an<lb/>
elementarv education major.<lb/>
" rhtjcoupon to Hank's Ice<lb/>
Cream and the chance to win a<lb/>
dinner for two was a good idea.<lb/>
It gave students the incentive<lb/>
to fill out the advisor form<lb/>
Mitchell said. "It's a good idea<lb/>
that we can evaluate out ad i-<lb/>
sors We can My what we<lb/>
would like, good or bait A lot<lb/>
of advisors need to be in-<lb/>
formed on how thev'redoing<lb/>
The results of the forms<lb/>
will help determine who will<lb/>
be the top four advisers of the<lb/>
1991-1492 school year. There<lb/>
will be four outstanding ad-<lb/>
viser awards. Tvvoawardswill<lb/>
be received by advisers from<lb/>
General College and two will<lb/>
be given to two advisers in<lb/>
declared majors.<lb/>
The winning advisers will<lb/>
be recognized at the fall con-<lb/>
Pholo by ECU Pholo Lab<lb/>
Chancellor Eakin awards April Mitchell with a gift certificate to Darryl's restaurant for participating<lb/>
in an advisor evaluation survey<lb/>
vocation in August.<lb/>
Each winning adviser will<lb/>
receive $250 for professional<lb/>
advancement and receive an<lb/>
engraved silver bowl by Chan-<lb/>
cellor Richard Eakin at the Fall<lb/>
Convocation.<lb/>
The rating system used on<lb/>
the evaluation asked the fol-<lb/>
lowing questions:<lb/>
? My adviser's know ledge<lb/>
of degree requirements and<lb/>
academic regulations<lb/>
? My adviser's knowledge<lb/>
of where to seek information<lb/>
that heshe does not hav,<lb/>
?My adviser's availabil-<lb/>
ity through regular office<lb/>
hours or appointment<lb/>
? My adviser's attitude to-<lb/>
ward helping me.<lb/>
Questions 1 through 4 av-<lb/>
erage:<lb/>
?My own preparation<lb/>
preparedness for meeting with<lb/>
my adviser<lb/>
? My overall rating of my<lb/>
ad iser.<lb/>
"The advisor evaluation<lb/>
surveys give us feedback on<lb/>
advising said loAnn ones,<lb/>
assistantdean of General Col-<lb/>
lege. "We want to make advis-<lb/>
ing the best we can<lb/>
Last vear at the National<lb/>
Academic Advising Associa-<lb/>
tion com ention.ECl was pre-<lb/>
sented a certificate of merit for<lb/>
innovative and exemplar)<lb/>
practices in the academic ad-<lb/>
 ising of students<lb/>
Ms. Talmvra l.eahv ol the<lb/>
geography department won a<lb/>
national award tor outstand-<lb/>
ing advising last vear ,i w ell.<lb/>
In addition to finding the<lb/>
best m isors on campus Ms<lb/>
lones has been working on a<lb/>
mini-advising enter<lb/>
"We are now in our third<lb/>
vear of a mini-adv ising cen-<lb/>
ter Jones said.<lb/>
"Our center was formu-<lb/>
lated in order toaccommodate<lb/>
students who have declared<lb/>
pre-business or undeclared<lb/>
majors Jones said<lb/>
There are five retired ad-<lb/>
visers and five graduate stu-<lb/>
dents who work in the mini-<lb/>
advising center, Jones said.<lb/>
"When 1 was an under-<lb/>
graduate there was nothing<lb/>
See Advisor, page 3<lb/>
<pb facs="00058320_0002"/><lb/>
2 ?be East ffiarolintan<lb/>
April 23, 1992<lb/>
CRI<lb/>
S)ENE<lb/>
Anti-abortion activists seize Buffalo<lb/>
Worried RA calls Public Safety;<lb/>
constipation found<lb/>
April 14<lb/>
2248?Vehicle Stopped for headlight violation, speeding and<lb/>
possessing a weapon on campus Verbal warning issued.<lb/>
April IS<lb/>
0241V Ik-lk Hall: Report of three male subjects climbing up the<lb/>
side ot the building. Subjects were identified as students, verbal<lb/>
warnings given.<lb/>
0859 Willis Building: Items were taken from a construction<lb/>
crew working.<lb/>
1302 Reade St. Parking Lot Window broken out of a Ford<lb/>
Escort.<lb/>
1 14 ames St Decal stolen from vehicle.<lb/>
April tf<lb/>
0138 Ihe Pantry Vehicle stopped. Subject was arrested for<lb/>
P W 1 mm transported to the Magistrates office.<lb/>
1042? Police Department Vehicle stopped. Student given ver-<lb/>
bal warning for expired inspection sticker.<lb/>
1509- Slav Hall: Vehicle Stopped. Student given verbal warning<lb/>
tor expired inspection sticker.<lb/>
1739 College Hill Dr Vehicle Stopped. Non-student charged<lb/>
with speeding, carrying a concealed weapon on campus, possessing<lb/>
stolen property, unregistered vehicle and no insurance.<lb/>
211 -Fletcher Hall: Vehicle stopped. Student issued state for<lb/>
expired drivers license.<lb/>
2142-Oreene Hall: Vehicle stopped for stop sign violation.<lb/>
Student issued state citation.<lb/>
April 17<lb/>
1210?Messick: Unknown person stole electronic equipment<lb/>
from nxm.<lb/>
141rv? Jarvis hall: Fire alarm activated by mechanical problem.<lb/>
April 18<lb/>
2Q3(? Scales Fieldhouse: Damage to property and vending<lb/>
machine found broken, into and property missing.<lb/>
2240? -lovner Library: Vehicle stopped for erratic driving. Non-<lb/>
student given verbal warning.<lb/>
April 1<lb/>
0022 Minges: Suspicious male reported looking at vehicle.<lb/>
Identified as a student no advised to leave the area<lb/>
0105?Brewster: Vehicle stopped. Student given a campus cita-<lb/>
tion for speeding and passing dn a double yellow line.<lb/>
0227?Damage to personal property report One subject ar-<lb/>
rested for being intoxicated and disruptive.<lb/>
134 Cotten I fall: RA concerned about a student having pains.<lb/>
Subject was constipated.<lb/>
Apnl 20<lb/>
0011 Evans St Vehicle stopped for running a stop sign. Staff<lb/>
member given a campus citation.<lb/>
Crime Scene is taken from official Public Safety logs<lb/>
BUFFALO, NY. (AP)? Hun-<lb/>
dreds of demonstrators massed in a<lb/>
steady rain yesterday to begin what<lb/>
they say will be a two-to-four-week<lb/>
siege aimed at shutting the city's<lb/>
abortion clinics. Theclinics said they<lb/>
were still open this morning.<lb/>
"We're going to rescue chil-<lb/>
dren with our bodies Operation<lb/>
Rescue leader Keith Tucci said as<lb/>
about 2(Xabortion opponents gath-<lb/>
ered on Main Street in front of one<lb/>
of four clinics he said his group<lb/>
besieged.<lb/>
rolice kept a similar number of<lb/>
abortion-rights demonstrators on<lb/>
theoppositesideofthestreet, which<lb/>
was closed for three blocks by the<lb/>
protest. The two sides traded in-<lb/>
sults, but chanted their slogans<lb/>
peacefully. <lb/>
At all four clinics, officials said<lb/>
at mid morning that thev were see-<lb/>
ing patients.<lb/>
Outside a clinic on High Street,<lb/>
where more than 2lK demonstra-<lb/>
Saffire, said he was demonstrating<lb/>
because "I've just had a baby. It's<lb/>
the best thing that ever happened to<lb/>
me. She's beautiful These (abortion<lb/>
rights) people have earrings in their<lb/>
noses<lb/>
Atanother,clmic,about40anti-<lb/>
abortionactivistscamed signs read-<lb/>
ing, "abortion has two victims, one<lb/>
dead, one wounded About 60<lb/>
abortion-rights activists chanted,<lb/>
"Pro-life, your name's a lie, you<lb/>
don't care if women die<lb/>
Tucci said Operation Rescue<lb/>
required its participants to sign a<lb/>
pledge of non-violence. But he said<lb/>
some protesters might defy a court<lb/>
order prohibiting them from block-<lb/>
ing access to the clinics.<lb/>
Militant abortion-rights dem-<lb/>
onstrators said thev would useforce<lb/>
to clear the way if necessary.<lb/>
"We plan on humiliating them<lb/>
and driving them back said Dave<lb/>
Blairof Detroit, a member of a mili-<lb/>
tant group called the National<lb/>
forChoice,anabortion-rights group.<lb/>
The Rev. Daren Drzymala, a<lb/>
Baptist minister from Buffalo, said<lb/>
the abortion-rights activists would<lb/>
help Operation Rescue's cause by<lb/>
fnghtening away women seeking<lb/>
abortions.<lb/>
"These people have shown<lb/>
their true colors with their vulgar-<lb/>
ity and their cussing Drzymala<lb/>
said.<lb/>
There were frequent verbalcon-<lb/>
frontations on Monday, the day<lb/>
Operation Rest ue initially planned<lb/>
to begin an action patterned atter<lb/>
last summer's siege outside clinics<lb/>
in Wichita. Kan , that resulted in<lb/>
2,600 arrests.<lb/>
"People say, Is Buffalo going<lb/>
to be the next Wichita1'I say Wichita<lb/>
was just the beginning Joe<lb/>
Slovenec, an Operation Rescue<lb/>
leader, told about 5(H) people at a<lb/>
rallv Mondav night at a Roman<lb/>
Catholic chinch. About 600 others<lb/>
watched the rally on . bsed-cm uit<lb/>
television in a parish hall<lb/>
Outside, about 100 abortion-<lb/>
rights activists shouted obscenities,<lb/>
waved signs s-uch as "No return to<lb/>
the Kh kstreet bub hers, "and n<lb/>
inglysang"( ?h e Me IhatOld<lb/>
Religion "<lb/>
"I admire their vocabulary<lb/>
Thev went to college and le<lb/>
four wordsind you can't sa) ?<lb/>
in frontof children said the<lb/>
pastor, Msgr. Joseph.<lb/>
An abortion opponent ei '<lb/>
ingthechurchheldupa postervn <lb/>
?i picture of an aborted fetus and<lb/>
shouted, " rhat's a ot'M baby<lb/>
abortion-rights protester sh<lb/>
back, "Women die of illegal<lb/>
tions. What -?re you going I<lb/>
about that?"<lb/>
tors pro and con gathered, an abor- Women's Rights Organizing Com-<lb/>
tion foe pushed an abortion rights mittee.<lb/>
demonstrator and she kicked him<lb/>
in the groin, rolice separated the<lb/>
pair and made no arrests.<lb/>
The abortion opponent, John<lb/>
"Women get assaulted every<lb/>
day by these Operation Rescue<lb/>
gixms said Dianne Mathiowetz,<lb/>
spokeswoman for Buffalo United<lb/>
ECU Recreational Services Presents<lb/>
NVcu of War<lb/>
April 23,1992<lb/>
"Pull together" for a good cause!<lb/>
Join in the fun at ECU'S Annual Barefoot<lb/>
on the Mall and show our support to the<lb/>
Ronald McDonald House<lb/>
Teams shall consist of ten members (male, female, co-rec) or<lb/>
individuals may sign up on The Mall<lb/>
A minimum $1.00 donation per participant requested<lb/>
To register YOUR team<lb/>
contact Kendra Curtis<lb/>
at 757-638 or stop by<lb/>
204 Chnstenbury Gym<lb/>
SAVE TIME!<lb/>
Save<lb/>
Stamps<lb/>
Too<lb/>
Pay You<lb/>
utility<lb/>
bill at<lb/>
the<lb/>
NEW<lb/>
EAST<lb/>
BANK at<lb/>
Mendenh<lb/>
Monday - Friday<lb/>
lOam-zpm<lb/>
Call Greenville Utilities" at<lb/>
551-1539 for further information.<lb/>
The<lb/>
EAST CAROLINA<lb/>
UNIVERSITY<lb/>
HONORS PROGRAM<lb/>
takes pleasure in congratulating the<lb/>
following graduating seniors of spring 1992<lb/>
for completing the requirements to become<lb/>
GRADUATES OF THE<lb/>
HONORS PROGRAM<lb/>
 REBECCA CHESTER<lb/>
 ERIKA CHURCHILL<lb/>
 JONATHAN GRAUEL<lb/>
 ANNE H0RT0N<lb/>
 DERRICK HYMAN<lb/>
 TERRI JARVIS<lb/>
 MICKIE KENNEDY<lb/>
 SCOTTY VAN LAW<lb/>
 SCOTT MAXWELL<lb/>
 MICHELE Mc DEVITT<lb/>
 STEVE RANDOLPH<lb/>
 SCOTT SMITH<lb/>
 PATRICK STANFORTH<lb/>
 AMBER S6UTHERLAND<lb/>
 ALEXANDRA TRIPP<lb/>
AND IN RECOGNIZING THE COMMENCEMENT<lb/>
SPEAKER FOR SPRING 1992<lb/>
MR. RICK ATKINSON<lb/>
ECU HONORS PROGRAM GRADUATE 1974<lb/>
Make Overtoil's Your Last Stop<lb/>
at the End of the Semester<lb/>
$3.00 off<lb/>
j OVERTONS<lb/>
price on any one pair of<lb/>
i UMBROSHORTS<lb/>
Must present coupon for discount.<lb/>
One coupon per customer per visit.<lb/>
Cannot be used with other sales or oilers.<lb/>
expires 5-8-92<lb/>
I<lb/>
I<lb/>
I<lb/>
I<lb/>
I<lb/>
I<lb/>
I<lb/>
I<lb/>
I<lb/>
I<lb/>
I<lb/>
I<lb/>
I<lb/>
I<lb/>
I<lb/>
I<lb/>
I<lb/>
I<lb/>
I<lb/>
I<lb/>
1<lb/>
$10.00 off<lb/>
OVERTONS<lb/>
price on any one pair of<lb/>
TENNIS SHOES<lb/>
Must present coupon for discount.<lb/>
One coupon per customer per visit.<lb/>
Cannot he used with other sales or offers.<lb/>
expires 5-8-92<lb/>
i20<lb/>
20<lb/>
off OVERTONS<lb/>
price on any one men's or ladies<lb/>
swimsuit<lb/>
Must present coupon for discount. One coupon per customer per visit.<lb/>
Cannot be used with other sales or offers.<lb/>
20<lb/>
expires 5-8-92<lb/>
20<lb/>
Supreme Court a<lb/>
ib- hej<lb/>
ert ? d in the ga : a m , and ?<lb/>
chan Han<lb/>
.iht ?? first - : retailing<lb/>
lay and three<lb/>
throu - ?<lb/>
 <lb/>
"<lb/>
?<lb/>
<lb/>
<lb/>
? ? ??<lb/>
  . partint<lb/>
. . <lb/>
? ? . ? ?<lb/>
<lb/>
 . ?<lb/>
We Wa<lb/>
The East Carolinian is now acl<lb/>
the following positions for su<lb/>
? Staff Illustrator<lb/>
? Systems Manager<lb/>
? Circulation Manager<lb/>
? Classified Ad Technician<lb/>
? News Editor ?<lb/>
Please apply at our office<lb/>
Student Publica<lb/>
You ha<lb/>
long en<lb/>
o<lb/>
? Starts Wedn<lb/>
1992-throw<lb/>
? Monday - Fi<lb/>
?Saturday 12<lb/>
? Cost is one<lb/>
? Bring in thu<lb/>
book free ?<lb/>
Overtoil's<lb/>
1<lb/>
111 Red Banks Rd.<lb/>
Greenville, NC<lb/>
919-355-7600<lb/>
fyofc<lb/>
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8am-7pm M-F<lb/>
8am-6prr. Sat<lb/>
Wh<lb/>
Mendenha<lb/>
Ce<lb/>
el<lb/>
f S!<lb/>
buying-an<lb/>
created'b<lb/>
profits sup<lb/>
iby with the<lb/>
fC JC11 1 5 f74T6YO<lb/>
<pb facs="00058320_0003"/><lb/>
ize Buffalo<lb/>
Bghtsgroup rail) Monda) night at a Roman<lb/>
?vmala, a Cathoht church About600others<lb/>
ii.ttalo -aid u,i! e rally on ctosed-ciicuil<lb/>
 its would television in a parish hall<lb/>
mse b<lb/>
April 23, 1992 (gfre jEaat (Earnltnian 3<lb/>
i<lb/>
( Hi- - j about hi' abortion<lb/>
thouted obscenities,<lb/>
k h as Mo return to<lb/>
? hers andmock-<lb/>
Me ikuOld-Ttme<lb/>
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ind learned<lb/>
? , u can t s,n them<lb/>
i I the church<lb/>
a enter-<lb/>
iheld upa poster with<lb/>
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E TIME!<lb/>
reenville Utilities at<lb/>
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price on any one pair of<lb/>
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expires 5 8 92<lb/>
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8am-7pm M-F<lb/>
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Supreme Court overturns execution stay<lb/>
Books<lb/>
Advisor<lb/>
(AD ? Double murderer Rob-<lb/>
ert Alton Harris died in the gas<lb/>
chamber at dawn yesterday to<lb/>
( alitorma s first execution in 25<lb/>
years, after a dramatU last-minute<lb/>
-ta was overturned<lb/>
rheSupremeC ourto ertumed<lb/>
that sta And three others filed<lb/>
through the night In the v'th U.S.<lb/>
Circuit Court of ppeaK Inanex-<lb/>
braordinar) mwe, frustrated high<lb/>
i ourt justices ended thejudk ialduel<lb/>
In orderingtheappealscourtnotto<lb/>
isut' an) more stays without per-<lb/>
mission.<lb/>
Ihe fourth st,n was issued ,u-<lb/>
ter I larris was strapped tothedeath<lb/>
seal After the Supremeburt'srul-<lb/>
ing Harris 39,washasul) returned<lb/>
to the gaschamber, loo king far more<lb/>
somber than earlier. Rut he winked<lb/>
and nodded at one guard And<lb/>
mouthed, "all richt<lb/>
Triegas was introduced at about<lb/>
&amp;S6 a.m and shortly afterward<lb/>
Harris' head jerked from left to right<lb/>
before falling slow I v to his iluM. He<lb/>
appeared to be unconscious about<lb/>
rv 12a.m and was pronounced dead<lb/>
at (v21 a.m.<lb/>
Warden Daniel Vasquez read<lb/>
his final statement. You can be a<lb/>
king or a street sw eeper but every-<lb/>
bod dances with thK .rim Reaper<lb/>
it said.<lb/>
Harris died 14 years after he<lb/>
shot to death two San Diego teen-<lb/>
agers so he could use their car tor a<lb/>
bank robbery. He admitted taking<lb/>
part in the slayings; his supporters<lb/>
cited his past as an abused child,<lb/>
among other things, as a reason to<lb/>
spare him.<lb/>
With Harris' execution, Cali-<lb/>
fornia becomes the 20th state to<lb/>
make use of the death penalty since<lb/>
tlie U.S. Supreme Court in 1476 al-<lb/>
lowed states to resume capital pun-<lb/>
ishment. He was the lhs?th person<lb/>
put to death since the ruling.<lb/>
Sixteen other states have the<lb/>
death penalty but haven't used it.<lb/>
A total of 330 men and women<lb/>
remain on death row in California,<lb/>
and more than 2,5lX)nationallyasof<lb/>
lanuarv.<lb/>
Harris had been scheduled to<lb/>
die just after midnight, but theth<lb/>
US-Circuit Court of Appeals in San<lb/>
Francisco put the execution on hold<lb/>
six hours beforehand, based on a<lb/>
claim that his brother shot one of<lb/>
the teen-agers.<lb/>
It issued three more stays<lb/>
based on a claim thatdeath by gas is<lb/>
cruel And unusual punishment.<lb/>
Ihen the US. Supreme Court or-<lb/>
dered no more stays.<lb/>
There is no good reason for<lb/>
this abusive delay, which has been<lb/>
compounded by last-minute at-<lb/>
tempts to manipulate the judicial<lb/>
process the court said in the 7-2<lb/>
ruling. As with two previous votes<lb/>
on the gas issue, lustices ohn Paul<lb/>
Stevens and I iarrv A. Blackmun<lb/>
dissented.<lb/>
In the dissent, Stevens wrote,<lb/>
"the barbaric use of cyanide gas in<lb/>
the Holocaust, the development of<lb/>
cyanide agents as chemical weap-<lb/>
cis,our contemporary understand-<lb/>
ing of execution bv lethal gas, and<lb/>
toedevelopmentof less cruel meth-<lb/>
ods of execution all demonstrate<lb/>
that execution by cyanide gas is<lb/>
unnecessarily cruel<lb/>
US District judge Marilyn Hall<lb/>
Tatel ordered that Harris' execu-<lb/>
tion be videotaped as evidence for<lb/>
the gas issue. A video camera was<lb/>
seen in the death chamber today.<lb/>
We Want You!<lb/>
The East Carolinian is now accepting applications for<lb/>
the following positions for summer and fall of 1992:<lb/>
? Staff Illustrator<lb/>
Systems Manager<lb/>
Circulation Manager<lb/>
? Asst. News Ed.<lb/>
? Copy Editor<lb/>
? Asst. Entertainment Ed.<lb/>
Classified Ad Technician ? Typesetters<lb/>
? News Editor<lb/>
Staff Writers<lb/>
Please apply at our office on the second floor of the<lb/>
Student Publications Building.<lb/>
You have w<lb/>
long e n o u g<lb/>
PEN<lb/>
Starts Wednesday April 29,<lb/>
1992- through May 6fo<lb/>
Monday - Friday<lb/>
Saturday 12-4<lb/>
Cost is one dollar per book<lb/>
Bring in this ad to enter one<lb/>
bOOk free (one ad per customer)<lb/>
Where<lb/>
Mendenhall Studen<lb/>
Center<lb/>
e live in a world of change. The<lb/>
Student Book Excrffinqe v!l<lb/>
change the way we look at<lb/>
.<lb/>
buying and selling ttxtho iKs It was<lb/>
created by students Mr students All<lb/>
profits support the ; yan ,?so!f St :<lb/>
3M<lb/>
m<lb/>
the ninu:<lb/>
s v ' ? want!<lb/>
Continued from page 1<lb/>
money.<lb/>
Once students understand<lb/>
how the system operates, workers<lb/>
will not be needed, Schaubach<lb/>
said.<lb/>
"I'd like to see it get to the<lb/>
point where we wouldn't have to<lb/>
man the booth' he s.iid. "I'd like<lb/>
to see the campus become that<lb/>
computer literate"<lb/>
Johnston said he became in-<lb/>
terested in the system when he<lb/>
read an article about it in The Ensf<lb/>
Ginaffftion.Then hedecided to pro-<lb/>
mote the project to SGA.<lb/>
"I thought it was a great idea<lb/>
he said. "So I figured I could help<lb/>
out in getting it through SGA<lb/>
Hie SGA recently appropri-<lb/>
ated S2lH to advertise the system.<lb/>
The booth will be open from<lb/>
11 a.m. to 3 p.m. from April 24<lb/>
through May 6. On Saturday, May<lb/>
2 and tm May b the booth will be<lb/>
open from 12 p.m. to 4 p.m.<lb/>
Continued from page 1<lb/>
like a mini-advising center said<lb/>
Chuck Lee, one of the graduate<lb/>
assistants in the center.<lb/>
"I like helping others and my<lb/>
job is to help students choose<lb/>
classes that they need Lee said.<lb/>
Thead isingcentercalled up<lb/>
Jason Quick, a pre-business ma-<lb/>
jor, to let hi m know that he needed<lb/>
to make an appointment with<lb/>
them for registration, he said.<lb/>
"Everyone in the center has<lb/>
always been able to help me im-<lb/>
mediately even if my adviser<lb/>
wasn't in said Stacie Mabus, a<lb/>
freshman who is undecided on<lb/>
her maor<lb/>
"Mv adviser helped me<lb/>
choose a wide variety of courses<lb/>
to take so l could decide what I<lb/>
liked<lb/>
Come Join Us And Be A Part Of<lb/>
THE 4th RANKED DANCE<lb/>
TEAM IN THE NATION<lb/>
mmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmimmm<lb/>
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1st Meeting Will Be Held On<lb/>
April 24 at 4:30 inside<lb/>
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discount, $1,000.00 down payment and 2.9 A.P.R. tor 48 months.<lb/>
<pb facs="00058320_0004"/><lb/>
ize Buffalo<lb/>
April 23, 1992 She East (Carolinian 3<lb/>
? it ,i Roman<lb/>
ut 600 others<lb/>
sed- ircuit<lb/>
p.uishl all<lb/>
? ibortiorv<lb/>
. houted obscenities,<lb/>
No return to<lb/>
andmock-<lb/>
d i line<lb/>
? ibular)<lb/>
imed<lb/>
? i them<lb/>
Ithechurch<lb/>
enter-<lb/>
? i with<lb/>
? and<lb/>
? ? . An<lb/>
ited<lb/>
ibor-<lb/>
E TIME!<lb/>
eenville I tilities at<lb/>
r fun rmation.<lb/>
four Last Stop<lb/>
he Semester<lb/>
$10.00 off<lb/>
)ERTON'S<lb/>
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? i discount.<lb/>
i per isit.<lb/>
talcs or ol fers.<lb/>
20<lb/>
ION'S<lb/>
men's or ladies<lb/>
suit<lb/>
mer per isit.<lb/>
icr v<lb/>
20<lb/>
Supreme Court overturns execution stay<lb/>
Books<lb/>
Advisor<lb/>
(AP) Double murdert?i Rob- rhegMwasintroducedatAboul<lb/>
it Alton Harris died in the gas 6:05 a.m , and shortly afterward<lb/>
ihambei at dawn vesterdav in Harris' head jerked from left tnrighl<lb/>
California's first execution in i beforefallingsknvlytohischest.He<lb/>
vears after a dramati la a minute appeared to be unconsc iou ? about<lb/>
-ta was overturned 6:12a.m,ctnd was pronounced dead<lb/>
rhe Supreme Court rtumed at 6:21 a.m<lb/>
that sta and three others filed Warden Dani' Vasquez read<lb/>
? ugh the night b the Vth I s his final statement Youcanbea<lb/>
i iu uit v ouit . . tnex king or a street sweepei but ever)<lb/>
traordinan move frustrated high bodydanceswithheGrim Reaper,<lb/>
rtjustit ps ended the judicial duel it said<lb/>
h otdei ii<lb/>
lssu an mo<lb/>
misioo awrs so he could use their cai for a<lb/>
rhe fourth sta was issued al bank robber) He admittetl taking<lb/>
I larris was strapped tothedeath part in the sla ings; his supporters<lb/>
seal f ipreme iurl srul cited his past as mi abused Juki,<lb/>
i ig. Harris hastily returned among other things as a reason to<lb/>
mbei liH?kingfarmore sparehim<lb/>
-on ? ? winked With Harris' executiim ili<lb/>
m.i i it one cuai t and totnia becomes tlie 2(Kh -tate to<lb/>
mo ihed<lb/>
pealscourtnotto Harris died II years after he<lb/>
tavs without per- shot to death two San Diego teen<lb/>
make use of the death penalh since<lb/>
the U.S. Supreme Court in I976al-<lb/>
bwed states to resumecapital pun-<lb/>
ishment. 1 le was the 169th person<lb/>
put to death since the ruling.<lb/>
sixteen other states have the<lb/>
death penalty but haven't used it<lb/>
A total of 1 U men and women<lb/>
remain on death row me alifornia,<lb/>
and moifthani Hi nation.) IK asol<lb/>
lanuai <lb/>
I larris had been s heduled to<lb/>
die tt after midnight, but the9th<lb/>
U.S.( ircuit( ourtof Appeals inSan<lb/>
I i.HH iscopul theexe( utjononhokd<lb/>
six hours beforehand, based on a<lb/>
claim that his brother shot onv ot<lb/>
the teen agei -<lb/>
It issued three more stays<lb/>
ha-ed on a claim that death by ga is<lb/>
cruel and unusual punishment.<lb/>
Ihen the I S Supremeourt or-<lb/>
dered no more sta) s<lb/>
I here is no w reasHi for<lb/>
this abusive delay, which has been<lb/>
compounded by last minute at-<lb/>
tempts to manipulate the judicial<lb/>
process the court said in the 7-2<lb/>
ruling. As with two piv ions votes<lb/>
on the gas issue, u ?ti es ohn Paul<lb/>
Stevens and I larr) Blackmun<lb/>
dissented<lb/>
In the dissent, Stevens wrote,<lb/>
"the barbark use of c) anide gas in<lb/>
the Holik aust, the development ot<lb/>
cyanide agents as hemk al weap-<lb/>
ons, our contemporary understand-<lb/>
ing ot e ution b) lethal gas, and<lb/>
tin-development ot less ruel meth-<lb/>
ods of execution all demonstrate<lb/>
that execution b cyanide ;as is<lb/>
unnecessaril) cruel "<lb/>
USDistrictJudgeMarilynHall<lb/>
Patel ordered that Hams' execu-<lb/>
tion be videotaped as evidence tor<lb/>
the gas issue. A ideo camera was<lb/>
sen in the death chamber toda)<lb/>
We Want You!<lb/>
The East Carolinian is now accepting applications for<lb/>
the following positions for summer and fall of 1992:<lb/>
? Staff Illustrator<lb/>
? Systems Manager<lb/>
Circulation Manager<lb/>
? Asst. News Ed.<lb/>
? Copy Editor<lb/>
? Asst. Entertainment Ed.<lb/>
? Classified Ad Technician ? Typesetters<lb/>
? News Editor<lb/>
? Staff Writers<lb/>
Please anolv iit our office on the second floor of the<lb/>
Student Publications Building.<lb/>
- ??.? - . ? w. - ??  ' '<lb/>
You have waited<lb/>
long enough. . .<lb/>
Starts Wednesday April 29,<lb/>
1992- through May 6<lb/>
Monday- Friday 11-5<lb/>
Saturday 12-4<lb/>
Cost is one dollar per book<lb/>
Bring in this ad to enter one<lb/>
bOOk free (on? ad per customer)<lb/>
Where?<lb/>
Mendenhatl Student<lb/>
Center<lb/>
PC 355-5783<lb/>
Kam-Tpm M-F<lb/>
Ham-ftpn: St<lb/>
1<lb/>
cc<lb/>
CD<lb/>
cc<lb/>
k,<lb/>
CQ<lb/>
0Q<lb/>
CC<lb/>
CD<lb/>
e live in a world ol change. The<lb/>
A A I Student Book Exchange wl<lb/>
V change the way we look at<lb/>
buying and selling textbooks. It was<lb/>
created by students for students. All<lb/>
profits support the program itself: Stop<lb/>
bv with the names of the books you want<lb/>
.???,U ?? ??<lb/>
CALL 737-4736 FOR MOEB i$Tmm&amp;i0M<lb/>
?i Ii<lb/>
Continued from page 1<lb/>
money<lb/>
Once students understand<lb/>
how Ihesy stem operates, workers<lb/>
will nol be needed, Schaubach<lb/>
said<lb/>
"I'd liki' to see it get to the<lb/>
point where we v i Mikln't have to<lb/>
man the booth he ?ml. "I'd like<lb/>
to see the i ampus be ome that<lb/>
computer literate<lb/>
lohnston said he became in-<lb/>
terested in the system when he<lb/>
read an article about it in Thel<lb/>
i nroliniiin. I hen hede ided to pro-<lb/>
mote the proje t toS ! A<lb/>
"I thought it was a great idea<lb/>
he said. "So I figured 1 could help<lb/>
out in getting it through S A "<lb/>
I he S .A ret ently appropri-<lb/>
ated $200 to advertise the system<lb/>
The booth will he open from<lb/>
11 a.m. to 5 p.m from April 2<lb/>
through May 6 (hrvSaturday, May<lb/>
2 and on Mav 6 the booth v ill be<lb/>
open from 12 p.m to 4 p.m.<lb/>
Continued from page 1<lb/>
liked mini-ad ising center aul<lb/>
Chiu k Lee, one of the graduate<lb/>
assistants in the enter<lb/>
"I like helping others and my<lb/>
job is to help student choose<lb/>
classes that they need Lee said.<lb/>
Ihe.nh ising center called up<lb/>
I,(son Qui k, a pre-business ma<lb/>
or, to let him know that heneed- 1<lb/>
to make an appointment with<lb/>
them for registration, he said<lb/>
! . eryone in the center has<lb/>
alwav ? been able to help me im-<lb/>
mediatek even it my adviser<lb/>
wasn't in " said Stacie Mabus, a<lb/>
freshman who is undecided on<lb/>
her major.<lb/>
Ah adviser helped me<lb/>
choose .i v ide variety of courses<lb/>
to take so 1 could decide what 1<lb/>
liked "<lb/>
IN<lb/>
Come Join Us And Be A Part Of<lb/>
THE 4th RANKED DANCE<lb/>
TEAM IN THE NATION<lb/>
ECU DANCE TEAM<lb/>
TRY-OUT DATES<lb/>
APRIL 24, 25, 26<lb/>
1st Meeting Will Be Held On<lb/>
April 24 at 4:30 inside<lb/>
MINGES COLISEUM<lb/>
(4 IN THE NATION)<lb/>
HEY,HEYE.C.<lb/>
at Brown and Wood<lb/>
HE BELIEVE<lb/>
this is a great graduation gilt!<lb/>
$233.83 per month<lb/>
1992 Pontiac Sunbird<lb/>
92299<lb/>
Equipped with automatic transmission,<lb/>
air conditioning, tinted glass, sport<lb/>
mirrors, AM-FM cassette and more!<lb/>
Payment based on list price of $12,323 with $7300 dealer<lb/>
discount, $1,000.00 down payment and 2.9 A.P.R. for 48 months.<lb/>
i<lb/>
. ?<lb/>
<pb facs="00058320_0005"/><lb/>
SITE i?ust (Earolinian<lb/>
Serving the East Carolina campus community since 1925<lb/>
James R. Knisely, General Manager<lb/>
Matthew D. Jones, Managing Editor<lb/>
Gregory E. Jones, Director of Advertising<lb/>
Jennifer Wardrep, Hews Editor Richard Haselric, Staff illustrator<lb/>
Julie Roscoe, Asst. News Editor Michael Albuquerque, Business Manager<lb/>
Lewis Cobi e. Entertainment Editor Larry Huccins, Gradation Manager<lb/>
Dana Damu SON. Asst. Entertainment Editor Chantal Weedman, Layout Manager<lb/>
Michael Martin, Sports Editor Steven Ollice, Classified Advertising Technician<lb/>
Robert Todd, Assistant Sports Editor Chris Norman, Darkroom Technician<lb/>
Jeff Becker, Copy Editor Jean Caraway, Advertising Production Manager<lb/>
Blair Skinner, Copy Editor Deborah Daniel, Secretary<lb/>
Keeping up with the Jones boy<lb/>
Memories of a forgotten newspaper<lb/>
ROTC initiates<lb/>
By<lb/>
Greg<lb/>
Jones<lb/>
Editorial<lb/>
Columnist<lb/>
min<lb/>
The Easl Carolinian has served the East Carolina campus community since ll)25. emphasizing information that affects ECU<lb/>
students The I asi Carolinian publishes 12.0(H) copies ever) Tuesday and Thursday. The masthead editorial in each edition<lb/>
is the opinion ol the Editorial Board. The East Carolinian welcomes letters expressing all points of v iew 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/>
for publication I etters should be addressed to The Editor, The East Carolinian, Publications Bldg . ECU, Greenville, N.C .<lb/>
2785S 4! Foi more information, call CM1)) 757-6366.<lb/>
Opinion<lb/>
Page 4, Tuesday, April 21, 1992<lb/>
Fond farewell, advice offered<lb/>
roday, our newspaper will break format.<lb/>
The space where this print now resides is<lb/>
usually reserved for our opinion on various is-<lb/>
sues. But this is our last paper of the semester, and<lb/>
quite frankly we are tired of voicing our opinion.<lb/>
In lieu of splashing our opinion on this hal-<lb/>
lowed page, we will instead offer Advice. So here<lb/>
goes.<lb/>
? Retrain from stressing too hard about your<lb/>
finals. In the end, you'll be done with them all and<lb/>
wonder what it was you were worried about.<lb/>
?Barefoot on the Mall is a festival for feet.<lb/>
Anyone wearing shoes of any kind will be asked<lb/>
10 leave.<lb/>
? Thrve things come no! back: the air that is<lb/>
flown, the spoken word, and lost opportunities.<lb/>
?Commencement is right around the corner.<lb/>
Seniors, this means your 10th year High School<lb/>
reunion is fast approaching.<lb/>
? The next time Brother Jim graces our cam-<lb/>
pus, let's get out there and show him what<lb/>
rnasturbator's and fornicator's we really are.<lb/>
?College life is great. Study a lot, drink a little,<lb/>
become involved and use a condom.<lb/>
? Finally, don't forget that these are the best<lb/>
years of your life. Twenty years from now, when<lb/>
you're sitting in board meeting, you'll look back<lb/>
and realize the fondest memories are those ol col-<lb/>
lege.<lb/>
 and what a long strange trip it's been.<lb/>
Beginning my tenure as Direc-<lb/>
tor of Advertising one year ago, little<lb/>
did I know all that lay ahead, watting<lb/>
to test my patience and, at times, my<lb/>
sanity<lb/>
A casual reactor of The East Caro-<lb/>
linian may think of the paper as some-<lb/>
thing that magically appears on Tues-<lb/>
days and Thursdays, providing the<lb/>
Students with reading material to flip<lb/>
through between classes<lb/>
There is, however, a minority of<lb/>
students on campus who know this is<lb/>
not the case Thesesmokmg, dipping,<lb/>
swearing, ZMB-Ustening, Wendy's-<lb/>
e.ittng folks are the staff of The East<lb/>
Carolinian<lb/>
At times the paper has been ac-<lb/>
cused of being too-liberal, too-conser-<lb/>
vative, unethica, and (most recently)<lb/>
unprofessional Theseattributesarea<lb/>
matter ot perspective, however, it is a<lb/>
fact that these are some of the most<lb/>
dedicated people with which 1'veever<lb/>
had the pleasure to work<lb/>
One clear example comes clear<lb/>
to mind The welcome-back edition in<lb/>
the fall of 1991 Perhaps you remem-<lb/>
ber it7 It was a 56-page, tour-pound,<lb/>
bundle of joy that arrived at your<lb/>
newsstand only one day late This<lb/>
love-child might have been a week<lb/>
late or aborted all together had it not<lb/>
been tor a handful of sleepy-eyed<lb/>
newspaper junkies<lb/>
The paper was supposed to<lb/>
come out on Wednesday, thefirstday<lb/>
of classes On Tuesday, production<lb/>
day, the air was full with optimism.<lb/>
we had sold the most inches of adver-<lb/>
tising tor a single newspaper in the<lb/>
history of The East Carolinian It soon<lb/>
became apparent that with this ret ord-<lb/>
breaking accomplishment came an<lb/>
unwanted realization ? hundreds i ?1<lb/>
ads had tobecreated and what seemed<lb/>
like miles of copy had to be placed<lb/>
within the 56-page mammoth<lb/>
Thepaper's deadline was 2 a m<lb/>
Wednesday morning<lb/>
Along about 11 pm Fuesday<lb/>
night, the first hint of a pessimistic-<lb/>
attitude surfaced Questions were<lb/>
raised concerning the probability of<lb/>
the paper maintaining its schedule<lb/>
Unfortunately, our General<lb/>
Manager. Tim Hampton, was the first<lb/>
to speak up. He paid dearly for his<lb/>
pessimism At the time, I was work-<lb/>
ing alongside my brother. Matt (ones,<lb/>
who played the role of news editor<lb/>
Neither of us cared to listen to Tim's<lb/>
reasoning<lb/>
The Brothers Jones then began<lb/>
to launch into a tirade directed to-<lb/>
ward Tim How could he dare think<lb/>
we wouldn't get this paper finished<lb/>
b) deadline? We would simply step<lb/>
up our efforts and work harder, damn<lb/>
it<lb/>
At this time, the three of us<lb/>
walked into the ad production office<lb/>
and asked Doug Morris how many<lb/>
ads he had left to complete "Eight<lb/>
he said Eight short, little, easy ads<lb/>
No sweat "<lb/>
One o'clock Wednesday morn-<lb/>
ing, a mere hour until deadline<lb/>
"How many more ads do you<lb/>
have lett, Doug<lb/>
"Eight Eight short, little, easy<lb/>
ads No sweat "<lb/>
Bv this time, Doug ha'd been in<lb/>
front oi the ad computer for 18 hours<lb/>
Grey hairs sprouted before our eyes<lb/>
He resembled some sick, key-punch-<lb/>
in g statue, with the faint iKior of Dim's<lb/>
breadsticks surrounding him<lb/>
It was now official, the paper<lb/>
would come out on Thursday And<lb/>
the new printing deadline moved to 3<lb/>
p m Wednesday<lb/>
fter ip I gizing t'1 Tim for<lb/>
beii Rright we all settled down for a<lb/>
beverage-filled all-nighter "The<lb/>
IVist was among us all<lb/>
At thecrackofdawn, Doug said<lb/>
"Eight Eight short, little, easy ads<lb/>
No sweat "<lb/>
He also mentioned vimething<lb/>
about going to bathroom, but he  as<lb/>
afraid his legs didn't work anymore<lb/>
Around noon on Wedne I<lb/>
Doug really did have only eight ads<lb/>
left Meanwhile, we all came ? the<lb/>
realization that we needed, t g ?<lb/>
class<lb/>
We all used the opporrui<lb/>
a chance to sleep, shower, u <lb/>
lungs a break from the 23-1<lb/>
tine binge<lb/>
We arrived back at the<lb/>
2 -V p m to put the finishing touches<lb/>
on our masterpiece and h dehvei ??<lb/>
the printer .it 3 p m on the m se<lb/>
Things went considerat<lb/>
terforusatterthefirsteditun 'v ?<lb/>
encountered numerous ;<lb/>
throughout the year, but at le<lb/>
had set a benchmark for h  . . j.<lb/>
ip things could go<lb/>
? ? ? ?<lb/>
It is often said tl at<lb/>
courses represent only halt of  <lb/>
lege education Learning how to in-<lb/>
teract with people, at ??.??. ? ri-<lb/>
sibility, prioritizing and time-n<lb/>
ment are all equally im ?? t pur-<lb/>
suits of a college education<lb/>
The EastCarolinian pn . ?<lb/>
colleagues and myself wid<lb/>
dose oi Life 1001, which 1 d<lb/>
prove invaluable when search g irtd<lb/>
obtaining a career after sv <lb/>
I urge everyone who has ?<lb/>
the time to read these ramblings to<lb/>
become involved with the newspa-<lb/>
per A variety ot positions ? ?<lb/>
entertainment reporter, adv<lb/>
representative, copy editi - ??<lb/>
As for the staff men ? rj<lb/>
present and past, who ha<lb/>
reigns fThe East Carolinian spt i <lb/>
tion ? Tim, Deborah, all the Mate<lb/>
Margie. Mbie, Larry S ti eai dl<lb/>
the a : rep ? and ever ? ? ? I<lb/>
leredttaplea iret get) ? ???<lb/>
and w -i. ??? ith J<lb/>
I all the risii gli lersruj rid<lb/>
future emj ?? - g I<lb/>
Maxwell's Silver Hammer<lb/>
 Acquainted with the night<lb/>
Letters to the Editor<lb/>
Scott<lb/>
Maxwell<lb/>
I ditorial<lb/>
Columnist<lb/>
From about eighth grade until<lb/>
: ted fi m high school 1<lb/>
 e I n my wallet a razor blade<lb/>
This was so 1 could kill myself, it 1<lb/>
decided to<lb/>
1 thought a lot about killing<lb/>
myself back then, for one main<lb/>
reason I"he woman who gave birth<lb/>
to me, who still lives in that damned<lb/>
rathole of a house in Florida ? a<lb/>
woman 1 refuse to call my mother ?<lb/>
abused me Not physically, mind<lb/>
you, and not in any sense I'm sure<lb/>
the courts would agree with But she<lb/>
took a special, vicious pleasure in<lb/>
what I would consider emotional<lb/>
abuse. The details aren't important.<lb/>
So I carried around a razor<lb/>
blade most of the time. And as I<lb/>
usually failed in my fumbling<lb/>
attempts to gain from friends and<lb/>
lovers the emotional support I<lb/>
desperately needed, I often thought<lb/>
about using it<lb/>
That was how it came to be<lb/>
that reading saved my life For some<lb/>
people, I guess, it's religion, for<lb/>
others it's drugs, for me it was<lb/>
Harlan Ellison's stories.<lb/>
Again, the details aren't<lb/>
important What matters ? and<lb/>
what mattered then ? is that<lb/>
Harlan Ellison writes stones about<lb/>
pain Not physical pain, not usually,<lb/>
but emotional anguish, of any stripe<lb/>
the pain of being reacted by a lover,<lb/>
the pain ot being a crazy bag lady in<lb/>
New York, of being miserably shy,<lb/>
of being simply lonely, it's in there.<lb/>
I managed to find in Harlan<lb/>
Ellison's tones an indication that<lb/>
someone else in the universe had<lb/>
been through what 1 was going<lb/>
through, and had made it Simply<lb/>
knowing that, simply knowing it<lb/>
was possible, kept me alive through<lb/>
those miserable days and nights.<lb/>
I got the hell out of Florida<lb/>
after high school, and have since<lb/>
severed all ties with the woman<lb/>
who abused me there My girlfriend,<lb/>
whom 1 met in Florida and who is<lb/>
also attending college here, is a<lb/>
wonderfully kind and patient<lb/>
person who has done a lot to repair<lb/>
the huge furrows that that Floridian<lb/>
harpy raked into my psyche. And I<lb/>
threw away the razor blade.<lb/>
Even so, I carried a deep sense<lb/>
of gratitude to Harlan Ellison, as I<lb/>
would for a favor 1 could never<lb/>
repay I know he didn't do it for me,<lb/>
but he wrote the stories that enabled<lb/>
me to find strength in myself to<lb/>
keep going. I owed him, at least, a<lb/>
thanks.<lb/>
Well, 1 got a chance to thank<lb/>
him, a year or so ago A friend who<lb/>
knew of my respect tor Ellison as a<lb/>
writer called from Raleigh to tell me<lb/>
about a fundraiser tor Harvey Cantt<lb/>
It was at the H.irdb.u kafe in<lb/>
Chapel Hill, Ellison would be<lb/>
signing books and pretending to<lb/>
wait tables and generally making an<lb/>
amusing ass of himself while die<lb/>
assembled guests ate dinner<lb/>
But this was a fundraiser and<lb/>
they had to raise funds A hundred<lb/>
dollars a plate And I couldn't afford<lb/>
it<lb/>
A week before the dinner, for<lb/>
no apparent reason, the Visa gods<lb/>
raised my credit limit by $200<lb/>
Fifteen minutes after I found that<lb/>
out, my girlfriend and 1 were signed<lb/>
up for the last two tickets to the<lb/>
event<lb/>
We went. Ellison was witty,<lb/>
intelligent, amusing, charming,<lb/>
acerbic ? everything people say he<lb/>
is. You could feel him in a room like<lb/>
a force of nature, everywhere he<lb/>
went, the swirling clouds of people<lb/>
behind him were affected by his<lb/>
presence If you weren't talking to<lb/>
him, you were talking about him,<lb/>
that was for sure You tended to<lb/>
forget that he was only five feet five<lb/>
inches tall, because he feels like a<lb/>
giant.<lb/>
He gave his opinions He<lb/>
waited tables He yelled at my<lb/>
girlfriend for not eating her soup<lb/>
(but he was only kidding) He read a<lb/>
not-yet-published story to the<lb/>
crowd, and he reads his stories even<lb/>
better than he writes them<lb/>
Slowly it grew later, and<lb/>
darker. People were starting to drift<lb/>
away, talking and laughing softly,<lb/>
into the night. I don't drink, but I<lb/>
downed a couple of glasses of wine<lb/>
anyway because I was going to need<lb/>
them 1 walked away front my<lb/>
girlfriend and stood in a ragged line<lb/>
of people who were waiting to get a<lb/>
book signed or to say goodbye.<lb/>
Waiting to say my thank you to<lb/>
Harlan Ellison.<lb/>
When the people in front of<lb/>
me had cleared out, I stood a little<lb/>
sheepishly for a moment in front of<lb/>
him ? he was half-sithng on a table,<lb/>
and I felt awkward talking so far<lb/>
down to him I was holding onto a<lb/>
copy of Deathbini Stories he had<lb/>
signed for me earlier in the evening<lb/>
"Mr. Ellison I said, "I just<lb/>
wanted you to know that your<lb/>
stories saved my life about a million<lb/>
times, and even though I know you<lb/>
didn't do it for me, I just wanted to<lb/>
say thank you " And I stuck out my<lb/>
hand for him to shake<lb/>
Which is a lie It didn't go that<lb/>
way at all. As poor as it is, that's<lb/>
infinitely better than what did<lb/>
happen. No, that was only what I<lb/>
tried to say, what I had been<lb/>
promising myself I would say<lb/>
1 actually did manage to say<lb/>
some of it, but after the tirst three or<lb/>
four words my throat simply closed<lb/>
up I stopped iist short of tears It<lb/>
wasn't enough. Itwasn t enough<lb/>
Ten years ol abuse m ith only his<lb/>
words between me and that stupid,<lb/>
stupid razor blade cod damn it,<lb/>
Gee, thanks, Mr Ellison wasn't<lb/>
enough<lb/>
1 finally managed to finish<lb/>
what Id Started, more or less, but<lb/>
toward the end 1 simply gestured<lb/>
vaguely with the book It was all 1<lb/>
could do<lb/>
Somewhere in there he took<lb/>
off his glasses, and 1 could see that<lb/>
his eyes were grey He looked down<lb/>
at the floor for a moment, then back<lb/>
up at me, and said, "You know, you<lb/>
never know, when you wnte a book<lb/>
like that, what it's going to come to<lb/>
mean to someone else, twenty,<lb/>
thirty years later <lb/>
I knew what he was trying to<lb/>
do for me. I struggled to get out<lb/>
another "Thank you" without<lb/>
breaking down and crying and<lb/>
embarrassing myself, and barely<lb/>
made it<lb/>
"Thank you he said gently.<lb/>
There's a moment in one of<lb/>
my favorite Ellison stories, "Paladin<lb/>
of the Lost Hour when a man<lb/>
named Billy Kinetta gets a chance to<lb/>
meet another man who died saving<lb/>
Kmetta's life in Vietnam Kinetta<lb/>
hadn't even known the other man,<lb/>
whose momentary distraction of a<lb/>
couple of Viet Cong saved him, but<lb/>
he frequently goes to the grave,<lb/>
trying to say thank you. And one<lb/>
day ? well, the details aren't<lb/>
important. He gets his chance.<lb/>
Billy Kinetta says thank you to<lb/>
the dead man And then, as Billy<lb/>
tells a friend:<lb/>
 he let me go He let me go<lb/>
so 1 didn't even have to say I was<lb/>
sorry He told me he didn't even sa-<lb/>
me in that foxhole. He never knew<lb/>
he'd saved my life. I said thank you<lb/>
and hp said no, thank you, that he<lb/>
hadn't died for nothing<lb/>
That's what Harlan Ellison<lb/>
did for me, that night in the Hard-<lb/>
back Cafe He was telling me that he<lb/>
understood, but that the thanks<lb/>
weren't really necessary, that I<lb/>
didn't owe him anything, that he<lb/>
was simply glad to know he'd done<lb/>
some good in the world while he<lb/>
was here<lb/>
1 left, then, with my dear and<lb/>
wonderful girlfriend, and walked<lb/>
away into the night. And for the<lb/>
first time that 1 could remember, I<lb/>
felt free.<lb/>
Here's hoping we can all do<lb/>
some good in the world while we're<lb/>
here. Goodbye, ECU, goodbye.<lb/>
Is Walker reallv<lb/>
an ECU student?<lb/>
To the Editor<lb/>
The written .iss.nilt that was di-<lb/>
rected onSCA PresidantCoarrne) ones<lb/>
and Vice President Sherrj Smith in<lb/>
Walker's Ride on the Wild Side" in tho<lb/>
April 14edition ol The East Carolinian is<lb/>
unjust What has Mr William Walker<lb/>
done in his cars .it EC U' In thii article,<lb/>
he bashes outgoing students for rr ing<lb/>
to help the student body as a whole<lb/>
become more im oh ed in campusorga-<lb/>
nizations such as si  and prevent stu-<lb/>
dent apathy He sa s S  has lost Hal-<lb/>
loween for ??: acci pted stupid noise<lb/>
ordinances for biw talked numerous<lb/>
times about some underground book<lb/>
exchange that has never materialized<lb/>
for him, made payments of almost a<lb/>
quarter of a million dollars for him m the<lb/>
wiretapping issue, appropriated an ob-<lb/>
scene amount of money for the "ques-<lb/>
tionable" recreation confer foriim,done<lb/>
nothing about the parking situation for<lb/>
him, decreased library hours for him,<lb/>
and lost the school yearbook for him. I<lb/>
can not believe ho has the brass to say<lb/>
Ms Jones and Ms Smith have been on<lb/>
the SGA long enough to be held respon-<lb/>
sible for all these matters.<lb/>
Obviously, the Great J. William<lb/>
Walker knows nothing about SGA, Ms.<lb/>
Jones nor Ms Smith 1 have been in-<lb/>
volved in numerous activities as well as<lb/>
SGA for three years and now serve as a<lb/>
student assistant for Chancellor Eakin<lb/>
through the Ambassador's program. In<lb/>
my three years of hard work, 1 have<lb/>
learned to recognize attitudes such as<lb/>
theelesterousj. William Walker's bring<lb/>
this university down What has King<lb/>
Walker done here in his time at ECU1<lb/>
First, the SGA did not lose Hal-<lb/>
loween. Halloween was lost by non-<lb/>
students and outsiders that created<lb/>
problems while visiting Greenville Sec-<lb/>
ond,SGA is currently working towards<lb/>
solutions to the noise ordinance situa-<lb/>
tion with committees headed b Vs<lb/>
nesandl iss heduted meetings with<lb/>
PoliceChief Hinman for debate Third,<lb/>
underground book ex-<lb/>
change program, as Mr Walker referred<lb/>
to it. has n.w materialized and received<lb/>
funding ??' 520G to start advertising<lb/>
Fourth, referring to the wiretapping is-<lb/>
sue, the SGA has officially supported<lb/>
? ns of Startle) Kitreli in report-<lb/>
ing! phesaw wrong Fifth, the<lb/>
: scene amount of money for the<lb/>
stionab atton center will<lb/>
make ECU the tops on the East Coast as<lb/>
tar as recreational centers This recre-<lb/>
ational center will bringnotoriet) and a<lb/>
 lling point in recruiting students to<lb/>
ECU Is this obscene? Sixth, the parking<lb/>
situation is tough on other campuses<lb/>
such as UNC and NCSU as well as ECU<lb/>
At least ECU allows it freshmen to h.n e<lb/>
a car at school, which is unlike many<lb/>
other universities Seventh, the SGA has<lb/>
decreased libran, hours us for him. 1<lb/>
suppose he is the onlv one that is not<lb/>
allowed into the library at times when<lb/>
he feels like he might want to study 1<lb/>
guess everyone else is allowed in except<lb/>
him It's also Ms. Jones and Ms Smith<lb/>
that caused the loss of the yearbook for<lb/>
only him. I suppose everyone else re-<lb/>
ceived a yearbook except him. So King<lb/>
Walker, Ms Jones and Ms. Smith have<lb/>
caused all these losses? It is apathetic<lb/>
students such as yourself that have<lb/>
caused the losses. Not one, but many.<lb/>
In reference to the ad "There isn't<lb/>
a woman alive who doesn't love Dick<lb/>
Heads" and portray ing the photographs<lb/>
of Mr Tommv Spauldingand Chancel-<lb/>
lor Eakin in the "Clearly Labeled Satire<lb/>
Page humor is funny, but this is de-<lb/>
grading and disgusting.<lb/>
I have worked closely with Mr<lb/>
Spaulding for three vearsnow.and now<lb/>
am a Student Assistant tor Chancellor<lb/>
Eakin through the Ambassador's pro-<lb/>
gram. In working with Mr Spaulding<lb/>
in SGA and on other committees<lb/>
through the university, 1 have come to<lb/>
realize that Mr Spaulding will go out of<lb/>
his wa to help a friei I whet<lb/>
   . . . -<lb/>
school workin the :?<lb/>
science department rpersoi , Mr<lb/>
Spaul ling sets a good i<lb/>
dents. Mid the) can .? I<lb/>
abotttprobtcrnssucha Mi Watimr,<lb/>
but to work towards s<lb/>
AsfarasChancf<lb/>
cemed, in growing to ? rt per-<lb/>
sonal!) as well as profess.<lb/>
past three years, a student<lb/>
for more in a chancellor H<lb/>
Is sporting events in<lb/>
our student athletes, maintains<lb/>
believable social schedule ??<lb/>
his spare time to good will org<lb/>
fions and manages somehow ?<lb/>
time to spend with his family Hema re-<lb/>
tains an open door policy to stud- nts<lb/>
who want to display feelingsover some-<lb/>
thing whether it be good or bad, and<lb/>
even takes time to talk with students<lb/>
about personal problems if they wish to<lb/>
discuss them.<lb/>
To downgrade students such as<lb/>
Courtney Jones, Sherry Smith, Tommy<lb/>
Spaulding, and ECU Chancellor Eakin<lb/>
is senseless What good comes out ot<lb/>
this7 None Grow up, Mr J. William<lb/>
Walker. 1 realize the ad displaying the<lb/>
photos of Mr Spaulding and Chancel-<lb/>
lor Eakin are on the "Clearly Labeled<lb/>
Satire Page but this is not funny It is<lb/>
sad joumalishc attributes<lb/>
In wnhng this, I am reminded of<lb/>
the editorial that npped one East Caro-<lb/>
linian staff wnter who totally missed<lb/>
the facts of the Lollapalooza concert<lb/>
even as to the order of the performers in<lb/>
the show<lb/>
The question was raised, "Was<lb/>
the writer even in attendance at<lb/>
Lollapalooza?" Now, in relation to the<lb/>
downgrading of Ms Jones. Smith. Mr<lb/>
Spaulding, Chancellor Eakin 1 sav Is<lb/>
Mr Walker even a student at ECU1<lb/>
Damon P Johnson<lb/>
Junior<lb/>
Political Science<lb/>
University covered with injustice<lb/>
To the Editor<lb/>
My first reason for writing is<lb/>
about Brother Jim's recent visit to our<lb/>
campus. Brother Jim tried to shine his<lb/>
narrow-minded viewsdown everyone's<lb/>
throats, and 1 persortelly think he stunk<lb/>
at brain-washing techniques. When I<lb/>
was leaving after hearing some of the<lb/>
garbage he was preaching the first day<lb/>
he was here, I overheard an ECU ad-<lb/>
ministrator make the comment to one<lb/>
Of his suit friends that he found it hard<lb/>
to believe that people at the college<lb/>
level could not listen to someone's views<lb/>
without criticism during their speech.<lb/>
He was not letting his views be known<lb/>
in an educated way; he was trying to<lb/>
shove his thoughts on people and criti-<lb/>
cize everyone. I did not appreciate the<lb/>
statement made by the administrator,<lb/>
and I guess he would not like me to<lb/>
make the statement that I find it hard to<lb/>
conceive that anyone at the college offi-<lb/>
cial level could not read a phone book to<lb/>
find out that tapping someone's phone<lb/>
is illegal But, 1 do<lb/>
My next reason for wnhng is the<lb/>
homophobia around here. It's every-<lb/>
where, but 1 must know something<lb/>
Why is someone else's sexual prefer-<lb/>
ences so intriguing to some people For<lb/>
instance, while walking on a recent Sat-<lb/>
urday afternoon, I noticed a guy walk-<lb/>
ing his dog and looking back As he<lb/>
passed, he said, "Dude, check out the<lb/>
two chicks holding hands back there "<lb/>
So what! At least they were not finger-<lb/>
ing each other on the sidewalk, but if<lb/>
they had been, it would have been their<lb/>
business. I don't see gays walking<lb/>
around saying, "Hey, check out that<lb/>
girl licking that guy's mouth oufThere-<lb/>
fore, why should straights worry so<lb/>
much about gays? Oh, and if you con-<lb/>
demn such practices, why don't you<lb/>
put yourself into a gay's position? But,<lb/>
of course, the easy way out would be to<lb/>
act like a narrow-minded, ethnocentric<lb/>
Neanderthal and put down everything<lb/>
you never care to face. The term gay<lb/>
does not stand for trash or sinner M<lb/>
rule of thumb is to find out about some-<lb/>
thing before shooting my mouth off<lb/>
about it, but anyone can make a mis-<lb/>
take<lb/>
M final reason for wnhng is the<lb/>
base men t doors to Scott Hall The lobby<lb/>
is locked up around 12am, and 1 can<lb/>
understand the reasoning behind this,<lb/>
but 1 cannot understand the reasoning<lb/>
for locking the outside basement doors<lb/>
at night without the residents having a<lb/>
key to get in them The inside door at the<lb/>
base of the inside stairwell is left open<lb/>
so people can enter the basement and<lb/>
leave through the outside doors People<lb/>
are trying to study or watch television<lb/>
in the base ment are constantly badgered<lb/>
by people trying togetinatnight Hous-<lb/>
ing, give us curfew door keys like ev-<lb/>
eryone else around campus.<lb/>
Till next time, give 'em hell.<lb/>
Ronald Mercer<lb/>
Junior<lb/>
Chemistry <lb/>
By Kenneth Chesson<lb/>
SUfl Writer<lb/>
.rmv ROTC lias madi<lb/>
sirj history in I ewfraternit) tiled<lb/>
Pershing Rifles heidea forthefrati n<lb/>
whit h is the first 'its kind<lb/>
stemmed fi im a isil to Clemson<lb/>
Uni ? ? ?<lb/>
many jobs of the Pershing<lb/>
? ?<lb/>
: ? ? I basketba<lb/>
? koi feed ifvolunta rsfron<lb/>
in drill<lb/>
United 5l iti<lb/>
?<lb/>
erekV<lb/>
beenalol fi <lb/>
the grou ' ? ?<lb/>
and basii know i<lb/>
i r two semi<lb/>
"Allot us<lb/>
. ? f we <lb/>
1<lb/>
i<lb/>
rolio. ed a<lb/>
temity the i J<lb/>
<lb/>
.<lb/>
?  rl tndi<lb/>
FRIDAY Meal<lb/>
EARTH MERCHU<lb/>
and<lb/>
SPAWN<lb/>
S VI L HI) AY NKiHI<lb/>
FOUNTAIN OF YOUTH a?<lb/>
THE KILL KIDS<lb/>
onlv $?:<lb/>
v<lb/>
v?a<lb/>
U JlT'AAt Sl??<lb/>
Appearing April 26. 1<lb/>
Sunday 8:00 PM<lb/>
Jenkins Uiditoritim<lb/>
S hool of tt<lb/>
sponsored b The Memorial Baptist Chi<lb/>
BSl<lb/>
l or ini'rt mi   ' -<lb/>
School's Almost<lb/>
It's Time To<lb/>
 ?<lb/>
. ?<lb/>
?m<lb/>
?7<lb/>
757-<lb/>
Accomodal<lb/>
60 peol<lb/>
Mexican Restaurant<lb/>
<pb facs="00058320_0006"/><lb/>
with the Jones boy<lb/>
gotten newspaper<lb/>
No sweat<lb/>
He also mentioned something<lb/>
g to bathroom buthewaf<lb/>
 didn t work anymore.<lb/>
 ,1 pn Wednesday!<lb/>
ive only oiht ads<lb/>
?? Meant hih tv in e to thei<lb/>
? ? needed to go tol<lb/>
pportunity s<lb/>
 - v erand giveourl<lb/>
eak i m the 23-hour nico-<lb/>
i? k .it the office at<lb/>
? '  ngtouches<lb/>
 ? md to deln er it to<lb/>
3 on the nose<lb/>
? considerably bet-<lb/>
fterthVVe.till<lb/>
- problems<lb/>
' at least we<lb/>
M ' w Si rvt ed-<lb/>
? ? ?? thai . ollege<lb/>
? half of a o<lb/>
rtg how to m-<lb/>
I pting respon-<lb/>
 ne managt-<lb/>
? n pi rtant pur-<lb/>
?tion<lb/>
n provided my<lb/>
? ? with a heavy<lb/>
I which 1 think will<lb/>
. a hen searching and<lb/>
reel after  hool<lb/>
? who has Uken<lb/>
? " ese ramblings to<lb/>
? 1 with the netvspa-<lb/>
? ?. r positions exist ?<lb/>
? porter advertising<lb/>
I j editor etc<lb/>
' - Staff members,<lb/>
? a ho have held the<lb/>
ntan s produc-<lb/>
ill the Marts,<lb/>
 ott fean, all<lb/>
? else ? 1<lb/>
? ?'?? know<lb/>
lership and<lb/>
to the Editor<lb/>
?? ? nd whether it be<lb/>
? - ?? olunteer v rk<lb/>
a political<lb/>
? ? : ? rsonall) Mr<lb/>
lex imple tor sh;<lb/>
IJT1 not to bitch<lb/>
?sou.Mr Waiter,<lb/>
solul<lb/>
ellorEakints( v<lb/>
. ? know him pcr-<lb/>
?? tstonally in the<lb/>
? ? ? could no task<lb/>
r He constantly<lb/>
.?ents in support of<lb/>
iii tains an un-<lb/>
lule, -volunteers<lb/>
I will organiza-<lb/>
s mehow to find<lb/>
? family He mam-<lb/>
door j itudents<lb/>
?? Jisplat reelings over some-<lb/>
good or bad. and<lb/>
? ? ? rime to talk with students<lb/>
? ei Hal problems if rhe wishtO<lb/>
discuss them<lb/>
grade students such as<lb/>
tnej (ones,Sheny Smith. Tommy<lb/>
Spaulding, and ECU Chancellor Eakin<lb/>
is senseless What good i mes out of<lb/>
this' None Grow up Mr i William<lb/>
Walker 1 realize the ad display ing the<lb/>
phot 'Mr Spaulding and ChanceJ-<lb/>
learly Labeled<lb/>
Page but this is not funny It is<lb/>
malistic attributi<lb/>
In writing minded of<lb/>
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totally missed<lb/>
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attendance at<lb/>
tion to the<lb/>
nes Smith, Mr<lb/>
' "akin I sal Is<lb/>
? lent it ECU1<lb/>
?nee<lb/>
ed with injustice<lb/>
? ??.<lb/>
i<lb/>
?he sidewalk, but if<lb/>
? uld have been their<lb/>
Kays walking<lb/>
heck out that<lb/>
s mouth out There-<lb/>
straights worry so<lb/>
Oh. and if you con-<lb/>
I whv don't you<lb/>
jay's position' But,<lb/>
way out would be to<lb/>
? i inded, ethnocentric<lb/>
?utdown everything<lb/>
face The term gav<lb/>
? stand for trash or sinner My<lb/>
' " ? is to find out about some-<lb/>
shooting my mouth off<lb/>
in make a mis-<lb/>
? for writing is the<lb/>
ttHatl The lobby<lb/>
: iround 12am, and 1 can<lb/>
zoning behind this,<lb/>
'?' 'and the reasoning<lb/>
c ?? utsiJe basement doors<lb/>
at night without the residents having a<lb/>
nthem Theinsidedooratthe<lb/>
inside stairwell is left open<lb/>
Hi enter the basement and<lb/>
leave through theoutsidedoors People<lb/>
are trying to study or watch television<lb/>
in thebasementareconstantly badgered<lb/>
bv people trvingtoget in at night. Hous-<lb/>
ing, give us curfew door keys like ev-<lb/>
eryone else around campus<lb/>
Till next time, give em hell<lb/>
Ronald Mercer<lb/>
Junior<lb/>
Chemistry k<lb/>
iROTC initiates service fraternity<lb/>
April 23, 1991 ?lje SaBt (Carolinian5<lb/>
By Kenneth Chesson<lb/>
M.itf Writer<lb/>
ECU's Army ROTC has made univer-<lb/>
sttyhistor) in starting a new fratemitv called<lb/>
Pershing Rifles Ihe idee for the fraternity,<lb/>
which is the first of its kind on campus,<lb/>
stemmed from a recent visit to Clemson<lb/>
I ni erstt)<lb/>
One of the main jobs of the Pershing<lb/>
Rifles is to put together a color guard for<lb/>
football and basketball games Until now<lb/>
thocolor guard consisted of volunteers from<lb/>
the Amu KOK hey will also represent<lb/>
EC I in drill competitions throughout the<lb/>
I nited States competing against other uni-<lb/>
versities.<lb/>
CadetC apt Derek Watts said there has<lb/>
been a lot of time and effort put in to starting<lb/>
Ihe group. Members studied the history<lb/>
and basic knowledge of the Fershing Rifles<lb/>
for two semesters, Watts said.<lb/>
"All of us were nervous while waiting<lb/>
to see if we would be accepted he said.<lb/>
"When they came with their decision tell-<lb/>
ing us we were accepted we were greatly<lb/>
relieved and surprised. They gave our fra-<lb/>
ternity the name Z-4<lb/>
ECU's Tershing Rifles consists of eight<lb/>
cadets, Watts said.<lb/>
Phe nation-wide fraternity is run bv<lb/>
cadets. Ihe cadets take care of all the finan-<lb/>
cial work and other tasks that need to taken<lb/>
(are of in the fratemitv. Thev have advisers<lb/>
to assist them if any help is needed, but the<lb/>
cadets have the final authority.<lb/>
Ihe cadets raise money by having fund -<lb/>
raisers. The fratemitv is solely supported<lb/>
b) the fratemitv members and the money<lb/>
the) raise through fund-raisers<lb/>
"Starting from the ground up is very<lb/>
costly Watts said. "Right now we wear<lb/>
our Army uniforms while performing cer-<lb/>
emonies. We hope to expand and invite the<lb/>
Air Force cadets to pledge the fratemitv<lb/>
once we get on our feet and get everything<lb/>
running smoothlv. Therefore we will need<lb/>
to purchase uniforms for the fraternity so<lb/>
everyone will be wearing the same uni-<lb/>
form. That in itself will be costly<lb/>
TherershingRifleisisa National Honor<lb/>
Fraternity not a social fraternity, Watts said.<lb/>
"It is a.great honor to become a member<lb/>
of the fraternity Watts said. "We don't<lb/>
have a rivalry with any other university.<lb/>
ust to be the best is the main goal<lb/>
Perilling Rifles was started in 1K44 at<lb/>
the University of Nebraska, the National<lb/>
Headquarters of today's Pershing Rifles.<lb/>
Pershing.<lb/>
Rv 1<lb/>
H ?<lb/>
ij<lb/>
<lb/>
<lb/>
Photo cckift?y -iOTC<lb/>
The members of ROTC's new fraternity, Pershing Rifles, prepare for the up-coming<lb/>
year The service fraternity exists nationwide<lb/>
'   '<lb/>
FRIDAY NIGHT<lb/>
EARTH MERCHANTS<lb/>
and<lb/>
SPAWN<lb/>
SATl'RDAY NIGHT<lb/>
FOUNTAIN OF YOUTH and<lb/>
THE KILL KIDS<lb/>
onlv$:<lb/>
Appearing April 26, 1992<lb/>
Sunday 8:00 PM<lb/>
Jenkins Auditorium<lb/>
School of Ail<lb/>
sponsored b The Memorial Baptist Church and<lb/>
BSU of ECU<lb/>
I or mart information call  75S-5 14<lb/>
the FIZZ BISTRO<lb/>
110 E. 4th St. -752-5855<lb/>
FRIDAY<lb/>
Lenny &amp; the Legends<lb/>
SATURDAY<lb/>
David Mann - Sax player<lb/>
featured on the Tonight Show<lb/>
Paul Tardif<lb/>
Carol Dshield<lb/>
lewis Pragasm<lb/>
(call for advance reservation)<lb/>
ECONOMY MINI<lb/>
STORAGE<lb/>
USE YOUR<lb/>
STUDENT<lb/>
DISCOUNT<lb/>
SHARE WITH A ROOMMATE<lb/>
SPECIAL RATES MAY 1-AUG 31<lb/>
300 FARMER ST<lb/>
GREENVILLE<lb/>
757-0373<lb/>
? ?,<lb/>
p.<lb/>
Every Thursday Night<lb/>
Student DUCKl Night<lb/>
J?S1<lb/>
v<lb/>
r!<lb/>
"One Beer One Buck"<lb/>
1.00 - Domestics<lb/>
2.50 - Pitchers<lb/>
2.85 - Ice Teas<lb/>
LADIES FREE<lb/>
ALL NIGHT<lb/>
??<lb/>
The<lb/>
CoMedY<lb/>
ZONE<lb/>
Ever) Wed<lb/>
nizhi<lb/>
ATiTIC<lb/>
752-7303 1 209 E. 5th St. CoMedY<lb/>
ZONE<lb/>
The<lb/>
Every Wed.<lb/>
nichl<lb/>
Thursday, April 23<lb/>
DARKSTAR<lb/>
SfH 32 oz Draft ? .99c HighlaJLs ? .99c Membership<lb/>
Friday, April 24<lb/>
Up Rising<lb/>
Baltimore's No. 1 Reggae Hand<lb/>
$2.00 32 oz Draft<lb/>
Saturday, April 25<lb/>
Purple School Bus<lb/>
$2.00 32 oz Draft<lb/>
Monday, April 27<lb/>
DILLON FENCE AND<lb/>
SUGAR SMAK<lb/>
Reading Day Eve Concert<lb/>
Thursday, April 30<lb/>
Egypt and<lb/>
Sex, Love and Money<lb/>
.99c 32 oz Draft ? .99c HightolLs ? .99c Memberships<lb/>
Friday, May 1<lb/>
STEGMONDS<lb/>
ECU'S No. 1 Band<lb/>
$2.00 32 oz Draft<lb/>
INCERT SERIES<lb/>
THIS SATURDAY<lb/>
WRDU W6.fMm<lb/>
The Home Of Rock N Roll rAjTJ<lb/>
PRESENTS EARTH O<lb/>
THE 2nd ANNUAL BUDDIES<lb/>
CELEBRATION<lb/>
CeieOrjie<lb/>
? arin<lb/>
Da, 9?1<lb/>
Tile<lb/>
CJonnells<lb/>
flREHOSE<lb/>
OILLON FENCE ? BUFFALO TOM ? FUT DUO JETS<lb/>
 portion o' tie pfOceH3? ne"t i'm "vfor'Tientai youos<lb/>
Tickets Start at Just $8.50<lb/>
IPlus Service Charge<lb/>
v ngfrn eo?MAww 62'(i<lb/>
THREE EASY WAYS TO GET TICKETS!<lb/>
Visit any Tctttmastet Center teaturmn, TRACKS Recom Bar Sarstno Muse ano<lb/>
Sound Shop stores tflroogtiou! Horrn ttwjw a saies m at outlets<lb/>
Charge pi rickets bv shone' IjmSm ewm cm<lb/>
0' surcftase tickets on te eventng ot the sno at the MM Creed Bo Othde 'ocateo wst<lb/>
outside C the -nam iates 0?n 5 30ofn through showtime icash MC Visa accepted!<lb/>
' Serm charge added to as outw shone and box office sales <lb/>
I I II Ml II III II III  Jill I .I I WWIP?.?<lb/>
WM<lb/>
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<pb facs="00058320_0007"/><lb/>
April 23, 1991 ?he tEast (Carolinian 5<lb/>
with the Jones boy<lb/>
?gotten newspaper<lb/>
i<lb/>
? ore<lb/>
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-?<lb/>
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? ?? ?<lb/>
ed with injustice<lb/>
My<lb/>
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-?inn<lb/>
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? ittht<lb/>
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"<lb/>
ROTC initiates service fraternity<lb/>
B Kenneth ('hosson<lb/>
SUfl Wnti-r<lb/>
ECU's mn ROTC has made univer-<lb/>
sity history in startinga new fraternity called<lb/>
Pershing Rifles rheideafoi the fraternity,<lb/>
which is the I t of its kind on campus,<lb/>
stemmed from ,i recent visit to Clemson<lb/>
I ni ersitv<lb/>
 ne ol the rrwn jobs t the Pershing<lb/>
Rifles i- tii put together a color guard for<lb/>
: ' ? kefball games Until now<lb/>
thecolorguai I I ? lunteei .1<lb/>
? . ill also represent<lb/>
i drillomperitions throughout the<lb/>
I nited States compel runi<lb/>
( adef( apt I erek Watts said there has<lb/>
rt put in to starting<lb/>
kroup ' ' the hi<lb/>
and bask knowledge of the Pershing Rifles<lb/>
tor two semesters, Watts said.<lb/>
"All of us were nervous while waiting<lb/>
to see it we would he accepted he said.<lb/>
When the) came with their det ision tell<lb/>
ing us we were accepted we were great!)<lb/>
ivlie ed and surprised, fhey gave our fra-<lb/>
ternity the n,ime 4<lb/>
! C U's Pershing Rifles consists of eight<lb/>
iadets Wattss.tui<lb/>
fhe nation-wide frafernif) is run bv<lb/>
cadets I hecadeis take cafe of all the finan-<lb/>
cial work,nut other tasks tli,it need to taken<lb/>
ire of in the fraternity. fhey have advisers<lb/>
to is -i -t them it,im help is needed, but the<lb/>
(adet - ha e Ehe final authonu<lb/>
1 hecadets raise money by ha ingfund-<lb/>
raisers Ihe fraternity is sotel) Mipportw.1<lb/>
b the fraternity members and (he mone)<lb/>
tin rai e through fund-raisers<lb/>
"Skirting from the ground up is very<lb/>
costly Watts said "Right now we wear<lb/>
our Armv uniforms while performingcer<lb/>
emonies. We hope tr expand and invitethe<lb/>
Air Force cadets to pledge the fraternity<lb/>
once we get on our feet and get every thing<lb/>
running smoothly therefore we will need<lb/>
to purchase uniforms tor the fraternit) so<lb/>
everyone will he wearing the same uni<lb/>
form. That in itself will he costly<lb/>
fhePershingRiflesisa National Honor<lb/>
 r,iternirvnotasocial traternitv, Wattss.iKt<lb/>
" 11 is a grea t hi n r U be I me a memhi -r<lb/>
ot the fraternity Watts said "We don't<lb/>
have a rivaln, with anv other university<lb/>
lust to he the best is the main goal "<lb/>
Pershing Rifles was sorted in lsi4 at<lb/>
the University cA Nebraska, the National<lb/>
Headquarters ot today's Pershing Rifles<lb/>
Pershing.<lb/>
l ??via: .<lb/>
V.<lb/>
14<lb/>
k<lb/>
.<lb/>
The membor of ROTC's new fr :??'??. . '? prepare for the up-coming<lb/>
? ;?? -ri!tv' exrt . i ? ??<lb/>
n <lb/>
FRIDAY NI(;i?T<lb/>
, ?v EARTH MERCHANTS<lb/>
X&amp; and<lb/>
SPAWN<lb/>
BA l KDAY NKiHI<lb/>
FOIMAIN OF YOUTH and<lb/>
THK KILL KIDS<lb/>
onlv &amp;<lb/>
appearing April 26, 1992<lb/>
Sunday 8:00 PM<lb/>
hiikms iif i it r iinn<lb/>
St hool of <lb/>
sponsored b) The Memorial Baptist Church and<lb/>
BSI of ECL<lb/>
at mm ? ?? ? .? ?<lb/>
the FIZZ BISTRO<lb/>
110 E. 4th St752-5855<lb/>
FRIDAY<lb/>
J<lb/>
SATURDAY<lb/>
:??- ? ??: jyet<lb/>
?? ; - "e Tonight Show<lb/>
Pd. <lb/>
:  i Dsnield<lb/>
 ? ?<lb/>
$2.25 Pitchers<lb/>
weekdays<lb/>
ECONOMY MINI<lb/>
STORAGE<lb/>
USE YOUR<lb/>
DISCOUNT<lb/>
SHARE WITH A ROOMMATE<lb/>
SPECIAL RATES MAY 1 ? AUG 31<lb/>
L<lb/>
300 FARMER ST<lb/>
GREENVILLE<lb/>
757-0373<lb/>
 <lb/>
????-v:<lb/>
:v4- I<lb/>
?? VV<lb/>
j'l<lb/>
t.<lb/>
"m<lb/>
&amp;$<lb/>
ti?<lb/>
: V<lb/>
Every Thursday Night<lb/>
Student tBIJIJKl Night<lb/>
m<lb/>
"One Beer One Buck"<lb/>
1.00 - Domestics<lb/>
2.50 - Pitchers<lb/>
2.85 - Ice Teas<lb/>
LADIES FREE<lb/>
ALL NIGHT<lb/>
V<lb/>
-v<lb/>
Th Al 1111 The<lb/>
CGMedY 7M"73?3 12?' E' 5th "? CoMedY<lb/>
ZONE A ZONE<lb/>
Hihl<lb/>
. Wed<lb/>
Thursday, April 23<lb/>
DARKSTAR<lb/>
.Wc 32 o Dr.jft ? .Wc HighbaJk ? .Wc Membershipe<lb/>
Friday, April 24<lb/>
I j) Rising<lb/>
Baltimore's No. 1 Reggae Hand<lb/>
$2.00 32 oz Draft<lb/>
Saturday, April 25<lb/>
Purple School Bus<lb/>
$2.00 32 oz Draft<lb/>
Monday, April 27<lb/>
DILLON FENCE AND<lb/>
SUGAR SMAK<lb/>
Reading Day Eve Concert<lb/>
Thursday, April<lb/>
Egypt and<lb/>
Sex, Love and Money<lb/>
.99 32 (? Draft ? 99 Ifighhafc ? 99 MembersNjps<lb/>
Friday, May 1<lb/>
STEGMONDS<lb/>
ECU'S No. 1 Band<lb/>
$2.00 32 oz Draft<lb/>
? HaideEr ?<lb/>
CONCERT SERIES<lb/>
S3TJEZE<lb/>
WRDU W6.FMm<lb/>
Ih. Mom. OtRmk N KrSXSJ<lb/>
PRESENTS EARTHO<lb/>
THE 2nd ANNUAL BUDDIES<lb/>
CELEBRATION<lb/>
The<lb/>
Connells<lb/>
flREHOSE<lb/>
OILUIH FBMX ? BUFFALO TO. ? FUT DUO JEIS<lb/>
A oolic o' fie Doac. . ?. j-oups<lb/>
Tickets Start at Just $8.50<lb/>
P ? JMaffle<lb/>
f Grnutnr<lb/>
Di.tll<lb/>
VV DBEffl au?m 6?Ci<lb/>
THREE EASY WAYS TO GET TICKETS!<lb/>
 ? -a lis' sar ??<lb/>
s 919-834-4000 mmSESl<lb/>
Of oufctase ticnets or itie evening of !t? sno? a- ?" A ?.  xatec<lb/>
DutsOe o The  oates Ope 5 30c- 'oug' snoxtime icav MC ? accepM<lb/>
 ? ?? - ? - ?-<lb/>
-iIM 1 Kl IK<lb/>
(xtlN<lb/>
o<lb/>
<pb facs="00058320_0008"/><lb/>
,<lb/>
Classifieds<lb/>
She East Carolinian<lb/>
April 23,1992<lb/>
 Kl l<lb/>
II MM I NONSMOKING koom-<lb/>
ma n Nil pi Dfof MimswrorlongM<lb/>
tor 2 bedroom townhoma ovv. vvD<lb/>
12 ram i utilities (cabk .nut water<lb/>
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ROOMMATE WAN 11 n 2 bedroom<lb/>
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775? Stact) 931 7858<lb/>
KINGS AIMS APARTMENTS Om<lb/>
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ETMAIE ROOMMATE- natdtd to<lb/>
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month plui 1 : unUtMsall 58 sS4s<lb/>
SUBLEASE AVAII ABLE FOB SUM-<lb/>
MER' Fully Fumiahad rwobedroom<lb/>
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campus! lean raaponstola non-smok<lb/>
ers pleat I umished! 752 l<lb/>
BOOMMATI m 1 DBT Undergrad<lb/>
tmokei tot ial drinkei needed to ihan<lb/>
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ditional expense I Ins sublease is ideal<lb/>
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ROOMMAH Nl I Dlf?ASArSum-<lb/>
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FURNITURE- Chest, dresser with mir-<lb/>
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$175 Call 321 -1334<lb/>
ECU GRAD STUDENT FINISHING<lb/>
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business (truck and equipment) Work<lb/>
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Excellent opportunity to pay your way<lb/>
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FOR SALE: Microwave, clean, ginxl<lb/>
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Limittd Offoi $330 ? month<lb/>
Conttd J l m ToBMny Wiiii?mi<lb/>
?7815 or 830-1937<lb/>
OHloi or" M, s. i-s Waat<lb/>
?AZALEA GARDENS'<lb/>
??ilifr? mt. tm ??? ?nJ ??? ??than. itn<lb/>
nhi? IV OaHjm ? ?irl?? jl SMOimonh, 6<lb/>
nnkw VK'WIH IH'StflU -V: M  ,??!?<lb/>
u?1m Apnm?uolmXHl?b?TiMiiAulaUrn<lb/>
?? ftm-k V?lky C'?n?r CT?b<lb/>
Conua J.T. or Tommv Wtflumt<lb/>
v, 815<lb/>
SfTFDCARS: trucks,noaN.4-wheel-<lb/>
ers. motor homes by IHI. IKS, OF.A<lb/>
? itlabla s our area noM Call B01V338-<lb/>
3388 i xt i s?w<lb/>
FOR SAl F! IBM 5 Menviry Writer<lb/>
hpewnter t. lists2lH10new Excellent<lb/>
condition-1800 call 78-m<lb/>
BIKE FOR SALE- Mnvtnn Sprint llV<lb/>
spvd unisex, blue rareK usef and b<lb/>
tantastu shafv Must aaalll ? 12 Call<lb/>
Danaat931-841S Graatbikatl<lb/>
FOR SALE: Queetvsie Iwf DR table<lb/>
s 2 i hairs, cottee table. COUCh and<lb/>
maM hitig chair- all in great shape Call<lb/>
C'olWn72-170fl<lb/>
BUY 1HIS: Round table with leaf and<lb/>
sixihairs Good condition ITS Call758-<lb/>
0315, leave messa !t no answer<lb/>
FOR SALE: Red. Cyclepro bicycle In<lb/>
good condition Great for summer<lb/>
school Must Sell" Asking $80, make an<lb/>
otter Call 931-9516 Asxforjim<lb/>
BIKE FOR SALE: Trek 820 ATB. blue,<lb/>
21 speed excellent condition, new<lb/>
smoke tires, rack it bag Call 355-1N15<lb/>
$3(X)<lb/>
FOR SALE: Desk, nightstnnd. 3 drawer<lb/>
dresser with l shelves, nvin frame, rix<lb/>
spring and nuttress, brown couch and<lb/>
easy chair,Toshiba stereospeakers,<lb/>
beat h i ruis?'r bike and Knptonite Uxk,<lb/>
OIII DCARE NEEDED now and<lb/>
through summer for two children,<lb/>
ages 2 1 2 and 7, two or thn-<lb/>
weekdays mornings and afternoons<lb/>
l v asional Saturday evenings and<lb/>
weekend overnights Must have<lb/>
experience and own transportation<lb/>
 all tor interview with kids 72-<lb/>
6372<lb/>
CRITSF SHIPS NOW HIRING: Eam<lb/>
SjOOOt r'mORth and world travel (Ha-<lb/>
waii, Mexico, iheCaribbean,etc) Holi-<lb/>
il.n summer a:xi career employment<lb/>
available Noexpatiencaneceeiary. For<lb/>
employment program call l-2lv545-<lb/>
41ext CS86<lb/>
FREETRAVEL Aircounersand cruise<lb/>
ships Students also needed Christmas,<lb/>
spnngand summer foramusertvnt park<lb/>
employment Call 800-338-3388 Ext F-<lb/>
34M<lb/>
NOW ACCEPTING APPUCATIONS<lb/>
for night auditorfront desk position<lb/>
Pleeae appiy in person at The Hampton<lb/>
Inn, 3439 S Memonal Drive Previous<lb/>
hotel expenence preferrecf but not nec-<lb/>
essary<lb/>
PROFtSSIONAL COUPLE SEEKS<lb/>
HOUSESITTING anv timedunng mid-<lb/>
May thru August Will cre forpets.etc<lb/>
Call 918-6r4-7869 evenings after b p.m.<lb/>
References available<lb/>
$10-$36OUP WEEKLY: Mailing bro-<lb/>
chures' Spare Full time Set own hours!<lb/>
Free Details! Send self-addressed<lb/>
stamped envelope Publishers (S) P.O.<lb/>
Box 51037 Durham, N.C. 27717.<lb/>
POSTAL JOBS AVAILABLE: Many<lb/>
positions. Great benefits Call 800-338-<lb/>
3388 Ext. P-3712<lb/>
READ BOOKS FOR PAY! $100T ITLE!<lb/>
Fill out likedislike forms FREE 24hr<lb/>
recording 505-764-0699<lb/>
EASY WORK! Excellent Pay1 Assemble<lb/>
products at home Call toll free, 1-800-<lb/>
467-5566 ext. 5920.<lb/>
HELP WANTED- Student needed to<lb/>
work part-time for a busy law firm in<lb/>
Greenville If interested, please call 355-<lb/>
0300.<lb/>
ECU VOLLEYBALL TEAM: needsstu-<lb/>
dent helper for Fall season - paid posi-<lb/>
tion Contact Coach McCaskill at 757-<lb/>
4612.<lb/>
ALASKA SUMMER EMPLOYMENT-<lb/>
Fisheries. Earn $5,000month Free<lb/>
transportation' Room k Board' Over<lb/>
8,(XX) openings No expenence neces-<lb/>
sary Male or fgrjlflk For employment<lb/>
program call Student Employment Ser-<lb/>
vices at 1-206- 545-4155 ext 1644<lb/>
HELP WANTED: Carpet Bargain Cen-<lb/>
ter Morning hours Apply in person at<lb/>
shire on 1009 Dickinson Ave from 8 am<lb/>
hi h pm<lb/>
STOP We need your help mailing our<lb/>
circulars Work full part-time trom<lb/>
S500wk. Guaranty Work at home'<lb/>
For free info send long selt-addressed<lb/>
stamped envelope. Family<lb/>
Homemailers, Box 351, Damascus, MD<lb/>
20872<lb/>
When you're ready to move ahead call<lb/>
Mark at 830-0772 anytime.<lb/>
EZ BICYCLE REPAIRS- Any Brand-<lb/>
Any Problem. Expert workmanship at<lb/>
affordable rates. Call Steve 355-0420.<lb/>
Leave message <lb/>
PERSONALS<lb/>
SERVICES OFEERED<lb/>
LOOKING FOR A GREATSUMMER<lb/>
JOB? FLORIDA JOB OPPORTUNITY<lb/>
REPORT A Directory of Hospitality<lb/>
Industry employers, job descriptions,<lb/>
wages, and housing Lists Attractions,<lb/>
Resort Hotels, Cruise Ship, Summer<lb/>
Camps, and more! For vour copy send<lb/>
$8 95toCAREERRESEARCHCROUP.<lb/>
7226W CobnialDr Suite249,Orlando,<lb/>
Fl 32818<lb/>
WHY PAY AND STARVE TO LOSE<lb/>
WEIGHT? Save and eat to satisfy hun-<lb/>
ger (even for sweets) and get rast, per-<lb/>
manent weight loss to the sie thaf s<lb/>
right for you and feel better than ever<lb/>
while you drop 1 3-1 pound daily (dia-<lb/>
betics and hvpoglycemic s. uh) Maybe<lb/>
even make a little money without over-<lb/>
ruling your lifestyle to lose weight or<lb/>
keep it off Free information by mail<lb/>
355-3789<lb/>
WORDPROCESSING: Resumes term<lb/>
papers, letters, psychological assess-<lb/>
ments Reasonable rates, fast service<lb/>
Call 321-2522<lb/>
TYPING- Error-free.quickand depend-<lb/>
able-at reasonable cost. Excellent typ-<lb/>
ing and proofreading skills (grammar,<lb/>
punctuation, sentence struchire, etc )<lb/>
Call Pauline at 757-3693 1<lb/>
NEED MONEY FOR COLLEGE?<lb/>
SFAMS locates private sector financial<lb/>
aid for college students Call Marshall<lb/>
Yount 1-800-238-8771<lb/>
BETTER RESUMES GETJOBS. Don't<lb/>
take chances when first impressions<lb/>
count A better resume will open ihe<lb/>
nght doors 1 can help you apply for<lb/>
work with a personalized job applica-<lb/>
tion letter and resume designed to show-<lb/>
case your talents If you're senousabout<lb/>
the future call me I'm a professional<lb/>
writer with over fifteen years' expen-<lb/>
ence in marketing and resume writing<lb/>
FORUM COMMITTEE- Nicole, Katy,<lb/>
John, Stuart, and J. Thanks for making<lb/>
this year's experience a learning one<lb/>
Hope it was "good for you" too. I'm<lb/>
going to miss chairing the "Laidback<lb/>
Bunch" Have a fun summer and good<lb/>
luck next year Love, Tracy. PS Katy<lb/>
make sure to send Nicole pictures of all<lb/>
the "potential" speakers<lb/>
GAMMA SIGS: We had a fun time<lb/>
with the service project Hope to do<lb/>
something again sewn Love Alpha<lb/>
Sigma llu<lb/>
Nut: I've fallen and I can't get up' Please<lb/>
break your promise soon Confusion is<lb/>
great Your mess, Squirt.<lb/>
DELTA CHI- thanks for all of the fun<lb/>
during Creek Week' CongTats to Lisa<lb/>
Bertmg our new SCA Secretary' You're<lb/>
1 Bettv' Beta Pi's Not much longer<lb/>
now! How about that AOPi softball<lb/>
team Could it be another champion-<lb/>
ship' Love Sisters and Pledges of AOPi.<lb/>
CONGRATS to all AOPi seniors and<lb/>
alum! Go?xi luck after graduahon'<lb/>
CONGRATS to the newley elected of-<lb/>
ficers of AOPi: Chnshne "Roll Pi" John-<lb/>
son Kate "Clueless" Bott, Stacey "the<lb/>
brain" Carroll, and Li "Bob's queen"<lb/>
MuBkanl All other officers keep up the<lb/>
great work' You guys are the shit'<lb/>
SEBERT- Are your pantson tight7 They<lb/>
better be' See vou at Bahama Mama'<lb/>
TO MARGE, JODI, CRUISER, FOX,<lb/>
LISA,AND SHFRRI- You are the best'<lb/>
Mo one at ECU compares to you' "tours<lb/>
Forever. DOO-DAD<lb/>
SIGMAS want to wish everyone gtxxi<lb/>
luck on finals' Have a great summer'<lb/>
SIGMA SENIORS: Get ready to be<lb/>
burned" Senior send-on Friday night"<lb/>
PUD- Cruiser, Shern, Jodi, Fox, Lisa<lb/>
and Liod It's almost over' You guys<lb/>
PERSONALS<lb/>
CONGRATULATIONS ADPi SOFT-<lb/>
BALL SOCCER: You did a great ,ob<lb/>
in the playoffs! .<lb/>
ALPHA SIGMA PHI-Congratulations<lb/>
on most improved Fraternity and high-<lb/>
est G PA. Also to the new Creek Hall of<lb/>
Fame inductees John Can trell.JohnCist<lb/>
andChuck Heard<lb/>
DONT MISS The Sigma topless car<lb/>
wash, Fnday from 12-4<lb/>
ANDY STEPHENSON! Thank you n<lb/>
much for coaching our softball team'<lb/>
Love the Alpha Phi's<lb/>
GOODLUCKtoallgraduatingser, ?<lb/>
Love, the Alpha Phi's<lb/>
Pi KAPPS: We can't wait til the Shag<lb/>
social tonight (Get out those dancing<lb/>
shoes') Love the Alpha i'lu's<lb/>
DZ PLEDGES: Thanks so much for the<lb/>
great Big Sis party' You guys are A? <lb/>
SOME Lve the Sisters<lb/>
DELTA ZETA wishes e pod<lb/>
luck on exams and A FABL Ll ?<lb/>
MER"<lb/>
DELTA SIG'S: We hid a gn<lb/>
with vou guys on Wednesd.n Hope to<lb/>
"toga' with you aajainaoon '? nks<lb/>
Delts<lb/>
Pi DELTA: Congrats to all - . <lb/>
officers' Pm-Cathy Maas Pres-Su-<lb/>
sanFalk,Sec-Jen Putnam . .<lb/>
Tavlor. Hedge Ed -Christ ?<lb/>
Meredith Hewitt, Soria<lb/>
Member-at-Large-Mis-v Wade S?r-<lb/>
geant-at-ArmvLisa Fox, r .<lb/>
JenCrawford,Gloria Ling,<lb/>
Cynthia Stancil, Aitr<lb/>
Handlev, Sch. M 5S)<lb/>
Oaistenbury, Pubfacity-Frances weD<lb/>
Histonan-Lyn Lincoln, Kit<lb/>
Howard, Sister Act Dire I<lb/>
Rives, AlumniCorTe-porv ? ????<lb/>
Earp<lb/>
Are you interested in working for Expressions<lb/>
magazine? There will be stipended positions to be<lb/>
filled Fall '92. Only those willing to make a<lb/>
committment should inquire. Stop by the<lb/>
Expressions office in the Student Publications<lb/>
1-3. See Kathy Horns, Expressions General<lb/>
Manager.<lb/>
EAST CAROLINA'S MINORITY PUBLICATION:<lb/>
 Minority being any group of students that feel<lb/>
outside the "mainstream For example: ethnic<lb/>
groups, international students, non-traditional<lb/>
students, differently-abled students, veterans or<lb/>
women.<lb/>
ATTENTION-TIB 11TH NMM.<lb/>
BAHAMA MAM <lb/>
Kappa Mgma house I ?<lb/>
12 30 Featuring the Ar . -?<lb/>
Police and Hawaii.)! ' - .<lb/>
tt?st First Place is e?;v - - : ?<lb/>
Daytona tor Bikini Final - Kt<lb/>
is$100,Thirdta$50 I. ?? reS<lb/>
mfo call 752-5543 757-  xpi<lb/>
Sigma<lb/>
ODDS and ENDS<lb/>
HELP WANTED<lb/>
Experienced cook<lb/>
specializing in Mexican<lb/>
food. Apply in person at<lb/>
Alfredo's<lb/>
i s now B UYING<lb/>
8 n d SELLING all<lb/>
h o m e t in nishing<lb/>
8 n ?J appliances a 1<lb/>
very reasonable<lb/>
prices. For m ore<lb/>
i n t" 0 r ni a t i o n , call<lb/>
RANDY at<lb/>
3 55-22 14 (leave<lb/>
message if no<lb/>
answer).<lb/>
SUMMER WORK<lb/>
SI0.95 guaranteed starting rate -<lb/>
full or part-lime openings.<lb/>
Call: Charlotte. NC - 704-55&amp;-6565<lb/>
Raleigh. NC - 91?-851-7422<lb/>
Greensboro. NC - ?19-335-1519<lb/>
Hickory. NC - 704O2.V4665<lb/>
$$$<lb/>
Sell your textbooks back<lb/>
at ECU Student Stores.<lb/>
Selling used books here<lb/>
means Recycling Them!<lb/>
I<lb/>
I<lb/>
I<lb/>
I<lb/>
I<lb/>
I<lb/>
L<lb/>
Alfredo's N.Y. Pizza<lb/>
718 E. 5th St. ? Downtown ? 752-0022<lb/>
2 Large Pizzas<lb/>
with 1 topping<lb/>
$7.99<lb/>
carry out only<lb/>
not good after<lb/>
9pm<lb/>
I Lgnch $peci9l ?<lb/>
? Personal Size ?<lb/>
? 1 topping pizza<lb/>
? with large soda ?<lb/>
I $3.99 j<lb/>
 good 10pm <lb/>
JL J.<lb/>
Every Sun. Mon. Tues<lb/>
ALL PITCHER<lb/>
$1.50<lb/>
(with this coupon)<lb/>
Announcements<lb/>
NEWMAN CATHOLIC STU-<lb/>
PEMT ItNTER<lb/>
The Newman Catholic Student<lb/>
Catholic Center invites you to wor-<lb/>
ship with them. Sunday Masses<lb/>
11:30 a.m. and 8:30 p.m. At the<lb/>
Newman Center, s53 E. 10th St<lb/>
Two houses trom the Fletcher Mu-<lb/>
sic Building. For more information<lb/>
contact Fr. Paul Vaeth, 757-1991.<lb/>
ALPHA PHI SIGMA<lb/>
Alpha Phi Sigma will hold its next<lb/>
meeting on April 27th at 5pm in<lb/>
room 218 Ragsdale. At this time<lb/>
officers will be elected for next year,<lb/>
so please plan to attend. For more<lb/>
information, please contact Melissa<lb/>
Smith at 931-7569.<lb/>
THE BISEXUAL-GAY -LESBIAN<lb/>
nJililAlivA<lb/>
Social support, advocacy, activi-<lb/>
ties. Everyone welcome - gays,<lb/>
lesbians, bisexuals, concerned<lb/>
family and friends. CaII757-6766<lb/>
?or information regarding meeting<lb/>
time and place.<lb/>
AUDITIONS FOR<lb/>
IQLQRGUARD<lb/>
If you have ever wanted to become<lb/>
a member of the Marching Pirates<lb/>
Colorguard, then here's your<lb/>
chance! We are looking for indi-<lb/>
viduals who love to perform in<lb/>
front of large, enthusiastic crowds<lb/>
and work hard for excellence. We<lb/>
will join the Marching Pitates at<lb/>
home football games, selcted away<lb/>
games, exhibitions, pep rallies and<lb/>
BOWL games. No experience<lb/>
necessary. Come out and join the<lb/>
fun and excitement<lb/>
<lb/>
FAST CAROLINA FRIENDS<lb/>
Volunteers of East CarolinaFriends<lb/>
should plan to attend the annual<lb/>
closing banquet, held this year on<lb/>
Sunday, April 26th, 2-5pm, in<lb/>
Mendenhall Student Center. Lunch<lb/>
will be provided and elections for<lb/>
the '9293 year will be held. Persons<lb/>
interested in running for an office<lb/>
should call 757-6137 for further in-<lb/>
formation. Bring $3 by Thursday,<lb/>
April23rd, to Brewster A-409 to con-<lb/>
firm your reservation at the ban-<lb/>
quet. This is a mandatory event and<lb/>
does not include the little friends.<lb/>
Contact your Director of Services<lb/>
for further information.<lb/>
ENGLAND<lb/>
It's not too late to plan to study in<lb/>
England for the 1992-93 academic<lb/>
year! Experience another culture<lb/>
while earning college credit! Please<lb/>
contact the International Studies<lb/>
office in Brewster A-117orcall 757-<lb/>
6769 for more information on this<lb/>
exciting opportunity! For the cost of<lb/>
attending ECU, you can attend<lb/>
school in England - call - it can<lb/>
change your life!<lb/>
B1IS1NFSS WORKSHOP<lb/>
"Reducing Conflict in the Work-<lb/>
place" focuses on managing diver-<lb/>
sity and handling difficult and<lb/>
sensetive employee problems.<lb/>
Workshop skills applicable to all<lb/>
employees-not just manager. Work-<lb/>
shop will be held on Saturday, May<lb/>
2nd, 9am to 4pm at the Meredith<lb/>
Suites Hotel in Research Triangle<lb/>
Park. Sponsered by the Center for<lb/>
Peace Education. $75 registration fee<lb/>
(S65 if registered by April 20th). For<lb/>
more information call 919-929-9821<lb/>
or 919-489-8079.<lb/>
GAMMA BFTA PHI<lb/>
Gamma Beta Phi: Our last meeting<lb/>
this semester is April 22nd at 5pm,<lb/>
in Mendenhall. See you there!<lb/>
ECU BIOLOGY dim<lb/>
We will be having an Advisor Ap-<lb/>
preciation Dinner at Chico's on<lb/>
Wednesday, April 22nd at 5pm.<lb/>
Also, there will be an Adopt- A-Street<lb/>
on Saturday, April 25th. We will<lb/>
meet at Hardee's on Cotanche at<lb/>
10am.<lb/>
"BREAKING UP IS HARD TO<lb/>
DO-UMSTEADSLAY1991-92<lb/>
End of the year Hail Blow-out for<lb/>
Umstead's and Slay's " Last Genera-<lb/>
tion Food, folks, and fun tor all on<lb/>
Saturday April 25. SUPERBLA<lb/>
(Noon-until).<lb/>
ECU MODEL U. N.<lb/>
Congradulations to the ECU MUN<lb/>
delegates in their win at New York<lb/>
It was a great end to a great semester<lb/>
and die beginning of the ECU MUN<lb/>
dynasty M. DHILSS<lb/>
PSI CHI<lb/>
Attention all Psychology depart-<lb/>
ment staff members and members<lb/>
of Psi Chi: Psi Chi will be holding a<lb/>
"Spring Ring" at Elm Street Park on<lb/>
Friday, April 24th at 4 pm. There<lb/>
will be a cookout and refreshments<lb/>
will be served. Directions to Elra<lb/>
Street Park will be posted in Rawrl<lb/>
on the Psi Chi Bulletin board. Please<lb/>
come out and enjoy a pleasant after-<lb/>
noon with us!<lb/>
Entertainment<lb/>
Barefooters t<lb/>
By Dana Danielson<lb/>
Assistant EntortairanenI Iditor<lb/>
Springtime is ii rJ<lb/>
time to kick off I<lb/>
litdebitofsteai<lb/>
today's 14th annual Bai <lb/>
Mall<lb/>
A ? ide  ?tn. ? f different a<lb/>
tn itie Barefoot<lb/>
program<lb/>
The musical I ituresthe<lb/>
hand F asl .ir tiinaGi<lb/>
Cold Sweat at 1 p.m<lb/>
"GatemoutiV : i ? ??<lb/>
and rhe? ean Blue at 4 ;<lb/>
Asidefrommusic,several<lb/>
pusorganizati<lb/>
open<lb/>
Camm<lb/>
a pie throw ain ? ublic<lb/>
Safer)<lb/>
In addirJ n to t te torn<lb/>
of reveng reedunl<lb/>
b.ike sates and homemade candv<lb/>
sales will be offered<lb/>
Also a grilled homemade<lb/>
chicken w ing, hamburger, hot<lb/>
and onu n ring stand and a try b I<lb/>
stand, put n by the Native Amen-<lb/>
cansof ECU, will be included in the<lb/>
festivities.<lb/>
Residence Hall Association will<lb/>
sponsor a twister Tie-Oft, and for<lb/>
those who bnn their own T-shirts<lb/>
the Craftsman East will tie ly<lb/>
them.<lb/>
rhe Recreational Services ? I<lb/>
host a Mc-1 ug-t f-V ar benniniiat<lb/>
2 p.m. and continuing through the<lb/>
afternoon<lb/>
I ?? dollar donations are sug-<lb/>
ii.Jtliemonevr,i<lb/>
pport the Ronald<lb/>
? .? ar was the!<lb/>
tug and we ra<lb/>
1 I R Roth.m<lb/>
Recreational Se<lb/>
? tweat least rha<lb/>
rity I<lb/>
haJtenge I<lb/>
one. Lt. Keith Km- I<lb/>
Stuar - tor, marl<lb/>
of Mendenhall; Carla '<lb/>
n and p<lb/>
iach<lb/>
elebriries bo part<lb/>
. Trap<lb/>
: . ?? lent Unii i<lb/>
high<lb/>
?<lb/>
?<lb/>
?<lb/>
be drawn and<lb/>
? ? i fitting ii<lb/>
?<lb/>
up to providt<lb/>
? Ichair Parti<lb/>
I<lb/>
chair ? I exj<lb/>
tlte course<lb/>
!n addition I<lb/>
course, winn rs<lb/>
shot ?<lb/>
will receive an L<lb/>
Hie ' -<lb/>
sponsor a demonstra<lb/>
 Club<lb/>
? ? '<lb/>
Dance Theatre de<lb/>
Bv oe Horst<lb/>
Staff VSriter<lb/>
fhe beaut) of human motion.<lb/>
Hie grace of human form<lb/>
I ast Carolina Playhouse com-<lb/>
bined grace and beautv Tuesday<lb/>
night with iteopetung performance<lb/>
of Dance Theatre.<lb/>
Starting out cn an upbeat note,<lb/>
the dance piev'es flowed tigether ti<lb/>
term an entertaining, and often<lb/>
breath-taking, look at the human<lb/>
form. In most pieces, the dancers'<lb/>
enthusiasm and love were dearly<lb/>
e ident;theoverall energy was high<lb/>
and consistent throughout the per-<lb/>
formance.<lb/>
rhe nightopened with "Square<lb/>
Roots (A Non-Mathematical Bal-<lb/>
let choreographed by loseph<lb/>
Carow.<lb/>
Wearing colorful and varied<lb/>
costumes, the dancers entertained<lb/>
the crowd accompanied bv music<lb/>
like "Duelling Banjos" and "Tur-<lb/>
key in the Straw Heather Lvleand<lb/>
Jennifer McCord danced wonder-<lb/>
fulK in their individual sections,<lb/>
setting the tone of the night with an<lb/>
upbeat, tun-tilled number.<lb/>
Following "Square Roots" was<lb/>
Dawn Clark's piece, "Interface<lb/>
" Interface" contrasted u ith the first<lb/>
piecebvdelvtngmore into the theme<lb/>
and message of a piece rather than<lb/>
its entertainment value. With songs<lb/>
bv Aretha FranWin serving as back-<lb/>
ground, Interface" becamea piece<lb/>
with a message. It forced the audi-<lb/>
ence I think about the meaning<lb/>
instead of looking at the pure<lb/>
tainment value.<lb/>
1 lie next piece was The<lb/>
coiden rubeschoreographed K<lb/>
PatnuaWeeks Couptedwith<lb/>
nal music by School of Musk senkw<lb/>
Michael B. Dixon, this piece beauti-<lb/>
The dancer's si I<lb/>
throughout all pertorma<lb/>
fully exj<lb/>
and their rea I<lb/>
ing and the musi I<lb/>
beauty of this pie I<lb/>
tent thuit vith or- j<lb/>
change theaudienct<lb/>
swing with it. One<lb/>
focus on the golden <lb/>
themglovs intens .<lb/>
Ihe highlight ot the "j<lb/>
"Steep St ? ' -<lb/>
resident Linda '<lb/>
Pertalion acting a re<lb/>
? - was the pi N<lb/>
mission. An inh<lb/>
 arious<lb/>
Stud)" amused<lb/>
left them laugh I<lb/>
Rebel '92 pro<lb/>
By Dana Danielson<lb/>
Assistant Entertainment Editor<lb/>
This year's edition of theKr.v.<lb/>
magazine will be available during<lb/>
exam week and will include a van-<lb/>
etv of ECU student's artistic and<lb/>
literary work.<lb/>
Much work of the art school<lb/>
will be showcased in RsM 92. The<lb/>
gallerv section will feature the<lb/>
ludges choices for this year's Rebel<lb/>
art show, held in the fall.<lb/>
As always, Rebel 92 will feature<lb/>
the winner's work of the fiction and<lb/>
poetry contests. The first placestory<lb/>
was written by Scott Maxwell, and<lb/>
DougSmithsubmitted the firstplace<lb/>
p?vm.<lb/>
This year's feau.<lb/>
anetv of writer's wt<lb/>
"500 Winters j<lb/>
Behrens deals wittj<lb/>
the return of native<lb/>
rure in this countr<lb/>
features a painted<lb/>
Behrens, who has rtj<lb/>
interviewed extensl<lb/>
indigenous to North<lb/>
QtnsKemple'b<lb/>
Art of Cartixning<lb/>
on the pathetic state!<lb/>
comics and offers<lb/>
ways in which<lb/>
cartoonist's work.<lb/>
Clyde Edgertor<lb/>
<pb facs="00058320_0009"/><lb/>
6J<lb/>
PERSONALS<lb/>
v PPi SOFT-<lb/>
v<lb/>
Entertainment<lb/>
3Ik iEast (Carolinian<lb/>
April 23, 1992<lb/>
7<lb/>
Barefooters to celebrate spring<lb/>
?<lb/>
l Dana Danielson<lb/>
mt l ntertatnmenl I ditoi<lb/>
me is hi the air ,mJ it -<lb/>
? ? ?? the shoes .u-ul lot ,i<lb/>
amsat<lb/>
il Barefoot on the<lb/>
? ' ? fferentat<lb/>
? ? ?<lb/>
neup features the<lb/>
trolina Grass at noon<lb/>
y m i, larence<lb/>
' w n at 2 0 y m<lb/>
it 4 p in<lb/>
" mn eralcam<lb/>
;mawillha e<lb/>
? ?<lb/>
'? ; ? dunking ho.ths<lb/>
i I homemade cai<lb/>
ffered<lb/>
homemade<lb/>
' " ? .? .yi hot d<lb/>
' ind and a fr bread<lb/>
it on bv the Nati e meri-<lb/>
, will be included in the<lb/>
I iall ssociahonwill<lb/>
r a 1 w ister I ie Off and for<lb/>
? ng their own 1 -shirts<lb/>
?" "  I .1st W ill tit<lb/>
il Ser<lb/>
- f-VVarbeg<lb/>
gestedandthemone raised v ill ey<lb/>
tii support tlu Ronald McDinakt<lb/>
 louse<lb/>
l astvear was the first veai w e<lb/>
had tin' tin; and ' raised about<lb/>
? I - said ! R Roth marketing di<lb/>
re? i forRet reationa - ? e<lb/>
e to raise at lea -t thai mu h tl<lb/>
veai<lb/>
 v elebril<lb/>
 ide .1 . hallenge foi those seeki<lb/>
iMio I t KeithKnoxol Publii Safeh<lb/>
rt Secctoi mat kol  lirectoi<lb/>
oJ M hall Carla 'i Resi<lb/>
lu ation aivl possibh .1 f ? ??<lb/>
 tun hesandathlete 1 few l<lb/>
tlu elebi iti I partit ipate<lb/>
 t'L to Fl 1 rap sponsored<lb/>
b tin' Student I nion will be a<lb/>
? ? ?be missed I hetrap<lb/>
? itable w .?U ant<lb/>
pa n I<lb/>
nt 1 f vekro and<lb/>
throw - him in hei - I igaii ?' I<lb/>
surf a e An outl f a a ill<lb/>
bedraw ?? I ?<lb/>
clos   HV,<lb/>
i bsta II be set<lb/>
up to pm ide insight to being in a<lb/>
wheelchair Participants will be<lb/>
seated and blindfolded in a wheel<lb/>
hair and expected to go through<lb/>
the course<lb/>
In addition to the wheelchair<lb/>
(. ur-o w innie 1 orkgun<lb/>
sho ?  Ii  .? m ?<lb/>
?<lb/>
sponsoi ? ' 1 tl<lb/>
M<lb/>
: Miniri : level iu, David Sche<lb/>
.?  I entertain Barefooters this<lb/>
? !t tamountoi 1 hangeina tub<lb/>
It noonecan guess theexa t amount,<lb/>
tlu' person with the ck?sest guess<lb/>
will w in a SHU) sa ings bond.<lb/>
Ihe Student I nion will rattle<lb/>
??  dozen r-shirts throughout<lb/>
I IN<lb/>
I nfortunateh IheRock) I lor-<lb/>
rorFktun a ill not be shown<lb/>
this vear due to malfunctioning<lb/>
iHitside proje tors<lb/>
We re realh som about the<lb/>
? shown<lb/>
1 nn jobes said assistant program<lb/>
? ? it Mend ?'? e hope<lb/>
to hi ? ? ?<lb/>
? n the Ma  ? u in<lb/>
i- the  Rose<lb/>
St ruxil en lura 1 auffer<lb/>
n with I ntem-<lb/>
Photo courtesy Reprise Records<lb/>
Itzel and Bobbv Milton of The Ocean<lb/>
year on Central Campus Mall<lb/>
Lauffer s original proposition<lb/>
was fora relaxedda of festiv itiesto<lb/>
run from 10 am tolOp.m includ-<lb/>
ingbands crafts and food. Baref ?:<lb/>
on the Mall runs from noon to 6<lb/>
p m tod.w<lb/>
Lauffer was unable to attend<lb/>
her first festh albecausehercarwas<lb/>
-tru. k bj a drunk driver shortly<lb/>
after thopropiw.il lo.n ing her para-<lb/>
lyzed. She did. however, attend<lb/>
Barefoot the following year.<lb/>
In case of rain, mit acth itie<lb/>
excluding the toxi booths, will he<lb/>
held inside The Vefcro FI I rap<lb/>
will be set up in the covered area<lb/>
outside Mendenhall C afeteria it it<lb/>
will tit<lb/>
Ihe rainsites tor the bands are<lb/>
asfollows K Grass in MSC Multi-<lb/>
purposeRoom Cold I MS(<lb/>
Last ear tt isand f students tui<lb/>
coorc r kt ? ire I ?- same<lb/>
Hendrix "heatre Clarence<lb/>
"Gatemouth i MS Mul-<lb/>
ti purpose Rtnm ?<lb/>
MSC Hendn ?<lb/>
11 let o .v ill be i<lb/>
<lb/>
Dance Theatre demonstrates human motion Thunderheart' illustrates<lb/>
to be<lb/>
INfce a<lb/>
N<lb/>
hn?c<lb/>
? ,2-0022<lb/>
Mon, Tues<lb/>
PITCHERS<lb/>
I S1.50<lb/>
;on)<lb/>
iiUI 1<lb/>
?iJJJJl<lb/>
I<lb/>
<lb/>
RBI ASTI<lb/>
1 MODE! 1<lb/>
ML'N<lb/>
york<lb/>
.a ?? . -??'<lb/>
?ML N<lb/>
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IM( HI<lb/>
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is HARP H)<lb/>
I Blow<lb/>
1 m hers<lb/>
n ? idinga<lb/>
? hark on<lb/>
? 4 pm. There<lb/>
?imentS<lb/>
will bi . ? ? s to Elm<lb/>
? will be posted in Raw!<lb/>
on tin ? Please<lb/>
ipk wantafter-<lb/>
l oo Horsl<lb/>
Staft w<lb/>
?<lb/>
?<lb/>
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t the I<lb/>
? 1<lb/>
? ? ? .<lb/>
? ?<lb/>
I by Josej<lb/>
rful m .<lb/>
- the dancers entertained<lb/>
lied by musk<lb/>
anvi Tur-<lb/>
Hi atfierh leand<lb/>
-rd danced wonder-<lb/>
their indi ldual sections,<lb/>
? -noot the night with an<lb/>
? nlUxl number<lb/>
 Suuare RiHts w as<lb/>
terface<lb/>
? contrasted with the first<lb/>
. ? Ivingmore into the theme<lb/>
? a piece an<lb/>
it value  ithsoi<lb/>
klinsei  ? " ?ck-<lb/>
Interf u e bei amea ? -<lb/>
ige It forced the a<lb/>
think ibout th mea<lb/>
kmgati ? ? nter-<lb/>
? ? as 1 he<lb/>
I<lb/>
,  ? - '<lb/>
f Mu<lb/>
lub<lb/>
Native American struggle<lb/>
B Ike Shibley<lb/>
M.itt V ri! T<lb/>
m  :(earty evident in the Danci ? 1 :? was high and consistant<lb/>
pieces flowed 1 tfx breathtaking k rt the human form.<lb/>
. . 1 red tl ims<lb/>
? u i the mu ed the<lb/>
il. if tiii- piece to such an ex-<lb/>
h one light (or musk 1<lb/>
theaudii net - I ??? uki<lb/>
? w ith it. Om x.en the ligl '<lb/>
Iden tubes mak<lb/>
. . .<lb/>
? ' I by guest<lb/>
resklent Lin Kent<lb/>
Pertalkm actin !<lb/>
hir, was the 1<lb/>
;skm An interesl - I '<lb/>
?? .<lb/>
imusei.1 tl-<lb/>
ii laughii ?<lb/>
Folkiw epStud<lb/>
bits' viewed the mysterKius sym-<lb/>
:vk ?: . f the 1 nets and cell I<lb/>
bodieshoreographed b<lb/>
Pertalkm, "Orbits' flowed with a<lb/>
concentric balance to give<lb/>
thematic dance piece<lb/>
v rbitsirnpressi eba kdnip,<lb/>
?: . ed of c r stals and<lb/>
?4 ? ed to further enha: '<lb/>
? rder in the uni-<lb/>
erie also hon ? iphed<lb/>
imw.gaveanin!<lb/>
ok at the wandenngs t the<lb/>
1 of a voung  1 nie White<lb/>
ave an outstanding peri<lb/>
exemplifving the beaut) and .??<lb/>
of ballot wonderfully. L sing ultra-<lb/>
violet light to create a dazzling ef-<lb/>
fect on White- dress and the male<lb/>
partner- gloves, Reverie de-<lb/>
lighted the senses to see<lb/>
After a second intermission,<lb/>
Alan Arnett- Mood Sw ings" con-<lb/>
cluded the night on the same up-<lb/>
beat, entertaining note thatitstarted<lb/>
on.<lb/>
L singsongs trom NatalieCole<lb/>
and 1 larr C onnk k. Ir tci name a<lb/>
tow Mood Swings" hearkened<lb/>
back to the '40s .n-A the "50s with a<lb/>
rousing number Combining tap<lb/>
and jazz dance, Mtxxl Swings" left<lb/>
the audierK e w ith a spring in their<lb/>
step and .1 -mile on their face<lb/>
1 new turn<lb/>
? . ? . ? resei<lb/>
<lb/>
. ? es ? imp rtant fH'int-<lb/>
1 he yi. ture ertitie- . ?<lb/>
kilmor asai ? I 1 I preat stat-<lb/>
ure Hiscleancut -quare iawel<lb/>
face thmK veils a raging sea of<lb/>
emotion- In 1 hecooB)<lb/>
plaved Ice Mar andseemeddes-<lb/>
tinedforprett) bo n4es How-<lb/>
oxer C 'Ii or tone changed that<lb/>
desrim b casbng Kilmer as Jim<lb/>
Morrison in ? - KUmer<lb/>
bnught believability and even<lb/>
ompatlv. to the role.<lb/>
In   rheart kilmor<lb/>
pla - a clean-sha en FBI agent<lb/>
whii finds himself drawn into<lb/>
the mvsteriou- world oi the na-<lb/>
tive American Indian His rrui-<lb/>
dhismo becomes repressed as he<lb/>
struggles with the seriousness<lb/>
oi the script He turns in a stellar<lb/>
performance that anchors the<lb/>
picture<lb/>
Ihe other point thi- picture<lb/>
makes 1- that the mistreatment<lb/>
oi Indian- did not end when the<lb/>
West was settled. Even today<lb/>
the native American- get pushed<lb/>
around the countn K a greedy<lb/>
heartless political machine. Ehe<lb/>
film's director, Michael pted,<lb/>
poignanth depicts the India<lb/>
plight of toda<lb/>
The stor) open- with agent<lb/>
Rav Lex 011 Kilmer being sent t<lb/>
The Badlands of South Dakota<lb/>
to investigate the murderof I eo<lb/>
Fa-tnk,apolitka activemem-<lb/>
ber of -UM trie boriginal<lb/>
substance<lb/>
.<lb/>
? ? - ; ? diansin<lb/>
a ttghth<lb/>
the caneasih kei . " ? - I ?ni<lb/>
5amShepard<lb/>
an ag? nt alreadv inplac<lb/>
re - ?: : . ' '<lb/>
- ? ? ed wil<lb/>
days. He avers that rJ -<lb/>
been identified sothi<lb/>
I tppi end him.<lb/>
Whi ? estij<lb/>
der  ? oi is <lb/>
Walter Grahai<lb/>
Green 1 1 -? 1 ?' fficer<lb/>
row es that mon<lb/>
1- involved in the 1:<lb/>
than 1 e oi ki ??- - I le helps<lb/>
Levoi meel other ?? 1 j of<lb/>
ARM ?. also befriends him<lb/>
when the situation on the reser-<lb/>
vation worsens<lb/>
?- the 1 ' " iveb doubts<lb/>
surface in Levoi's mind Heqi?s-<lb/>
tions the credibilit oi the law<lb/>
enforcement on the reservation,<lb/>
especialh lack Milton Trod<lb/>
Ward 1 who -o I blocks<lb/>
to snare members I VRN4 he<lb/>
FBI wants tocapturejami -1 - - -<lb/>
Iwue the alleged murder hut<lb/>
does not seem interested in 1<lb/>
leering evkJence Amysten be-<lb/>
gins tosurmundFatElk -d-<lb/>
A tangled wel f d<lb/>
emerges is I<lb/>
tion hi- alliances<lb/>
? Thunder ; 1 :<lb/>
B) Dana Danielson<lb/>
 it.int 1 nU'rt.nnm.nt I ditor<lb/>
I his veal ?dition of theJ<lb/>
tine will be available during<lb/>
. k and w ill include a an<lb/>
r ? 11 L student's artistk oo<lb/>
literarv work.<lb/>
!tuh work of the art school<lb/>
.Mil be Oxwvcased in RrW 92 lh?<lb/>
Caller section will feature the<lb/>
pudges hone- tor thi- oar s Rdrl<lb/>
art-how. held in the fall<lb/>
A-alwaRrM?: willteature<lb/>
Ihe w inner - work of tlie fiction anil<lb/>
poetry contests. Thefirstplacestorv<lb/>
was w ntten h Scot! Maxwell, arul<lb/>
Unigsmvsubmittevlthefirstplaoe<lb/>
?11<lb/>
his yeai - features m lude a<lb/>
varieh oi writer<lb/>
A inters b I a id<lb/>
Behrens deals with the hope for<lb/>
the return of natJN e AmeiK.in cul-<lb/>
ture in tin- country 1 he story al-o<lb/>
features a painted illustration h<lb/>
Behrens, who has researched and<lb/>
interviewed extensively Indians<lb/>
indigenous to North C arolirw<lb/>
C hn-Kemplepievo ihol o-t<lb/>
Art of Cartooning is a comment<lb/>
im the pathetic State of new-paper<lb/>
OOfltics od offer- suggestions of<lb/>
wavs in whn.h to improve<lb/>
cartoonist's work<lb/>
C Ivde tdgerton, the author of<lb/>
Rane 1- featured in m inter-<lb/>
 iew w nten hv Mary ngel Bkwint<lb/>
that otter- insight to the creative<lb/>
mini and advice to pmspectjve<lb/>
writers.<lb/>
Hemingway House in Key<lb/>
West, R. is the focus oi a pieve h<lb/>
1 im I lampton, w horov oal- the pa-t<lb/>
i t the writer in the residence w here<lb/>
sin h n( n els ,is The Sun Also Rises<lb/>
and For Whom Ihe hell rolls were<lb/>
penned<lb/>
Rebel 2 also features two fac-<lb/>
tual narratives; lane Ashfotd's Te-<lb/>
ruu itv" deals w ith the unusual do-<lb/>
mestic problem of hats in the home,<lb/>
and Denise Machala's "Whit's in a<lb/>
beach" takes a detailed look at a<lb/>
childhood tnernorj<lb/>
A final editorial written bv<lb/>
Christine Russell, talk- about free<lb/>
speec h and how Americans are let-<lb/>
ting basic rights slip aw.u<lb/>
The Rebel's fnanaging editor,<lb/>
left Paricer, writes the prologueedi-<lb/>
ti'nal<lb/>
What I talk about in the edito-<lb/>
rial goes along our reasoning of<lb/>
bnnging in more illustrators and<lb/>
creating greater opportunity for<lb/>
writing and art to be connected<lb/>
Parker said.<lb/>
"Illustrationasweonceknewit<lb/>
has waned. 1 believe if books and<lb/>
magazines make a greater effort to<lb/>
gv-e readership something they<lb/>
can't get from 1 then they can<lb/>
start drawing people back to read-<lb/>
ing '<lb/>
The brunt of the production<lb/>
work was handled K art director<lb/>
Steve Reid Reid created la out de-<lb/>
signs and graphic- for the maga-<lb/>
zine<lb/>
The cover was designed b<lb/>
Michael Dabbsand features the first<lb/>
place sculp ture from the RfW92 art<lb/>
show<lb/>
Anyone interested in contrib-<lb/>
uting to the 1993 Rebel should in-<lb/>
quire at publications office or watch<lb/>
for a table by the Student Stores<lb/>
where applications for editorial<lb/>
positions can be obtained<lb/>
REBEL<lb/>
?<lb/>
<pb facs="00058320_0010"/><lb/>
PERSONALS<lb/>
Entertainment<lb/>
el lie taiU Carolinian<lb/>
April 23, 1992<lb/>
7<lb/>
Barefooters to celebrate spring<lb/>
v I ana Danielson<lb/>
i nterUitvmenl 1 ditor<lb/>
ne i.ii.(<lb/>
t Mi I <lb/>
ind u<lb/>
?<lb/>
an ; i '<lb/>
ll<lb/>
 . <lb/>
.<lb/>
<lb/>
<lb/>
?<lb/>
 v , i ?<lb/>
<lb/>
???<lb/>
<lb/>
-<lb/>
'<lb/>
?<lb/>
?<lb/>
?<lb/>
IScheltzi ind Bobby Miltoi fTh eai<lb/>
lers this year oi entra impus Ma<lb/>
itub Lauffei ? ? il <lb/>
??'??? ? ? i  itiesto<lb/>
ingbai ??????? ?<lb/>
: in on the Mall runs fron<lb/>
I .uittcr was unable '<lb/>
her first festh al because her car was<lb/>
struck b i drunk driver shortly<lb/>
tioning after the proposal, leaving her p<lb/>
K zed She did howe er, atti<lb/>
? the Barefoot the tollowing year.<lb/>
In v.i-11 tain most ,u ti ittes,<lb/>
im excluding the fcxxl btxths will be<lb/>
? eld inside Tlu-<lb/>
 be set up in the .en I an i<lb/>
? I. Mendenh.1<lb/>
.m!1 tit<lb/>
??.? ? ???? band ii<lb/>
? ?<lb/>
??? ?<lb/>
tip<lb/>
V ? Mei li<lb/>
P is HAKI) H)<lb/>
?0022<lb/>
I UCS<lb/>
3S<lb/>
50<lb/>
-<lb/>
t J<lb/>
I<lb/>
<lb/>
? i si<lb/>
, rs<lb/>
ting a<lb/>
rkon<lb/>
ere<lb/>
merits<lb/>
s to Elm<lb/>
n Rawl<lb/>
: Please<lb/>
.ant after-<lb/>
Dance Theatre demonstrates human motion<lb/>
l lot' Horst<lb/>
st.i I! VN<lb/>
Thunderheart7 illustrates<lb/>
Native American struggle<lb/>
.ii -ecti<lb/>
I ?<lb/>
? '<lb/>
?.? It<lb/>
raphed I<lb/>
 .<lb/>
?<lb/>
?<lb/>
i ?<lb/>
I r '<lb/>
? irther enhai I " ?<lb/>
<lb/>
? ? also h?:?  r.<lb/>
?' . '<lb/>
? ? ? ?<lb/>
Photo courtesy Doug Ray<lb/>
? ri -?-? ??? is I )l an I : nsistant<lb/>
reathl  ok at the human form.<lb/>
of ballet wonderfully. I sing ultra-<lb/>
violet light to create a dazzling ef-<lb/>
? ? n White's dress and the male<lb/>
? er's gloves, Reverie de-<lb/>
igl ted the senses to see<lb/>
Alter ? second intermission,<lb/>
?Man Amett's Mood Swings" con-<lb/>
cluded the night on the same up-<lb/>
beat, entertainingnote that it started<lb/>
on<lb/>
I sing songs from atalie( ole<lb/>
and 1 larr C onniv k, It to name a<lb/>
few Mood Swings" hearkened<lb/>
back I the'40s and the l with a<lb/>
rousing number Combining tap<lb/>
and jazz dance Moixi Swings" left<lb/>
the audienv e w ith a spring in their<lb/>
step and a smile on their face.<lb/>
?<lb/>
l Ike Shible<lb/>
Si iti v nt.T<lb/>
<lb/>
M<lb/>
???? , <lb/>
ictorol ? :?? ?? ??<lb/>
'?  ? l i. ? ??<lb/>
think eils a I iging ?? ? '<lb/>
tions. Ii he coolh<lb/>
? .  ?? : eemed<lb/>
  <lb/>
? ? i that<lb/>
am<lb/>
? ? Kill<lb/>
 ? . .<lb/>
:? ?<lb/>
rsthal<lb/>
been 1 ? ? ? ?<lb/>
. . .<lb/>
?<lb/>
In<lb/>
- a<lb/>
who finds hit<lb/>
the m ?? rid oi thi<lb/>
rive American Indian t lis n<lb/>
chismobe 01 ' ? ??:?:?<lb/>
struggles with the seriousn<lb/>
of the script 1 le turn- in a stellar<lb/>
performance that anchors the<lb/>
pk ture<lb/>
rheother point this picture<lb/>
makes is that the mistreatment<lb/>
of Indians did not end v hen the<lb/>
West was settled Even toda<lb/>
the native Amerii ans get pushed<lb/>
around thecountn b a greedy<lb/>
hearties- political machine, rhe<lb/>
film's director, Mu hael ?Xpted,<lb/>
poignanth depicts the Indian's<lb/>
plight of too i<lb/>
rhe ' i ? ipens wit!<lb/>
Ra i e ii I Kilmer) beingsent to<lb/>
rhe Badlands ol South Dakota<lb/>
to in estigate the murder ol I<lb/>
Fasti lk,apoliticalI ahvemem-<lb/>
her of RM " ? M riginal<lb/>
I<lb/>
ti ? '<lb/>
? ?<lb/>
 .<lb/>
Ward<lb/>
membi<lb/>
FBlwantsl<lb/>
1 w ice, tht ?<lb/>
doesn<lb/>
A t,<lb/>
?<lb/>
?<lb/>
Thunder<lb/>
Rebel '92 promises quality; substance<lb/>
I- te.ltut.<lb/>
 I ana Danielson<lb/>
i int 1 ntertainmenl 1 a1 itor<lb/>
litii m of thei<lb/>
? .  will be available during<lb/>
- md v. il! in ludea<lb/>
i ,tuden! - arti .tie and<lb/>
? II<lb/>
? ? work of the art - hool<lb/>
ised in '? ?  I b?<lb/>
. ?  ? ill feature the<lb/>
es tor this war's Rebel<lb/>
? ?? hiv held in the fall.<lb/>
A- ilv lys Ribd92 will feature<lb/>
inner's work of the fiction and<lb/>
etryci mtests. fhefirstplai eslor)<lb/>
rten b ott Maxwell, and<lb/>
bueSmith submitted thefirstplace<lb/>
:<lb/>
A'intei<lb/>
? . ?? leal<lb/>
the retui f nal rican i ul<lb/>
ture in this (ounti I i ? ?<lb/>
featui i painted illustrati i b<lb/>
Behrens, who ha n ? 11 hi I and<lb/>
inti i iewed extensh el) Indians<lb/>
ii lieei ? ' " ? rtl u ana<lb/>
n in inter- diihlho.Kl memory<lb/>
' .  . n : Lint A final editorial, written by<lb/>
 t to the creative Christine Russell, talk- about tree<lb/>
to pi pective speech and how Americans are let-<lb/>
ting basic rights slip away.<lb/>
' ? t<lb/>
,<lb/>
Art of C artooning is ,i comment<lb/>
on the patheti( -tat of ne -paper<lb/>
comics and otter- suggestions of<lb/>
v, a) in u hu h to impro e<lb/>
cartocnisl s work.<lb/>
C kde I dgerton the author oi<lb/>
can't get from 1 then the can<lb/>
start drawing people bat k to read-<lb/>
ing<lb/>
fhe brunt of the production<lb/>
work was handled b art director<lb/>
Hemingvva House in Ke fhe Rebel's managing editor, SieveReid.Reidcreated layoutde-<lb/>
 ii bthefixus l left Parker, writes the prologueedi- sigrts and graphics for the maga-<lb/>
flm Hampton, wrx reveals the past tonal zine<lb/>
of the writer in the residence where "Whatl talk about in the edito- rhe cover was designed b<lb/>
suchnovelsas rheSun lsoRises rial goes akmg our reasoning oi Michael Dabbsand features the first<lb/>
and For Whom I ho i ? I I illswere bringing in more illustrators and placesculpture from the Rebel 92 art<lb/>
penned creating greatei opportunity for show.<lb/>
Rebel 92 also features two t.u writing .od art to he connected Anyone interested in contrib-<lb/>
tualnarratives;JaneAshford's le Parker -aid utmg to the 1993 Rebel should in-<lb/>
nacity" deals with the unusual do- ustrationasweoncelaewil quireatpublkationsoffkeorwatch<lb/>
mestic problem of bats in the home, has uan.nl 1 believe it books and tor a table by the Student Stores<lb/>
andDeniseMachala's"What'stna magazines make a greater effort to where applications for editorial<lb/>
Beach" takes a detailed took at a gtye readership something thev positions can be obtained.<lb/>
<pb facs="00058320_0011"/><lb/>
PERSONALS<lb/>
Entertainment<lb/>
?lje iEast CEarulixiiau<lb/>
April 23, 1992<lb/>
<lb/>
arefooters to celebrate spring<lb/>
' m.i i i<lb/>
II' I )I1U'Kdu<lb/>
ink di<lb/>
 <lb/>
? v-<lb/>
. . . <lb/>
Dance Theatre demonstrates human motion Thunderheart' illustrates<lb/>
j<lb/>
Native American struggle<lb/>
I ' . ! k I S I<lb/>
'<lb/>
?<lb/>
11<lb/>
hearth<lb/>
<lb/>
: ' -<lb/>
. rs<lb/>
, a<lb/>
?<lb/>
Rebel '92 promises quality; substance<lb/>
ana I .<lb/>
m<lb/>
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edit : Steve Retd Reid i reared la<lb/>
lett Parker, writes the pi ueedi sign- and  i I " ??' ?<lb/>
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 ,1 ? ill ib lit ii theedito- rhe co ei was '? ?? ? I b<lb/>
rial .? , i ? ui reasoning ot MichaelDabb ? ll thefirst<lb/>
tnnj re illustrators and placesculpture from the<lb/>
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writing ind art to be cinn?cted nyone interested in contrib<lb/>
t(1l, rr1 ? hi ii ! ? re rarker said uting to the 1993 Rebel should in<lb/>
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Beach" takes a detailed kxk at .1 gi e readership something the) positions can be obtained<lb/>
? 1 ,<lb/>
he Sun lso Ri-<lb/>
!? 11 ? ? features two fa<lb/>
<pb facs="00058320_0012"/><lb/>
8<lb/>
(SH)C East (flarolmian April 23,?992<lb/>
Thunder<lb/>
Continued from page 7<lb/>
Tension fills the theater from<lb/>
the opening shots of South Dakota<lb/>
Indians chanting. Much of this ten-<lb/>
sion arises heca use the story is based<lb/>
on actual events.<lb/>
Although Thunderheart creates<lb/>
a serious mood, the tension could<lb/>
have been more emphasized; the<lb/>
rope encircling the viewer's heart<lb/>
could have been more taut. Apted<lb/>
defuses some of the power inherent<lb/>
in the film.<lb/>
Apted and his editor cut too<lb/>
quickly from drums banging out a<lb/>
solemn rhvthm. The shots of sun-<lb/>
shine over the Badlands are like-<lb/>
wise hx? short.<lb/>
Apted spends loo much time<lb/>
on other shots that need only a pass-<lb/>
ing look. A sequence in which Levoi<lb/>
stakes out an elder of the tribe,<lb/>
played masterfully by Chief Ted<lb/>
Ihin Elk, drags on for too many<lb/>
minutes.<lb/>
The story could havebeen more<lb/>
nhtlv written. The plot wanders<lb/>
too much with excessive dead space<lb/>
where no information reaches the<lb/>
viewer and the urgency of the situ-<lb/>
ation lessens. This should not have<lb/>
happened because Levoi remains<lb/>
on edge during the entire experi-<lb/>
ence in South Dakota. The viewer<lb/>
needs to vicariously feel mis un-<lb/>
easiness.<lb/>
Many shots, though, do reach<lb/>
cinematic perfection. They<lb/>
seamlessly mesh with the mood.<lb/>
Extended shots of Levoi's sweat<lb/>
rl I led face ha unt the screen. An over-<lb/>
head shot near the end is equally<lb/>
haunting.<lb/>
The truth of the picture is dis-<lb/>
tressing. Many films, from Arthur<lb/>
Perm's Little Big Man to Kevin<lb/>
Gainer's Dances with Wolves, have<lb/>
made people aware of just how<lb/>
badly the Native Americans have<lb/>
been treated in the past. As Ameri-<lb/>
cans, w e collectively wince to know<lb/>
that our ancestors could hold such<lb/>
little regard for human life.<lb/>
Thunderhearl shocks the senses<lb/>
bv boldly showing tfwtnothmghas<lb/>
changed m 200 wars.<lb/>
with detached distress. missed opportunities to create a re-<lb/>
Thimderhetut beats with so- markablecinemaucexperience,this<lb/>
ciallv-conscious blood. Despite the picture still needs to be seen.<lb/>
EasLTatplma 19914992<lb/>
Playhouseoeason<lb/>
EAST<lb/>
CAROLINA<lb/>
DANCE<lb/>
THEATRE<lb/>
APRIL 21, 22, 23, 24 and 25 at 8:15 p.m.<lb/>
APRIL 26 at 2:15 p.m.<lb/>
Live Theatre For Less Than A Movie So Bring A Date<lb/>
ECU STUDENTS: $4.50<lb/>
Call: 757-6829<lb/>
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THURSDAYS - SATURDAYS:<lb/>
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$2.00 off admission Saturday Night.<lb/>
HELP WANTED: Female Exotic Dancers Needed. Call 756-6278<lb/>
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<pb facs="00058320_0013"/><lb/>
8<lb/>
vUhe taut (Earulinian<lb/>
April 23, 1992<lb/>
Thunder<lb/>
Continued from page 7<lb/>
Femion tills the theater from<lb/>
the opening shots o( South I takota<lb/>
Indians chanting Much of this ten<lb/>
stonarisesbecausetheston abased<lb/>
n a tual events<lb/>
Uthough ntnmfetfittirt creates<lb/>
i serious mood Ihe tension could<lb/>
have been more emphasized the<lb/>
rone enc ik ling the viewer s heart<lb/>
could have been more taut pted<lb/>
fu sstmeofthepowei inherent<lb/>
in the 'ilm<lb/>
pted and his editor i ui too<lb/>
nuickh from drums banging out a<lb/>
?lemn rhythm rhe shots ol sun<lb/>
. ,n er the Badlands are like-<lb/>
 too ?hort<lb/>
tared spends too much time<lb/>
nthet shots that need onl a pass<lb/>
? look sequence in which Levoi<lb/>
ikes oul an elder oi th'1 tribe<lb/>
ived masterfully b) Chiel red<lb/>
(Tun Elk drags on for too mam<lb/>
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Phestors couldhavebeenmore<lb/>
? htl) written rhe plot wanders<lb/>
? , i mu ln ithex essivedead spa e<lb/>
where no information reaches the<lb/>
v iewei and me urgency ol the situ<lb/>
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eds to vicariously fed this un-<lb/>
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Main shots though, do reach<lb/>
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I trended shots ol Levoi's sweat<lb/>
filledfacehauntthescreen over-<lb/>
head shot near the end is equally<lb/>
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rhe truth ol the picture is dis-<lb/>
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199L1992<lb/>
EasLCaipuna ?. ? -<lb/>
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<pb facs="00058320_0016"/><lb/>
10<lb/>
Wie SaHt (Uarolininu<lb/>
April 23, 1992<lb/>
Sports<lb/>
Lady Pirates stump UNC<lb/>
'Girls of Summer' win doubleheader 3-0,4-3<lb/>
By Charles Mitchell<lb/>
Senior Sports Writer<lb/>
After coming off a dismal weekend<lb/>
in South Carolina, the Lady Pirates took<lb/>
aim and fired upon the Lady Tar Heels<lb/>
who recently finished third in the Atlan-<lb/>
tic Coast Conference tournament.<lb/>
North Carolina, who ranks fourth in<lb/>
the Southeast Region, desperately<lb/>
needed to win at least one of the two<lb/>
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over ECU in the south rankings. How-<lb/>
ever, the "Girls of Summer" had other<lb/>
plans as they soundly defeated UNC in<lb/>
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Jenny Parsons pitched a three-hit<lb/>
shutout as the Lady Pirates won the first<lb/>
of a twin bill 3-0.<lb/>
"Aside from the moist field condi-<lb/>
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well an assistant coach said. Laura<lb/>
Crowder lead the aggressive Pirate "D"<lb/>
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Crowder started the first inning off<lb/>
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Crowder from third.<lb/>
Cheryl Hobson continued the inning<lb/>
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and a two-two count, Lisa Coreprew<lb/>
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After a brief 10-minute break the<lb/>
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With the assistance of the ever present<lb/>
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ECU got on the board first when C.<lb/>
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The Lady Bucs answered that chal-<lb/>
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base to put runners on the corners for<lb/>
Wilke.<lb/>
On a 1-2 count, Wilke drove a shot to<lb/>
second for the fielders choice RBI that<lb/>
scored Crowder from third. With C.<lb/>
Hobson on third and Wilke on second,<lb/>
senior first baseman Christy Kee blasted<lb/>
a seeing eye single to left field to account<lb/>
for her two runs batted in and end the<lb/>
scoring for the Pirates.<lb/>
With the score now 4-3, the Pirate<lb/>
"D" turned up their game a notch and<lb/>
literally shutout the regions number four<lb/>
team. Parsons went on to record three<lb/>
strikeout and her 36th win of the season.<lb/>
The40-16 Lady Pirates will play their<lb/>
final regular season home game today<lb/>
against UNC-Wilmington at the Lady<lb/>
Pirate field (across from Allied Heath).<lb/>
The scheduled start time is 3 p.m. for the<lb/>
doubleheader.<lb/>
ECU flounders f our games at USC<lb/>
By Charles Mitchell<lb/>
Senior Sports Writer<lb/>
Photo by Dall Reed ? ECU Photo Lab<lb/>
Exceptional defense, pitching and base running are pnmary reasons tor the ECU Lady Pirate<lb/>
softbaH team' s success this season The team took a pair of wins from UNrC-ChapelHil Tuesday.<lb/>
The Lady Pirates played six games<lb/>
this r. ast Easter weekend at the Annual<lb/>
Lady Gamecocks Easter Tournament<lb/>
and managed to salvage two victories.<lb/>
In game one, ECU lost 4-3 to Geor-<lb/>
gia Southern in seven innings.<lb/>
Jenny Parsons pitched the 10-hit<lb/>
contest and recorded two strikeouts for<lb/>
the Lady Pirates. Lisa Coreprew led ECU<lb/>
offensively with her 2-for-3 and one RBI<lb/>
outing.<lb/>
Parsons pitched a four-hitter as the<lb/>
Lady Gamecocks of South Carolina<lb/>
scored three unearned runs with the<lb/>
assistance of three Pirate errors. Laura<lb/>
Crowder stroked out two hits in her<lb/>
four at bats and added two stolen bases<lb/>
to her credit.<lb/>
Georgeann Wilke pitched a four hit-<lb/>
ter as the Lady Pirates won for the first<lb/>
time this weekend.<lb/>
Even though the defense commit-<lb/>
ted three errors, the hot bat of Chanel<lb/>
Hooker who went 2-for-3 kept ECU in<lb/>
the contest.<lb/>
Three errors proved costly as USC<lb/>
cashed in to win yet another one against<lb/>
ECU by the score of 3-1. Wilke took the<lb/>
loss while giving up just six hits and<lb/>
striking out two. The lone Pirate run<lb/>
came in the form of a Cheryl Hobson<lb/>
out-of-the park homerun. Hooker again<lb/>
had the hot bat with her 2-for-2 after-<lb/>
noon.<lb/>
In their third meeting of the tourna-<lb/>
ment, ECU whitewashed Georgia South-<lb/>
ern 11-1. Parsons recorded the win in<lb/>
pitching a two hitter as the Pirate "D"<lb/>
committed no errors. Laura Crowder,<lb/>
Stephanie Hobson and Cheryl Hobson<lb/>
lead the Pirate hitters in the 15 hit game.<lb/>
Crowder went 3-for-3 with two stolen<lb/>
bases. Stephanie Hobson also went 3-<lb/>
for-3 while sister Cheryl batted 3-for-4<lb/>
during the contest. Sherri Allen got into<lb/>
the action with her three RBI triple to<lb/>
light things up.<lb/>
In the Pirates' final game of the tour-<lb/>
nament, Parsons pitched ECU to extra<lb/>
innings before succumbing to her 10th<lb/>
lost of the season. The Lady Pirates<lb/>
took the No. 13 nationally ranked Game-<lb/>
cocks 11 innings before losing the con-<lb/>
test 1-0. Crowder went 3-for-5 and Lisa<lb/>
Coreprew went 2-for 5 in a losing ef-<lb/>
fort.<lb/>
The 38-16 Lady Pirates play today<lb/>
at 3 p.m. against North Carolina at the<lb/>
Ladv Pirate field (across from Allied<lb/>
Health.)<lb/>
N.C State, Ga. Tech win in ACC action<lb/>
N.C. State 2, Virginia 1<lb/>
RALEIGH (AP) - Vinny<lb/>
Hughes hit a one-out triple in<lb/>
the bottom of the ninth inning<lb/>
to drive in the tying run and set<lb/>
up Kevin Ross' game-winning<lb/>
hit as North Carolina State de-<lb/>
feated Virginia 2-1 Sunday.<lb/>
N.C. State improved to 36-<lb/>
12 overall and 12-9 in the ACC.<lb/>
Virginia fell to 19-25,3-17.<lb/>
Virginia took the early lead<lb/>
in the second inning when Han<lb/>
Martinsen singled and later<lb/>
scored on a two-out single by<lb/>
Casey Shore.<lb/>
It stayed that way until the<lb/>
bottom of the ninth as Virginia's<lb/>
Kent Kruse (0-4) and N.C.<lb/>
State's Terry Harvey locked up<lb/>
in a pitcher's duel. Harvey did<lb/>
;not allow another run nd<lb/>
yielded just six hits before be-<lb/>
ing relieved by Stacy Betts in<lb/>
the eighth inning. Reliever<lb/>
Jamie Wolkosky (3-1) came on<lb/>
to pitch a perfect ninth inning<lb/>
and notch the win.<lb/>
Meanwhile, Kruse carried<lb/>
a no hitter through 6 2-3 in-<lb/>
nings before yielding back-to-<lb/>
back singles to Paul Borawski<lb/>
and Rob Bark. He maintained<lb/>
his shutout until the ninth when<lb/>
he walked Sean Drinkwater<lb/>
with one out and then gave up<lb/>
a triple to Hughes. Kevin Stock<lb/>
came on in relief and intention-<lb/>
ally walked the next two bat-<lb/>
ters to load the bases. Kevin<lb/>
Ross then singled to bring home<lb/>
Kip Bryan.<lb/>
Ga. Tech 6, UNC 3<lb/>
ATLANTA (AP) ? Michael<lb/>
Smith homered and drove in<lb/>
three runs to lead 14th-ranked<lb/>
Georgia Tech past North Caro-<lb/>
lina 6-3 Sunday and complete a<lb/>
sweep of a three-game Atlantic<lb/>
Coast Conference series.<lb/>
Tech (33-9,10-7 ACC) built<lb/>
a 6-0 lead for Brent Colson (8-<lb/>
2), before the Tar Heels got<lb/>
three runs in the eighth.<lb/>
Smith got his two-run<lb/>
homer in the second, following<lb/>
Brian Alyea's RBI single.<lb/>
North Carolina starter<lb/>
Brian Willman (3-2) lasted into<lb/>
the sixth. He gave up nine hits<lb/>
and all six runs.<lb/>
Chris Cox and Manny<lb/>
DaSilva doubled in the Tar<lb/>
Heels' three-run eighth.<lb/>
FSU 11, Wake Forest 1<lb/>
WINSTON-SALEM, N.C.<lb/>
(AP) ? Florida State scored five<lb/>
runs in the first innings and<lb/>
cruised to an 11-1 victory over<lb/>
Wake Forest Sunday, sweeping<lb/>
a three-game series.<lb/>
Chris Roberts went 3-for-4,<lb/>
with two RBI, while Tony<lb/>
Leibsack went 2-for-3, with an<lb/>
RBI and a solo home run for<lb/>
Florida State (33-14, 13-7 ACC)<lb/>
in the second inning.<lb/>
Seminole starter Roger Bai-<lb/>
ley (10-3) pitched 6 1-3 innings,<lb/>
allowing only a solo home run<lb/>
to Brad Pryce in the sixth. Bai-<lb/>
ley allowed only six hits and<lb/>
three walks while striking out<lb/>
eight.<lb/>
Wake Forest (25-16,9-9) had<lb/>
runners in every inning but the<lb/>
ninth. The Demon Deacons left<lb/>
12 men on base, including the<lb/>
bases loaded in both the first<lb/>
and seventh innings.<lb/>
Clemson 5, ASU 3<lb/>
CLEMSON, S.C. (AP) ?<lb/>
Keith Williams hit his eighth<lb/>
home run of the year in the<lb/>
eighth inning to clinch<lb/>
See ACC, page 11<lb/>
Crowder, Parsons<lb/>
lead NCAA ranks<lb/>
By Charles Mitchell<lb/>
Senior Sport Writer<lb/>
Two ECU Lady Pirates<lb/>
worked their way to the top of<lb/>
the NCAA charts for women's<lb/>
fastpitch softball.<lb/>
Senior co-captain Laura<lb/>
"Lou" Crowder has the nation's<lb/>
record for most stolen bases in a<lb/>
season with her astounding 51-<lb/>
of-52 base stealing for a percent-<lb/>
ageof .993. In addition, Crowder<lb/>
also holdsthe new NCAA record<lb/>
for most consecutive stolen bases<lb/>
without being thrown out.<lb/>
Crowders' amazing string<lb/>
of 69 stolen bases (over a three-<lb/>
season period) tops the old<lb/>
record of 54 set by Donna Newell<lb/>
of UCLA With her well blended<lb/>
mix of speed and talent, Crowder<lb/>
is also ranked No. 18 in the na-<lb/>
tion in batting. She sports a .483<lb/>
batting percentage in, 56 games<lb/>
played.<lb/>
Jenny "Scrappy" Parsons is<lb/>
the nations leader with most vic-<lb/>
tories in a single season.<lb/>
Parsons' 36 wins leads all<lb/>
other pitchers in the nation rank-<lb/>
ing her 11th with a 79.8 win per-<lb/>
centage. Parsons throws a vari-<lb/>
ety of pitches ranging from her<lb/>
wicked curve ball to her floating<lb/>
riser to her blistering fastball ?<lb/>
not to exclude her drop, fork and<lb/>
other pitches, Parsons continues<lb/>
to mix up her bag of tricks to<lb/>
keep her opponents guessing.<lb/>
As a junior, Parsons is ex-<lb/>
pected to return next year and<lb/>
lead the Lady Pirates to yet an-<lb/>
other winning season.<lb/>
NBA playoffs end topsy-turvey season<lb/>
(AP) ? Going into the last of<lb/>
1,107 regular-season games, the 16<lb/>
NBA playoff teams still were not<lb/>
deterrnined Sunday night after Mi-<lb/>
ami, Houston and Atlanta lost games<lb/>
that would have guaranteed a spot<lb/>
in the postseason party.<lb/>
Miami could have clinched the<lb/>
final Eastern Conference spot, but<lb/>
lost 109-93 to Boston, which sealed<lb/>
the No. 2 seed in the conference with<lb/>
a 109-93 victory over the Heat<lb/>
That left the door open for At-<lb/>
: lanta, but the Hawks lost 112-108 at<lb/>
Cleveland, giving the berth back to<lb/>
?$? Heat Both Miami and Atlanta<lb/>
?finished with 38-44 records, with<lb/>
3Hiami getting the first playoff berth<lb/>
3mong the four most recent expan-<lb/>
sion teams on the basis of having a<lb/>
Setter conference record than the<lb/>
3-iawks.<lb/>
'Z, Houston could have clinched<lb/>
3he final Western Conference berth.<lb/>
but fell at home, 100-97 to Phoenix.<lb/>
With those outcomes, the first-<lb/>
round pairings in the Eastern Con-<lb/>
ference have Miami playing Chi-<lb/>
cago, Indiana facing Boston, New<lb/>
Jersey meeting Cleveland and De-<lb/>
troit meeting New York.<lb/>
In the West it's Utah and the<lb/>
Los Angeles Clippers, Seattle and<lb/>
Golden State, San Antonio and Phoe-<lb/>
nix, and Portland against either<lb/>
Houston or the Los Angeles Lakers.<lb/>
The Rockets'loss gave the lak-<lb/>
ers, in the last game of the regular<lb/>
season, a chance to make the play-<lb/>
offs for the 16th consecutive year<lb/>
with a victory over the Los Angeles<lb/>
Clippers. The Clippers on Thursday<lb/>
night clinched their firs tplayoff berth<lb/>
since 1976.<lb/>
The Lakers stayed alive with an<lb/>
upset victory on Saturday at Port-<lb/>
land.<lb/>
Jeff Hornacek scored 18 points<lb/>
for the Suns, already assured of the<lb/>
No. 4 playoff spot in the Western<lb/>
Conference.<lb/>
"Nobody can say we didn't try<lb/>
to win this game Phoenix coach<lb/>
Cotton Fitzsimmons said. "I told the<lb/>
team that if Houston gets in, they'll<lb/>
have to earn it by beating us<lb/>
"It was a day when the lid was<lb/>
on the casket" Rockets coach Rudy<lb/>
Tomjanovich said. "Balls would be<lb/>
on the rim and come out We missed<lb/>
little things and had lapses. It wasn't<lb/>
a day to have a game like that"<lb/>
The Celtics capped a late sea<lb/>
son surge to their 14th Atlantic Drvi-<lb/>
sion title in 20 years with their eighth<lb/>
consecutive victory without sitting<lb/>
Larry Bird.<lb/>
"AllIcansayis,XoaevelancL<lb/>
Miami coach Kevin Loughery said<lb/>
before the Cavaliers won. "We got<lb/>
11<lb/>
y<lb/>
Just kickin' around<lb/>
WeeftrMreJwayeseefflstorjfcyanimportsrt<lb/>
e Mi heckey esc to pn the time between stuoyiriQ. Renarnbac, Bsrafootonthelyiai<lb/>
, these guy play<lb/>
? thii afternoon.<lb/>
?x<lb/>
ACC<lb/>
Clemson's 5-3 victory Sunday<lb/>
over Appalachian State.<lb/>
Williams' hit came after the<lb/>
game had been delayed twice<lb/>
by rain, the first time briefly<lb/>
but for nearly an hour the sec-<lb/>
ond time.<lb/>
Clemson (38-7) scored in<lb/>
the first inning<lb/>
Northrop led withi<lb/>
made it home on<lb/>
single.<lb/>
The Tigers sec<lb/>
the third with a sir;<lb/>
len base by Ted<lb/>
single by North<lb/>
Love wins<lb/>
Heritage<lb/>
Classic for<lb/>
second time<lb/>
HILTON HEAD 1SLAND,S.C.<lb/>
(AP) ? Davis Love III, who won<lb/>
his third Heritage Classic over the<lb/>
weekend, says it was a different<lb/>
player who won in 1987.<lb/>
"There's so much room be-<lb/>
tween my win in '87 and my win<lb/>
last year Love said.<lb/>
Or this year.<lb/>
"1 feel like a completely differ-<lb/>
ent plaver he said. "I've ma-<lb/>
tured<lb/>
Love no longer just tries to blast<lb/>
for cash. He's improved all of his<lb/>
game, including putting, which<lb/>
may have been his weakest area<lb/>
when he hit the PGA Tour in 1985.<lb/>
"I lot of people consider him a<lb/>
long hitter fellow golfer Russ<lb/>
Cochran said. "1 think that's just<lb/>
oneof his weapons now. He'ssolid<lb/>
from the word go.<lb/>
"Davis is a good combination.<lb/>
You get a guy who can drive it with<lb/>
length and straight, and a guy<lb/>
who's a good putter and got a head<lb/>
on his shoulder, that's a winning<lb/>
combination<lb/>
The 28-year-old Love has won<lb/>
two of his last three tournaments<lb/>
and has been in the top eight in<lb/>
four of his last five. He is second on<lb/>
the money list to red-hot Fred<lb/>
Couples.<lb/>
Were it not for Couples, Love<lb/>
would be the story of the pro tour.<lb/>
And there are some who feel the<lb/>
former North Carolina All-Ameri-<lb/>
can is in Couples' class.<lb/>
"He's become a world-class<lb/>
player MarkO'Meara said. "He's<lb/>
got all the talent and potential to be<lb/>
oneof the best players in the world.<lb/>
He's in the same category as Fred<lb/>
Love shies away from such<lb/>
comparisons.<lb/>
"I just think Freddie's learned<lb/>
how to play the game. He's a very<lb/>
athletic golfer. He's a feel and touch<lb/>
golfer, nota scientific and mechani-<lb/>
cal golfer. 1 think that's the way the<lb/>
game should beplayed Lovesaid.<lb/>
"I need to move my game in that<lb/>
direction.<lb/>
"Freddie's arrived 1 see my-<lb/>
self as being a year or two behind<lb/>
Freddie in experience<lb/>
As good as Love is playing, the<lb/>
comparisons with Couples are in-<lb/>
evitable. They both will play in the<lb/>
Greater Greensboro Open this<lb/>
week. Couples skipped the Heri-<lb/>
tage after winning the Masters.<lb/>
Love lost to Couples in a play-<lb/>
off at the Los Angeles Open earlier<lb/>
this year.<lb/>
Love is the first player to win<lb/>
the Heritage Classic three times<lb/>
and only the second to win back-<lb/>
to-back titles. He says he now has<lb/>
more confidence and "tournament<lb/>
toughness<lb/>
"I've learned to control my<lb/>
swing pace under pressure he<lb/>
said. "Guys that hit the ball a long<lb/>
way have to have even more con-<lb/>
trol over their swing<lb/>
He said his best swings come<lb/>
when he hits the ball with about 80<lb/>
percent of his power.<lb/>
Love found the control after<lb/>
the death in late 1988 of his father<lb/>
and lifelonggolf teacher. But first it<lb/>
took some time to get over his loss.<lb/>
"My swing wasn't there for a<lb/>
while and my game wasn't there<lb/>
for a while because I was trying to<lb/>
do too much on my own Love<lb/>
said.<lb/>
But he began working with<lb/>
golf teachers )ack Lumpkin and<lb/>
Bruce Harmon along with sports<lb/>
psychologist Bob Rotella.<lb/>
Love also added his brother,<lb/>
Mark, a one-time golf teacher, to<lb/>
his golfing cadre as caddy and on-<lb/>
the-course counselor.<lb/>
"I've got some people I can<lb/>
trust with my swing now Love<lb/>
said. "I just have some direction<lb/>
now. I mink in that streteh in 89 it<lb/>
wasn'ttratlwasn'tworkmghard.<lb/>
I tost tond of tost my direction<lb/>
BE KI<lb/>
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Shorts<lb/>
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Treat yd<lb/>
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THI PLAZA MAI<lb/>
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Get your t<lb/>
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APPLICi<lb/>
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<pb facs="00058320_0017"/><lb/>
10<lb/>
(Btfe lEaot (Earolintan<lb/>
April 23, 1992<lb/>
Sports<lb/>
Lady Pirates stump UNC<lb/>
'Girls of Summer' win doubleheader 3-0,4-3<lb/>
By Charles Mitchell<lb/>
Senior Sports Writer<lb/>
After coming off a dismal weekend<lb/>
in South Carolina, the Lady Pirates took<lb/>
aim and fired upon the Lady Tar Heels<lb/>
who recently finished third in the Atlan-<lb/>
tic Coast Conference tournament.<lb/>
North Carolina, who ranks fourth in<lb/>
the Southeast Region, desperately<lb/>
needed to win at least one of the two<lb/>
games to maintain their two spot lead<lb/>
over ECU in the south rankings. How-<lb/>
ever, the "Girls of Summer" had other<lb/>
plans as they soundly defeated UNC in<lb/>
their scheduled double header.<lb/>
Jenny Parsons pitched a three-hit<lb/>
shutout as the Lady Pirates won the first<lb/>
of a twin bill 3-0.<lb/>
"Aside from the moist field condi-<lb/>
tions, the ladies played exceptionally<lb/>
well an assistant coach said. Laura<lb/>
Crowder lead the aggressive Pirate "D"<lb/>
who eliminated all possible threats from<lb/>
Carolina.<lb/>
Crowder started the first inning off<lb/>
with a baseon balls and eventually made<lb/>
it to third courtesvof a passed ball and a<lb/>
wild pitch. Mechelle Jones then drove a<lb/>
deep sacrifice fly to center field to score<lb/>
Crowder from third.<lb/>
Cheryl Hobson continued the inning<lb/>
with a hot smash off the glove of a Caro-<lb/>
lina infielder to reach first. With one out<lb/>
and a two-two count, Lisa Coreprew<lb/>
capped an explosive first inning with<lb/>
her two run blast (her fourth homerun of<lb/>
the year).<lb/>
After a brief 10-minute break the<lb/>
second scheduled game was underway.<lb/>
With the assistance of the ever present<lb/>
Pirate defense, Parsons pitched yet an-<lb/>
other complete game and recorded the<lb/>
second win of the evening 4-3.<lb/>
ECU got on the board first when C.<lb/>
Hobson reached first on a error aided<lb/>
single and later scored on a Georgeann<lb/>
Wilke triple. The Heels, determined to<lb/>
take at least one game, scored three runs<lb/>
in the second inning to put the heat back<lb/>
on the Pirates bat.<lb/>
The Ladv Bucs answered that chal-<lb/>
lenge with three runs of their own in<lb/>
their half of the third. Crowder stroked a<lb/>
single down the third base line and later<lb/>
stole second. With one out, G Hobson<lb/>
received a base on balls to reach first<lb/>
base to put runners on the corners for<lb/>
Wilke.<lb/>
On a 1-2 count, Wilke drove a shot to<lb/>
second for the fielders choice RBI that<lb/>
scored Crowder from third. With C.<lb/>
Hobson on third and Wilke on second,<lb/>
senior first baseman Christy Kee blasted<lb/>
a seeing eve single to left field to account<lb/>
for her two runs batted in and end the<lb/>
scoring for the Pirates.<lb/>
With the score now 4-3, the Pirate<lb/>
"D" turned up their game a notch and<lb/>
literallv shutout the regions number tour<lb/>
team. Parsons went on to record three<lb/>
strikeout and her th win of the season<lb/>
The4(Hr Ladv Pirates will plav their<lb/>
final regular season home game today<lb/>
against UNC-Wilmington at the Lady<lb/>
Pirate field (across from Allied Heath).<lb/>
The scheduled start time is 3 p.m. for the<lb/>
doubleheader<lb/>
ECU flounders four games at USC<lb/>
By Charles Mitchell<lb/>
Senior Sports Writer<lb/>
Photo by DaII H??d ? ECU Photo Lab<lb/>
Exceptional defense, pctehng and base running are primary reasons for the ECU Lady Pirate<lb/>
softhallteam ssuccess thtsseason TheteamtookaparofwinsfrtxnUNC-CriapeiHilTuesday<lb/>
The Lady Pirates played six games<lb/>
this f. ist Easter weekend at the Annual<lb/>
Ladv Gamecocks Easter Tournament<lb/>
and managed to salvage two victories<lb/>
In game one, ECU lost 4-3 to Geor-<lb/>
gia Southern in seven innings.<lb/>
lenny Parsons pitched the UVhit<lb/>
contest and recorded two strikeouts for<lb/>
the Ladv Pirates. Lisa Coreprew led ECU<lb/>
offensively with her 2-for-3 and one RBI<lb/>
outing.<lb/>
Parsons pitched a four-hitter as the<lb/>
Lady Gamecocks of South Carolina<lb/>
scored three unearned runs with the<lb/>
assistance of three Pirate errors. Laura<lb/>
Crowder stroked out two hits in her<lb/>
four at bats and added two stolen bases<lb/>
to her credit.<lb/>
Georgeann Wilke pitched a four hit-<lb/>
ter as the Lady Pirates won for the first<lb/>
time this weekend.<lb/>
Even though the defense commit-<lb/>
ted three errors, the hot bat of Chanel<lb/>
Hooker who went 2-for-3 kept ECU in<lb/>
the contest.<lb/>
Three errors proved costly as USC<lb/>
cashed in to win vet another one against<lb/>
ECU bv the score of 3-1. Wilke took the<lb/>
loss while giving up just six hits and<lb/>
striking out two. The lone Pirate run<lb/>
came in the form of a Chervl Hobson<lb/>
out-of-the park homerun. Hookeragain<lb/>
had the hot bat with her 2-for-2 after-<lb/>
noon.<lb/>
In their third meeting of the tourna-<lb/>
ment, ECU whitewashed Georgia South-<lb/>
ern 11-1. Parsons recorded the win in<lb/>
pitching a two hitter as the Pirate "D"<lb/>
committed no errors. Laura Crowder,<lb/>
Stephanie Hohr?n and Cheryl Hobson<lb/>
lead the Pirate hitters in the 15 hit game<lb/>
Crowder went 3-for-3 with two stolen<lb/>
bases. Stephanie Hobson a Is vsent 3-<lb/>
for-3 while sister Cheryl batted 3-for-4<lb/>
during the con test Shern Allen got into<lb/>
the action with her three RBI triple to<lb/>
light things up.<lb/>
In the Pirates' final game of the tour-<lb/>
nament, Parsons pitched ECU to extra<lb/>
innings before succumbing to her Hth<lb/>
lost of the season. The Lady Pirates<lb/>
tmik the No. 13 nationallv ranked Game-<lb/>
cocks 11 innings before losing the con-<lb/>
test 1-0. Crowder went 3-for? and Lisa<lb/>
Coreprew went 2-for-5 in a losing ef-<lb/>
fort.<lb/>
The 38-16 Lady Pirates play today<lb/>
at 3 p.m. against North Carolina at the<lb/>
Ladv Pirate field (across from Albed<lb/>
Health.)<lb/>
N.C State, Ga. Tech win in ACC action<lb/>
N.C . State 2, Virginia 1<lb/>
RALEIGH (AP) Vinnv<lb/>
Hughes hit a one-out triple in<lb/>
the bottom of the ninth inning<lb/>
to drive in the tying run and set<lb/>
up Kevin Ross' game-winning<lb/>
hit as North Carolina State de-<lb/>
feated Virginia 2-1 Sunday.<lb/>
N.C. State improved to 36-<lb/>
12 overall and 12-9 in the ACC.<lb/>
Virginia fell to 14-25, 3-17.<lb/>
Virginia took the early lead<lb/>
in the second inning when Hans<lb/>
Martinsen singled and later<lb/>
scored on a two-out single by<lb/>
C asev Shore.<lb/>
It staved that way until the<lb/>
bottom of the ninth as Virginia's<lb/>
Kent Kruse (0-4) and N.C.<lb/>
State's Terrv Harvey locked up<lb/>
in a pitcher's duel. Harvey did<lb/>
not allow another run nd<lb/>
yielded ust six hits before be-<lb/>
ing relieved by Stacy Betts in<lb/>
the eighth inning. Reliever<lb/>
lamie Wolkosky (3-1) came on<lb/>
to pitch a perfect ninth inning<lb/>
and notch the win.<lb/>
Meanwhile, Kruse carried<lb/>
a no hitter through b 2-3 in-<lb/>
nings before yielding back-to-<lb/>
back singles to Paul Borawski<lb/>
and Rob Bark He maintained<lb/>
his shutout until the ninth when<lb/>
he walked Sean Drinkwater<lb/>
with one out and then gave up<lb/>
a triple to Hughes. Kevin Stock<lb/>
came on in relief and intention-<lb/>
ally walked the next two bat-<lb/>
ters to load the bases. Kevin<lb/>
Ross then singled to bring home<lb/>
Kip Bryan.<lb/>
Ga. Tech 6, UNC 3<lb/>
ATLANTA (AP) ? Michael<lb/>
Smith homered and drove in<lb/>
three runs to lead 14th-ranked<lb/>
Georgia Tech past North Caro-<lb/>
lina 6-3 Sunday and complete a<lb/>
sweep of a three-game Atlantic<lb/>
Coast Conference series.<lb/>
Tech (33-9, 10-7 ACC) built<lb/>
a ri-0 lead for Brent Colson (8-<lb/>
2), before the Tar Heels got<lb/>
three runs in the eighth.<lb/>
Smith got his two-run<lb/>
homer in the second, following<lb/>
Brian Alyea's RBI single.<lb/>
North Carolina starter<lb/>
Brian Willman (3-2) lasted into<lb/>
the sixth. He gave up nine hits<lb/>
and all six runs.<lb/>
Chris Cox and Manny<lb/>
DaSilva doubled in the Tar<lb/>
Heels' three-run eighth.<lb/>
FSU 11, Wake Forest 1<lb/>
WTNSTON-SALEM, N.C.<lb/>
(AP) ? Florida State scored five<lb/>
runs in the first innings and<lb/>
cruised to an 11-1 victory over<lb/>
Wake Forest Sunday, sweeping<lb/>
a three-game series.<lb/>
Chris Roberts went 3-for-4,<lb/>
with two RBI, while Tony<lb/>
Leibsack went 2-for-3, with an<lb/>
RBI and a solo home run for<lb/>
Florida State (33-14, 13-7 ACC)<lb/>
in the second inning.<lb/>
Seminole starter Roger Bai-<lb/>
ley (10-3) pitched 6 1-3 innings,<lb/>
allowing only a solo home run<lb/>
to Brad Pryce in the sixth. Bai-<lb/>
ley allowed only six hits and<lb/>
three walks while striking out<lb/>
eight.<lb/>
Wake Forest (25-16,9-9) had<lb/>
runners in every inning but the<lb/>
ninth. The Demon Deacons left<lb/>
12 men on base, including the<lb/>
bases loaded in both the first<lb/>
and seventh innings.<lb/>
Clemson 5, ASU 3<lb/>
CLEMSON, S.C. (AP) ?<lb/>
Keith Williams hit his eighth<lb/>
home run of the year in the<lb/>
eighth inning to clinch<lb/>
See ACC, page 11<lb/>
Crowder, Parsons<lb/>
lead NCAA ranks<lb/>
By Charles Mitchell<lb/>
Senior Sporta Writer<lb/>
Two ECU Lady Pirates<lb/>
worked their way to the top of<lb/>
the NCAA charts for women's<lb/>
fastpitch Softball.<lb/>
Senior co-captain Laura<lb/>
"Lou" Crowder has the nation's<lb/>
record for most stolen bases in a<lb/>
season with her astounding 51-<lb/>
of-52 base stealing tor a percent-<lb/>
ageof .993. In addition, Crowder<lb/>
also holds the new NC AA record<lb/>
for most consecutive stolen bases<lb/>
without being thrown out.<lb/>
Crowders' amazing string<lb/>
of 69 stolen bases (over a three-<lb/>
season period) tops the old<lb/>
record of 54 set bv Donna Newell<lb/>
of UCLA. With her well blended<lb/>
mix of speed and talent Crowder<lb/>
is also ranked No. 18 in the na-<lb/>
tion in batting. She sports a .483<lb/>
batting percentage in V games<lb/>
played.<lb/>
lenny "Scrappv" Parsons is<lb/>
the natit ns leader with most vic-<lb/>
tories in a single season.<lb/>
Parsons' 36 wins leads all<lb/>
other pitchers in the nation rank-<lb/>
ing her 11 th with a 79.8 win per-<lb/>
centage. Parsons throws a vari-<lb/>
ety of pitches ranging from her<lb/>
wicked curve ball to her floating<lb/>
riser to her blistering fastball ?<lb/>
not to exclude herdrop, fork and<lb/>
other pitches, Parsons continues<lb/>
to mix up her bag of tricks to<lb/>
keep her opponents guessing.<lb/>
As a junior, rarsons is ex-<lb/>
pected to return next vear and<lb/>
lead the Lady Pirates to vet an-<lb/>
other winning season.<lb/>
NBA playoffs end topsy-turvey season<lb/>
(AP) ? Going into the last of<lb/>
1,1117 regular-season games, the 16<lb/>
NBA plaoff teams still were not<lb/>
determined Sunday night after Mi-<lb/>
ami,Houstonand Atlanta lost games<lb/>
that would have guaranteed a spot<lb/>
in the postseason party.<lb/>
Miami could have clinched the<lb/>
final Eastern Conference spot, but<lb/>
kst 109-93 to Boston, which sealed<lb/>
the No. 2 seed in the conference with<lb/>
a 109-93 victory over the Heat<lb/>
That left the door open for At-<lb/>
. lanta, but the Hawks lost 112-108 at<lb/>
-Cleveland, giving the berth back to<lb/>
? Heat. Both Miami and Atlanta<lb/>
nished with 38-44 records, with<lb/>
;jMiami getting the first playoff berth<lb/>
-jmong the four most recent expan-<lb/>
sion teams on the basis of having a<lb/>
"fetter conference record than the<lb/>
Hawks.<lb/>
m Houston could have clinched<lb/>
?ijhe Final Western Conference berth.<lb/>
but fell at home, 100-97 to Phoenix.<lb/>
With those outcomes, the first-<lb/>
round pairings in the Eastern Gin-<lb/>
ference have Miami playing Chi-<lb/>
cago, Indiana facing Boston, New<lb/>
Jersey meeting Cleveland and De-<lb/>
troit meeting New York.<lb/>
In the West, it's Utah and the<lb/>
Los Angeles Clippers, Seattle and<lb/>
Golden State,San Antonio and Phoe-<lb/>
nix, and Portland against either<lb/>
Houston or the Los Angeles Lakers.<lb/>
The Rockets' loss gave the Lak-<lb/>
ers, in the last game of the regular<lb/>
season, a chance to make the play-<lb/>
offs for the 16th consecutive year<lb/>
with a victory over the Los Angeles<lb/>
Clippers. The Clippers on Thursday<lb/>
night clinched their first playoff berth<lb/>
since 1976.<lb/>
The Lakers stayed alive with an<lb/>
upset victory on Saturday at Port-<lb/>
land.<lb/>
Jeff Hornacek scored 18 posits<lb/>
for the Suns, already assured of the<lb/>
No. 4 playoff spot in the Western<lb/>
Conference.<lb/>
"Nobody can say we didn't try<lb/>
to win this game Piwenix coach<lb/>
Cotton Fitzsirnmons said. "1 told the<lb/>
team that if Houston gets in, they'll<lb/>
have to earn it by beating us<lb/>
"It was a day when the lid was<lb/>
on the casket Rockets coach Rudy<lb/>
Tomjanovich said. "Balls would be<lb/>
on the rim and come out We missed<lb/>
little things and had lapses. It wasn't<lb/>
a day to have a game like that"<lb/>
The Celtics capped a late-sea-<lb/>
sm surge to their 14th Atlantic Divi-<lb/>
sion title in 20 years with their eighth<lb/>
consecutive victory without ailing<lb/>
Larry Bird.<lb/>
"AD I can say is, 'GoOevelancL<lb/>
Miami coach Kevin Loughery said<lb/>
before the Cavaliers wort "We got<lb/>
See NBA, page 11<lb/>
ECU Photo Lab<lb/>
Just kickin' around<lb/>
Weather always seems to ptey an important role in whal ECU students do for fun Here, these guys piav<lb/>
a little hackey sac to pass the time between studying Remember, Barefoot on the Mail is this afternoon<lb/>
ACC<lb/>
Clemson's 5-3 victory Sunday<lb/>
over Appalachian State<lb/>
Williams' hit came after the<lb/>
game had been delayed twice<lb/>
by rain, the first time briefly<lb/>
but for nearly an hour the sec-<lb/>
ond time<lb/>
Clemson (38-7) scored in<lb/>
the first inning<lb/>
Northrop led withi<lb/>
made it home on<lb/>
single.<lb/>
The Tigers sc<lb/>
the third with a su<lb/>
len base by Ted<lb/>
single by North!<lb/>
Love wins<lb/>
Heritage<lb/>
Classic for<lb/>
second time<lb/>
HILTON HEAD lSLAND.S.C.<lb/>
(AP) ? Davis Love III, vho won<lb/>
his third Heritage Gassk n et the<lb/>
weekend, says it was a different<lb/>
player who won ir<lb/>
"There's so much room be-<lb/>
tween mv win :r 57 and my . m<lb/>
last year Love said<lb/>
Or this year<lb/>
"I feel like a completely diffi i<lb/>
ent player, he said, "I've ma-<lb/>
tured<lb/>
Love no longer just tries t<lb/>
for cash. He - improved all of his<lb/>
game, including putting, which<lb/>
mav have been his weakest area<lb/>
when he hit the PGA Tour n i<lb/>
"I lot of people consider him a<lb/>
long hitter fellow golfer Russ<lb/>
Cochran said. "I think that -<lb/>
oneofhi weapons now. He's<lb/>
from the word go.<lb/>
"Davis is a good combination.<lb/>
You get a guv who can drive it with<lb/>
length and straight, and a guv<lb/>
who's a good putter and got a head<lb/>
on his shoulder, that's a winning<lb/>
combination<lb/>
The 28-year-old Love has w m<lb/>
two of his last three tournaments<lb/>
and has been in the top eight in<lb/>
four of his last five. He is second on<lb/>
the money list to red-hot Fred<lb/>
Couples.<lb/>
Were it not for Couples, Love<lb/>
would be the stone oi the pro tour.<lb/>
And there are some who feel the<lb/>
former North Carolina All-Amen-<lb/>
can is in Couples' class.<lb/>
"He's become a woridt-dass<lb/>
plaverMarkO'Mearasaid. "He <lb/>
got all the talent and potential to be<lb/>
oneof the bes t players in the world.<lb/>
He'sin the same category as Fred<lb/>
Love shies away from such<lb/>
comparisons.<lb/>
"I just think Freddie's learned<lb/>
how to play the game. He's a very<lb/>
athletic golfer. He's a feel and touch<lb/>
golfer, nota scientific and mechani-<lb/>
cal golfer. I think that s the way the<lb/>
game should be played Lovesaid.<lb/>
"1 need to move mv game in that<lb/>
direction.<lb/>
"Freddie's arrived. I see my-<lb/>
self as being a year or two behind<lb/>
Freddie in expenence"<lb/>
As good as Love is p laving, the<lb/>
comparisons with Couples are in-<lb/>
evitable. They both will plav in the<lb/>
Greater Greensboro Open this<lb/>
week. Couples skipped the Hen-<lb/>
tage after winning the Masters<lb/>
Love lost to Couples in a plav-<lb/>
off at the Los .Angeles Open earlier<lb/>
this year.<lb/>
Love is the first plaver to win<lb/>
the Heritage Classic three times<lb/>
and only the second to win back-<lb/>
to-back titles He savs he now has<lb/>
more confidence and tournament<lb/>
toughness<lb/>
"I've learned to control my<lb/>
swing pace under pressure he<lb/>
said. "Guys that hit the ball a long<lb/>
wav have to have even more con-<lb/>
trol over their swing<lb/>
He said his best swings come<lb/>
when he hits the ball with about SO<lb/>
percent of his power.<lb/>
Love found the control after<lb/>
the death in late 1988 of his father<lb/>
and lifekmggolf teacher. Butfirstit<lb/>
took some time to get over his loss.<lb/>
"Mv swing wasn't there for a<lb/>
while and my game wasn't there<lb/>
for a while because I was trying to<lb/>
do too much on my own Love<lb/>
said.<lb/>
But he began working with<lb/>
golf teachers lack Lumpkin and<lb/>
Bruce Harmon along with sports<lb/>
psychologist Bob Rotella.<lb/>
Love also added his brother,<lb/>
Mark, a one-time golf teacher, to<lb/>
his golfing cadre as caddy and on-<lb/>
the-course counselor.<lb/>
"I've got some people I can<lb/>
trust with my swing now Love<lb/>
said. "I just have some direction<lb/>
now. I think in that stretch in W it<lb/>
wasn't that I wasn't working hard.<lb/>
I just kind of tost my direction<lb/>
BE kl<lb/>
You <lb/>
Sundrc<lb/>
Shorts<lb/>
Tanks<lb/>
A<lb/>
We Br<lb/>
OutY<lb/>
Best.<lb/>
Treat <lb/>
to lots<lb/>
lookfor<lb/>
with:<lb/>
? coloring<lb/>
? highlight! j<lb/>
? tanning<lb/>
? waxing<lb/>
M<lb/>
S<lb/>
THE LI<lb/>
Registrar<lb/>
Get your ft<lb/>
Team merr,<lb/>
For<lb/>
Fun,<lb/>
Gu<lb/>
HOSTED Bl<lb/>
Alpha Phi 01<lb/>
American Cl<lb/>
APPLICi<lb/>
Mail<lb/>
P.O.<lb/>
<pb facs="00058320_0018"/><lb/>
mht gam (Barolintan April 23, 1991 11<lb/>
Sports<lb/>
mpUNC<lb/>
header 3-0,4-3<lb/>
da<lb/>
i<lb/>
v<lb/>
it run<lb/>
again<lb/>
fter<lb/>
rurna-<lb/>
uth-<lb/>
dk'T,<lb/>
lengf with three rum of thoir own in<lb/>
their half of the third e rowder stroked I<lb/>
single dow n the third baseline and later<lb/>
stole second With one out Hohson<lb/>
received ' base on Kill- to re.uh first<lb/>
to put runners on the lorners for<lb/>
Wilke<lb/>
Onal 2 count Wilke drove shot to<lb/>
nd tor the fielders choke RBI that<lb/>
scoredrowdet from third With C.<lb/>
ion on thud and Wilke on second,<lb/>
senior fl rsl baseman c hn-tv Kee blasted<lb/>
,i seeing eve single to left field toaccourrt<lb/>
, - rwo runs batted in and end the<lb/>
for the Pirates<lb/>
h the score now 4-3, the Pirate<lb/>
turned up their game a notch and<lb/>
illv shutout the regions number four<lb/>
wenl on to record three<lb/>
strikeout and her Jeth win of the season.<lb/>
rhe40 16 Lad) Pirate will play their<lb/>
ason home game tixlav<lb/>
rvst L NC Wilmington at the Lady<lb/>
ross from Allied Heath).<lb/>
eduledstarttimeis3p.m for the<lb/>
doubleheader<lb/>
es at USC<lb/>
lobson and Cheryl Hobson<lb/>
irate hitter-in the 15 hit game.<lb/>
for-3 with two stolen<lb/>
I ink Hobson also went 3-<lb/>
while sister Cheryl hatted 3-for-4<lb/>
during the contest Sherri Allen pot into<lb/>
? ? Ktion with her three RBI triple to<lb/>
' things up<lb/>
In the Pirates' final game of the tour<lb/>
nament, Parsons pitched ECU to extra<lb/>
inning- before succumbing to her HKh<lb/>
lost of the season ihe Lady Pirates<lb/>
took the No. 13 nationally ranked Game<lb/>
? - 11 innings before losing the con-<lb/>
test l1 C row dor went Mor-5 and Lisa<lb/>
( oreorew went 2-for-5 in a losing ef-<lb/>
fort<lb/>
rhe 38-16 Lady Pirates play today<lb/>
at " p m against orth Carolina at the<lb/>
Lady Pirate field (across from Allied<lb/>
Health .<lb/>
der, Parsons<lb/>
NCAA ranks<lb/>
Mitchell<lb/>
Writer<lb/>
I Pirates<lb/>
ly to the top of<lb/>
tor women's<lb/>
iptam Laura<lb/>
ias the nation's<lb/>
Itolen bases in a<lb/>
bounding 51<lb/>
Igtorapenent-<lb/>
lition.c rowder<lb/>
NCAA record<lb/>
. e stolen bases<lb/>
Irown out<lb/>
imaing string<lb/>
I, (over a three-<lb/>
tops the old<lb/>
mna Newell<lb/>
?r well blended<lb/>
Ulent,( rowder<lb/>
is also ranked No IS in the na-<lb/>
tion in batting She sports a.483<lb/>
batting percentage in games<lb/>
played<lb/>
lennv "Scrappy" Pan-on, is<lb/>
the ruitu ns leader with most vic-<lb/>
tories in a single season.<lb/>
Parsons' 36 wins leads all<lb/>
other pitchers in the nation rank-<lb/>
ing her 11 th with a 74.S win per-<lb/>
centage Parsons throws a vari-<lb/>
ety of pitches ranging from her<lb/>
wicked curve ball to her floating<lb/>
nser to her hhstenng fastball ?<lb/>
not to exclude her drop, fork and<lb/>
other pih hes Parsons continues<lb/>
to mix up her bag of tricks to<lb/>
keep her opponents guessing.<lb/>
As a unior, Parsons is ex-<lb/>
pected to return next vear and<lb/>
lead the Lady Pirates to vet an-<lb/>
other winning season<lb/>
? -at ???9<lb/>
KL4S?<lb/>
rc<lb/>
.?l- to 0 ?<lb/>
PteMo by Kevin<lb/>
ECU Photo Uk<lb/>
ECU students do for fun Here, these guys play<lb/>
Remember, Barefoot on the Mall i this afternoon.<lb/>
 .<lb/>
ACC<lb/>
Continued from page 10<lb/>
NBA<lb/>
Continued from page 10<lb/>
Clemson's 5-3 victory Sunday<lb/>
over Appalachian State.<lb/>
Williams' hit came after the<lb/>
ame had been delayed twice<lb/>
bv rain, the first time briefly<lb/>
but for nearly an hour the sec-<lb/>
ond time.<lb/>
Clemson (38-7) scored in<lb/>
Love wins<lb/>
Heritage<lb/>
Gassic for<lb/>
second time<lb/>
HILTON HEAD1SLANDS.C.<lb/>
tAP) ? Davis Love HI, who won<lb/>
his third Heritage Classic over the<lb/>
weekend, says it was a different<lb/>
player who won in 1987.<lb/>
"There's so much room be-<lb/>
tween my win in '87 and my win<lb/>
last year Love said.<lb/>
Or this year.<lb/>
"I feel like a completely differ-<lb/>
ent player he said. "I've ma-<lb/>
tured<lb/>
Love no longer just tries to blast<lb/>
tor cash. He's improved all of his<lb/>
game, including putting, which<lb/>
may have been his weakest area<lb/>
when he hit the PGA Tour in 1985.<lb/>
"1 lot of people consider him a<lb/>
long hitter fellow golfer Russ<lb/>
( ochran said. "I think that's just<lb/>
oneof his weapons now. He's solid<lb/>
from the word go.<lb/>
"Davis is a good combination.<lb/>
You get a guy who can drive it with<lb/>
length and straight, and a guy<lb/>
who's a good putter and got a head<lb/>
on his shoulder, that's a winning<lb/>
combination<lb/>
The 28-year-old Love has won<lb/>
two of his last three tournaments<lb/>
and has been in the top eight in<lb/>
four of his last five. He is second on<lb/>
the money list to red-hot Fred<lb/>
Couples.<lb/>
Were it not for Couples, Love<lb/>
would be the story of the pro tour.<lb/>
And there are some who feel the<lb/>
former North Carolina All-Ameri-<lb/>
can is in Couples' class.<lb/>
"He's become a world-class<lb/>
player Mark O'Meara said. "He's<lb/>
got all the talent and potential to be<lb/>
one of the best players in the world.<lb/>
He's in the same category as Fred<lb/>
Love shies away from such<lb/>
comparisons.<lb/>
"1 just think Freddie's learned<lb/>
how to play the game. He's a very<lb/>
athleticgolfer. He'sa feel and touch<lb/>
golfer, not a scientific and mechani-<lb/>
cal golfer. 1 think that's the way the<lb/>
game should be played Lovesaid.<lb/>
"1 need to move my game in that<lb/>
direction.<lb/>
"Freddie's arrived. I seemy-<lb/>
self as being a year or two behind<lb/>
Freddie in experience<lb/>
As good as Love is playing, the<lb/>
comparisons with Couples are in-<lb/>
evitable. They bom will play in the<lb/>
Greater Greensboro Open this<lb/>
week. Couples skipped the Heri-<lb/>
tage after winning the Masters.<lb/>
Love lost to Couples in a play-<lb/>
off at the Los Angeles Open earlier<lb/>
this year.<lb/>
Love is the first player to win<lb/>
the Heritage Classic three times<lb/>
and only the second to win back-<lb/>
to-back titles. He says he now has<lb/>
more confidence and "tournament<lb/>
toughness<lb/>
"I've learned to control my<lb/>
swing pace under pressure he<lb/>
said. "Guys that hit the ball a long<lb/>
way have to have even more con-<lb/>
trol over their swing<lb/>
He said his best swings come<lb/>
when he hits the ball with about 80<lb/>
percent of his power.<lb/>
Love found the control after<lb/>
the death in late 1988 of his father<lb/>
and lifelonggolf teacher. Butfirstlt<lb/>
took some time to get over his loss.<lb/>
"My swing wasn't there for a<lb/>
while and my game wasn't there<lb/>
for a while because I was trying to<lb/>
do too much on my own Love<lb/>
said.<lb/>
But he began working with<lb/>
golf teachers Jack Lumpkin and<lb/>
Bruce Harmon along with sports<lb/>
psychologist Bob Rotella.<lb/>
Love also added his brother,<lb/>
Mark, a one-time golf teacher, to<lb/>
his golfing cadre as caddy and on-<lb/>
the-course counselor.<lb/>
"I've got some people I can<lb/>
trust with my swing now Love<lb/>
said. "I just have some direction<lb/>
now. I think in that stretch in W It<lb/>
wasn't that I wasn't working hard.<lb/>
I just kind of tost my direction<lb/>
the first inning when Kevin<lb/>
Northrop led with a double and<lb/>
made it home on Jeff Morris'<lb/>
single.<lb/>
The Tigers scored again in<lb/>
the third with a single and sto-<lb/>
len base by Ted Corbin and a<lb/>
single by Northrop. Morris<lb/>
walked and Keith Williams was<lb/>
safe on a double error, and both<lb/>
made it home on a Shawn<lb/>
Satterfield triple.<lb/>
The Mountaineers (16-31)<lb/>
scored first in the fourth on a<lb/>
Joe Bernard walk, a sacrifice<lb/>
and a single by Jody Broyles.<lb/>
Appalachian State scored<lb/>
again after the second rain de-<lb/>
lay when Brent Cardwell<lb/>
walked and Randy DeBruhl<lb/>
singled.<lb/>
Paul O'Neil's single<lb/>
brought them home following<lb/>
a Broyles sacrifice.<lb/>
beat, butwe played hard. You'vegot<lb/>
to give Boston anawful lot of credit"<lb/>
Boston completed a comeback<lb/>
from five games behind New York<lb/>
witheightgamestoplayand tied the<lb/>
Knicks with a 51-31 record.<lb/>
Boston gets the No. 2 seed be-<lb/>
hind Chicago in the conference be-<lb/>
cause the Celtics beat New York 3-2<lb/>
in the season series.<lb/>
Atianta,tryingtornakethe play-<lb/>
offs for theseventhconsecutiveyear,<lb/>
led 108-107 in the final minutes be-<lb/>
fore Mark Price scored five points in<lb/>
the final 9,6 seconds for Cleveland.<lb/>
BE KIND TO YOUR BODY . . .<lb/>
You've worked your mind all year, so give your<lb/>
body a break. Dress it in all natural fabrics-<lb/>
QWU FOOTBALL VIDEC<lb/>
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Shorts<lb/>
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Arlington Village '919 Redbanks Rd. ? 756-1058<lb/>
OF THE 1991 SEASON!<lb/>
Order Your Highlight Video Today<lb/>
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We Bring<lb/>
Out Your<lb/>
Best<lb/>
Treat yourself<lb/>
to lots of great<lb/>
look for spring<lb/>
with:<lb/>
? coloring<lb/>
? highlighting<lb/>
? tanning<lb/>
? waxing<lb/>
A<lb/>
East Carolina University's<lb/>
Student Union Board of Directors<lb/>
is taking applications for<lb/>
DAY-STUDENT REPRESENTATIVES<lb/>
for the 1992-1993 term<lb/>
Responsibilities: ? Selecting the Student Union President<lb/>
? Approving Committee Chairpersons<lb/>
? Approving the Student Union Budget<lb/>
? Setting Policy for the Student Union<lb/>
Qualifications: ? Full-time Student<lb/>
? Resides Off Campus<lb/>
? Independent<lb/>
Deadline to apply: Monday, April 27,1992 by 12:00 noon<lb/>
Applications can be picked up at the Student Union<lb/>
Office - Room 236 Mendenhall<lb/>
? cuts<lb/>
? sets<lb/>
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Mon-Sai 9-3Qm4p<lb/>
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THE LEO JENKINS MEMORIAL<lb/>
JOIN THE FIGHT<lb/>
May 1 &amp; 2 (Fri, Sat)<lb/>
Starting time 6pm<lb/>
Registration begins at 4:30pm at the ECU track.<lb/>
Get your team of 8-10 people together to walk,<lb/>
run or jog against cancer.<lb/>
Team members run or walk in shifts for 24 hours<lb/>
For more information, call 752-2574.<lb/>
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<pb facs="00058320_0019"/><lb/>
12 Stic ?aat (Earultnian April 23, 1992<lb/>
(AP) The Edmonton Oilers<lb/>
are part oi Wayne Gretzky's past<lb/>
Ihe I os Angeles Kings hope his<lb/>
future includes another Stanley<lb/>
( up<lb/>
Gretzk) who led Edmonton<lb/>
to tour NHL championships be-<lb/>
fore being dealt to Los Angeles m<lb/>
August 1988, was part Of a parade<lb/>
of ev Oilers who came back to tor-<lb/>
ment their tormor team Monday<lb/>
night<lb/>
Gretzky had tour assists and<lb/>
tour other members o the Oilers'<lb/>
Kenyan runner<lb/>
wins Boston<lb/>
Marathon for<lb/>
third time<lb/>
BOSTON (AP) Plenty of<lb/>
runners had speed and stamina<lb/>
Ibrahim Hussein and Olga<lb/>
Markova also had the smarts to<lb/>
sur ive a brisk early pace<lb/>
fhey lurked hundredsor" yards<lb/>
behind the early loaders, saving<lb/>
their energj and waiting tor the<lb/>
pa esetters to poop out. Then they<lb/>
spurted ahead and galloped the<lb/>
final six miles unchallenged in ihe<lb/>
Boston Marathon<lb/>
And both crossed the finish<lb/>
line Monda) with fantastic times.<lb/>
Hussein a Kenyan who won<lb/>
his third Boston Marathon and sec-<lb/>
ond in a row, had the HM'mi best<lb/>
men's time of the races in the<lb/>
o ent s history, 2 hours. S minutes<lb/>
14 seconds.<lb/>
Markova a Russian making<lb/>
her first !ston appearance won<lb/>
in 2 2; 4 ? these ond best women's<lb/>
time m Boston since 1972 when<lb/>
women became official competi-<lb/>
tors in the race, and the best<lb/>
women's time in the world in five<lb/>
years.<lb/>
lheir rewards were impres-<lb/>
sive ?60,000 e.nh tor winning.<lb/>
So were their victory margins a<lb/>
2-minute 25-secondadvantagefot<lb/>
Hussein o ei oaquim Pinheiroof<lb/>
Portugal and a 2-minute, 43-sec-<lb/>
md gap between Markova and<lb/>
i oshiko amamoto of Japan.<lb/>
fhe weather i loudy skies<lb/>
and i temperature ol 58 degrees at<lb/>
the starl was conducive to a fast<lb/>
pace<lb/>
Uta Pippig of Germany, oneol<lb/>
thew omen sta oritesanda victim<lb/>
he early pace, realized her mis-<lb/>
take when she tried to keep up<lb/>
with leader Wanda Panfi! in the<lb/>
early staj<lb/>
Ihe pace, she said, "was razy.<lb/>
 I was s(i tired<lb/>
Panni, the favorite and defend-<lb/>
ing champion, later suc umbed to<lb/>
the speed as Markova went by her<lb/>
just after the ln-mile mark of the<lb/>
2f-mile, 385-yard endurance test.<lb/>
I'ippig recover to finish third,<lb/>
while Panfil en? ? vi jp sixth.<lb/>
"She's reallv happv she didn't<lb/>
run with Wanda on the first part<lb/>
because the second part is very-<lb/>
hard, " a translator said for<lb/>
Markova moments after she<lb/>
crossed the finish line.<lb/>
Ihe pace was even faster<lb/>
am ng the men as Simon Karon of<lb/>
Kenya covered the first 10 kilome-<lb/>
ters, just over h miles, in 28:43, one<lb/>
set i nd faster than the former Bos-<lb/>
ton record for that checkpoint.<lb/>
He had charged in front at the<lb/>
start and held a lead of up to 200<lb/>
yards over a pack that ranged from<lb/>
four to eight other runners, all Af-<lb/>
ricans But at 13 miles, Hussein,<lb/>
threeother Kenyans and three-time<lb/>
runner-up Juma Ikangaa of Tanza-<lb/>
nia caught him and Karon was<lb/>
never a factor after that<lb/>
Hussein, who beat Ikangaa by<lb/>
one second in 19HH in the closest<lb/>
finish ever in Boston, ran with<lb/>
Ikangaa and Boniface Merende of<lb/>
Kenya to the 20-mile mark.<lb/>
Then Ikangaa faded. One mile<lb/>
later, Merendedropped back, leav-<lb/>
ing Hussein striding strongly ac-<lb/>
companied only by the throng that<lb/>
cheered from the sides of the road.<lb/>
Ikangaa finished fourth and<lb/>
Merende sixth.<lb/>
Hussein was confident Karori<lb/>
couldn't last at his fast pace.<lb/>
"1 wasn't worried about him<lb/>
Hussein said. "I would have been<lb/>
worried if he were still in the lead<lb/>
at 16 miles<lb/>
Pinheiro, the runner-up in<lb/>
2:1039, said, "I tried to stay back.<lb/>
The first part of the race was too<lb/>
fast. I couldn't go out fast like the<lb/>
other runners did<lb/>
dynasty combined for five goals as<lb/>
the Kings outscored Edmonton 8-5<lb/>
to even their Smythe Division semi-<lb/>
final series at one victory apiece.<lb/>
"I reallv felt that after the first<lb/>
game, the way they came out to-<lb/>
night was instrumental in getting<lb/>
us going Kings coach Tom<lb/>
Webster said.<lb/>
Paul Coffey had two goals and<lb/>
Martv McSorley, Charlie Huddv<lb/>
and lari Kurri each hid one In all,<lb/>
the fiveex-Oilerscombined for five<lb/>
goalsand nineassists. LAhad three<lb/>
it former I<lb/>
power-plav goals after going 0<lb/>
for 9 in tlie opener<lb/>
" I don't think vou can expect<lb/>
tohoUK .retkv,l offevand Kurn<lb/>
down tor too long said<lb/>
lAlmonUui'slV'rnieNicholls,who<lb/>
sco red twice I hev've got a great<lb/>
power plav. We )ust have to be<lb/>
disciplined and not take a lot of<lb/>
penalties<lb/>
in the other Smythe Division<lb/>
semifinal, Vancouver evened the<lb/>
series with a 3-2 victory over<lb/>
WinnipeginCame2 IntheNorns<lb/>
King!<lb/>
rL i tivinn it'sNewlersevattheew<lb/>
1 Vision, Minnesota took a two- with a 5-3 victory at Chicago. Ui "?? P&amp;sbun at<lb/>
gam lead with a 4-2 victory ,n Ihe four Wales Conference YoARaBS and<lb/>
Detroit and St. Louis pulled even nes resume tonight. In the Patrick Washington <lb/>
9 p m2 a.m<lb/>
2 completely separate Cubs<lb/>
Under One Roof<lb/>
MOTHERS PLAYHOUSE<lb/>
PUTT-PUTT<lb/>
K<lb/>
Mon-Thur 6-11<lb/>
, Friday 6-1<lb/>
orlwlde. W '?.<lb/>
10th St. past DunWn Donut8Suy j-io<lb/>
hJ3" '?"<lb/>
axplrt May 30, 1992<lb/>
axplr? May 30. 1992<lb/>
<pb facs="00058320_0020"/><lb/>
12 dlic t:a?t (Earollnian April 23, 1992<lb/>
former Oilers combine for Kings win<lb/>
. s  Imun .U tr,?- ' .1<lb/>
<lb/>
lure<lb/>
he 1 dmontonHlers<lb/>
ay ne (iretzk s past<lb/>
;eles Kings hope hi-<lb/>
les another Stanle<lb/>
tO fOUl l<lb/>
dvnasty i ombined tor ti egoalsas<lb/>
the Kings outscored Edmonton 8 5<lb/>
toe en their Smythel i isionsemi<lb/>
tinal series at one victory apiei e<lb/>
I really felt that after the first<lb/>
who led I dmonton game the a they came out to<lb/>
championships be night was instrumental in getting<lb/>
ilti Us Angeles in us going kings coach rom<lb/>
was part ot a parade Webstei said.<lb/>
ame ba? k to tor PauK offey had two goals and<lb/>
team Monday Marty McSorley,harlie Huddy<lb/>
and Ian Kurn each had one In all,<lb/>
id ? ii assists and thefiveex-Oilerscombined for five<lb/>
; the Oilers goalsand nine assists. LA had three<lb/>
powei play goals aftei going !<lb/>
tot 9 in the opener<lb/>
I don t mink you can expet I<lb/>
toholdGretzkyoffey and Kurri<lb/>
dou n tor too long, '?ant<lb/>
I dmonton s BemieNicholls who<lb/>
scored twice fhev vegotagreat<lb/>
power pla We just have to be<lb/>
dis liplined and not take a lot of<lb/>
penalties<lb/>
Inthfothtt Smythe I h ision<lb/>
semifinal, Vancouver evened the<lb/>
series with a '? " ictory over<lb/>
Winnipegin iame2 IntheNorris<lb/>
Division, Minnesota took a two with a 5-3 victory at rucago Division N<lb/>
Kame load with a 4 2 victory in fhe four Wales onferencese fork Rangers and<lb/>
I fctroitandSt Louis pulled even ries resume tonight In the Patrick Washington<lb/>
PUTT-PUTT<lb/>
With over 1,000<lb/>
courses world wide.<lb/>
Kenyan runner<lb/>
wins Boston<lb/>
Marathon for<lb/>
third time<lb/>
Mon-Thur 5-11<lb/>
Friday 5-1<lb/>
Saturday 10-11<lb/>
10th St. past Dunkln DonutsSy J-10<lb/>
expire May 30, 1992 I explreaMity 30, 1992<lb/>
lt ot<lb/>
ader;<lb/>
hen the<lb/>
ill<lb/>
? nish<lb/>
times<lb/>
?Maratl i indse<lb/>
'hi second l<lb/>
'e in the<lb/>
 <lb/>
? taking<lb/>
? 'earanct won<lb/>
?? ?  men's<lb/>
?<lb/>
'inheii<lb/>
? ' i ta-t<lb/>
nd-<lb/>
?<lb/>
ldura ? '<lb/>
on the first <lb/>
rid part is '?<lb/>
ator said for<lb/>
ed the finish line<lb/>
is even fastei<lb/>
? .  - : iriof<lb/>
Ken ? the first kik me-<lb/>
istover6miles in28:43,one<lb/>
 : fa ? ? ! than the former Bos-<lb/>
? ? re rd I ' that heckpoint.<lb/>
?. hadcl irgedin tront at the<lb/>
 h I a lead of up to 200<lb/>
? ? it ranged trom<lb/>
. ? ? ?' ei runners, all At<lb/>
But at I miles I lussein,<lb/>
threeother Kem an-ami three-time<lb/>
runner upjumalkangaaof l.in.i<lb/>
ma caught him and Karon was<lb/>
?ii?: ei a fat tor after that<lb/>
 lussein, who beat lkangaa h<lb/>
one second in 1988 in the ck)sest<lb/>
finish ever in Boston, ran sith<lb/>
lkangaa and Bonifa e Merende of<lb/>
Kenya to the 20-mile mark.<lb/>
Ihen lkangaa faded ?nemike<lb/>
later, Merendedroppedba k,lea -<lb/>
ing Hussein striding strongly ac-<lb/>
companied only by the throng that<lb/>
cheered from the sides of the road<lb/>
lkangaa finished fourth and<lb/>
Merende sixth.<lb/>
Hussein was confident Karon<lb/>
couldn't last at his fast pace<lb/>
"I wasn't worried about hint<lb/>
Hussein sod. "I would have been<lb/>
worried it he were -till in the lead<lb/>
at lf miles.<lb/>
Tinheiro, the runner-up in<lb/>
2:1039, said, I tried to stav back.<lb/>
Hie first part of the race was too<lb/>
fast I couldn't go out fast like the<lb/>
other runners did "<lb/>
<pb facs="00058320_0021"/><lb/>
12 vlhc East (Earulintan April23, 1992<lb/>
Gretzky, host of other former Oilers combine for Kings<lb/>
win<lb/>
?<lb/>
hiers dynasty combined for five goalsas power-pla goals attei<lb/>
i ? rJw Kings outscored Edmonton H i forMintrx<lb/>
v In- toeventheirSmytrwDivisionsemi Idon'tthink oucanexj<lb/>
i i? final series at one victory apiece toholdC.rel ? ffev?wdr<lb/>
I reall fell thataftei the firsl dov n !<lb/>
? - game the was they came out to Ldrnonton'slVnwNicholls.whi<lb/>
ht was instrumental in getting scored twici lhe<lb/>
, going Kings coach rom power pla We just have to fo<lb/>
, ,  ?. .  J dis liplinet<lb/>
luiU offe had two goals and penal! i<lb/>
v irt McSorle harlie Hudd In tl i<lb/>
,?nd lari Kurri each had one In.ill semifinal<lb/>
thefiveev-Oilerscombined for five series w<lb/>
inwlsandnineassists.l had three Winnipeg<lb/>
Minnesota took a two with a 5 I victory at Chicago<lb/>
game I?hJ with a 4 2 victory in rhefourWales onfi n i ? ?<lb/>
it and St Louis pulled even ries resume tonight In the Patrick<lb/>
.<lb/>
nt take ?<lb/>
Dubs<lb/>
?'<lb/>
TlV.VIy,<lb/>
Mon-Tnur Ml<lb/>
Friday 5-1<lb/>
Saturday 10-11<lb/>
PUTT-PUTT<lb/>
yxj w,th over 1'000<lb/>
NC. . courses world wide<lb/>
j' 10th St. past DunWn Donutssy<lb/>
BUY ON'tTx BUY ONE<lb/>
Kenyan runner<lb/>
wins Boston<lb/>
Marathon for<lb/>
third time<lb/>
expire May 30, 1992<lb/>
expire May 30, 1992<lb/>
? ?<lb/>
?<lb/>
? ? ?<lb/>
?<lb/>
trie ton<lb/>
- ? -nit<lb/>
? . ? ? ? reel i <lb/>
idol<lb/>
I Karoi was<lb/>
s i tl<lb/>
tnieu<lb/>
ran with<lb/>
i ? . mai k<lb/>
? . mile<lb/>
?? ? ea <lb/>
striding strongl) a<lb/>
? 'Iit<lb/>
, i the n iad<lb/>
. t fourth and<lb/>
Ikangaa I<lb/>
Merendi<lb/>
I ius ??'M n.is 11 mfident Karori<lb/>
, hi.in I la i .it his tat pa e<lb/>
" v. lit worried about him<lb/>
Hussein mi would have been<lb/>
worried it he were -till in the le.nl<lb/>
M h mil-<lb/>
Pinheiro, the runner up in<lb/>
2 10-39, said, "1 tried to stay back<lb/>
The first part of the race was too<lb/>
fast I couldn't goout fast likethe<lb/>
other runners di.i<lb/>
<pb facs="00058320_0022"/>
</div></body></text></TEI>