<?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="00058338_0001"/>
?.<lb/>
Can Courtney?<lb/>
Was Sherry Smith's absence part of SGA<lb/>
president Courtney Jones'plan to get elected?<lb/>
See pg. 4<lb/>
Irish Spring<lb/>
The Frank and Walters<lb/>
bring a breath of fresh<lb/>
modern music from Ireland.<lb/>
Seepg. 7.<lb/>
Sports<lb/>
Jerk them 'Cocks<lb/>
The Pirate football team will face the<lb/>
South Carolina Gamecocks Saturday.<lb/>
See pg. 9.<lb/>
m<lb/>
The East Carolinian<lb/>
mm1iBi.1111iM.iL1.iuu<lb/>
Vol. 67 No. 7<lb/>
Circulation 12,000<lb/>
Greenville, North Carolina<lb/>
Thursday, September 17,1992<lb/>
10 Pages<lb/>
Medical school<lb/>
receives top ranking<lb/>
By Christie Lawrence<lb/>
Staff Writer<lb/>
The Association of American Medi-<lb/>
cal Colleges (AAMC) ranked ECU's School<lb/>
of Medicine first in the nation for primary<lb/>
care physicians.<lb/>
The first-place ranking strengthens<lb/>
the school's reputation for graduating fam-<lb/>
ily doctors, pediatricians and internal<lb/>
medicine physicians.<lb/>
"Weare very gratified by this achieve-<lb/>
ment said Dr. James A. Hallock, vice<lb/>
chancellor for health sciences and dean of<lb/>
the medical school. "Not only is it proof<lb/>
positive that our medical school is meet-<lb/>
ing its foremost mandate, but it also re-<lb/>
flects the return on the hard work of so<lb/>
many people in creating an environment<lb/>
that allows primary care medicine to flour-<lb/>
ish<lb/>
The AAMC conducted the survey by<lb/>
looking back five years to the graduating<lb/>
classes of 1987 and calculating how many<lb/>
of those graduates are practicing primary<lb/>
health care. The five-year time frame con-<lb/>
firms that the general practitioners have<lb/>
not moved on to specializing in a particu-<lb/>
lar field.<lb/>
More than half of the 1987 gradu-<lb/>
ates of ECU's School of Medicine have<lb/>
become primary care physicians. ECU's<lb/>
ranking, shared with Southern Illinois,<lb/>
showed 53.7 percent of graduates pur-<lb/>
suing a career in primary health. The<lb/>
percentage more than doubled the na-<lb/>
tional rate of 25.6 percent.<lb/>
ECU's School of Medicine,<lb/>
founded in the mid70s, had a mission<lb/>
to encourage and recruit medical stu-<lb/>
dents in the field of primary health care.<lb/>
According Hallock, the ranking shows<lb/>
the school's consistent dedication to<lb/>
producing general practitioners rather<lb/>
than specialists.<lb/>
"I think this report clearly demon-<lb/>
strates the commitment that the school<lb/>
has had to its mission of primary care,<lb/>
and demonstrates the success that the<lb/>
school has had in fulfilling that mis-<lb/>
sion Hallock said.<lb/>
Specialties such as cardiology, ra-<lb/>
diology and gastroenterology attract<lb/>
medical students who seek more money<lb/>
See Med, page 3<lb/>
Smashing Pumpkins<lb/>
Photo by Dial Reed ? TEC<lb/>
Pumpkin grower Jim Craft of Hwy. 43 in Greenville gears up for Halloween. For the first time in three years, downtown<lb/>
bars will remain open Halloween night.<lb/>
Work begins on video yearbook<lb/>
By Marjorie Pitts<lb/>
Staff Writer<lb/>
Instead of turning to that fa-<lb/>
vorite page in the yearbook, it's<lb/>
time now to fast-forward to your<lb/>
favorite partof the video yearbook.<lb/>
Last spring, the med ia board voted<lb/>
on the video yearbook to be the<lb/>
unprecedented annual student<lb/>
media.<lb/>
The Media Board spent<lb/>
$53,000on new equipment for five<lb/>
years, giving the yearbook an an-<lb/>
nual budget of $10,000. In five<lb/>
years, the equipment will need to<lb/>
be updated. However, in previous<lb/>
years, the university has spent at<lb/>
least $60,000 annually to print a<lb/>
yearbook.<lb/>
Part of the new equipment<lb/>
includes a software application<lb/>
called the video toaster. The video<lb/>
toaster gives the ability to send two<lb/>
messages at once and allows the<lb/>
user to take a piece of tape and edit<lb/>
it in new ways. "The video toaster<lb/>
"We want everybody's input,<lb/>
we do not want anyone to feel<lb/>
like they're left out<lb/>
?Sam Matheny,<lb/>
executive producer of the<lb/>
video yearbook<lb/>
is very current, it's really only been<lb/>
available for about a year said Dr.<lb/>
Harrell Allen, chair of the commu-<lb/>
nication de- <lb/>
partment.<lb/>
"It repre-<lb/>
sents a new<lb/>
frontier, it's<lb/>
21st-century<lb/>
technol-<lb/>
ogy"<lb/>
Since<lb/>
the video<lb/>
toaster is so<lb/>
current, the 10-person staff is learn-<lb/>
ing as they go along. "We, the<lb/>
class, had a nine hour session that<lb/>
introduced us to the toaster said<lb/>
Sam Malheny, executive producer<lb/>
of the video. "This is a learning<lb/>
process. We want to put together a<lb/>
well-formatted, well-polished<lb/>
product that everybody will be<lb/>
proud of<lb/>
Matheny said the toaster<lb/>
gives high quality graphics and<lb/>
editing. "The video toaster we have<lb/>
is the most powerful in North Caro-<lb/>
lina right now Matheny said. "We<lb/>
want<lb/>
 everybody's<lb/>
input, we do<lb/>
not want any-<lb/>
one to feel like<lb/>
they're left<lb/>
out<lb/>
"I feel the<lb/>
students are<lb/>
very involved<lb/>
and dedicated,<lb/>
they're not just<lb/>
doing a project, but something<lb/>
real said Dr. Xue-Mei Zhang, pro-<lb/>
fessor of the class. "The class is<lb/>
ready toapply new knowledge and<lb/>
do something good<lb/>
According to Allen, the ma-<lb/>
jority of colleges and universi-<lb/>
ties are still using print instead of<lb/>
video, but the movement will be<lb/>
toward video because the new gen-<lb/>
eration has grown up on video.<lb/>
Another positiveaspectof the<lb/>
video is the ability to see, "reality<lb/>
on film opposed toa photo where<lb/>
a picture is frozen.<lb/>
The master copy of the video<lb/>
will be ready April 1, 1993. The<lb/>
Media Board will buy copies and<lb/>
sell at cost to students. Allen also<lb/>
hopes to have the video shown on<lb/>
cable television channels around<lb/>
the area so those students with ac-<lb/>
cess to a VCR can tape the video<lb/>
themselves.<lb/>
Even though school isonly in<lb/>
the fourth week, many events have<lb/>
been covered.<lb/>
"We've covered the football<lb/>
games, Kingof the Hill, Greek Day<lb/>
onthemallandtheKingstonTrio<lb/>
Matheny said.<lb/>
Any suggestions about the<lb/>
video yearbook, or if there's an<lb/>
event that you would like to see<lb/>
covered, there will be a suggestion<lb/>
box where you need to put your<lb/>
name, what you want covered and<lb/>
a phone number. You can put this<lb/>
information in a suggestion box<lb/>
outside the Media Board office.<lb/>
Computer lab limited<lb/>
to business students<lb/>
By Tammy Carter<lb/>
Staff Writer<lb/>
Computers in the busi-<lb/>
ness department's student lab<lb/>
are available only to those stu-<lb/>
dents enrolled in business<lb/>
classes.<lb/>
According to Rick Har-<lb/>
ris, a microcomputer consult-<lb/>
ant the academic computing<lb/>
department, the business labs<lb/>
were set up solely for business<lb/>
students.<lb/>
"The funds come from the<lb/>
business school, not from the<lb/>
general use fund Harris said.<lb/>
The business lab is the<lb/>
only computer lab on campus<lb/>
that limits its users to students<lb/>
within the department.<lb/>
Ernie Marshbum, also of<lb/>
the academic computing de-<lb/>
partment, said the other com-<lb/>
puter labs on campus are<lb/>
funded through the general use<lb/>
fund. He said the labs estab-<lb/>
lished through the general fund<lb/>
"must be open to everyone who<lb/>
is part of the college commu-<lb/>
nity<lb/>
Still, many students may<lb/>
not know where they can go to<lb/>
use computers on campus. In-<lb/>
structors can give students in-<lb/>
formation about computers<lb/>
available tor use within that<lb/>
instructor's department.<lb/>
The academic comput-<lb/>
ing department publishes a<lb/>
See Computers, page 3<lb/>
Its a Rush<lb/>
Forum to address public health concerns<lb/>
ECU News Bureau<lb/>
Photo by Biff Hanson ? TEC<lb/>
Fraternities place banners on the mall to attract new members. ECU's 17<lb/>
fraternities began fall Rush Sept. 14.<lb/>
An Arkansas publichealthofficialwill<lb/>
deliver the keynoteaddressatEastCarolina<lb/>
University's Chancellor's Forum, Sept. 17-<lb/>
18, in Mendenhall Student Center.<lb/>
Dr. M. Joycelyn Elders, director of the<lb/>
Arkansas Department of Health, will ad-<lb/>
dress the forum at 130 p.m. Thursday. In<lb/>
her presentation, she is expected to offer<lb/>
suggestion for solving public health prob-<lb/>
lems in the state.<lb/>
In addition to the health topic by El-<lb/>
ders, the two-day program on "Supporting<lb/>
Community Leaders Initiatives for Qual-<lb/>
ity" will also examine issues related to edu-<lb/>
cation and economic development.<lb/>
Dr.JesseL WhiteofChapel Hill,chair<lb/>
of the Commission on the Future of the<lb/>
South, will address economic development<lb/>
in the state, and Mary Futrell of Washing-<lb/>
ton, DC, a senior fellow at Georgetown<lb/>
University, will focus her presentation on<lb/>
improving education.<lb/>
While the forum's subject matter ap-<lb/>
pears to be broad in scope, the three topics<lb/>
arecloselvlinked,accordingtoforumdirec-<lb/>
tor Dr. Henry Peel.<lb/>
"When business or industry consid-<lb/>
ers whether or n t to move into an a rea, they<lb/>
look at things likeeducationor health care<lb/>
he said. "When school superintendents start<lb/>
planning in education, they have to consider<lb/>
other things like economic development.<lb/>
"We hope this forum will help county<lb/>
managers and other county leaders solve<lb/>
their education, health and economic prob-<lb/>
lems and improve the quality of their com-<lb/>
munities Peel said.<lb/>
Peel said ECU hopes to use the forum to<lb/>
demonstrate its commitment to helping the<lb/>
region prosper.<lb/>
"We want the Chancel lor's Fom m to be<lb/>
more than just a two-day event. We have a<lb/>
number of projects under way to stay in<lb/>
contact with community leaders to help them<lb/>
improve their communities he said.<lb/>
Following each of the guest speakers, a<lb/>
panel of experts willofferdiscussion of issues<lb/>
in local communities.<lb/>
Amongthoseparticipatinginpaneldis-<lb/>
cussionsare. Robert Etheridge,statesuperin-<lb/>
tendent of Public Instruction; Rose Marie<lb/>
Lowry of Raleigh, president-elect of the N.C.<lb/>
Association of Educators; William Owens of<lb/>
Elizabeth City, presidentof the N.C. Associa-<lb/>
tion of County Commissioners; Billy Ray<lb/>
Hall of Raleigh, president of the N.C. Rural<lb/>
Economic Development Center.<lb/>
Thomas W. Bradshaw Jr president of<lb/>
toe First Boston Corporation of Raleigh;<lb/>
Charles Evans of Manteo, UNC Board of<lb/>
Governors member; Steve Shore of N.C.<lb/>
Primary Health Care Association; Bemie<lb/>
Patterson of the Office of Rural Health and<lb/>
Resource Development, and Dr. E. HJjrvey<lb/>
Estes r. of the Kate B. Reynolds CorniTRirury<lb/>
Practitioner Program of Raleigh.<lb/>
The moderators for the panel discus-<lb/>
sions are Betty McCain, a member of the<lb/>
UNC Board of Governors from Wilson, Dr.<lb/>
James Jones of the ECU School of Medicine<lb/>
and Dr. Del ma Blinson of the ECU Rural<lb/>
Education Institute.<lb/>
School superintendents from<lb/>
Edgecombe,GreeneJohnston,Perquimans,<lb/>
Pi tt and Washington Counties will also par-<lb/>
ticipate in focus group meetings.<lb/>
All presentations at the Chancellor's<lb/>
Fonim are free and open to the public. A<lb/>
registration fee is required for community<lb/>
leaders who attend meals and socials and<lb/>
receive written materials. For furthest de-<lb/>
tails, call the Chancellor's Forum office at<lb/>
757-6862.<lb/>
sponsor<lb/>
The Chancellor's Forum is sponsored<lb/>
annually by East Carolina University and by<lb/>
Carolina Telephone &amp; Telegraph Company.<lb/>
The forum is expected to attract city and<lb/>
county managers and commissioners, school<lb/>
superintendents,hospitaladministra tors and<lb/>
business leaders form across the state.<lb/>
m<lb/>
<pb facs="00058338_0002"/><lb/>
2t The Emrt varntiman<lb/>
FFTEMBER 17, 1992<lb/>
i<lb/>
MQuntf OtheiCamp<lb/>
Panel to discuss effects of media onLDCs<lb/>
By Tracy Ford<lb/>
Staff Writer<lb/>
UNC increases recycling<lb/>
The University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill's Office of<lb/>
Waste Reduction and Recycling has made it a little easier for<lb/>
students and staff to participate in recycling on campus. A new<lb/>
residence hall recycling program include dornvroom uvvchng<lb/>
bin- and more recycling centers around campus. W e think that<lb/>
by providing individual containers in students' rooms, it will be<lb/>
easier for students who want to participate said Wayne Kund,<lb/>
UNC housing director. The new recyding centers allow students<lb/>
and University employees to recycle aluminum, glass, glossv<lb/>
magazines and newspapers.<lb/>
ISU elevator crashes<lb/>
Six students on an elevator in the Indiana State University<lb/>
Student Union were shaken-up when the cable broke and the<lb/>
elevator fell from the fifth to the second floor. "The doors flew<lb/>
open " said Mamie Shike, an ISU student involved in the acci<lb/>
dent.Shike said thelights fell from theceilmgottheelevator onto<lb/>
the students. All of the students were treated bv a chiropractor<lb/>
for back pain and are cons.dering turning the bills over to the<lb/>
university.<lb/>
California colleges lose funds<lb/>
After a 63-day stalemate, California law makers passed a<lb/>
budget that c t hundreds of millions of dollars from higher<lb/>
education, proming college officials to consider new measures<lb/>
to keep their schools solvent. The UC system will receive $224<lb/>
million less than last year, an 11 percent cut. Officials were only<lb/>
expecting a 7 percent to 10 percent cut. UC spokesman Rick<lb/>
Melaspina said the system may consider increasing student fees,<lb/>
administrative cuts, faculty cuts and limits on enrollment for<lb/>
next year.<lb/>
Newspaper bans military ads<lb/>
The five-member editorial staff of the University of Central<lb/>
Arkansas' student newspaper voted not to publish armed for, es<lb/>
recruitment advertisements because of the military's ban on<lb/>
gays and lesbians. Local recruiting offices spent between $1,000<lb/>
to $1,500 on advertising per semester in the Echo, and usually<lb/>
advertised in every issue of the paper. A spokesman for the<lb/>
Army Recruiting Command said mat while the ban will have<lb/>
some effect on recruiting efforts, officials w II find other ways fa<lb/>
reach students. "We felt strongly enough editorially, so we<lb/>
decided we shouldn't have their ads said Kim Green, editor ot<lb/>
the Echo.<lb/>
"Window on Africa: De-<lb/>
mocratization and Media Expo-<lb/>
sure a two-dav conference to<lb/>
discuss the effects of media ex-<lb/>
posure on developing nations<lb/>
will begin today.<lb/>
"This conference is a cross<lb/>
reference of politics and mass<lb/>
communication said Dr. Festus<lb/>
Eribo,a professor in ECU's com-<lb/>
munication department. "It is<lb/>
unique because communication<lb/>
scholars and political scienceare<lb/>
coming together in one confer-<lb/>
ence to discuss common prob-<lb/>
lems and issues<lb/>
Professors from across the<lb/>
nation, including Wisconsin,<lb/>
New York and California, are<lb/>
attending the conference to<lb/>
speak on a variety of subjects<lb/>
pertaining to international me-<lb/>
Check it out<lb/>
"Window on Africa: Democratization and Me-<lb/>
dia Exposure" begins today. The opening cer-<lb/>
emony, which includes introduction of guests<lb/>
and opening comments, will begin today at 9<lb/>
a.m. and run to 9:30 a.m. Discussions will run<lb/>
from 9:30 a.m. to 12 p.m. and 2 p.m. to 5 p.m.<lb/>
today and 9 a.m. to 12:15 p.m. on Friday.<lb/>
dia development.<lb/>
According to Eribo, the<lb/>
conference will create awareness<lb/>
and will be a challenge for ev-<lb/>
eryone involved. "It will give<lb/>
the (students) more information<lb/>
and stimulate new ideas<lb/>
The conference, hosted by<lb/>
the international studies pro-<lb/>
gram at ECU, will also intro-<lb/>
duce at the opening ceremonies<lb/>
the new director of international<lb/>
studies, Dr. John Heise.<lb/>
Some of the discussions<lb/>
will include Africa's trend to-<lb/>
ward democracy, communica-<lb/>
tion and national development,<lb/>
race in the construction of me-<lb/>
dia image Russian press and<lb/>
Africa and monitoring elections<lb/>
in Africa.<lb/>
"The participants are lead-<lb/>
ing communication scholars<lb/>
Eribo said. "Different scholars<lb/>
have been invited to speak on<lb/>
different topics that they have<lb/>
already written papers<lb/>
The opening ceremony,<lb/>
which includes introduction of<lb/>
guests and opening comments,<lb/>
will begin today at 9 a.m and<lb/>
discussions will run from 9:30<lb/>
a.m. to 12 p.m. and 2 p.m. to 5<lb/>
p.m. Friday'sdiscussions will run<lb/>
from 9 a.m. to 12:15 p.m.<lb/>
Help Wanted!<lb/>
The East Carolinian is<lb/>
now hiring typesetters.<lb/>
Macintosh experience<lb/>
preferred. Apply at<lb/>
Student Pubs Bldg.<lb/>
Joyce Etheridge<lb/>
Contemporary Styles of the 90s<lb/>
at Contempoary Prices<lb/>
X<lb/>
Shear Hair Design<lb/>
514 14th Street<lb/>
752-9706<lb/>
752-9707<lb/>
I<lb/>
Compiled by Elizabeth Shimmel. Taken from CPS<lb/>
and other newspapers.<lb/>
&amp;3M&amp;4<lb/>
TOURNAMENT<lb/>
Leadership Opportunities<lb/>
An employer's perspective of using your collegiate leadership<lb/>
experiences to enhance your career.<lb/>
Lisa Daniel.<lb/>
Eastern North Carolina Regional Personnel Manager.<lb/>
Wachovia Bank of North Carolina<lb/>
Dr. Jim Westmoreland<lb/>
Director,<lb/>
Caieer Services, ECU<lb/>
Monday,<lb/>
Sept 21, 1992<lb/>
MSC 221<lb/>
Regtstratior Required<lb/>
3-4 pm RSVP at 757-4711<lb/>
sponsored by:<lb/>
ECU<lb/>
RECREATIONAL<lb/>
SERVICES &amp;<lb/>
Entry Deadline: Monday, September 21<lb/>
Fee: $15 per team . ?<lb/>
Takes Place: September 24, 25 &amp; 27<lb/>
Register at: 204 Christenbury Gym<lb/>
Eligible: all ECU students, faculty, &amp; staff<lb/>
For additional details call David Gaskins at 757-63871<lb/>
&amp; VIDEC 758-425b S: 1<lb/>
T ?<lb/>
h ?<lb/>
C3 1<lb/>
T ?? <lb/>
Uq ? <lb/>
<lb/>
Uo<lb/>
BEST PRICES<lb/>
Suzanne Vega<lb/>
Bobby Brown<lb/>
Public Enemy<lb/>
Ugly Kid Joe<lb/>
Marky Mark<lb/>
Robert Cray<lb/>
Ramones<lb/>
V Queen<lb/>
DEAR DAD,<lb/>
$2.00 OFF<lb/>
REGULAR PRICED CD i<lb/>
OR <lb/>
$1.00 OFF<lb/>
REGULAR PRICED <lb/>
CASSETTE<lb/>
OR<lb/>
2 FOR 1 j<lb/>
VIDEO RENTAL<lb/>
MONDAY-WEDNESDAY ONLY I<lb/>
COUPON GOOD THRU 93092 ?<lb/>
White Sands<lb/>
: Final Analysis<lb/>
Lawn mower Man<lb/>
 The Mambo Kings<lb/>
? WhileMsn Cant Jump<lb/>
S Fried Green Tomatoes<lb/>
! BEST SELECTION<lb/>
 NEW VIDEO<lb/>
FOR SCHOOL<lb/>
SUPPLIES<lb/>
Smithfiett Factory Store, Carotim Pottery Outkt C enter,<lb/>
Exit 95 or 97, 95, Sntithfield, M , (919) 989-6100. Mori Sat. 9, Sun. 1-6.<lb/>
Discontinuedalmost perfect sports and fitness stuff.<lb/>
<pb facs="00058338_0003"/><lb/>
?? Ml ??<lb/>
 ? ? I '<lb/>
rt.<lb/>
SEPTEMBER 17. 1992<lb/>
The East Carolinian 3 <lb/>
?'<lb/>
Employers to<lb/>
recruit on campus<lb/>
By Elizabeth Shimmel<lb/>
Assistant News Editor<lb/>
The 1992 ECU Business Career<lb/>
Day for students will be held Sept 22<lb/>
in the General Classroom Building.<lb/>
Director of Career Services, Dr.<lb/>
James Westmoreland, said the event<lb/>
is a very important one for ECU stu-<lb/>
dents. "This is one of the best oppor-<lb/>
tunities to have companies come on<lb/>
campus and to find out what their<lb/>
hiring needs will be he said.<lb/>
Representatives from 46 orga-<lb/>
nizations will be present to meet and<lb/>
speak with students from all majors<lb/>
aboutprospectivecareersaftergradu-<lb/>
ation. Banking, accounting firms, re-<lb/>
tail industries, the federal govern-<lb/>
ment and numerous other compa-<lb/>
nies and associations will be avail-<lb/>
able to share information with stu-<lb/>
dents about their organizations.<lb/>
"(Career Day) offers exposure<lb/>
to a wide range of businesses and<lb/>
organizations that are out there<lb/>
Westmoreland said.<lb/>
The Career Services office at<lb/>
the Bloxton House has helpful litera-<lb/>
ture available to students that can be<lb/>
reviewed before they attend Career<lb/>
Day. The literature can aid in formu-<lb/>
la tingquestions toaskcertain organi-<lb/>
zations.<lb/>
"Students should think of<lb/>
things they would like to ask pro-<lb/>
spec hveemployers Westmoreland<lb/>
said.<lb/>
Some recruiters will also visit<lb/>
various classes to inform students<lb/>
about their organizations and what<lb/>
employers look for in hiring new<lb/>
employees.<lb/>
"This is probably the best time<lb/>
to find out what each organization<lb/>
needsin employees Westmoreland<lb/>
said.<lb/>
Business Career Day is spon-<lb/>
sored by the ECU School of Business<lb/>
and the Career Services Office and<lb/>
will run from 9 a.m. to 2 p.m.<lb/>
"There will be an excellent<lb/>
range of organizations, especially<lb/>
with the economy the way it is<lb/>
Westmoreland said. "Considering<lb/>
that they may hire only 10 people<lb/>
from across the state, the fact that<lb/>
they are here to choose from ECU<lb/>
students is important"<lb/>
Many of the representatives<lb/>
who comeforCareer Day will return<lb/>
duringthe fall and spring to conduct<lb/>
interviews with graduatingsrudents<lb/>
at the Career Services office in the<lb/>
Bloxton House.<lb/>
In addition to Business Career<lb/>
Day, Career Services has also<lb/>
scheduled a Health Career Day for<lb/>
Nov. 5, and an Education Career<lb/>
Day for Feb. 16,1993.<lb/>
Friday. September 18<lb/>
Bad Bob &amp; The<lb/>
Rockin' Horses<lb/>
Saturday. September 19<lb/>
Roily Gray and<lb/>
Sunfire<lb/>
HOURS<lb/>
MonSTues 11am-3pm<lb/>
Wed 11 am-3pm &amp; 9pm-1 am<lb/>
Thurs &amp; Fri 11am-1am<lb/>
Sat 9pm-1am<lb/>
513 Cotanche St<lb/>
located across from UBE<lb/>
758-0080<lb/>
Med<lb/>
Continued from page 1<lb/>
Computers<lb/>
Continued from page 1<lb/>
and prestige in their field. Due to<lb/>
the increase in specialists, many<lb/>
medical analysts feel that the future<lb/>
will produce a shortage in general<lb/>
practitioners.<lb/>
Hallock attributed ECU's<lb/>
strong showing in the report to a<lb/>
concerted effort to support and el-<lb/>
evate primary care that begins with<lb/>
the student admissions committee.<lb/>
"Clearly the perceptionof stu-<lb/>
dents who apply to this school is<lb/>
that we as a school are interested in<lb/>
primary care said Hallock. "So,<lb/>
naturally we attract students who<lb/>
share that same interest<lb/>
Hallock also attributes the<lb/>
success to other factors, such as the<lb/>
curriculumandorganizationalcul-<lb/>
rure. The curriculum exposes the<lb/>
students to primary care early and<lb/>
often. Parity given to primary care<lb/>
in relation toother specialties isdue<lb/>
to an organizational culture.<lb/>
"We attract students to the<lb/>
school who have an interest com-<lb/>
ing in, which is a critically impor-<lb/>
tantfactor'Hallocksaid. "Our cur-<lb/>
riculum supports and encourages<lb/>
family medicine and primary care.<lb/>
The students know our school is<lb/>
committed to primary care, as well<lb/>
as other specialties<lb/>
The 1992 Report is the third<lb/>
issued by the AAMC that measures<lb/>
institutional goals. Prior to 1992,<lb/>
the reports focused exclusively on<lb/>
research funding.<lb/>
The number one ranking was<lb/>
listed as a part of the AAMC's 1992<lb/>
Institutional Goals Ranking Report.<lb/>
The association surveyed 126 med i-<lb/>
cal schools concerning their goals<lb/>
in five categories: primary medi-<lb/>
cine graduates; graduates who be-<lb/>
came medical school faculty mem-<lb/>
bers; minority graduates; and the<lb/>
amount of federal research grants<lb/>
and contracts.<lb/>
The report showed that 45.3<lb/>
percent of ECU graduates accept<lb/>
residencies in North Carolina, earn-<lb/>
ing the school a ranking of 52nd in<lb/>
the na tion. Hallocksaid ECU hopes<lb/>
to encourage more doctors to settle<lb/>
in eastern North Carolina.<lb/>
The report also showed 7.1<lb/>
percent of the school's graduates<lb/>
had taken jobs with medical<lb/>
schools, ranking the school 75th.<lb/>
Of ECU's graduates, 9.4 per-<lb/>
cent are minorities, placing the<lb/>
school 36th. The 1990-91 federal<lb/>
research grants and contracts were<lb/>
$3.7 million ranking ECU 107th in<lb/>
that category.<lb/>
map of computer locations on<lb/>
campus, along with a list of<lb/>
computers and software avail-<lb/>
able within each lab.<lb/>
The most recent list was<lb/>
published in August 1991. More<lb/>
computer labs have been estab-<lb/>
lished since that time.<lb/>
Terry Harrison, assistant<lb/>
manager of academic comput-<lb/>
ing, said as soon as all depart-<lb/>
ments have reported their up-<lb/>
dated labs and software to aca-<lb/>
demic computing, a new map<lb/>
and list will be published.<lb/>
Maps and software infor-<lb/>
mation can be obtained from the<lb/>
Austin building in Room 208.<lb/>
DOWNTOWN aQEENVILLES<lb/>
NATURAL FOODS SOURCE<lb/>
Offering<lb/>
NaturalOrganic Groceries<lb/>
Wholesome Snacks &amp; Treats<lb/>
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M.<lb/>
BLUE PLANET LjfeFoods)<lb/>
405 EVANS STREET MALL<lb/>
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iy;dpJtJi?friiiiJidfdi<lb/>
HUNGRY PIRATE<lb/>
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sour cream, and covered with enchilada sauce<lb/>
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finding out about graduate school is as easy<lb/>
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tP<lb/>
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THaKHTrUKE: 1 THE RIGHT TIME:<lb/>
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WORKSHOP SCHEDULE<lb/>
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DISCIPLINE DISCUSSIONS<lb/>
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Saturday, September 19<lb/>
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The Party Continues Part 2 with 210 DRAFT<lb/>
Sunday, September 20<lb/>
PROGRESSIVE DANCE NIGHT<lb/>
$4 COVER ? 0t DRAFT<lb/>
FREE Jumps On The Attic's Velcro Wall<lb/>
Monday, September 21<lb/>
MONDAY NIGHT FOOTBALL<lb/>
on 15 Foot TV Screen<lb/>
990-32 oz Draft ? Door Prizes ? 2 FREE 6 Foot Subs from Sub Station<lb/>
New York Giants vs. Chicago Bears<lb/>
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<pb facs="00058338_0004"/><lb/>
- 1<lb/>
"(<lb/>
<lb/>
- The Egg Carolinian<lb/>
September 17, 1992<lb/>
Opinion<lb/>
Page 4<lb/>
ECU should pave the way, not get paved over<lb/>
In a traditional fashion, the university has<lb/>
once again served its style of equity on its stu-<lb/>
dents. <lb/>
The University Curriculum Committee re-<lb/>
cently decided that the 13 hour requirement for<lb/>
social sciences would be reduced to 12 hours.<lb/>
It is about time that the committe realized<lb/>
that a 13 hour require is ridiculous inadepart-<lb/>
ment whose courses typically carry three hour<lb/>
creditsThree times four equals 12, not thir-<lb/>
teen. Apparently, between 1978 and 1992 the<lb/>
UCC could not figure out that three is not a<lb/>
multiple of 13.<lb/>
The UCC needs to look in a more pro-<lb/>
gressive direction in the future. We can not<lb/>
allow our school to uphold such innane poli-<lb/>
cies as the 13 hour social science require-<lb/>
ment. The simple fact that it has taken ECU<lb/>
this long to get rid of this policy sheds a<lb/>
lasting impression on the inner workings ot<lb/>
this institution.<lb/>
The UCC should be setting precedents tor<lb/>
programming and diversity. They should be the<lb/>
JOE OF ALL TRADES<lb/>
front runners in North Carolina.<lb/>
If ECU wants to take on a "new look ot<lb/>
credibility, it needs to move forward rapidly<lb/>
instead of dragging its heels on an issue as<lb/>
trivial as a social science requirement.<lb/>
The students of this university know that<lb/>
ECU has the potential to be the best in North<lb/>
Carolina and perhaps the natioa However, with<lb/>
slow change and old ideas, the surge of growth<lb/>
could end. ,<lb/>
For students graduating in 1993, and<lb/>
perhaps underclass students as well, it is too<lb/>
late. Many seniors have taken that extra so-<lb/>
cial science class to equal 15 hours instead of<lb/>
an additional class in their major or field.<lb/>
Students need to be aware of these<lb/>
discrepencies in the system. There may be<lb/>
others in general college, or even in indi-<lb/>
vidual departments.<lb/>
Check it out. Think about<lb/>
requirements,talk to advisors, be aware of v ,L-? . .?w ?<lb/>
whatisrequiredforgraduation Dontletthe - RoW1 UaS changed Pirate lOOtDall<lb/>
university get away with inconsistencies. FeaCtl BOW1 Iiab iaii&amp; by (<lb/>
J ? btv,Q ?iocf Hav in several Bowl). Things cnange.  fc<lb/>
A VIEW FROM ABOVE<lb/>
By T. Scott Batchelor<lb/>
By Joe Horst<lb/>
Criminals promote social reform in future<lb/>
wnif take it to its extremes, a criminal a<lb/>
"The Criminal of today is the<lb/>
innovator of tomorrow<lb/>
?Emil Durkheim<lb/>
Crime has been a very difficult<lb/>
thing not only to define, but also to<lb/>
enforce. Lack of responsibility on the<lb/>
part of witnesses (most notably the<lb/>
Kitty Genovese case, which I'll go into<lb/>
later), is ever-changing societal views<lb/>
that have a direct impact on Supreme<lb/>
Court rulings and corruption in al-<lb/>
most every part of the law enforce-<lb/>
ment system are just a few problems<lb/>
that a law enforcement official must<lb/>
face when trying to do his or her job to<lb/>
the best of their ability.<lb/>
But possibly the most impor-<lb/>
tant and significant aspectof criminal<lb/>
law today is the fact that laws govern-<lb/>
ing behavior have been re-interpreted<lb/>
andre-re-interpretedtotheextentthat<lb/>
illegal behavior20 years ago is now<lb/>
classified as acceptable.<lb/>
Problems with interpreting<lb/>
enforcing the law<lb/>
Kitty Genovese was attacked<lb/>
by a man armed with a knife. For a<lb/>
time period of around 30 minutes to<lb/>
an hour, Genovese cried for help,<lb/>
scream and holler as she stumbled<lb/>
around the quad in which she was<lb/>
attacked. Only after she died did any-<lb/>
onebothertocall thepoliceand report<lb/>
the crime.<lb/>
To the best of my recollection,<lb/>
that quad was surrounded on all sides<lb/>
by high-rise tenements. If not all sides,<lb/>
then it was enclosed by at least two, if<lb/>
not three. Over 35 people saw the<lb/>
attack take place either for the most<lb/>
part or in its entirety ? and did noth-<lb/>
ing to stop it! Not one person raised<lb/>
their window and yelled at the at-<lb/>
tacker or called the police. On the<lb/>
contrary, most sat in darkened rooms<lb/>
and watched the event like it was on<lb/>
theircolorTV.Thisblatantexampleof<lb/>
society's unwillingness to get involved<lb/>
served as a wake-up call to people's<lb/>
lassitude in their belief of, "Oh, that<lb/>
won't happen to me<lb/>
This attitude is one of the cen-<lb/>
tral problems law enforcement offi-<lb/>
cials face when trying to do your job.<lb/>
How can one "nab a bad guy" when<lb/>
no one that saw the crime will come<lb/>
forward to admit it? But more to the<lb/>
point of this column, what example<lb/>
are the courts setting by legalizing<lb/>
certain actions that were illegal not<lb/>
more than 10 years ago?<lb/>
Society benefits from crime?<lb/>
That quote from Durkheim<lb/>
above thisarticle surrounds one of the<lb/>
most interesting trends in law enforce-<lb/>
ment I've ever seen. In the '60s, blacks<lb/>
sitting in the front of busses or eating<lb/>
at an all-diner was unlawful. But with<lb/>
the advent of the civil rights move-<lb/>
ment, those lawswereoverturned and<lb/>
deemed unconstitutional.<lb/>
Mind you, 1 don't feel that seg-<lb/>
regation should be re-instituted. But<lb/>
if you look at the concept as a whole,<lb/>
it gets a little scary. Using this ex-<lb/>
ample to illustrate a generality and<lb/>
take it to its extremes, a criminal can<lb/>
stand in court and say that his crime<lb/>
was committed for the good of soci-<lb/>
ety. If believed, then there is a prece-<lb/>
dent set for future cases. Wait a few<lb/>
years and that particular action that<lb/>
this person was indicted on will be<lb/>
stricken from the books.<lb/>
Think that's bad? Let me take it<lb/>
one step further. Once higher courts<lb/>
have nullified high verdict crimes<lb/>
such as murder, rape or manslaugh-<lb/>
ter, then the lower verdict crimes will<lb/>
move up in their sentencing. Soon<lb/>
enough, you may be arrested and be<lb/>
tried for littering or spitting on the<lb/>
sidewalk. Not only may you be tried,<lb/>
but just think of a country with people<lb/>
in jail or on death row for jaywalking.<lb/>
OK, maybe I've gone off the<lb/>
deep-end a little bit with this idea.<lb/>
(Then again, maybe not?) But<lb/>
Durkhiem is considered to be one of<lb/>
the forefathers for our criminal justice<lb/>
system today. Can I be faulted for<lb/>
wondering if some of his views that<lb/>
are considered outlandish today may<lb/>
not be considered sound, say in 20<lb/>
years?<lb/>
Society controls so much of our<lb/>
judicial system today that it may not<lb/>
be a big leap for us to seesomeofthese<lb/>
not-so-sane ideas appear. New Su-<lb/>
preme Court judges will probably be<lb/>
needed within the next 10 to 15 years,<lb/>
so who knows which way they'll go.<lb/>
Only with some sane and ex-<lb/>
tensive thought behind the rulings of<lb/>
these cases can we be sure that our<lb/>
country will not end up in this post-<lb/>
Orwell design.<lb/>
It was the coolest day in several<lb/>
weeks here in eastern North Carolina,<lb/>
and a perfect Saturday for football.<lb/>
I eagerly donned my purple<lb/>
ba?pball caD that says ECU on the<lb/>
front and headed forFicklenStadium,<lb/>
where there was the promise of thrill-<lb/>
ing moments, hard-hitting action and<lb/>
intense competition ?not to mention<lb/>
the football game down on the field.<lb/>
My girlfriend and I arrived at<lb/>
the stadium an ample amount of<lb/>
time before kickoff (or so we<lb/>
thought in our youthful folly). The<lb/>
problem was, we had General Ad-<lb/>
mission tickets, probably because<lb/>
of something bad I did when I was<lb/>
10 or 11 years old.<lb/>
General Admission is like fly-<lb/>
ing coach on an airline, only it's worse<lb/>
because the peanuts aren't even free.<lb/>
Going to Pirate football games<lb/>
didn't used to be this hectic. Not many<lb/>
years ago, a football ticket was about<lb/>
as valuable as a handful of Confeder-<lb/>
ate money.<lb/>
Now, students have to present<lb/>
a student LD. and a letter from their<lb/>
Congressman just to get in the gate.<lb/>
But that was BPB, (Before Peach<lb/>
Bowl). Things change.<lb/>
After fighting a swarm ot<lb/>
other General Admissioners who<lb/>
mosfly stood in the doorway aisles<lb/>
like a herd of purple and gold deer<lb/>
caught in a car's headlights, we<lb/>
found a couple of seats on the end<lb/>
of a bench, way up at the top of the<lb/>
stadium.<lb/>
Bench seatingat a sportingevent<lb/>
is OK I guess, but if the people around<lb/>
me had had red hair I would have felt<lb/>
like one of the Waltons at dinner time.<lb/>
Having made it through the<lb/>
trauma of locating a seat, I stuffed<lb/>
some Kleenex into my nostrils to stop<lb/>
my altitude-induced nosebleed and<lb/>
prepared to watch the Pirates feast on<lb/>
a few Hokies.<lb/>
It wasn't long before those 15<lb/>
tiny bottles of bourbon that the guy in<lb/>
front of me had drank began to show<lb/>
some effects.<lb/>
At first, there were subtle<lb/>
signs that he was becoming intoxi-<lb/>
cated, like when he yelled out,<lb/>
"Wooo! (something) major strap in<lb/>
a doodle 'urn Hokie (something)<lb/>
and fire 'em (something) outta here,<lb/>
woo doggie then proceeded to<lb/>
A BIT O' THOUGHT<lb/>
show his excitement by throwing<lb/>
up on his friend's sneakers.<lb/>
It' a good thing the gam? was<lb/>
televised Sunday night so he could<lb/>
see the second half.<lb/>
Mostly, the people sitting<lb/>
around me at the game were well ?<lb/>
behaved and had a good time.<lb/>
Some guys behind me had<lb/>
brought a bottle of rum and they kegt,<lb/>
the soft-drink urchins busy delivery<lb/>
ing cups of ice-cold mixer.<lb/>
These young men and women<lb/>
deserve a big round of applause. I. -<lb/>
don't know how much they get paid<lb/>
for dragging those unwieldy trays of<lb/>
drinks up and down the stands, but<lb/>
whatever it is, it isn't enough.<lb/>
Despite the massive crowds and<lb/>
the attendant inconveniences of big-<lb/>
time college football, all in all I had a<lb/>
good day Saturday.<lb/>
My girlfriend underestimated<lb/>
the power of the bright sunshine and<lb/>
looks like a Chernobyl survivor, but<lb/>
on the other hand I got to see the<lb/>
Pirates pull off an incredible win<lb/>
against Virginia Tech.<lb/>
I think that's an equitable trade-<lb/>
off.<lb/>
By David Jones<lb/>
We need a new SGA president<lb/>
 ,r,i?- would ereatlv increase h<lb/>
LETTERS TO THE EDITOR<lb/>
increase in fans creates new problems tor Hcklen<lb/>
To The Editor:<lb/>
On September 12,1 attended the<lb/>
ECU vs. Virginia Tech football game.<lb/>
As an alumnus of ECU and a former<lb/>
Marine Corps Veteran of the Viet-<lb/>
nam War (1968-1969), I was appalled<lb/>
at what I witnessed after the game<lb/>
ended.<lb/>
I had tickets near the Virginia<lb/>
Tech visitors and I was surprised to<lb/>
see the flag of the United States<lb/>
draped upon the ground as if it was a<lb/>
raS<lb/>
I realize those folding it may not<lb/>
have understood what they were han-<lb/>
dling. But as college students, I would<lb/>
assume that most of them know the<lb/>
flag deserves more respect than what<lb/>
1 saw it receive by the "Event Staff"<lb/>
after the great ECU win over Virginia<lb/>
Tech.<lb/>
To some it may be an old fash-<lb/>
ioned sentimentality for "nothing<lb/>
more than justapieceof cloth How-<lb/>
ever, 1 did not feel proud as an alum-<lb/>
nus of ECU that day.<lb/>
Don Lundegard<lb/>
ECU Alumnus<lb/>
Class of 1973<lb/>
TheEast Carolinian<lb/>
James R. Knisely, General Manager<lb/>
Jennifer A. Wardrep, Managing Editor<lb/>
Arthur A. Sutorius, Director of Advertising<lb/>
Jeff Becker, News Editor<lb/>
Elizabeth Shimmel, Asst. News Editor<lb/>
Dana Danielson, Lifestyle Editor<lb/>
Joe Horst, Asst. Lifestyle Editor<lb/>
Robert Todd, Sports Editor<lb/>
Chas Mitch'l, Assistant Sports Editor<lb/>
Blair Skinner, Copy Editor<lb/>
Sean Herring, Copy Editor<lb/>
Deborah Daniel, Secretary<lb/>
Richard Haselrig, Staff illustrator<lb/>
Michael Albuquerque, Business Manager<lb/>
John Bullard, Circulation Manager<lb/>
Chantal Weedman, Layout Manager<lb/>
Cori Daniels, Classified Advertising Technician<lb/>
Bill Walker, Opinion Page Editor<lb/>
Woody Barnes, Advertising Production Manage<lb/>
Dail Reed, Photo Editor<lb/>
?T . )cm emnhasi7in" information that affects<lb/>
Greenville. N.C 27858-4353. For more information, call (919) 751 63?.<lb/>
A few years ago, 1 attended the<lb/>
Universityof North Carolina atChapel<lb/>
Hill. I was able to see one election that<lb/>
occurred there between three truly<lb/>
remarkablecandidateswhowererun-<lb/>
rung for the office of SGA president.<lb/>
For the purposes of anonymity, 1 will<lb/>
refer to them as Mark, Bill and Rick.<lb/>
In a nutshell, Mark was your<lb/>
basic run-of-the-mill Republican. He<lb/>
was an African-American as well and,<lb/>
politically speaking, it seemed to me<lb/>
that Mark was the choice of the major-<lb/>
ity He had the upper-middle class<lb/>
vote and the minority vote, which<lb/>
when combined, compromised a good<lb/>
70 percent of the voting population on<lb/>
Chapel Hill's campus at that time.<lb/>
Bill was, according to my room-<lb/>
mate who was on his campaign staff,<lb/>
a solid candidate for office. In reality,<lb/>
he was the only other person in the<lb/>
running for the presidential position.<lb/>
Bill was a Political Science major, he<lb/>
knew his way around the Student<lb/>
Government bureaucracy and he<lb/>
wanted to run a clean campaign. Bill<lb/>
was basically the Democrat of the race.<lb/>
Rick was the third party inde-<lb/>
pendent candidate. His ideas were<lb/>
similar to Bill's. He simply did not<lb/>
have the support Billhad and it looked<lb/>
as though he had a snowball's chance<lb/>
in a certain netherworld dimension of<lb/>
winning (note the slight foreshadow-<lb/>
ing here).<lb/>
To make a long story short, Bill<lb/>
won the election.<lb/>
During the first runoff, no one<lb/>
candidate had a clear majority of the<lb/>
votes. Then during the second runof<lb/>
of just the top two (Mark and Bill), Bill<lb/>
received 53 percent of the vote.<lb/>
But, problems began occurring<lb/>
almost immediately. It was revealed<lb/>
thatMarkhadmisappropnated funds<lb/>
from other various SGA projects that<lb/>
he was involved in, and had f unneled<lb/>
them into his own campaign funds.<lb/>
No one reallv liked this fact, but since<lb/>
Mark did not win the election, there<lb/>
was no problem Yeah, right).<lb/>
There was no problem until less<lb/>
than a week later it was discovered<lb/>
that Bill and some of his campaign<lb/>
staff weregoingoutonmidnightraids<lb/>
and defacing ad posters and other<lb/>
such campaign paraphernalia that be-<lb/>
longed to Mark's camp.Both candi-<lb/>
dates were disqualified from the elec-<lb/>
tion after a long and drawn-out stu-<lb/>
dent hearing.<lb/>
Rick (remember him?) was<lb/>
given the office of president and did a<lb/>
great job of running the SGA that<lb/>
year Chapel Hill was the laughing<lb/>
stock of the North Carolina college<lb/>
system that year, at least until we got<lb/>
Rick in office and running the show.<lb/>
I am sure that by now every<lb/>
reader is wondering what is the pur-<lb/>
pose of the article. Welt, in the immor-<lb/>
al words of Bill CosbyI toM you<lb/>
that story to tell you this one  "<lb/>
Last spring, we elected<lb/>
Courtney Jones and Sherry Smith to<lb/>
the offices of president and vice-presi-<lb/>
dent respectively. By "we" I of course<lb/>
mean that small percentage of stu-<lb/>
dents that had brains enough to real-<lb/>
ize that voting does make a difference<lb/>
and did so.<lb/>
But anyway, less than two<lb/>
weeks into the summer, Sherry Smith<lb/>
announced she would be resigning<lb/>
from the office of vice president due<lb/>
to a prior work contract that she had<lb/>
to fulfill. Everyone was, of course,<lb/>
shocked. All of her supporters were<lb/>
hurt and most of all, Courtney Jones<lb/>
must have been stunned.<lb/>
As a matter of fact, in last<lb/>
Tuesday's paper, she went as far as to<lb/>
say that she did not think it would be<lb/>
a problem when Smith resigned be-<lb/>
cause she thought thatSmith had gone<lb/>
through all the necessary procedures<lb/>
to gain exempt status. "There is a pro-<lb/>
cess that you have to go through to be<lb/>
exempt for the summer that was not<lb/>
carried out by Sherry was the exact<lb/>
quote that Jones made on the subject<lb/>
Now, then, case closed, right?<lb/>
Not by a long shot. Way back on May<lb/>
20 when it was announced by The<lb/>
East Carolinian that Smith had quit,<lb/>
Jones stated flatly that she knew Smith<lb/>
wasgoingtoquitandhadplannedthe<lb/>
whole summer itinerary around the<lb/>
fact that there was going to be no vice-<lb/>
president.<lb/>
Well, gee whiz, it just seems<lb/>
like Jones really knows her stuff and<lb/>
had all her bases covered, huh?<lb/>
Sorry, but I don't buy it. If Jones<lb/>
knew that Smith was going to quit,<lb/>
why did she choose her for a running<lb/>
mate? Answer, because she knew it<lb/>
would greatly increase her chances of<lb/>
getting elected president. Also, why<lb/>
were the voters not informed of this<lb/>
situation beforehand?<lb/>
If both candidates knew that<lb/>
Smith was not going to be there for<lb/>
part of her term before the election,<lb/>
whywasthisinformationsuppressed?<lb/>
Answer, because Jones knew it would<lb/>
wipeoutherchancesofgetting elected<lb/>
ifinformarionofthisnaturehadleaked<lb/>
out She also knew that The East<lb/>
Carolinian's staff had offered up its<lb/>
choice for president as being Jonathan<lb/>
Brooks, not Courtney Jor-s.<lb/>
The end result was mat the in-<lb/>
formation did not leak, Jones was<lb/>
elected and now there is a new elec-<lb/>
tion for vice president set for Sept. 23.<lb/>
A good friend of mine told me<lb/>
that the reason most people do not<lb/>
like politics is that they do not like the<lb/>
way it works. That may very well be<lb/>
true and on a national scale there is<lb/>
not much I can do about this fact ex-<lb/>
cept vote my conscience and hope for<lb/>
the best.<lb/>
However, on this campus, my<lb/>
voice is a little bigger by comparison<lb/>
and I want something done about this<lb/>
situation. I propose a new election for<lb/>
president to take place at the same<lb/>
time as the vice presidential election<lb/>
Allow no new candidates, that would<lb/>
take up too much time ? , simply<lb/>
have a new runoff between Brooks<lb/>
and Jones.<lb/>
It will cost a little extra money<lb/>
and the ECU student body will look<lb/>
bad for a little while, but at least we<lb/>
will have taken responsibility for the<lb/>
actions of our own and we will have<lb/>
put a person in office that everyone<lb/>
knows the whole story about without<lb/>
any coverups.<lb/>
Let's put a president in office<lb/>
who wants to fulfill the obligations of<lb/>
president as well as display at least a<lb/>
modicum of integrity - not someone<lb/>
whohas proven that they will useany<lb/>
means necessary to get into office.<lb/>
Now then, any of you out there<lb/>
that agree, get over to the SGA offices,<lb/>
complain to the advisors, write to the<lb/>
paper do whatever it takes.<lb/>
Let's try to make a change and<lb/>
Sir w that it is truly the students who<lb/>
have the power in Student Govern-<lb/>
ment.<lb/>
<pb facs="00058338_0005"/><lb/>
The East Carolinian<lb/>
September 17, 1992<lb/>
Lifestyle<lb/>
Attic to celebrate 21st year<lb/>
By Stacy Peterson<lb/>
Staff Writer<lb/>
Photo courtesy Chris Cutfaro<lb/>
Drivin' n' Cryin' will help rock The Attic as it celebrates it's 21st birthday tonight.<lb/>
"Imagine" if you will, it is fall 1971.<lb/>
Finally Saturday night, you have spent<lb/>
theaftemoonpolishingyour platform shoes<lb/>
? you know, the ones that are so heavy<lb/>
that you pulled a hamstring the last time<lb/>
you wore them. You choose the perfect pair<lb/>
of bell-bottoms not knowing that they are<lb/>
going to completely cover the "stacks" you<lb/>
just polished. You pick your afro to global<lb/>
roundness and trim your sideburns. You<lb/>
have invited all of your friends over only to<lb/>
find your eight-track collection to be com-<lb/>
pletely exhausted. You haveheard of a new<lb/>
place on Fifth Street called "The Attic" that<lb/>
features live rock 'n' roll. So you and all of<lb/>
your friends hop in the riymou th and head<lb/>
downtown. Life in Greenville will never be<lb/>
the same.<lb/>
The Attic, theoriginal rock'n'roll night-<lb/>
club in N.C. was started by Tom Haines<lb/>
and Stewart Cambell 21 years ago mis<lb/>
month. The Attic got its name because it<lb/>
was the actual "attic" of Bogies, which, at<lb/>
the time, was the "Fiddlers Three<lb/>
Restuarant According to Joe Tronto, the<lb/>
present co-owner, some of the popular<lb/>
bands that would frequent the Attic were<lb/>
Brice Street, Jessie Bolt, Sidewinder, Super<lb/>
The Attic celebrates its 21st birthday<lb/>
Thursday, September 17.<lb/>
Featured performance by Drivin' n' Cryin<lb/>
Tickets are $10 in advance, $12 at the door.<lb/>
Pick up tickets at the Wash Pub on 10th Street.<lb/>
Grit Cowboy<lb/>
Band and Nan-<lb/>
tucket. Four of<lb/>
these bands still<lb/>
play to some ex-<lb/>
tent today.<lb/>
In 1975, The<lb/>
Attic moved to a<lb/>
vacant super<lb/>
market building<lb/>
across from The<lb/>
Fizz and re-<lb/>
mained there until Sept. 1982 when the<lb/>
building burned completely to the ground.<lb/>
A decision was then made to set up a tem-<lb/>
porary operation at the "King And Queen<lb/>
North" banquet room until another loca-<lb/>
tion could be founil.<lb/>
Only five weeks later, The Attic was<lb/>
opened again in theoriginal location above<lb/>
Bogies, while missing only four operation<lb/>
davs. In 1984, The Attic was completely<lb/>
remodeled ,ni I iquor was added to the bar.<lb/>
Then in 1986, the co-founder Tom Haines<lb/>
moved to Charlotte and became an agent<lb/>
for "The Comedy Zone a network of the<lb/>
biggestcomediansontlieEastCoast. About<lb/>
two years ago Joe Tronto and Jeff Cobb<lb/>
bought out The Attic and remain the own-<lb/>
ers today.<lb/>
Tronto has been associated with The<lb/>
Check it out<lb/>
J<lb/>
Atticabout 15yearsand had actually started<lb/>
by playing in bands that would play at the<lb/>
club in theearlydays. According to Tronto,<lb/>
"The Attic has always been visually ori-<lb/>
ented, we wen- one of the first clubs to use<lb/>
a seven foot screen Today The Attic has a<lb/>
huge 15 foot screen and six 19 inch televi-<lb/>
sions. Tronto believes the key factors that<lb/>
have given the club its unusual longevity<lb/>
are: staving innovative, providing a com-<lb/>
fortable setting to club goers, cleanliness of<lb/>
the establishment, and most importantly<lb/>
the employees, managment, and staff.<lb/>
"The Comedy Zone was added five<lb/>
years ago and has turned out to be a big<lb/>
success according to Tronto. Every<lb/>
See Attic, page 8<lb/>
Who's There?<lb/>
Attic<lb/>
Thursday<lb/>
Drivin' n' Cryin'<lb/>
Friday<lb/>
Purple School Bus<lb/>
Saturday<lb/>
Trashed Gypsy<lb/>
and Carver<lb/>
Pasta<lb/>
Works<lb/>
Thursday<lb/>
Klee Liles<lb/>
Friday and<lb/>
Saturday<lb/>
Ledbetter<lb/>
New Deli<lb/>
Thursday<lb/>
Two Pound Planet<lb/>
Friday<lb/>
Bad Bob &amp; the<lb/>
Rocking Horses<lb/>
Saturday<lb/>
Roily Gray and the Comgan's<lb/>
Saturday<lb/>
Bobby Z and<lb/>
Implas<lb/>
P'Rccks<lb/>
Friday<lb/>
Weird Zombie<lb/>
Music Buffet<lb/>
Saturday<lb/>
Anti Scene vv<lb/>
Picasso Trigger<lb/>
Singing trio not<lb/>
easily categorized<lb/>
Sunfires<lb/>
Fizz<lb/>
Thursday<lb/>
Essence<lb/>
Friday<lb/>
Panama Steel<lb/>
Saturday<lb/>
Old Habits<lb/>
Walnut Creek<lb/>
Sunday<lb/>
Violent Femmes<lb/>
and B-52's<lb/>
Mother Nature<lb/>
packs New Deli<lb/>
RiotS interrupt musical treat Sirming with a breath of fresh music,<lb/>
By Pamela Revels<lb/>
Staff Writer<lb/>
The Roches areoften described<lb/>
as a folk-pop group, but since their<lb/>
debut in 147f they have steadily<lb/>
evaded being categorized.<lb/>
The threesisters, Maggie, Terre<lb/>
and 5uz7.v Roche, have produced<lb/>
eight albums full of wit and hu-<lb/>
mor. The group combines zany,<lb/>
playful lyrics with heavenly har-<lb/>
monies and the result is pure fun.<lb/>
The music defies all of the other<lb/>
neatlv pinpointed genres on the<lb/>
market today.<lb/>
Even though the trio's music<lb/>
sways toward the ridiculous and<lb/>
quirky, it is far from carefree. Many<lb/>
of the songs deal with the ups and<lb/>
downs of everyday life. The sub-<lb/>
ject matter frequently rests on the<lb/>
serious side, but the sisters never<lb/>
lose their sense of humor.<lb/>
A perfect illustration of this is<lb/>
their latest album A Dove. The<lb/>
gro Lip's sense of wit and irony pre-<lb/>
vails in their choice to follow the<lb/>
song "You're the One" with<lb/>
"You're the Two which explain<lb/>
the finer points of unfaithful rela-<lb/>
tionships. Although this album<lb/>
shifts to a more personal level than<lb/>
the previous releases, The Roches<lb/>
still maintain the witty repartee<lb/>
they began with.<lb/>
Maggie and Terre began sing-<lb/>
ing folk music together in their<lb/>
teens. The duet made an album in<lb/>
1975 titled Seductive Reasoning.<lb/>
A year later, their sister Suzzy<lb/>
joined them for some Christmas<lb/>
carolling in New York City. The<lb/>
eloquent harmonies that the three<lb/>
prod need co old not be denied, a nil<lb/>
the duet became a trio.<lb/>
Despite resistance, the sisters<lb/>
insisted on playing their own in-<lb/>
struments instead of singing over a<lb/>
male-dominated band. After win-<lb/>
ning this fight, the group became<lb/>
an inspiration to other female mu-<lb/>
sicians, such as The Indigo Girls.<lb/>
By standing up to satisfy their own<lb/>
The Roche sisters, Maggy Terre and Suzzy, have blended their talents<lb/>
See Roche, page 8 ancj wit tostar in Tiny Toon Adventures, and produce songs and albums<lb/>
"Out of all the clubs<lb/>
we have played in<lb/>
North Carolina, the<lb/>
Deli is our favorite'<lb/>
? members of Mother Nature<lb/>
By Stacy Peterson<lb/>
Staff Writer<lb/>
Are you just a little tired of<lb/>
attitude-stricken bands who have<lb/>
the variety of an economy-size can<lb/>
of vienna sausage?<lb/>
Some bands today seem to be<lb/>
sterile, lack<lb/>
any emotion <lb/>
and seem to<lb/>
try to<lb/>
outplay each<lb/>
other rather<lb/>
than trying<lb/>
to find a<lb/>
simple<lb/>
groove.<lb/>
This is<lb/>
definitely <lb/>
not the case<lb/>
with "Mother Nature a (eenville<lb/>
based classic rock bind.<lb/>
Mother Nature was formed in<lb/>
January 1991 and is composed of<lb/>
Warren Sumner ? bass, Mark Wil-<lb/>
liams ? vocals and guitar, Jon<lb/>
Mathews ? guitar and vocals and<lb/>
Bert Swain ? drums and vocals.<lb/>
All are students here at E( L.<lb/>
When asked why the band<lb/>
chose to play lassk rock 'n' roll,<lb/>
Mark Williams replied. "We all<lb/>
grew up listening to classii roi I<lb/>
and most of the artists we i. o erare<lb/>
no longer around. It would be a<lb/>
shame to let this music die out<lb/>
Two of the most outstanding<lb/>
features of this band are theirgenu-<lb/>
ine, honest approach to the various<lb/>
songs that span from the late '60s<lb/>
to the present. Mother Nature has<lb/>
a sound that compares to She<lb/>
StegmondsTheUsualsand Cream<lb/>
of Soule.<lb/>
Saturday, Sept. 12th, Mother<lb/>
Nature took its '70s review to a<lb/>
packed house at the New Deli here<lb/>
in Greenville.<lb/>
According to the members of<lb/>
Mother Natu re, "outof all theclubs<lb/>
we have<lb/>
 played in<lb/>
North Caro-<lb/>
lina, the Deli<lb/>
is still our fa-<lb/>
vor i t e<lb/>
Mother Na-<lb/>
ture took the<lb/>
stage about<lb/>
10:30p.m.<lb/>
and per-<lb/>
 formed a<lb/>
high energy,<lb/>
"take no prisoners first set.<lb/>
The highlights of the first set<lb/>
were "Paint It Black "Midnight<lb/>
Rider "Seven Bridges Road" and<lb/>
"You Really Got Me Now<lb/>
The second set featured .1 ver-<lb/>
sion of "Behind Blue Eyes" in which<lb/>
the harmony was enough to give<lb/>
one chill-bumps, hen, the band<lb/>
delivered up "Brown-Eyed ail<lb/>
followed bv'Train,Train" that as<lb/>
enough to leave one breathless.<lb/>
Then it happened ? "good<lb/>
ol' fashion" bar brawl fa i i iw com-<lb/>
mon occurrence in downtown<lb/>
Greenville) that ended the how<lb/>
early, pissing the band otl as ell<lb/>
.is the audieni e.<lb/>
Irish band<lb/>
charms listeners<lb/>
Allinall.Mtli<lb/>
i es i'ii. iugh  -a il '<lb/>
about anyi ?ne<lb/>
Natureprom-<lb/>
tl if) just<lb/>
By Rachel Parker<lb/>
Staff Writer<lb/>
Straight from Ireland, The<lb/>
Frank and Walters bring a breath<lb/>
of fresh air to modern music with<lb/>
their uplifting lyrics and upbeat<lb/>
music.<lb/>
The three men who make<lb/>
up The Frank and Walters hail<lb/>
from a small village near Cork in<lb/>
Ireland.<lb/>
Growing up they spent most<lb/>
of their time listening to the only<lb/>
two records they owned.<lb/>
Those records, which greatly<lb/>
influenced their music, were<lb/>
Seargean t Pepper by the Beatles and<lb/>
Greatest Hits by Simon and<lb/>
C .arfunkel.<lb/>
Thev also wrote songs about<lb/>
two drunken tramps who roamed<lb/>
the streets of their hometown.<lb/>
The three members of the<lb/>
band are Paul Linehan, vocalsand<lb/>
bass, Niall Linehan, guitar; ,m<lb/>
Ashley Keating, drums.<lb/>
All three write humerous and<lb/>
surreal songs about their friends.<lb/>
Basically,Paul Linehan writes the<lb/>
lyrics and Keating and Niall<lb/>
Linehan i onipose the music.<lb/>
"Mi hael" is about their<lb/>
best fi iend, theonly person in their<lb/>
neighborhood to own a fancy car,<lb/>
until he wivi ked it ,nv replaced it<lb/>
with a bicycle.<lb/>
"So smile and ride your bi-<lb/>
cvcleYou never really look down<lb/>
cause you're afraid that you'd see<lb/>
the clouds, or maybeyou're afraid<lb/>
of heightsYou have an awfully<lb/>
long way to fall my friend So cycle<lb/>
with your head in the clouds the<lb/>
lyrics proclaim.<lb/>
"Daisy Chain" emphasizes<lb/>
the diversity of the people living<lb/>
in the world.<lb/>
"We don't know what's<lb/>
wrong with them and they don't<lb/>
know what's wrong with us<lb/>
Doesn't anybody know why they<lb/>
do all the things they do?Whv<lb/>
don't we know why they say all<lb/>
the things they say?Why don't<lb/>
you know that you 're just not them<lb/>
and they're just not you?"<lb/>
"Walter's Trip" is more<lb/>
surreal.<lb/>
"I saw a giraffe as high as my<lb/>
kneeHe was making shapes of<lb/>
the letter Zlt rained blue sponges<lb/>
for half an hour while the boys<lb/>
they play chess in the tower<lb/>
The Frank and Walters<lb/>
charm listeners w ith their realistic<lb/>
words and music.<lb/>
The United States debut mini-<lb/>
album was released lime 2, 1992.<lb/>
Don't miss the band who is,<lb/>
according to MME, the best Irish<lb/>
band nil e the I i idei tones.<lb/>
ART EXHIBITIONS<lb/>
Wellington B. Gray Gallery ?<lb/>
Recherche, 3 5 works by eleven art-<lb/>
is from Philadelphia African-<lb/>
American's artists' organization, cur-<lb/>
rently on exhibit.<lb/>
William Fick: Linocuts, T by 6' to<lb/>
4' by 8' large format prints presenting<lb/>
satirical images depicting dilemma of<lb/>
human condition, currently on exhibit.<lb/>
Joyce Ogden: Personal Views.<lb/>
Site-specific sculptural installation<lb/>
coupled with year-long lecture pro-<lb/>
gram on installation art, currently on<lb/>
exhibit.<lb/>
Jenkins Fine Arts Center ?<lb/>
Carol L. Overman, senior student<lb/>
at ECU. Selection of art works consist-<lb/>
ing of paintings in acrylic, silver jew-<lb/>
elry designs, a woodcut print and a<lb/>
variety of textile works. Display will<lb/>
run Sept. 21-28.<lb/>
Julie Lambeth, senior student at<lb/>
ECU. Selection of av works consisting<lb/>
oi direct dyes, a woodcut print, bead-<lb/>
and a variet) ol textile works. Dis-<lb/>
play will run from Sept. 2 1 -28.<lb/>
?<lb/>
<pb facs="00058338_0006"/><lb/>
??<lb/>
8 The East Carolinian<lb/>
SEPTEMBER 17. 1992<lb/>
I<lb/>
New ending in re-cut Blade<lb/>
Attic<lb/>
Continued from page 7<lb/>
Roche<lb/>
By Michael Harrison<lb/>
Staff Writer<lb/>
While Sneakers shows today's<lb/>
potential technology at work, the<lb/>
near future's potential technology<lb/>
is depicted in director Ridley<lb/>
Scott's re-cut Blade Runner.<lb/>
Blade Runner achieved instan-<lb/>
taneous wide-spread recognition<lb/>
for its stylistic effects and unusual<lb/>
storyline.<lb/>
A vastly overpopulated Earth<lb/>
of the future is facing a severe<lb/>
backlash for genetic engineering.<lb/>
Live human-like, but<lb/>
murdering beings called<lb/>
replicants, have been genetically<lb/>
constructed to work as slaves on<lb/>
other colonized planets. The<lb/>
replicants look very human, and<lb/>
some of them might be sneaking<lb/>
to Earth to live as humans.<lb/>
Enter Harrison Ford as Rich<lb/>
Deckard, a "blade runner" whose<lb/>
assignment is todiscover the mur-<lb/>
dering replicants and eliminate<lb/>
them.<lb/>
Deckard is saved from a<lb/>
replicantattack by Rachel (played<lb/>
bv Sean Young) who turns out to<lb/>
be a replicant herself. Despite his<lb/>
common sense, Deckard is taken<lb/>
in by her looks and charm.<lb/>
A climatic confrontation<lb/>
erupts between Deckard and<lb/>
replicant leader Roy Batty (Rutger<lb/>
Hauer), and Deckard is finally<lb/>
forced tofacehisduty toeliminate<lb/>
Rachel as a renegade.<lb/>
The desire to do a re-edited<lb/>
version dates back to the film's<lb/>
original release.<lb/>
"We are more used to the vi-<lb/>
sual styleofBmfrRiHHernow,but<lb/>
at the first research screenings, I<lb/>
think people were over-awed by<lb/>
the scenic tapes try and somewhat<lb/>
confused by the storyline Scott<lb/>
said. "After numerous previews,<lb/>
we felt that the film needed some<lb/>
additional narration, but I think<lb/>
what we inserted was overkill.<lb/>
Harrison (Ford) objected as well,<lb/>
but it seemed to be required by the<lb/>
audience, so we put it in<lb/>
Gone now is Harrison Ford's<lb/>
voiceover, and another ending has<lb/>
replaced the first, more uplifting<lb/>
one. Deckard and Rachel's ro-<lb/>
mance is also more deeply ex-<lb/>
plored now.<lb/>
Scott said he believes movie-<lb/>
goers have become more sophisti-<lb/>
cated since '82, and thus, will be<lb/>
more accepting of the new end-<lb/>
ing, the one he had originally en-<lb/>
visioned.<lb/>
"I think this dark view of the<lb/>
future was a bit shocking at the<lb/>
time Scott continued. "Today,<lb/>
it's much less so. Warner Bros,<lb/>
had in its files a version of the film<lb/>
which I had edited in 1982 and<lb/>
they exhibited it in Los Angeles in<lb/>
late 1991 to positive response.<lb/>
When the studio showed this ver-<lb/>
sion to me, 1 thought, 'We've got-<lb/>
ten so close; why not complete<lb/>
this as I'd like to see it today, for<lb/>
audiences who appreciate his<lb/>
material and now are ready to see<lb/>
it in its undiluted form And from<lb/>
this came the cut we're releasing<lb/>
now<lb/>
The production design was<lb/>
very much unlike anything seen<lb/>
before. Buildings typically aver-<lb/>
age to be hundreds of stories tall.<lb/>
Streets are jammed with people<lb/>
and vehicles.<lb/>
Scott said, "Blade Runner is<lb/>
firstand foremost a detective story,<lb/>
a thriller. It's not so much science<lb/>
fiction as futuristic, or better yet,<lb/>
of the future<lb/>
Blade Runneraso stars Edward<lb/>
James Olmos, M. Emmet Walsh,<lb/>
Joe Turkel, Daryl Hannah, Brion<lb/>
James, William J. Sanderson,<lb/>
Joanna Cassidy, Morgan Paull,<lb/>
James Hong and Hy Pyke.<lb/>
Wednesday night The Comedy<lb/>
Zone features two guest comedi-<lb/>
ans, and is an example of The Attic's<lb/>
continued variety.<lb/>
The Attic has featured some of<lb/>
the top comedians in the country,<lb/>
including: Carrot Top (who will be<lb/>
performing two shows during<lb/>
Homecoming week), Ritch<lb/>
Shydner, Mark "Skippy" Price,<lb/>
Willie and Lester, Mike Mesmer<lb/>
"Eyes Kevin Hughs and Blake<lb/>
Clark. There are even plans now to<lb/>
feature a locally-produced televi-<lb/>
sion show spotlighting comedians<lb/>
live from The Attic.<lb/>
The Attic has featured some of<lb/>
thenation'sbiggestacts. Bands who<lb/>
have performed there include: The<lb/>
Black Crowes, Greg Allman, The<lb/>
Georgia Satellites, The Pointer Sis-<lb/>
ters (who recorded a concert film<lb/>
seen internationally at The Attic),<lb/>
The Ramones, The Romantics and<lb/>
Bonham.<lb/>
The Attic has also seen various<lb/>
forms of national recognition. The<lb/>
club appeared on the cover of "Per-<lb/>
formance Magazine" Sept. 3rd 1982<lb/>
and has been mentioned on MTV<lb/>
several times. The world famous<lb/>
Attic T-shirts have sold an astonish-<lb/>
ing90,tXX)since 1971,and havebeen<lb/>
seen as far away as Toko. ji<lb/>
FutureplansTrontohasforThe<lb/>
Attic include keeping The Comedy<lb/>
Zone strong, bringing in more new<lb/>
bands such as Sex Tolice, Johnny<lb/>
Quest, and Dillon Fence, and stay-<lb/>
ing up with thenational band scene.<lb/>
The Attic now also has the Pro-<lb/>
gressive Dance NightSunday nights<lb/>
featuring free jumps on the new<lb/>
"velcro-wall<lb/>
Another addition is The Attic<lb/>
Unplugged every Tuesday night<lb/>
featuring the best in live acoustic<lb/>
music, once again proving the, di-<lb/>
versity of the club.<lb/>
The Attic will celebrate its 21st<lb/>
birthday tonightwithlsland record-<lb/>
ing artist Drivin' n' Cryin Tickets<lb/>
are $10 in advance and $12 at the<lb/>
door. Advanced tickets can be<lb/>
bought at the Wash Pub on Tenth<lb/>
Street. There will be limo rides, din-<lb/>
ners, door prizes and all of the regu-<lb/>
lar specials. Come out and join the<lb/>
celebration and experience what<lb/>
makes The Attic special.<lb/>
Continued from page 7<lb/>
musical needs, The Roches carved<lb/>
a niche for future female acts.<lb/>
The group has pursued sev-<lb/>
eral interesting endeavors since<lb/>
then. One of their most notable<lb/>
projects was a Christmas album,<lb/>
We Three Kings, recorded in the<lb/>
1990 season. It contains the group's<lb/>
versions of 24 popular carols.<lb/>
They also did back-up vocals<lb/>
on albums for the pop band Was<lb/>
Not Was, and for country singer<lb/>
Kathy Mattea.<lb/>
The trio proved their tendency<lb/>
toward silliness and fun by depict-<lb/>
ing a group of singing roaches on<lb/>
Steven Spielberg's television car-<lb/>
toon series, Tiny Toon Adventures.<lb/>
The Roches have appeared on<lb/>
only one of the animated episodes,<lb/>
but more are on the way.<lb/>
The Roches have plans to re-<lb/>
lease a new record this fall, and<lb/>
they are currently on the road.<lb/>
They will perform at Thalian<lb/>
Hall in Wilmington Sept. 17 at<lb/>
8:00p.m.<lb/>
r Atpiofe<lb/>
s<lb/>
EX P<lb/>
eadership Fair<lb/>
L O S I<lb/>
O N<lb/>
? t<lb/>
Discover Your Leadership<lb/>
Potential!<lb/>
Join an Organization!<lb/>
Pnes (or SluJenls Include:<lb/>
Climbing Wall Instruction Session and Pass!<lb/>
Ray Charles Tickets<lb/>
Bowiuig aid BtRvrdx Coupons'<lb/>
midoitur r;r?,ow<lb/>
I<lb/>
Seafood House &amp; Oyster Bar<lb/>
YtumnYs<lb/>
$1.00 OFF Any Meal ?xcept Specials<lb/>
coupon good thru 103192 with Student I.D.<lb/>
Shrimp Plote $3.95<lb/>
Trout &amp; Shrimp Plate $4.95<lb/>
Trout, Ocean Perch &amp; Shrimp<lb/>
Choice of Tujo $4.95<lb/>
Offer Good Mon-Thurs<lb/>
Washington Highway Take-outs Welcome<lb/>
(NC33?xt) (lOthSt. ?xt) 7CO Z170<lb/>
Greenville, NC 34-3I4<lb/>
Si?imi isaaBir a. D"rM ' Ps??x? wmhi<lb/>
Eating &amp; DrinkinvJ"Vf Satoon<lb/>
MONDAY NIGHTFOOTBALL<lb/>
IS BACK!<lb/>
New York Giants vs.<lb/>
Cicago Bears<lb/>
SPECIALS INCLUDE:<lb/>
? Draft Beer - 95$ a glass$4.95 a pitcher<lb/>
?House Hiballs $2.00<lb/>
?Juice Highballs $2.25<lb/>
? Double Lime Margaritas $2.75<lb/>
?Double Strawberry Margaritas $2.95<lb/>
?Buffalo Wings 25t each<lb/>
from 4 pm - Closing<lb/>
? Drawings for Prizes Every Monday!<lb/>
(located behind Quincy's Stealbouse on Greenville Blvd. 355-46)<lb/>
SEASON OF SAVINGS<lb/>
ft<lb/>
A<lb/>
FRESH<lb/>
CHICKEN<lb/>
LEG<lb/>
QUARTERS<lb/>
jrff? V4?<lb/>
?I'lX-l.iidlMlLuA-ljC.<lb/>
PRICES EFFECTIVE THRU SATURDAY, SEPTEMBER 19,1992<lb/>
RINSO ULTRA<lb/>
LAUNDRY<lb/>
DETERGENT<lb/>
16 OZ<lb/>
10 LOAD<lb/>
OODLES<lb/>
OF<lb/>
NOODLES<lb/>
? i?5? i<lb/>
NABISCO<lb/>
SALTINE<lb/>
CRACKERS<lb/>
HEAVY<lb/>
WESTERN<lb/>
T-BONE<lb/>
STEAKS<lb/>
HEAVY<lb/>
WESTERN<lb/>
BONELESS<lb/>
SIRLON<lb/>
STEAKS<lb/>
LEAN-N-TENDER<lb/>
FRESH<lb/>
PORK<lb/>
SPARERIBS<lb/>
<lb/>
w<lb/>
'BUSCH<lb/>
I?OB?<lb/>
2 LITER<lb/>
COCA<lb/>
COLA<lb/>
CLASSIC<lb/>
snszszsrjp.<lb/>
rO?MMAl<lb/>
BUSH OR<lb/>
SCHLITZOR BUSH LIGHT<lb/>
SCHLITZ LIGHT SUEP?ES<lb/>
) tJ i24PACK-120Z<lb/>
Jgf 12 PACK <lb/>
2 LITER<lb/>
COKE II<lb/>
FORMERLY<lb/>
NEW COKE<lb/>
BREYERS ? STOUFFERS <lb/>
ALL NATURAL PREMIUM S,N.Gjr 5. STOUFFERS<lb/>
ICE CREAM LASAGNA MACARONI<lb/>
MILK &amp;-4CQ &amp; CHEESE<lb/>
i<lb/>
DONALD DUCK CHILLED<lb/>
s ORANGE JUICE<lb/>
GALLON<lb/>
<pb facs="00058338_0007"/><lb/>
Secret Agent V7<lb/>
By Chris Kemple<lb/>
Laughter is a<lb/>
Fred's Corner<lb/>
healing action. It's also an eight letter word.<lb/>
By Sean Pamell<lb/>
HWIMIItnMi<lb/>
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On The Air<lb/>
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&amp;)TCA&amp;? SWWM1H KlO<lb/>
By Ferguson and Manning<lb/>
WSOUJTA<lb/>
On The Air<lb/>
By Manning and Ferguson<lb/>
YA'KMu) ALB, ZUAS<lb/>
U0NDER.IV6 OJHCZETHe<lb/>
VAite 'GOAMJO" cones<lb/>
PPOH<lb/>
 XTS FZoBtoCV S0fl?tllJ6<lb/>
AJATive AmftCAK) M'fW&amp;i<lb/>
$or?e-rn6 pgePAup<lb/>
MtAMltJCFOL<lb/>
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&amp;fR.?fj u&amp;sreLAuD op.<lb/>
A MCTAPHWcAt STATS Of<lb/>
on&amp;vess DTH AJAtuee<lb/>
or wee<lb/>
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&amp; LtHfiE '?Z<lb/>
The Abduction<lb/>
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Ml MJGHTIRS BEEN<lb/>
The World of Ghannon and Elvis<lb/>
By Whiteley and Brown<lb/>
AquaClear power heads<lb/>
ON SALE "<lb/>
$1799 $19.99 $2999 $3999<lb/>
University Center "JTl thru 97492<lb/>
14th &amp; Charles St. SOOSO<lb/>
Taken, ahp t want<lb/>
You W GET HER sack<lb/>
BUT WHAT CAN WE<lb/>
MY LORD? Y<lb/>
By Efvs Brown<lb/>
fttfue i<lb/>
Rich's Nuthouse<lb/>
L4), ftXJR-d'rJ?S'<lb/>
I'M TALKJN' s<lb/>
to youfs-uau?<lb/>
OH NO, NOT<lb/>
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by Haselrig<lb/>
JVfT MNT?P V?X 72? WAIT A ?L, PfL.<lb/>
KNOW TUAT Tt-? &amp;Z.XA VJUATS S-&amp;S.<lb/>
sov aocxMfrwe usas MAME? ?<lb/>
HORfilBlM. 7UAAK13 r-? S ?ARNl?<lb/>
fok BUVtN' IT, JOSTTUG, 1 ff SELTZER<lb/>
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?-a 11 x Z GOTTA GrO<lb/>
?Ml  .<lb/>
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NECJ&amp;H&amp;NE<lb/>
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lriX UXK UK? A Nice<lb/>
&amp;UV, ?Ae.N(E. I PWC<lb/>
VAZ'LL B? GCOP<lb/>
FRICNPS <lb/>
7<lb/>
YOU Said vou<lb/>
have, to 00 50<lb/>
I'LL CHECK vex<lb/>
LATEJZ. '<lb/>
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m<lb/>
sucu?a sap go? ? xil xJrv<lb/>
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EAST CAROLINA FRIENDS<lb/>
30 KIDS NEED FRIENDS<lb/>
? 2 Hours A Week ? A Car ? 2.2 G.P.A.<lb/>
 Kids Ages 4-13 - -<lb/>
DEADLINE: SUNDAY, SEPTEMBER 20<lb/>
VOLUNTEER<lb/>
757-6137<lb/>
,AWQf 9<lb/>
ecr<lb/>
ecf<lb/>
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it<lb/>
The East Carolinian<lb/>
Classifieds<lb/>
SEPTEMBER 17,1992<lb/>
Page 6<lb/>
F( )R RENT<lb/>
KINGS ARMS APART-<lb/>
MENTS :1 and 2 bedroom<lb/>
apartments. Energy-efficient,<lb/>
several locations in town. Car-<lb/>
peted, kitchen appliances, some<lb/>
water and sewer paid, washer<lb/>
dryer hookups. Call 752-8915.<lb/>
FEMALE ROOMMATE<lb/>
NEEDED: 2 blocks from cam-<lb/>
pus, $160 per month plus oo<lb/>
of utilities, phone, and cable.<lb/>
Available now. Call 752-1596<lb/>
for more information.<lb/>
ROOMMATE NEEDED: 407<lb/>
Biltmore St. $125.00month<lb/>
plus 1 3 utilities. Call 758-0700.<lb/>
HOUSEMATE WANTED:<lb/>
Near campus, quiet, $165.50<lb/>
month plus 12 utilities. Call<lb/>
758-3311.<lb/>
HOUSE TO SHARE: Need<lb/>
roommate male or female.<lb/>
House has washer, dryer, deck,<lb/>
and garage for storage. $200.00<lb/>
PER MONTH plus 13 utili-<lb/>
ties, cable and phone. Call Mike<lb/>
or Ron 355-2627.<lb/>
NEED A MATURE, respon-<lb/>
sible female, preferably non-<lb/>
smoker to share a 3 bedroom<lb/>
apt in Tar River. Will have<lb/>
ownroom. Rent is $143.00, utili-<lb/>
ties not included. Contact 758-<lb/>
7016.<lb/>
ROOMMATE NEEDED: Fe-<lb/>
male, non-smoker; 2 blocks<lb/>
from campus; small bedroom;<lb/>
$100 rent 13 utilities and<lb/>
phone. No pets. Available now.<lb/>
More info call 757-2782.<lb/>
FEMALE ROOMMATES<lb/>
NEEDED: (Available October<lb/>
3rd.) To share a two bedroom<lb/>
at Georgetowne Apts1 block<lb/>
from downtown and campus.<lb/>
Contact Laurie: 752-9672.<lb/>
FEMALE WANTED to share 2<lb/>
bedroom apt. Rent $175.00 1 <lb/>
2 utilities. Must be neat and<lb/>
have a good sense of humor.<lb/>
Call (D) 757-2200,after 5:30.757-<lb/>
2786 ask for Lyn.<lb/>
ROOMMATE NEEDE: Male,<lb/>
non-smoker to share large 2<lb/>
bedroom apt. 1 block from cam-<lb/>
pus. $115mo. rent 13 utili-<lb/>
ties. Call 752-6181, leave mes-<lb/>
sage.<lb/>
FOR RENT: Parking space<lb/>
available on Library St. 12<lb/>
block from campus. Reasonable<lb/>
rate call 830-9343.<lb/>
FOR SALE<lb/>
MOVING - MUST SALE:<lb/>
Onkyo Tuner, Pioneer Amp.<lb/>
JVC CDplayer wremote Bose<lb/>
501 speakers $300.00. King size<lb/>
4 poster waterbed, $300.00.<lb/>
Walnut Exec. Desk $90.00. Call<lb/>
Dean or Shelly 355-5847.<lb/>
MUST SALE: Antique white<lb/>
French Provincial bedroom<lb/>
suite - will sell pieces individu-<lb/>
F( )R SALE<lb/>
ally. Also keyboard, lamps and<lb/>
more.callChristineorVaughna<lb/>
at 321-1302. Leave message.<lb/>
FOR SALE: 1987 Dodge Colt,<lb/>
new breaks and exhaust, 68 K<lb/>
miles. Good condition - $1,800.<lb/>
Call Tony 752-1340.<lb/>
FORMAL DRESS: Perfect for<lb/>
any formal occasion. Black T-<lb/>
length rhinestone sprinkled<lb/>
size 9-10. Call 355-7119 any-<lb/>
time.<lb/>
HAND DRUMS: Dounbeks,<lb/>
Bodlrans, tablas, etc. call 756-<lb/>
4226 for more information.<lb/>
FOR SALE: New 50 watt<lb/>
Onkyo receiver. Has only been<lb/>
used for a couple of months.<lb/>
Still under warranty for 1 12<lb/>
years. Call 830-9301.<lb/>
FOR SALE: G.E. portable ste-<lb/>
reo - $50.00 or best offer. AM<lb/>
FM stereo, duel cassette, high<lb/>
speed dubbing, detachable<lb/>
speakers and auxiliary jacks.<lb/>
Call 931-9807 (Leave message).<lb/>
2 U2 TICKETS: $30.00 each.<lb/>
Row 38. Columbia, SC, Sep-<lb/>
tember 23. Call 758-2372. Leave<lb/>
message.<lb/>
MEN'S AND WOMEN'S 26"<lb/>
FreeSpiritbicycles. $70.00 each.<lb/>
321-1701.<lb/>
DORM REFRIGERATORS<lb/>
used, very good condition.<lb/>
$50.00. Warsaw Pawm, War-<lb/>
saw, NC (919) 293-4040.<lb/>
HELP WANTED<lb/>
Hours are from 3:00 pm until<lb/>
7:00 pm with some night and<lb/>
weekend coaching. This pro-<lb/>
gram will run from September<lb/>
to mid-November. Salary rates<lb/>
start at $4.25 per hour. For more<lb/>
information, please call Ben<lb/>
James at 830-4567 or Micheal<lb/>
Daly at 830-4550.<lb/>
TOPLESS DANCERS<lb/>
WANTED - Great club, Great<lb/>
money, unbelievable tips. Work<lb/>
Thursday, Friday, Saturday, 9<lb/>
pm - 2 am. Call Sid 919-735-<lb/>
7713 or Paul 919-736-0716.<lb/>
MothersPlayhouse<lb/>
Goldsboro.<lb/>
HELP WANTED<lb/>
in<lb/>
Cost Plus! Computers<lb/>
756-6390<lb/>
386DX-40MHZ<lb/>
4MB Ram<lb/>
120MB Hard Drive<lb/>
1.2 MB 5.25" Floppy Drive<lb/>
1.44 MB 3.5" Floppy Drive<lb/>
Super VGA .28 DP Monitor<lb/>
1 MB SVGA Card<lb/>
Dual Serial Ports<lb/>
Parallel &amp; Game Ports<lb/>
101 Key Enhanced Keyboard<lb/>
MouseDOS 5.0Windows 3.1<lb/>
$1540.00<lb/>
HELP WANTED<lb/>
ALASKA SUMMER EM-<lb/>
PLOYMENT - Fisheries. Earn<lb/>
$5,000month. Free trans-<lb/>
portation! Room &amp; Board!<lb/>
Over 8,000 openings. No ex-<lb/>
perience necessary. MALE or<lb/>
FEMALE. For employment<lb/>
program call Student Employ-<lb/>
ment Services at 1-206-545-<lb/>
4155 ext. A5362.<lb/>
FALL SOCCER COACHES -<lb/>
The Greenville Recreation and<lb/>
Parks Department is recruit-<lb/>
ing for 12to 16part-time youth<lb/>
soccer coaches for the fall youth<lb/>
soccer program. Applicants<lb/>
must possess some know 1( -Ige<lb/>
of the soccer skills and 1. ve<lb/>
the ability and patience with<lb/>
youth. Applicants must be able<lb/>
to coach young people ages 5-<lb/>
16, in soccer fundamentals.<lb/>
EMERGENCY! Expanding<lb/>
company needs hardworking<lb/>
reliable students to mail our diet<lb/>
brochures from Home Dorm!<lb/>
Earn up to $200 PT or $1000 FT!<lb/>
Employees needed immedi-<lb/>
ately! For job application send<lb/>
self-addressed stamp envelope:<lb/>
Colossal Marketing, Employee<lb/>
Processing, P.O. Box 291140<lb/>
Port Orange, FL 32129.<lb/>
POSTAL JOBS AVAILABLE!<lb/>
Many positions. Great benefits.<lb/>
Call (800) 338-3388 ext. P-3712<lb/>
"HELP WANTED" EARN<lb/>
$1,500 WEEKLY mailing our<lb/>
circulars Begin now FREE<lb/>
packet! SEYS, Dept. 164, Box<lb/>
4000, Cordova, 38018000.<lb/>
GUARANTEED WORK<lb/>
AVAILABLE. Excellent pay for<lb/>
EASY home based work. Full<lb/>
part-time. Rush self-addressed<lb/>
stamped envelope: Publishers<lb/>
(G2) 1821 Hillandale Rd. 1B-<lb/>
295 Durham, NC 27705<lb/>
$360UP WEEKLY. Mailing<lb/>
brochures! Sparefull-time. Set<lb/>
own hours! RUSH self-ad-<lb/>
dressed stamped envelope:<lb/>
Publishers (G1) 1821 Hillandale<lb/>
Rd. 1B-295 Durham, NC 27705<lb/>
COLLEGE REP WANTED: To<lb/>
distribute "Student Rate" sub-<lb/>
scription cards at this campus.<lb/>
Good income. For information<lb/>
and application write to: COL-<lb/>
LEGIATE MARKETING SER-<lb/>
VICES, P.O. Box 1436<lb/>
Mooresville, NC 28115.<lb/>
BRODY'S &amp; BRODY'S FOR<lb/>
MEN are accepting applications<lb/>
for Part-Time Sales and Cus-<lb/>
tomer Service Positions. Flex-<lb/>
ible schedules to fit most needs.<lb/>
Salaryclothing Discount. Ap-<lb/>
ply Brody's The Plaza Mon-<lb/>
Wed. l-4pm.<lb/>
WANTED BARTENDERS<lb/>
WAITRESSES: Apply in per-<lb/>
son Mon-Thurs. between 2-<lb/>
4pm. No phone calls, Please!<lb/>
Professor O'Cools 605A Green-<lb/>
ville Blvd. (Behind Quincy's).<lb/>
Computers, Inc 106 E. 5th St.<lb/>
752-3694.<lb/>
WORK AT HOME: Assembly<lb/>
, craft, typing and more! Up to<lb/>
$500.00 a week possible. For<lb/>
information write Source; P.O.<lb/>
Box 227, Dept. 9108 Greenville,<lb/>
NC 27834.<lb/>
ATTENTION! EARN $2500<lb/>
Free Trip! Students, Greeks,<lb/>
Clubs earn free Spring Break<lb/>
trip after selling only 8 trips at<lb/>
your school! Spring Break 1-<lb/>
800-678-6386.<lb/>
CAMPUS REPS WANTED!<lb/>
Quality vacations to exotic des-<lb/>
tinations! Sell Spring Break<lb/>
packages to Jamaica, Cancun,<lb/>
Bahamas, Florida. Fastest way<lb/>
to free travel and extra $$$$.<lb/>
Call Sun Splash Tours 1-800-<lb/>
426-7710.<lb/>
MODELS Susan's needs you<lb/>
now! 809-A Red Banks Rd<lb/>
Greenville. New TV commer-<lb/>
cials in production. Require-<lb/>
ments: Height 5'7" and up, size<lb/>
6-8, some previous modeling<lb/>
or pageant experience.<lb/>
THURSDAY BABYSITTER<lb/>
NEEDED from 8:30am to<lb/>
11:30am. Must have experience<lb/>
and energy. Transportation<lb/>
necessary. Susan 758-5345.<lb/>
LOST AND FOUND<lb/>
ily is anxiously awaiting his<lb/>
return. Call Dana at 757-6366.<lb/>
PERSONALS<lb/>
GREEKS &amp; CLUBS<lb/>
RAISE A COOL<lb/>
$1000<lb/>
IN JUST ONE WEEK!<lb/>
PLUS $1000 FOR THE<lb/>
MEMBER WHO CALLS!<lb/>
No obligation. No cost.<lb/>
You also get a FREE<lb/>
HEADPHONE RADIO<lb/>
just for calling<lb/>
1-80d-932-0528.Ext.65<lb/>
SERVICES ()FFERED<lb/>
TYPINGWORD PROCESS-<lb/>
ING : Call Cindy after 5:30 or<lb/>
leave message. Familiar with<lb/>
all formats 15 years experience.<lb/>
Low rates. Work guaranteed.<lb/>
Call 355-3611.<lb/>
TENNIS LESSONS: Student<lb/>
and Faculty; $7 per hour. Call<lb/>
752-8280.<lb/>
S Financial Aid Available S<lb/>
Attention All Srudenral<lb/>
Undergrade k Grad uaiea. Over $5 Billion k gran <lb/>
scholarships are now available from private sector Ac<lb/>
government sources for College Students nationwide. All<lb/>
student! are eligible! Let us help you locate the money that<lb/>
you are eugMe to receive. Applications are now bang<lb/>
accepted. To receive your financial aid program call:<lb/>
Student Financial StTVicn<lb/>
BlftagMBaUaafcHM<lb/>
WRITERPHILOSOPHER<lb/>
MUSICIAN and poetic soul<lb/>
seeks friendship and corre-<lb/>
spondence from like-minded<lb/>
lady. Photos and letters to MV,<lb/>
P.O. Box 8663, Greenville, NC<lb/>
27835.<lb/>
SIGMA PLEDGES : Hope<lb/>
you're having a great week.<lb/>
Get excited! It won't be long<lb/>
now until you find your big<lb/>
sis Love, the Sisters.<lb/>
ANNE SELDON &amp; Ken<lb/>
Ashby thanks for making<lb/>
Parent's Day such a great suc-<lb/>
cess. Ken, you were very handy<lb/>
with those tents. Thanks again!<lb/>
Love the Sigmas.<lb/>
PI DELTA local sorority will<lb/>
beholding their annual Rush<lb/>
at Mendenhall Multipurpose<lb/>
room on Monday Sept. 21 from<lb/>
7:30 -10:00pm, Tues. Sept. 22<lb/>
from 7:30 - 10:00pm and on<lb/>
Wednesday Sept. 23 from 7:30<lb/>
- 10:00 pm. The sisters of Pi<lb/>
Delta invite any girl to attend.<lb/>
RAIN FALLING Reality call-<lb/>
ing. Mind flies Reality dies.<lb/>
ALPHA OMICRON PI<lb/>
proudly supports KATE BOTT<lb/>
Z for Sophomore Class Vice-<lb/>
President!<lb/>
GO PIRATES Good luck<lb/>
against South Carolina! Love,<lb/>
Alpha Omicron Pi.<lb/>
CONGRATS to the Alpha<lb/>
Omicron Pi flag football team!<lb/>
2 shut-outs in a row! Keep up<lb/>
that winning tradition! Alpha<lb/>
Omicron Pi and Damn proud<lb/>
of it<lb/>
VOTE KATE BOTT for<lb/>
Sophomore Class Vice-presi-<lb/>
dent!<lb/>
PERSONALS<lb/>
you're 3 man. Cheers from 114<lb/>
TO THE ECU FOOTBALL<lb/>
TEAM and fans: Congratula-<lb/>
tions on the game against VA<lb/>
Tech! Lets win again in South<lb/>
Carolina. Go Pirates! - Alpha<lb/>
Xi Delta!<lb/>
TO THE ALPHA XI DELTA<lb/>
FOOTBALL TEAM and<lb/>
Coach Micheal Baker: The<lb/>
plays are in full effect along<lb/>
with the cuts and bruises. We<lb/>
wish you a great season with<lb/>
no loses! Libos, the Sisters and<lb/>
pledges of Alpha Xi Delta.<lb/>
TO KAPPA SIG and Angelica<lb/>
Pena: Thank you for the Par-<lb/>
ents Weekend celebration!<lb/>
Love the Pledges and Sisters<lb/>
of Alpha Xi Delta.<lb/>
FOOTBALL PLAYERS AND<lb/>
FANS: Congratulations on<lb/>
your victory against VA Tech!<lb/>
Hope everyone had as much<lb/>
fun as we did! Party on, Pi-<lb/>
rates! Love, Gamma Sigma<lb/>
Sigma.<lb/>
TWAS THE NIGHT OF<lb/>
TOGA and all through the<lb/>
place. Fred Flinstone was<lb/>
groovin to JQ's bass. The cat<lb/>
thief and Eddie's cramps were<lb/>
no joke. I got two words for<lb/>
Sam ? Poison Oak.<lb/>
TO THE B?@!CH who stole<lb/>
my hat at Toga Friday: You<lb/>
can run but you can't hide!<lb/>
You know who you are and<lb/>
you'll never be able to wear it<lb/>
in public. I Want My Hat Back!<lb/>
JB<lb/>
WAY TO GO Alpha Phi flag<lb/>
football players! Keep up the<lb/>
great job!<lb/>
WE PAY CASH OR CREDIT<lb/>
For Unwanted CD's,<lb/>
Cassettes &amp; Vinyl<lb/>
Stop By or Call CD ALLEY<lb/>
Downtown 758-5026<lb/>
IMMEDIATE OPENING:<lb/>
Typist Secretarial person. Ap-<lb/>
ply in person between 9:00 -<lb/>
5:00 Monday thru Friday at SDF<lb/>
LOST AND FOUND<lb/>
HAVE YOU SEEN a black<lb/>
ma le cat? Last seen in mall area<lb/>
a week ago. Very worried fam-<lb/>
CONGRATULATIONS to<lb/>
the new Zeta Tau Alpha<lb/>
pledges! Amy Barber, Heather<lb/>
Burgee, Deana C?le, Michelle<lb/>
Chrisman, Edy Cline, Krista<lb/>
Dalkowski, Tammy Hardison,<lb/>
Laura Hogan, Jen Lyons, Tara<lb/>
Martinelli, Lisa Melisauskas,<lb/>
Alicia Nisbet, Roxanne<lb/>
Reynolds, Natalie Richards,<lb/>
Jennifer Shetzley, Jennifer<lb/>
Tysinger, Leigh Ann Watkins,<lb/>
Stacey Wilmoth and Robin<lb/>
Wilson. Love, the Sisters.<lb/>
CONGRATULATIONS to<lb/>
the new initiates of Zeta Tau<lb/>
Alpha: Kate Baebler, Lara<lb/>
Marr, Eileen Moore, Jodi<lb/>
Simmons and Jill Wagner.<lb/>
TO THE DEADHEAD, the<lb/>
BALDHEAD, and the RED-<lb/>
HEAD: Don't take life's joke<lb/>
on you personally, It's only one<lb/>
big drinking game And<lb/>
TO THE BETA PSI<lb/>
PLEDGES: We had so much<lb/>
fun on biglittle hunt. We hope<lb/>
it was worth the search! Love,<lb/>
your Alpha Phi Big Sisters.<lb/>
CONGRATULATIONS to<lb/>
the pledge class officers of Al-<lb/>
pha Phi: President, Julie<lb/>
Breazeale; Vice President,<lb/>
Janet Funderburk; V.P. of<lb/>
Scholarship, Amanda Baer and<lb/>
J.P. Worley; Treaasurer,<lb/>
Heather Joyce; Recording Sec,<lb/>
Amy Rogers; Social Chairman,<lb/>
Cathy Choate; Activites Asst,<lb/>
Amy Moss; Chaplain, Tammi<lb/>
Hakooz; Panhellenic Del<lb/>
Katy Bonny; Panhellenic Rep<lb/>
Mindy Grahm and Jonni<lb/>
Wainwright; Philanthropy,<lb/>
Jodi Rittenhouse and Jenny<lb/>
Ransey; Historian, Kathy<lb/>
Molnar; Lock out, Malinda<lb/>
Sikes; Scrapbook, Kristen<lb/>
Shiavone; Sisters Party,<lb/>
Courtney Faison; Fundraiser,<lb/>
Wendy Spencer; Big and Little<lb/>
Chariman, Wendy Bosttan.<lb/>
We look forward to an Awe-<lb/>
some year, Love, the sisters of<lb/>
Alpha Phi.<lb/>
Announcements<lb/>
BISEXUAL-GAY-LES-<lb/>
BIAN SUPPORT GROUP<lb/>
Social support and activities.<lb/>
Meetings are closed. Call 757-<lb/>
6766 11:00 - 12:15 Tues. and<lb/>
Thurs. or 1:00 - 2:30 Wed. for<lb/>
information on meeting time<lb/>
and place.<lb/>
P.U.S.H. THROUGH THE<lb/>
BARRIERS<lb/>
If you would like to work<lb/>
towards reducing the Archi-<lb/>
tectural, as well as the attitudi-<lb/>
nal barriers that students with<lb/>
special needs are faced with<lb/>
every day, then come to the<lb/>
next meeting of P.U.S.H.<lb/>
(People United to Support the<lb/>
Handicapped). The meeting<lb/>
will be 5:00-6:00 on Thursday,<lb/>
September 17 in Cotten Hall<lb/>
Lobby. We will be working on<lb/>
ourplans for Homecomingand<lb/>
an Awareness Week. Come join<lb/>
the fun<lb/>
CAM. FOR ENTRIES<lb/>
The Rebel Magazine, ECU's<lb/>
literary and arts publications'<lb/>
annual competition is calling<lb/>
for entries. Deadline is 11-4-92<lb/>
at 5pm. Regulations and entry<lb/>
forms are located at the Rebel<lb/>
office in the Publication Bldg<lb/>
English Dept, main office and<lb/>
School of Art Media Center.<lb/>
COUNSELING CENTER<lb/>
Men's Issues: This group<lb/>
will explore current society ex-<lb/>
pectations of men and the pres-<lb/>
sures men experience. The<lb/>
group will focus on exposing<lb/>
stereotypes and redefining<lb/>
what it means to be a man in<lb/>
light of current ideas about<lb/>
emotional health and well-be-<lb/>
ing. Mondays beginning (9-21-<lb/>
92 from 3-4pm in 329 Wright<lb/>
Building. Call 757-6661.<lb/>
STUDENTS FOR LIFE<lb/>
Are you Pro-life? If so, you<lb/>
are invited to join ECU Stu-<lb/>
dents for Life. We offer sup-<lb/>
port, information, and an op-<lb/>
portunity to get involved. Call<lb/>
Heather or Laurie at 758-7698<lb/>
for details.<lb/>
RF.A1. CRISIS INTERVEN-<lb/>
TION<lb/>
We need your experience!<lb/>
Your achievements in every-<lb/>
day situations can be useful to<lb/>
others. Earn that feeling of ac-<lb/>
complishment. Real crisis cen-<lb/>
ter is recruiting volunteer cri-<lb/>
sis counselors for our tele-<lb/>
phone hot-line and walk-in<lb/>
center. We will be offering<lb/>
training classes in this enrich-<lb/>
ing field beginning September<lb/>
21, 1992. Call 758-HELP or<lb/>
come by 312 East 10th Street.<lb/>
REAL CRISIS INTERVEN-<lb/>
TION<lb/>
Teens! Dial-A-Teen is inter-<lb/>
ested in your valuable time.<lb/>
We are looking for special<lb/>
teens, between the ages of 15<lb/>
and 18, who would like to vol-<lb/>
unteer their invaluable listen-<lb/>
ing skills to help others in cri-<lb/>
sis. We are offering training<lb/>
classes for our teen hotline be-<lb/>
ginning September 21, 1992.<lb/>
Call 758-HELP or come by 312<lb/>
East 10th Street.<lb/>
COUNSELING CENTER<lb/>
Therapy group for survivors<lb/>
of Insest and Molestation<lb/>
Wednesdays from 3:30 -<lb/>
5:00pm. Call 757-6661 for more<lb/>
information.<lb/>
COUNSELING CENTER<lb/>
Support group for women<lb/>
with eating disorders. Students<lb/>
only. Thursays, 3:30 - 5:00pm.<lb/>
Call Dr. Sara Shepard at 757-<lb/>
6661 for more information.<lb/>
FCHI ACROSS CLUB<lb/>
A meeting for those inter-<lb/>
ested in playing Fall andor<lb/>
Spring Lacross will be held in<lb/>
the basement of Christenbury<lb/>
Gymnasium on Tuesday, Sep-<lb/>
tember 22 at 5:00pm. For fur-<lb/>
ther information, contact Lake<lb/>
at 757-2465.<lb/>
INTRODUCTION TO<lb/>
MEDIATION<lb/>
A short course of instruc-<lb/>
tion in mediation techniques<lb/>
and philosophy will begin 10:00<lb/>
- 11:30am, Sunday, September<lb/>
20, in the Courtney Square<lb/>
Clubhouse, of Arlington Blvd.<lb/>
one block south of Plaza Mall.<lb/>
The course will continue for<lb/>
the next three Sunday morn-<lb/>
ings. All are invited. Bring a<lb/>
cushion and wear comfortable<lb/>
clothing. The instruction is<lb/>
sponsored by the ECU Bud-<lb/>
dhist Mediation and Study<lb/>
Group.<lb/>
SCHOOT OF MUSIC<lb/>
EVENT<lb/>
Sunday, Sept. 20, the ECU<lb/>
School of Music will present<lb/>
"Concert on the Lawn an<lb/>
event of the Friends of the<lb/>
School of Music for members<lb/>
and their guest. For more in-<lb/>
formation call 757-6851.<lb/>
WINDSURFING!<lb/>
ECU Recreational Services<lb/>
will be sponsoring a<lb/>
windsurfing trip on Friday,<lb/>
September 25 - Sunday, Sep-<lb/>
tember 27. Take a break from<lb/>
the stress and come out and<lb/>
have some fun! The cost is<lb/>
$4.00students and $5.00fac-<lb/>
ulty- staff-guest. This includes<lb/>
basic instruction, rigging,<lb/>
transportation and board bal-<lb/>
ance. A pre trip meeting will<lb/>
be haled on September 23 at<lb/>
5:00pm in Brewster D-101. For<lb/>
further information call 757-<lb/>
6911.<lb/>
WINDSURFING CLUB<lb/>
MEETING<lb/>
This Thursday, Sept. 17 at<lb/>
5:30 in Christenbury Gym Rm.<lb/>
102. If you are interested in<lb/>
learning to windsurf, compe-<lb/>
tition windsurfing, or just per-<lb/>
fecting your jibes, loops, etc.<lb/>
This is the group for you. You<lb/>
can windsurf regardless of<lb/>
height, weight or income.<lb/>
<pb facs="00058338_0009"/><lb/>
The East Carolinian<lb/>
September 1 7, 1992<lb/>
Sports<lb/>
Page 9<lb/>
Prediction<lb/>
Pirates will jerk 'Cocks around<lb/>
By Robert S. Todd<lb/>
Sports Editor<lb/>
The 'Cocks can't hang with a bunch<lb/>
of hostile Tirates.<lb/>
The Rues will sail into Columbia and<lb/>
leave with their second victory. Unfortu-<lb/>
nately, the fans that will fill William-Brice<lb/>
Stadium will be calling for the head of<lb/>
South Carolina Head Coach Sparkv<lb/>
Woods (who may be looking for a new job<lb/>
soon).<lb/>
Michael Anderson has proven he is<lb/>
quite capable of running the offense and<lb/>
wide receiver Peter Zophy, who had 111<lb/>
yards receiving on nine catches against<lb/>
Virginia Tech, has shown he is quite ca-<lb/>
pable of catching the "Satellite's" signals.<lb/>
Tony Davis stepped forward as a de-<lb/>
fensive force last weekend to help ease<lb/>
the pain of an injured Jerry Dillon, while<lb/>
Greg Grandison gave the fans a glimpse<lb/>
of his Ail-American abilities by stealing<lb/>
two Maurice DeShazo passes to preserve<lb/>
the Buc victory-<lb/>
Pholo by Dail Reed ? TEC<lb/>
Peter Zophy zoomed for 111 yards on nine catches against the Hokies of Virginia Tech.<lb/>
Believe it, USC can<lb/>
count on the loss<lb/>
By Chas Mitch'l<lb/>
Assistant Sports Editor<lb/>
See 'Cocks, page 10<lb/>
Head Coach Steve Logan and com-<lb/>
pany, will tike aim this weekend at one of<lb/>
East Carolina's long time nemesis. The<lb/>
Gamecocks of South Carolina has a 8-1 lead<lb/>
in head-to-head match-tips, and are look-<lb/>
ing to revenge last year's loss to the Bucs.<lb/>
According to Coach Logan, the pri-<lb/>
mary reason why the Gamecocks are so<lb/>
successful against the Pirates can be<lb/>
summed up in one word, intimidation.<lb/>
"I've been involved in two match-ups<lb/>
with South Carolina and quite frankly, we<lb/>
took the field scared Logan said. "This<lb/>
time we will not be intimidated bv the team<lb/>
or the size of the stadium<lb/>
With two games under their belts, the<lb/>
chances of a South Carolina rout are slim to<lb/>
none. Even though VVilliams-BriceStadium<lb/>
seats 75,lXX land the fans of the Gamecocks<lb/>
can be loud, obnoxious and unruly, the<lb/>
Pirates should come out of this match-up<lb/>
unscathed.<lb/>
On the offensive side of the ball, ECU<lb/>
holds a decisive edge in consuming the<lb/>
football field. While USC is still having a<lb/>
hard time trying to find the offensive chem-<lb/>
istry, Sean McConnelland Michael Ander-<lb/>
son have made their own chemistry.<lb/>
McConnell is like the Desert Fox, Gen-<lb/>
eral Erwin RommelLhesetsup the ground<lb/>
game and leaves the opposition in total<lb/>
disarray, while Anderson fits the mold of<lb/>
Storming Norman Schwarzkopf.<lb/>
So, after 60 minutes of head slapping,<lb/>
body smashing and ass-kicking football,<lb/>
the Gamecocks will be cockless as the Pi-<lb/>
rates romp over them. Pirate faithful, you<lb/>
can "paint this one purple" as the total<lb/>
package of offense, defense and special<lb/>
teams will bring home yet another Pirate<lb/>
win.<lb/>
ECU v. South Carolina<lb/>
ECU<lb/>
1991 record: 11-1-0, Peach Bowl Champions<lb/>
Primary offense: Pro-option<lb/>
Primary defense: Multiple 50<lb/>
Offensive lettermen returning: 5<lb/>
Defensive lettermen returning: 6<lb/>
General information<lb/>
Location: Greenville, N.C.<lb/>
Enrollment: 16,693<lb/>
Colors: Purple &amp; Gold<lb/>
Nickname: Pirates<lb/>
Conference: Independent<lb/>
Stadium: Ficklen (35,000)<lb/>
Surface: Grass<lb/>
Previous Results<lb/>
ECU USC<lb/>
1977 16 19 (first meeting)<lb/>
1991 31 20<lb/>
Gamecocks lead series 8-1<lb/>
only two of the nine previous meetings<lb/>
have been played in Ficklen. While four<lb/>
of the top ten crowds ever to see ECU<lb/>
play have been in William-Brice Stadium.<lb/>
South Carolina<lb/>
1991 record: 3-6-2<lb/>
Primary offense: Multiple<lb/>
Primary defense: Multiple<lb/>
Offensive lettermen returning, lost: 6, 5<lb/>
Defensive starters returning, lost: 6,5<lb/>
Special teams lettermen returning, lost: 4,1<lb/>
Head Coach: Sparky Woods (Carson-Newman, 76)<lb/>
Record at School: 15-17-3 (4 seasons)<lb/>
Career Record: 53-36-5 (9 seasons)<lb/>
General Information<lb/>
Location: Columbia, S.C<lb/>
Enrollment: 25,613<lb/>
Colors: Garnet and Black<lb/>
Nickname: Gamecocks<lb/>
Conference: Southeastern<lb/>
Stadium: William-Brice (72,400)<lb/>
Surface: Natural Grass<lb/>
1992 Schedule<lb/>
Sept. 5 lost to Georgia, 6-28<lb/>
lost to Arkansas, 745<lb/>
East Carolina<lb/>
at Kentucky<lb/>
at Alabama<lb/>
MISSISSIPPI STATE<lb/>
at Vanderbilt<lb/>
TENNESSEE<lb/>
LOUISIANA TECH<lb/>
at Florida<lb/>
at Clemson<lb/>
Znim Cimmulaj<lb/>
Michael Anderson<lb/>
i<lb/>
Conch Sparky<lb/>
Woods<lb/>
Sept. 12<lb/>
Sept. 19<lb/>
Oct. 3<lb/>
Oct. 10<lb/>
Oct. 17<lb/>
Oct. 24<lb/>
Oct. 31<lb/>
Nov. 7<lb/>
Nov. 14<lb/>
Nov. 21<lb/>
m<lb/>
lirnndon Bennett<lb/>
Crystal Balls<lb/>
ECU USC<lb/>
Robert S. Todd, Sports Editor 38 17<lb/>
( has Mitch'l, Ast Sports Editor 42 17<lb/>
Nancy lenkins, Mayor 2M 14<lb/>
Kevin Hail, WZMB Sports Dir. 3S 21<lb/>
Richard Eal in,hancellor 30 14<lb/>
Courtney Jones, SGA President 21 14<lb/>
Kisha Hubbard, Soph psych. 40 lo<lb/>
Vince Thomas, Soph comm. 35 21<lb/>
Brian Bailey, WN( I-TV 34 20<lb/>
ave:<lb/>
34<lb/>
"The 'Cocks are impotent. ITiey can't score<lb/>
"No contest<lb/>
"I think ECU has ti be twice a- gi x x.1 as S uth (an lina.<lb/>
"Expect more trick plays from ipecial teams<lb/>
No comment<lb/>
"The Pirates have begun their win streak<lb/>
"Because South Carolina is sorry<lb/>
"We're gonna kick that ass<lb/>
"Fans are so unhappy vith Sparky V Kids, if ECl<lb/>
lumps on top early (the fans) won't be a factor<lb/>
(( 'in e again, the opinions expressed here are<lb/>
purely for entertainment purposes. Please <lb/>
no v aeei inj<lb/>
Photo by Dail Reed ? TEC<lb/>
Defensive Coordinator Chris Thurmond takes it one play at a time and lets the statistics come.<lb/>
Vision creates leadership<lb/>
for defense coordinator<lb/>
By Warren Sumner<lb/>
Staff Writer<lb/>
It is imperative for someone<lb/>
who leads to have a vision. Luckily<lb/>
for the East Carolina Pirates, their<lb/>
defensive backs have such a leader<lb/>
in the Defensive Coordinator Chris<lb/>
Thurmond.<lb/>
Thurmond's attitude that "the<lb/>
next play is the most important" has<lb/>
already beo 'me standard on the Fi-<lb/>
nite defense1. Given the defensive<lb/>
stand made in the last minutesof the<lb/>
Virginia Tech game, it seems the<lb/>
Pirate defense is focusing on im-<lb/>
proving their national ranking from<lb/>
last year's 83rd. Ranking, however,<lb/>
is of minimal importance to<lb/>
Thurmond.<lb/>
'We're just trving to concen-<lb/>
trate on aUgnmentand assignment<lb/>
hesaidIfwejustconcentrateonthe<lb/>
fact that the upcoming play is the<lb/>
most important, the statistics will<lb/>
take care of themselves<lb/>
1 hurmi aid said tli.it "alignment<lb/>
and assignment" is quite relevant to<lb/>
his integral philosophy in coaching.<lb/>
"The most important play is the next<lb/>
playhe said. Thurmond tries to get<lb/>
his players to focus on that play and<lb/>
not dwell cm the play that just oc-<lb/>
curred.<lb/>
Thurmond, a 39-year-old Okla-<lb/>
homa native, began his career at<lb/>
McAlesterhigh school in 1976, after<lb/>
graduating from the University of<lb/>
Tulsathepreviousvear. He returned<lb/>
to his alma mater in 1983 and com-<lb/>
pleted a nine year association, before<lb/>
receiving the call to come to join<lb/>
SteveLogan'scoachingstaff at ECU.<lb/>
Thurmond credits much oi his<lb/>
success in coaching to his mentor,<lb/>
Bobby Troctor, a long-time second-<lb/>
ary coach at the University of Okla-<lb/>
homa.<lb/>
"We have a similar personal-<lb/>
ity he slid. "He took an interest in<lb/>
me early in mv career, and always<lb/>
answered any oi mv problems As<lb/>
a local high school coach fhurmond<lb/>
would drive to meet Proctor in the<lb/>
Oklahoma film room and review<lb/>
game films. Thurmond said Proctor's<lb/>
advice is still available on a weekly<lb/>
basis, as the two friends talk often.<lb/>
Thurmond said hedoesn'tmind<lb/>
the publ icity received by the offense<lb/>
and hopes they continue their suc-<lb/>
cess.<lb/>
"When the offense performs<lb/>
well it's always gcxd for us. The one<lb/>
great thingaboutcoachingatECU is<lb/>
that we are never out of a game<lb/>
Thurmond said. He is alwavs pre-<lb/>
pared to motivate his defense into<lb/>
stopping the other team, as was<lb/>
proven in the last stand in the Vir-<lb/>
ginia Tech game.<lb/>
"We always prepare for pres-<lb/>
sure situations he said. "But in a<lb/>
situation like that there's not as much<lb/>
pressure as other times, mainly be-<lb/>
cause, everyone expects the opposi-<lb/>
tion to score. We view those times<lb/>
moreasopportunities,tlian pressure<lb/>
Pirate tansevervwherehopetlie<lb/>
Pi ratedefensecontinuestoseize their<lb/>
opportunities.<lb/>
ECU'S TOP BENCH PRESS WEIGHTS<lb/>
SOURCE: ECU MEDIA GUIDE<lb/>
<pb facs="00058338_0010"/><lb/>
?i'j - ?<lb/>
 ???.1? . ?1 ?<lb/>
mmmmmmmmmmmum<lb/>
"i<lb/>
10 The East Carolinian<lb/>
SEPTEMBER 17, 1992<lb/>
'Cocks<lb/>
Continued from page 9<lb/>
South Carolina has shown<lb/>
nothing other than ineptitude in<lb/>
their first two games of the sea-<lb/>
son, totaling just 13 points while<lb/>
allowing 73.<lb/>
This year marks the centen-<lb/>
nial for South Carolina football.<lb/>
Bad timing (it is also Parent's<lb/>
Day).<lb/>
ECU's band plays better than<lb/>
USC's. The 'Cocks receivers would<lb/>
have an easier time catching a cold<lb/>
than the ball and theirdefensewill be<lb/>
lucky to catch their breath.<lb/>
Injury Update<lb/>
Senior Halfback Ronnie Williams suffered a separated<lb/>
shoulder against Syracuse and is out for the season. Redshirt<lb/>
freshman Derrek Batson now starts at halfback.<lb/>
Senior weakside linebacker Jerry Dillon has a broken<lb/>
thumb on his left hand suffered against Syracuse. He did<lb/>
play against Virginia Tech but did not start. Junior Thomas<lb/>
Jones started at weakside linebacker.<lb/>
Coaches are hopeful that senior linebacker Adrian<lb/>
Barnhill can return this week to practice. Barnhill has<lb/>
missed the last several weeks of practice with a hairline leg<lb/>
fracture.<lb/>
The East Carolinian<lb/>
will be whipping<lb/>
WZMB's azz in the sec-<lb/>
ond-annual volleyball<lb/>
challenge.<lb/>
Front row seats are<lb/>
still available. Call the<lb/>
paper or the station for<lb/>
more information.<lb/>
(clip and save) LvJwJV ! (bring to meeting)<lb/>
There will be a mandatory Sports Writer meeting in the<lb/>
Student Pubs Building. This is for all writers and anyone<lb/>
INTERESTED in being a writer.<lb/>
This means you: Daniel "Don't Be Late" Willis, Ricky<lb/>
Charm, Bob "Fill Me In" Owens, Robert Joyner, Colin<lb/>
Mohlmann, James Timmons (did I spell that right?) AND<lb/>
ALL THE REST ? YOU KNOW WHO YOU ARE <lb/>
E ARE TWO SIDES TO ?<lb/>
G A NURSE IN THE ARM<lb/>
And they're both repre-<lb/>
sented by the insignia you wear<lb/>
as a member oi the Army Nurse<lb/>
I Corps. The caduceus on the left<lb/>
means you're part of a health care<lb/>
system in which educational and<lb/>
career advancement are the rule,<lb/>
 J not the exception. The gold bar<lb/>
on the right means you command respect as an Army officer. If you're earn-<lb/>
ing a BSN, write: Army Nurse Opportunities, P.O. Box 3219, Warminster,<lb/>
PA 18974-9845. Or call toll free: 1-800-USA-ARMY, ext. 438.<lb/>
ARMY NURSE CORPS. BE ALL YOU CAN BE.<lb/>
GEMSTONE &amp; CUSTOM DESIGN<lb/>
JEWELRY SHOW<lb/>
THOUSANDS OF CEMSTONES &amp; HUNDREDS OF MOUNTINGS<lb/>
AMETHYST BLUE TOPAZ<lb/>
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14 KARAT GOLD RINGS, EARRINGS &amp; PENDANTS<lb/>
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M MON, SEPT 21 7:30 - 1 0:00<lb/>
TUE,SEPT 22 7:30-10:00<lb/>
WED, SEPT. 23 7:30- 10:00<lb/>
AT MENDENHALL MULTI-PURPOSE ROOM<lb/>
THURSDAY: INVITATION ONLYy.<lb/>
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HARRIS TEETER LOW PRICES ALL DAY, EVERY DAY<lb/>
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WE INVITE YOU TO APPLY<lb/>
FOR YOUR HARRIS TEETER<lb/>
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I<lb/>
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I This Coupon May Nor<lb/>
Ee Reproduced Lrn.i<lb/>
I One Coupon Per Family<lb/>
Per Visit With Mn. "<lb/>
Purchase SI 000 Ofter ?<lb/>
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thru September 22 1992<lb/>
COUPON<lb/>
PLU 2016<lb/>
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THIS COUPON MAY NOT BE REPRODUCED. I<lb/>
LIMIT ONE COUPON PER FAMILY PER VISIT I<lb/>
OFFER GOOD SEPT. 16 THRU SEPT. 22, 1992<lb/>
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BUY ONE OF THE<lb/>
BELOW,AND GET ONE I8<lb/>
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CORN FLAKES FREE!<lb/>
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CINNAMON MINI BUNS<lb/>
This Coupon May Not<lb/>
Be Repioduced Limit<lb/>
One Coupon Per Fomily<lb/>
Per Visit With Minimum<lb/>
PurchoseSiOOOOher WiM l?ir;gy Mil<lb/>
Good September lo CYr UZSSS?L PLU 201 1<lb/>
September 22 1992 WJLTH V?55rMrK1 GROCERY<lb/>
Prices Effective Through September 22, 1992<lb/>
I ? V<lb/>
6 Through Tuesday, September 22, 1992,V-Greenville Store<lb/>
Prices In The Ad Effective Wednesday.September 1 6 Through Tuesday, September fcJVtf?<lb/>
Only. We Reserve The Right To Limirauantities. None Sold To Dealers. We Gladly Accept federal rooa iTamps.<lb/>
<pb facs="00058338_0011"/>
</div></body></text></TEI>