<?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="00058345_0001"/>
J<lb/>
Opinion<lb/>
Darwin not Deity<lb/>
Evolution is responsible for differences<lb/>
in skin color among races.<lb/>
See pg. 5 for story.<lb/>
Lifestyle<lb/>
Unrefreshing Waters<lb/>
Roger Waters' new album, Amused to<lb/>
Death, ventures into the horrors of war.<lb/>
Seepg. 7 for story.<lb/>
Sports<lb/>
The Ganksters<lb/>
Junior Smith and the Pirate<lb/>
football team got ganked by the<lb/>
Blue Devils Saturday.<lb/>
See pg. 11 for story.<lb/>
;<lb/>
The East Carolinian<lb/>
Vol. 67 No. 14<lb/>
Circulation 12,000<lb/>
Greenville, North Carolina<lb/>
Tuesday, October 13,1992<lb/>
14 Pages<lb/>
Wiretapping case goes to jury<lb/>
By Jeff Becker<lb/>
News Editor<lb/>
The jury in the federal wire-<lb/>
tapping trial of the two former ECU<lb/>
employees began deliberation late<lb/>
Monday afternoon and is expected<lb/>
to reach a verdict today.<lb/>
John Burrus, former Public<lb/>
Safety captain, and Teddy<lb/>
Roberson, former director of Tele-<lb/>
communications, are accused ot<lb/>
tapping two ECU phone lines in<lb/>
1990. The trial began last Tuesday<lb/>
in U.S. District Court in New Bern.<lb/>
Roberson and Burrus face<lb/>
four counts each of federal wire-<lb/>
tapping violations and one count<lb/>
of not reporting a crime. They both<lb/>
could serve a maximum of 23 years<lb/>
in prison if convicted on all counts.<lb/>
In closing arguments Mon-<lb/>
day, federal prosecutor David<lb/>
Folmer told the jury to ignore temp-<lb/>
tation to blame higher administra-<lb/>
tors at ECU for ordering the tap and<lb/>
study the evidence that indicates<lb/>
Burrus and Roberson acted alone.<lb/>
Roberson's attorney, Mike<lb/>
Howell, told the jury thatRoberson<lb/>
should be found innocent because<lb/>
Burrus suggested he make the taps.<lb/>
Burrus testified Monday that<lb/>
he had not met Roberson until two<lb/>
tapes had already been made and,<lb/>
therefore, could not have autho-<lb/>
rized the tap. Burrus said he first<lb/>
learned about wiretapping at a<lb/>
meeting with Roberson, Evan<lb/>
Midgette, assistant director of hu-<lb/>
man relations, and James DePuy,<lb/>
director of public safety.<lb/>
Burrus said that at the meet-<lb/>
ing he learned Roberson had taped<lb/>
the phone conversations of tele-<lb/>
communications employee Brooks<lb/>
Mills. He said DePuy told him the<lb/>
tapes indicated Mills was dealing<lb/>
drugs and instructed him to start<lb/>
an undercover investigation of<lb/>
Mills.<lb/>
Roberson testified that he<lb/>
started having trouble with Mills<lb/>
in July 1989. Roberson said he sus-<lb/>
pected Mills, a convicted drug<lb/>
felon, of using illegal drugs and<lb/>
had heard rumors that Mills had<lb/>
threatened him.<lb/>
In the spring of 1990,Roberson<lb/>
said he met with Burrus and<lb/>
Midgette to discuss the possibility<lb/>
of Mills carrying a pistol. During<lb/>
the meeting, Roberson said Burrus<lb/>
suggested he place a tap on Mills'<lb/>
phone.<lb/>
"1 don't remember how it<lb/>
came up, but Capt. Burrus asked<lb/>
me a few questions about record-<lb/>
ing Mr. Mills phone conversations,<lb/>
like can you record his conversa-<lb/>
tions, would he know they were<lb/>
being recorded, how hard would it<lb/>
be to do that Roberson said. "The<lb/>
fact he was a policeman led me to<lb/>
believe it would be OK<lb/>
A few days after the meeting,<lb/>
Roberson said he placed a micro-<lb/>
phone on Mi ll's telephone and con-<lb/>
nected the microphone to a mini-<lb/>
cassette recorder hidden in hi s desk.<lb/>
Roberson said he made three tapes<lb/>
of Mills' conversations.<lb/>
The first tape took about a<lb/>
week to make, and another meeting<lb/>
was set up between himself,<lb/>
Midgette and Burrus to discuss what<lb/>
he had recorded, Roberson said.<lb/>
According to Roberson, no<lb/>
one at the meeting authorized him<lb/>
to make more tapes, but no one<lb/>
told him to stop the recordings.<lb/>
"After I made the first tape,<lb/>
my impression was to make an-<lb/>
other tape Roberson said. "After I<lb/>
had already turned the first tape<lb/>
over to them, I was not discouraged<lb/>
to make a second tape<lb/>
Roberson said he finished<lb/>
makinga second tape of Mills' con-<lb/>
versations in early June 1990, and<lb/>
he turned over both tapes to Burrus<lb/>
for transcription.<lb/>
Burrus testified that he took<lb/>
the tapes and gave them to his<lb/>
secretary for transcription.<lb/>
"I made a copy of the tran-<lb/>
scripts and gave it to Jim DePuy<lb/>
Burrus said. "The original went in<lb/>
my desk<lb/>
The transcripts of Mills' con-<lb/>
versations contain several suspi-<lb/>
cious discussions but do not spe-<lb/>
cifically mention drug activity.<lb/>
DePuy testif;ed that the in-<lb/>
formation on the tapes prompted<lb/>
him to begin an undercover inves-<lb/>
tigation of Mills.<lb/>
"With the knowledge of that<lb/>
information, we initiated an inde-<lb/>
pendent investigation DePuy<lb/>
said. "I could notignore it. Morally<lb/>
and ethically, I thought it was my<lb/>
duty to pursue a suspected drug<lb/>
dealer on campus<lb/>
Michael Swinson testified<lb/>
Monday that DePuy recruited him<lb/>
as a part-time undercover agent in<lb/>
1989. Swinson, who goes by the<lb/>
nickname "Peanut said Burrus<lb/>
assigned him to investigate Mills in<lb/>
early June of 1990.<lb/>
Swinson said he posed as an<lb/>
ECU student assigned to the tele-<lb/>
communications department for<lb/>
community service and worked<lb/>
with Mills for a two- to three-week<lb/>
period.<lb/>
During the undercover opera-<lb/>
See Wiretap, page 2<lb/>
Photo by J�ff Backer � TEC<lb/>
Former Captan for investigations John Burrus (middle) leaves the U.S.<lb/>
Federal courthouse in New Bern Monday.<lb/>
Radio station opens legal can of worms<lb/>
By Joe Horst<lb/>
Staff Writer<lb/>
WZMB has opened up a le-<lb/>
gal can of worms, rivaling the wire-<lb/>
tapping scandal and threatening<lb/>
to upset one end of the campus to<lb/>
the other.<lb/>
On the weekends of Sept. 18<lb/>
and 25, members of the WZMB,<lb/>
with the help of the bar<lb/>
O'Rockefellers, sponsored an<lb/>
eventtitled the Weird ZombieMu-<lb/>
sic Buffet (W.Z.M.B.). The issue<lb/>
was then raised whether or not the<lb/>
radio station had disregarded the<lb/>
Media Board's advice for not as-<lb/>
sociating with any bars down-<lb/>
town.<lb/>
InFebruary, the Media Board<lb/>
� via a memorandum�advised<lb/>
Tim Johnson, general manager of<lb/>
WZMB, that their proposed ben-<lb/>
efit at O'Rockefellers would leave<lb/>
them and the university open to<lb/>
liability suits. The university<lb/>
attorney's office advised the Board<lb/>
tha t the event should not take place<lb/>
with any involvement by any rep-<lb/>
resentative of the university.<lb/>
The attorneys based their<lb/>
advice on the conclusion that<lb/>
WZMB was a co-sponsor of the<lb/>
event. That conclusion was based<lb/>
on the information that WZMB<lb/>
selected the bands, set the ticket<lb/>
price, had promoted the event on<lb/>
the air and would receive the gate<lb/>
receipts.<lb/>
At the Media Board meeting<lb/>
on July 14, Johnson proposed to<lb/>
sponsor the WZMB Greenville<lb/>
Showcase. The showcases' pur-<lb/>
pose would be to raise money to<lb/>
pay production costs for release of<lb/>
recorded products, to provide edu-<lb/>
cational experiences for broadcast-<lb/>
ing and communication majors by<lb/>
applying hands-on knowledge<lb/>
and to allow WZMB to take on a<lb/>
project that would give ECU na-<lb/>
tional recognition and exposure.<lb/>
Johnson planned to have<lb/>
O'Rockefellers sponsor the event<lb/>
and then donate the door receipts<lb/>
to WZMB to provide the music in<lb/>
an audio medium (tape, compact<lb/>
disc, etc.). The tapes would then<lb/>
Photo by Dail RMd � TEC<lb/>
WZMB posted a sign outside of O'Rocks informing patrons that the Weird Zombie Music Buffet was not a<lb/>
WZMB sponsored event. The Media Board has instructed WZMB to cease any involvement with downtown bars.<lb/>
be used as promotional giveaway<lb/>
items.<lb/>
Johnson also stipulated in his<lb/>
proposal that the opportunity was<lb/>
presented to him with no solicita-<lb/>
tion on his part. Contracts were<lb/>
also discussed to defray the risk of<lb/>
liability. Courtney Jones, SGA<lb/>
president, made a motion to ap-<lb/>
prove the showcase proposal<lb/>
pending further information from<lb/>
the university attorney's office.<lb/>
The Media Board approved the<lb/>
motion.<lb/>
In July of 1992, the univer-<lb/>
sity attorney's office advised Greg<lb/>
Brown, media advisor, to issue an<lb/>
updated version of the February<lb/>
memo in reference to a planned<lb/>
WZMB Summer Concert at the<lb/>
Attic. The memo stated that any<lb/>
liability will rest "entirely with<lb/>
the tavern owner(s) and th indi-<lb/>
viduals comprising the station<lb/>
management Brown went on to<lb/>
tell the attorneys that a written<lb/>
policy must be reviewed by the<lb/>
Board before an official policy can<lb/>
be enacted. "WZMB has been told<lb/>
they shouldn't have anything to<lb/>
do with the bars downtown<lb/>
Brown said.<lb/>
Johnson said attorneys had<lb/>
no legal precedence for their ad-<lb/>
vice and the relationship with the<lb/>
bars downtown was extremely<lb/>
beneficial to the radio station. John-<lb/>
son also professed that funds<lb/>
would not be received from the<lb/>
sales of alcohol, but from the ad-<lb/>
mission proceeds.<lb/>
On Sept. 15, a story about the<lb/>
Weird Zombie Music Buffet<lb/>
(W.Z.M.B.) ran in The East Carolin-<lb/>
ian. Two days later, Alfred<lb/>
Matthews, vice-chancellor for stu-<lb/>
dent affairs, sent Johnson a letter<lb/>
in reference to the story.<lb/>
Matthews stated that if the<lb/>
W.Z.M.B. event took place, then<lb/>
the radio station could be charged<lb/>
with insubordination by the Me-<lb/>
dia Board and that Johnson and<lb/>
involved staff members could be<lb/>
open to disciplinary action pursu-<lb/>
an t to the Uni versi ty Code of Con-<lb/>
duct.<lb/>
Matthews stated that the<lb/>
only way to have the event with-<lb/>
out going against the Media Board<lb/>
decision was:<lb/>
 That there must not be<lb/>
any use of materials or equipment<lb/>
owned by WZMB, the Media<lb/>
Board or the university. Further-<lb/>
more, the call letters of WZMB<lb/>
may not be used in any way, nor<lb/>
can any statements or implied ref-<lb/>
erences be made to WZMB, the<lb/>
Media Board, or the university,<lb/>
and WZMB cannot use any items,<lb/>
services or funds derived from this<lb/>
event<lb/>
On Sept. 24, the university<lb/>
attorney's office released a memo-<lb/>
randum defining the criteria for<lb/>
their decision, stating that "such<lb/>
activity places the university at<lb/>
risk of FCC sanctions and tort li-<lb/>
ability The university attorney's<lb/>
office, in outlining FCC regula-<lb/>
tions and WZMB's violation of<lb/>
See WZMB, page 3<lb/>
ARA holds<lb/>
mock elections<lb/>
By Elizabeth Shimmel<lb/>
Assistant News Editor<lb/>
A mock presidential election will be held on campus<lb/>
Wednesday to enable students to cast their ballots for the<lb/>
presidential candidate of their choice.<lb/>
The mock election is being sponsored by ARA Campus<lb/>
Dining Services. ARA has sponsored mock elections since the<lb/>
1980 Carter Ford race and always has the same outcome as the<lb/>
real election.<lb/>
"Our employ-<lb/>
ees and customers<lb/>
look forward to the<lb/>
ARA preview elec-<lb/>
tion said Joseph<lb/>
Neubauer, chair-<lb/>
man of ARA Ser-<lb/>
vices.<lb/>
"This year,<lb/>
with poll data vary-<lb/>
ing so widely on an<lb/>
almost daily basis, it<lb/>
should be especially<lb/>
interesting<lb/>
The purpose of<lb/>
the non-partisan<lb/>
election is to encourage more Americans to exercise their right<lb/>
to vote and to replace voter apathy with enthusiasm.<lb/>
"We chose to do this because we had a vice-presidential<lb/>
candidate on campus, and we thought there was a big interest<lb/>
in politics on campus said David Bailey, marketing manager<lb/>
for ARA at ECU.<lb/>
ARA Services is the world's largest foodservice company<lb/>
with operations in all 50 states. Their diverse customer base<lb/>
ranges from executive dining rooms to colleges and universities<lb/>
nationwide. They have been ECU's foodservice contractor for<lb/>
three years.<lb/>
This is the first mock election ARA has sponsored at ECU,<lb/>
but over 50,000 people nationwide have participated in past<lb/>
preview elections.<lb/>
"(The elections) let ARA know a wide-scope of their<lb/>
customers and helps elections by promoting students' voices<lb/>
and opinion Bailey said.<lb/>
Both the Democratic and Republican representatives on<lb/>
campus will bring literature to distribute to students at the<lb/>
voting booths.<lb/>
The booths will be located at Mendenhall Student Center<lb/>
next to the snack bar and in the lobby ot The Wright Place. They<lb/>
will be open from 8:00 a.m. to 9:00 p.m.<lb/>
The ballots will not contain Ross Perot's name because<lb/>
they were printed before he re-entered the presidential race.<lb/>
However, there will be a space for voters to write in the names<lb/>
of candidates other than Bill Clinton and George Bush.<lb/>
ARA needs volunteers to supervise the voting booths<lb/>
throughout the day.<lb/>
To volunteer, call David Bailey at 757-4801.<lb/>
"(The elections) let<lb/>
ARA know a wide scope<lb/>
of their customers and<lb/>
helps elections by<lb/>
promoting students'<lb/>
voices and opinion<lb/>
�David Bailey, marketing<lb/>
manager for ARA<lb/>
<pb facs="00058345_0002"/><lb/>
2 The East Carolinian<lb/>
OCTOBER 13. 1992<lb/>
Wiretap<lb/>
Continued from page 1<lb/>
tion, Swinson received several park-<lb/>
ing tickets. Mills testified Wednes-<lb/>
day thathe tookSwinson to fteTraf-<lb/>
ficSemcesOffice,locatedinthePub-<lb/>
lic Safety Building, to get Swinson's<lb/>
tickets erased from the computer.<lb/>
Patricia Hair Bullock, a clerk in the<lb/>
Traffic Services office, testified that<lb/>
she had dated Mills and would void<lb/>
parking violations for Mills at his<lb/>
request<lb/>
Bullock said she entered<lb/>
Swinson's name into the computer<lb/>
and the records showed Swinson<lb/>
was not registered as a student Bul-<lb/>
lock said she looked up from her<lb/>
computer and asked Swinson why<lb/>
he was not registered. Bullock said<lb/>
Swinson told her he was having<lb/>
trouble getting regL red in school,<lb/>
but his father was helpu .g him to get<lb/>
enrolled.<lb/>
Roberson said he began mak-<lb/>
ing a third tape of Mills' conversa-<lb/>
nces about the same tin� the under-<lb/>
coverinvesttionhadstarted.VVhile<lb/>
listening to the tape, he said he came<lb/>
across the voice of an unidentified<lb/>
female whomhebelieved was trying<lb/>
towamMillsoftheundercoveragent<lb/>
According to testimony, the female<lb/>
told Mills: "Be careful. The person<lb/>
you are with is not what he appears<lb/>
to be<lb/>
Roberson said he informed<lb/>
Public Safety mat Swinson's cover<lb/>
might be in jeopardy and DePuy<lb/>
immediately stopped the investiga-<lb/>
tion.<lb/>
Mills said Ron Avery, former<lb/>
ECU chief of police, and Burrus<lb/>
picked him up on June 29,1990, and<lb/>
took him to the Public Safety office.<lb/>
Mills said Avery,Burrus,DePuy and<lb/>
Richard Farris, director of Human<lb/>
Resources,attendWthemeeting,arri<lb/>
they discussed his sale of marijuana<lb/>
to Swinson.<lb/>
"(DePuy) told me at that time<lb/>
the chancellor and everybody knew<lb/>
about (my drug involvement), and I<lb/>
would either have to resign or be<lb/>
fired Mills said.<lb/>
Mills, who resigned June<lb/>
29,1990,tesrifiedmathesokiSwinson<lb/>
a quarter-ounce of marijuana at his<lb/>
trailer 15 miles from ECU.<lb/>
Captan for investigations<lb/>
Ernest Suggs testified Wednesday<lb/>
mat DePuy suspected Bullock of be-<lb/>
ing the unidentified female who had<lb/>
warned Mills of the undercover<lb/>
agent Both Suggs said Burrus testi-<lb/>
fied that DePuy ordered a tap on<lb/>
Bullock's phone.<lb/>
"I understood that Mr. DePuy<lb/>
instructed Johnny (Burrus) to get in<lb/>
touch with Ted (Roberson) to see if<lb/>
he can not monitor Patricia Hair<lb/>
(Bullock's) line the way it was done<lb/>
with Brooks Mills Suggs said.<lb/>
DePuy testified Thursday that<lb/>
he never ordered any wiretapping.<lb/>
"I have never authorized any-<lb/>
one(totapeaphoneconversation)in<lb/>
26 years DePuy said, referring to<lb/>
his law enforcement career.<lb/>
Roberson said Burrus ap-<lb/>
proached him about tapping<lb/>
Bullock's line, and he told Burrus<lb/>
that he did not have enough equip-<lb/>
ment to tap bom Mills' and Bullock's<lb/>
phone at the same time.<lb/>
However, Roberson said he<lb/>
placed a tap on Bullocks' phone after<lb/>
Mills resigned. He said mat whenhe<lb/>
gave the tape of Bullock's conversa-<lb/>
tions to Burrus, Burrus told him not<lb/>
to mention the tape to anyone.<lb/>
Burrus testified thathe did not<lb/>
authorize Roberson to tap Bullock's<lb/>
line and Roberson took it upon him-<lb/>
self to make the tape.<lb/>
"I was surprised because the<lb/>
last I knew, Roberson said he didn't<lb/>
have the equipment to make (the<lb/>
tap) Burrus said. "1 was surprised<lb/>
he had done it because the operation<lb/>
was over at that point and there was<lb/>
no use for it in my opinion<lb/>
In other testimony, Public<lb/>
Safety Capt Stanley Kittrell said<lb/>
Suggs told him Midgette, Richard<lb/>
Brown, vice chancellor for Business<lb/>
Affairs and possibly Chancellor Ri-<lb/>
chard Eakin had knowledge of me<lb/>
wiretapping. Midgette testified<lb/>
ThursdaythatFarrisalsoknewabout<lb/>
the taps.<lb/>
Both Farris and Brown testi-<lb/>
fied Thursday that they were not<lb/>
aware of the illegal wiretapping and<lb/>
did not authorize it<lb/>
At the time the FBI started its<lb/>
wiretappinginvestigationinlateOc-<lb/>
tober, Roberson said he met with<lb/>
Burrus and DePuy at a local dough-<lb/>
nut shop.<lb/>
"Up until this time, I thought<lb/>
everything was all right Roberson<lb/>
said. "I didn't know I had done any-<lb/>
thing wrong until that time<lb/>
DePuy testified that he held<lb/>
the meeting to make sure everyone<lb/>
cooperated with the FBI.<lb/>
"We wanted to make sure ev-<lb/>
eryoneonehonest,open,cooperated,<lb/>
so we could get this thing cleared<lb/>
up DePuy said.<lb/>
However, Midgette said<lb/>
DePuy held the meeting to get their<lb/>
stories straight<lb/>
"Mr. DePuy tried to set<lb/>
everybody's mind thattherewasone<lb/>
tape and thathe hadn't ordered any<lb/>
thing Midgette said. "I personally<lb/>
took the tape to the top cop (DePuy)<lb/>
and he was denying knowing any-<lb/>
thing about a wiretap I realized<lb/>
Mr. DePuy was trying to put dis-<lb/>
tance in this operation<lb/>
Both Roberson and Burrus re-<lb/>
signed from their jobs at ECU on<lb/>
March 8,1991.<lb/>
Suggs was recalled to the wit-<lb/>
ness stand on Monday. He testified<lb/>
that Avery harassed him when he<lb/>
returned to work after he testified<lb/>
Wednesday.<lb/>
Suggs said Avery told him<lb/>
DePuy became upset after he read<lb/>
portions of Suggs' testimony in the<lb/>
newspaper. Suggs said Avery came<lb/>
into his office suggested that he take<lb/>
a few days vacation.<lb/>
"DePuy was mad about my<lb/>
account that indicated he was in-<lb/>
volved in the tap of (Patricia Hair<lb/>
Bullock's phone) Suggs said.<lb/>
Brenda Mills, director of Inter-<lb/>
nal Auditor's department, testified<lb/>
that Suggs was convinced he had<lb/>
been harassed.<lb/>
"Avery told Suggs that he<lb/>
should stay out of DePus way be-<lb/>
cause DePuywasangry and he didn't<lb/>
need any more flare-ups in the de-<lb/>
partment Mills said.<lb/>
Mrs. Mills said she also inves-<lb/>
tigated a harassment complaint<lb/>
against DePuy in November of 1990<lb/>
filed by Kittrell. Kittrell, who in-<lb/>
formed the FBI of the illegal wiretap-<lb/>
ping,filedthecomplaintafter DePuy<lb/>
kicked in his office door in apparent<lb/>
retaliation forblowingthewhistleon<lb/>
the illegal recordings.<lb/>
"My finding was that Mr.<lb/>
DePuy had used very poor judg-<lb/>
ment in entering Kittrell's office<lb/>
Mrs. Mills said. "My corrective ac-<lb/>
tion was that Vice Chancellor Rich-<lb/>
ard Brownshould council Mr. DePuy<lb/>
in the way he treats his employees'<lb/>
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in concert<lb/>
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with<lb/>
The Raelettes<lb/>
and the<lb/>
Ray Charles Orchestra<lb/>
Homecoming Friday - October 16, 1992<lb/>
Minges Coliseum - 8 p.m.<lb/>
Good seats are still available!<lb/>
Ticket prices are: Public: $25<lb/>
ECU FacultyStaff: $20<lb/>
ECU StudentYouth: $12<lb/>
All tickets at the door are $25<lb/>
This program is sponsored in part by a grant from the<lb/>
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Contact:<lb/>
The Central Ticket Office, Mendenhall Student Center<lb/>
East Carolina University, Greenville, NC 27858-4353<lb/>
Phone: 919-757-4788 or, toll free, 1-800-ECU-ARTS<lb/>
I<lb/>
J<lb/>
<pb facs="00058345_0003"/><lb/>
-mm��� �<lb/>
dCo.<lb/>
�?�,<lb/>
-L-u.<lb/>
OCTOBER 13, 1992<lb/>
The East Carolinian 3 <lb/>
WZMB<lb/>
mem, stated that "it is undisputed<lb/>
that WZMB constitutes a 'spon-<lb/>
sor' at such activities<lb/>
In outlining tort liability, the<lb/>
university attorney's office went<lb/>
on to state that "there is a national<lb/>
trend emerging which makes it<lb/>
more likely that liability will ex-<lb/>
tend to those who provide alcohol<lb/>
to persons who subsequently in-<lb/>
jure someone<lb/>
In citing cases that illustrate<lb/>
this "trend the university<lb/>
attorney's office cited:<lb/>
� The Supreme Court of<lb/>
North Carolina held that a social<lb/>
host who provides alcohol to<lb/>
guests can be held liable for inju-<lb/>
ries caused by intoxicated guest's<lb/>
negligence if host knew or should<lb/>
have known that guest was intoxi-<lb/>
cated and "known to be driving<lb/>
� North Carolina has a Dram<lb/>
Shop Act that recognizes actions<lb/>
against tavern owners and em-<lb/>
ployees who knowingly sell or give<lb/>
alcoholic beverages to any person<lb/>
who is intoxicated.<lb/>
� An Alabama court has held<lb/>
mat action could be brought un-<lb/>
der that state's Dram Shop Act<lb/>
against sponsor of event at which<lb/>
alcohol is provided. (Martin v.<lb/>
Watts, 508 So. 2d, 1136)<lb/>
Theuniversityattorneysalso<lb/>
stated that the university could<lb/>
argue that there was no liability<lb/>
attached to itself�via WZMB �<lb/>
as the station merely caused "a<lb/>
condition providing an opportu-<lb/>
nity for other causal agencies to<lb/>
act<lb/>
The attorney's office con-<lb/>
cluded that since neither WZMB<lb/>
nor the Media Board were insured,<lb/>
the university becomes the prime<lb/>
target as "deep pocket" under the<lb/>
Tort Claims Act.<lb/>
On Sept. 24, the Media Board<lb/>
convened to discuss, among other<lb/>
things, the WZMB situation. Terry<lb/>
Avery, Media Board chair, said<lb/>
the biggest problem with the<lb/>
O'Rockefellers Buffet event was<lb/>
the relation of the acronym<lb/>
(W.Z.M.B.) to the caJl letters of the<lb/>
radio station.<lb/>
Johnson defended the Buf-<lb/>
fet, stating that the people who<lb/>
worked on the event did so as<lb/>
private individuals, not as mem-<lb/>
bers of WZMB. Johnson also said<lb/>
that the suggestion for the event's<lb/>
title came from the manager of<lb/>
O'Rockefellers and also apolo-<lb/>
gized if his personal participation<lb/>
was misconstrued, but that he<lb/>
couldn't cancel the Buffet because<lb/>
of its nature as an O'Rockefellers<lb/>
event.<lb/>
Avery said the Board had two<lb/>
important issues to decide at the<lb/>
next meeting. The first was<lb/>
whether or not a policy should be<lb/>
enacted based on the information<lb/>
received from the university attor-<lb/>
neys. They must also decide if<lb/>
WZMB, as the radio station, did<lb/>
have a part in the Buffet held at<lb/>
O'Rockefellers.<lb/>
The main issue in this lengthy<lb/>
set of events is whether or not the<lb/>
members of the WZMB manage-<lb/>
ment staff acted as representatives<lb/>
of WZMB or as private individu-<lb/>
als when promoting the Buffet.<lb/>
Johnson argued that the<lb/>
O'Rockefellers event was not a<lb/>
WZMB-sponsored event; that he<lb/>
and the other persons involved<lb/>
were acting in a private capacity<lb/>
and therefore solving the liability<lb/>
question.<lb/>
Johnson also demonstrated<lb/>
steps (i.e. flyers, disclaimernotices)<lb/>
that were taken to totally disasso-<lb/>
ciate the radio station from the<lb/>
Buffet.<lb/>
The Media Board voted Oct.<lb/>
8 as to the question of WZMB's<lb/>
involvement with the Buffet in<lb/>
September. The vote, taken twice,<lb/>
ended in a tie both times and can<lb/>
be brought up by any board mem-<lb/>
ber in the future until it is resolved.<lb/>
The Board must also decide<lb/>
if a policy should be drafted and<lb/>
established banning WZMB from<lb/>
the downtown bars pending the<lb/>
information received from the at-<lb/>
torneys.<lb/>
Arguments in defense of<lb/>
WZMB included situations where<lb/>
campus organizations, such as the<lb/>
American Marketing Association<lb/>
and the National Women's Stud-<lb/>
ies Alliance, have held meetings at<lb/>
various downtown establish-<lb/>
ments. Tailgating, wine-and-<lb/>
cheese parties and events where<lb/>
alcohol has been brought on cam-<lb/>
pus were also brought up.<lb/>
Avery stated that the univer-<lb/>
sity would need to look at this<lb/>
problem on a campus-wide level,<lb/>
not just restricted to the media and<lb/>
its inherent visibility.<lb/>
"If university officials look<lb/>
at the Media Board and WZMB,<lb/>
then they also should question<lb/>
possible liability other campus or-<lb/>
ganizations may incur Avery<lb/>
said.<lb/>
The Board took a vote Oct. 8<lb/>
to instruct WZMB to cease any<lb/>
involvement with downtown bars<lb/>
until a final decision was reached<lb/>
with the university attorneys. The<lb/>
vote was passed, restricting<lb/>
WZMB from association with lo-<lb/>
cal taverns, even as reporting as a<lb/>
medium.<lb/>
Liability and its definition is<lb/>
also an important point needing to<lb/>
be answered. Along with liability's<lb/>
definition, the definition of "com-<lb/>
mercial radio "co-sponsorship"<lb/>
and "promote" warrants further<lb/>
clarification. The question of li-<lb/>
ability insurance was brought up<lb/>
three times at the Oct. 8 Media<lb/>
Board meeting, but no concrete<lb/>
answers were forthcoming from<lb/>
the attorneys.<lb/>
Continued from page 1<lb/>
The Board will discuss the<lb/>
matter further in their meeting on<lb/>
Oct. 22. .<lb/>
Any persons interested or<lb/>
who have pertinent information<lb/>
on liability, university policies or<lb/>
information that may help clarify<lb/>
matters should contact the Media<lb/>
Board at 757-6009.<lb/>
News<lb/>
writers<lb/>
meeting<lb/>
Thurs. 3:30.<lb/>
in concert<lb/>
CRESCENT<lb/>
STEAM CLEANING<lb/>
We Cater To<lb/>
ECU Students Qc Faculty<lb/>
Reduced Rates For<lb/>
Fraternities &amp; Sororities<lb/>
1992 STUDENT SPECIAL<lb/>
$11.00 Per Room!<lb/>
�Upholstery -Spot Cleaning -Deodorizing<lb/>
2 room minimum 758-9128<lb/>
PI LAMBDA PHI<lb/>
is returning to East Carolina<lb/>
Ray Charles<lb/>
with<lb/>
HAPPY HOMECOMING<lb/>
to<lb/>
EAST CAROLINA UNIVERSITY<lb/>
FROM THE<lb/>
Econo Lodge<lb/>
WE SUPPORT PIRATE FOOTBALL<lb/>
AND WISH THE STUDENTS, STAFF AND<lb/>
ALUMNI A SAFE AND FUN WEEKEND!<lb/>
Coming soon! DENNY'S RESTAURANT<lb/>
next door to the Econo Lodge for customer convenience.<lb/>
Operated by the Furci Group.<lb/>
'VISIT THE NEW MANAGEMENT, ESTABLISHED SINCE 1991!<lb/>
The Raelettes<lb/>
and the<lb/>
Ray Charles Orchestra<lb/>
ALFREDO'S<lb/>
New York Pizza By The Slice<lb/>
218 E. 5th St.�752-0022<lb/>
Sun, Mon &amp; Toe SPECIAL<lb/>
 Pitchers $1.50<lb/>
Lunch Special 11-4<lb/>
Large Cheese Pizza<lb/>
$3.99<lb/>
I<lb/>
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with<lb/>
coupon<lb/>
2 Large Pizzas<lb/>
wifi 1 Topping<lb/>
$6.99<lb/>
coupon<lb/>
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THE WORLD'S LARGEST WATER SPORTS DEALER<lb/>
Homecoming Friday<lb/>
October 16, 1992<lb/>
Minges Coliseum - 8 p.m.<lb/>
Good seats are still available!<lb/>
This program it sponsored �i part by a grant from th�<lb/>
Papai-Cota Sotting Company of Graanvile<lb/>
Contact:<lb/>
The Central Ticket Office<lb/>
Mendenhall Student Center<lb/>
East Carolina University<lb/>
Greenville, NC 27858-4353<lb/>
Phone: 919-757-4788 or,<lb/>
toll free, 1-800-ECU-ARTS<lb/>
s<lb/>
ATTENTION<lb/>
EAST CAROLINA UNIVERSITY<lb/>
TRANSIT PASSENGERS<lb/>
Water skis<lb/>
Knee boards<lb/>
Water toys<lb/>
Snow skis<lb/>
Snow ski rentals<lb/>
Russell sweats<lb/>
Champion apparel<lb/>
NC Wildlife agent<lb/>
Sporting goods<lb/>
equipment<lb/>
Fishing tackle<lb/>
Hunting clothes<lb/>
Tennis shoes for<lb/>
every activity<lb/>
Boating supplies<lb/>
Marine electronics<lb/>
IMIIlTTE?<lb/>
m<lb/>
ROUTE CHANGE<lb/>
ECU Transit will be changing its BROWN ROUTE<lb/>
on Wednesday, October 14th in order to serve the<lb/>
Wesley Commons Apartments and the city bus stop<lb/>
at 4th and Evans.<lb/>
We will no longer be serving Elizabeth Street or<lb/>
Willow Street due to low ridership.<lb/>
See Map below for route redirection.<lb/>
ijlf Mon-Fri 8-7<lb/>
111 Red Banks Road<lb/>
Greenville, NC<lb/>
355-5783<lb/>
MAP KEY<lb/>
-f� BROWN ROUTE<lb/>
O BUS STOPS<lb/>
ppmJT at the Stop a few "inutes early!<lb/>
Officiai:timerCHCOnditi0nS are N�T IN OUR CONTROL!<lb/>
urricial times of departure win be posted.<lb/>
Revised schedules will be distributed this week.<lb/>
�<lb/>
M<lb/>
<pb facs="00058345_0004"/><lb/>
4 The East Carolinian<lb/>
OCTOBER 13. 1992<lb/>
New development courses offered<lb/>
By Tammy Carter<lb/>
Staff Writer<lb/>
The ECU Division of Con-<lb/>
tinuing Education and Summer<lb/>
School offers a variety of courses<lb/>
for personal and professional de-<lb/>
velopment.<lb/>
According to Elizabeth<lb/>
Moore, secretary for the non-credit<lb/>
division, the classes that are of-<lb/>
fered appeal to businesses and in-<lb/>
dividuals with personal or profes-<lb/>
sional interests.<lb/>
"The classes are for anybody<lb/>
who wants to enhance their per-<lb/>
sonal or professional develop-<lb/>
ment Moore said.<lb/>
While some courses are<lb/>
taught in one day, others meet up<lb/>
to 10 times per semester. If some-<lb/>
one wants to simply brush up on<lb/>
theircomputer skills, learn how to<lb/>
draw or even work on self-image,<lb/>
the classes offered by the Division<lb/>
of Continuing Education is a good<lb/>
way to start<lb/>
Classes offered this fall and<lb/>
their beginning dates are "Begin-<lb/>
ning Conversational German" Oct.<lb/>
6, "Developing Your Image as a<lb/>
Successful Woman" Oct. 8, "Basic<lb/>
Sailing" and "How to Get the Most<lb/>
Out of Your Home Video<lb/>
Camcorder" Oct. 15, "Family Re-<lb/>
search" and "Figure Drawing<lb/>
Several computer courses<lb/>
will also be offered. They are "In-<lb/>
termediate Lotus 1-2-3" Oct. 24,<lb/>
"Desktop Publishing With<lb/>
WordPerfect" Oct. 31, "Lotus<lb/>
Functions and formulas" Nov. 7<lb/>
and "DOS and Hard Drive Basics"<lb/>
Nov. 21. The cost of these classes<lb/>
range from $40-115 each.<lb/>
Students who find they have<lb/>
extra time on their hands are wel-<lb/>
come to register for any of the<lb/>
classes offered. While classes do<lb/>
not count towards regular aca-<lb/>
demic credit, students can com-<lb/>
plete special forms to have them<lb/>
added to their transcripts.<lb/>
Some career fields require<lb/>
continuing education unit hours<lb/>
in order to maintain their posi-<lb/>
tions. Teachers and various na-<lb/>
tional organizations are among<lb/>
these fields.<lb/>
Businesses can request that<lb/>
special programs and workshops<lb/>
be offered if there is an interest<lb/>
within that company. The Divi-<lb/>
sion of Continuing Education will<lb/>
then set up the requested course.<lb/>
Anyone interested in taking<lb/>
one of these courses can contact<lb/>
Elizabeth Moore at 757-6143 or 1-<lb/>
800-757-9111. Brochures will then<lb/>
be sent and the person can register<lb/>
by completing the form and re-<lb/>
turning it to the Division of Con-<lb/>
tinuing Education. Brochures are<lb/>
automatically sent to previous reg-<lb/>
istrants, people who are on main-<lb/>
frame as having special interests<lb/>
and to schools for teachers who<lb/>
need renewal courses.<lb/>
Clinton, Perot assail Bush in debate<lb/>
Los Angeles Times<lb/>
(ST. LOUIS)�President Bush<lb/>
pressed his attack on Democratic<lb/>
rival Bill Clinton's anti-war activi-<lb/>
ties as a college student, but the first<lb/>
presidential debate of the 1992 cam-<lb/>
paign was dominated Sunday night<lb/>
by assaultson Bush 'sown economic<lb/>
record by Clinton and independent<lb/>
Ross Perot.<lb/>
In defending himself, Bush<lb/>
declared his own "revival" plan<lb/>
would provideasufficientboostfor<lb/>
the nation, announced that if re<lb/>
elected he would name White House<lb/>
Chief of Staff James A. Baker III<lb/>
"economic coordinator and<lb/>
pledged to "protect the American<lb/>
taxpayer against the spend and tax<lb/>
Congress<lb/>
"This country is not coming<lb/>
apart at the seams, for heaven's<lb/>
sakes Bush said.<lb/>
Clinton and Perot repeatedly<lb/>
dismissed such statements as tradi-<lb/>
tional GOP rhetoric and suggested<lb/>
the president does not recognize the<lb/>
magnitudeofthenation's problems.<lb/>
"We've created a mess, don't have<lb/>
much to show for it and we have got<lb/>
to fix it Perot said.<lb/>
Yetthedebate'smostdramatic<lb/>
exchange came not over the core<lb/>
issueoftheeconomy,butover Bush's<lb/>
assault on Clinton's anti-war activi-<lb/>
ties: When Bush charged that<lb/>
Clinton's conduct rendered him<lb/>
unfit to be commander-in-chief,<lb/>
Clinton accused the president of<lb/>
"McCarthyism" and invoked the<lb/>
memory of Bush's late father, a Con-<lb/>
necticut senator who played a<lb/>
prominent role inopposing the 1950s<lb/>
red-baiting tactics of Republican Sen.<lb/>
Joseph McCarthy of Wisconsin.<lb/>
"When Joe McCarthy went<lb/>
around this country attacking<lb/>
people's patriotism he was wrong.<lb/>
He was wrong Clinton declared,<lb/>
gesturing with both hands.<lb/>
"AndasenatorfromConnecti-<lb/>
cut stood up to him named Prescott<lb/>
Bush. Your father was right to stand<lb/>
up to JoeMcCarthy;you were wrong<lb/>
to attack my patriotism. I was op-<lb/>
posed to the war but I loved my<lb/>
country and we need a president<lb/>
who willbringthiscoun try together,<lb/>
not divide it<lb/>
Bush insisted that he was not<lb/>
questioninftClinton'spatriotismfor<lb/>
taking part in anti-war protests in<lb/>
London while studying as a Rhodes<lb/>
Scholar at Oxford University, but<lb/>
rather his "character and judgment"<lb/>
matters thatBush hassoughtto make<lb/>
central themes of his bid for re-elec-<lb/>
tion. "I just think it's wrong Bush<lb/>
said.<lb/>
Sunday's nationally televised<lb/>
debate, held in the Washington Uni-<lb/>
versity Field House in St. Louis, was<lb/>
the first of three among the presi-<lb/>
dential contenders scheduled within<lb/>
eight days. It was also the first to<lb/>
include a candidate other than the<lb/>
Republican and Democratic nomi-<lb/>
nees, and Perot proved to be both a<lb/>
formidable debater and a thorn in<lb/>
the president's side.<lb/>
jl<lb/>
a<lb/>
0 Jj<lb/>
ocau<lb/>
DISCOVER<lb/>
FOSDICK'S<lb/>
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Choose from Any 2 Seafoods<lb/>
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Crab Cakes, Baby flounder. Perch, j<lb/>
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$ 1.00 extra per item per plate <lb/>
Mot good with any other coupons jffl<lb/>
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Vlth this coupon onlv<lb/>
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ONLY<lb/>
Exotic<lb/>
Nightclub<lb/>
Adult<lb/>
Entertainment<lb/>
rf Center<lb/>
TUESDAYS<lb/>
Silver Bullet's Female<lb/>
"Exotic" Dancers<lb/>
WEDNESDAYS<lb/>
Amateur Night for Female Dancers<lb/>
CASH PRIZE<lb/>
Contestants need to be there by 8:00. Competition is from 9 to 11:00.<lb/>
THURSDAYS - SATURDAYS<lb/>
- - -SJJyejBLJHej'S.FemajeJ'BrotjcIJtenceTS,<lb/>
ECU STUDENT SPECIAL<lb/>
$2.00 OFF Admission Any Night with this coupon<lb/>
Open Tuesday-SaturdayDoors Open 7:30pm<lb/>
Bum Stage Time 9;00pm<lb/>
E3F Call 756-6278<lb/>
Sattutuf<lb/>
Straight out of CZrm&amp;tiviH<lb/>
iil&amp;9 to E-mrl'm 2�tor&amp;<lb/>
L,<lb/>
Valid N.C. I.D. Required<lb/>
Make a positive<lb/>
choice this week<lb/>
�TMK OUt 0 UMt T<lb/>
l�M OU' 'OH "Af<lb/>
Tuesday the 13th<lb/>
WILL BRIDGES<lb/>
QUARTET<lb/>
8pm Student Union<lb/>
Coffeehouse<lb/>
Jazz music sponsored<lb/>
by the Student Union<lb/>
Coffeehouse Committee.<lb/>
$1 coverECU ID &amp; $2<lb/>
covergeneral public.<lb/>
Wednesday the 14th<lb/>
MOCKTOBERFEST<lb/>
2-4pm at the Croatan<lb/>
Enjoy FREE "Mocktails"<lb/>
and giveaways from<lb/>
SGAandARA.<lb/>
HOMECOMING<lb/>
ALCOHOL<lb/>
AWARENESS<lb/>
BANNER CONTEST<lb/>
Judge all the campus<lb/>
organization banners at<lb/>
the ECU vs. University<lb/>
of Cincinnati football<lb/>
game. Contest<lb/>
sponsored by RHA.<lb/>
This week's October Awareness<lb/>
advertisement sponsored by:<lb/>
Student Health Services. October 5 ad<lb/>
sponsored by the Office of Health<lb/>
Promotion &amp; Well-Being.<lb/>
Monday the 19th<lb/>
THE WALL<lb/>
10am-2pm Student<lb/>
Store Area<lb/>
How has substance<lb/>
abuse affected your life?<lb/>
Tell all on the wall. A<lb/>
compelling program for<lb/>
all East Carolinians.<lb/>
Sponsored by Alpha Phi<lb/>
Omega.<lb/>
<lb/>
SIUDENT UNION<lb/>
HAPPENINGS<lb/>
MOVIES 8 PM HENDRIX THEATRE<lb/>
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WED &amp; SUN, OCT 14 8c 18<lb/>
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THUR, FRI, SAT,OCT15, 16&amp;17<lb/>
COFFEE HOUSE THE WILL BRIDGES QUARTET<lb/>
OCT13, 8-10PM<lb/>
THE UNDERGROUND<lb/>
$1 ADMISSIONSTUDENT I.D.<lb/>
$2 ADMISSIONGENERAL PUBLIC<lb/>
SPECIAL HUMP DAY 'TOONS<lb/>
CONCERTS LUNCHTIME CONCERT<lb/>
CONCtK QCT 14, 11:30 AM-1 PM<lb/>
IN FRONT OF MENDENHALL<lb/>
<lb/>
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THE PDISEfi BF POIITIVI CHOICES<lb/>
NORTH CAROLINA IS MY HOME<lb/>
LIVE PERFORMANCE FEATURING<lb/>
CHARLES KURALT &amp; LOONIS McGLOHON<lb/>
NOV 11, 8 PM HENDRIX THEATRE<lb/>
TICKETS ARE NOW ON SALE AT THE<lb/>
CENTRAL TICKET OFFICE IN MSC 757-4788<lb/>
FCRUM THE ATTIC SOCIETY REVISITED<lb/>
f- ATT rr-1 OCT 20, 8 PM �<lb/>
SO C IETYl MENDENHALL GREAT ROOM<lb/>
TRAVEL GO TO NEW YORK<lb/>
PICK UP AN APPLICATION AT THE MSC<lb/>
TICKET OFFICE OR CALL 757-4715 FOR<lb/>
MORE INFORMATION<lb/>
LOOK FOR THE BIGGEST EY5NT PN OCTOBER!<lb/>
COMING OCTOBER 31<lb/>
For More Info Call The<lb/>
University Unions Program Hotline<lb/>
at 757-6004<lb/>
S -<lb/>
<pb facs="00058345_0005"/><lb/>
neam<lb/>
jae�i Tii<lb/>
ttmmmammmmmmmmmmmiimm<lb/>
The East Carolinian<lb/>
October 13, 1992<lb/>
Opinion<lb/>
Page 5<lb/>
Listen to Ross Perot � this time<lb/>
Pollsters and voters alike are naming over the age of 50 with these comments,<lb/>
Ross Perot the victor of the first presidential therefore widening the generation gap to<lb/>
debate Monday night � but did he really the size of his "home" state of Texas,<lb/>
say anything? He spoke in soundbytes and What's worse�someone who utilized<lb/>
made us listen and laugh with quips like, his right to protest and to travel when he<lb/>
"I'm not playing Lawrence Welk music to- was in his early 20s, or someone who has<lb/>
night" and "I'm all ears but as usual, there allegedly made moral judgments much<lb/>
wasn't much substance to what he said. more critical than these, like his involve-<lb/>
Perot did make one important point, ment in the Iran-Contra scandal, for in-<lb/>
though, when he spoke about moral charac-<lb/>
ter and its relevance to the election. Perot<lb/>
suggested that perhaps Washington peren-<lb/>
nials such as President Bush are more seri-<lb/>
stance.<lb/>
Bush has professed to merely dipping<lb/>
his fingertips in the Iran-Contra coup, say-<lb/>
ing he simply was advised about it, when<lb/>
ously guilty of moral turpitude than Clinton, actually he was probably up to his neck in<lb/>
who took part in questioned activities in his it�he was vice president at the time of the<lb/>
"formative years incident?<lb/>
Time and time again, both politicians So listen to Perot. Laugh at his jokes<lb/>
and the press have criticized Arkansas Gov. and jabs, and even his lack of a concrete<lb/>
Bill Clinton's trip to Moscow, calling him a stance on basically any issue. But, most<lb/>
spy and a traitor, and his anti-war activities importantly, listen to him when he ques-<lb/>
while he was studying in England during tions the dealings of our representatives<lb/>
the Vietnam War. and candidates.<lb/>
First of all, just because Clinton went to Perot was accurate in pointing out that<lb/>
Moscow, ate some red herring and drank when a person is a "senior official in the<lb/>
some vodka, doesn't make him a Commu- federal government spending billions of<lb/>
rust. Bush does the country a great disservice dollars of taxpayers' money" and a "ma-<lb/>
in trying to whip up Red Scare emotions of ture individual a wrong judgment or<lb/>
the 1950s and insert them into present day mistake made is by far more severe than<lb/>
politics. activities, based on moral stances and<lb/>
In fact, Bush is actually shooting himself rights, by a 20-year-old, before that person<lb/>
in the foot by appealing mostly to people is even close to becoming a public figure.<lb/>
HOW THE LEOPARD GOT HIS SPOTS By Robert S. Todd<lb/>
Blind from the facts of who you are<lb/>
Race has always meant very<lb/>
l;ttle to me. A beautiful woman is<lb/>
something I admire, whatever color<lb/>
she is. It never seemed awkward to<lb/>
me. It always felt very natural �<lb/>
until others would go out of their<lb/>
way to make me feel uncomfort-<lb/>
able.<lb/>
This is not another bleeding-<lb/>
heart-racism-is-not-right column.<lb/>
I'm going to fill you in as to<lb/>
why we are of diferent colors. God<lb/>
did not break out his Crayolas and<lb/>
color us. (There happens to be a<lb/>
wealth of knowledge coming your<lb/>
way, so be ready).<lb/>
People with pale, milky col-<lb/>
ored skin and the black skins of<lb/>
central Africa are unique adapta-<lb/>
tions to the environment. Most<lb/>
people on Earth are neither.<lb/>
Tne dominance of the earth<lb/>
with people who are a light brown<lb/>
with a yellow or olive tint (the<lb/>
people of Asia, the Middle East<lb/>
and northern Africa) make the<lb/>
black and white problems of this<lb/>
country almost trivial. Such a fuss<lb/>
over so few? America and South<lb/>
. Africaarethelastbastionsofwhite-<lb/>
black racism.<lb/>
A substance called melanin<lb/>
gives skin its color. Its most impor-<lb/>
tant function is to ensure the upper<lb/>
levels of the skin will be protected<lb/>
from ultraviolet light, which can<lb/>
cause sunburn, rashes, infection,<lb/>
skin cancer and malignant mela-<lb/>
noma (a dark, deadly tumor). If<lb/>
; everyone was covered with thick<lb/>
hair, there would be no need for<lb/>
 skin color.<lb/>
The more melanin, the darker<lb/>
; the skin and the lower the risk of<lb/>
� damage from the sun. The sun is<lb/>
not all bad, though. Sunlight is in-<lb/>
tegral in the conversion of a fatty<lb/>
substance in the skin into vitamin<lb/>
D. The darker the skin the longer it<lb/>
takes.<lb/>
Vitamin D is a necessity and is<lb/>
found in very few foods. The intes-<lb/>
tines would not be effective in ab-<lb/>
sorbing calcium without it. Mis-<lb/>
shaped birth canals, which can be<lb/>
fatal for mother and child,<lb/>
osteomalacia and rickets can result<lb/>
without the necessary calcium for<lb/>
the strengthening of bones.<lb/>
The oils and livers of marine<lb/>
fish are primary sources of vitamin<lb/>
D. Skin must be dark enough to<lb/>
protect the person who does not<lb/>
have access to the ocean from harm<lb/>
so he or she can endure the ultra-<lb/>
violet radiation of the sun long<lb/>
enough to produce vitamin D.<lb/>
Skin color is a tradeoff. People<lb/>
with access to the ocean, in cold<lb/>
climates do not need to be dark<lb/>
skinned. The cold weather does<lb/>
not permit the exposure of their<lb/>
skin and they have vitamin D<lb/>
readily available.<lb/>
The fact of the matter is: blacks<lb/>
and whites may have shared a com-<lb/>
mon ancestor as early as 10,000<lb/>
years ago.<lb/>
So, you see, people are truly<lb/>
human before they are black,<lb/>
white, plaid, checkered or green.<lb/>
There is nothing wrong with<lb/>
dating African-Americans (what-<lb/>
ever that means). I am Irish-Hun-<lb/>
garian-French-CzechosIovakian-<lb/>
American. Get the idea?<lb/>
Pigment does not determine<lb/>
social values, athleticism or the<lb/>
size of your Johnson�. Believe it<lb/>
or not, all African-Americans can't<lb/>
dunk and dance. In fact, there are<lb/>
white people who can a lmos t touch<lb/>
the rim and shake their rump.<lb/>
There are orientals who are<lb/>
tall and stupid. Not all of them<lb/>
know karate.<lb/>
You've heard it before but it's<lb/>
still true. See people for who they<lb/>
are, not their skin color.<lb/>
"She looks good for a black<lb/>
girl or "He's phat for a white<lb/>
boy only magnify thedif f erences<lb/>
thespeaker sees between theraces.<lb/>
A person is attractive - or they are<lb/>
not.<lb/>
It is no coincidence interracial<lb/>
couples tend tohavebeautiful chil-<lb/>
dren - no matter how ugly the<lb/>
parents are. It's a hint. People<lb/>
should learn to appreciate other<lb/>
culters.<lb/>
Inter-racial relationships do<lb/>
not deserve the amount of atten-<lb/>
tion they receive. If a black man<lb/>
dates a white woman, he is seen as<lb/>
just using her as a status symbol.<lb/>
Seeing an African-American<lb/>
woman date a white man is not<lb/>
only more rare, but harder for both<lb/>
people to cope with - she's a sell-<lb/>
out and he's a wannabe wether or<lb/>
not they are trying to assimilate<lb/>
into another culture or not.<lb/>
There is no question some of<lb/>
the accusations of status symbol<lb/>
and curiosity (a.k.a. Jungle Fever)<lb/>
are true, but it is the exception<lb/>
rather than the rule. Humanity<lb/>
and love have ways of shining<lb/>
through.<lb/>
There is only one way to end<lb/>
racism. Children are taught rac-<lb/>
ism. Think aboutit. Noone is born<lb/>
a bigot.<lb/>
Cliche, but true.<lb/>
"The black man must love<lb/>
the white man and the white man<lb/>
must love the black man because<lb/>
we are all tied together in a single<lb/>
garment of destiny Martin<lb/>
Luther King, Jr. said. "We must<lb/>
learn to live together as brothers<lb/>
or we will perish together as<lb/>
fools<lb/>
The East 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 S. Todd, Sports Editor<lb/>
Chas Mitch i, Assistant Sports Editor<lb/>
Blair Skinner, Copy Editor<lb/>
Sean Herring, Copy Editor<lb/>
Richard Haselrig, Staff Illustrator<lb/>
Michael Albuquerque, Business Manager<lb/>
John Bullard, Circulation Manager<lb/>
M. Chantal Weedman, Layout Manager<lb/>
Cori Daniels, Classified Advertising Technician<lb/>
J. William Walker, Opinion Page Editor<lb/>
Woody Barnes, Advertising Production Manager<lb/>
Dail Reed, Photo Editor<lb/>
Deborah Daniel, Secretary<lb/>
The East Carolinian has served the East Carolina campus community since 1925, emphasizing information that affects<lb/>
ECU students. The East Carolin ian publishes 12,000 copies every Tuesday and Thursday. The masthead editorial in each<lb/>
edition is the opinion of the Editorial Board. The East Carolinian welcomes letters expressing all points of view. Letters<lb/>
should be limited to 250 words or less. For purposes of decency and brevity. The East Carolinian reserves the right to edit<lb/>
or reject letters for publication. Letters should be addressed to The Editor, The East Carolinian, Publications Bldg ECU,<lb/>
Greenville, N.C 27858-4353. For more information, call (919) 757-6366.<lb/>
A SIDEWARDS GLANCE<lb/>
By David J. Jones<lb/>
Smoking ban protects non-smokers<lb/>
"It's my body and they're my<lb/>
lungs, what right do you have to<lb/>
tell me I can't smoke in a public<lb/>
area?"<lb/>
Sound familiar? There still<lb/>
seems to be a big controversy re-<lb/>
garding the issue of the smoking<lb/>
ban. If you are a smoker you may<lb/>
as well put the paper down or<lb/>
move on to another article, be-<lb/>
cause this is probably going to tick<lb/>
you off a little.<lb/>
Why is this a problem? I'm<lb/>
not even going to address the fact<lb/>
that it has been proven over and<lb/>
over again that cigarette smoking<lb/>
is the second or third worst thing<lb/>
you can do to your body. Neither<lb/>
am I going to address the fact that<lb/>
it has also been proven that sec-<lb/>
ond-hand smoke is very danger-<lb/>
ous to non smokers.<lb/>
Folks, it's just a matter of com-<lb/>
mon courtesy. Smoker's rights are<lb/>
not being violated. Nonsmokers<lb/>
rights are being protected. I know<lb/>
it sounds like a play on words but<lb/>
it is not.<lb/>
A famous politician was asked<lb/>
once todefine just whatindividual<lb/>
rights were and how far they ex-<lb/>
tended. Instead of giving a whole<lb/>
lot of technical jargon and a long<lb/>
drawn out report he gave a hypo-<lb/>
thetical case. The case was of one<lb/>
man who was in the process of<lb/>
hitting another man because of an<lb/>
argument they were having. For<lb/>
the purposes of this example let's<lb/>
call the man doing the hitting, man<lb/>
"A" and the man being hit, man<lb/>
"B A is perfectly within his rights<lb/>
to hit B up to and only up to the<lb/>
split second before A's fist con-<lb/>
nects with B's face. The instant<lb/>
thata connection is madeB's rights<lb/>
have been violated.<lb/>
Obviously this is a crude il-<lb/>
lustration, but it will serve the<lb/>
purposes of my argument. A<lb/>
smoker has all the rights in the<lb/>
world to smoke up until I have to<lb/>
breathe his or her smoke. Smoke<lb/>
has been proven to present a clear<lb/>
danger to my body (not to men-<lb/>
tion the fact that cigarette smoke<lb/>
smells terrible).<lb/>
Many people say that non-<lb/>
smokers are being to fanatical<lb/>
about the smoking issue. To a cer-<lb/>
tain extent I will agree with them.<lb/>
SGA president Courtney Jones<lb/>
brought out the point that during<lb/>
night classes women were now<lb/>
forced to go outside to smoke.<lb/>
Jones pointed out that going out-<lb/>
side classroom buildings at night<lb/>
is notexactly the safest thing to do<lb/>
here in Greenville and I am in-<lb/>
clined to agree with her.<lb/>
However, how complicated is<lb/>
it to negotiate a designated smok-<lb/>
ing area for these people? The an-<lb/>
swer is that it's notThat is the<lb/>
whole point behind the concept of<lb/>
compromise and it is exactly how<lb/>
the situation should be resolved<lb/>
but the ban must stand except in<lb/>
situations like the one just de-<lb/>
scribed.<lb/>
In my family, my father is a<lb/>
smoker and my mother is a non-<lb/>
smoker. My father understands<lb/>
that his smoking bothers mom in<lb/>
the house. The cigarette smoke<lb/>
usually travels over to mom and<lb/>
she is forced to breathe it (at which<lb/>
point a lot of hacking and cough-<lb/>
ing and complaining ensues).<lb/>
Rather than get fanatical about the<lb/>
issue and start screaming about<lb/>
smoker's rights my father now<lb/>
goes outside (usually on the front<lb/>
porch) when a nicotine fit besets<lb/>
him.<lb/>
Maybe the fact that a ban had<lb/>
to be enacted says something about<lb/>
the state of affairs in our society. If<lb/>
smokers became more courteous<lb/>
about when and where they light<lb/>
up and if nonsmokers weren't al-<lb/>
ways in a uproar, when a smoker<lb/>
happens to make a mistake and<lb/>
light up in the wrong place or<lb/>
situation, there would be no need<lb/>
for such a ban. But, alas such is the<lb/>
state our society is in. So until the<lb/>
current status quo is changed (a<lb/>
change that I am all in favor of) the<lb/>
ban must stand.<lb/>
It must stand if for no other<lb/>
reason to show us all how much<lb/>
like children we act even though<lb/>
we are supposed to be adults.<lb/>
LETTERS TO THE EDITOR<lb/>
Clinton personifies 'American Dream'<lb/>
To the Editor:<lb/>
This elections year is different<lb/>
because there is a feeling of ur-<lb/>
gency about the future of America.<lb/>
This serse of alarm has grown<lb/>
into a gnawing fear; fear that the<lb/>
middle class is an endangered spe-<lb/>
cies and the American Dream is<lb/>
dying. Something is definitely out<lb/>
of whack when the richest 1 per-<lb/>
cent of the population has more<lb/>
money than the other 90 percent.<lb/>
It is time for a change to protect<lb/>
the forgotten middle class. The<lb/>
only way we will achieve this is by<lb/>
electing Gov. Bill Clinton presi-<lb/>
dent.<lb/>
The assumption that when<lb/>
rich people and corporations are<lb/>
given tax breaks the money will<lb/>
trickle down to the rest of us has<lb/>
led toourcurrentdismaleconomic<lb/>
state. This has left the middle class<lb/>
to fend for themselves with little<lb/>
help from Washington, D.C.<lb/>
The poor have little money<lb/>
with which to pay taxes with. The<lb/>
rich have a multitude of loopholes<lb/>
to avoid paying their fair share.<lb/>
The middle class is stuck with tne<lb/>
bill.<lb/>
This is why Clinton favors<lb/>
eliminating tax deductions for<lb/>
outrageous executive pay and fa-<lb/>
vors increasing the tax rate for<lb/>
J tose earning over $200,000 a year<lb/>
to pay for a middle class tax cut.<lb/>
Those who can afford to pay more<lb/>
should take the burden off work-<lb/>
ing families struggling to make<lb/>
ends meet.<lb/>
College graduates currently<lb/>
face one of the worst job markets<lb/>
ever and very bleak future unless<lb/>
growth and industrial expansion<lb/>
take place.<lb/>
We must reverse the trend of<lb/>
the past four years in which we<lb/>
suffered a devastating decline in<lb/>
private sector employment after<lb/>
being promised thi. ty-million new<lb/>
jobs. Clinton will end tax breaks<lb/>
for companies that ship American<lb/>
jobs overseas.<lb/>
The cost of higher education<lb/>
and adequate health care is grow-<lb/>
ing out of reach for middle class<lb/>
Americans. This is why we need<lb/>
Clinton's education plan that<lb/>
makes it possible for all qualified<lb/>
students to get a college education<lb/>
or go to a vocational school upon<lb/>
completion of high school.<lb/>
Clinton's proposals to alleviate the<lb/>
health care crisis would bring a<lb/>
virtual revolution to the industry<lb/>
and bring costs back down to a<lb/>
reasonable level.<lb/>
Clinton grew up in a middle<lb/>
class family in rural Arkansas. He<lb/>
realizes the problems that we face<lb/>
and can identify with the middle<lb/>
class. Clinton truly personifies the<lb/>
American Dream and will do<lb/>
whatever it takes to keep it alive<lb/>
for all Americans.<lb/>
Scarlette Gardner<lb/>
Dining services should change its ways<lb/>
To the Editor:<lb/>
In a time when everyone, in-<lb/>
cluding more and more busi-<lb/>
nesses are becoming environmen-<lb/>
tally conscious, we were shocked<lb/>
to realize that our own university<lb/>
wasn't doing all it could to pro-<lb/>
mote "saving the environment<lb/>
Even other prominent univer-<lb/>
sities, such as the University of<lb/>
North Carolina at Chapel Hill,<lb/>
are making it easier for their stu-<lb/>
dents and faculty to aid the envi-<lb/>
ronment. There, they have a new<lb/>
residence hall recycling program<lb/>
with dorm-room recycling bins<lb/>
for every room and more recy-<lb/>
cling centers throughout the cam-<lb/>
pus.<lb/>
Here at ECU, Styrofoam<lb/>
plates and containers are being<lb/>
used for the packaging of foods<lb/>
in several of our dining facilities.<lb/>
These Styrofoam containers,<lb/>
which could have easily been sub-<lb/>
stituted for by paper products,<lb/>
are causing large amounts of non-<lb/>
biodegradable material to accu-<lb/>
mulate.<lb/>
Our university should make<lb/>
the campus more accessible for<lb/>
recycling.<lb/>
There should be separate con-<lb/>
tainers in the dining facilities<lb/>
where students can divide their<lb/>
waste convenient into recyclable<lb/>
and non-recyclable materials. If<lb/>
recycling is convenient, then it<lb/>
will be likely that more people<lb/>
will participate. It is time for the<lb/>
Campus Dining Services to<lb/>
change its ways.<lb/>
Tricia Jenkins<lb/>
Audra Cooper<lb/>
�M<lb/>
<pb facs="00058345_0006"/><lb/>
�<lb/>
n<lb/>
TTie Eos Carolinian<lb/>
October 13, 1992<lb/>
Classifieds<lb/>
Page 6<lb/>
FOR 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/>
ROOMMATE WANTED: To<lb/>
share two bedroom fully fur-<lb/>
nished apartment. ECU bus<lb/>
access near by. call Tim at 758-<lb/>
5207.<lb/>
FEMALE ROOMMATE<lb/>
WANTED to share a two bed-<lb/>
room apartment. Rent: 170.00 a<lb/>
month, 1 2 utilitiesand $175.00<lb/>
deposit. 201F Eastbrook Apart-<lb/>
ments. Call Stephanie at 758-<lb/>
7664.<lb/>
ROOM FOR RENT. Female<lb/>
non-smoker preferred. Own<lb/>
room and bath. Washerdryer<lb/>
in quiet 3 bedroom house.<lb/>
$225 month. Utilities included.<lb/>
Call 758-1471 anytime.<lb/>
TIRED OF YOUR PRESENT<lb/>
LIVING ARRANGEMENTS?<lb/>
Need a roommate to share apt.<lb/>
at 807 College View Apts.<lb/>
$125.00 mo 12 utilities<lb/>
(Lowest rent in Greenville) 2<lb/>
BR, Large den, ECU bus. For<lb/>
more information call 758-9865.<lb/>
FEMALE ROOMMATE<lb/>
NEEDED: To share 2 bedroom<lb/>
in Wilson Acres. Will have own<lb/>
room. $158.66mo 13 utili-<lb/>
ties. Call 830-9213.<lb/>
LOOKING FOR ROOM-<lb/>
MATE. Wistful Vista. One<lb/>
block from campus. Spacious<lb/>
apartment, large kitchen, bal-<lb/>
cony, hardwood floors, par-<lb/>
tially furnished. Rent $175<lb/>
month 12 utilities. Need by<lb/>
November 1. Call Karen or<lb/>
Mary at 830-9450.<lb/>
FOR SALE<lb/>
GOVERNMENT SIEZED<lb/>
CARS, trucks, boats, 4wheel-<lb/>
ers, motorhomes, by FBI, IRS,<lb/>
DEA. Available your area now.<lb/>
call 1-800-333-3737 ext. C-5999.<lb/>
FREE KITTEN: Male, 8 weeks<lb/>
old, supplies included. Needs<lb/>
good home. Call anytime: 321-<lb/>
0809.<lb/>
2CERWINVEGA 380 loud-<lb/>
speakers. 15" Woofers. Will<lb/>
sacrifice for $500. Call Josh at<lb/>
830-6893.<lb/>
FOR SALE<lb/>
CAR STEREO CD PLAYER:<lb/>
Alpine 5905 pullout, $180. Am<lb/>
amplifier ADS PH 12 6 chan-<lb/>
nels 20 by 6(200)An portable<lb/>
Sony CD player $150 with AC<lb/>
adapter.<lb/>
FERRET FOR SALE: 6 months<lb/>
old, supplies included, female,<lb/>
has shots, spayed and<lb/>
descanted. Price negotiable to<lb/>
GOOD HOME. Call Ashleigh:<lb/>
321-0809.<lb/>
TWIN BED: Mattress,<lb/>
boxspring, and frame. Good<lb/>
condition. $75.00 or best offer.<lb/>
HELP WANTED<lb/>
FOR SALE<lb/>
Pumpkins, Gourds,<lb/>
Indian Corn, Wheat Straw,<lb/>
New Crop Apples,<lb/>
Fresh Cider and more are<lb/>
now available at the<lb/>
Green Market<lb/>
14th St. &amp; Greenville Blvd<lb/>
757-3311<lb/>
BOOKTRADER<lb/>
BUY AND TRADE<lb/>
PAPERBACK BOOKS<lb/>
OVER<lb/>
50,000 TITLES<lb/>
919 Dickinson Ave.<lb/>
Greenville, NC<lb/>
758-6909<lb/>
COMICS OLD &amp; NEW<lb/>
NOWL USED CD'S<lb/>
HELP WANTED<lb/>
EMERGENCY! Expanding<lb/>
company needs hardworking<lb/>
reliable students to mail our<lb/>
diet brochures from Home<lb/>
Dorm! Earn up to $200 PT or<lb/>
$1000 FT! Employees needed<lb/>
immediately! For job applica-<lb/>
tion send self-addressed stamp<lb/>
envelope: Colossal Marketing,<lb/>
Employee Processing, P.O. Box<lb/>
291140 Port Orange, FL 32129.<lb/>
"HELP WANTED" EARN<lb/>
$1,500 WEEKLY mailing our<lb/>
circulars Begin now FREE<lb/>
packet! SEYS, Dept. 164, Box<lb/>
4000, Cordova, 38018-4000.<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 (Gl) 1821 Hillandale<lb/>
Rd. 1B-295 Durham, NC 27705<lb/>
WORK AT HOME: Assembly<lb/>
, craft, typing and more! Up to<lb/>
$500.00 a week possible. For<lb/>
information write Source; 1840-<lb/>
D Simonton Road, Dept. 9108,<lb/>
StatesviUe, NC 28677.<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 $$$$.<lb/>
Call Sun Splash Tours 1-800-<lb/>
426-7710.<lb/>
EASY WORK! Excellent pay!<lb/>
Assemble products at home.<lb/>
Call toll free. 1-800-467-5566<lb/>
Ext. 5920.<lb/>
ADULT ENTERTAINMENT:<lb/>
Earn $300 - $400 weekly. Day<lb/>
and night shift available. No<lb/>
experience necessary. Must be<lb/>
at least 18 years old. Call day or<lb/>
night 746-6762.<lb/>
POSTAL JOBS AVAILABLE!<lb/>
Many positions. Great benefits.<lb/>
Call l-800-333-3737ext. P-3712.<lb/>
CRUISE SHIPS NOW HIR-<lb/>
ING - Earn $2,000month <lb/>
world travel (Hawaii, Mexico,<lb/>
the Caribbean, etc.) Holiday,<lb/>
Summer and Career employ-<lb/>
ment available. No experience<lb/>
necessary. For employment<lb/>
program call 1-206-634-0468<lb/>
ext. C5362.<lb/>
MODELS: Susan's needs you<lb/>
now! 809-A Red Banks Rd Gre-<lb/>
enville. New TV commercials<lb/>
in production. Requirements:<lb/>
Height 5'7' and up, Size 6-8,<lb/>
some previous modeling or<lb/>
pageant experience.<lb/>
SAVE ON SPRING BREAK<lb/>
'93! Jamaica, Cancun, and<lb/>
Florida from $119.00. Book earl<lb/>
and save $$$! Organize group<lb/>
and travel free! Sun Splash<lb/>
HELP WANTED<lb/>
Tours 1-800-426-7710.<lb/>
$$$$ FREE TRAVEL AND<lb/>
RESUME EXPERIENCE In-<lb/>
dividuals and student organi-<lb/>
zations wanted to promote<lb/>
SPRING BREAK, call the<lb/>
Nation's leader. Inter-Campus<lb/>
Programs 1-800-327-6013.<lb/>
STUDENTS OR ORGANI-<lb/>
ZATIONS: Promote our<lb/>
Florida Spring Break packages.<lb/>
Earn money and free trips. Or-<lb/>
ganize small or large groups.<lb/>
Call Campus Marketing - 1-<lb/>
80023-5264.<lb/>
PERSONALS<lb/>
SERIVCES ()FFERED<lb/>
TYPING: Error free, quick and<lb/>
dependable at reasonable cost.<lb/>
Excellent typing and proof-<lb/>
reading skills (grammar, punc-<lb/>
tuation, sentence structure,<lb/>
etc.). Call Pauline at 757-3693.<lb/>
STUDY ABROAD IN AUS-<lb/>
TRALIA: Information on se-<lb/>
mester, year, graduate, sum-<lb/>
mer and internship programs<lb/>
in Australia. We represent 28<lb/>
Australian Universities, call us<lb/>
toll free 1-800-245-2575.<lb/>
YOUR CAREER IS AT STAKE!<lb/>
Are you applying to graduate school<lb/>
or medical school? We are academic<lb/>
scientists with extensive experience<lb/>
as members of graduate and medical<lb/>
school admissions committees. We<lb/>
will work with you on your application<lb/>
and strengthen your personal essay to<lb/>
give you that competitive edge.<lb/>
For free information, contact:<lb/>
AIKENDAiL Academic Consultants,<lb/>
703 Ninth Street, Suite 233, Durham,<lb/>
NC 27705-4802, (919) 493-0343.<lb/>
GREEKS &amp; CLUBS<lb/>
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IN JUST ONE WEEK!<lb/>
PLUS $1000 FOR THE<lb/>
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You also get a FREE<lb/>
HEADPHONE RADIO<lb/>
just for calling<lb/>
1-800-932-0528, Ext. 65<lb/>
RESEARCH INFORMATION)<lb/>
Largest Library of Information In US.<lb/>
all subjects<lb/>
Order Catalog Today with VteaMC or COD<lb/>
800-351-0222<lb/>
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Or, rush $2.00 to: Research Information<lb/>
11322 Idaho Ave. gQ6-A, Los Angles, CA 9002S<lb/>
QUIMECUM SUNT, non me<lb/>
intellexerant. Qui juxta me est,<lb/>
juxta ingnem est. Qui longe est<lb/>
a me, longe ingnem est. Copula<lb/>
Mei.<lb/>
CALLING ALL LADIES<lb/>
The 2nd annual Gamma Sigma<lb/>
Sigma Male Auction is coming<lb/>
soonso mark your calenders<lb/>
for October 20th.<lb/>
STAR YARBORO - TO MY<lb/>
"LITTLETEAPOT you were<lb/>
sucha good sport. WERE YOU<lb/>
SURPRISED? May the parties<lb/>
be plentiful! Your big<lb/>
sisterSusan Rives.<lb/>
MID SEMESTER RUSH: Miss<lb/>
out on Fall rush? We are look-<lb/>
ing for motivated guys search-<lb/>
ing for membership in a long<lb/>
established fraternity on the<lb/>
ECU campus. For more info<lb/>
call Scott 758-8469.<lb/>
KAPPA SIG PLEDGES:<lb/>
AWESOME time at cook out!<lb/>
Can't wait to do it again. Our<lb/>
flag football game was great<lb/>
and so were our escorts. Love,<lb/>
The Alpha Phi Pledges.<lb/>
ALPHA PHI FOOTBALL<lb/>
PLAYERS: Congrats on an<lb/>
undefeated season and thank<lb/>
you Drew and Tim for coach-<lb/>
ing us through it! Love, the<lb/>
Alpha Phi's.<lb/>
SIGMA PI: We had a great<lb/>
time at the pre-down town<lb/>
Thur Thanks to Doug, Steve,<lb/>
Sean, Brian, Chris and John for<lb/>
playing co-rec volleyball with<lb/>
us! Love, the Alpha Phi's.<lb/>
ALPHA OMICRON PI BETA<lb/>
ROH'S - It all began on a warm<lb/>
Thurs. night, with the sisters<lb/>
in charge we knew it would<lb/>
turn out right! 9:30 was the<lb/>
time, and you guys had<lb/>
reached your prime! You got<lb/>
your 1st clue and you knew<lb/>
what to do, an evening full of<lb/>
singing, dancing, and even a<lb/>
little barking too! House after<lb/>
house you performed like<lb/>
pro's, how you ate that Jello<lb/>
nobody knows! And when the<lb/>
hurt ended the party wasn't<lb/>
done, These Alpha Omicron<lb/>
Pi's were determined to have<lb/>
fun! Carrie and Beth were<lb/>
happy it was easy to see unfor-<lb/>
tunately their stomach's didn't<lb/>
agree. But, all in all we hope<lb/>
PERSONALS<lb/>
you guys had fun because to<lb/>
your big sisters you're all 1!<lb/>
JENNY KULA - Barking like a<lb/>
dog, "you are my sunshine<lb/>
farm animal impressions, a<lb/>
little jello, a lot of gel, and a<lb/>
whole lot of FUN! You are the<lb/>
shit! Love,YBS.<lb/>
SINCE YOU'RE SINGLE<lb/>
AND LIKE TO MINGLE;<lb/>
Come to a Free bowling party<lb/>
at East Carolina Bowl, 700 Red<lb/>
Banks Road. RSVP with Sheri.<lb/>
355-5510.<lb/>
DLETA CHI: Look what the<lb/>
Brotherhood of a lifetime has<lb/>
done in one year.<lb/>
AZD: I looked out the win-<lb/>
dow, seen the Eggman. Yelling<lb/>
for Maalox I knew it must be !<lb/>
Dan. We had Chinese eyes and j<lb/>
Cowboy boots, drinkin' much<lb/>
Killian's and getting all loose.<lb/>
Thumper is a game we'll never<lb/>
forget, screaming, hollarin' and<lb/>
grabbin' their @! Wednes-<lb/>
day night was great! P.S. How<lb/>
was the water Robin? The �;<lb/>
brothers and pledges of Delta :<lb/>
Chi. '<lb/>
ZETA: A.L.E. tried to rain on �<lb/>
our parade. Richard drank on, j<lb/>
he wasn't afraid. Out the door, ;<lb/>
he was tossed on his a. We :<lb/>
moved the party so the drink- '<lb/>
ing would last. Over to the '�<lb/>
Works and the coast was clear.<lb/>
We gathered around the guitar<lb/>
player so we could all hear. We<lb/>
had a blast! The Brothers and J<lb/>
Pledges of Delta Chi.<lb/>
THETACHI: We danced the j<lb/>
night away in our sombreros j<lb/>
and bahas. What an awesome<lb/>
time we had! You guys are<lb/>
great! Can't wait to do it again.<lb/>
Love, the Sigmas.<lb/>
KEVIN McMANARA, j<lb/>
Thanks so much for all you've j<lb/>
done for us You're and awe- ;<lb/>
some coach and friend. We .<lb/>
appreciate all the time you've :<lb/>
given to help us out. Love, the<lb/>
Sigmas.<lb/>
I HAVE THE BEST roommates<lb/>
ever! Thanks for all of the rides :<lb/>
last week, you three are won- !<lb/>
derful! Lots of love, your fa-<lb/>
vorite Assistant News Editor!<lb/>
REGAN: Wigidy,wigidy,wak! <lb/>
Announcements<lb/>
BISEXUAI -fiAY-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/>
CAMPUS CHRISTIAN<lb/>
FELLOWSHIP<lb/>
Looking for a fellowship of<lb/>
Christians, a place to pray,<lb/>
study God's word, be involved<lb/>
in social and service projects?<lb/>
Need a refuge from time to<lb/>
time? Campus Christian Fel-<lb/>
lowship may be what you are<lb/>
looking for. Our weekly meet-<lb/>
ings are at 7pm Wednesdays at<lb/>
our Campus House located at<lb/>
200 E. 8th St directly across<lb/>
from Cotanche St. from Men-<lb/>
denhall Student Center. Ev-<lb/>
eryone is welcome. For more<lb/>
information. Call Tim Turner,<lb/>
Campus Minister at 752-7199.<lb/>
PHI ETA SIGMA<lb/>
A general meeting will be<lb/>
held on October 8 at 6:00pm for<lb/>
all Phi Eta Sigma members. The<lb/>
meeting place will be at<lb/>
Fleming in the basement. Re-<lb/>
freshments will be served. If<lb/>
you have any questions, please<lb/>
contact the Vice-President at<lb/>
752-5792.<lb/>
STUDENT HFAITH<lb/>
SERVICE<lb/>
Flu vaccine will be available<lb/>
at Student Health Service this<lb/>
Fall If you would like to re-<lb/>
ceive the vaccine this Fall come<lb/>
by the Student Health Center<lb/>
(8am - 5pm) to sign up and pay<lb/>
for the vaccine. The cost is $3.00.<lb/>
October 16th is the last day to<lb/>
signup and to receive the vac-<lb/>
cine. Vaccines will be adminis-<lb/>
tered October 19 through Oc-<lb/>
tober 30.<lb/>
STRESS MANAGEMENT<lb/>
October 13 in 329 Wright<lb/>
Building at the Counseling<lb/>
Center from 2-3pm. Call 757-<lb/>
6661 for more information.<lb/>
"WHERE THERE'S A WILL,<lb/>
THERE'S AN A"<lb/>
Part I Tuesday October 13.<lb/>
3-5pm and Part II Thursday,<lb/>
October 15, ?-5pm. Both ses-<lb/>
sions will be in 313 Wright<lb/>
Building at the Counseling<lb/>
Center.<lb/>
25 OR OLDER<lb/>
Undergrad or grad student.<lb/>
Join us for brown bag lunches<lb/>
on Wednesday from noon to<lb/>
1:30pm. Come for part or all of<lb/>
the time. This rap group is an<lb/>
informal gathering designed to<lb/>
be supportive and help meet<lb/>
the needs of students with fam-<lb/>
ily responsibilities. This will be<lb/>
in 313 Wright Building. For<lb/>
more information, phone<lb/>
George Gressman at 757-6661<lb/>
(Counseling Center).<lb/>
BE ON TOP<lb/>
Recreational Services will be<lb/>
offering a Climbing II work-<lb/>
shop on Thursday Oct. 15 at<lb/>
3:00pm at the Climb Tower. A<lb/>
small tee is required - all equip-<lb/>
ment will be supplied. For more<lb/>
information, call 757-6387.<lb/>
PERFORMING ARTS<lb/>
SERIES.<lb/>
The National Orchestra of<lb/>
Spain will perform on Wed<lb/>
Oct. 14, 1992 at 8:00pm. The<lb/>
Orchestra, in its fifty years, has<lb/>
performed all over Europe, The<lb/>
United States, and South<lb/>
America. Its repertoire includes<lb/>
major works from the 18th<lb/>
through the 20th centuries and<lb/>
focuses on Spanish composers.<lb/>
r.AMMA BETA PHI<lb/>
Attention all members!<lb/>
There will be a general meeting<lb/>
held on Tuesday, October 13 in<lb/>
Mendenhall Room 244 at<lb/>
4:00pm. We look forward to<lb/>
seeing everyone there.<lb/>
SCHOOT OF BUSINESS<lb/>
SCHOLARSHIPS AVAIL-<lb/>
ABLE<lb/>
Approximately $17,600 will<lb/>
be awarded in scholarships to<lb/>
School of Business majors<lb/>
(those students already i the<lb/>
School of Business). Students<lb/>
interested in making applica-<lb/>
tion for these scholarships<lb/>
should secure forms from on of<lb/>
the following department of-<lb/>
fices: accounting -GCB 308; De-<lb/>
cisions Sciences-3418; Finance<lb/>
- 3420; Management - 3106;<lb/>
Marketing - 3414. All applica-<lb/>
tions must be submitted to Ruth<lb/>
Jones (GCB 3210), Chairman of<lb/>
School of Business Scholarship<lb/>
Committee, by October 16,<lb/>
1992. Students may apply for<lb/>
one or more of the scholarships.<lb/>
ORIENATION TO CAREER<lb/>
SERVICES<lb/>
The Career Services office<lb/>
invites seniors and graduate<lb/>
students who will graduate in<lb/>
December, 1992 or MaySum-<lb/>
mer, 1993 who have not at-<lb/>
tended an Orientation to Ca-<lb/>
reer Services meeting to attend<lb/>
on October 14 at 3:00 in the<lb/>
Bloxton House. The staff will<lb/>
give an overview of career ser-<lb/>
vices and distribute registra-<lb/>
tion forms. They will discuss<lb/>
procedures for establishing a<lb/>
credentials file and participat-<lb/>
ing in employment interviews<lb/>
on campus.<lb/>
VOLLEYBALL CLUB<lb/>
Anyone interested in the de-<lb/>
velopment of a Volleyball Club<lb/>
are welcome to attend the first<lb/>
organizational meeting for the<lb/>
Fall semester. This is a return-<lb/>
ing club with expectations of<lb/>
providing opportunities for<lb/>
men, women and Co-rec com-<lb/>
petition . The meeting will be<lb/>
Tues. Oct. 13 at 5:30pm in Tm<lb/>
10 Christenbury Memorial<lb/>
Gymnasium.<lb/>
MINORITY ARTS COM-<lb/>
MJXEEE<lb/>
The Student Union Minor-<lb/>
ity Arts Committee will meet<lb/>
today, October 13 at 5:15pm in<lb/>
Room 242 of the Mendenhall<lb/>
Student Center. All students<lb/>
are welcome.<lb/>
PHI SIGMA PI<lb/>
Phi Sigma Pi National<lb/>
Honor Fraternity will be hav-<lb/>
ing a dinner meeting at<lb/>
Szechuan Gardens Wed. Oct.<lb/>
13. The dinner will begin at<lb/>
5:30 and the meeting will begin<lb/>
at 6:30.<lb/>
ECU CERAMICS GUILD<lb/>
Annual mug sale. The sale<lb/>
will be Oct. 16 from 8-5 in the<lb/>
from entrance of Jenkins Fine<lb/>
Arts Center. All mugs are hand<lb/>
made by student and profes-<lb/>
sors of ceramics. The mugs<lb/>
range in price from $5-$10.<lb/>
ORDER OF OMEGA<lb/>
Attention all members and<lb/>
perspective members. Order of<lb/>
Omega meeting will be held<lb/>
Thurs. Oct. 15,1992 at 5:00pm.<lb/>
Mendenhall Multipurpose<lb/>
room on first floor.<lb/>
PERFORMING ART SE-<lb/>
BIES<lb/>
Performing on Friday, Oct<lb/>
16,1992at 8:00pm, RayCharles,<lb/>
the Raelettes, and the Ray<lb/>
Charles Orchestra will perform<lb/>
a variety of music ranging from ;<lb/>
gospel to blues to jazz to R&amp;B.<lb/>
The Carroll Dashieli Jazz En- j<lb/>
semble will serve as the open- '<lb/>
ing act. ;<lb/>
ECU SCHOOL OF MUSIC<lb/>
EVENTS<lb/>
THUR OCT. 15 � Faculty <lb/>
Recital featuring Selma <lb/>
Gokcen, cello; John B. O'Brien,<lb/>
piano with guest lecturers Bodo<lb/>
Nischan and McKay Sundwall:<lb/>
Beethoven and the Romantic<lb/>
(Fletcher Recital Hall, 8:00pm,<lb/>
Free). SUN OCT. 18�Facutly<lb/>
Recital featuring Charles Bath,<lb/>
piano (Fletcher Recital Hall,<lb/>
3:00pm, Free). MON OCT 19 (<lb/>
� Dawn Batts Hill, composi-<lb/>
tion, Graduate Recital (Fletcher<lb/>
Recital Hall, 7:00pm, Free); and<lb/>
David Farrior, tuba and Cedric<lb/>
Hairston, tuba, Senior Recital,<lb/>
(Fletcher Recital hall, 9:00pm, <lb/>
Free).<lb/>
INTERVIEW SKILLS ,<lb/>
WORKSHOP<lb/>
Seniors, graduate students<lb/>
and cooperative education stu-<lb/>
dents who need help in devel-<lb/>
oping or refining their inter-<lb/>
view skills are invited to a<lb/>
workshop sponsoredby Career<lb/>
Services. Come and leam spe-<lb/>
cial techniques that will help<lb/>
you prepare for the job search!<lb/>
The interview workshop will<lb/>
be held on Oct. 15 at 3:00, Oct.<lb/>
20 at 5:30 and Oct. 28 at 3:00 in<lb/>
t�o Rlovfon Hrnco<lb/>
<pb facs="00058345_0007"/><lb/>
The East Carolinian<lb/>
October 13, 1992<lb/>
Lifestyle<lb/>
Page 7<lb/>
Two of North Carolina's exemplary "pop" bands,<lb/>
Jennyanykind and Dillon Fence, played to an amoeba-like sweat mob<lb/>
Saturday at a packed Attic.<lb/>
Mojazz, Brown combination<lb/>
dynamites with new album<lb/>
Photo cc rtesy Jennyanykind<lb/>
Clockwise from left, Tom Royal, Mark Holland and Michael Holland comprise the band Jennyanykind. They<lb/>
and Dillon Fence joined together to rock "pop music" fans at the Attic.<lb/>
'Pop music' slams at Attic<lb/>
By Layton Croft<lb/>
Staff Writer<lb/>
With a decade-long deluge of<lb/>
categorical offshoots, "pop music"<lb/>
has had a lot to deal with.<lb/>
Alternative, industrial, grunge<lb/>
and techno are words construed by<lb/>
the press, contrived by the music<lb/>
industry and thrived on by the<lb/>
masses.<lb/>
Such words label bands and<lb/>
earmark the newest, "coolest"<lb/>
sound. But more importantly, such<lb/>
labels serve to carve the ever-diver-<lb/>
si fying pop music smorgasbord into<lb/>
bite-size chunks.<lb/>
Two of North Carol ina's exem-<lb/>
plary "pop" bands, Jennyanykind<lb/>
and Dillon Fence, played to an<lb/>
amoeba-like sweat mob Saturday<lb/>
at a packed Attic.<lb/>
The music zealots who flocked<lb/>
to the venue, though unnecessarily<lb/>
restrained by goofy barriers and<lb/>
goofier bouncers, proved the pop<lb/>
equation. That is: Vel 1-wri tten, aes-<lb/>
thetically pleasing muskfans who<lb/>
pay to see and hear that music <lb/>
Pop music.<lb/>
Jennvanvkind, a seven-month-<lb/>
old trio,attracted a dozen-plus pro-<lb/>
Dillon Fencers away from the bar<lb/>
and up to the stage for the last half<lb/>
of their 40-minute set.<lb/>
Sans popular music,<lb/>
Jennyanykind fosters a pop appeal<lb/>
not unlike that of Jan Morrison,<lb/>
Screaming Trees and Buffalo Tom.<lb/>
The band � Michael Holland (gui-<lb/>
tar, vocals), Mark Holland (drums)<lb/>
and Tom Royal (bass) � creates a<lb/>
kinetic flux of music that broods,<lb/>
revsand tripsover itself while ham-<lb/>
'Fence Jennyanykind deliver<lb/>
crowd-pleasing performances<lb/>
mering out a catchy,<lb/>
three- or four-chord<lb/>
riff.<lb/>
Michael<lb/>
Holland's impassive<lb/>
vocal delivery un-<lb/>
derstates his clipped,<lb/>
often biting, lyrics:<lb/>
"And it's summer in<lb/>
the cityYou know I<lb/>
pity for people,<lb/>
people in the street<lb/>
Ulin' for a piece of<lb/>
cold meatReal cool<lb/>
 real sour with fire<lb/>
on the insideLook<lb/>
out, white manI'm<lb/>
gonna beatyou silly,<lb/>
yeahI'm gonna<lb/>
beatyou silly,yeah<lb/>
These are troubled<lb/>
years (from "The<lb/>
Way It Is").<lb/>
But also with<lb/>
lennvam kind's bnl -<lb/>
liant muskad potar-<lb/>
itv th.it comes<lb/>
wrapped in es-<lb/>
teemed composure<lb/>
live, Holland occasionally shifts<lb/>
gears wailing and screeching a la<lb/>
Black Francis or Jani Joplin. The<lb/>
band's formula works amazingly<lb/>
well, hence pop appeal.<lb/>
Fop-music fans in Greenville<lb/>
love Dillon Fence, and it's no won-<lb/>
der. The irresistibility of their guitar<lb/>
hook-based, sugar melody-filled,<lb/>
upbeat, three-and-a-half minute<lb/>
packaged gems seems endless.<lb/>
Dillon Fence jammed at the Attic Saturday night.<lb/>
But in talking with guitarist,<lb/>
singersongwriter Greg<lb/>
Humphreys before his band's<lb/>
meaty, hour-and-a-half set, it be-<lb/>
came apparent Dillon Fence wants<lb/>
more.<lb/>
Alter five years of hard work,<lb/>
Humphreys sounded a tad un-<lb/>
happy with the band's current di-<lb/>
See Dillon, page 8<lb/>
By Andy Sugg<lb/>
Staff Writer<lb/>
With the release of<lb/>
Norman Brown's album, Just<lb/>
Between Us, Motown Records<lb/>
introduces its new Mojazz la-<lb/>
bel.<lb/>
Motown's press release de-<lb/>
fines Mojazz as a "vehicle for<lb/>
experimentation in music with-<lb/>
out the handcuffs and restric-<lb/>
tions of the past<lb/>
If future releases under the<lb/>
Mojazz label possess the dy-<lb/>
namics of Just Betzveen Us,<lb/>
Motown will become a major<lb/>
force in the jazz arena.<lb/>
Norman Brown is truly in-<lb/>
credible � his fingers run up<lb/>
and down the fretboard like<lb/>
excited ants. Stevie Wonder<lb/>
said of Brown, "He sounds like<lb/>
he was bom playing Listen-<lb/>
ers may make a comparison<lb/>
between Brown and Gairge<lb/>
Benson, but the style is defi-<lb/>
nitely pure Norman Brown.<lb/>
The first track on jiist Between Us, "Stormin<lb/>
is an aptly titled track � the thumping bass and<lb/>
Brown's blistering licks kick up a storm. On the<lb/>
line notes, the word "jam" is beside every track,<lb/>
and that's the way it is. This whole album smokes.<lb/>
"MoonlightTonight the slowestnumberon Jitst<lb/>
Photo courtesy Motown Entertainment<lb/>
Norman Brown's album, Just Between Us,<lb/>
should delight jazz lovers.<lb/>
Betzveen Us, is almost<lb/>
mellow, but Brown's<lb/>
guitarwork is phenom-<lb/>
enal.<lb/>
"Sweet Taste" jux-<lb/>
taposes Brown's guitar<lb/>
with a heavy bass riff<lb/>
and what wouid seem<lb/>
to be an awkward back-<lb/>
ground riff, but they all<lb/>
fit together to form a<lb/>
sweet taste for the ear.<lb/>
Included on Just Be-<lb/>
tioeen Us is a delicious<lb/>
cover of Stevie<lb/>
Wonder's "Too High<lb/>
with Wonder singing<lb/>
and playing the har-<lb/>
monica. Other guests<lb/>
include Boyz II Men,<lb/>
Gerald Albright,<lb/>
Ronnie Laws and Kirk<lb/>
Whalum. The Earth,<lb/>
Wind and Fire Horns<lb/>
reunite with guitarist Al<lb/>
McKay and bassist<lb/>
Verdine White on<lb/>
Brown's cover of EW&amp;F's classic, "Love Holiday<lb/>
Add the singing Ferri sisters and the result is a debut<lb/>
album that is beautiful.<lb/>
I cou Id go on and on about the tracks and Brown's<lb/>
enormous depth but instead I'll just say, "Buy the<lb/>
album If you like jazz, you need Just Between Us. If<lb/>
you don't like jazz, buy it anyway.<lb/>
ain<lb/>
Pnoto by Dail Heed � TEC<lb/>
By Lisa Williams<lb/>
Staff Writer<lb/>
The National Orchestra of Spain<lb/>
has been performing for 50 years<lb/>
and has quite a history.<lb/>
The National Spanish Orches-<lb/>
tra will be performing on Oct. 14 in<lb/>
Wright Auditorium on the ECU<lb/>
campus.<lb/>
The two coexisting orchestras<lb/>
of Spain were united with financial<lb/>
help from the government to form<lb/>
the National Orchestra of Spain.<lb/>
The widely proclaimed Span-<lb/>
ish Orchestra was presented in<lb/>
Barcelona in 1942.<lb/>
Conductors of the Orchestra<lb/>
have included Bartolome Perez<lb/>
Casas, Ataulfo Argenta, Antonio<lb/>
Ros Marba, Jesus Lopez Cobos and in 1991,<lb/>
Milanese Aldo Ceccato became the first non-Span-<lb/>
ish maestro.<lb/>
The present director is Spanish-born Rafael<lb/>
Fruhbeck DeBurgos.<lb/>
Maestro Fruhbeck made his North American<lb/>
debut with the Philadelphia Orchestra and con-<lb/>
ducted most of the major orchestras in the United<lb/>
States and Canada.<lb/>
The National Orchestraof Spa in has performed<lb/>
all over the world. Some of their performances<lb/>
have been in Germany, France, Italy, Hong Kong<lb/>
and the United States.<lb/>
Special guest soloist for the National Orches-<lb/>
tra of Spain's fall tour is guitarist Narciso Yepes<lb/>
Flavor!<lb/>
Photo courtesy Mercedes Cuervo � Arango Pulin<lb/>
Guitarist Narciso Yepes will perform for the National Orchestra of<lb/>
Spain at Wright Auditorium.<lb/>
Yepes is regarded as one of the greatest musicians of<lb/>
our day. He has developed an unique method, new<lb/>
resources and possibilities for the guitarfromhishard<lb/>
work and stud v oi the instrument. His technique has<lb/>
opened new horizons for the instrument which has<lb/>
inspired manycomposerstodedicatehimnew works.<lb/>
Yepes is general ly seen and welcomed on concert and<lb/>
recital stages in North and South America, Europe,<lb/>
the Near and Far East and Australia. Yepes also<lb/>
devotes a considerable amount of his time to music<lb/>
research and fine-tuning his craft.<lb/>
The National Spanish Orchestra not only per-<lb/>
forms Spanish music of our present times; they also<lb/>
include major works for symphonic orch astras of the<lb/>
18th and 20th centuries.<lb/>
Southern Pizza debuts<lb/>
with unique taste<lb/>
Waters 'amused' with new album<lb/>
By Cliff Coffey<lb/>
Staff Writer<lb/>
What does it take for a musician to be noticed? Roger<lb/>
Waters knows but has decided to avoid it.<lb/>
Even with a new album, Amused to Death, he avoids<lb/>
attention. He doesn't like to do publicity shots and he<lb/>
doesn't give many interviews. In the few videos he has<lb/>
done, he barely appeared in them. He's written several<lb/>
platinum-selling albums yet people still do not know who<lb/>
he is.<lb/>
He has written rock radio staples such as "Money<lb/>
"Welcome to the Machine "Wish You Were Here" and<lb/>
probably the most recognizable song, "Another Brick In<lb/>
The WallStillheispractically unknown.lt took the Berlin<lb/>
"Wall" show for him to get any recognition.<lb/>
After guiding Pink Floyd through their five best sell-<lb/>
ing albums (Dark Side of the Moon still holds Billboards'<lb/>
record for most weeks on the top lOOsellingalbumsatover<lb/>
175 months.) Waters left the band to pursue a solo career.<lb/>
Since 1984 he has released threesoloalbums,includinghis<lb/>
newest, Amused to Death.<lb/>
Amused to Death has Jeff Beck wielding the ax for<lb/>
Waters and it makes a remarkable difference.<lb/>
Waters is able to mix strong guitar work with melody-<lb/>
driven songs.<lb/>
Sometimes the mood overpowers the musk and ice<lb/>
versa. The mixture of the separate entities merge to give<lb/>
Waters his strongest effort to date.<lb/>
Since Waters revolutionized the idea of a concept<lb/>
aibum,itis predictable that Amused to Dnjfi would also fall<lb/>
under the same category. The unifying theme in all four-<lb/>
teen songs is the cost of war and the mass reaction to it: "I<lb/>
saw the frontline boys popping their pil IsSick of the mess<lb/>
they findOn their stage And the bravery of being out of<lb/>
range<lb/>
Waters has never been known for his peppy lyrics and<lb/>
this venture keeps that trend in tact Amused is dedicated<lb/>
to a soldier that died in World War I, William Hubbard.<lb/>
The first release from the album is "What God Wants,<lb/>
Part 1 The song is full of juxtaposed thoughts and the<lb/>
music reflects this mood also.<lb/>
With tongue in cheek, Waters sings about "Perfect<lb/>
Sense" in wars. The chorus, which he calls the global<lb/>
anthem, is, "Can't you seeIt all makes perfect sense<lb/>
Expressed in dollars and cents, Pounds, shillings and<lb/>
pence<lb/>
He has sports announcer Marv Albert call a play-by-<lb/>
play of a naval attack, making light of the situation.<lb/>
Thecontradiction between muskand lyrics on Amused<lb/>
tricks the listener into thinking that a song might be<lb/>
uplifting and optimistic, but Waters never let up.<lb/>
See Waters, page 8<lb/>
By Joe Horst<lb/>
Assistant Lifestyle Editor<lb/>
Pizza hasbeendeveloped in the Midwest and<lb/>
the North since time immemorial. With the ad-<lb/>
vent of Papa Oliver's on 10th Street, the concept of<lb/>
a "southern pizza" is an idea whose time has<lb/>
come.<lb/>
Located at 316C East 10th St next to Hank's<lb/>
Ice Cream and The Pantry, Papa Oliver's replaces<lb/>
the old establishment of Oli verio's. Owners Todd<lb/>
and Maureen McGregor have revamped the en-<lb/>
tire store's operation to bring this unique idea to<lb/>
the South.<lb/>
Papa Oliver's has brought in renowned Chef<lb/>
Robert of R.J. Consultants out of San Diego, Cal if.<lb/>
to present the tastiest pizza and subs that com-<lb/>
bines both health and the southern market.<lb/>
With a degree in baking science and technol-<lb/>
ogy, Robert has designed a formula specifically<lb/>
for the South. His crusts, toppings and sauces are<lb/>
one of a kind and reflect the unique flavor of<lb/>
southern cooking.<lb/>
"I've made more than five million pizzas<lb/>
said Robert. "There's no pizza like this in the<lb/>
country<lb/>
Current ideas for pizzas include a hot and<lb/>
spicy pizza, country ham (designed to be low in<lb/>
fat), hickory smoked and Italian chicken, jusl to<lb/>
name a few. Also ottered are Papa Pita fries, Olfie<lb/>
bread stk ks and a special Pirate Piza.<lb/>
The Pirate Pizza will be decided b ballot in<lb/>
Greenville neighborhoods. Residents will vote as to<lb/>
the pizza's toppings and if the Pirates win their foot-<lb/>
ball game, the community will share in the win with<lb/>
a special-priced pizza.<lb/>
Papa Oliver's hot and spicy pizza is just that �<lb/>
hot and spicy. If your stomach can't handle the heat,<lb/>
then stay out of the kitchen. Make sure you've got<lb/>
plenty of liquid near you after eating even one slice�<lb/>
that heat stays in your mouth for a full five minutes<lb/>
after eating it. Weak stomachs are not for this one.<lb/>
Their regular pizza � mine was loaded with<lb/>
extra cheese � fills you up without feeling like you<lb/>
can't move out ot your chair. Thecrust on either pizza<lb/>
is one of the best in Greenville. It's light and tasty and<lb/>
will spoil the eater to any other pizza. Taste Papa's<lb/>
crust and bread and then taste the competition's �<lb/>
there's no contest.<lb/>
Theonlythingagainst Papa's pizza is their grease.<lb/>
After opening the box from delivery, 1 discovered the<lb/>
bottom to be saturated with grease.<lb/>
Though the great taste offsets this problem, it can<lb/>
get to beahale trying to hold on to oneslice after the<lb/>
other. Napkins are a must � Papa's is nothing if not<lb/>
a messy meal.<lb/>
"We make pizza the way people li ke it � not the<lb/>
way we like it Papa's pizza emphasizes this owner's<lb/>
quote in the bet way possible, by living up to its<lb/>
reputation and letting the pizza-lover decide for him-<lb/>
self.<lb/>
As one vendor had been heard to comment,<lb/>
"Pizza i more than pepperoni � it's .1 meal<lb/>
'?.<lb/>
<pb facs="00058345_0008"/><lb/>
iTgjf� �<lb/>
8 The East Carolinian<lb/>
OCTOBER 13, 1992<lb/>
Dillon<lb/>
rection. The major-label produc-<lb/>
tion of Dillon Fence's debut LP on<lb/>
Mammoth Records and mammoth<lb/>
seller across the South, Rosemary,<lb/>
isn't going to happen again,<lb/>
Humphreys said.<lb/>
Indeed, thealmostoverwhelm-<lb/>
ing predictability of songs such as<lb/>
"Something For You" and "Day-<lb/>
light" inhibits Rosemary's staying<lb/>
power, and therefore its worm as a<lb/>
classic pop album, which is what it<lb/>
sets out to be.<lb/>
Dillon Fence began recording<lb/>
material for their hext album Mon-<lb/>
day, and peppered their energetic<lb/>
Continued from page 7<lb/>
Waters<lb/>
Even on a song called "It's A<lb/>
Miracle" he's sarcastic. "They had<lb/>
sex in PennsylvaniaA Brazilian<lb/>
grew a treeA doctor in Manhat-<lb/>
tanSave a dying man for freeIt's<lb/>
a miracle<lb/>
The final song on the album is<lb/>
the title track, "Amused to Death<lb/>
The bulk of the song is an ex-<lb/>
planation of how this world's soci-<lb/>
ety is falling apart Waters ends the<lb/>
story with the death of the human<lb/>
set Saturday with six new songs.<lb/>
Humphreys said the new album<lb/>
should be recorded in several<lb/>
months, and won't be produced by<lb/>
Ron St Germain, Rosemary's pro-<lb/>
ducer. But where Humphreys<lb/>
claims "thenew album won'tsound<lb/>
anything like the last one the<lb/>
band's new songs sound like Rose-<lb/>
mary outtakes.<lb/>
Where the song "Sugarcane"<lb/>
(released on the five-song CD EP<lb/>
Daylight) departs from the rubber-<lb/>
arm jangle rhythm pop Dillon Fence<lb/>
has mastered, all six new tunes<lb/>
played Saturday sounded like stale<lb/>
Continued from page 7<lb/>
race.<lb/>
Though itcould hardily becon-<lb/>
sidered an album full of positivity,<lb/>
Amused to Death is definitely an<lb/>
enlightening experience. For Pink<lb/>
Floyd fans there is little room for<lb/>
disappointment.<lb/>
bread tastes.<lb/>
The members of Jennyanykind<lb/>
moved to Chapel Hill because of.<lb/>
bands like Dillon Fence, one of the<lb/>
pioneers of Chapel Hill's near de-<lb/>
cade-long emergence as the premier<lb/>
new music capital in the South-<lb/>
east.<lb/>
Saturday's show quietly fea-<lb/>
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fc<lb/>
<lb/>
<pb facs="00058345_0009"/><lb/>
i !�  mm -r r rr �<lb/>
mmmmmmmmmmmmtmmmm<lb/>
1992 Homecoming Queen Candidates<lb/>
Rhonda Sawyer<lb/>
Middle Grades<lb/>
Hope Surratt<lb/>
Slay Hall<lb/>
Mandy Waters<lb/>
GarrettHall<lb/>
Jennifer Davis<lb/>
Ay cock Hall<lb/>
Deborah Atkinson<lb/>
Pi Omega Pi<lb/>
Christy Green<lb/>
Clement Hall<lb/>
Rhonda Harrison<lb/>
ECU Gospel Choir<lb/>
Laura McMillan<lb/>
Chi Omega<lb/>
Laura Sharar<lb/>
Alpha Phi Omega<lb/>
Rena Salameh<lb/>
Sigtna Phi Episilon<lb/>
Amy Roberson<lb/>
S.LA.P.<lb/>
Angela Nix<lb/>
Freshman Class<lb/>
Lori Woodard<lb/>
Jones Hall Council<lb/>
Angela Brown<lb/>
Crew Club<lb/>
Lori Oates<lb/>
Alpha Phi<lb/>
Tracy Plyler<lb/>
Occupational Therapy<lb/>
Dawn Trout<lb/>
Hospitality Management<lb/>
Connie Hardee<lb/>
Lambda Chi Alpha<lb/>
Amy Pittard<lb/>
Ambassadors<lb/>
Regina Duncan<lb/>
P.U.SM.<lb/>
Katie Hardison<lb/>
Greene Hall<lb/>
Karen Combs<lb/>
BelkHall<lb/>
Tonyia Stogner<lb/>
CJSWAlliance<lb/>
La Tisha Barnes<lb/>
ECU Dance Team<lb/>
Cydia Williams<lb/>
Gotten Hall<lb/>
Natalie Richards<lb/>
Sigma Nu<lb/>
Traci Dinwiddie<lb/>
Tyler Hall Council<lb/>
Dazvn Frank<lb/>
Pre P.T Club<lb/>
Kafhy Rouse<lb/>
Gamma Sigma Sigtna<lb/>
Edith Burroughs<lb/>
Delta Zeta<lb/>
Jean McAleese<lb/>
Alpha Xi Delta<lb/>
Christa Catlette<lb/>
American Marketing<lb/>
Assoc.<lb/>
Candidate Elections:<lb/>
Mendenhall 8-6<lb/>
Student Stores 8-5<lb/>
Allied Health 8-5<lb/>
College Hill 8-5<lb/>
PURPLE &amp; GOLD<lb/>
Nothing finer in north Carolina<lb/>
Pictures published courtesy of The East Carolinian<lb/>
All Photos by Dail Reed<lb/>
Brooke Driskill<lb/>
Kappa Sigma<lb/>
Robyn Smolen<lb/>
Sigma Sigma Sigtna<lb/>
Tiffany Brunson<lb/>
White Hall<lb/>
Stephanie Geiger<lb/>
Peer Health Educators<lb/>
Christin Wagner<lb/>
Cheerleaders<lb/>
Heather Hunt<lb/>
Visual Arts Forum<lb/>
Amy Barker<lb/>
Zeta Tau Alpha<lb/>
Bethany Orwin<lb/>
Pirate Crew<lb/>
Tristan Jones<lb/>
Alpha Delta Pi<lb/>
Candy Hudspeth<lb/>
Flemming Hall<lb/>
Megan Schubring<lb/>
Sign Lang. Club<lb/>
Angela Underhill<lb/>
Fletcher Hall<lb/>
Tammy Wiutley<lb/>
Residence Hall Assoc.<lb/>
Tricia Chappell<lb/>
Scott Hall<lb/>
Susan Rives<lb/>
Pi Delta<lb/>
Leigh Ann Stewart<lb/>
Panhellic Council<lb/>
Kara Pertnisohn<lb/>
Jarvis Hall<lb/>
Susan Temtille<lb/>
Alpha Omicron Pi<lb/>
mmmmmmmmmmmmmmmwm<lb/>
�mmmi �<lb/>
<pb facs="00058345_0010"/><lb/>
�<lb/>
mi � 'ii r.<lb/>
1<lb/>
HOMECOMING '92 HAS OFFICIALLY BEGUN<lb/>
CHECK YOUR CALENDAR TO SEE IF YOU HAVE<lb/>
INCLUDED THE FOLLOWING EVENTS IN YOUR<lb/>
HOMECOMING CELEBRATIONS.<lb/>
PURPLE &amp; GOLD<lb/>
NOTHMO FINCH M NORTH CAROLINA<lb/>
PURPLE &amp; GOLD<lb/>
NOTHMtt PINCNIN NORTH CAnOUNA<lb/>
tiytfe f<lb/>
<lb/>
PIRATE STOMPFESTPARTY<lb/>
Minges Coliseum<lb/>
October 17,1992<lb/>
9pm-2am<lb/>
featuring<lb/>
Alpha Phi Alpha Omega Psi Phi<lb/>
Alpha Kappa Alpha Sigma Gamma Rho<lb/>
Kappa Alpha Psi Phi Beta Sigma<lb/>
Delta Sigma Theta Zeta Phi Beta<lb/>
Intermission Performance by Dance Expressions<lb/>
Tickets: Advance $5.00 At Door $6.00 National Pan Hellenic Greeks with Paraphanalia-FREE<lb/>
OCTOBER DATES<lb/>
SUNDAY MONDAY TUESDAY WEDNESDAY THURSDAY FRIDAY SATURDAY<lb/>
11<lb/>
12<lb/>
13<lb/>
MEET THE<lb/>
CANDIDATES<lb/>
12:30 PM<lb/>
MALL<lb/>
14<lb/>
CANDIDATE<lb/>
ELECTIONS<lb/>
Mendenhall 8-6<lb/>
Allied Health 8-5<lb/>
Bottom of<lb/>
College Hill 8-5<lb/>
15<lb/>
16<lb/>
PIRATEFEST<lb/>
5:30 PM<lb/>
MALL<lb/>
RAY CHARLES<lb/>
IN CONCERT<lb/>
8:00 PM<lb/>
MINGES<lb/>
17<lb/>
10:00 AM<lb/>
PARADE<lb/>
DOWNTOWN<lb/>
2:00 PM<lb/>
GAME<lb/>
FICKLEN<lb/>
STOMPFEST<lb/>
8:00 PM<lb/>
MINGES<lb/>
FLOAT JUDGING, SPIRIT AWARD AND THE TOP 8 CANDIDATES WILL BE REVEALED AT PIRATEFEST.<lb/>
FOR THE EXTRA SMART SHOPPER, WE ARE GIVING FREE PRIZES TO THOSE WHO ATTEND PIRATEFEST<lb/>
LOOK FOR THE TREASURE CHEST DISPLAY AT PIRATEFEST AND THE STUDENT STORE.<lb/>
COME AND SHOW YOUR PURPLE AND GOLD PRIDE.<lb/>
REMEMBER, FOR EACH CANNED FOOD ITEM BROUGHT IN BY A MEMBER OF YOUR ORGANIZATION,<lb/>
5 POINTS GOES TOWARD THE SPIRIT AWARD.<lb/>
HOWEVER EACH PERSON IS LIMITED TO ONLY ONE 5 POINTS GOING TOWARD THE SPIRIT AWARD.<lb/>
SPIRIT AWARD WINNER RECEIVES A LOVING CUP AND A CASH PRIZE.<lb/>
<pb facs="00058345_0011"/><lb/>
The East Carolinian<lb/>
OCTOBER 13, 1992<lb/>
Sports<lb/>
Page 11<lb/>
Blue Devils dominate ECU<lb/>
Pirates devastated, 45-14<lb/>
By Robert S. Todd<lb/>
Sports Editor<lb/>
ECU was.shocked Saturday as they failed to<lb/>
score at least 20 points for the first time in almost two<lb/>
years. Running back Randy Cuthbert and the Duke<lb/>
Blue Devils destroyed the Pirates, 45-14, in front of<lb/>
an estimated 15,000 ECU fans who travelled to<lb/>
Durham, N.C.<lb/>
"Its devastating strong safety Greg Grandi-<lb/>
son said. "We didn't want<lb/>
to loose to no damn ACC<lb/>
team<lb/>
Cuthbert plowed<lb/>
through ECU's defensive<lb/>
line re 126 yards, 12 less<lb/>
man the Bucs' team effort<lb/>
of 138 yards on the ground.<lb/>
He took full advantage of <lb/>
the holes created by his of-<lb/>
fensive line, breaking away for 53 yards on one rush.<lb/>
ECU was never in the game, the closest score<lb/>
being 35-14. The Pirates might have gone into the<lb/>
locker room at halftime down 31-0 if not for corner<lb/>
back Greg Floyd. Floyd blocked a field goal attempt<lb/>
with K)2 left in the half.<lb/>
In the second half, the Pirates never seemed to<lb/>
gain much momentum.<lb/>
"When you turn the ball over like we did Head<lb/>
Coach Steve Logan said, "it takes all the rhythm<lb/>
outofya<lb/>
Quarterback Michael Anderson threw four<lb/>
interceptions and fumbled two snaps while de-<lb/>
fensive back Garrett Beasley, replacing punter<lb/>
Michael Jacobs, fumbled his first snap on offense.<lb/>
Turnovers led to 24 Duke points.<lb/>
ECU's strong point this season has been their<lb/>
ability to put points on the board. However, the<lb/>
Bucs' offense only managed one touchdown �<lb/>
the other coming on a<lb/>
36-yard fumble return<lb/>
by line backer Ernie<lb/>
Lewis.<lb/>
The Pirates' 305<lb/>
yards of total offense is<lb/>
well below their sea-<lb/>
son average and 79 of<lb/>
 those yards came on a<lb/>
late run by seldom-<lb/>
used running back Charles Miles. Miles is now<lb/>
tied with Willie Hawkins for the eighth longest<lb/>
run in ECU history. The run was also the longest<lb/>
since 1979.<lb/>
Next weekend is homecoming against the<lb/>
Bearcats of Cincinnati. The Pirates are 29-8 in<lb/>
homecoming games since 1955, their last loss at<lb/>
the hand of West Virginia in 1988,10-30. Kick-<lb/>
off is scheduled for 2 p.m.<lb/>
"It'sdevastating. Wedidn'twant<lb/>
to loose to no damn ACC team<lb/>
�Strong safety Greg Grandison<lb/>
-r��<lb/>
m Ear. safefc<lb/>
<lb/>
"? fvV7vi j&amp; i<lb/>
1 t<lb/>
'ttfcj<lb/>
 i I" K 'fmf Br<lb/>
. tW-<lb/>
H0���00-<lb/>
' fW" � r'A<lb/>
Photo by Dail Rssd � TEC<lb/>
The Blue Devil's Randy Cuthbert (not pictured) rushed for<lb/>
126 yards while the entire Pirate team rushed for 138.<lb/>
East Carolina<lb/>
Duke<lb/>
0 0 14 0- 14<lb/>
21 7 7 10- 45<lb/>
msTQUMrm<lb/>
DUKE � Stanley Dorsey 4 yard TD pass Iran Spense Fudver (Gardner PAT rood) (7<lb/>
plays, M yards, 2 44 TOP)<lb/>
DUKE - RobertBaldwin 1 yard TO run (Gardner PAT good) (7plmn, 71 yards. 201 TOP)<lb/>
DUKE - Randy Cuthbert 20 yard TD pass from Fischer (Gardner? AT good) 0 play. 20<lb/>
yards, 07TOP)<lb/>
SECOND QUARTER<lb/>
DUKE - ID Lewis 2 yard TD run (Gardner PAT good) (10 plays. 68 yards. 422 TOP)<lb/>
THIRD QUARTER<lb/>
DUKE - Sean Thomas 84 yard interception return for a TD (Gardner PAT good)<lb/>
ECU - Morris Letcher 9 yard TD pass from Michael Andersen (Owens PAT good) (a<lb/>
plays, 47 yards. 223 TOP)<lb/>
ECU � Ernie Lewis 34 yard fumble recovery renamed for a TD (Owens PAT good)<lb/>
FOURTH QUARTER<lb/>
DUKE Randy Gardner 39 yard field goal (4 plays, 5 yards, M7TOP)<lb/>
DUKE � Dan Clark 8 yard TD pas. from Rachel (Gardner PAT good) (� plays, 53yard<lb/>
3 50 TOP)<lb/>
TEAM STATISTICS<lb/>
ECU DUKE<lb/>
FIRST DOWNS 14 21<lb/>
Rushing 5 is<lb/>
Passing 9 9<lb/>
Penally 0 2<lb/>
3RDEFF 2-15 6.15<lb/>
4THEFF M 11<lb/>
TOT YARDS 305 461<lb/>
Total plays 71 76<lb/>
Average gain 429 606<lb/>
NET RUSHING 138 239<lb/>
Rushes 34 47<lb/>
Avg per rash 4j05 506<lb/>
NET PASSING 1(7 222<lb/>
Comp-alt 2237 2029<lb/>
Yards per pass 7.5 HI<lb/>
Sacked-yards lost 15 3is<lb/>
Had intercepted 21 485<lb/>
PUNT AVG 37.8 36.7<lb/>
RETURN YARDS 54 110<lb/>
Punta-retums 213 425<lb/>
KkJcoffs- returns 6142 23S<lb/>
Interceptions 21 485<lb/>
PENALTIESYRDS 565 565<lb/>
FUMBLES-LOST 32 32<lb/>
Time of possession 2909 3051<lb/>
PLAYER STATISTICS<lb/>
Missed field goals: ECU 00.<lb/>
DUKE 12<lb/>
ECU rushing C Miles 2-82,) Smith 12-47, C Van Buren 6-20, M. Anderson 10<lb/>
C Driver 112. M Ulrhrr 1-5 M Foreman 1-2, G Beasley M-ID<lb/>
ECU passing S McConneU 5-2-11, M Anderson 32-20-156,<lb/>
ECU receiving C. Clumpier 3-36, M Lefcher 3-33, C Van Buren 3-24. D. luck. 3-22.<lb/>
D Balson 3-18, Zophy 2 15,) Smith 3-15, C Driver 1-7. Wilson 1-3<lb/>
Tackles; UT-AT-TOT<lb/>
Grandison 6-2-8, Render 3-2-5, Walker n-i. 1. Floyd 0-3-3. Cunmulaj 1-5-t Davl.09,<lb/>
Oillan4-7,Srof.l�l.Tavlar2 2-4, U-�is 17-8, Cooper 3-6-� UKher&amp;l-l,Tete2-3-<lb/>
5 McBr 1e0-4 I Hurley 2-1-3, LuphertO-1-1. Robin son CM I Carter 2 JA Lsbiano I-<lb/>
0-1, Quilei0-1-1, Booth. 144, Crumble 1-1-2, Foreman 0-t-l, Blake 1-0-1 Cotton 0-21<lb/>
Graham 1-0-1<lb/>
Pirates can't compete with big dawgs<lb/>
By Chas Mitch'l<lb/>
Assistant Sports Editor<lb/>
During my road trip to<lb/>
Durham, I saw a bumper sticker<lb/>
that said it all. "If you can't run<lb/>
with the big dawgs, better stay on<lb/>
the porch Not that the Blue<lb/>
Devils of Duke are considered one<lb/>
of the big dawgs in NCAA<lb/>
football, but after Saturday's<lb/>
match-up one may want to think<lb/>
twice.<lb/>
Duke used both the finesse<lb/>
and a smashmouth approach in<lb/>
dismantling the ECU attack On<lb/>
offense, neither Sean McConneU<lb/>
nor Michael Anderson could<lb/>
manage to generate the offensive<lb/>
unit in a consistent manner.<lb/>
Sporadic passing and ques-<lb/>
tionable calls only quicken the<lb/>
demise for the Pirates<lb/>
"I give Duke a lot of credit<lb/>
Head Coach Steve Logan said.<lb/>
"That's the best football game<lb/>
they've played that I've seen.<lb/>
They were mistake free for the<lb/>
most part"<lb/>
On the other side of the ball,<lb/>
defensive coordinator Chris<lb/>
Thurmond could only watch in<lb/>
disbelief and shock as his defense<lb/>
struggled to stop the Blue Devil<lb/>
offense.<lb/>
Not just on the board, but on<lb/>
the field did the Pirates go down<lb/>
in flames. On numerous occasions<lb/>
the ECU defense missed the initial<lb/>
tackle which enabled the Duke<lb/>
ball carriers to pile up the yards<lb/>
and the first downs.<lb/>
"They played a little better on<lb/>
defense than we did nose guard<lb/>
Zaim Cunmulaj said. "They out-<lb/>
played us. It shows by the score<lb/>
Coaching great Vince Lom-<lb/>
bardi once said, "a No. 1 defense<lb/>
CAASt,andinj5s<lb/>
Soccer Standings<lb/>
Team CAATotalStreak<lb/>
1. William &amp; Mary3-0-1.8759-3-2.714Wonl<lb/>
2. Oid Dominion2-0-1.8337-2-3.708Won 2<lb/>
George Mason2-0-1.8336-3-3.625Lostl<lb/>
4. James Madison2-1-0.66710-2-0.833Won 2<lb/>
5. Richmond1-2-0.3336-5-1.542Lostl<lb/>
6. UkC Wilmington 7. American1-3-0.2502-6-0.250Lost 2<lb/>
0-2-1.1675-7-1.423Lostl<lb/>
8. East Carolina0-3-0.0002-7-0.222Lost 2<lb/>
Volleyball Standings<lb/>
TeamCAATotalStreak<lb/>
1. George Mason0-0-0.00010-3.769Won 4<lb/>
2. American0-0-0.00015-7.682Won 5<lb/>
3. William &amp; Mary0-0-0.00011-6.647Lost 2<lb/>
4. James Madison0-0-0.0008-10.444Lostl<lb/>
5. UNC Wilmington0-0-0.0009-12.429Lost 2<lb/>
6. East Carolina0-0-0.0007-13.350Lost 2<lb/>
Volleyball leaders<lb/>
Hitting GAvgKill AvgG<lb/>
1. Schultz, ECU73.3131. Smith, GMU40<lb/>
2Smith,GMU40.3082. Schultz, ECU73<lb/>
3. Plentiovich, UNCW75.2883. Chilausky, UNCW70<lb/>
4. Callman, CMU34.2784. Sylvain, AU77<lb/>
5. Chilausky, UNCW70.2655. Knauss, UNCW64<lb/>
Assist AvgGAvgTeam AsAvgGW-L<lb/>
l.Rentovich,UNCW7511.521. UNCW7536-39<lb/>
2 Arnold, GMU4410.772. ECU7332-41<lb/>
3. Parsons, ECU7110343.W&amp;M6135-26<lb/>
4. Schimke, WfcM619.444. GMU4430-14<lb/>
5. Wutznick, AU677.665.AU8050-30<lb/>
will stop a No. 1 offense How-<lb/>
ever, when your defense is thrust<lb/>
on the field due to fumbies and<lb/>
interceptions, then eventually<lb/>
even a No. 20 offense can beat a<lb/>
No. 1 defense on the field.<lb/>
"We were training the ball<lb/>
over and never sustaining<lb/>
anything Logan said. "When<lb/>
you don't sustain, you never have<lb/>
a chance to get in any rhythm<lb/>
Tony Davis, Ernie Lewis and<lb/>
Cunmulaj along with the entire<lb/>
defensive unit should be com-<lb/>
mended for their efforts on the<lb/>
gridiron. Their never-say-die<lb/>
attitude, plus their heart and<lb/>
desire can only offer a mere<lb/>
glimmer of hope for the future.<lb/>
After it was all said and<lb/>
done, the ECU kicking team rose<lb/>
from the scorn of the fans and<lb/>
media.<lb/>
Garrett Beaslev replaced<lb/>
redshirt freshman Michael Jacobs<lb/>
for the punting duties. Aside<lb/>
from an early miscue, the junior<lb/>
from Hot-lanta, Ga punted for a<lb/>
respectable average of 37.8 yards<lb/>
on five punts.<lb/>
As for his first punt attempt,<lb/>
which resulted into a fumble,<lb/>
Beasley had these comments:<lb/>
"You see, what happened<lb/>
was I was still hyped from the<lb/>
kickoff. The game was just<lb/>
getting started and I forgot t.<lb/>
take my gloves off � from the<lb/>
sweat and stuff on my gloves, it<lb/>
just slipped right through my<lb/>
hands<lb/>
Now with two unexplainable<lb/>
and unexpected losses within the<lb/>
past three weeks, it appears that<lb/>
the Pirates will be returning back<lb/>
to the chalkboard to reassess the<lb/>
offensive woes and defensive<lb/>
break-downs.<lb/>
Avg<lb/>
5.40<lb/>
4.63<lb/>
4.31<lb/>
3.25<lb/>
3.03<lb/>
Avg<lb/>
12.07<lb/>
11.82<lb/>
11.79<lb/>
11.77<lb/>
9.06<lb/>
Fitness Week offers well-<lb/>
being for busy students<lb/>
Rec Services<lb/>
Fitness Week is an effort to<lb/>
improve the exercise habits of<lb/>
college students. EastCarolina is<lb/>
one of 250 colleges in the United<lb/>
States participating in this event.<lb/>
The activities will take place the<lb/>
week of October 19-23.<lb/>
This is the third year that<lb/>
ECU has participated with Rec-<lb/>
reational Sen' tees organizing this<lb/>
campus event. Once again, a va-<lb/>
riety of exciting events are<lb/>
planned for the week with many<lb/>
special prizes to be featured as<lb/>
part of each activity.<lb/>
Prizes include: watches,<lb/>
Reebok shoecertificates, T-shirts,<lb/>
restaurant dinner certificates,<lb/>
plenty of juice and much more.<lb/>
Schedule some time during your<lb/>
week to participate in these free<lb/>
fun and "fizzical" activities. For<lb/>
more information contact Kathy<lb/>
Hill at 757-6387 and look for the<lb/>
event poster for details.<lb/>
Monday, Oct 19<lb/>
Fitness Fizzicals presentsGet<lb/>
flexed!<lb/>
Grip strength and flexibility<lb/>
assessments at 107-A<lb/>
Christenbuty Gym 3-5:30 p.m.<lb/>
Tie-in to Fitness!<lb/>
Beginningclimbinginstruc-<lb/>
tion at the Hard ROC Tower<lb/>
from 3-6 p.m. Open to the<lb/>
first 12 participants - sign up<lb/>
at 117 Christenbury<lb/>
Gym October 12-19.<lb/>
See Fitness, page 12<lb/>
Owens finds first year difficult<lb/>
By Warren Sumner<lb/>
Staff Writer<lb/>
Deke Owens, East Carolina's<lb/>
placekicker, has faced many difficult situa-<lb/>
tions in his first year starting as a Pirate. He<lb/>
has faced difficult kicks, the heartbreaking<lb/>
losses of his team, as well as contending<lb/>
with the academic pressure of a Criminal<lb/>
Justice degree.<lb/>
However, nothing is more trying than<lb/>
the intense hounding of Pirate fans, upset<lb/>
with Owens' performance this season<lb/>
Owens, weary of the harshness of these<lb/>
fickle football fans, is ready to relieve him-<lb/>
self of some of that pressure.<lb/>
"I'm not going to say what the fans are<lb/>
saying is completely unjust Owens said.<lb/>
"But I feel people in general just don't un-<lb/>
derstand kicking. Owens said that he feels<lb/>
the Pirate's kicking game has been unfairly<lb/>
blamed formuchof the Pirate football team's<lb/>
problems mis year.<lb/>
Owens said his performance and the<lb/>
performance of punter Michael<lb/>
Jacobs had been somewhat<lb/>
"used as an excuse" this year<lb/>
by critics of the Pirate football<lb/>
team. Owens said that Pirate<lb/>
Head Coach Steve Logan's<lb/>
comments, critical of the kick-<lb/>
ing game during media inter-<lb/>
views, had been misinter-<lb/>
preted by Pirate fans.<lb/>
"Coach's comments were<lb/>
dramatized and taken out of<lb/>
context Owens said. "A lot of that misun-<lb/>
derstanding has caused what Michael and<lb/>
I have faced this year Owens, however,<lb/>
readily admits that his game does need vast<lb/>
improvement and will approach solving<lb/>
his problems mentally.<lb/>
"I'm going to try to look at this season<lb/>
in two parts he said. "The first part is<lb/>
behind me, now I have to try to fix my<lb/>
problems in the second part Owens had a<lb/>
relatively uneventful game Saturday against<lb/>
Duke. No field goals were attempted in the<lb/>
Pirate's losing effort against the<lb/>
Blue Devils, but he connected<lb/>
on both of his attempted extra<lb/>
points.<lb/>
Owens, hoping to enter law<lb/>
school next fall, is unsure<lb/>
whether he will return to the<lb/>
Pirates next year and exchange<lb/>
his kicking shoes for law books.<lb/>
Should Owens make a re-<lb/>
turn to the Pirate roster, he will<lb/>
face the pressure of competing<lb/>
with last year's place kicker, Anthony<lb/>
Brenner, who was ruled academically ineli-<lb/>
gible this season. Owens said he is not<lb/>
concerned with that proposition and is<lb/>
solely concentrating on this year.<lb/>
Owens is optimistic about making the<lb/>
improvement necessary to develop into a<lb/>
reliable kicker for the Pirates and end the<lb/>
"roller coaster" inconsistency he has pro-<lb/>
vided so far.<lb/>
"I know I'll kick to my potential, it's just<lb/>
a matter of when<lb/>
The Owner's Golden Rule: He who has the gold, makes the rules<lb/>
Wire Service<lb/>
Higher Authority doesn'tunder-<lb/>
stand why thesefootball and baseball<lb/>
people are always arguing. She said,<lb/>
"Why don't you do a column ex-<lb/>
plaining it?" But mow the yard first.<lb/>
It looks like your haircut.<lb/>
Edward Bennett Williams was a<lb/>
great lawyer who owned the Balti-<lb/>
more Orioles.<lb/>
He once said, "I believe in the<lb/>
golden rule. He who has the gold,<lb/>
rules<lb/>
Which explains how rich folks<lb/>
come down with dictator lust,<lb/>
whether they're Ross Perot or George<lb/>
Steinbrenner or Jack Kent Cooke. So<lb/>
all arguments, dear HA, are caused<lb/>
by conflicts of these natural impulses:<lb/>
The owners wannabe dictators and<lb/>
the players wannabe free men.<lb/>
In Minneapolis, the National<lb/>
Football League owners lost yet an-<lb/>
other lawsuit trying to keep players<lb/>
under their considerable thumbs.<lb/>
And in St. Louis, baseball own-<lb/>
ers made noises as if they want to<lb/>
wage war against the players, who<lb/>
have been invincible for 20 years.<lb/>
The yard can wait. Let's try to<lb/>
understand this foolishness.<lb/>
Starting with football: First with<lb/>
Joe Kapp, Cullen Bryant and John<lb/>
Mackey, followed by Yazoo Smith<lb/>
and now Freeman McNeil et al the<lb/>
NFL has made a habit of losing law-<lb/>
suits to rebellious players. They are 0<lb/>
for forever.<lb/>
They also lost an antitrust suit<lb/>
broughtby the United States Football<lb/>
League in 1989. Though the damage<lb/>
award was one silly dollar�the jury<lb/>
believed the UFCT would have failed<lb/>
on its own � tne verdict against the<lb/>
NFL gave Howard Cosell the chance<lb/>
to say time and again that the league<lb/>
was, is and remains "a duly-adjudi-<lb/>
cated illegal monopoly Right as al-<lb/>
ways.<lb/>
Unembarrassed, even eager,<lb/>
NFL lawyers will appeal the defeat.<lb/>
The NFL says going to court is the<lb/>
only way it can deal with its players'<lb/>
union. No sale here.<lb/>
Moving to baseball: Consider, if<lb/>
you will, two key elements of a pro-<lb/>
posal made by baseball club owners<lb/>
to contain the rising cost of player<lb/>
salaries.<lb/>
1. A salary cap. 2. Classification<lb/>
of players fromQass A through Class<lb/>
E, with ratings and salaries set by the<lb/>
league president.<lb/>
The club owners blamed play-<lb/>
ers' greed for baseball's money crisis.<lb/>
One sportswriter said, "A more un-<lb/>
grateful set of people than the major-<lb/>
ity of professional ballplayersitwould<lb/>
be hard to find Another described<lb/>
players as "a few porcine profession-<lb/>
als who, in their selfishness and love<lb/>
of gold, tried to destroy the reserve<lb/>
rule<lb/>
A little Providence catcher<lb/>
named Gilligan had the brass to ask<lb/>
for $3,200.<lb/>
Asportswri ter leaped tohis type-<lb/>
writer: "That's $40 a game. Twenty<lb/>
dollars an hour. He's no hog but he<lb/>
wants the club to pay him more than<lb/>
it can make. Why, they offered Paul<lb/>
Hines $9 an hour to stand in center<lb/>
field and catch a fly occasionally<lb/>
These caterwaulings came 103<lb/>
years ago. In 1889, the great player<lb/>
John Montgomery Ward created the<lb/>
first players' union and said: "There<lb/>
was a time when the League stood for<lb/>
integrity and fair dealing. Today it<lb/>
stands fordollarsand cents Players<lb/>
have been bought, sold and ex-<lb/>
changed as though they were sheep<lb/>
instead of American citizens<lb/>
That last sentence spoke of the<lb/>
reserve clause in contracts. A player<lb/>
was club property and had to accept<lb/>
slavery or get out of baseball.<lb/>
That was 103 years ago. Casey<lb/>
Stengel was born that summer.<lb/>
See Owners, page 13<lb/>
I<lb/>
<pb facs="00058345_0012"/><lb/>
�<lb/>
72 The East Carolinian<lb/>
OCTOBER 13, 1992<lb/>
Fitness<lb/>
Tuesday, Oct. 20<lb/>
Aqua Spray Party<lb/>
Get in the pod for a refreshing<lb/>
aquarobks class - 530-630 p.m.<lb/>
in the Christenbur' Tool. Refresh-<lb/>
ments and prize drawing at the<lb/>
completion of class. No registration<lb/>
required, please show ECU ID.<lb/>
Wednesday, Oct. 21<lb/>
21 Minute Triathlon<lb/>
A unique event featuring 10<lb/>
minutes of bicycling, 10 minutes of<lb/>
swimming,andoneminuteof push-<lb/>
ups. Activities may be sequentially<lb/>
performed in any order at<lb/>
Christenbury Facilities from3-6p.m.<lb/>
Awards go to the top male and<lb/>
female finisher overall in each<lb/>
event.<lb/>
Thursday, Oct. 22<lb/>
Fitness Class Extra aganza<lb/>
All fitness classes are free of<lb/>
charge so try something new (reg-<lb/>
istered participants receivea "free-<lb/>
bie" coupon).<lb/>
Prizes will be awarded at the<lb/>
end of each class at Christenbury<lb/>
and Pipeline Pumphouse.<lb/>
Continued from page 11<lb/>
Other Self-Directed Week-<lb/>
long Events<lb/>
Star Wars Step-Off - Pledge to<lb/>
climb the stairs, not ride the "v ator"<lb/>
during Fitness Week. All pledge<lb/>
participants will receive recogni-<lb/>
tion and are eligible for a major<lb/>
prize.<lb/>
Just Do It! Cross Training<lb/>
Challenge<lb/>
This is a multi-element, self-<lb/>
directed activity to keep you<lb/>
active throughout the week. Each<lb/>
day participate in a different activ-<lb/>
ity for at least twenty minutes then<lb/>
turn in your log sheet before Oc-<lb/>
tober 23 to be eligible for a major<lb/>
prize.<lb/>
Activity selections include:<lb/>
walking, running, bicycling,<lb/>
stair master, swimming and<lb/>
weight training.<lb/>
The overall purpose of Fitness<lb/>
Week is to show students how to<lb/>
integrate exercise into their busy<lb/>
class schedule. If you would like<lb/>
more information on Fitness Week,<lb/>
stop by 204 Christenbury Gym.<lb/>
Instant replay has hardly caused ripple<lb/>
Wire Service<lb/>
So far, despite an occasional<lb/>
cynic popping off, the absence of<lb/>
instant replay has hardly caused a<lb/>
ripple.<lb/>
There has been some noise<lb/>
about fumbles and interceptions.<lb/>
But in those instances, it al-<lb/>
most was a certainty that under<lb/>
instant replay those plays wouldn't<lb/>
have been overturned because of a<lb/>
quick whistle or an inconclusive<lb/>
review. So far, so good.<lb/>
It shows that NFL Commis-<lb/>
sioner raul Tagliabue was wise not<lb/>
to wage the traditional war at the<lb/>
owners meeting last March in Phoe-<lb/>
nix, where instant replay was abol-<lb/>
ished after six years of con troversy.<lb/>
We needed a year to review the<lb/>
system.<lb/>
Now comes "The<lb/>
Commissioner's View" in the lat-<lb/>
est "NFL Report the league's quar-<lb/>
terly publication.<lb/>
Tagliabue writes: "One conse-<lb/>
quence of this instant replay dei i-<lb/>
sion is that it will help restore a<lb/>
sense of proportion to the role of<lb/>
officiating to our game. Both sides<lb/>
in this debate agree on at least one<lb/>
thing � that instant replay contrib-<lb/>
uted to distorting the significance<lb/>
of officiating. Theofficials are not<lb/>
the attraction of our game. Fans<lb/>
follow the NFL to see quarterbacks<lb/>
and linebackers in action � not<lb/>
referees and line judges, they root<lb/>
for two teams �not three� on the<lb/>
field.<lb/>
"Replay often focused too<lb/>
much emphasis on theofficialsand<lb/>
created a new platform for un-<lb/>
founded criticism of their perfor-<lb/>
mance. Too often, replay inter-<lb/>
rupted momentumof the gameand<lb/>
invited long, repeated discussions<lb/>
of split-second officiatingdecisions.<lb/>
Wecanexpectafaster-pacedgame<lb/>
without these interruptions in 1992<lb/>
Was Tagliabue simply selling a<lb/>
return to the old system or did he<lb/>
truly see the perils of instant replay.<lb/>
Stay tuned next spring when it<lb/>
getsanother vote. Then see what the<lb/>
commish has to say.<lb/>
The East<lb/>
Carolinian: If s a<lb/>
great place to<lb/>
start. Apply today<lb/>
for one of the<lb/>
many positions<lb/>
now open with<lb/>
TEC. Apply on<lb/>
2nd floor of the<lb/>
publications<lb/>
building across<lb/>
from Joyner.<lb/>
Homecoming Service Specials<lb/>
Vie East Carolinian is now accepting<lb/>
applications for Managing Editor.<lb/>
Apply at TEC office in publications<lb/>
building.<lb/>
COUPON!<lb/>
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Offer Good Mon-Thurs<lb/>
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Sat 9pm-1am<lb/>
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For further information, contact Chris Graham at 355-5000.<lb/>
jssas<lb/>
&amp;SW�tilNESDAY<lb/>
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We service all makes and models of automobiles.<lb/>
Make Greenville Toyota your home for automotive parts<lb/>
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<pb facs="00058345_0013"/><lb/>
���<lb/>
OCTOBER 13, 1992<lb/>
The East Carolinian<lb/>
13<lb/>
Owners<lb/>
Baseball's reserve clause, clearly ille-<lb/>
gal in any other business, would be<lb/>
changed in time. Like brick masons<lb/>
and sportswriters,ballplayerswould<lb/>
become free agents able to work any-<lb/>
where. By the time this change hap-<lb/>
pened, Casey Stengel was dead. It<lb/>
was then 1976.<lb/>
Small wonder that players have<lb/>
neverliked,trusted,or believed own-<lb/>
ers. In 1889, owners cried ruin just as<lb/>
Bowie Kuhn 87 years later would say<lb/>
free agency might bankrupt one en-<lb/>
tire league.<lb/>
The game has enjoyed 20 years<lb/>
of unprecedented revenueand popu-<lb/>
larity.<lb/>
Maybe experts studying<lb/>
baseball's finances will tell owners<lb/>
and players the business is suicidal.<lb/>
Until such announcement, players<lb/>
have no reason to believe the<lb/>
doomsaying. It has gone on for 103<lb/>
years.<lb/>
Which is why if push comes to<lb/>
shove in this winter's labor negotia-<lb/>
tions, theplayers,aninvincibleunion<lb/>
for 20 years, will win another one.<lb/>
Back to football: What happened<lb/>
in the Freeman McNeil case isso cyni-<lb/>
Continued from page 11<lb/>
cal thatevenasportscolumnistwould<lb/>
think the tactic is beneath rich folks.<lb/>
But there's a frustrated dictator's<lb/>
logic toitFightingMcNeiletal.served<lb/>
the owners' purposes financially if<lb/>
not morally. It delayed free agency<lb/>
five more years. So owners kept<lb/>
money rather than pay free agents.<lb/>
Football owners abused the<lb/>
American legal system. The court be-<lb/>
came an NFL business tool. It's<lb/>
cheaper to hire lawyers than free-<lb/>
agent quarterbacks. It's cheaper to go<lb/>
to court than to be law-abiding citi-<lb/>
zens. Slick.<lb/>
The East Carolinian's sports page is searching for writers who<lb/>
want to write! Anybody interested should attend the writers<lb/>
meeting on Thursday at 5:30 p.m. in the Student Pubs building.<lb/>
SLAM<lb/>
U.S.A.<lb/>
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Corner of Evans &amp; 14th Streets 830-175�L<lb/>
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Bring Coupon In For $4.00 Off Slam Ball<lb/>
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504 Jello Shots � 754 Kamikazes<lb/>
$1.00 Domestics � $2.50 Pitchers<lb/>
50C Jello Shots � 75 Kamikazes<lb/>
$2.50 Teas, Bahama Mamas &amp; Pitchers<lb/>
50c Jello Shots � 750 Kamakazes<lb/>
DAY<lb/>
COUNIRTNITE<lb/>
"0" CENT DRAFT "Ue Best in Country<lb/>
$1.25 Domestics AllNite"<lb/>
georges hair designs<lb/>
�Full Service Unisex Salon<lb/>
�Tanning<lb/>
�Skin and Nail Care<lb/>
�Walk-Ins Welcome<lb/>
�European Trained Stylists<lb/>
�Latest in Facial.&amp; Body Wax<lb/>
�Professional Hair Products<lb/>
THE PLAZA MALL<lb/>
Greenville Blvd.<lb/>
Open Mon. - Sat 9:30am - 9pm<lb/>
Sunday 1pm - 6prh<lb/>
756-6200<lb/>
STANTON SQUARE<lb/>
On Stantonsburg Rd.<lb/>
Open Mon. - Fri. 10am - 8pm<lb/>
Saturday 9pm - 6pm<lb/>
757-0076<lb/>
Homecoming Special<lb/>
The Only Salon In Greenville Where You Can Get<lb/>
george's hair designs<lb/>
$2.00 Off<lb/>
ALL HAIRCUTS<lb/>
george's hair designs<lb/>
$5.00 OFF<lb/>
PERMS or<lb/>
TANNING PACKAGE<lb/>
expires Nov. 15, 1992 ! expires Nov j5 1992<lb/>
Petey The Pirate" Painted On Your Nails<lb/>
3026-A East Tenth Street<lb/>
Greenville, NC<lb/>
830-6152<lb/>
4c 1fmi "piHmtifui. autfum<lb/>
?�tl Set 4 TUtt $33.00<lb/>
"TKtuUeunea, $10.50<lb/>
"pta-ln $16.00<lb/>
coupon good only with Student I.D.<lb/>
ask for Tamara or Ann<lb/>
Mtet?<lb/>
SURF SHOP<lb/>
THE PLAZA 355-6680<lb/>
EMS<lb/>
Cologne<lb/>
Spray<lb/>
Legend<lb/>
cologne<lb/>
Spray<lb/>
OFF<lb/>
UAHUFACTUPCIK SUCCCSTCO ttTAH<lb/>
Navy Cologne<lb/>
6 0Z. 1.7 OZ.<lb/>
incognito Cologne<lb/>
5 OZ. � 1 7 OZ<lb/>
COtY<lb/>
Alrspun<lb/>
Powder<lb/>
Fahrenheit edt<lb/>
Spray 1.7-oz. or<lb/>
Poison EOT spray<lb/>
1.0-oz.<lb/>
'OFF<lb/>
UAUUrACTUHEK SUCGISTED PfTAIl<lb/>
New Aimay Teen<lb/>
Skincare and cosmetics<lb/>
COty U<lb/>
Upstkt<lb/>
Suave<lb/>
Moisturizers<lb/>
aM Face<lb/>
wash<lb/>
30<lb/>
Bonnie Bell<lb/>
Skin Fragrances<lb/>
Cailente<lb/>
Cologne<lb/>
Spray<lb/>
unforgettable $Q99<lb/>
EDC Spray ? if<lb/>
BS-or<lb/>
Suave Cleansing<lb/>
Creams and<lb/>
Toners<lb/>
Low Prices. And More.<lb/>
I<lb/>
Mb-<lb/>
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 V ' ' '<lb/>
<lb/>
 J. �!��<lb/>
PURPLE AND GOLD<lb/>
NOTHING FINER IN CAROUNA<lb/>
r F I e SSj S&amp;oftfuKfy at t6e �&amp;&amp; o� &amp;tnfiub<lb/>
Student Stores<lb/>
ALUMNI SPECIAL<lb/>
Wear your class ring and<lb/>
receive a discount on<lb/>
supplies and wearing<lb/>
apparel the year you<lb/>
graduated from 3 to 30. <lb/>
CLASS RINGS<lb/>
Save $10 on class<lb/>
rings. Place your<lb/>
order Saturday,<lb/>
October 17 at the<lb/>
Student Store to<lb/>
receive your discount.<lb/>
RUSSELL<lb/>
SWEATSHIRT<lb/>
Purchase any of our<lb/>
Pro-Cotton or High<lb/>
Cotton sweatshirts at<lb/>
regular price and get<lb/>
a "Russell Athletic"<lb/>
Pro-Cotton<lb/>
sweatshirt for $19.95<lb/>
($49.95 VALUE)<lb/>
REGISTER FOR A FREE CAMERA<lb/>
Use this Kodak Star 835 Auto Focus<lb/>
camera to record this year's Homecoming<lb/>
memories. Comes complete with film and<lb/>
batteries.<lb/>
STORE HOURS:<lb/>
Monday - Thursday 8 am - 8 pm<lb/>
Friday 8 am - 5 pm<lb/>
Saturday 11 am - 5 pm<lb/>
Telephone: 757-6731<lb/>
EXTENDED HOURS:<lb/>
Both Evenings and Saturdays<lb/>
MORE CONVENIENT WAYS TO PAY:<lb/>
New Pirate Points. Discover, MasterCard, Visa, Personal Check and Cash<lb/>
ECU Student Stores: More than just books-your dollars support student scholars!<lb/>
LOCATED IN THE WRIGHT BUILDING �OWNED AND OPERATED BY EAST CAROLINA UNIVERSITY<lb/>
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