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<pb facs="00058361_0001"/>
wimmers on top<lb/>
ECU men's and women's<lb/>
swim team are having<lb/>
successful years.<lb/>
See page 12.<lb/>
The East Carolinian<lb/>
Vol. 68 No. 5<lb/>
Circulation 12,000<lb/>
Greenville, North Carolina<lb/>
Tuesday , January 26, 1993<lb/>
14 Pages<lb/>
Abortion activists confront each other on anniversary<lb/>
ECU students, faculty participate<lb/>
in Roe Vs. Wade rally<lb/>
By Joe Horst<lb/>
Staff Writer<lb/>
ECU sophomore Thomas Blue confronts a Greenvilleroif?'anti-<lb/>
abortion supporter.<lb/>
Chilly weather Friday night<lb/>
did not deter supporters and op-<lb/>
ponents alike from commemo-<lb/>
rating the 20th anniversary of the<lb/>
landmark Supreme Court deci-<lb/>
sion, Roe v. Wade.<lb/>
As the sun set and the night<lb/>
grew colder, both sides began<lb/>
lighting candles to honor the<lb/>
event from their respective<lb/>
views. At 5:45 p.m the pro-<lb/>
choice side gathered on the east<lb/>
steps of the Pitt County Court-<lb/>
house, with the anti-abortion<lb/>
advocates on the south side.<lb/>
As bells tolled the six<lb/>
o'clock hour in the background,<lb/>
the two sides met on the south<lb/>
steps to try to outdo each other<lb/>
in volume and message content.<lb/>
Before the meeting of the<lb/>
two sides, individuals from each<lb/>
group were equally voiceful on<lb/>
the subject.<lb/>
"I think Roe v. Wade is very<lb/>
important for women because<lb/>
with the issues today like pov-<lb/>
erty and economic turmoil, you<lb/>
want to be sure that you have an<lb/>
extra option said Tim Truzy,<lb/>
an ECU graduate student. "Who<lb/>
wants to bring up a child in the<lb/>
conditions we live in today?"<lb/>
Though these people were<lb/>
pro-choice, some did not believe<lb/>
that abortion was right. Michelle<lb/>
Glad, an ECU junior, believes<lb/>
that the woman has the right to<lb/>
make that choice, though she per-<lb/>
sonally is against abortion.<lb/>
Student's<lb/>
death<lb/>
explained<lb/>
ByWarren Sumner<lb/>
Staff Writer<lb/>
Many ECU students turned out to show thier support for both Vthe 'pro-<lb/>
choice and pro-life sides.<lb/>
"Who are you to tell me<lb/>
(how to act?)" Glad said. "It's<lb/>
none of your business what I do<lb/>
Individuals on the anti-<lb/>
abortion side replied with equal<lb/>
emotion to the controversial is-<lb/>
sue.<lb/>
"(The Roe v. Wade decision)<lb/>
was a pretty black day, we feel,<lb/>
as far as humanity is concerned<lb/>
said John Andrason, grand<lb/>
knight of the Greenville Knights<lb/>
ofColumbus. "Wedo believe that<lb/>
human life starts at conception<lb/>
� that's the number one bottom<lb/>
line � and from there we grow<lb/>
"I think that (the decision)<lb/>
is something that should be re-<lb/>
considered and looked at from a<lb/>
more modernistic and biblical<lb/>
point of view said Keith Webb,<lb/>
an ECU graduate student.<lb/>
Though on the anti-abor-<lb/>
tion side, some people professed<lb/>
views that fell into a gray area of<lb/>
debate.<lb/>
"I don't believe that abor-<lb/>
tion in the case of incest or rape<lb/>
is the wrong thing Webb said.<lb/>
"Or abortion in the case of dan-<lb/>
ger to the mother � those I agree<lb/>
with, because instead of losing<lb/>
two lives, you're only aborting<lb/>
one<lb/>
"The only thing I know<lb/>
that's black and white is death<lb/>
and taxes Andrason said.<lb/>
"What's in between, there's room<lb/>
for compromise. I just hope <lb/>
that common sense prevails in<lb/>
this, because it has polarized<lb/>
One aspect of both groups<lb/>
See MARCH page 4<lb/>
mgural<lb/>
By Jason Williams<lb/>
Staff Writer<lb/>
Filled with hope and idealism, some<lb/>
20 members of the ECU College Demo-<lb/>
crats travelled to the nation's capitol last<lb/>
week to participate in the inaugural fes-<lb/>
tivities.<lb/>
Their hard work throughout the<lb/>
campaign had finally paid off, as this trip<lb/>
was the reward for meeting with candi-<lb/>
dates, volunteering at rallies and passing<lb/>
out flyers during the past semester.<lb/>
Thomas Blue, president of the Col-<lb/>
lege Democrats, led the first caravan to<lb/>
Washington, leaving at 3 a.m. Jan. 17 in<lb/>
order to attend a volunteer's meeting in<lb/>
DC. "If we had volunteered, we would<lb/>
have had to pass out flags along the pa-<lb/>
rade route all day long and we would<lb/>
have missed the swearing-in ceremony,<lb/>
so we decided against it Blue said.<lb/>
The first event in which the group<lb/>
participated was the America's Reunion<lb/>
on the Mall on Sunday afternoon. Scarlette<lb/>
Gardner, another College Democrat, de-<lb/>
scribed the event by saying, "Tents were<lb/>
set up for various entertainment groups<lb/>
and food from all over America and the<lb/>
world was available Blue added, "We<lb/>
also got to see Peter, Paul and Mary, some<lb/>
awesome fireworks, and even Chelsea<lb/>
Clinton was there<lb/>
Bill Gheen, the vice president of the<lb/>
ECU College Democrats, attended a new,<lb/>
but promising event on Monday spon-<lb/>
sored by the Young People's National<lb/>
Service Coalition. "The purpose of this<lb/>
group is to create the first ever youth<lb/>
think tank in Washington to increase the<lb/>
involvement of young people in govern-<lb/>
mental the grass roots level Gheen said.<lb/>
Later that day, the ECU group at-<lb/>
tended what most people saw on lV.<lb/>
Tuesday night as the Presidential Gala.<lb/>
Called the American Gala, the show was<lb/>
actual ly a dress rehearsal for the televised<lb/>
event. "The performers weren't nearly as<lb/>
relaxed as they were the night before, and<lb/>
the Fleetwood Mac performance on T.V.<lb/>
was lame compared to Monday night<lb/>
Gardner said.<lb/>
Bill Gheen said the Gala conveyed a<lb/>
message beyond the entertainment. "This<lb/>
kind of thing instills a positive attitude in<lb/>
people that we can change the future for<lb/>
the better Gheen said.<lb/>
Other members of the group went<lb/>
to a Youth Town Meeting in which they<lb/>
participated in a Question and Answer<lb/>
session with Congressional leaders such<lb/>
as Maxine Waters (D-Ca), and Patricia<lb/>
Schroeder (D-Co).<lb/>
Member Steve Benzkofer said, "The<lb/>
Representatives really focused on the is-<lb/>
sues currently affecting the Administra-<lb/>
tion such as the policy or. the Haitians and<lb/>
race relations<lb/>
Despite standing almost a block<lb/>
away from the stage, the College Demo-<lb/>
crats were able to obtain tickets for all of<lb/>
their members to the swearing-in cer-<lb/>
emony Wednesday morning. "I thought<lb/>
Clinton's speech was very effective, and<lb/>
Maya Angelou's poem was very moving<lb/>
also Benzkofer said.<lb/>
Donning tuxedos and evening<lb/>
gowns, the fun began in earnest later that<lb/>
evening as the group was represented at<lb/>
several inaugural balls across town.<lb/>
Several people, including Gheen,<lb/>
made a brief appearance at the Youth<lb/>
Ball, one of the 11 official balls held that<lb/>
evening. "It was basically stale and bor-<lb/>
ing, in part because they invited more<lb/>
security than guests Gheen said.<lb/>
Later, the College Democrats pro-<lb/>
ceeded to the North Carolina Inaugural<lb/>
Ball, where they began to enjoy them-<lb/>
selves. "It was well-organized, and they<lb/>
had a good spread of food and an open<lb/>
bar Blue said. '<lb/>
"We met and talked with Gov. Hunt,<lb/>
the North Carolina Congressional del-<lb/>
egation, and the entire Council of State. It<lb/>
made me feel like we were really playing<lb/>
a part in government Blue said. To fin-<lb/>
ish off the evening in style, some enter-<lb/>
prising Democrats found a discount lim-<lb/>
ousine service to take them back to their<lb/>
See INAUGURAL page 3<lb/>
Autopsy findings have de-<lb/>
termined that the sudden death<lb/>
of ECU student Richard Louis<lb/>
DeOliveira was a result of natu-<lb/>
ral causes. According to the<lb/>
medical examiner's office at Pitt<lb/>
County Memorial Hospital, the<lb/>
autopsy showed that DeOliveira<lb/>
was a victim of Ischemic heart<lb/>
disease, a condition defined by<lb/>
the small size of DeOliveira's<lb/>
coronary arteries.<lb/>
These arteries depleted the<lb/>
level of blood supplied to<lb/>
DeOliveira's heart, and the lack<lb/>
of circulation of this blood<lb/>
caused DeOliveira to suffer a<lb/>
fatal heart attack.<lb/>
DeOliveira, on the morn-<lb/>
ing of December 4, collapsed and<lb/>
lost consciousness while walk-<lb/>
ing to a friend's apartment after<lb/>
a night in downtown Greenville.<lb/>
When his companion noticed<lb/>
DeOliveira was having diffi-<lb/>
culty breathing, he called for<lb/>
emergency assistance.<lb/>
Deoliveira was trans-<lb/>
ported to Pitt County Memorial<lb/>
Hospital, where doctors pro-<lb/>
See AUTOPSY page 4<lb/>
ECU'S College<lb/>
Democrats<lb/>
listened to a<lb/>
speech by Vice<lb/>
President Al<lb/>
Gore and his<lb/>
wife, Tipper, at<lb/>
the Youth<lb/>
Inaugural Ball<lb/>
while they were<lb/>
in Washington,<lb/>
D.C. last week<lb/>
for the<lb/>
presidential<lb/>
inauguration.<lb/>
Photo Courtesy ECU College Democrats<lb/>
College Democrats prepare to fight<lb/>
tuition increase<lb/>
By Jason Williams<lb/>
Staff Writer<lb/>
Though the ECU College Demo-<lb/>
crats primarily used the past week to<lb/>
celebrate their victories, some mem-<lb/>
bers of the group began organizing for<lb/>
their next campaign, that of trying to<lb/>
prevent an increase in tuition.<lb/>
Last Tuesday, Thomas Blue, presi-<lb/>
dent of the group, and others touted<lb/>
the Capitol, going door-to-door speak-<lb/>
ing with North Carolina's Congres-<lb/>
sional delegation. "Everyone re-<lb/>
sponded positively, and seemed like they<lb/>
wanted to help Blue said.<lb/>
Blue also said that Rep. Martin<lb/>
Lancaster in particular is committed to<lb/>
fighting for college students, as ECU now<lb/>
falls in his district.<lb/>
The North Carolina Inaugural Ball<lb/>
on Wednesday afforded another occa-<lb/>
sion to speak with government leaders<lb/>
about the proposed tuition hike.<lb/>
Blue said that when asked if he<lb/>
would help keep the cost of an education<lb/>
See TUITION page 3<lb/>
Inter-Fraternity Council prepares for spring Rush<lb/>
Organizers hope for a new,<lb/>
positive image<lb/>
By Joe Horst<lb/>
Staff Writer<lb/>
ECU fraternities have been on<lb/>
thegothepastfew weeks withprepa-<lb/>
rations for their Spring rush activi-<lb/>
ties.<lb/>
Starting today and running<lb/>
through Thursday, the various fra-<lb/>
ternities will hold activities that will<lb/>
allow prospective members to get<lb/>
acquainted with present members<lb/>
and the fraternity life. Bids from each<lb/>
individual fraternity will be given<lb/>
out Thursday night after midnight.<lb/>
"RushJ is all what the rushee<lb/>
wan's to do said Ian Eastman,Inter-<lb/>
Fraternity Council president.<lb/>
"Tha t's probably the best thingabou t<lb/>
rush.<lb/>
"Themost important thingwas<lb/>
thattherusheecouldmakeachoice.<lb/>
If he didn't like someone in that<lb/>
house, the rushee didn't want to go<lb/>
there, he could go somewhere else<lb/>
A major aspect of the spring<lb/>
rush this year will be the nightly<lb/>
running of the 1FC transit service.<lb/>
One bus will circulate among the<lb/>
residence halls on campus and drop<lb/>
individuals off at various fraternity<lb/>
houses and meeting places through-<lb/>
out the city.<lb/>
"We're renting one of the ECU<lb/>
Transit buses Eastman said. "The<lb/>
bus should be around every house<lb/>
every 30 minutes. We're going U i get<lb/>
it going from 8 p.m. to 10:30-11:00.<lb/>
It's free of charge for all potential<lb/>
rushees<lb/>
Each fraternity will follow its<lb/>
own schedule of activities for the<lb/>
three-night period of spring rush.<lb/>
Events range from get-togethers with<lb/>
various sororities to slide shows and<lb/>
presentations highlighting each<lb/>
fraternity's offerings.<lb/>
Eastman has taken over the<lb/>
job of IFC president this semester<lb/>
because of the previous president's<lb/>
graduation and plans to continue<lb/>
toe upward swing that IFC has been<lb/>
having.<lb/>
"I want to see the image of the<lb/>
fraternity on this campus to im-<lb/>
prove Eastman said. "I want it to<lb/>
be the top organization on this cam-<lb/>
pus. The fraternities are just trying<lb/>
to give both the fraternities and the<lb/>
school a positive image.<lb/>
"When people see fraternity<lb/>
banners outside, I want them to look<lb/>
at them and go, 'Golly, I've heard a<lb/>
lot of good things about them<lb/>
Eastman also plans to hold<lb/>
fundraisers that would raise money<lb/>
ranging from $5,000-6,000, which<lb/>
would be donated tocharitjes under<lb/>
thePanhellenic-lFCofEast Carolina<lb/>
University.<lb/>
"We want the campus to look<lb/>
at us as something they can rely on<lb/>
Eastman said.<lb/>
"Instead of being part of the<lb/>
problem, we want to be part of the<lb/>
solution<lb/>
Eastman plans to use this<lb/>
spring rushasaplatform from which<lb/>
IFC can continue to "move up<lb/>
"I just want to see IFC go up<lb/>
EastmansaidTflcanshowthrough<lb/>
my positive image, hopefuliv,that<lb/>
will reflect on the Greek system<lb/>
<pb facs="00058361_0002"/><lb/>
i-i<lb/>
�<lb/>
2 The East Carolinian<lb/>
JANUARY 26, 1993<lb/>
SGA opposes proposed dropadd policy<lb/>
Snowball fight turns ugly<lb/>
Michigan State University officials are investigating how<lb/>
a campus snowball fight escalated into a melee that left five<lb/>
students injured and nearly $3,000 in damage to dormitories<lb/>
and automobiles. The fight, which lasted about eight hours,<lb/>
began in the early evening of Dec. 10 and wasn't finished until<lb/>
the next day. The injuries included broken fingers, nose<lb/>
injuries, a dislocated knee and shoulder and a head concus-<lb/>
sion. Officials said four students were arrested and charged<lb/>
with malicious destruction of property, disorderly behavior<lb/>
and violation of a vehicle code. The melee apparently began<lb/>
as a stress-relieving snowball fight that escalated into a near-<lb/>
riot that moved from one campus to another as snow supplies<lb/>
dwindled, school officials said. Several cars were damaged by<lb/>
the snowballs, and one vehicle was kicked by a student.<lb/>
Magazine launched for young males<lb/>
A magazine begun by two Harvard University students<lb/>
that targets males from the ages 15-22 will be launched<lb/>
nationwide by Warner Publisher Services, a division of Time<lb/>
Warner. EDGE will make its debut April 20 with an initial<lb/>
press run of 200,000 copies. "We expect EDGE to make a swift<lb/>
and dramatic impact across the country, in Canada and<lb/>
internationally as well said Aaron Shapiro, an undergradu-<lb/>
ate at Harvard and publisher of the magazine. Some topics<lb/>
include sports, music, dating, partying, style and fitness. A<lb/>
major marketing campaign will accompany the launch, tar-<lb/>
geting high schools and colleges and universities.<lb/>
Rape victim files $18.9 million suit<lb/>
A young woman has filed an $18.9 million suit against<lb/>
George Mason University, claiming that campus police<lb/>
bungled the investigation of her alleged rape. The woman,<lb/>
who was a 17-year-old freshman at the time of the attack, said<lb/>
she was raped and sodomized by three men in her dormitory<lb/>
room at 2:20 a.m. Sept. 2, 1991, the campus newspaper re-<lb/>
ported. The suit claims that Jane Doe was not taken to the<lb/>
hospital until 6 a.m and she was not examined unti 19 a.m. In<lb/>
addition, the suit claims that university police "took the<lb/>
wrong bedding to the forensic laboratory" and "failed to<lb/>
monitor the collection and evaluation of evidence<lb/>
Compiled by Karon Hassoll. Taken from CPS<lb/>
and other campus newspapers.<lb/>
By Jennifer Wardrep<lb/>
Staff Writer<lb/>
After much debate and contro-<lb/>
versy, the SGA will formallyopposea<lb/>
new dropadd rule proposal at the<lb/>
Faculty Senate meeting today.<lb/>
Courtney Jones, SGA president, told<lb/>
SGAmembersMondaythatsheplans<lb/>
to speak to the Senate on behalf of the<lb/>
organization.<lb/>
The rule proposal states that,<lb/>
"During the first week of classes of the<lb/>
fall and spring semesters a student<lb/>
may drop or add a course or courses<lb/>
to his or her schedule following con-<lb/>
sultation with his or her adviser For<lb/>
summer sessions, the period is the<lb/>
firsttwodaysofclasses,therulestates.<lb/>
According to the proposal, a<lb/>
student may drup a course during<lb/>
the first 40 of class meetings, and<lb/>
may drop up to four courses while<lb/>
pursuing a degree. The number of<lb/>
courses a student may drop is pro-<lb/>
rated by the number of the students'<lb/>
completed hours. For example, a stu-<lb/>
dent entering ECU with 32-63 credit<lb/>
hours may drop three courses.<lb/>
The dropadd proposal also<lb/>
states that, "The student's academic<lb/>
record will reflect any course drop<lb/>
This stipulation is the target of the<lb/>
SGA's opposition.<lb/>
"If that sentence were deleted,<lb/>
I'd be fine with this policy Jones<lb/>
said. "They're saying that's it is ac-<lb/>
ceptable forastudenttodropacourse,<lb/>
but then they say it will be reflected<lb/>
on their records. Thaf s not fair<lb/>
In its October resolution, the<lb/>
SGA gave several reasons for oppos-<lb/>
ing the resolution and recognizing a<lb/>
need for improvements to the pro-<lb/>
posal, including a lack of statistics on<lb/>
students' reasons for dropping<lb/>
courses.The resolution also says that<lb/>
the policy could prevent students<lb/>
from taking challenging courses and<lb/>
may cause them to take fewer hours<lb/>
of courses each semester, which<lb/>
would lengthen their academic ca-<lb/>
reer.<lb/>
Joneswillpresentpetitionswith<lb/>
about 1,060 student signatures in<lb/>
opposition of the policy. The Faculty<lb/>
Senate will meet today at 2:10p.m. in<lb/>
the Mendenhall Student Center<lb/>
Great Room.<lb/>
During the meeting Monday,<lb/>
Keith Dyer, SGA vice president,<lb/>
asked for committee volunteers to<lb/>
help produce an organizational<lb/>
newsletter. The SGA newsletter will<lb/>
be distributed twice during each se-<lb/>
mester, campus-wide, Dyer said.<lb/>
Also during the meeting, the<lb/>
SGAinducted new senior class offic-<lb/>
ers: MichaelOT-Ioppe,president;Bill<lb/>
Wiggins, vicepresident;and George<lb/>
Sartiano, secretarytreasurer.<lb/>
TheSGAapproved appropria-<lb/>
tions in the amount of $600 to the<lb/>
Inter-Fraternity Council for an up-<lb/>
corrungconference,andtothe Aquatic<lb/>
Science Club in the amount of $165.<lb/>
ECU hosts medical lecture series<lb/>
By Karen Hassell<lb/>
Assistant News Editor<lb/>
For the next three months, ECU<lb/>
will be continuing to host a lecture<lb/>
series entitled Ethics &amp; the Techno-<lb/>
logical Revolution in Health Care.<lb/>
"With the emphasis on high<lb/>
technology in our health care system<lb/>
and the benefits and burdens that<lb/>
this brings, we thought this would be<lb/>
a natural area for use to pursue a<lb/>
lecture series saidDr. John Moskop,<lb/>
of the department of medical hu-<lb/>
manities.<lb/>
Today the medical field in-<lb/>
volves working with DNA<lb/>
constuction, fetal tissueand extended<lb/>
life support systems. These areas,<lb/>
among others, promote ethical is-<lb/>
sues whichcanbedifficulttoanswer.<lb/>
"We want to attract a good<lb/>
diversity to attend said Moskop.<lb/>
The lecture series was orga-<lb/>
nized by Moskop and Loretta<lb/>
Kopelman of thedepartmentof medi-<lb/>
cal humanities, Maire Pokomy of the<lb/>
school of nursing and Richard<lb/>
McCarty of the department of phi-<lb/>
losophy. The first lecture was en-<lb/>
titled "Ethics and Human Gene<lb/>
Therapy" and hosted by Dr. LeRoy<lb/>
Walters. According to Moskop, some<lb/>
critics charge that altering genes is a<lb/>
dangerous area in medicine. Ethical<lb/>
considerations on which humans<lb/>
should be used for gene therapy test-<lb/>
ing and the usage of gene therapy to<lb/>
enhance certain physical traits all<lb/>
worked into last Thursday's lecture.<lb/>
Future lectures include"Moral<lb/>
Issues in Human Organ Transplan-<lb/>
tation" with Dr. James Childress,<lb/>
"Intensive Care Ethics" with Sara<lb/>
Fry, Ph.D RN. and "The Techno-<lb/>
logical Imperative and the U.S.<lb/>
Health Care System: A Moral and<lb/>
Policy Appraisal" with Dr. Daniel<lb/>
Callahan.<lb/>
Each lecture will take place on<lb/>
a Thursday at 7:30 p.m. in the Brody<lb/>
Medical Science Building.<lb/>
WHO COULDN'T<lb/>
USE SOME<lb/>
&amp; HOWCANYOUSPENDTHE Xj<lb/>
y FUNNIESTNICHTOF YOUR JX<lb/>
 LIFE THIS WEDNESDAY FOR JX<lb/>
ONLY$5.00?<lb/>
SEE PACEIO<lb/>
r.<lb/>
PROCTOR BARBER SHOP<lb/>
Men's Hairstyling<lb/>
222-D Cotanche St.<lb/>
758-3802<lb/>
$1.00 OFF<lb/>
for all ECU Students<lb/>
gl Corner of 3rd &amp;<lb/>
Cotanche<lb/>
COTANCHE<lb/>
sj JrZl � � JS�1�?<lb/>
Six Mi ofiotn vcssions dt signed u p<lb/>
for tin fin nidi mill nnuiit of the<lb/>
Man h 20, IWM,MAT Exam<lb/>
GMAT<lb/>
Review<lb/>
Course<lb/>
Course Schedule:<lb/>
TuesdayFebruary 23<lb/>
ThursdayFebruary 15<lb/>
TuesdayMarch 2<lb/>
ThursdayMarch 4<lb/>
TuesdayMarch 16<lb/>
ThursdayMarch 18<lb/>
Inn clmses during Spring Brent)<lb/>
Course Time:<lb/>
7:(X)p.m):O0p.m.<lb/>
ONLY $149<lb/>
Cost nit hides<lb/>
till niMliit lltiiitlJ fee<lb/>
and twoi(iiiIii GMA'I<lb/>
review manuals<lb/>
Verbal and Math Topics To He Reviewed:<lb/>
� Sentence Correction<lb/>
� Reading Comprehension<lb/>
� Critical Reasoning<lb/>
� Problem Solving<lb/>
(Arithmetic Algebra, Geometry)<lb/>
� Data Sufficiency<lb/>
Location:<lb/>
ECU School of Business, BB&amp;T Center for<lb/>
leadership<lb/>
Development, General Classroom Building,<lb/>
Suite 1200<lb/>
Instructors:<lb/>
Course taught by lull-time ECU (acuity<lb/>
Texts:<lb/>
The Princeton Review:<lb/>
Cracking the System: The GMAT<lb/>
'The Official Guide for GMAT Review<lb/>
Oncludet actual GMAT queali- ,a with aokltiom)<lb/>
Presented by<lb/>
ECU Si hoot of Business Professional Programs<lb/>
1200 General Classroom Budding<lb/>
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FROZEN ASSORTED VARIETIES<lb/>
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GOOD SUNDAY, JAN. 24 THROUGH SATURDAY, JAN<lb/>
50, 1995 IN GREENVILLE WE RESERVE THE RIGHT TO<lb/>
LIMIT QUANTITIES NONE SOLD TO DEALERS<lb/>
ADVERTISED ITEM POLICY Each of these advertised items<lb/>
is required to be readily available for sale in each Kroger<lb/>
Store, except as specifically noted in this ad If we do run<lb/>
out of an advertised item, we will otter you your choice ol<lb/>
a comparable item, when available, reflecting ihe same<lb/>
savings or a raincheck which will entitle you to purchase<lb/>
the advertised item at the advertised price within 30 days<lb/>
Only one vendor coupon will be accepted per tlem<lb/>
purchased<lb/>
m<lb/>
 l<lb/>
�<lb/>
<pb facs="00058361_0003"/><lb/>
�<lb/>
3 The East Carolinian<lb/>
JANUARY 26, 1993<lb/>
VgRLP NEWSI<lb/>
Sodal Democrat to become new Danish prime minister<lb/>
Vietnamese celebrates Tet, 25<lb/>
years after Tet Offensive<lb/>
Copenhagen, Denmark (AP) -<lb/>
Social Democrat Poul Nyrup<lb/>
Rasmussen returned his party to<lb/>
power Friday after a decade's ab-<lb/>
sencebyputtingtogether Denmark's<lb/>
first majority coalition government<lb/>
since 1972.<lb/>
"It's a new start Rasmussen<lb/>
said after telling his socialist party,<lb/>
the country's largest, that he will be<lb/>
the next prime minister.<lb/>
Rasmussen, 49, met<lb/>
Denmark's figurehead monarch,<lb/>
Queen Margrethe II, for more than<lb/>
an hour late Friday to inform her of<lb/>
the change in government and seek<lb/>
her formal endorsement.<lb/>
Rasmussen, an economist and<lb/>
chairman of theSocialistDemocratic<lb/>
Party, later said he would present<lb/>
his governmentMonday afternoon.<lb/>
The new four-party coalition was to<lb/>
spend theweekendsettingupacabi-<lb/>
net.<lb/>
Rasmussen succeeds Conser-<lb/>
vative Poul Schlueter, who quit Jan.<lb/>
15 after 10 years as prime minister<lb/>
when a judicial commission said he<lb/>
had misled Parliamentabouta policy<lb/>
of stalling visas for Tamil refugees.<lb/>
The change in government<lb/>
was taking place just three weeks<lb/>
into Denmark's six-month term as<lb/>
holder of European Community<lb/>
presidency, which rotates between<lb/>
the 12 member nations.<lb/>
The coalition's policy state-<lb/>
ment said the Danish ECpresidency<lb/>
would not beaffected by thechange,<lb/>
because a majority of Parliament's<lb/>
eight parties had already endorsed<lb/>
the agenda drafted by the outgoing<lb/>
government.<lb/>
Rasmussen's government will<lb/>
be the country's first majority coali-<lb/>
tion since a three-party, liberal-cen-<lb/>
ter cabinet resigned in 1972.<lb/>
The coalition holds 90 seats in<lb/>
Parliament, the minimum needed<lb/>
for a majority in the 179-seat legisla-<lb/>
ture.<lb/>
The Social Democratic-led<lb/>
government will have "a strong em-<lb/>
ployment policy, a green (environ-<lb/>
mental) line, a business-minded line<lb/>
and respect for the labor market<lb/>
said Rasmussen, whose party iscred-<lb/>
ited with building the Danish wel-<lb/>
fare state.<lb/>
Since Parliament has already<lb/>
adopted Denmark's 1993 national<lb/>
budget, the new administration was<lb/>
not expected immediately to make<lb/>
any sweeping economic reforms.<lb/>
NATIONAL<lb/>
Racially motivated murders on the rise<lb/>
Ho Chi Minh City, Vietnam<lb/>
(AP)�Earsplittingfireworks explo-<lb/>
sions resounded through the streets<lb/>
Saurday as Vietnamese celebrated<lb/>
Tet, the start of the lunar New Year.<lb/>
The festive mood was buoyed<lb/>
by a burgeoning economy and the<lb/>
return for the holiday of tens of thou-<lb/>
sands of Vietnamese who fled their<lb/>
country around the time of the com-<lb/>
munist takeover in 1975.<lb/>
This Tet "is the happiest in the<lb/>
last 50 year said Nguyen Xuan<lb/>
Qanh, a Harvard-educated econo-<lb/>
mist and adviser to the Vietnamese<lb/>
government. "We want to look to the<lb/>
fu ture, to let bygones be bygonesand<lb/>
work hard to rebuild our country<lb/>
"The economic situation is<lb/>
Inaugural<lb/>
good. The political one is good, and<lb/>
hopefully the American govern-<lb/>
ment will lift the (economic) em-<lb/>
bargo sometime this year he said.<lb/>
The celebration over the next<lb/>
several days will be a marked con-<lb/>
trast to 25 years ago, when Viet-<lb/>
namese communist forces launched<lb/>
the bloody "Tet offensive" across<lb/>
south Vietnam, setting the stage for<lb/>
the U.S. withdrawal in the Vietnam<lb/>
War.<lb/>
But few people were dwell-<lb/>
ing on memories of the offensive;<lb/>
for them Tet is a tradition of family<lb/>
reunions and spiritual renewal.<lb/>
And after three wars and yers of<lb/>
international isolation, many Viet-<lb/>
namese are looking ahead.<lb/>
Continued from page 1<lb/>
NORTH CHARLESTON,S.C.<lb/>
(AP) � People can't stop talking<lb/>
about the crimes, partly because of<lb/>
theirbrutality�a womanheregang-<lb/>
raped and murdered, a man in<lb/>
Florida doused with gasoline and set<lb/>
afire�butalsobecauseofaquestion<lb/>
that makes folks shudder.<lb/>
Were the victims singled out<lb/>
because of their race?<lb/>
In the Tampa case, the victim<lb/>
wasblackand all threesuspects white.<lb/>
Here, the victim was white and all<lb/>
eight suspects black.<lb/>
"I'd like to know what they<lb/>
were thinking said Mike Kelley of<lb/>
North Charleston, who lives a few<lb/>
trailers down from the scene of the<lb/>
rape and knew some of me suspects<lb/>
as neighbors. He and others shook<lb/>
their head s while discussing the case<lb/>
on a recent rainy evening.<lb/>
To many in the South and else-<lb/>
where, racially motivated crimes<lb/>
seem like throwbacks to the days of<lb/>
rynchings genera tionsago,or to more<lb/>
recent times when official segrega-<lb/>
tion creatEd suspicion, tension and<lb/>
hatred between blacks and whites.<lb/>
"We've come a long way in-<lb/>
sisted Frank Binarr, another disbe-<lb/>
lieving neighbor here. "Whites and<lb/>
blacks get along<lb/>
Even if that is broadly true,<lb/>
racially motivated violence is none-<lb/>
theless on the rise, the numbers indi-<lb/>
cate.<lb/>
More than 50 murders across<lb/>
the United States in 1991 and '92<lb/>
were classified as hate crimes by<lb/>
Klanwatch, a research group in Bir-<lb/>
mingham, Ala that has monitored<lb/>
hate group activity since 1979.<lb/>
"Hatecrimesused to be strictly<lb/>
white on black. Now, it's every racial<lb/>
group said Klanwatch researcher<lb/>
Angie Lowry. As she worked on an<lb/>
analysisof 1992 data, shesaid, "Hate<lb/>
crimes in just about every category<lb/>
are up<lb/>
A just-released study of 10 cit-<lb/>
ies' 1992 police figures found a 24<lb/>
percent rise in bias crimes from '91.<lb/>
The study, prepared for the Los An-<lb/>
geles law firm Stroock &amp; Stroock &amp;<lb/>
Lavan, was part of a U.S. Supreme<lb/>
Court brief in defense of a Wisconsin<lb/>
law increasing penal ties for ha te-mo-<lb/>
tivated crimes.<lb/>
In some ways, the Florida and<lb/>
South Carolina crimes were mirror<lb/>
images, with numerous eerie paral-<lb/>
lelsbutthe races of victim and attack-<lb/>
ers reversed.Both victims, authori-<lb/>
ties say, were chosen at random.<lb/>
Christopher Wilson,31, a black<lb/>
New York tourist, was abducted at<lb/>
gunpoint from a Tampa-area shop-<lb/>
ping center on New Year's Day.<lb/>
Police say he was driven to an<lb/>
isolated area, robbed, doused with<lb/>
gasoline and set ablaze.<lb/>
Burned over 40 percent of his<lb/>
body,heremains hospitalized.Three<lb/>
white men who worked in a local<lb/>
labor pool have been charged with<lb/>
attempted murder.<lb/>
Just two days earlier in North<lb/>
Charleston, police say, 25-year-old<lb/>
Melissa McLauchlin was abducted<lb/>
while walking across a street, taken<lb/>
to a trailer park, raped by at least five<lb/>
men, then driven out of town, shot<lb/>
six times and dumped on a rural<lb/>
road.<lb/>
Five men have been arrested<lb/>
and a sixth is being sought on mur-<lb/>
der, rape and related charges; two<lb/>
women have been charged as acces-<lb/>
sories. All the suspects are black.<lb/>
In each case, there is chilling<lb/>
evidence ma t race was at least part of<lb/>
the motive.<lb/>
In Tampa, investigators found<lb/>
a note that read: "One less nigger,<lb/>
one more to go It was signed<lb/>
"KKK but the suspects have de-<lb/>
nied being part of any hate group<lb/>
and Ku Klux Klan officials have de-<lb/>
nied involvement<lb/>
Wilson told police his abduc-<lb/>
tors taunted him with racial slurs.<lb/>
FBI agents are looking into possible<lb/>
civil rights charges.<lb/>
&amp;m<lb/>
PREVIEW<lb/>
93<lb/>
&amp;<lb/>
I<lb/>
iV<lb/>
�<lb/>
&amp;<lb/>
Summer Student<lb/>
Leadership Opportunity<lb/>
Available<lb/>
EAST CAROLINA<lb/>
UNIVERSITY<lb/>
ORIENTATION<lb/>
STAFF<lb/>
Applications Available in<lb/>
Room 203 Erwin<lb/>
Beginning January 25, 1993<lb/>
Deadline For Completed Application<lb/>
is February 19, 1993<lb/>
At 4:00 PM<lb/>
hotels.<lb/>
Xymena Solano, another Col-<lb/>
lege Democrat from ECU,artended<lb/>
yet another official ball at Union<lb/>
Station. "It was great. Steven Stills<lb/>
of Crosby, Stills and Nash pro-<lb/>
vided the entertainment and Bill<lb/>
and Hillary showed up Solano<lb/>
said.<lb/>
The group returned to<lb/>
Greenville about midday Thurs-<lb/>
Tuition<lb/>
day, Jan. 21, exhausted from the<lb/>
week's activities, but witnesses to<lb/>
an historic occasion.<lb/>
"I think we saw the passing<lb/>
of the torch from one generation to<lb/>
the next.<lb/>
While Reagan had Frank<lb/>
Sinatra, Bill Clinton had the Grate-<lb/>
ful Dead, and people that I actu-<lb/>
ally have in my CD. box Blue<lb/>
said. "We had real people<lb/>
Continued from page 1<lb/>
down, State Representative<lb/>
Charles MacLawhorn responded,<lb/>
"You bet<lb/>
Bill Gheen, vice president of<lb/>
the College Democrats also re-<lb/>
ported that Gov. Jim Hunt and Lt.<lb/>
Gov. Dennis Wicker expressed<lb/>
support for the initiative as well.<lb/>
"The governor and the lieu-<lb/>
tenant governor said that they<lb/>
support us all the way Gheen<lb/>
said.<lb/>
Gheen said that the tuition<lb/>
question will be the group'9 "next<lb/>
major cause and hopes that the<lb/>
entire student body will support<lb/>
them.<lb/>
"I think our group and other<lb/>
groups also can rally behind this<lb/>
issue Blue said.<lb/>
Club Ped<lb/>
is a walking dub for all faculty, staffand students Individuals or groups of four are<lb/>
encouraged to register at any time during the year. This program is free of charge.<lb/>
Participants interested in joining should pick up their "Walking Papers in 204<lb/>
Christenbury Gymnasium and complete program<lb/>
registration information.<lb/>
Prizes will be awarded when individuals reach specific "mileposts" along either campus<lb/>
Routes to Fitness oral a location convenient to each participant. Mileage forms are<lb/>
collected at the end of each month<lb/>
Additional benefits include:<lb/>
The "Walking Paper"<lb/>
A monthly newsletter for Club Ped members packed with lips and upcoming Club Ped<lb/>
activities.<lb/>
Ped Parties<lb/>
Special events for club members only which may include 'shoe shoptalks' or informa-<lb/>
tion sessions on topics of interest to fitness walkers.<lb/>
This program is offered through the Office of Health Promotion and Well-Being and<lb/>
ECU Recreational Setvices. For more details call 757-6387.<lb/>
<pb facs="00058361_0004"/><lb/>
4 The East Carolinian<lb/>
JANUARY 26, 1993<lb/>
Autopsy<lb/>
Continued from pagel<lb/>
March<lb/>
Continued from pagel<lb/>
I<lb/>
1<lb/>
nounced him dead on arrival.<lb/>
Tina Stilley, who dated<lb/>
DeOliveira for nearly six months<lb/>
before he died, said that<lb/>
DeOliveira was the kind of per-<lb/>
son who hated to cause his<lb/>
friends and family distress, and<lb/>
believes that if he could, he<lb/>
would do his best to alleviate<lb/>
the sadness those close to him<lb/>
feel.<lb/>
"Richard was a very<lb/>
thoughtful person Stilley said.<lb/>
"If he had known he was going<lb/>
to die ahead of time he would<lb/>
have done everything he could<lb/>
to put the pain on himself and<lb/>
take it away from everybody<lb/>
else<lb/>
Stilley said that DeOliveira<lb/>
had many friends at the univer-<lb/>
sity and was "a very well-liked"<lb/>
peison, and that she could hon-<lb/>
estly think of no flaws in her<lb/>
relationship with him.<lb/>
"Our relationship was per-<lb/>
fect from the very beginning, the<lb/>
first moment that I saw him, it<lb/>
was real strange because I knew<lb/>
it was an immediate bond we<lb/>
went riding on his motorcycle, it<lb/>
was the first time I'd ever been<lb/>
on one  He was the only guy<lb/>
I'd ever kissed where I didn't<lb/>
feel awkward kissing him the<lb/>
first time. Nothing about dating<lb/>
Richard was ever difficult<lb/>
Stilley said that DeOliveira<lb/>
was very motivated in school<lb/>
and in life, as he wanted to be a<lb/>
success. She said he was very<lb/>
close to his family and main-<lb/>
tained a good relationship with<lb/>
them.<lb/>
She said he was the type of<lb/>
person who liked to plan ahead<lb/>
and believes that if he had lived<lb/>
they would have eventually<lb/>
married .<lb/>
Stilley said that she could<lb/>
not comment on what her fond-<lb/>
est memory of DeOliveira was,<lb/>
because it was impossible to de-<lb/>
cipher that from any other time.<lb/>
"Every moment with Rich-<lb/>
ard was wonderful Stilley said.<lb/>
that night was the fact that mem-<lb/>
bers of the group against abor-<lb/>
tion had their children present,<lb/>
but no children were on the pro-<lb/>
choice side.<lb/>
As the night progressed,<lb/>
both groups chanted and sang<lb/>
songs in support of their indi-<lb/>
vidual causes. At one time, both<lb/>
groups inadvertently joined to-<lb/>
gether in a rendition of "Amaz-<lb/>
ing Grace Through the night,<lb/>
religious hymns vied with chants<lb/>
of "We shall overcome" and "The<lb/>
gag rule is dead<lb/>
Newly elected President Bill<lb/>
Clinton overturned the contro-<lb/>
versial "gag rule" on this anni-<lb/>
versary, freeing up any publicly<lb/>
funded health clinic to mention<lb/>
abortion as a viable alternative to<lb/>
pregnancy.<lb/>
This change does not affect<lb/>
the recent Supreme Court deci-<lb/>
sions affecting the various<lb/>
choices available, nor do some<lb/>
feel that Clinton will necessarily<lb/>
make things easier for pro-choice<lb/>
individuals.<lb/>
"(The Court) has made de-<lb/>
cisions in certain states, for ex-<lb/>
ample, that a minor must have<lb/>
permission of a parent or court-<lb/>
appointed representative said<lb/>
Dr. Marie Farr, an ECU English<lb/>
professor. "They've made deci-<lb/>
sions that some wives must ask<lb/>
permission of their husbands.<lb/>
Those are definitely restrictions<lb/>
that have been placed<lb/>
"I don't think the battle is<lb/>
over said Thomas Blue, an ECU<lb/>
sophomore. "I think the Supreme<lb/>
Court is really the key. Whether<lb/>
or not President Clinton makes<lb/>
appointments � the freedom of<lb/>
choice amendment is still very<lb/>
much in danger<lb/>
Police were not present at<lb/>
what turned out to be a peaceful<lb/>
demonstration, though personal<lb/>
confrontations did occur.<lb/>
coupon ,1t<lb/>
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Adult<lb/>
Entertainment<lb/>
M Center<lb/>
 MONDAYS<lb/>
Football Sports Night<lb/>
TUESDAYS<lb/>
Silver Bullet's Female "Exotic" Dancers<lb/>
WEDNESDAYS<lb/>
Amateur Night for Female Dancers 11pm-1am<lb/>
CASH PRIZE 0y -<lb/>
'Contestants need to call &amp; register m advance. Must amir by 8fiQ. &amp;&amp;9j&amp;tPtT<lb/>
THURSDAYS -SATURDAYS<lb/>
Silver Bullet's Female "Exotic" Dancers<lb/>
We do Birthdays, Bacelor Parties, Bridal Showers,<lb/>
Corporate Parties &amp; Divorces<lb/>
ECU STUDENT SPECIAL<lb/>
$2.00 OFF Admission Any Night with this coupon<lb/>
Doors Open 7:30pm Stage Time 9:00pm<lb/>
tEsmm Call 756-6278<lb/>
5 miles west of Greenville on 264 AIL<lb/>
Dlcklnaon Ava.<lb/>
(behind John's Convenient Mart)<lb/>
Valid N.C. I.D. Required<lb/>
I 1, fir 1 m - � � J ���� i jE9llmSiMllilllllllT iiii'vmiTiHiirv llh'lllllllTIIIIIPS iiiiirliilliiriiiliiv lnr.24lHiurs. slimiiriiinrlMilr iv jlliiiiil lulling il. Slirnini'iijiiv iillllirplriisiirrs nlilii'llrsli. llllSlllllTilllllir!illll r fliii GRlRfl � CHRIS BflCHRLB � 11 BllCWiffl '<lb/>
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�� vm: � � ��-��� ���<lb/>
, rldWftfc THE COMIC BOOK STORE iw�pPfrVTfr 919 Dickenson Ave. Open 7 Days yMWJMlW Greenville, NC x Aw�?k VJ W qiq 7CQ enno Mon-Sat9:30-6 " 919-758-6909 Sun 2:00-6<lb/>
I<lb/>
HI STODEOT UNIONS<lb/>
 HAPPENINGS "<lb/>
MOVIES I 8 PM HENDRIX THEATRE<lb/>
HOW WOULD<lb/>
IF SHE COULD<lb/>
AND SHE WILL<lb/>
COOL WORLD<lb/>
THUR, FRI &amp; SAT, JAN 28, 29 &amp; 30<lb/>
RAN<lb/>
SUN, JAN 31<lb/>
IPG 13 <lb/>
COFFEE HOUSE! TONIGHT<lb/>
BRIAN HUSKEY<lb/>
8 PM THE UNDERGROUND, MSC<lb/>
'�1 Admission with Student I.D.<lb/>
$2 Admission for General Public<lb/>
SPECIAL EVENTS! TOM DELUCA<lb/>
HYPNOTIST<lb/>
THURJAN28, 8 PM<lb/>
HENDRIX THEATRE<lb/>
$3.00 In Advance at Central Ticket Office, MSC<lb/>
$5.00 At The Door<lb/>
HYPNOTIST<lb/>
MINORITY ARTS! "SONG OF MY PEOPLE"<lb/>
TUES, FEB 2, 8 PM<lb/>
HENDRIX THEATRE<lb/>
A historic film project on the national experience<lb/>
of African-Americans and their contributions to<lb/>
American culture.<lb/>
FORUM I ANARCHY OR APATHY<lb/>
an evening with<lb/>
NOAM CHOMSKY<lb/>
TUES, FEB 9, 8 PM<lb/>
HENDRIX THEATRE<lb/>
For More Info Call The<lb/>
 University Unions Program Hotline<lb/>
at 757-6004<lb/>
TOURNAMENTS<lb/>
BILLIARDS<lb/>
TONIGHT<lb/>
Women's<lb/>
Tues, Jan 26, 1993<lb/>
7 PM-10 PM<lb/>
CHESS<lb/>
Wed, Jan 27, 1993<lb/>
7 PM- 10 PM<lb/>
BOWLING<lb/>
Co-Rec<lb/>
Thurs, Jan 28,1993<lb/>
7 PM-10 PM<lb/>
Registration in the Billiards Room, MSC<lb/>
Fee: $2.00 G.P.A 2.0<lb/>
Winners will receive an all expense paid trip to<lb/>
represent East Carolina University in the Regional<lb/>
Competition at the University of Tennessee in Knoxville<lb/>
Sponsored by the Student Union Productions Committee<lb/>
<pb facs="00058361_0005"/><lb/>
� � - <lb/>
The East Carolinian<lb/>
January 26, 1993<lb/>
Classifieds<lb/>
Page 5<lb/>
F( )R RENT<lb/>
KINGS ARMS APARTMENTS<lb/>
:1 and 2 bedroom apartments. En-<lb/>
ergy-efficient, several locations in<lb/>
town. Carpeted, kitchen appli-<lb/>
ances, some water and sewer paid,<lb/>
washerdryer hookups. Call 752-<lb/>
8915.<lb/>
SHARE 2 BEDROOM apt $200<lb/>
rent 12 utilities. On 10th St. be-<lb/>
hind Pantry. Call Tom 830-5158<lb/>
1 BR APARTMENT on 13th St<lb/>
great for pets, esp. dogs. Available<lb/>
immediately. $275mo. Call 752-<lb/>
9197<lb/>
2 GRADUATE STUDENTS seek-<lb/>
ing roommate to live in 3 bdr. house<lb/>
3 mi. from ECU, 1 mi. from PCMH.<lb/>
$160monthperson &amp; $160 de-<lb/>
posit. Call Jason or Mandel 756-<lb/>
6614 or Jason 757-6318.<lb/>
LARGE 1 bedroom 1 bath apt. for<lb/>
one or two people. Balcony, on site<lb/>
laundry and pool. 10 minute walk<lb/>
to ECU. Paid cable. $310month<lb/>
830-8892<lb/>
ROOMMATE NEEDED: To share<lb/>
a two bedroom apartment at Wil-<lb/>
son Acres. 13 rent and utilities.<lb/>
Need soon as possible. Call after<lb/>
4:30 pm and ask for Rhonda. 830-<lb/>
9066.<lb/>
FEMALE ROOMMATE<lb/>
NEEDED: to share 2 bedroom, 1<lb/>
12 bath apartment at Carriage<lb/>
House. $160month rent 12<lb/>
electric. Call Christie at 756-9261.<lb/>
(Leave message)<lb/>
ROOMY!ATI-W ANTED<lb/>
WANTED: roommate to share<lb/>
apartment in Tar River area. 14<lb/>
of rent and 14 utilities. Call 758-<lb/>
5207.<lb/>
MALE ROOMMATE WANTED:<lb/>
Convenient location to campus<lb/>
with ECU bus transportation avail-<lb/>
able- Furnished bedroom with Pri-<lb/>
vate Bath, Cable, Telephone,<lb/>
washerdryer, kitchen privileges-<lb/>
"you tend to your business and I<lb/>
tend to mine philosophy<lb/>
$175.00mon includes utilities.<lb/>
Call 321-1848.<lb/>
ROOMMATE NEEDED: Wild-<lb/>
wood Villas - Assume 13 bills<lb/>
and $183.33 per month rent. 3<lb/>
bedroom townhouse with washer<lb/>
and d ryer and convenient location<lb/>
to college. Call us at 758-8115.<lb/>
ROOMMATE NEEDED: to share<lb/>
a townhouse apartment. Rent is<lb/>
$160 mon and 12 utilities. Con-<lb/>
venient to campus and includes<lb/>
ECU bus. Contact Stacy Peterson<lb/>
at Carriage House Apartments, apt<lb/>
 60, 321-1532.<lb/>
FEMALE ROOMMATE<lb/>
NEEDED. 112 miles from ECU,<lb/>
bus, $17250 12 utilities. Com-<lb/>
pletely furnished. Nonsmoker.<lb/>
Please call Ali at 752-1782.<lb/>
FEMALE ROOMMATE<lb/>
NEEDED: to share a two-bedroom<lb/>
apartmentvill have own room.<lb/>
$155mo rent -r 1 3 utilities. Must<lb/>
be responsible, reliable, and easy-<lb/>
R( )()MMATE WANTED<lb/>
going. If interested please call 830-<lb/>
4983 � if no answe, leave message<lb/>
Available ASAP<lb/>
F( )R SALE<lb/>
RINGGOLD TOWERS cONDO<lb/>
- One bedroom unit. Children<lb/>
out of school, I want to sell fast.<lb/>
Call (919) 847-1557 Raleigh, NC.<lb/>
VALENTINES SPECIAL: Don't<lb/>
forget to order early this year as<lb/>
we run out every year. For just<lb/>
29.95 you can get your lady 1<lb/>
dozen long stem red roses ar-<lb/>
ranged and boxed. 757-1007<lb/>
HEY NOW! HAND DRUMS: ce-<lb/>
ramic and metal doumbeks,<lb/>
tablas, bodhrans, frame drums,<lb/>
etc. Call 756-4226 for more infor-<lb/>
mation.<lb/>
TAKE OVER CLUB FOR<lb/>
WOMEN ONLY membership!<lb/>
Save$59.00 initiation fee! ONLY<lb/>
$29.00mo. Call today at 756-<lb/>
9235 and start the new year off<lb/>
right. Please leave a message.<lb/>
FOR SALE: Packard Bell Legend<lb/>
IV computer for sale. Panasonic<lb/>
24 pt. printer, VGA color moni-<lb/>
tor. Computer has hard drive, 2<lb/>
floppy drives. (5.25" and 3.5")<lb/>
Must sell! $850. Includes Harvard<lb/>
Graphics, Lotus 1-2-3, Multimate,<lb/>
PFS Graphics, Grammatix, and<lb/>
other programs. Call (919) 321-<lb/>
2577 leave message.<lb/>
FOR SALE: Nintendo with great<lb/>
accessories. Call &amp; leave message,<lb/>
758-8319 Great price.<lb/>
FOR SALE: Mountain bike �<lb/>
Gary Fisher advance model. High<lb/>
quality Shimano components, six<lb/>
months old, excellent condition,<lb/>
and U-lock included. $375 nego-<lb/>
tiable, call David at 758-2879<lb/>
UNRELEASED LIVE CON-<lb/>
CERT &amp; STUDIO RECORD-<lb/>
INGS FOR SALE: from the fol-<lb/>
lowing artists: U2, Clapton,<lb/>
Beatles, Zeppelin, SRV, Black<lb/>
Crowes, Lenny Kravitz, Hendrix,<lb/>
REM, Matthew Sweet, More! Call<lb/>
931-2573 and leave name, num-<lb/>
ber, and requested artist on mes-<lb/>
sage.<lb/>
GRADUATING: MUST SELL!<lb/>
1988 ISUZU IMPULSE TURBO<lb/>
� low miles, all extras plus spoil-<lb/>
ers must see and drive: $6000.<lb/>
Rockford Fosgate Punch 150 car<lb/>
amp. $150, Blaupunkt 20x20 amp.<lb/>
$50. Dorm size microwave $25.<lb/>
New blue sports coat, size 40L<lb/>
$30. New "Members Only" ski<lb/>
jacket (whiteblue)$ 50 (never<lb/>
worn) Call Tommy 752-9620<lb/>
DAY BED, white, iron and brass<lb/>
w2 twin size Orthopedic mat-<lb/>
tresses and rollout pop-up<lb/>
trund le. Never used, in box. Cost<lb/>
$700. $310 cash. (919) 637-4421<lb/>
after 6:30 pm.<lb/>
BRASS BED, queen size w<lb/>
frame and deluxe Orthopedic<lb/>
mattress set in factor' box. Can't<lb/>
use. Cost $750, sacrifice $285 cash<lb/>
(919) 637-4421 after 6:30 pm.<lb/>
HELP WANTED<lb/>
SAVE on Spring Break '93! Ja-<lb/>
maica, Cancun, Bahamas from<lb/>
$459 Florida from !149! Organize<lb/>
group and travel free! Contact<lb/>
Susan @ 931-7334 or call Sun<lb/>
Splash Tour s todayl-800-426-<lb/>
7710.<lb/>
CRUISE SHIPS NOW HIRING<lb/>
- Earn $2000month world<lb/>
travel (Hawaii, Mexico, the Car-<lb/>
ibbean, et.Holiday, Summer<lb/>
and Career employment avail<lb/>
able. No experience necessary.<lb/>
For employment program call 1-<lb/>
206-634-0468 ext. C5362.<lb/>
ORIGINAL ARTWORK<lb/>
WANTED! Looking for art that<lb/>
would look good on T-shirts. We<lb/>
will pay for the exclusive use of<lb/>
your work. Call for an appoint-<lb/>
ment 752-6953.<lb/>
POOL MANAGERSAQUATIC<lb/>
DIRECTORS � several posi-<lb/>
tions in Greenville &amp; Nags Head<lb/>
areas. Must be 21 yrs or older.<lb/>
Deadline Feb. 21. Call Bob<lb/>
Wendling, 756-1088.<lb/>
TOPLESS DANCERS<lb/>
WANTED: Great club, great<lb/>
money, unbelievable tips. Work<lb/>
Thursday, Friday, Saturday, 9<lb/>
pm-2am. Call Sid 919-735-7713<lb/>
or Paul 919-736-0716. Mothers<lb/>
Playhouse in Goldsboro.<lb/>
$10 - $360UP WEEKLY Mailing<lb/>
brochures! Sparefull time. Set<lb/>
own hours! RUSH stamped en-<lb/>
velope: Publisher- (GI) 1821<lb/>
Hillandale Rd. 1B-295 Durham,<lb/>
NC 27705<lb/>
BRODY's AND BRODY's FOR<lb/>
MEN are accepting applications<lb/>
for part-time sales associates.<lb/>
Flexible scheduleSalarycloth-<lb/>
ing discount. Apply Brody's The<lb/>
Plaza MonWed. 1-4 pm<lb/>
SPEND A SUMMER in New<lb/>
Hampshire. Outstanding boys<lb/>
girls sports camps located on<lb/>
New England's largest lake are<lb/>
recruiting individuals forall staff<lb/>
positions, including nurses. Ap-<lb/>
plicants must be able to assist in<lb/>
the instruction of an activity. For<lb/>
more information, call Kyle at<lb/>
(919) 847-4430.<lb/>
NOW ACCEPTING APPLICA-<lb/>
TIONS for waitstaff at Professor<lb/>
O'Cools between 2-4 pm daily.<lb/>
No phone calls accepted. Located<lb/>
behind Quincy's Steak House on<lb/>
Greenville Blvd.<lb/>
WANTED: loving after school<lb/>
care for 7 year old girl. 2:30-5:30,<lb/>
Monday-Friday. Non-smoker.<lb/>
Transportation and references re-<lb/>
quired. 355-3716 after 6 pm.<lb/>
YOUTH SOCCER COACHES:<lb/>
The Greenville Recreation &amp;<lb/>
Parks Department is recruiting<lb/>
12 to 16 part-time youth soccer<lb/>
coaches forthespringindoorsoc-<lb/>
cer program. Applicants must<lb/>
possess some knowledge of the<lb/>
soccer skills and have the ability<lb/>
and patience to work with youth.<lb/>
Applicants must be able to coach<lb/>
young people ages 5-18 in soccer<lb/>
fundamentals. Hours are from 3<lb/>
HELP WANTED<lb/>
pm to 7 pm with some night and<lb/>
weekend coaching.This program<lb/>
will run from the first of March to<lb/>
the first of May. Salary rates start<lb/>
at $4.25 per hour. For more infor-<lb/>
mation please call Ben jarnes or<lb/>
Michael Daly at 830-4550.<lb/>
SERVICES ()FFERED<lb/>
AWESOME SPRING BREAK<lb/>
TRIPS! Bahamas Cruise 6 Days<lb/>
Includes 10 Meals, Great Beaches &amp;<lb/>
Nightlife! $279! Panama City<lb/>
Beachfront Rooms With Kitchens<lb/>
$119, Key West Oceanfront Hotel<lb/>
$249, Daytona Beachfront Rooms<lb/>
With Kitchens $149, Cancun $459,<lb/>
Jamaica $479! Springbreak! 1-800-<lb/>
678-6386<lb/>
ATTENTION SPRING BREAK-<lb/>
ERS Party like Gods Panama<lb/>
City $139, Key West $269, Jamaica<lb/>
&amp; Cancun from $450. Quality Ac-<lb/>
commodations,FreeDrinkParti <lb/>
Calljoe Endless Summerl-800-234-<lb/>
7007.<lb/>
MODEL PORTFOLIOS Photo<lb/>
Creations &amp; Associates 355-8886.<lb/>
�"AWESOME SPRING BREAK<lb/>
BAHAMAS CRUISE $279! In-<lb/>
cludes6days in Bahamas, lOmeals!<lb/>
Sail from Florida! Beautiful Beaches,<lb/>
Great Nightlife! Drinking age 18!<lb/>
Springbreak 1-800-678-6386<lb/>
��FREE DAYTONA SPRING<lb/>
BREAK Organize only 18 people<lb/>
and travel free! Stay at the Howard<lb/>
Johnson's Beachfront from only<lb/>
$149! CALL NOW! Take A Break<lb/>
Vacations 1-800-328-SAVE<lb/>
PORTRAITS DONE great gifts for<lb/>
Mothers and Fathers day or birth-<lb/>
days. Parents, siblings, pets, etc.<lb/>
done $25 and up. For info, call Sean<lb/>
931-8162.<lb/>
BABYSITTER FOR HIRE trust-<lb/>
worthy, senior with plenty of<lb/>
babysitting experience. Call 321-<lb/>
2835 leave message if no answer.<lb/>
MONEY FOR COLLEGE IS<lb/>
AVAILABLE! Get your fair share!<lb/>
Let us help you! Call for free infor-<lb/>
mation. 1-800-995-9013, anytime!<lb/>
SERVICES OIT-ERED<lb/>
�qsv SoiUtq V�(tt Charters<lb/>
 prssem <lb/>
tkt oakamaf &amp;� the fcef 15<lb/>
JW<lb/>
OKuoar ownprivate-uatcU<lb/>
?cera( t&amp;i mm '�<lb/>
$385<lb/>
,1<lb/>
800-780,<lb/>
-4001<lb/>
GREEKS &amp; CLUBS<lb/>
$1,000 AN HOUR!<lb/>
Each member of your frat,<lb/>
sorority, team, club, etc.<lb/>
pitches in just one hour<lb/>
and your group can raise<lb/>
$1,000 in just a few days!<lb/>
Plus a chance to earn<lb/>
$1,000 for yourself!<lb/>
No cost. No obligation.<lb/>
1-800-932-0528, ext. 65<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/>
HQ2H USED CD'S<lb/>
BREAKS<lb/>
PRICES FOR ST A Y�NOT<lb/>
SOUTH PADRE ISLAND<lb/>
5 3na 7 NIGHTS<lb/>
DAYTONA BEACH<lb/>
5 AND 7 NIGHTS<lb/>
PANAMA CITY BEACH<lb/>
5 AND 7 NIGHTS<lb/>
STEAMBOAT<lb/>
2 5 AND 7 NIGHTS<lb/>
MUSTANG ISLAND I<lb/>
PORTARANSAS<lb/>
5 AND 7 NIGHTS<lb/>
HILTON HEAD ISLAND<lb/>
5 AND 7 NIGHTS<lb/>
FORT LAUDERDALE<lb/>
5 AND 7 NIGHTS<lb/>
VAIL BEAVERCREEK<lb/>
5 AND 7 NIGHTS<lb/>
12th Annual<lb/>
Party!<lb/>
TOLL FREE INFORMATION &amp; RESERVATIONS<lb/>
1-800-321-5911<lb/>
ATTENTION FEMALES: Wet T-<lb/>
Shirt contest contestants wanted.<lb/>
Contest will be held on Thursday<lb/>
Jan. 28 for more info call Travis or<lb/>
James at 757-0127.<lb/>
CONGRATULATIONS Alexis<lb/>
Hickman on placing in Miss Green-<lb/>
ville Sigma Sigma Sigma<lb/>
THE LADIES OF DELTA ZETA<lb/>
would like to wish everyone a good<lb/>
luck in the Spring semester, and a<lb/>
special good luck goes out to all of<lb/>
you fraternitiesduringRUSH! Have<lb/>
a super semester!<lb/>
DELTA CHI THOUGHT: "Associ-<lb/>
ate yourself with men of good qual-<lb/>
ity if you value your own reputa-<lb/>
tion; for it is better to be aolne than in<lb/>
bad company<lb/>
DELTA CHI wishes all fraternities<lb/>
good luck with RUSH<lb/>
CONGRATULATIONS Anna<lb/>
Harrington on Panhellenic Presi-<lb/>
dent. You'll do a great job. We are<lb/>
proud of YOU. Sigma Sigma Sigma<lb/>
ALPHA PHI would like to wish all<lb/>
fraternities good luck with rush this<lb/>
week! Go Greek!<lb/>
PERSONALS<lb/>
CONGRATS TO ALPHA OMI-<lb/>
CRON PI on winning the fall<lb/>
Chancellor's Cup for intramural ex-<lb/>
cellence! Way to go!<lb/>
KAPPA ALPHA, Sigma Phi Epsi-<lb/>
lon And Lambda Chi Alpha we look<lb/>
forward to helping you w rush.<lb/>
Sligma Sigma Sigma<lb/>
CONGRATULATIONS TO THE<lb/>
NEWLYINITIATED SISTERS OF<lb/>
ALPHA OMICRON PI � Jule<lb/>
Fisher, Holy Fleming, Melody<lb/>
Grover, Bonnie Hiser, Amy John-<lb/>
son, Tami Johnson, Lisa Stine, Beth<lb/>
McGee, Amanda Smith, Meredith<lb/>
Stevens,ChristineZamzowJennifer<lb/>
Kula, Amanda Whichard, and Jill<lb/>
Woolard. Love, your sisters.<lb/>
TOTHEDEERSLAYER�I'mvery<lb/>
happy for you &amp; your business ven-<lb/>
ture! I hope you have a wonderful<lb/>
and productive week. Thanks forall<lb/>
of your help &amp; support don't ever<lb/>
forget who loves ya' most, HON.<lb/>
ALPHA DELTA PI wishes all ECU<lb/>
fraternities good luck for a great<lb/>
Spring Rush!<lb/>
GOOD LUCK to all fraternities on<lb/>
Rush .Sigma Sigma Sigma<lb/>
ECU RUGBY wants all interested<lb/>
parties to know that you don't have<lb/>
to be socially acceptable to play<lb/>
rugby. Come out and play behind<lb/>
Allied Health Tuesday - Thursdav<lb/>
at 3:30 pm.<lb/>
ANDY - Just wanted to say thanks<lb/>
for dinner. That's one down and<lb/>
TWO more to go. Had agreat time!<lb/>
Aimee<lb/>
HEY PEZZ - You know my eyes<lb/>
have seen it all now! I want to<lb/>
sincerely thank you for all the fun<lb/>
these past 3 weeks. The friendship<lb/>
love I feel will hopefully stay with<lb/>
usforyearstocomenomatterwhere<lb/>
you end up! Not a Hag!<lb/>
EAST<lb/>
CAROLINIAN<lb/>
ACCOUNT<lb/>
EXECUTIVES<lb/>
Karen Bilyj<lb/>
Lindsay Fernandez<lb/>
Matt Hege<lb/>
�<lb/>
Aimee Lewis<lb/>
-�<lb/>
Brandon Perry<lb/>
CALL 919-757-6366<lb/>
today for more<lb/>
advertising information<lb/>
Announcements<lb/>
RECREATIONAL SERVICES<lb/>
Recreational Services will be<lb/>
sponsoring a Pirate Double Dare<lb/>
on Thursday, January 28, at 6:30<lb/>
pm. Double Dare is a special event<lb/>
in which teams of four attempt to<lb/>
answer questions worth certain<lb/>
amounts of points. The team with<lb/>
the most points at the end wins!<lb/>
There will be physical challenges,<lb/>
so be prepared to GET NASTY!<lb/>
Registration ends Tuesday, Janu-<lb/>
ary 26 at 5:00 pm, so register now.<lb/>
Call 757-6387 formore information.<lb/>
PRE-PHYSICAL THFRAPY<lb/>
OJUi<lb/>
The Pre-Physical Therapy<lb/>
Club will be having a meeting<lb/>
Thursday, Jan. 28 at 7:30 in<lb/>
Mendenhall, Room 221. Club Dues<lb/>
($2.00) will becollected at the meet-<lb/>
ing. All are welcome.<lb/>
COMMUNICATING TO<lb/>
ASSERT YOURSELF<lb/>
The Counseling Center is of-<lb/>
fering a two-session workshop for<lb/>
students deisgned to identify effec-<lb/>
tive communication techniques for<lb/>
acheiving assertiveness in your life.<lb/>
Emphasis will be placed on the<lb/>
impact of self-esteem in accomplish-<lb/>
ing assertive behavior. Call 757-<lb/>
6661 to sign up: participation is<lb/>
limited, socallearly! The workshop<lb/>
will be held in 313 Wright,Tuesday,<lb/>
January 26 and Thursday January<lb/>
28 from 9-10 am.<lb/>
GONATIONAI"<lb/>
Pay ECU tuition and study at<lb/>
another university! Easy applica-<lb/>
tion procedure. Contact Stephanie<lb/>
Evancho, 757-6769, for details, or<lb/>
stop by the International Programs<lb/>
office on 9th Street.<lb/>
GO INTERN ATION AIM<lb/>
Pay ECU tuition, room and<lb/>
board, and study at one of many<lb/>
foreign locations! No foreign lan-<lb/>
guage requirements for many sites!<lb/>
Contact Stephanie Evancho, 757-<lb/>
6769, for details or stop by the<lb/>
International Programs office on<lb/>
9th Street.<lb/>
GAMMA SIGMA SIGMA<lb/>
Service! Friendship! Equality!<lb/>
Attention all ECU females:Gamma<lb/>
Sigma Sigma, a national service<lb/>
sorority will hold its Spring<lb/>
Chatterings January 26-28 from 7-9<lb/>
pm in theCentral Campus Meeting<lb/>
Room located in the basement of<lb/>
Fleming Dorm. Refreshments and<lb/>
good company provided Formore<lb/>
in f orm a tion, con tact Bess, 757-2921<lb/>
or Beth, 757-2782.<lb/>
CAMPUS CHRISTIAN FEL-<lb/>
LOWSHIP<lb/>
Looking for a fellowship of<lb/>
Christians, a place to pray, study<lb/>
God's word, be involved in social<lb/>
and serviceprojects? Need a refuge<lb/>
from time to time? Campus<lb/>
Christian Fellowship may be what<lb/>
you are looking for. Our weekly<lb/>
meetings are at 7 pm Wednesdays<lb/>
at our Campus House located at<lb/>
200 E. 8th St directly across<lb/>
Cotanche St. from MendenhallStu-<lb/>
dent Center. Everyone is welcome.<lb/>
For more information, call Tim<lb/>
Turner, Campus Minister, at 752-<lb/>
7199.<lb/>
SPECIAL OLYMPICS<lb/>
The Greenville-Pitt County<lb/>
Special Olympics will be conduct-<lb/>
ing a T rack and Field coaches tra in-<lb/>
ing school on Saturday, February<lb/>
13 from 9 am-4 pm for all individu-<lb/>
als interested in volunteering to<lb/>
coach track and feild. We are also<lb/>
looking for volunteer coaches in<lb/>
the following sports: Swimming,<lb/>
Bowling, Gymnastics,<lb/>
Rollerskating, Powerlifting and<lb/>
Volleyball. No experience is neces-<lb/>
sary. For more information contact<lb/>
Greg Epperson at 830-4551.<lb/>
AMERICAN MARKETING<lb/>
ASSOCIATION<lb/>
The American Marketing As-<lb/>
sociation will hold a general meet-<lb/>
ing on Wednesday, Jan. 27, at 4 pm<lb/>
in Room 1032 of the General Class-<lb/>
room Building. The A.M.A. offic-<lb/>
ers and president Brian kerns will<lb/>
discuss the 1993 Spring semester<lb/>
agenda for the chapter and refresh-<lb/>
ments will be served following the<lb/>
meeting.<lb/>
SAM (SOCIETY FOR AD-<lb/>
VANCEMENT OF MANAGE-<lb/>
MENT)<lb/>
Spring organizational meeting<lb/>
Tuesday, Jan. 26th GC 1028 � 3:30<lb/>
pm. Current and new members are<lb/>
welcomed to attend. Refreshments<lb/>
will be served after the meeting.<lb/>
GAMMA BETA PHI<lb/>
Attention Gamma Beta Phi<lb/>
members! We will be having our<lb/>
first meeting of the semester Wed.<lb/>
Jan. 27th at 5 pm in General Class-<lb/>
room Building Room 1005. We look<lb/>
forward to seeing all of you there!<lb/>
EAST CAROLINA NATIVF<lb/>
AMERICAN ORGANIZATION<lb/>
All persons interested in join-<lb/>
ing the East Carolina Native Ameri-<lb/>
can organization there will be a<lb/>
meeting Jan. 26 at 6:30 pm until 7:30<lb/>
in Room 14 Mendenhall. You do<lb/>
not have to be Native American.<lb/>
Dues of $5.00 will be collected.<lb/>
PUSH. THROUGH THF<lb/>
BARRIERS<lb/>
If you would like to work to-<lb/>
wards reducing the architectural,<lb/>
as well as the attitudinal barriers<lb/>
that students with special needs<lb/>
are faced with every day, then come<lb/>
to the next meeting of P.U.S.H.<lb/>
(People United to Support the<lb/>
Handicapped). Meetings will be<lb/>
5:00 - 6:00 on Thursdays in Cotten<lb/>
Hall Lobby. Come join the fun<lb/>
ECU LACROSSE CM IB<lb/>
The ECU Lacrosse Club will<lb/>
hold a meeting on Thursday<lb/>
January 28 at 5:00 pm in Room 102<lb/>
Christenbury gym nas ium. Anyone<lb/>
interested in playing spring lacrosse<lb/>
should attend. For further<lb/>
information, contact Lake at 757-<lb/>
2465.<lb/>
PERFORMING ARTS SFRIFS<lb/>
Martha Graham is considered<lb/>
oneof the first innovatorsof modem<lb/>
dance. The Ensemble will perform<lb/>
on Friday, January 29,1993, at 8:00<lb/>
pm presenting a dance program<lb/>
that showcases Graham's style �<lb/>
one that focuses on breathing<lb/>
techniques. The dancers'<lb/>
movements unfold, oriental-style,<lb/>
from the center of the body, and<lb/>
they wear loose-fitting clothing, a<lb/>
Graham trademark.<lb/>
SPRING LECTURE SERIFS -<lb/>
NEW WORLD MEETS OLD<lb/>
The Culinary Encounter: Im-<lb/>
pact of New-World Food Crops,<lb/>
1492-1992. John Sabella,<lb/>
Agricultural Consultant,<lb/>
Greenville, NC Jan. 28 (Thursday),<lb/>
7:30 pm, NBrewster Bldg Room<lb/>
C103 ECU campus. Dr. Sabella is<lb/>
concerned about the loss of genetic<lb/>
diversity among food-crop plants<lb/>
and their undomesticated relatives<lb/>
still growing in the wild. He will<lb/>
address this long-tem problem in<lb/>
the context of how agricultural<lb/>
practices change in response to<lb/>
economic and political<lb/>
considerations.<lb/>
COUNSELING CENTER<lb/>
Gay, Lesbian, and Bisexual:<lb/>
This weekly group experience<lb/>
intends tooffer a safe and accepting<lb/>
environment in which to share<lb/>
feelings and concerns. The<lb/>
challenges presented by alternative<lb/>
lifestyles in a homophobic society<lb/>
will be discussed. Please call 757-<lb/>
6661 for an appointment and more<lb/>
information.<lb/>
ECU LAW HONOR SOCIETY<lb/>
The ECU Law Honor Society<lb/>
will be holding their first meeting<lb/>
of Spring semester on Monday,<lb/>
February 1, 1993 at 5:15 in 218<lb/>
Ragsdale. New members are<lb/>
invited to attend and become<lb/>
involved in interesting discussion<lb/>
of various legal issues and careers.<lb/>
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111 ' ' ' " ��<lb/>
- fi' ,<lb/>
V- �<lb/>
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AEOB 0n AX AEOKAKXAXAOKOKTnKAnKOXNIOKT<lb/>
Tues. DELI NIGHT with the ladies of XQ<lb/>
Wed. PIZZA with the ladies of AO<lb/>
Thur. BARBECUE with the ladies of AGTI<lb/>
Ben<lb/>
Tues. FIESTA NIGHT<lb/>
Wed. BASKETBALL NIGHT (chips &amp; salsa)<lb/>
Thur. FIESTA NIGHT<lb/>
AX<lb/>
Tues. PIZZA<lb/>
Wed. SANDWICH B AR with the ladies of AO<lb/>
Thur. SUB NIGHT with ladies of XQ<lb/>
KL<lb/>
Tues. HOR'SDOURVES with the ladies of AEA<lb/>
Wed. PARTY SUBS with the ladies of AAFI<lb/>
Thur. PIZZA with the ladies of AO<lb/>
AXA<lb/>
Tues. SLIDE SHOW, REFRESHMENTS with the ladies of XQ<lb/>
Wed. SLIDE SHOW, REFRESHMENTS with the ladies of AZ<lb/>
Thur. REFRESHMENTS with the ladies of III<lb/>
Interfraterr<lb/>
Spring B<lb/>
January 26<lb/>
ELIZABETH<lb/>
axaT<lb/>
ASt<lb/>
TTKA<lb/>
.ITC<lb/>
DlCKINSON<lb/>
14th<lb/>
LOOKER<lb/>
TTKt<lb/>
2nd<lb/>
3rd<lb/>
4th<lb/>
5th<lb/>
DOWN-<lb/>
TOWN<lb/>
READE<lb/>
ecu<lb/>
10th<lb/>
nth<lb/>
GREENVILLE<lb/>
AI0<lb/>
Tues. LUAU with the ladies of AOn<lb/>
Wed. OLYMPIC GAMES with the ladies of FIA<lb/>
Thur. GRAFFITI NIGHT<lb/>
IlKA<lb/>
Tues. SUBS with the ladies of AO<lb/>
Wed. SHISH KEBABS with the ladies of XQ.<lb/>
Thur. PIZZA with the ladies of A Afl<lb/>
0KF<lb/>
Tues. DELITR<lb/>
Wed. BURGER:<lb/>
Thur. SANDWK<lb/>
Sponsored By:<lb/>
KA<lb/>
Tues. HICKORY HAMS with the ladies of III<lb/>
Wed. WARREN'S "HOT" DOGS with the ladies of AEA<lb/>
Thur. ST. CHARLES OYSTER BAR with the ladies of EQ<lb/>
GOG<lb/>
Pepsi Cola Bottling Company of G. enville, NC<lb/>
Transportation will be available Tuesday 26th - Friday 2S<lb/>
at every dorm every 30 minutes from 8 to<lb/>
For Further Inforn<lb/>
XAOKOKTnKAnKOSNZOESnETrTKEGSOEEnXTrT<lb/>
f<lb/>
' .<lb/>
 l �<lb/>
<pb facs="00058361_0007"/><lb/>
T�r�<lb/>
iiV 'r�ii �<lb/>
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nKTrTKEGXAEOBGnAXAXOKAKXAXAOKOKTnKAn<lb/>
lity Council's<lb/>
Aish 1993<lb/>
-29 8-11 p.m.<lb/>
DKT<lb/>
Tues. SUBS with the ladies of XO<lb/>
Wed. HOR'S DOUVES with the ladies of AZ<lb/>
Thur. PIZZA with the ladies of AEA<lb/>
liko<lb/>
Tues. PIGPICKIN<lb/>
Wed. 1st ANNUAL BEST SUB in Greenville Contest<lb/>
Thur. TOGA, VIDEOSLIDE SHOW<lb/>
IOE<lb/>
Tues. CHICKEN WINGS with the ladies of AAn<lb/>
Wed. OYSTERS with the ladies of III<lb/>
Thur. SUBS with the ladies of AHA<lb/>
in<lb/>
Tues. SUBS with the ladies of AZ<lb/>
Wed. Sorority Representatives<lb/>
Thur. PIZZA with the ladies of XQ.<lb/>
Tues. SUBS with the ladies of AO<lb/>
Wed. PIZZA with the ladies of AZ<lb/>
Thur. WET T-SHIRT CONTEST!<lb/>
OOCATIJftNS<lb/>
� rirTAR river<lb/>
 KY WOODLAWN , st CLUBHOUSE<lb/>
WOODLAWN ,st<lb/>
2nd<lb/>
3rd<lb/>
4 th<lb/>
5 th<lb/>
campus<lb/>
ELM<lb/>
-JSK<lb/>
KI<lb/>
CHARLES"<lb/>
TKE<lb/>
COLLEGE<lb/>
HILL<lb/>
KINGSTON<lb/>
PLACE<lb/>
14th<lb/>
BLVD<lb/>
AX<lb/>
fa with the ladies of AAn at AAn house<lb/>
I &amp; DOGS with the ladies of XQ at 106 Woodlawr<lb/>
:HE3with the ladies of AEA at 106 Woodlawn St.<lb/>
TKE<lb/>
Tues. PIGPICKIN'<lb/>
Wed. PIZZA with the ladies of AAn<lb/>
Thur. SUBS with the ladies of AEA<lb/>
0X<lb/>
Tues. BUFFALO WINGS<lb/>
Wed. PIZZA<lb/>
Thur. HOR'S DOURVES<lb/>
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Tues. REFRESHMENTS and Sorority Representatives<lb/>
Wed. REFRESHMENTS and the ladies of AOn<lb/>
Thur. REFRESHMENTS with the ladies of AO<lb/>
Sponsored By:<lb/>
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Warren's "HOT" Dogs, Greenville, NC<lb/>
m <lb/>
MfcEbv the East Carolina Transit Buses to pick up all rushees<lb/>
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�� ' �"��" ��<lb/>
<pb facs="00058361_0008"/><lb/>
��� �� � �<lb/>
7Vit? East Carolinian<lb/>
January 26, 1993<lb/>
Opinion<lb/>
Page 8<lb/>
Roe v. Wade viewed as liberal milestone<lb/>
<lb/>
Friday commemorated the 20th<lb/>
anniversary of one of the most important days<lb/>
in the freedom of choice movement, the Roe v.<lb/>
Wade decision.<lb/>
In 1973, the Supreme Court decided in<lb/>
this landmark case that a<lb/>
woman had the right to abort<lb/>
her pregnancy in the first<lb/>
trimester (three months) in<lb/>
conjunction with her doctor's<lb/>
"medical judgement in the<lb/>
second trimester, the state<lb/>
could regulate abortions "in<lb/>
ways that are related to<lb/>
maternal health and in the<lb/>
last trimester, the state could<lb/>
"regulate, and even<lb/>
proscribe" abortions with the<lb/>
exception of where the birth<lb/>
may endanger the mother's health<lb/>
More recently, the Supreme Court has<lb/>
the<lb/>
freedom of<lb/>
choice<lb/>
amendment is<lb/>
still very much<lb/>
in danger<lb/>
ECU sophomore Thomas Blue<lb/>
adoption and keeping the baby.<lb/>
Abortion is the right and the choice of the<lb/>
woman involved. Though this issue should not<lb/>
be without its regulations, over-regulating it is<lb/>
not the answer. Regulations should be in place<lb/>
to aid the mother in her<lb/>
decision, not hinder her once<lb/>
she has made that decision.<lb/>
The recent restrictions<lb/>
placed by the Supreme Court<lb/>
come dangerously close to<lb/>
harming the essential right of<lb/>
choice given to all Americans.<lb/>
Restrictions that are placed<lb/>
should be for the sole purpose<lb/>
of regulation; and that<lb/>
regulation should follow<lb/>
Wade's rule and be concerned<lb/>
with the health of the mother.<lb/>
The editorial board at The East Carolinian<lb/>
does not advocate the killing of babies; rather,<lb/>
placed certain guidelines and restrictions on we advocate the ability of a pregnant woman to<lb/>
the process of getting an abortion. In some make her own informed and knowledgeable<lb/>
states, a minor must get written permission choice about the matter,<lb/>
from her parents before getting an abortion Abortion is not the only alternative offered<lb/>
and some wives are required to get permission to a future mother; it is just one of many that<lb/>
from their husbands. she may choose from.<lb/>
Newly elected president Clinton honored Freedom of choice is an essential part of<lb/>
the anniversary by overturning the what America's forefathers dreamed that this<lb/>
controversial "gag rule" thathadbeen imposed, country could be. Limiting this freedom by<lb/>
This rule forbode any health centers from restricting the choice of having an abortion<lb/>
mentioning to pregnant women the option of only serves to mock the very document our<lb/>
having an abortion. Now, abortion has been forefathers based this country of ours on: the<lb/>
added to the list of alternatives that include United States Constitution.<lb/>
By Amy E. Wirtz<lb/>
Vegetarianism defined to uninitiated few<lb/>
Vegetarianism is not a<lb/>
dirty word. It is a legitimate<lb/>
lifestyle choice of millions.<lb/>
George Bernard Shaw saw a cer-<lb/>
tain beauty in it: "Think of the<lb/>
fierce energy concentrated in<lb/>
an acorn! You bury it in the<lb/>
ground, and it explodes into a<lb/>
great oak. Bury a sheep, and<lb/>
nothing happens but decay<lb/>
In a way, humans suffer<lb/>
from a sort of decay by eating<lb/>
meat continually in their diets.<lb/>
Clearly, vegetarian and near-<lb/>
vegetarian diets have medical,<lb/>
economic, political and hu-<lb/>
manitarian benefits that are<lb/>
enormous in their scope. Yet,<lb/>
we choose to ignore this, even<lb/>
when it has been reported by<lb/>
the U.S. surgeon general for<lb/>
several years that excess fat and<lb/>
cholesterol should be cut from<lb/>
our diets. Dr. Koop stated that<lb/>
our standard, fat-laden Ameri-<lb/>
can diet is "killing millions pre-<lb/>
maturely and ruining the lives<lb/>
of tens of millions Saturated<lb/>
fat and cholesterol come solely<lb/>
rrom animal products; there is<lb/>
no mystery in that.<lb/>
Granted, no one should<lb/>
tell you what toeat�thattends<lb/>
to be intensely personal. But<lb/>
everyone should be informed<lb/>
as to how hisher eating habits<lb/>
effect them and the entire<lb/>
planet. On the whole, vegetari-<lb/>
anism has gotten a bad rap. It<lb/>
has been considered something<lb/>
odd that some people get into,<lb/>
a practice that non-vegetarians<lb/>
tolerated. Dietary and nutri-<lb/>
tional organizations now agree<lb/>
that vegetarianism is beneficial<lb/>
to an overall healthy lifestyle.<lb/>
Well-planned vegetarian<lb/>
diets can reduce the risk of obe-<lb/>
sity, lower blood pressure and<lb/>
lower rates of diabetes. These<lb/>
diets also help people suffer less<lb/>
from hypertension, lung cancer,<lb/>
osteoporosis, kidney stones,<lb/>
gallstones and diverticular<lb/>
diseases.<lb/>
In addition to these obvi-<lb/>
ous health aspects, there are<lb/>
other valid reasons for the<lb/>
adoption of a vegetarian diet.<lb/>
These reasons include: (a) pres-<lb/>
ervation of the environment by<lb/>
eating foods low on the food<lb/>
"Think of the<lb/>
fierce energy<lb/>
concentrated in<lb/>
an acorn! You<lb/>
bury it in the<lb/>
ground, and it<lb/>
explodes into a<lb/>
great oak"<lb/>
George Bernard Shaw<lb/>
chain, (b) a solution to world<lb/>
hunger by decreasing the<lb/>
demand on the world's food re-<lb/>
sources, (c) low cost, since diets<lb/>
low in animal Proteins typically<lb/>
are less expensive than meat-<lb/>
based diets, and (d) philosophi-<lb/>
cal or ethical concerns,<lb/>
including opposition tocruelty<lb/>
to animals and attitudes toward<lb/>
violence.<lb/>
Many Americans choose<lb/>
to ignore the adverse effects<lb/>
that their diets have on others<lb/>
in this world. Some consider it<lb/>
"their own problem" and shrug<lb/>
it off as "none of anyone's<lb/>
business How wrong they are.<lb/>
According to Diet for a New<lb/>
America, over a billion people<lb/>
could be fed by the grain and<lb/>
soybeans eaten by U.S. livestock<lb/>
every year. That same livestock<lb/>
production accounts for more<lb/>
than half of all the water<lb/>
consumed (for all purposes) in<lb/>
the U.S.<lb/>
It is speculated that if<lb/>
Americans reduced their meat<lb/>
intake by just 10 percent, the<lb/>
savings in grains and soybeans<lb/>
could adequately feed 60 mil-<lb/>
lion people � the number of<lb/>
people who starve to death,<lb/>
worldwide, each year. Try and<lb/>
convince me that what you eat<lb/>
doesn't effect other people. It<lb/>
accounts for the significant<lb/>
reduction of tropical rainforests<lb/>
because of tree cutting for graz-<lb/>
ing land, the water shortages in<lb/>
so many areas of the world and<lb/>
even air and water pollution.<lb/>
I think it is the ignorance<lb/>
that disturbs me the most in<lb/>
this ongoing debate. People are<lb/>
simply not being educated to<lb/>
the benefits of vegetarianism.<lb/>
To make a difference, it<lb/>
doesn't take much. First, try eat-<lb/>
ing less meat. Then increase<lb/>
your intakeof fruits, grains and<lb/>
vegetables.<lb/>
Gradually, you'll find<lb/>
yourself eating less and less<lb/>
meat, and not even missing it.<lb/>
You start to lose the stomach<lb/>
for it and eventually end up<lb/>
disliking it completely.<lb/>
At least that's what hap-<lb/>
pened to me. I also developed a<lb/>
strange affection for cows, but I<lb/>
almost guarantee that won't<lb/>
happen to you. And one more<lb/>
thing: Happy vegging!<lb/>
The East Carolinian<lb/>
James R. Knisely, General Manager<lb/>
Blair Skinner, Managing Editor<lb/>
Arthur A. Sutorius, Advertising Director<lb/>
Elizabeth Shimmel, News Editor<lb/>
Karen Hassell, Asst. News Editor<lb/>
Dana Danielson, Lifestyle Editor<lb/>
Robert Todd, Sports Editor<lb/>
Warren Sumner, Asst. Sports Editor<lb/>
Sean Herring, Copy Editor<lb/>
Gregory Dickens, Copy Editor<lb/>
Dail Reed, Photo Editor<lb/>
Deborah Daniel, Secretary<lb/>
Joe Horst, Opinion Page Editor<lb/>
Richard Haselrig, Staff Illustrator<lb/>
Michael Albuquerque, Business Manager<lb/>
John Bullard, Circulation Manager<lb/>
Cori Daniels, Layout Manager<lb/>
Monique Campbell, Assistant Layout Manager<lb/>
Woody Barnes, Creative Director<lb/>
Matt MacDonald, Systems Manager<lb/>
The East Carolinian has served the East Carolina campus community since 1925, emphasizing information that affects<lb/>
ECU students. The East Carolinian 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/>
orreject 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/>
E5�Vi 1 mOBVK � W' <lb/>
jmk man<lb/>
m piscipun&amp;J<lb/>
A VIEW FROM ABOVE<lb/>
By T. Scott Batchelor<lb/>
Inauguration symbolistic, not reality-based<lb/>
"The terms of the President<lb/>
and Vice President shall end at<lb/>
noon on the 20th day of January<lb/>
 and the terms of their succes-<lb/>
sors shall then begin U.S. Con-<lb/>
stitution, Amendment XX, Sec-<lb/>
tion 1.<lb/>
At the time of this writing,<lb/>
Bill Clinton will have been presi-<lb/>
dent for about 75 hours. That's 75<lb/>
down, 34,965 to go. Yes, I'm count-<lb/>
ing.<lb/>
It's not that Mr. Clinton isn't<lb/>
a likeable sort of fellow that I<lb/>
mark the hours until his tenure<lb/>
expires. I'm sure he's a nice<lb/>
enough guy on a personal level.<lb/>
But his ideas are wrong-headed,<lb/>
and, contrary to what some may<lb/>
think, ideas do have conse-<lb/>
quences.<lb/>
Take his obsession with<lb/>
symbolism, for example.<lb/>
Clinton's pre-inaugural festivities<lb/>
absolutely oozed with symbolic<lb/>
gestures. There was a mass<lb/>
touchy-feely, Up-With-Change<lb/>
fete staged near the Lincoln Me-<lb/>
morial via HBO; Clinton took the<lb/>
same travel route to Washington<lb/>
that Thomas Jefferson took for<lb/>
his inauguration; there was even<lb/>
a replica of the Liberty Bell on<lb/>
hand which the president-elect<lb/>
could "ring in" change across the<lb/>
land. If Clinton's inaugural events<lb/>
became a work of literature, it<lb/>
would no doubt be an allegory.<lb/>
I half expected him to break<lb/>
out in a verse or two of "If I Had<lb/>
a Hammer But I guess that's<lb/>
brother Roger's department.<lb/>
Then there were the inau-<lb/>
gural balls. Several of them. I<lb/>
knowClintondeeplydesired that<lb/>
everyone in America could at-<lb/>
tend the inaugural celebration,<lb/>
but come on. This change of<lb/>
power sported more balls than a<lb/>
pool table. Clinton attended most,<lb/>
if not all, of the parties (qualify-<lb/>
ing for honorary statusasan ECU<lb/>
student).<lb/>
It was in association with<lb/>
these bashes that I first heard the<lb/>
word "people's" being bandied<lb/>
about. The melange at the Lin-<lb/>
coln Memorial was billed as "The<lb/>
People's Inaugural Celebration<lb/>
or something like that.<lb/>
Watch out for anything that<lb/>
begins "The People's  Com-<lb/>
munist North Korea calls itself<lb/>
the Democratic (there's a laugh!)<lb/>
People's Republic of Korea. Like-<lb/>
wise, Albania is The People's So-<lb/>
cialist (at least they're honest) Re-<lb/>
public of Albania. Come to think<lb/>
ofit, the People's Republic of Co-<lb/>
lumbia wouldn't be a bad name<lb/>
for Washington, D.C if it<lb/>
achieves statehood. (I'm all for<lb/>
truth for labeling.)<lb/>
This brings me to President<lb/>
Clinton's inaugural address. Of<lb/>
Bill Clinton<lb/>
will have been<lb/>
president for<lb/>
about 75<lb/>
hours. That's<lb/>
75 down,<lb/>
34,965 to go.<lb/>
this speech, the Greenville Daily<lb/>
Reflector wrote: "With a forceful<lb/>
inaugural speech punctuated<lb/>
with the themes of his campaign,<lb/>
Bill Clinton set the tone for the<lb/>
new administration, saying<lb/>
America must be bold to face its<lb/>
many challenges Bill Clinton's<lb/>
speech set the tone for his admin-<lb/>
istration, alright, and that tone<lb/>
was symbolism over substance.<lb/>
Let us review.<lb/>
Hard-line communist politi-<lb/>
cos in Russia threaten to reinsti-<lb/>
tute a pernicious form of govern-<lb/>
ment we saw emasculated dur-<lb/>
ing the Reagan-Bush years; in So-<lb/>
malia, people are still starving to<lb/>
death and dying from weapons<lb/>
fire; Bosnia-Hercegovina isa daily<lb/>
threat to neighboring European<lb/>
states; Iraq's Saddam Hussein<lb/>
continues to defy lawful U.N.<lb/>
sanctions despite repeated<lb/>
military reprisals from U.Sled<lb/>
forces; Pakistan has the A-bomb,<lb/>
or the ability to put one together,<lb/>
and may have destructive designs<lb/>
on India; the E.Cs Maastricht<lb/>
Treaty is looking a little green<lb/>
around the gills; and Haitians are<lb/>
fleeing their country for America<lb/>
in bathtubs, canoes and just about<lb/>
anything else that'll float.<lb/>
Clinton's speech didn't<lb/>
touch on these topics much. Al-<lb/>
ways the savvy politician, he<lb/>
stuck with the empty, misleading<lb/>
rhetoric which got him elected,<lb/>
most of which dealt with domes-<lb/>
tic issues.<lb/>
President Clinton spoke of<lb/>
the U.S. economy in a somber<lb/>
tone adopted by many a hand-<lb/>
wringing liberal. What he didn't<lb/>
mention was the fact that our<lb/>
economy, while not experienc-<lb/>
ing a boom, is growing steadily,<lb/>
healthily and is stable. He also<lb/>
didn't mention that fact that the<lb/>
recession, which became a rally-<lb/>
ing point for Clintonites during<lb/>
the campaign, ended in March of<lb/>
1991, and that we've been climb-<lb/>
ing out of it slowly and surely<lb/>
ever since then.<lb/>
On the social front, Clinton<lb/>
sprinkled his speech with the<lb/>
usual insipid platitudes so com-<lb/>
mon to Democratic rhetoric. It<lb/>
was a rehash of the ol "I feel<lb/>
your pain spiel. Well, here's a<lb/>
newsflash for you readers out<lb/>
there: regardless of what Bill<lb/>
Clinton says, there is little power<lb/>
in a president's purview to con- -<lb/>
trol social problems largely im-<lb/>
mune to government. "For ex-<lb/>
ample ascolumnistGeorge Will<lb/>
writes, "the inadequacy of edu-<lb/>
cation in grades K-12, and the<lb/>
urban regression in the midst of<lb/>
societal prosperity, are problems<lb/>
of cultural values, character, behav-<lb/>
ior and family breakdonm (italics<lb/>
added).<lb/>
Clinton said, "There is noth-<lb/>
ing wrong with America thatcan-<lb/>
not be cured by what is right with<lb/>
America<lb/>
Exactly. I only hope<lb/>
President Clinton really listened<lb/>
to what he said.<lb/>
FROM<lb/>
MAGAZINE<lb/>
When You Care Enough to Display Synthetic Emotion<lb/>
Hallmark Cards has staked its future on a new market�"nonoccasion" greetings. In<lb/>
other words, cards for people with nothing special to say and no holiday on which they<lb/>
feel obliged to say it. The 520 cards in Hallmarks "Just How I Feel" nonoccasion line<lb/>
are divided into seven categories, according to what feelings you, the buyer, are trying<lb/>
to express. Here are some of the messages; we've taken the liberty of clarifying<lb/>
Hallmarks rather vaguely worded feelings in order to make shopping even easier.<lb/>
Feeling: "Sorry I Smacked You Around<lb/>
Cover Art: Rolling waves in solemn<lb/>
turquoise and aquamarine<lb/>
Inscription: anger is a powerful thing.<lb/>
IT CAN START OUT SO SMALL, YETIT CAN<lb/>
TAKE ON A LIKE OF ITS OWN<lb/>
Feeling: "For the Abused Child in My<lb/>
Life<lb/>
Cover Art: Child's crayon drawing of<lb/>
tulips and a white picket fence<lb/>
Inscription: i know i havent always<lb/>
BEEN THE PERFECT MOM<lb/>
Feeling: "You'd Make a Great Second<lb/>
Husband<lb/>
Cover Art: Crayon drawing of a man in a<lb/>
child's wagon<lb/>
Inscription: i love to watch you<lb/>
WITH THE CHILDREN, BECAUSE ITS<lb/>
OBVIOUS YOU SHARE SOMETHING VERY<lb/>
SPECIAL<lb/>
Feeling: "The Threat of a Sexual-<lb/>
Harassment Suit Has Led Me to This<lb/>
Unconventional Approach<lb/>
Cover Art: Two sharp pencils and a cup of<lb/>
coffee<lb/>
Inscription: we cant choose the people<lb/>
WE WORK WITH, BUT SOMETIMES WE GET<lb/>
LUCKY AND WIND UP WORKING WITH<lb/>
SOMEONE SPECIAL.<lb/>
Feeling: " Was Just a Fling, Honest<lb/>
Cover Art: Watercolor seashore scene<lb/>
Inscription: i know that no words can<lb/>
MAKE UP FOR WHAT I'VE PUT YOU<lb/>
THROUGH. BUT, OVER TIME, I HOPE I CAN<lb/>
PROVE TO YOU THAT YOU CAN TRUST ME<lb/>
AGAIN<lb/>
f<lb/>
�i :<lb/>
��-<lb/>
<pb facs="00058361_0009"/><lb/>
The East Carolinian<lb/>
January 26, 1393<lb/>
Lifestyle<lb/>
Page 9<lb/>
The Connells' charm graces<lb/>
Emerald City's nightlife<lb/>
Raleigh band rocks the Attic<lb/>
By Stacy Peterson<lb/>
Staff Writer<lb/>
One simple word: Charm.<lb/>
If therehaseverbeenaband that<lb/>
knows when to hold back and when<lb/>
to deliver the big hooks, its Raleigh's<lb/>
own The Connells.<lb/>
Usingfhemind'sear,trytoimag-<lb/>
ineanatural imagery escapingamisty<lb/>
obscurity to travel on a level of rev-<lb/>
elation witheleganceinreserve.Now<lb/>
try to imagine the sameband visiting<lb/>
The Attic Jan. 24 and deliveringa set<lb/>
mat flowed like an electric wooden<lb/>
raft with a steady mid-tempo sail<lb/>
againstthe river of trendsand genres.<lb/>
In order to understand a band<lb/>
whose music flows like a conversa-<lb/>
tion among friends, we must strip<lb/>
awaytheouterveneerandtalkabout<lb/>
a plaintive shyness and animated<lb/>
playfulness mat has become a staple<lb/>
of The Connells.<lb/>
The Connells introduced what<lb/>
they jokingly call "New Stream"<lb/>
music in 1984 in and around Raleigh<lb/>
and Chapel Hill. The band began<lb/>
withMikeCoraefla�kinghisDrother<lb/>
and bassist, David, to help him start<lb/>
a band. Lead vocalist Doug<lb/>
MacMillan was brought in by the<lb/>
barid'sfirstdnimTner,whowassoon<lb/>
replaced by PedeWimberley,drum-<lb/>
mer for (at the time, punk band)<lb/>
Johnny Quest The last person to join<lb/>
was George Huntiey on guitar, key-<lb/>
boards and vocals.<lb/>
Guitarist Mike Connell had just<lb/>
finished passing the Bar exam tobe-<lb/>
come a lawyer, Huntiey was doing<lb/>
bio-statistician research, David<lb/>
Ccrff�ellfcrsakeahistorydegree,and<lb/>
MacMillan gaveuphisjobasaswim-<lb/>
ming instructor to collectively be-<lb/>
come "rock stars<lb/>
As a interesting point of refer-<lb/>
ence,DougMacMillanattendedECU<lb/>
from 1981 until 1984 whenhemoved<lb/>
toRaleigh to join The Connells. In an<lb/>
after-show interview, MacMillan re-<lb/>
flected on thoseyearsof pirateship. "I<lb/>
was on the swimming team, so I<lb/>
stayed up at Scott dorm said<lb/>
MacMillan. "I can remember sitting<lb/>
up in room 111-B listening to tapes of<lb/>
Mike's Connell songs, and trying to<lb/>
sing to them There seems to be<lb/>
something magical about "Pirate<lb/>
Pride" for MacMillan in that he still<lb/>
goes to ECU games. All during the<lb/>
show Thursday night at The Attic he<lb/>
kept yelling "Gimme Some Pirate<lb/>
to get the little pirate to move above<lb/>
fheexitdoor. AccordingtoMacMillan,<lb/>
perhaps the most noticeable change<lb/>
was the newspaper. "The East Caro-<lb/>
linian has gone color MacMillan,<lb/>
jokingly said.<lb/>
In he beginning The Connells<lb/>
played parties. The band had eight or<lb/>
nine originals, and when the band<lb/>
had to play two sets, the band would<lb/>
just play the same songs over again<lb/>
rearranging the order.<lb/>
By March of 1985 The Connells<lb/>
had landed their first single, "Darker<lb/>
Days on a Dolphin Records compi-<lb/>
lation called the More Mondo sam-<lb/>
pler.<lb/>
After hearing the single, North<lb/>
Carolina producerDonDixonoffered<lb/>
tostepinandproducesome songs for<lb/>
the band. Some of these songs were<lb/>
recorded and later released as Darker<lb/>
Days, the bands first full-length LP.<lb/>
The album was released in the UJK.<lb/>
cnDemonrecoro(co-ownedbyElvis<lb/>
Costello). Critics loved the record,<lb/>
and due to popular demand the al-<lb/>
bum was released on Black Park<lb/>
Records, The ConneU's and their<lb/>
managerfriend Ed Morgan's own<lb/>
label in the Unted States.<lb/>
Ata New Year's Eve 1986 show-<lb/>
case at the Brewery in Raleigh, Lets<lb/>
Activefrontmanand producer Mitch<lb/>
Easter noticed the band and was<lb/>
blown away by their performance.<lb/>
He offered to produce their next<lb/>
In Review<lb/>
Equal Affections<lb/>
By David Leavitt<lb/>
Weidenfeld &amp; Nicholson, 1989<lb/>
By Tammy Fedder<lb/>
Staff Writer<lb/>
A mother, a father, one son and one daughter; the basic American<lb/>
family unit<lb/>
"IualAf&amp;ctionsisabouttheG�rfarr<lb/>
the majority of the novel is set in the 1980s, Leavitt uses stories, memories<lb/>
and flashbacks to illustrate the family history previous to World War H.<lb/>
Nat Cooper was once his family's disappointment They couldn't<lb/>
understand why Nathad towaste his life with computers. Thatwas in the<lb/>
195&amp;.Aftetheirriusttybegantotakeoffmthe<lb/>
one. Nat is a professor of computer science.<lb/>
Louise is contentwifhherhusband She lrvesadecentlife,butforyears<lb/>
they have lived under trieshadowsLouise'srecurringcancer.Emotionally,<lb/>
she is reserved with her family and, as the story unfolds we find that Louise<lb/>
has a past she does not want her children to know about<lb/>
April Cooper is a musician. She began her career on the tail end of the<lb/>
protest movement of the early 70s. The author follows her life and career<lb/>
truoughboyfriends, then lovers, andfhefeministsnxjvementduringpost-<lb/>
Vietnam era. She is moderately successful in general, but very successful<lb/>
with women audiences. April lives constantly on the road, although she<lb/>
keeps a home in California.<lb/>
ThmtherebTvid.YcnmgerthanAprilbynineyears,heorKxidolized<lb/>
her.Hetravelled as part ofher entourage over two years. Then he metWait<lb/>
He never left New Haven again for any reason other than short trips.<lb/>
David and Walter are bothsuccessful lawyers. They haveahome in the<lb/>
suburbsandlrveaverydornesticlife. David ishappy with hislife and home<lb/>
in Connecticut Walter, on the other hand, is a little restless, and spends a<lb/>
growing amount of time at his computer communicating with strangers<lb/>
through a gay electronic mail network.<lb/>
Eleanor is Louise's younger sister. Eleanor and her husband spend a<lb/>
good deal oftinieincourtsuingpeopleorbeingsued.Alwaysonthelookout<lb/>
to make an easy buck, Eleanor and Sid have spent most their lives close to<lb/>
bankruptcy. Although she never will sayittohersister'sface,Eleanorcan't<lb/>
help but wonder why both her sister's children are gay.<lb/>
"Equal Affections" is about relationships, emotions and fears. It is<lb/>
aboutlivinganddyingand how one family deals with them. David Leavitt<lb/>
also wrote "The Lost Language of Cranes which you may recall, was<lb/>
producedonPBSlastfall.Both"LostLanguage"and "Equal Affections"are<lb/>
well-written novels. HBr those interested, they are in the stacks at Joyner<lb/>
Photo by Dail Read<lb/>
Doug MacMillan, lead singer for The Connells, was tickled to return to<lb/>
Greenville's Attic Thursday night.<lb/>
record Boylan Heights . In the fall of<lb/>
1987, it was released and quickly be-<lb/>
came a college favorite. The album<lb/>
scaled Rolling Stone's National Al-<lb/>
ternative chart (4) and stayed in the<lb/>
top ten for twosolid months. With the<lb/>
success of the single "Over There<lb/>
TVTRecords picked up the band and<lb/>
released fhealbumnationwide. With<lb/>
the success of this record the group<lb/>
began and seemingly endless tour.<lb/>
"Sometimesitgotrealtough;vvewent<lb/>
from having one case of beer on our<lb/>
rider to cases and a bottle of 'kickin'<lb/>
chicken MacMillan said.<lb/>
In 1989 The Connells recorded<lb/>
and released Fun &amp; Games. The<lb/>
album was produced by Gary Smith<lb/>
(Pixies, Throwing Muses), and the<lb/>
album's sound changed to a more<lb/>
raw, simple, live sound that landed<lb/>
The Connells in the top 10 of every<lb/>
See CONNELLS page 11<lb/>
'Body' considered<lb/>
dead on arrival<lb/>
By Gregory Dickens<lb/>
Staff Writer<lb/>
A large mansion at night. A<lb/>
blonde woman straddling an older<lb/>
man in bed. He is tied to the bedpost<lb/>
and later found dead. Investigators<lb/>
swarm the boudoir, picking clues<lb/>
and joking over the various equip-<lb/>
ment and accessories discovered<lb/>
there.<lb/>
The woman is later accused of<lb/>
murder during sex and the man<lb/>
assigned to help her becomes at-<lb/>
tracted to her while not yet con-<lb/>
vinced of her innocence.<lb/>
Basic Instinct, you ask? Nope,<lb/>
but the makers of Body of Evidence<lb/>
would love you to think of their<lb/>
movie so highly. Or be able to claim<lb/>
their product is as good as Paul<lb/>
Verhoven's thriller from last year.<lb/>
So does Body of Evidence measure<lb/>
up?<lb/>
Not even close. Rebecca Carlson<lb/>
(Madonna) is accused of seducing<lb/>
older men in order to get into their<lb/>
wills and then killing them with<lb/>
sex. No, really. Their heartsare feeble<lb/>
and they become soenthralled, they<lb/>
kick off. Frank Dulaney (Willem<lb/>
Dafoe)isherattorney,a family man<lb/>
who becomes attracted to her fe-<lb/>
tishes and attitudes. Body is a<lb/>
courtroom drama and during the<lb/>
trial, the DA uses her reputation as<lb/>
a wanton to portray her as afemme<lb/>
fatale . As Frank tires to fight the<lb/>
media and a hard-nosed judge (<lb/>
Lillian Lehman, in the movie's best-<lb/>
written role), he also is frustrated<lb/>
with the DA's evidence against<lb/>
Rebecca, especially when she tells<lb/>
him so little in her defense. Each<lb/>
revelation in the court leads to a sex<lb/>
scene in which Dafoe becomes more<lb/>
adventurous as Rebecca controls<lb/>
him more.<lb/>
Body suffers from not being<lb/>
able to exploit a good theme. Direc-<lb/>
tor Uli Edel is unwavering in his<lb/>
attempt to film a murder mystery<lb/>
but Brad Mirman has written a<lb/>
subtle tale of conflicting attitudes<lb/>
toward sex and how society views<lb/>
those outside sexual conservative-<lb/>
ness.<lb/>
Set in Portland, Or the movie<lb/>
has numerous references to an<lb/>
assumed collective attitude. Frank<lb/>
argues thafpeopleherehavepretty<lb/>
conservative viewsof sex Rebecca<lb/>
responds, "No they don't. They just<lb/>
don't talk about it The media<lb/>
covering the trial is cordoned off in<lb/>
a balcony, hoveringover the balcony<lb/>
like vulture but do they want to<lb/>
knowaboutthemurderorthelurid<lb/>
details of her sex life? Rebecca is<lb/>
also convinced the jury hates her.<lb/>
"The women think I'm a whore and<lb/>
the men see me as every chick that<lb/>
blew them off in a bar The DA<lb/>
tries to equate her libido with an<lb/>
ability tocommitmurder. He argues<lb/>
that her interest in S &amp; M makes her<lb/>
more capable of killing her lover<lb/>
than a sexually-passive woman.<lb/>
The true story in Body is Dafoe's<lb/>
seduction. Initially a devoted hus-<lb/>
band and father, he is amused and<lb/>
later enticed by her penchants. With<lb/>
each encounter, he is physically<lb/>
scarred in someway. She pours hot<lb/>
candle wax on him and later they<lb/>
make love while he lies on top of<lb/>
broken glass. It is a theme of sacri-<lb/>
fice involved in a new experience,<lb/>
an initiation of sorts. It also fore-<lb/>
shadows possible danger for him if<lb/>
their sex continues. His stigmas are<lb/>
comparable to Dimmesdale from<lb/>
"The Scarlet Letter" and Lucy and<lb/>
Mina's corruption in Bram Stoker's<lb/>
Dracula.<lb/>
Edel and Mirman try to keep<lb/>
the murder plot as tangible and<lb/>
debatable as the "did she or didn't<lb/>
she" ending of Instinct. However,<lb/>
the screenplay doesn't have near<lb/>
enough intrigue and detail. In fact,<lb/>
Body is lacking in comparison in<lb/>
many ways.<lb/>
Instinct isawell-photographed.<lb/>
See BODY page 11<lb/>
Art message conveyed through work<lb/>
Sparrow leans toward<lb/>
the dark and brooding<lb/>
By Mike Harrison<lb/>
Staff Writer<lb/>
Mendenhall hosted a series of paintings<lb/>
by ECU School of Art senior, William Craig<lb/>
Sparrow. The show ran from Jan. 10 -17.<lb/>
Sparrow's work represents a variety of<lb/>
art media and materials. Sparrow occasion-<lb/>
ally produces a vibrant painting, but most<lb/>
often paints works that Are dark and brood-<lb/>
ing.<lb/>
"Being able to relay messages through<lb/>
painting, other than the written word, is an<lb/>
important characteristic of an artist Spar-<lb/>
row said, adding he likes to choose subjects<lb/>
that he is familiar with.<lb/>
Choosing works for the show was a col-<lb/>
laborative effort by Sparrow, a professor, a<lb/>
painting faculty advisor, as well as an art<lb/>
education advisor. Sparrow also met the fac-<lb/>
ulty inMendenhall.Aftertheshowwasup,he<lb/>
had to present slides of the paintings to the art<lb/>
media center.<lb/>
Approval of individual paintings and<lb/>
their content was done by Sparrow and advi-<lb/>
sors. Nevertheless, subject matter was a less<lb/>
serious issue in Sparrow's show than the<lb/>
paintings' overall effectiveness.<lb/>
"I could tell by being with the work and<lb/>
seeing it everyday which pieces were weaker<lb/>
and which were stronger Sparrow said.<lb/>
"Sometimes space is a limiting factor<lb/>
when putting together a show Sparrow<lb/>
added, citing the Mendenhall showing as an<lb/>
example. He originally intended the gallery<lb/>
to show 22 to 23 paintings. Space limited the<lb/>
number to 19.<lb/>
"Criticism can be very difficult for an<lb/>
artist sometimes Sparrow said. "Being an<lb/>
art person and having your work scrutinized<lb/>
� literally trashed at times � by professors,<lb/>
you really ha ve to have a thick skin<lb/>
Sometimes a person's artistic taste is to-<lb/>
tally separate from what he paints he said.<lb/>
Adding, "the only thing a lot of people wan t<lb/>
are valentinesonthewallordeer pain tings�<lb/>
you know, these ducks-on- the-pond things <lb/>
'cute' things<lb/>
Sparrow said he thinks ECU School of<lb/>
Artisagreatart school. "I've been told thatthe<lb/>
Art School here is about the best in the state. I<lb/>
One of 19<lb/>
works by<lb/>
Sparrow<lb/>
that were<lb/>
on display<lb/>
Jan. 10-17.<lb/>
mean, nothing else can really touch it in the<lb/>
state<lb/>
Sparrow is from Snow Hill, a small town he<lb/>
said has a population between 2,000 - 3,000.<lb/>
His artistic interest gained notable head-<lb/>
way while attending a community college. He<lb/>
eventually transferred to ECU and is now con-<lb/>
centrating his art major in painting.<lb/>
He has worked all through college, han-<lb/>
dling every job from sales to driving a forklift<lb/>
truck. Hehasalso worked athis old high school,<lb/>
GreeneCentralHigh,teachingstudentstopaint<lb/>
Sparrow uses subjects in his works that<lb/>
have character. Old, weathered objects are his<lb/>
favorite. His paintings are sometimes mono-<lb/>
chromatic, often containing a lot of black paint.<lb/>
He paints to create an image of movement<lb/>
and energy. He said, "A lot of times I like my<lb/>
things to look fresh, like I just did them.<lb/>
"Most of the time I work in spurts. Oneday<lb/>
I might work five hours. One day I might work<lb/>
three to four<lb/>
Sometimes he leavesa particularworkalone<lb/>
fora longtime. When he works onitagain later,<lb/>
he can approach it with a fresh perspective.<lb/>
Sparrow said he likes to play tennis to relax<lb/>
and hasa large interestin reading. "In order to be<lb/>
an artist, you have to be literate, not just in your<lb/>
field he said. "I don't like TV very much<lb/>
Sparrow plans to go to graduate school,<lb/>
either here, Pennsylvania or out west. He also<lb/>
has plans tostudent teach in a publicschool later<lb/>
this year.<lb/>
Photo by Dai! Heed<lb/>
1" �<lb/>
ft<lb/>
Photo by Dail Reed<lb/>
William Craig Sparrow<lb/>
<pb facs="00058361_0010"/><lb/>
10 The East Carolinian<lb/>
JANUARY 26, 1993<lb/>
Ensemble to bring mythology, sexuality to Wright<lb/>
By Marjorie McKinstry<lb/>
Staff Writer<lb/>
The Martha Graham En-<lb/>
semble, a dance troupe designed<lb/>
to showcase the innovative tech-<lb/>
niques of Martha Graham, will<lb/>
display their unique talents<lb/>
Friday,Jan.29,at8 p.m. in Wright<lb/>
Auditorium.<lb/>
The dances will reflect the<lb/>
choreography of Graham that in-<lb/>
spired her repu ta tion as the leader<lb/>
of modern dance. The dancer's<lb/>
movements are oriental in style:<lb/>
all arms, legs and gestures unfold<lb/>
from the body. Breathing is also a<lb/>
major focus, because Graham<lb/>
Jikes to highlight what she con-<lb/>
siders the most "organic aspect of<lb/>
life Diaphragm con tractionsand<lb/>
releases are emphasized, creat-<lb/>
ing a sexual tension, since the<lb/>
movements originate "in the<lb/>
dancer's pelvis, creating a per-<lb/>
cussive angular movement<lb/>
Graham's ensemble also will<lb/>
d isplay her interest in mythology<lb/>
� Greek, Roman and Judeo-<lb/>
Christian. The dance "El<lb/>
Penitente" explains the relation-<lb/>
ship between religion, sin and re-<lb/>
pentance, but only uses three<lb/>
dancers, one to represent the<lb/>
Virgin, Magdalene and the<lb/>
mother.<lb/>
Sexuality is inherent in the<lb/>
Creek-inspired dances, in which<lb/>
Pholo by John White<lb/>
Anne Westwick and John White, part of the Martha Graham Ensemble,<lb/>
perform here in "Diversion of Angels<lb/>
Graham allows mythological<lb/>
characters like Medea, Jocasta,<lb/>
Phaedra and Clytemnestra to<lb/>
"bear the passions that humans<lb/>
like to recognize in themselves,<lb/>
but that Graham exposes with<lb/>
Bible Archaeology and<lb/>
Prophecy Fulfillment<lb/>
A Slide Presentation of<lb/>
Some Interesting Discoveries<lb/>
unflinching scrutiny Graham's<lb/>
choreography was designed to<lb/>
capture and communicate the in-<lb/>
ternal emotions humans experi-<lb/>
ence. Traditional steps are<lb/>
avoided, pointed graceful toesare<lb/>
ALFREDO'S<lb/>
New York Pizza By The Slice<lb/>
replaced by flat feet; hands vent<lb/>
anger, frustration and love, in-<lb/>
stead of languidly flowingaround<lb/>
the body.<lb/>
Such changes in choreogra-<lb/>
phy and subject choice define<lb/>
Graham's idea of modern dance,<lb/>
and explains why her style is so<lb/>
controversial. Few peopleare un-<lb/>
affected by Graham's interpreta-<lb/>
tion of dance�most fa 11 into two<lb/>
schools: those frustrated and irri-<lb/>
tated by her divergence from tra-<lb/>
ditional dance,and those inspired<lb/>
and fascinated by her use of cul-<lb/>
tures varying from Native Ameri-<lb/>
can mythology to the Bible.<lb/>
As the dancers pounce on<lb/>
stage Friday evening, it will be<lb/>
interesting to see how Greenville<lb/>
will respond to the Martha Gra-<lb/>
ham Ensemble.<lb/>
Check it Out<lb/>
Tickets are on sale at<lb/>
the Central Ticket<lb/>
Office, Mon. - Fri, 8:30<lb/>
a.m. to 6 p.m. Advance<lb/>
tickets are $7for stu-<lb/>
dents,$W for faculty I<lb/>
staff and $15 for the<lb/>
general public. Tickets<lb/>
at the door will he $15.<lb/>
Staff Reports<lb/>
East Carolina's travel adven-<lb/>
ture series continues Wednesday<lb/>
evening Jan.27, wi th theshowing<lb/>
of Israel a cinematic voyage<lb/>
through the holy places of Juda-<lb/>
ism, Christianity and Islam.<lb/>
The film, directed and pro-<lb/>
duced by Fran and Brooke<lb/>
Reidelberger,highlightsholidays<lb/>
suchasIsrael'sIndependenceDay,<lb/>
andhistoricareasjikeancientjaffa,<lb/>
the ruins of Caesarea and Bahai<lb/>
Temple.<lb/>
The film also explores some<lb/>
modem day towns and places,<lb/>
includingthebeachesofElat,Hula<lb/>
Valley agriculture and the Hula<lb/>
Ma tu re Reserve.<lb/>
Glimpses into personal lives<lb/>
alsoshow typical daily activities in<lb/>
a kibbutz.<lb/>
The film also features<lb/>
Bedouins in the Negev Desert and<lb/>
an emotional view of Hasidicsand<lb/>
Jews worshiping at the Wailing<lb/>
Wall.<lb/>
The birthplace of Jesus,<lb/>
Bethlehem, will be a major focus.<lb/>
Thecityofjerusalem brightens the<lb/>
screen as the city's spills over with<lb/>
"Christian Pilgrims visit the the<lb/>
Stations of the Cross and the<lb/>
Church of the Holy Sepulcher<lb/>
Free student tickets for the film<lb/>
series are available at the Central<lb/>
Ticket Office, and may be picked<lb/>
up in advance. Future films in the<lb/>
Travel Adventure Series will in-<lb/>
clude Highway to Alaska in March<lb/>
and Charm of the South in April.<lb/>
<lb/>
Reminder<lb/>
Lifestyle Writers<lb/>
Don't forget to sign payroll<lb/>
sheets by 5 p.m. today or<lb/>
you won't get paid!<lb/>
�<lb/>
Mendenhall Room 248<lb/>
7:15 pm<lb/>
Tuesday, January 26 &amp;<lb/>
Wednesday, January 27<lb/>
Apostolic Campus Ministry<lb/>
DOWNTOWN<lb/>
218 E. 5th St.�752-0022<lb/>
New<lb/>
HAPPY LUi KH oP�CA<lb/>
MON-SAT. 12:00-3:00PM<lb/>
$1.00<lb/>
PITCHERS<lb/>
PIZZA SLICES<lb/>
2 SODAS<lb/>
� DAILY 5-8 PM<lb/>
� BUY ONE GET ONE FREE<lb/>
2 FOR 2<lb/>
SPECIAL<lb/>
I DINNER MENU<lb/>
� 2 CALZONES, 2 STROMBOLIS<lb/>
2 BEERS, 2 DRINKS<lb/>
ANSWER FROM PAGE 2<lb/>
CLIPTHISADFOR<lb/>
$2.00 ADMISSION TO<lb/>
WED COMedY<lb/>
JAN 27. 93 .iSS1 <lb/>
zone ATiTir<lb/>
$1.50 HIBALLS � I � �<lb/>
$1.50TALL BOYS sthVa752 73�3<lb/>
ALL NIGHT LONG (V<lb/>
s<lb/>
STUDENT<lb/>
STORES<lb/>
LAST DAY<lb/>
TO RETURN<lb/>
TEXTBOOKS FOR FULL REFUND<lb/>
FEATURING AT THE<lb/>
TUESDAY JANUARY Z6TH<lb/>
lU43�IiY4<lb/>
MUST HAVE RECEIPT FOR<lb/>
FULL REFUND<lb/>
One Sfofr S6ofifeirtf<lb/>
ECU Sfudent Stores: More than just books�your dollars support student scholars<lb/>
Wright Building � 757-6731<lb/>
Rave<lb/>
�71 i �: I M �7iY4M<lb/>
CLASSICS NIGHT<lb/>
$3.00 Members $4.00 Guests<lb/>
0 DRAFT ALL NIGHT!<lb/>
D Teas &amp; Bahama Mamas � 50 Jello Shots � 75' kamikazes<lb/>
i:iU:M�7iV<lb/>
SWEET 16 NIGHT<lb/>
$1.00 Domestics � $2.75 Pitchers � $3.00 Teas &amp; Bahama Mamas<lb/>
50C Jello Shots � 75f Kamikazes � 75� 100 M.P.H.<lb/>
RUSH HOUR<lb/>
FREE Admission for All 7 til 9:00<lb/>
$3.00 Teas &amp; Bahama Mamas � S2 75 Pitchers � 50c Jello Shots<lb/>
75c Kamakazes � 75c 100 M.P.H<lb/>
sriUViUiiVi<lb/>
WEeKEnd<lb/>
DRNcE PaRTY<lb/>
<pb facs="00058361_0011"/><lb/>
JANUARY 26, 1993<lb/>
The East Carolinian<lb/>
11<lb/>
CONNELLS<lb/>
Continued from page 9<lb/>
alternative chart in existence. With all<lb/>
this new success the band began<lb/>
touring theUS selling out 1,000 seat<lb/>
venues even on the west coast<lb/>
In 1990 The Cornells toured Eu-<lb/>
rope for the first time en route to<lb/>
record One Simple Word with pro-<lb/>
ducerHugh Jones (Ultra VividScene,<lb/>
EchoardTheBunnymeaDelArnitri).<lb/>
Mike Cornell kept hearing fans say<lb/>
thattheband was muchmore power-<lb/>
ful live, so the band looked at the new<lb/>
record with adifferent goal in mind.<lb/>
Instead of imitatingtherecord live,let<lb/>
therecordimitatetheliveshow. Word<lb/>
stresses performance over studio<lb/>
tricks. During the recording it was<lb/>
common for the band to put in about<lb/>
15 hours a day.<lb/>
With all of this as back ground<lb/>
information, we come to Thursday<lb/>
night Jan. 21st, as the group pays one<lb/>
last visit to Greenville before its off to<lb/>
record their fifth album in February.<lb/>
Theshowbeganwithappearancesby<lb/>
BODY<lb/>
Gravity's Pull from Chapel Hill and<lb/>
Battersea Park from Raleigh opening<lb/>
up.<lb/>
The Connells took the stage a<lb/>
UrUeaftermidnightwifriafastversion<lb/>
of "Something To Say the crowd<lb/>
was impatient with excitement and<lb/>
wenrnuts,causingmeentirebuilding<lb/>
to shake.<lb/>
The band continued straight<lb/>
through with enough smiles and in-<lb/>
tensity to make the crowd rather than<lb/>
the band to feel at home. MacMillan<lb/>
dressed in the oldest ECU shirt still<lb/>
wearable, whirled and whipped<lb/>
stumpily around thestage while con-<lb/>
trolling the crowds every move with<lb/>
a microphone cord and pair of worn<lb/>
out glasses.<lb/>
In between songs it was fairly<lb/>
common for MacMillan tobombasti-<lb/>
cally sing bits of Burt Bacharach<lb/>
compostionsaswellasoldCarStevens<lb/>
tunes.<lb/>
The show ended with an acous-<lb/>
Continued from page 9<lb/>
tic version of "Hey Wow that took<lb/>
the crowd off of the roller coaster in<lb/>
order to allow them to return home.<lb/>
Thecrowdexperienced thepleas-<lb/>
ant afterglow of a good show, a pri-<lb/>
vateandpostcoital sort ofbuzz. Fight-<lb/>
ing and yelling over autograph seek-<lb/>
ers a short interview was held and I<lb/>
witnessedaincredibleglimpseofwhat<lb/>
the band is really like.<lb/>
One example is when MacMillan<lb/>
was trying to think of a quote, he was<lb/>
interrupted by a road crew member<lb/>
towhomhesaid "Shut up I'm giving<lb/>
aquote'TheinterviewslowIy turned<lb/>
into a storytelling session<lb/>
The Connells will be recording a<lb/>
newalbuminFebruaryinWoodstock,<lb/>
New York.<lb/>
According to Mike Cormell, the<lb/>
studio is located where Bob Dylan<lb/>
had his infamous motorcycle wreck<lb/>
in 1967. After hearing some of the<lb/>
new songs live, we should be in store<lb/>
for yet "Another Souvenir<lb/>
frenetic, sensual picture with com-<lb/>
plex charactersandgreatacting. The<lb/>
accused Catherine (Sharon Stone)<lb/>
was intelligent, cunning, seductive<lb/>
and intimidating; the '90s first real<lb/>
femmefatale. The story tackled the<lb/>
psychological effects of a sexual re-<lb/>
lationship without trust or bound-<lb/>
aries on a cop involved with the<lb/>
prime murder suspect. Body is a<lb/>
patchworkofstockcharacters,bland<lb/>
production and ridiculous dialogue.<lb/>
The interrogation scene is half-<lb/>
heartedly stolen from Instinct and<lb/>
details suchas malebondage (hand-<lb/>
cuffs vs. white silk), vague suspects,<lb/>
sexual murder, and homosexuality<lb/>
are directly lifted.<lb/>
It would have been more im-<lb/>
pressive if Edel had taken the effort<lb/>
to copy Instinct" cinematography,<lb/>
style and attitude. And Madonna,<lb/>
who is a vixen on stage and record,<lb/>
isunconvincmg and dull; a true lack<lb/>
of effort after her Breathless in Dick<lb/>
Tracy.<lb/>
Body just doesn't hold tension<lb/>
or surprise. In fact, if s difficult to<lb/>
say the movie holds your attention<lb/>
whentheaudienceislaughingwhen<lb/>
Madonna is slapped by Frank'swife.<lb/>
Or when Frank throws Rebecca to<lb/>
die floor in rage and frustration and<lb/>
she casually throws her robe open<lb/>
in earnest invite. Or when she de-<lb/>
scribes how she used to pick wild<lb/>
strawberries and appreciated their<lb/>
"sweetness" more when the wooden<lb/>
fence scraped her legsand the thorns<lb/>
caught her fingers.<lb/>
Instances like these make it ap-<lb/>
parent that Madonna chose this<lb/>
movie as a continuation of her<lb/>
heightened sexuality from "Erotica"<lb/>
and her "Sex" book.<lb/>
If the producers had the<lb/>
foresight to concentrate on her<lb/>
willingnesstobenudeand naughty<lb/>
and scrapped the murder plot<lb/>
altogether, then at least Body of<lb/>
Evidence would have been further<lb/>
removed from comparison with<lb/>
Basic Instinct and, perhaps, slightly<lb/>
more entertaining.<lb/>
The East<lb/>
Carolinian<lb/>
regrets<lb/>
wrongly<lb/>
identifying<lb/>
Alexis<lb/>
Hickman<lb/>
deft),<lb/>
second<lb/>
runner-up<lb/>
in the<lb/>
Miss<lb/>
Greenville<lb/>
Pageant<lb/>
on Jan.<lb/>
16, as<lb/>
Jennifer<lb/>
West in<lb/>
the Jan.<lb/>
19 issue.<lb/>
THIS<lb/>
KSJ 1 "Are you being served?"<lb/>
J Episcopal<lb/>
Student Fellowship<lb/>
Invites You to Join Us Each Week for<lb/>
WFDNESDAyNTGHT SANITY BREAK FROM CAMPUS!<lb/>
� 5:30pm Student Eucharist<lb/>
� Supper provided after service<lb/>
�ProgramConversation after supper<lb/>
� Add new friends to your life!<lb/>
� Bring an old friend with you!<lb/>
� Be apart of a faith community<lb/>
Newvideo series begins Wednesday, January 27th<lb/>
What?: "QUESTIONS OF FAITH"<lb/>
Where?: ST. PAUL'S EPISCOPAL CHURCH 401E. 4th Street<lb/>
(cross 5th Street in front of Garret Hall walk down Holly Street to 4th Street-You Are There!)<lb/>
C� Schedule of Services �i<lb/>
Sundays: 7:30,9:00,11:00 <lb/>
Campus Minister: Marty Gartman � 752-3482<lb/>
Tuesday<lb/>
College Night<lb/>
The Best Mix<lb/>
DanceTop 40<lb/>
&amp; Rock n Roll<lb/>
Free Cover untii 10:00<lb/>
Doors open at 8:00<lb/>
Wednesday<lb/>
Alive After Five<lb/>
Live Beach Music at 7:00<lb/>
Doors open at 5:30<lb/>
Thursday<lb/>
Coontemporary Country<lb/>
Live Country Music<lb/>
Doors open at 900<lb/>
v.zqNEt<lb/>
Friday<lb/>
Comedy Zone<lb/>
&amp; Late Night Dancing<lb/>
Doors open st 8:00<lb/>
Comedy Show at 9:00<lb/>
Saturday<lb/>
Super Saturday<lb/>
Greenville's<lb/>
Largest Dance Party ,<lb/>
Doors open at 9:00 ,&amp;<lb/>
'jirj a, a. a<lb/>
C C D D D D P<lb/>
The University Media Board<lb/>
seeks Editors and General Managers<lb/>
The University Media Board is seeking full-time students<lb/>
interested in serving in the following stipended posts<lb/>
for the 1993-1994 academic year:<lb/>
EDITOR<lb/>
Expressions minority students magazine ($175montnj<lb/>
EDITOR<lb/>
The Rebel fine arts magazine ($175month)<lb/>
GENERAL MANAGER<lb/>
The East Carolinian student newspaper<lb/>
(estimated 1992-1993 stipend $4,700)<lb/>
GENERAL MANAGER<lb/>
WZMB student radio station<lb/>
DAY STUDENT REPRESENTATIVE<lb/>
to the Media Board (no stipend)<lb/>
All applicants should have a 2.5 grade point average<lb/>
Contact: University Media Board<lb/>
2nd Floor, Student Publications Building<lb/>
Telephone 757-6009<lb/>
Deadline for Applications: 5 p.m. Monday, February 8<lb/>
nancacnn a n c<lb/>
I<lb/>
Telephone 355 5000<lb/>
207 SW Greenville Boulevard<lb/>
Greenville, NC<lb/>
2t2S�<lb/>
FREE<lb/>
BREADS<lb/>
2 SOFTS<lb/>
DRINK<lb/>
REVIEW '93<lb/>
Summer Student<lb/>
Leadership Opportunity Available<lb/>
EAST CAROLINA UNIVERSITY<lb/>
ORIENTATION STAFF<lb/>
Applications Available in<lb/>
Room 203 Erwin<lb/>
Beginning January 25, 1993<lb/>
Deadline For Completed Application<lb/>
is February 19, 1993<lb/>
At 4:00 PM<lb/>
GREENVILLE<lb/>
)TH Street ot Greenville Btv<lb/>
(next to Food Lion)<lb/>
757-1212<lb/>
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GREENVILLE<lb/>
393 Arlington Blvd.<lb/>
MEDIUM SIZE<lb/>
PLUS TAX<lb/>
756-7256 <lb/>
little Caesare)Pizza!Plzzar<lb/>
Two great pizzas! One low price: Alwaysl Always!<lb/>
<pb facs="00058361_0012"/><lb/>
Ttie East Carolinian<lb/>
January 26, 1993<lb/>
Lewis stays true to<lb/>
the game, next<lb/>
assist goes to kids<lb/>
Pirate star hopes to teach<lb/>
values to misguided youths<lb/>
By Jason Tremblay<lb/>
Staff Writer<lb/>
Senior James "Pookie" Lewis,<lb/>
in his final year as East Carolina's<lb/>
alternating forward and center, is<lb/>
preparingforhisimpendinggradu-<lb/>
ation with a sense of purpose, hope-<lb/>
ful and ready for a promising fu-<lb/>
ture.<lb/>
A Justice major focusing on ju-<lb/>
venile delinquency, Lewis hopes to<lb/>
one day aid troubled children in<lb/>
their reformation. Gting grade<lb/>
school counselors and probation<lb/>
officers as possible career options,<lb/>
Lewis feels sympathetic toward<lb/>
misguided youth.<lb/>
"I always wanted to do that,<lb/>
always just wanted to make a dif-<lb/>
ference in a kid because my life<lb/>
wasn't easy, and I thought I kind of<lb/>
got a feel for kids, you know, espe-<lb/>
cially delinquent kids or kids with<lb/>
problems Lewis said.<lb/>
Despite a troubled childhood,<lb/>
Lewis proudly proclaims the<lb/>
strength and love of his family, as<lb/>
well as his admiration for them.<lb/>
With 2 brothers and 3 sisters (com-<lb/>
monly known as Baaahb, Boo-Boo,<lb/>
Mynie, Dean, Pig, and of course,<lb/>
Pookie himself,) there seems to be<lb/>
no shortage of positive role models<lb/>
in the Lewis household. James is<lb/>
also very proud of his parents, and<lb/>
appreciates the chances that he has<lb/>
been given.<lb/>
"You really don't realize how<lb/>
lucky you are until you get away<lb/>
fromyour family Lewis said, "and<lb/>
I'd just like to say thanks to them<lb/>
Lewis comes to ECU from<lb/>
Batesburg, SC with a positive atti-<lb/>
tude about Pirate basketball.<lb/>
"We got something set out to<lb/>
provethisyear.I thinkalotof people<lb/>
got doubts about us, a lot of people<lb/>
don't believe in us, and I guess be-<lb/>
cause it's been a traditional thing<lb/>
for an ECU basketball team. We've<lb/>
got the talent and we've got the<lb/>
coaching to do it this year Lewis<lb/>
said.<lb/>
When asked aboutcompetition<lb/>
on the team. Lewis shrugs with Zen-<lb/>
like understandingand explainsIf<lb/>
you want to get some playing time,<lb/>
you better practice hard and show<lb/>
your talent and give 110 percent. If<lb/>
you don't, they're there to take your<lb/>
spot<lb/>
With his final season almost<lb/>
half over, Lewis looks back on his<lb/>
basketball career as a positive learn-<lb/>
ing experience, one which he will<lb/>
miss.<lb/>
"Yeah, in a way I think I'm<lb/>
going to miss it a little, you know,<lb/>
being away from basketball and<lb/>
everything, but life goes on. The<lb/>
experience and stuff I have learned<lb/>
from basketball have prepared me<lb/>
for what I have to confront later on<lb/>
in the future said Lewis.<lb/>
Regarding the renovationof the<lb/>
Minges athletic facility in 1994,<lb/>
Sports<lb/>
Page 12<lb/>
Photo by Dail Rd<lb/>
LOOK! James Lewis finds a path for the ball despite his self-inflicted<lb/>
blindness. He vision for the future is much more clear.<lb/>
Lewis maintains an attitude of de-<lb/>
tached benevolence about the<lb/>
project, owing to the fact that he will<lb/>
never play in the improved facility<lb/>
professionally.<lb/>
"Thenewkidsareexcited about<lb/>
it Lewis said I think it will bring<lb/>
a different typeof atmosphere here,<lb/>
but ECU players are playing in<lb/>
something new, and they want to<lb/>
establish themselves in that place. I<lb/>
won't get a chance to play in it he<lb/>
adds, "but still, I think if s some-<lb/>
thing good towards the sport<lb/>
Lewis believes that the im-<lb/>
proved facility will bringmore sup-<lb/>
porters to tine ECU home games,<lb/>
and says that the fans are an impor-<lb/>
tant aspect of the game for the ath-<lb/>
letes.<lb/>
"Just come out and talk to us<lb/>
Lewis said, "askus,you know,how's<lb/>
everything, how's practice going,<lb/>
and showing they're concerned,<lb/>
which they've been doinga good job<lb/>
of so far. We appreciate stuff like<lb/>
that, that gives us an extra boost to<lb/>
do better<lb/>
Swimmers make a<lb/>
winning splash<lb/>
By Brent St Pierre<lb/>
Staff Writer<lb/>
Quick quiz! What is the most<lb/>
successful athletic program this<lb/>
year at ECU?<lb/>
A. Football,<lb/>
B. Men's Basketball,<lb/>
C. Women's Basketball or<lb/>
D. Men's and Women's<lb/>
Swimming?<lb/>
If you answered "A" it is ob-<lb/>
vious you are having flashbacks<lb/>
from last year and are suffering<lb/>
from severe football withdrawal<lb/>
symptoms. If you answered "B"<lb/>
or "C" it is equally obvious that<lb/>
you are innocently mistaking<lb/>
ECU basketball with its more suc-<lb/>
cessful twin brother in Chapel<lb/>
Hill. Thatonly leaves one answer,<lb/>
the correct answer. "D the men's<lb/>
and women's swim team.<lb/>
East Carolina's swim teams<lb/>
are off to their greatest start ever.<lb/>
The men are 10-0 and have yet to<lb/>
be challenged.<lb/>
The women are 9-1 and in<lb/>
position to post the greatest one-<lb/>
year turn around in the 13 years<lb/>
that Coach Rick Kobe has been<lb/>
involved with ECU swimming.<lb/>
On Jan. 16 the Pirates<lb/>
drowned the Duke Blue Devils.<lb/>
Last year the Devils handled<lb/>
the Pirate's easily, defeating the<lb/>
men 132-111 and the women 129-<lb/>
114.<lb/>
But a year later, the emer-<lb/>
gence of a loaded freshmen class<lb/>
had the Pirate's poised for re-<lb/>
venge.<lb/>
Chanting the cry "Dookie<lb/>
doesn't swim it floats" the Pirates<lb/>
went forth and buried tile visit-<lb/>
ing Blue Devils from Durham.<lb/>
The men were victorious 147-88<lb/>
while the women won 129-111.<lb/>
The victory by the men tied the<lb/>
ECU record for consecutive vic-<lb/>
tories at eight.<lb/>
On Friday, the Pirates hosted<lb/>
the College of Charleston. Kobe's<lb/>
Pirates had little trouble in route<lb/>
to a 129-96 pasting of the Cougar<lb/>
women. Weary that the upset<lb/>
minded Cougar's might feel that<lb/>
the luck of their basketball team<lb/>
may have rubbed off on their<lb/>
swim team, Kobe's men quickly<lb/>
reminded them that this is not<lb/>
basketball and we are not Geor-<lb/>
gia Tech. The men rolled to a 123-<lb/>
81 victory.<lb/>
The men were led by a pair of<lb/>
triple-winners, Patrick Cassidy<lb/>
and Brian Soltz. The ladies had<lb/>
three triple-winners in Tia<lb/>
Pardue, Beth Humphry and<lb/>
Jackie Schmieder.<lb/>
The Pirate's had little time to<lb/>
savor their victory because the<lb/>
Monarchsof Old Dominion were<lb/>
coming to Minges next.<lb/>
This important conference<lb/>
meet served as a calling card to<lb/>
the rest of the Colonial Athletic<lb/>
Conference.<lb/>
The Ladies swam to an easy<lb/>
134-95 victory. They were led by<lb/>
triple-winner and senior co-cap-<lb/>
ta?n Tia Pardue.<lb/>
The men were equally as im-<lb/>
pressive, winning 126-100. The<lb/>
men were led by triple-winners<lb/>
Derrick Nelson and Brian Soltz.<lb/>
Kobe was pleased to say the least.<lb/>
"The victory by the men<lb/>
broke the all-time consecutive<lb/>
wins record and puts us in posi-<lb/>
tion to win the CAA champion-<lb/>
ships Kobe said. "The win by<lb/>
the ladies ties the greatest start<lb/>
See SWIM page 14<lb/>
�<lb/>
rs�Wmm<lb/>
1 pcuVS.Fla.At Ian;m<lb/>
ECU (74)<lb/>
Minfgftrb<lb/>
m-am-ao-taPfp<lb/>
Jones 1234i04)0-1008<lb/>
Lyons 257-163-43-42019<lb/>
Richardson 140-10-01-1320<lb/>
Hunter 291-50-53-5112<lb/>
Young 113-50-13-5136<lb/>
Peterson 29M4-11-15112<lb/>
Gill 294-94-64-82212<lb/>
Armstrong 51-1OOOO032<lb/>
Lewis 182-42-42-3016<lb/>
Copeland281-45-72-6127<lb/>
Totals 20025-5718-3122-38151574<lb/>
Percentages: FG - .439, Ft. 580,3 pt Goals: 6-20 -<lb/>
300, Team Rebounds - 4, Blocked Shots - 3,<lb/>
Turnovers -16, Steals -10.<lb/>
Florida Atlantic(60)<lb/>
Minfgftrb<lb/>
m-am-ao-taptP<lb/>
Horford61-20-00-0002<lb/>
Saab182-31-10-2015<lb/>
Eddcn191-22-42-2454<lb/>
Hazell34 12-196-81-70430<lb/>
Harvey223-50-03-4306<lb/>
Yeadon141-40-01-1012<lb/>
Brown211-50-00-1142<lb/>
Hitter272-70-01-2035<lb/>
Cargill241-2OO2-5132<lb/>
Bdlan90-1OO0-0000<lb/>
Wilcox60-02-21-1132<lb/>
Totals200 24-5011-15 12-31102460<lb/>
Percentages: FG - .480, Ft 733,3 pt Goals: 1-8 -<lb/>
.125, Team Rebounds - 6, Blocked Shots - 2,<lb/>
Turnovers -19, Steals - 5.<lb/>
1st half 2nd half OT<lb/>
ECU<lb/>
Fla. Atlantic<lb/>
45<lb/>
29<lb/>
29<lb/>
31<lb/>
Final<lb/>
74<lb/>
60<lb/>
Work Ethic:<lb/>
ECU out-<lb/>
muscled and<lb/>
out-husted<lb/>
the over-<lb/>
matched the<lb/>
Div. II Owls.<lb/>
How many<lb/>
licks does it<lb/>
take to get to<lb/>
the center of<lb/>
a Tootsie<lb/>
Pop? The<lb/>
world may<lb/>
never know.<lb/>
Photo by Biff Ranson<lb/>
Payne's Bucs go Owl-hunting<lb/>
By Warren Sumner<lb/>
Assistant Sports Editor<lb/>
The ECU men's basketball team,<lb/>
plagued by the tough competition in the<lb/>
CAA conference, has faced many tough<lb/>
teams,as is reflected in thePirates'6-o record.<lb/>
They have been forced to scratch and claw in<lb/>
every contest they have played, just to have<lb/>
a chance of winning, or at least not getting<lb/>
blown out<lb/>
How relieved the Pirates must have<lb/>
beenafter their 7460thrashingoftheFlorida<lb/>
Atlantic Owls in Minges on Thursday night<lb/>
The Pirates never trailed against the<lb/>
Division II Owls and outmatched their op-<lb/>
ponents from the outset of the game. Strong<lb/>
inside shooting by Anton Gill and Curley<lb/>
Young dominated the Owls in the first half<lb/>
as the Pirates put together a 11-0 run mid-<lb/>
way through the period to knot the score at<lb/>
30-12. An Owl timeout was calledat833, but<lb/>
was answered with a Lester Lyons three-<lb/>
pointer. The Owls attempted a comeback<lb/>
led by theoutsideproduction of guard Elvin<lb/>
Hazell,butthePirates,relyingontheirphysi-<lb/>
cal advantage, took a 16-point lead to the<lb/>
locker room at halftime.<lb/>
Both teams came out gunning when<lb/>
play resumed as the contest became a scor-<lb/>
ing exhibition at the beginning of the second<lb/>
half. Lester Lyons and Hazell traded slam<lb/>
dunks and outside shots, but the superior<lb/>
talent on the Pirate squad overwhelmed the<lb/>
Owls. The Pirates, despite outmatching the<lb/>
Owls on die inside, put forth a perimeter<lb/>
onslaught to put Florida Atlantic behind by<lb/>
18 with 5:00 remaining. The Owls then pro-<lb/>
ceeded with a desparation "foul-a rama" to<lb/>
try to pull closer with 73 percent shooting<lb/>
from the line, but could not bridge the gap<lb/>
the Pirates had built throughout the game.<lb/>
ECU pool tournaments break out<lb/>
By Billy Weaver<lb/>
Staff Writer<lb/>
The ECU men's Billiards Tourna-<lb/>
ment, held Thursday Jan. 21 in<lb/>
Mendenhall, saw 32 players contending<lb/>
for the title. The tournament was open to<lb/>
all ECU students, with the only re-<lb/>
quirement being a minimum 2.0<lb/>
g.p-a.<lb/>
Lynn Jobes, Director of<lb/>
Student Union, said that this<lb/>
year's competition entries<lb/>
were "slightly down from<lb/>
last year which may be a<lb/>
result of the recently instated<lb/>
2.0 g.p.a. requirement.<lb/>
"We would rather have less en<lb/>
tries and higher academics she said.<lb/>
The lower numbers, however, only en-<lb/>
hanced the intensity of the competition.<lb/>
Each contestant was shooting for the<lb/>
chance to represent ECU in the Associa-<lb/>
tion of College Unions-International re-<lb/>
gional tournament held at the Univer-<lb/>
sity of Tennessee, in Knoxville.<lb/>
Last year's winner, Rodney<lb/>
Strickland, was eliminated in<lb/>
the final four by Shawn<lb/>
Bartley. Winning first<lb/>
place from the "losers"<lb/>
column in this double elimi-<lb/>
nation contest, Bartley will<lb/>
ay the winner of the best 2-of-<lb/>
3 between Lewis Croom and Devin<lb/>
Scully. Both Scully and Croom being<lb/>
undefeated throughout the tournament,<lb/>
Bartley must defeat the winner twice in<lb/>
order to advance to the regionals in Ten-<lb/>
nessee. These final three contestants will<lb/>
shoot it out Feb. 4 at 7 p.m. in the<lb/>
Mendenhall Billiards Center.<lb/>
Check it Out<lb/>
There will also be a<lb/>
women's preliminary<lb/>
held tonight at 7 p.m.<lb/>
in the Mendenhall<lb/>
Student Center.<lb/>
Lady Pirates<lb/>
earn first<lb/>
CAA victory<lb/>
By Kevin Hall<lb/>
Staff Writer<lb/>
trying to erase the goose-egg in<lb/>
the win column of their conference record,<lb/>
the East Carolina Lady Pirate basketball<lb/>
teambattled AmericanUniversity inMinges<lb/>
Coliseum Friday night.<lb/>
Head coach Rosie Thompson was<lb/>
pleased with her team's performance and,<lb/>
moreimportantly,their first conferencewin.<lb/>
"We won and that'salwaysgood<lb/>
Coach Thompson said, after the 70-62 vic-<lb/>
tory. "We shot the ball well from the out-<lb/>
side, and Toina (Coley) continues to play<lb/>
good defense for us<lb/>
Coley, a Senior guard,<lb/>
p:ckpocketed the Lady Eagles five times, to<lb/>
improve her conference best steals total to<lb/>
52. Coley also scored a career high22 points.<lb/>
The Pirates grabbed an early 7-0<lb/>
lead, but American was able to creep back<lb/>
into the game. ECU was charged with eight<lb/>
fouls before American received their first<lb/>
The partisan Pirate fans on hand in Minges<lb/>
voiced their displeasure to the referees<lb/>
throughout the game.<lb/>
However, the Pirates led the entire<lb/>
way, except for a 21-21 tie with 6:15 left in<lb/>
the first half. ECU fired back with one of<lb/>
their many offensive spurts to extend the<lb/>
lead to 31-21, before the Eagles closed the<lb/>
gap to 31-27 at the half.<lb/>
Less than a minute into the second<lb/>
half, American's first-half scoring leader<lb/>
Karen Jenkins went down with a knee in-<lb/>
jury. The Eagles played without her ser-<lb/>
vices for the remainder of the game.<lb/>
ECU grabbed several 10-point<lb/>
leads in the second half, but the stubborn<lb/>
Eagles hung tough and cut the lead to 52-49<lb/>
with 7:00 left, but didn't get any closer.<lb/>
ECUexploded ona 15-2 run, keyed<lb/>
by some nice no-look passes by seniorpoint<lb/>
guard Gaynor ODonnell.<lb/>
O'Donnell, the nation's assist<lb/>
leader, dished out 12 and also scored ten<lb/>
points. CAA leading scorer Rhonda Smith<lb/>
continued her bid for conference player of<lb/>
the year, achieving her seventh double-<lb/>
double of the year with 15 points and 11<lb/>
boards.<lb/>
In order to stay close in this year's<lb/>
conference race, the defending CAA regu-<lb/>
lar season champion Pirates desperately<lb/>
needed this victory. ECU improved to 7-5<lb/>
overall and 1-2 in theCAA. American fell to<lb/>
6-7,1-2.<lb/>
BU vs.Ameiiiwi<lb/>
ECU (70)<lb/>
Minfgftrb<lb/>
m-am-ao-taPf�P<lb/>
Coley 367-138-84-72422<lb/>
Cagle 10-00-0OO000<lb/>
OTonnell394-111-20312510<lb/>
Thurman 274-604)2-4348<lb/>
Smith 275-125-74-113415<lb/>
Baker 90-10-00-1100<lb/>
Samuels 352-62-31-6026<lb/>
Blackmon 263-73-63-4129<lb/>
Totals 20025-5619-26 16-40 22 21 70<lb/>
Percentages: FG - .446, Ft. 731,3 pt. Goals: 1-5 -<lb/>
.200, Team Rebounds - 4, Blocked Shots -1,<lb/>
Turnovers - 21, Steals -11.<lb/>
American(62)<lb/>
Minfgftrb<lb/>
m-am-ao-ta?f�P<lb/>
Dorfmeijter.B. 60-22-204)002<lb/>
DorfmelMer,A.200CM)OO010<lb/>
Turner 282-91-13-4235<lb/>
Connell 90-30-01-2210<lb/>
Keller 262-95-83-8149<lb/>
Dorezas 141-31-22-2333<lb/>
Baker 141-304)34132<lb/>
Greenfield 92-30-03-3004<lb/>
Jenkins 142-32-30-1226<lb/>
Wilkins 296-132-5OO1315<lb/>
Hirschler 19440-12-5008<lb/>
loseoski 303-112-24-9108<lb/>
Totals 20033-7019-29 11-49 24 20 95<lb/>
Percentages: FG - .343, Ft. 625,3 pt. Goals: 1-10 -<lb/>
.100, Team Rebounds - 7, Blocked Shots -1,<lb/>
Turnovers - 24, Steals -15.<lb/>
1st half 2nd half<lb/>
J<lb/>
�'<lb/>
Photo by Biff Ranson<lb/>
Got 'Em! Point guard Gaynor O'Donnell<lb/>
chalks up another assist.<lb/>
,<lb/>
<pb facs="00058361_0013"/><lb/>
13 The East Carolinian<lb/>
JANUARY 26, 1993<lb/>
Rugby team prepares for championship<lb/>
Team must<lb/>
rebuild to defend<lb/>
N.C. title<lb/>
By Jason Webb<lb/>
Staff Writer<lb/>
Taking up where they left<lb/>
off last fall, the Pirate Rugby<lb/>
Club has started preparing a<lb/>
defense of its eastern North<lb/>
Carolina Collegiate Champion-<lb/>
ship.<lb/>
The team is confident of suc-<lb/>
cess this spring and has an am-<lb/>
bitious schedule to toughen new<lb/>
players as well as test the veter-<lb/>
ans against some of the best<lb/>
teams in the southeast.<lb/>
One of the major challenges<lb/>
will come on March 20 when<lb/>
powerful Maryland R.F.C. visits<lb/>
ECU.<lb/>
The Terrapin ruggers have<lb/>
already made it to the National<lb/>
Championships and are peren-<lb/>
nial contenders for Group III re-<lb/>
gion honors.<lb/>
Pirates' missing men<lb/>
Several key players from last<lb/>
fall's successful Pirates will be<lb/>
missing and the team hopes their<lb/>
replacements are ready.<lb/>
Gone are props Burt Hewitt<lb/>
and Rich Hooten who anchored<lb/>
the forwards. Flanker Linwood<lb/>
Obriant and Chris Carney are<lb/>
also gone.<lb/>
These four represent half of<lb/>
the most dominant scrum in<lb/>
North Carolina so their absence<lb/>
will be sorely felt.<lb/>
Coach Larry Babits and his<lb/>
playing advisors Jason Webb,<lb/>
Jay Keller and Richard Moss are<lb/>
seeking to mould a new pack<lb/>
around veterans and B team stal-<lb/>
warts who saw extensive ser-<lb/>
vice last year.<lb/>
It takes leather balls to play rugby: Key loses have set the mighty Pirate rugby team back a few steps. They hope<lb/>
to recover and maintain their dominance in the state.<lb/>
No positions are finalized<lb/>
this early in the season and<lb/>
Babits is looking for strong, fast<lb/>
thinkers who could fit into this<lb/>
year's edition.<lb/>
"Actually, size is not that<lb/>
important if one is quick and<lb/>
agile and has the desire to do<lb/>
well said Moss, who plays full-<lb/>
back.<lb/>
Building on the '92 season<lb/>
Last fall, the Pirate ruggers<lb/>
came up short in an attempt to<lb/>
win the North Carolina Colle-<lb/>
giate Championship outright.<lb/>
The loss did not prevent<lb/>
them from obtaining a wild-<lb/>
card entry into the Group III<lb/>
Championship tournament but<lb/>
again, the ruggers came up<lb/>
short.<lb/>
IF YOU WANT TO MAKE IT<lb/>
IN THE REAL WORLD,<lb/>
SPEND A SEMESTER IN OURS.<lb/>
tffi(VAXktep<lb/>
World Co.<lb/>
Walt Disney World Co. representatives will be on campus to present an<lb/>
information session for Undergraduate Students on the Walt Disney<lb/>
World SUMMERFALL '93 College Program.<lb/>
WHEN: Tuesday, Feb. 2<lb/>
7:00pm<lb/>
WHERE: 1028 General Classroom Building<lb/>
Attendance at this presentation is<lb/>
required to interview for the<lb/>
SummerFall '93 College Program.<lb/>
Interviews will be held on Wednesday,<lb/>
Feb. 3 The following majors are<lb/>
encouraged to attend: SUMMER�<lb/>
Business, Communication, Recreation<lb/>
Leisure Studies, Hospitality Restaurant<lb/>
Mgmt , and TheatreDrama. FALL�All<lb/>
major wHrome.<lb/>
For more information<lb/>
Contact: Cooperative Education<lb/>
Phone: 757-6979<lb/>
An Equal Opportunity Employer<lb/>
� The Walt Disney Co.<lb/>
 I I ������-�-�����������������'��� -i<lb/>
Tuesday<lb/>
is<lb/>
Student Appreciation<lb/>
Day<lb/>
During February<lb/>
SEAFOOD<lb/>
626 S. Memorial Drive<lb/>
Present your 1993 Student ID<lb/>
Card and get:<lb/>
YOUR CHOICE OF<lb/>
ANY DINNER FOR ONLY<lb/>
$Q29<lb/>
3<lb/>
Excluding platters &amp; family packs<lb/>
Not valid with any other discounts<lb/>
Beverages and desserts not included<lb/>
tttttttttttttttttttttttttt<lb/>
"Last year was a disappoint-<lb/>
ment because we did so well<lb/>
early on and then were stale<lb/>
when it really counted said<lb/>
Babits.<lb/>
"This spring, we are rebuild-<lb/>
ing but taking on tougher oppo-<lb/>
sition to show the younger play-<lb/>
ers what top-flight rugby is all<lb/>
about<lb/>
Babits is quick to point out<lb/>
that first time players made the<lb/>
A side last fall and many more<lb/>
rookies could move up this<lb/>
spring.<lb/>
"All that is really needed is<lb/>
basic athletic skills and a desire<lb/>
to learn a sport which you can<lb/>
play into your fifties said<lb/>
Babits.<lb/>
Keller also pointed out that<lb/>
everyone plays because the<lb/>
matches include games against<lb/>
the B and C sides in conjunction<lb/>
with the A side match which<lb/>
counts for the North Carolina<lb/>
championship.<lb/>
The second and third side<lb/>
games are real learning experi-<lb/>
ences because veteran players<lb/>
are available for on-field coach-<lb/>
ing during the game.<lb/>
Practice is currently under-<lb/>
way Tuesday, Wednesday and<lb/>
Thursday from 3:30 to 5p.m. on<lb/>
the Allied Health fields.<lb/>
5-vV<lb/>
DISCOVER<lb/>
FOSDICK'S<lb/>
1890 SEAFOOD<lb/>
FOSDICK'S W<lb/>
1890 SEAFOOD ir<lb/>
3003 S. EVANS STREET<lb/>
756-2011<lb/>
2 REGULAR<lb/>
COMBINATION PLATTERS<lb/>
9<lb/>
Dine In or Take Out r fS<lb/>
Qood Any Time ?27��7�<lb/>
(reg. $15.90)<lb/>
Choose From Any 2 Seafoods<lb/>
For Each Platter-<lb/>
Shrimp, Trout, Clams, Deviled Crab, 2k<lb/>
k Crab Cakes, r3aby Flounder, Perch '<lb/>
k Oysters or Scallops<lb/>
$ 1.00 extra per item per plate<lb/>
Mot yood with any other coupons<lb/>
kor specials. Beveraye not Included.<lb/>
Expires 2893<lb/>
Vlth this coupon only<lb/>
Bodysuits<lb/>
9Full selection<lb/>
of bras and<lb/>
panties<lb/>
Sleepwear<lb/>
� Teddies<lb/>
Bustiers<lb/>
Student Discounts of 10<lb/>
Bridal<lb/>
Registry<lb/>
Avaiable<lb/>
Track Scores<lb/>
Week 2<lb/>
This week: The Pirate track<lb/>
teams have a week off, return-<lb/>
ing to action at the Barnette<lb/>
Bank Invitational at the Uni-<lb/>
versity of Florida Jan. 30.<lb/>
Last Week: Danita<lb/>
Roseboro and Susan Schram<lb/>
collected third place finishes<lb/>
to lead the Lady Pirates at the<lb/>
Joe Hilton Invitational at the<lb/>
University of North Carolina<lb/>
on Jan. 16.<lb/>
Roseboro finished third in<lb/>
the 55 meters with a time of<lb/>
7.08. Shram finished third in the<lb/>
shot put with a mark of 43-10.5<lb/>
Other Lady Pirates that placed<lb/>
included Stacy Green's fourth<lb/>
place finish in the mile with a<lb/>
time of 5:21.3. Alexis Jacks fin-<lb/>
ished fifth with a time of 2:30.0<lb/>
in the 880. The Lady Pirate re-<lb/>
lay team finished fourth in the<lb/>
mile relay with a time 4:21.4.<lb/>
The Pirate men, originally<lb/>
scheduled to run at the Joe<lb/>
Hilton Invitational,did not com-<lb/>
pete.<lb/>
Men<lb/>
Jan. 9Father Diamond InvitationalFairfax, Va.<lb/>
16UNC InvitationalChapel Hill, N.C<lb/>
31Barnette Bank InvitationalGainesville, Fla.<lb/>
Feb. 7Mobil 1 InvitationalFairfax, Va.<lb/>
12&amp;13Husker InvitationalLincoln, Neb.<lb/>
20Collegiate InvitationalFairfax, Va.<lb/>
28Fairfax Indoor ClassicFairfax, Va.<lb/>
Mar. 6&amp;7IC4A's Indoor Championshipis Boston, Mass.<lb/>
12&amp;13 NCAA Indoor Championships Indianapolis, Ind<lb/>
Women<lb/>
Jan. 9<lb/>
16<lb/>
30<lb/>
Feb. 6<lb/>
12<lb/>
20<lb/>
26<lb/>
Mar. 6<lb/>
13<lb/>
Father Diamond Invitational<lb/>
UNC Invitational<lb/>
Barnette Bank Invitational<lb/>
Virginia Tech Relays<lb/>
University of North Carolina<lb/>
Collegiate Invitational<lb/>
University of North Carolina<lb/>
ECAC Indoor Championships Boston, Mass.<lb/>
NCAA Indoor Championships Indianapolis, Ind<lb/>
Fairfax, Va.<lb/>
Chapel Hill, N.C.<lb/>
Gainesville, Fla.<lb/>
Blacksburg, Va.<lb/>
Chapel Hill, N.C<lb/>
Fairfax, Va.<lb/>
Chapel Hill, N.C.<lb/>
WHY ARE THESE<lb/>
STUDENTS<lb/>
SO HAPPY?<lb/>
THEY JUST GOT<lb/>
MONEY BACK FROM<lb/>
A-l<lb/>
AUTO BODY<lb/>
REPAIR SHOP<lb/>
20 Discount For All<lb/>
ECU Students and Faculty<lb/>
�Free Estimates �Insurance Claims<lb/>
�Painting �Fiberglass Work<lb/>
�Frame Straightening �Glass Work<lb/>
A-1 AUTO BODY REPAIR SHOP<lb/>
2200 Dickenson Avenue<lb/>
355-4611<lb/>
shai<lb/>
if I ever fall in love<lb/>
CASSETTE m J<lb/>
S7.98 $10.98<lb/>
We Now Buy &amp; Sell Used<lb/>
CDs � Nintendo<lb/>
Super Nintendo � Sega Genesis<lb/>
1109 Charles St<lb/>
758-4251<lb/>
<lb/>
<pb facs="00058361_0014"/><lb/>
14 The East Carolinian<lb/>
JANUARY 26, 1993<lb/>
1992-93 ECU Swimming and Diving<lb/>
best times of year.<lb/>
(Through Duke meet, Jan. 16)<lb/>
<lb/>
Men<lb/>
50 Freestyle:<lb/>
100 Freestyle:<lb/>
200 Freestyle:<lb/>
Brian Soltz<lb/>
Brian Soltz<lb/>
Derek Nelson<lb/>
21.87<lb/>
48.23<lb/>
1:44.70<lb/>
SWIM<lb/>
Seahawks fall to William &amp; Maiy, drop in CAA<lb/>
WILUAMSBURG, Va. (AP) �<lb/>
ThomasRobertshitajumperand Kurt<lb/>
Small followed up with a bank shot<lb/>
from the left Saturday to keep Will-<lb/>
iam &amp; Mary ahead of North Carolina-<lb/>
Wilmington 67-63.<lb/>
Keith Adkins missed a shot for<lb/>
North Carolina-Wilmington (11-3<lb/>
overall, 3-2 Colonial Athletic Associa-<lb/>
tion) and teammate Tim Shaw<lb/>
knocked the ball out of bounds.<lb/>
Brendan Connor made his sec-<lb/>
ond foul shot for the final margin as<lb/>
William &amp; Mary improved to 9-5 over-<lb/>
all, 2-3 in the CAA.<lb/>
North Carolina-Wilmington<lb/>
tied it twice during the final five<lb/>
minutes, the second time on a re-<lb/>
verse plus a free throw from Darren<lb/>
Moore to make it 57-57 with 3:44<lb/>
remaining.<lb/>
A Reggie Veney layup off a<lb/>
steal put North Carolina-Wilming-<lb/>
ton up 59-57, their first lead of the<lb/>
half.<lb/>
Small made a foul shot to pull<lb/>
the Tribe within 59-58, and the<lb/>
teams exchanged a one-point lead<lb/>
until Roberts' jumper.<lb/>
William &amp; Mary had lead by as<lb/>
much as 12 points three times<lb/>
in the second half, the last time<lb/>
at 48-36 with 12:04 remaining.<lb/>
The Seahawks cut that lead<lb/>
with a 9-0 run, including a 3-<lb/>
pointer from Chris Meighen<lb/>
and two field goals fromShaw.<lb/>
Small led William &amp; Mary<lb/>
with21 points. ToddCauthom<lb/>
had 16 points and 11 re-<lb/>
bounds. Roberts scored 11<lb/>
points.<lb/>
For North Carolina-<lb/>
Wilmington, Moore scored 22<lb/>
points.<lb/>
Continued from page 12<lb/>
ever by an ECU team<lb/>
Only one year ago, the ladies<lb/>
record was five up and seven<lb/>
down, a far cry from this years 9-<lb/>
1 "Jeckyl and Hyde" reversal.<lb/>
With only two dual meets re-<lb/>
maining on this year's schedule<lb/>
the Pirates prepare for the CAA<lb/>
Championships next month.<lb/>
If the Pirates can split their<lb/>
remaining two meets against<lb/>
North Carolina and UNC-Wilm-<lb/>
 ington, both the men and women<lb/>
will have posted the greatest win-<lb/>
ning percentage under Rick Kobe<lb/>
since he has bee" here.<lb/>
A split would be a combined<lb/>
record of 21-3.<lb/>
The best combined record<lb/>
before this year was 21-5 set in<lb/>
1986. The '86 team went on to win<lb/>
the CAA Championships.<lb/>
The Pirates' next home meet<lb/>
is Saturday, Jan. 30, at 2 p.m.<lb/>
Kansas rules AP college hoops poll<lb/>
The Top Twenty Five teams in The<lb/>
Associated Press' college basketball<lb/>
poll, with first-place votes in parenthe-<lb/>
ses, records through Jan.24, total points<lb/>
based on 25 points for a first-place vote<lb/>
through one point for a 25th-place vote<lb/>
and previous rankings:<lb/>
1. Kansas (49)<lb/>
2. Indiana (7)<lb/>
3. North Carolina (9)<lb/>
4. Kentucky<lb/>
5. Michigan<lb/>
6. Cincinnati<lb/>
7. Duke<lb/>
8. Arizona<lb/>
9,SetonHall<lb/>
10.UNLV<lb/>
11. Iowa<lb/>
lLVanderbilt<lb/>
13. Pittsburgh<lb/>
14. Purdue<lb/>
15. Virginia<lb/>
16. Arkansas<lb/>
17. Utah<lb/>
18. Georgia Tech<lb/>
19. Florida St.<lb/>
20. Oklahoma<lb/>
21. Georgetown<lb/>
22. Connecticut<lb/>
23.Tulane<lb/>
24. Marquette<lb/>
25. Houston<lb/>
Other receiving votes: Wake For-<lb/>
est 101, Wisconsin 66, Michigan St 65,<lb/>
UCLA58,New Orleans 42, Massachu-<lb/>
setts 34, Xavier, Ohio31,Minnesota 26,<lb/>
Brigham Young 21, St John's 20, Iowa<lb/>
St 17, Kansas St 15, Missouri 13,<lb/>
California 10, Ohio St 10, Mem-<lb/>
phis St 8, LSU 7, Syracuse 5, Bos-<lb/>
ton College 4, New Mexico St 4,<lb/>
Long Beach St 3, NE Louisiana 3,<lb/>
Southern Cal 3, WiCentucky 3,<lb/>
James Madison 2.<lb/>
FIRST ANNUAL ST. CHARLES<lb/>
SUPER BOWL PARTY<lb/>
featuring:<lb/>
�Over 25<lb/>
DomesticImport Beers<lb/>
�Free Snacks<lb/>
�Two TV Screens<lb/>
�All-You-Can-Eat<lb/>
Crab Legs &amp; Steamed Shrimp<lb/>
SUPER BOWL SPECIAL<lb/>
250 Steamed Oysters<lb/>
All Day<lb/>
Super Bowl Sunday Hours<lb/>
12:00 til the fat lady sings<lb/>
ST. CHA1LES<lb/>
Grilled. Steamed &amp; Raw Bar<lb/>
1 2 PRICE<lb/>
PITCHERS<lb/>
OF BEER<lb/>
All Day Mondays<lb/>
SUNDAY PLAYOFFS<lb/>
SPECIAL aQC<lb/>
16 oz DRAFT 3"<lb/>
in NFL Cup<lb/>
you keep the cup!<lb/>
12 PRICE<lb/>
APPETIZERS<lb/>
Sun-Wed 9:00 PM - CLOSE<lb/>
Dine-In Only<lb/>
Corner of 10th and Charles<lb/>
Tues-Thurs 500-9:30<lb/>
Fri-Sat 4:00-10:00 Sun 12-9:30<lb/>
752-2450<lb/>
GET TAN!<lb/>
WITHOUT GOING BROKE<lb/>
BASKETS BY CHOICE<lb/>
Carolina East Centre<lb/>
(beside the Plitt Theatres)<lb/>
PRICES<lb/>
1 MONTH $49.00<lb/>
2 MONTH $75.00<lb/>
3 MONTH $99.00<lb/>
�Wolff tanning beds<lb/>
� Open 7 days a week<lb/>
� Always fresh bulbs<lb/>
� Personal service;<lb/>
� Lowest prices around<lb/>
TOUCHDOWN AT<lb/>
TOO<lb/>
TANNING BED VISITS FOR<lb/>
$99.00<lb/>
limited number will be sold<lb/>
FREE VISIT CALL 321-0709<lb/>
ADMISSION PRICE UNTIL 10:30pm<lb/>
Wednesday, January 27, 1993<lb/>
Present This Coupon At The Door<lb/>
Interested in a<lb/>
Career<lb/>
as a Paralegal?<lb/>
Legal Assistants Program<lb/>
A certificate program open to qualified women<lb/>
who have a baccalaureate degree<lb/>
Approved by the American Bar Association<lb/>
Intensive summer schedule May-August; part-time<lb/>
evening schedules beginning January or September<lb/>
Placement service for graduates is without fee to<lb/>
employer or graduate.<lb/>
Applications Deadline forihe 1993 Summer Program: March 1. 1993. For details,<lb/>
contact: Legal Assistants Program, Continuing Education, Meredith College,<lb/>
3800 Hillsborough Street, Raleigh, NC 27607-5298 (919) 829-8353.<lb/>
Meredith College admits women students without regard to race, creed, national or<lb/>
ethnic origin, age or handicap. � ���<lb/>
menechthedtegp<lb/>
QfFaqtastic Snys<lb/>
 the Original Family HaircutterSi<lb/>
South Park Shopping Center<lb/>
115 Red Banks Road<lb/>
355-9515<lb/>
NEW HOURS<lb/>
Open Sunday 1-6<lb/>
Appointment <lb/>
Necessary ,5T<lb/>
OPEN MON-SUN<lb/>
Mon-Fri 9-8<lb/>
Sat 9-6 Sun 1-6<lb/>
3<lb/>
TOYOTA QUALITY SERVICE<lb/>
WINTERIZATION SPECIAL<lb/>
�Drain cooling system and replace<lb/>
anti-freeze for protection to 20-30<lb/>
degrees below zero<lb/>
�Check all fluid levels.<lb/>
�Check battery and starter.<lb/>
�Clean and inspect battery 5<lb/>
terminalscables.<lb/>
Please present coupon when repair order is written.<lb/>
Coupon expires 2-13-93<lb/>
l<lb/>
r<lb/>
-�<lb/>
Wanted:<lb/>
V Licensed Stylists<lb/>
f Fantastic Sam'a f Fantaatie Sa<lb/>
PERMS J ADULT<lb/>
i 522.95 swHAIR CUT.<lb/>
- - $8.00 I<lb/>
�20 95 '<lb/>
. VfcW.�Jl - (Shampoo included) .<lb/>
V Long Hair Extra VV DtiH Cuta ErtrJ<lb/>
TOYOTA QUALITY SERVICE<lb/>
MINOR TUNE-UP<lb/>
�Install Toyota-brand spark plugs.<lb/>
�Check air, fuel and emission filters.<lb/>
�Inspect ignition wires, distributor cap<lb/>
and rotor, belts, braces and PVC valve.<lb/>
�6-cylinder or 60,000-miIe platinum plugs $A �<lb/>
slightly higher. MtJ�J<lb/>
Please present coupon when repair order is written.<lb/>
I I<lb/>
NEW SERVICE HOURS<lb/>
SATURDAY<lb/>
9 am -1 pm<lb/>
321-3000<lb/>
TOYOTA QUALITY SERVICE<lb/>
OIL CHANGE WITH FILTER<lb/>
�Includes up to 5 quarts Premium grade<lb/>
Kendall Motor Oil and Genuine Toyota<lb/>
double-filtering oil filter.<lb/>
�Complete under-thc-hood check<lb/>
of all belts, hoses and fluid levels.<lb/>
TOYOTA QUALITY SERVICE<lb/>
AUTOMATIC<lb/>
TRANSMISSION<lb/>
TUNE-UP<lb/>
"1<lb/>
?39.95<lb/>
L<lb/>
r<lb/>
�Replace pan, gasket and fluid. 'Clean screen.<lb/>
�Adjust brands as well as manual and throttle linkage<lb/>
(where applicable).<lb/>
Please present coupon when repair order is written.<lb/>
Coupon expires 2-13-93<lb/>
J<lb/>
L.<lb/>
Coupon expires 2-13-93<lb/>
'I love what you do for me<lb/>
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15.95<lb/>
i.<lb/>
Please present coupon when repair order is written.<lb/>
Coupon expires 2-13-93<lb/>
L<lb/>
GENUINE TOYOTA<lb/>
OIL FILTER 4,OC<lb/>
�Double-stage filtering element<lb/>
with anti-drainback valve.<lb/>
Regular Price $6.13 Limit 2 plus tax.<lb/>
Not valid with other coupons. Over the counter sales only.<lb/>
Please present coupon at time of purchase.<lb/>
Coupon expires 2-13-93<lb/>
J<lb/>
� toyota Greenville Toyota<lb/>
Service Hours: Monday - Friday 7:30am - 6pm Saturday 9am<lb/>
3615 South Memorial Drive<lb/>
Located Across From Carolina East Mall<lb/>
lpm<lb/>
.<lb/>
<pb facs="00058361_0015"/>
</div></body></text></TEI>