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<pb facs="00058371_0001"/>
Lifestyle<lb/>
The classics<lb/>
World renowed<lb/>
pianist Leon Bates<lb/>
will play with the<lb/>
North Carolina<lb/>
Symphony.<lb/>
See story page 7.<lb/>
Today<lb/>
High 54?<lb/>
 <lb/>
J Tomorrow<lb/>
The East Carolinian<lb/>
Vol. 68 No. 14<lb/>
Circulation 12,000<lb/>
Greenville, North Carolina<lb/>
Public safety enforces<lb/>
bicycle safety policies<lb/>
Tuesday, March 2,1993<lb/>
12 Pages<lb/>
By Shannon Anderson<lb/>
Staff Writer<lb/>
Students, faculty or employees<lb/>
who ride bicycles may soon be ticketed<lb/>
or have their bikes impounded by uni-<lb/>
versity police if they are caught riding<lb/>
too fast or carelessly on sidewalks.<lb/>
Public Safety Lieutenant Keith<lb/>
Knox said the student population has<lb/>
grown, so thiscauses large increases in<lb/>
cyclists and pedestrians.<lb/>
"The university police have not<lb/>
enforced this in the past, but the bi-<lb/>
cycle population is so<lb/>
heavyitcreatespossible Wr dott'f SPP anv<lb/>
hazards Knox said. l UUn L btt unY<lb/>
The students are<lb/>
asked to follow the same<lb/>
The faculty senate committee and<lb/>
others have complained to the univer-<lb/>
sity police because of some collisions<lb/>
between cyclists and pedestrians, and<lb/>
alsoaccidentsbetween cyclistsand au-<lb/>
tomobiles. Knox said there have also<lb/>
rules as automobiles on<lb/>
campus. Including<lb/>
riding the right direc-<lb/>
tion on one-way streets.<lb/>
Students should also<lb/>
push their bicycles on<lb/>
sidewalks that are<lb/>
heavily populated by<lb/>
pedestrians.<lb/>
According to<lb/>
Knox there are plans to<lb/>
move some of the bicycle racks that are<lb/>
in the problem areas. He said that they<lb/>
might put a rack for each building, but<lb/>
some of the larger ones will probably<lb/>
stay in their current places.<lb/>
Knox believes bicycle population<lb/>
has grown because it is the fastest and<lb/>
easiest mode of transportation. It also<lb/>
has become more popular because it is<lb/>
safer than cars for the environment.<lb/>
problem with<lb/>
riding on open<lb/>
campus, but if it<lb/>
creates potential<lb/>
hazards we need<lb/>
to do something<lb/>
about it, 99<lb/>
Keith Knox<lb/>
been several near -misses involving bi-<lb/>
cycles.<lb/>
ECU Chief of Police Ken Avery<lb/>
said the university police plans to be-<lb/>
gin enforcing the policy on the first of<lb/>
April. "We want to first educate the<lb/>
publicsaid Knox, "then we will begin<lb/>
enforcement<lb/>
Some of the prob-<lb/>
lems that bicycles are<lb/>
causing on campus in-<lb/>
clude the cyclists forc-<lb/>
ing pedestrians off<lb/>
sidewalks, Knox said.<lb/>
This problem area is in<lb/>
front of the student<lb/>
store and general class-<lb/>
room building.<lb/>
Another problem<lb/>
is cyclists going too<lb/>
fast, Knox said. This is<lb/>
dangerous because the<lb/>
cyclist may not be able<lb/>
to stop in case of a<lb/>
problem, or the cyclist will be less vis-<lb/>
ible to automobiles driving on campus.<lb/>
Knox said the cyclists also create<lb/>
problems on campus bv ridingon grass<lb/>
areas, causing paths. This destroys the<lb/>
beautification of the campus.<lb/>
Lieutenant Knox said that the<lb/>
campus police are mostly concerned<lb/>
about cyclists riding in crowded areas.<lb/>
T don't see any problem with<lb/>
riding on open campus, but if it creates<lb/>
potential hazards we need to do some-<lb/>
thing about it Knox said.<lb/>
Knox said this new policy will re-<lb/>
enforce some policies already being rec-<lb/>
ognized.<lb/>
The university police will<lb/>
strengthen its policy on students or<lb/>
faculty who chain their bicycles to the<lb/>
buildings on campus.<lb/>
They will also require that all bi-<lb/>
cycles be registered with the univer-<lb/>
sity.<lb/>
In the future theuniversity police<lb/>
will have a unit of police officers on a<lb/>
bicyc'e patrol, but right now there is no<lb/>
funding for this project.<lb/>
Photos by Jason Bosch<lb/>
Public safety<lb/>
will soon punish<lb/>
cyclists caught<lb/>
riding recklessly<lb/>
on campus<lb/>
sidewalks. The<lb/>
relocation of<lb/>
many bicycles<lb/>
racks is also<lb/>
under<lb/>
consideration.<lb/>
RHA victorious at state conference<lb/>
By Karen Hassell<lb/>
Assistant News Editor<lb/>
The ECU Residence Hall As-<lb/>
sociation received five honors in-<lb/>
cluding state president, associate<lb/>
finance director and NCARH'ssec-<lb/>
retarynewsletter editor recently in<lb/>
a state conference.<lb/>
ECU's RHA hosted the North<lb/>
Carolina Association of Residence<lb/>
Hall's 1993 state conference on Feb.<lb/>
19-21 at the Hilton Inn.<lb/>
This year's conference was<lb/>
entitled "NCARH Wants You<lb/>
"The ECU students who<lb/>
planned the conference deserve a<lb/>
lot of praise for theirdedicationand<lb/>
skill said RHA Advisor Linda<lb/>
Sessoms.<lb/>
ECU RHA members began<lb/>
last February to prepare a bid for<lb/>
the conference at a regional busi-<lb/>
ness meeting. The bid was then ac-<lb/>
cepted and the conference chairs<lb/>
met several times over the summer<lb/>
for "initial planning and brain-<lb/>
storming stated Sessoms.<lb/>
Two hundred and ten resi-<lb/>
dence hall leadersand advisors from<lb/>
across the sta te a ttended the confer-<lb/>
ence. RHA Vice President Janna<lb/>
McDonald was named 1993-94<lb/>
NCARH state president. James<lb/>
HnMO counssy buu hha<lb/>
Linda Sessoms, Tammy Whitley and India Vaughn were all honored at<lb/>
the N.C. RHA state conference.<lb/>
Moretz was re-elected as the state<lb/>
associate finance director. Ken<lb/>
Wooten waselected NCARH'ssec-<lb/>
retarynewslettereditor. Lisa Den-<lb/>
ning was named RHA's president<lb/>
and RHA's National Communica-<lb/>
tionCoordinator India Vaughn won<lb/>
a "Top Five"programaward. RHA<lb/>
Advisor Linda Sessoms was<lb/>
awarded "Ad visor of the Year"and<lb/>
presented with a plague.<lb/>
"The purpose of the confer-<lb/>
ence was to bring residence hall<lb/>
leaders together to attend educa-<lb/>
tional workshops, share ideas, net-<lb/>
work, socialize, to attend state busi-<lb/>
ness meetingsand show theii school<lb/>
spirit Sessoms said.<lb/>
Other winners included Ap-<lb/>
palachian State with the "Most Spir-<lb/>
ited Large Delegation High Point<lb/>
University with "Most Spirited<lb/>
Small Delegation" and UNC-<lb/>
Wilmington with "Best Roll Call<lb/>
dean air policy still in experimental stage<lb/>
University officials pleased with<lb/>
smokers' cooperation.<lb/>
By Joe Horst<lb/>
Staff Writer<lb/>
In the summer of 1992, the<lb/>
ECU Board of Trustees voted to<lb/>
restrict smoking in all campus<lb/>
buildings. The group voted 11-2<lb/>
in favor of the act that prohibited<lb/>
smoking in buildings that are<lb/>
poorly ventilated or not venti-<lb/>
lated at all.<lb/>
Dr. John Moskop, presi-<lb/>
dent of the Faculty Senate, said<lb/>
that the university must come<lb/>
up with a policy that includes<lb/>
smokers' rights.<lb/>
"The resolution directs the<lb/>
chancellor to develop a clean air<lb/>
policy which includes designat-<lb/>
ing smoking areas in certain<lb/>
buildings Moskop said.<lb/>
Currently, there are only<lb/>
threeareasthatare open to smok-<lb/>
ers inside of campus buildings,<lb/>
and these are in the experimen-<lb/>
tal stage. According to Richard<lb/>
Brown, vice chancellor for busi-<lb/>
nessaffairs,thenumberof rooms<lb/>
available to be set aside for smok-<lb/>
ers are very few.<lb/>
"We have a very little num-<lb/>
ber of rooms available Brown<lb/>
said. "The ones we currently have<lb/>
are located in Joyner Librarv,<lb/>
BiewsterBiiildingandRawl Build-<lb/>
ing<lb/>
These<lb/>
nx:ms test out<lb/>
ventilation sys-<lb/>
tems called<lb/>
"SmokeEaters<lb/>
With three of<lb/>
these in each<lb/>
room, the<lb/>
smoke is pulled<lb/>
into the ma-<lb/>
chine, run<lb/>
through a vari-<lb/>
ous set of filters<lb/>
and forced back<lb/>
out as clean air.<lb/>
Brown also commented that<lb/>
the university is facing very few<lb/>
problems with smoking inside, but<lb/>
does face problems outside.<lb/>
"The policy has created far<lb/>
The policy<lb/>
has created<lb/>
far fewer con-<lb/>
flicts or prob-<lb/>
lems than we<lb/>
anticipated<lb/>
Richard Brown,<lb/>
Vice Chancellor for<lb/>
Business Affairs<lb/>
fewer conflicts or problems than<lb/>
we anticipated Brown said.<lb/>
'There is less clean-up needed<lb/>
inside thebuildings,butoutside<lb/>
wedohavea problem with ciga-<lb/>
rette butts<lb/>
The university is looking<lb/>
into purchasing<lb/>
ash urns that<lb/>
would go outside<lb/>
each exit door on<lb/>
buildings. Brown<lb/>
said that these<lb/>
urns would cost<lb/>
the university in<lb/>
excess of $10,000.<lb/>
Future<lb/>
"SmokeEaters"<lb/>
would also cost<lb/>
the university<lb/>
around $4,000 a<lb/>
unit. Brown said<lb/>
that most indi-<lb/>
viduals are following the policy<lb/>
with little to no problems.<lb/>
"Smokers are voluntarily<lb/>
being good citizens and smok-<lb/>
ing outside Brown said.<lb/>
American Lung Association benefits from food fair<lb/>
By Shannon Anderson<lb/>
Staff Writer<lb/>
Thefourthannual Taste ofGreenville,<lb/>
sponsored by the American Lung Absocia-<lb/>
tionof.NorrhCaro!ina,willbeheldonMarch<lb/>
6atthe Plaza inGreenville from 11:30a.m. to<lb/>
2 p.m.<lb/>
Severa I resta u ran fc, from Eastern Nfc rth<lb/>
Carolina will set up individually decorated<lb/>
booths for custi imers to st p by and sample<lb/>
some of their fxd tohelp benefit the Ameri-<lb/>
can Lung Association f r Eastern' an lina.<lb/>
Tickets are $7 for adults and $3 for<lb/>
children over five-years-old. For more infor-<lb/>
mation call the American Lung Association<lb/>
of North Carolina at 1-800-849-5949.<lb/>
There will be entertainment bv the<lb/>
Panama Steel Band, and Miss Greater<lb/>
GreenvillePitt County, Jenny West, will be<lb/>
featured.Thiseventalso includes free photo<lb/>
identification and fingerprints for children.<lb/>
"A taste of Greenville is also spon-<lb/>
sored by IVpsi- oia Bottling Compan) of<lb/>
enville said Sadie Daughtey, director<lb/>
i f tin cistern region of the American Lung<lb/>
Association of North Carolina The Pepsi-<lb/>
C ola Bottling Company asked if they could<lb/>
become involved in some kind of money-<lb/>
raising project.<lb/>
The idea for the festival was sparked<lb/>
by other projects held in cities across the<lb/>
country. A similar festival has been held in<lb/>
Chicago for 14 vears.<lb/>
The Taste of Greenville began in 199(1<lb/>
when more than LO00 people attended. The<lb/>
great turn-out made the assixriation decide<lb/>
to find a building with more space than the<lb/>
American Legk m Building. In l991,thefood<lb/>
festival was held in the Plaza Mall with a<lb/>
turn-out of 1,500 parti ipants<lb/>
Proceed from ticket sales will go to<lb/>
local funding of educational seminars on the<lb/>
dangers of smoking, asthma, and lung can-<lb/>
cer.<lb/>
Daughtey said money from the ticket<lb/>
sales will also go towards training clinic<lb/>
leaders to give the educational seminars.<lb/>
"Thisistheonly fund raiserwehave in<lb/>
Pitt Count-each year Daughty said, "We<lb/>
i inly hit people up for monev once a year<lb/>
The Taste of Greenville began when<lb/>
( asey Dobynes lost four members of his<lb/>
family to lung cancel. I le approached the<lb/>
association because he wanted tostarta fund<lb/>
raiser tohelp research on lung cancer.<lb/>
This buffet-style food festival has usu-<lb/>
all) drawnlargecrowdsForsomereason<lb/>
Daughtey said on rainy days we get more<lb/>
people<lb/>
The American Lung Association of<lb/>
North Carolina-Eastern Carolina serves 22<lb/>
Eastern North Carolina counties. Daughtey<lb/>
has been involved with the association for<lb/>
seven vears.<lb/>
Some of the restaurants that will par-<lb/>
tidp.ite are Annabelle's, The Beef Bam,<lb/>
Chico's, Golden Corral, Omar's Express, Red<lb/>
1 jobster, Shoney's, Subway and Trie Upper<lb/>
C rust Bakery.<lb/>
<pb facs="00058371_0002"/><lb/>
2 The East Carolinian<lb/>
MARCH 2, 1993<lb/>
Female rejected by The Citadel<lb/>
Shannon Richey Faulkner was accepted, and then re-<lb/>
jected by The Citadel after it was determined that her high<lb/>
school transcripts had been altered to delete all references to<lb/>
her gender. The Citadel, a state-run military school in Charles-<lb/>
ton, S.C allows no women in its corps. In a press release. The<lb/>
Citadel said provisional acceptance requires that several<lb/>
conditions be met before full acceptance?"One of those crite-<lb/>
ria involves a medical physical, which, in this case, would<lb/>
have immediately disqualified the applicant it said. If<lb/>
Faulkner sues, it will be the second gender-discrimination<lb/>
suit filed against The Citadel within a year. Three female<lb/>
veterans sued the school in June to be allowed to attend the<lb/>
same day classes that male veterans attended along with The<lb/>
Citadel's 2,000 cadets. Instead of allowing the women in, the<lb/>
school closed its day-school program for the male veterans.<lb/>
New SAT exam being planned<lb/>
The Scholastic Aptitude Test may have a new name<lb/>
when a redesigned form of the test is introduced in spring<lb/>
1994. Critics say that the word "aptitude" misleads high<lb/>
school students and their parents into believing the test is<lb/>
analyzing something innate or immutable, said Robert Seaver,<lb/>
spokesman for The College Board. Additionally, an aca-<lb/>
demic study recommended a new name because the rede-<lb/>
signed test won't include the antonyms section and will have<lb/>
a longer reading section that requires students to come up<lb/>
with conclusions. In the math section, the students will have<lb/>
to generate their own answers instpd of picking an answer.<lb/>
Students leave school after murder<lb/>
Three students dropped out of the University of West<lb/>
Florida after a junior was abducted from a campus parking lot,<lb/>
raped and strangled. Additionally, six students who were tak-<lb/>
ing night classes switched to day classes despite improved<lb/>
lighting and a campus security phone system that has been<lb/>
installed, reported the student newspaper, The Voyager. Susan<lb/>
Leigh Morris, 21, a communication arts major who lived with<lb/>
her parents in Pensacola, disappeared from a campus parking lot<lb/>
on Jan. 12 while walking to her car after a night course. Her body was<lb/>
found in a wooded area on campus the next day. She had been<lb/>
beaten, raped and strangled, officials said. A suspect, Eric Scott<lb/>
Branch, was charged with murder, sexual battery and grand theft.<lb/>
Compiled by Karen Hassell. Taken from CPS<lb/>
and other campus newspapers.<lb/>
StateNews<lb/>
Cleveland county residents fight increased meningitis<lb/>
SHELBY, N.C. (AP) ? In-<lb/>
fectious meningococcal meningi-<lb/>
tis struck two Cleveland County<lb/>
residents ? a Gardner-Webb<lb/>
University student and a 3-year-<lb/>
old boy ? over the weekend.<lb/>
Both were admitted to<lb/>
Cleveland Memorial Hospital,<lb/>
where they were diagnosed with<lb/>
the potentially fatal infection, ac-<lb/>
cording to a news release from<lb/>
County Health Director Denese<lb/>
Stallings.<lb/>
It's the same illness that<lb/>
killed Robert Allen, a 14-year-<lb/>
old Shelby High School student,<lb/>
two weeks ago. The two people<lb/>
diagnosed this weekend appar-<lb/>
ently had no contact with Allen,<lb/>
Stallings said.<lb/>
The 19-year-old college<lb/>
freshman was in isolation and<lb/>
listed in fair condition Monday,<lb/>
and the toddler was in good con-<lb/>
dition, said Dean Jenks, a hospi-<lb/>
tal spokesman. Both were un-<lb/>
dergoing treatment for menin-<lb/>
gitis.<lb/>
The bacteria that causes<lb/>
meningococcal meningitis has a<lb/>
10-day incubation period, so<lb/>
health officials said that the dan-<lb/>
ger period for further cases from<lb/>
exposure to Allen expired last<lb/>
weekend.<lb/>
These two cases seem to be<lb/>
unrelated to Allen and to each<lb/>
other, Stallings t?aid, since the stu-<lb/>
dent and the toddler lived in dif-<lb/>
ferent parts of the county and<lb/>
had no known contact with each<lb/>
other.<lb/>
The Cleveland County<lb/>
Health Department is working<lb/>
with area physicians and state<lb/>
health officials to trace the<lb/>
source of the bacteria, Stallings<lb/>
said.<lb/>
The main symptoms of<lb/>
meningitis are high fever, head-<lb/>
ache and pain or stiffness in the<lb/>
back of the neck. Early symp-<lb/>
toms may be similar to a cold.<lb/>
Symptoms include aches, a low-<lb/>
grade fever, mild headache and<lb/>
nausea and vomiting.<lb/>
SPRING BREAK SPECIALS<lb/>
FRONT BRAKE SERVICE<lb/>
$72.50 $62.50<lb/>
OIL FILTER &amp; CHANGE<lb/>
PLUS LUBE<lb/>
$16.50<lb/>
Up to 5 qts. ol Pennzoil 10W30 or Castrol<lb/>
20W50. Other brands &amp; weights slightly higher. I<lb/>
Most cars and light trucks.<lb/>
Offer valid with coupon thru 4-1-93<lb/>
LIFETIME WARRANTY<lb/>
MUFFLER<lb/>
$60.50<lb/>
Most cars and light trucks.<lb/>
Offer valid with coupon thru 4-1-93<lb/>
? ?<lb/>
Most cars and light trucks.<lb/>
Offer valid with coupon thru 4-1-93<lb/>
CV JOINT SERVICE<lb/>
$50.00<lb/>
Remove axel, old outer boot, clean &amp; repack<lb/>
joint &amp; Install new outer boot.<lb/>
Most cars and light trucks.<lb/>
Offer valid with coupon thru 4-1-93<lb/>
FUEL INJECTION<lb/>
CLEANING<lb/>
$59.50<lb/>
For engine hesitation, rough Idling, stalling, poori<lb/>
milage. Recommended every 15,000 miles. I<lb/>
Most cars and light trucks.<lb/>
Offer valid with coupon thru 4-1-93<lb/>
MAINTAINACE TUNE-UP<lb/>
Ke?p your car or light truck running rightl Carburetor<lb/>
adjustment (where applicable), new spark plugs<lb/>
instated, set timing, PVC system serviced.<lb/>
4 Cylinder $39.50<lb/>
6 Cylinder $49.50<lb/>
8 Cylinder $59.50<lb/>
Most cars and light trucks.<lb/>
Offer valid with coupon thru 4-1-93<lb/>
MADJ&amp; HATTER<lb/>
AUTO CAR CENTER k nJ<lb/>
Performance, Protection, Quality<lb/>
PRICES DO NOT INCLUDE TAX<lb/>
Muffler ? Brakes<lb/>
3140Moseley Dr.<lb/>
758-2306<lb/>
(Behind Parker's BBQ,<lb/>
Greenville Blvd.)<lb/>
fi)Hi<lb/>
FREE<lb/>
Tire Rotation<lb/>
With Any<lb/>
Service<lb/>
HOURS<lb/>
Mon-Thur 8-7 Fri 8-5 Sat 8-1<lb/>
golden,<lb/>
corral<lb/>
STEAKS, BUFFET &amp; BAKERY<lb/>
Golden Choice Buffet<lb/>
with carved meats nightly<lb/>
$5.19<lb/>
Weekend Buffet Breakfast<lb/>
$4.49<lb/>
present school I.D. and receive a<lb/>
FREE BEVERAGE<lb/>
504 SW Greenville Blvd.<lb/>
??? i<lb/>
Student<lb/>
Government<lb/>
Association<lb/>
I WHAT:<lb/>
t<lb/>
r<lb/>
? WHEN:<lb/>
?WHERE:<lb/>
Filing for Spring Elections<lb/>
? Executive President<lb/>
? Executive Vice-President<lb/>
? Executive Treasurer<lb/>
? Executive Secretary<lb/>
Thursday, February 25, 1993<lb/>
until 5:00pm,<lb/>
Thursday, March 4, 1993<lb/>
Room 255<lb/>
Mendenhall Student Center<lb/>
757-4726<lb/>
r<lb/>
?<lb/>
I<lb/>
?<lb/>
QUALIFICATIONS:<lb/>
? Overall 2.0 G. P.A.<lb/>
? Enrolled at least 2<lb/>
Consecutive Semesters<lb/>
at East Carolina University<lb/>
? Good Standing<lb/>
? Completed at least<lb/>
48 Semester Hours<lb/>
$10.00 Filing Fee<lb/>
MANDATORY CANDIDATES MEETING<lb/>
Monday, March 15, 1993<lb/>
25th ANNUAL SPRING<lb/>
BIKINI CONTEST<lb/>
Thursday, March 4th<lb/>
Admission $2 Members $4 Guests<lb/>
PRIZES ??????<lb/>
1st Place $200 CfiSH<lb/>
2nd Place $100 CASH<lb/>
3rd Place $50 CfiSH<lb/>
DRINK SPECIfiLSl<lb/>
$3.00 PITCHERS<lb/>
$1.00 DOMESTICS<lb/>
75c 100 M.P.H. SHOTS<lb/>
n?<lb/>
<pb facs="00058371_0003"/><lb/>
MARCH 2, 1993<lb/>
The East Carolinian 3<lb/>
National News<lb/>
Hundreds attend Virginia state trooper's funeral, state investigates shooting<lb/>
U'ARRENTON, Va. (AP) ?<lb/>
More than 1,500 mourners said<lb/>
goodbye to Virginia state Trooper<lb/>
k ee M ? Cavazos, who was gunned<lb/>
down last week after he pulled<lb/>
over a car.<lb/>
Cavazos, a 10-year-veteran<lb/>
of the police department, was shot<lb/>
five times last Wednesday off an<lb/>
Interstate 95 exit ramp near Dale<lb/>
City. At 50, he was nearing retire-<lb/>
ment. A North Carolina man has<lb/>
been charged.<lb/>
Law enforcement officers<lb/>
from as far as California attended<lb/>
funeral services for Cavazos at St.<lb/>
James Episcopal Church in<lb/>
Warrenton and the burial at<lb/>
Fairview Cemetery in Culpeper.<lb/>
"Ifitcouldbehim,itcouldbe<lb/>
us said Patrolman Martin Brooks<lb/>
of the Boston Police Department.<lb/>
Brooksand rvvofellowofficerswho<lb/>
came to the funeral mourned one<lb/>
of their own last Wednesday. Bos-<lb/>
ton police Officer Thomas F. Rose<lb/>
was fatally<lb/>
u<lb/>
wounded Feb.<lb/>
19 inside a po-<lb/>
lice station.<lb/>
State po-<lb/>
lice Chaplain<lb/>
Preston<lb/>
Everhart said<lb/>
Cavazos paid<lb/>
the ultimate sac-<lb/>
rifice.<lb/>
Law enforcement of fleers are<lb/>
getting tired of the killings, and<lb/>
government officials should begin<lb/>
taking action, he said. "We have<lb/>
become sitting ducks Everhart<lb/>
said.<lb/>
Gov. L. Douglas Wilder, who<lb/>
attended the funeral, said he heard<lb/>
a call for handgun control. "We in<lb/>
Virginiaare taking the lead Wilder<lb/>
said. "And though<lb/>
it wasn't in time to<lb/>
prohibit theacrions<lb/>
that took the life of<lb/>
Trooper Cavazos,<lb/>
hopefully it will be<lb/>
in time to stop fu-<lb/>
ture loss of life<lb/>
The gover-<lb/>
norhassaidhewill<lb/>
sign a bill passed Thursday by the<lb/>
General Assembly that will limit<lb/>
handgun purchases to one a month<lb/>
unless the buyer gets state police<lb/>
permission for a multiple purchase.<lb/>
Cavazos was still alive when<lb/>
If it could be<lb/>
him, it could<lb/>
be us?<lb/>
Patrolman Martin Brooks<lb/>
he was found about 12:45 a.m.<lb/>
Wednesday.<lb/>
He was wearinga bulletproof<lb/>
vest, but none of the shots fired<lb/>
from a 9mm handgun struck the<lb/>
protected area, police said. He was<lb/>
killed by two shots that hit him<lb/>
above the vest. He died at Wash-<lb/>
ingtonHospital. Cavazoswasbom<lb/>
in Edinburg, Texas. He moved to<lb/>
Virginia in 1969 and joined state<lb/>
police in 1983.<lb/>
Younger troopers often asked<lb/>
Cavazos for guidance because he<lb/>
was older and wiser, 1st Sgt. Dou-<lb/>
glas Hendley said. "I think almost<lb/>
everyone called him Pop he said.<lb/>
Two men have been arrested<lb/>
in Cavazos' slaying.<lb/>
Prosecutors have said they<lb/>
will seek the death penalty against<lb/>
Lonnie Weeks Jr of Fayetteville,<lb/>
N.C who was implicated by his<lb/>
uncle as the person who fired the<lb/>
fatal shots.<lb/>
Weeks, 20, and his uncle and<lb/>
co-defendant, Louis Jefferson<lb/>
Dukes,21, of Washington, D.C, are<lb/>
charged with capital murder, use<lb/>
of a firearm in the commission of a<lb/>
felony and stealing the auto they<lb/>
were driving.<lb/>
Cavazos, of Nokesville, was<lb/>
the first Virginia state trooper to<lb/>
be killed in the line of duty since<lb/>
1989.Cavazos is survived by his<lb/>
wife, Linda, a 16-year-old son and<lb/>
a 20-year-old daughter who at-<lb/>
tends the University of Virginia.<lb/>
Hank's<lb/>
Homemade Ice Cream<lb/>
Specials<lb/>
Sunday - Sundaes<lb/>
10 OFF All Sundaes on Sundays<lb/>
Tuesday - Two For One<lb/>
Get Two Blend-Ins For The Price Of One<lb/>
Wednesday - Waffles<lb/>
Free Waffle Cone With Each Order<lb/>
Specials are Good thru March<lb/>
No Coupons Needed<lb/>
LOOK AT US<lb/>
O Off<lb/>
Any regular priced sunglasses<lb/>
with student I.D<lb/>
N tilid with trf mhrr offer. Only v-5d M lhkInratia<lb/>
limited time offer<lb/>
We carry:<lb/>
oqiY REVO ?!?<lb/>
1-1.1 k r.I AMl.l- I<lb/>
Art<lb/>
Other Name Brands Available<lb/>
Southern Eyes Sunglasses<lb/>
Sales &amp; Service<lb/>
We also carry sports cards<lb/>
Carolina East Mall<lb/>
555-7695 <lb/>
i ATM !<lb/>
Don't be left out<lb/>
of the picture!<lb/>
Sign up fa on-campus housing next year<lb/>
during the week of March 15.<lb/>
For further information, please contact<lb/>
University Housing at 757-6450.<lb/>
UNITED COLORS<lb/>
OF BENNETTON<lb/>
NEW<lb/>
SPRING &amp;<lb/>
SUMMER<lb/>
MERCHANDISE<lb/>
Arlington Village<lb/>
638 E. Arlington Blvd 355-7473 Mon-Sat 10-6<lb/>
' .H<lb/>
ATTENTION: STUDENT GROUPS<lb/>
DO YOU NEED MONEY?<lb/>
Annual Fund-Raising Planning<lb/>
Are Scheduled For:<lb/>
ions<lb/>
Monday, March 15<lb/>
Tuesday, March 16<lb/>
Wednesday, March 17<lb/>
Thursday, March 18<lb/>
Monday, March 22<lb/>
Tuesday, March 23<lb/>
Wednesday, March 24<lb/>
Thursday, March 25<lb/>
Tuesday, April 6<lb/>
Wednesday, April 7<lb/>
Thursday, April 8<lb/>
Room 241<lb/>
Room 242<lb/>
Room 242<lb/>
Room 247<lb/>
Room 241<lb/>
Room 242<lb/>
Room 242<lb/>
Room 247<lb/>
Room 242<lb/>
Room 242<lb/>
3-6 PM<lb/>
4-7 PM<lb/>
4-7 PM<lb/>
4-7 PM<lb/>
3-6 PM<lb/>
4-7 PM<lb/>
3-6 PM<lb/>
5-8 PM<lb/>
4-7 PM<lb/>
4-7 PM<lb/>
4-4:45 PM<lb/>
Room 242<lb/>
A Representative of Your Organization Must Be Present At<lb/>
One Session In Order To Obtain 1993-1994 Funding<lb/>
All Groups With SGA Funded Status Are Eligible<lb/>
For Further Information Call:<lb/>
Brynn Thomas 757-0157<lb/>
Rich Paravella 757-3581<lb/>
If You Are Unsure If You Are Eligible For Funding Please Call Millie Murphrey at 757-4726<lb/>
WWPWBWB!<lb/>
MHMHM<lb/>
??'???-warn?mum<lb/>
<pb facs="00058371_0004"/><lb/>
4 The East Carolinian<lb/>
MARCH 2, 1993<lb/>
International News<lb/>
Aid falling on Serb lines, missing Muslims<lb/>
Word of the day:<lb/>
ZYMURGY<lb/>
FRANKFURT, Germany<lb/>
(AP) ? Air Force officials said<lb/>
Monday that the first U.S. air-<lb/>
drop of food and medicine into<lb/>
Bosnia went well, but reports<lb/>
from the ground indicated the<lb/>
aid went to Serbs, not hungry<lb/>
Muslims.<lb/>
Flying high and at night to<lb/>
avoid ground fire, three C-130<lb/>
cargo planes dropped more than<lb/>
20 tons of food and medical sup-<lb/>
plies over the Muslim communi-<lb/>
ties and returned safely to Frank-<lb/>
furt before dawn.<lb/>
It was the most direct<lb/>
American involvement yet in the<lb/>
nearly year-long war in Bosnia-<lb/>
Herzegovina. Up to300,000Mus-<lb/>
lims in eastern Bosnia have not<lb/>
received U.N. relief supplies be-<lb/>
cause of roadblocks set up by<lb/>
Serb fighters.<lb/>
U.S. officials have said they<lb/>
also will drop food for Bosnia's<lb/>
Serbs and Croats. All three war-<lb/>
ring factions ? Muslims, Croats<lb/>
and Serbs?had representatives<lb/>
in Germany to inspect the cargo<lb/>
and ensure no weapons were<lb/>
dropped.<lb/>
U.N. officials said the aid<lb/>
was dropped Monday on the<lb/>
Muslim enclave of Cerska. But a<lb/>
Serb commander indicated it fell<lb/>
into the hands of Serb fighters<lb/>
who U.N. officials said cut the<lb/>
eastern town in two overnight.<lb/>
Pilots said they encountered<lb/>
no hostile fire.<lb/>
Military officials, citing se-<lb/>
curity concerns, would not say<lb/>
where the relief pallets were<lb/>
dropped or how high the planes<lb/>
flew. The slow-moving turbo-<lb/>
prop C-130s have few defenses.<lb/>
"It went very well Brig.<lb/>
Gen. Donald E. Loranger Jr com-<lb/>
mander of the Air Force's 435th<lb/>
Airlift Wing at Rhein-Main Air<lb/>
Base outside Frankfurt, told re-<lb/>
porters.<lb/>
He said it was difficult to<lb/>
determine where the food<lb/>
landed, but said he was confi-<lb/>
dent "we were very, very accu-<lb/>
rate<lb/>
Alemka Lisinski of the U.N.<lb/>
High Commissioner for Refugees<lb/>
in Zagreb, Croatia said the first<lb/>
run targeted only Cerska.<lb/>
Nenad Unukic, a radio op-<lb/>
erator in Zagreb, said officials in<lb/>
Cerska and two other encircled<lb/>
Muslim towns ? Gorazde and<lb/>
Zepa ? told him by radio that by<lb/>
mid-morning no aid had been<lb/>
found.<lb/>
Warlord gets ultimatum, talks continue<lb/>
MOGADISHU, Somalia (AP)<lb/>
? Supporters of rival warlords<lb/>
stoned each other, and three Somalis<lb/>
were shot to death Sunday in<lb/>
Kismayu while the U .Sled coalition<lb/>
stepped upeffortstocalm the south-<lb/>
em port, officials said.<lb/>
Thecoalition issued an ultima-<lb/>
tum ordering warlord Col. Omar Jess<lb/>
tomovehisforcesawayfromthecity<lb/>
to an area 80milesnorth by midnight<lb/>
Tuesday or face attack. Jess' rival,<lb/>
Mohamed Said Hirsi, known asGen.<lb/>
Morgan, complied with a similar ul-<lb/>
timatum last week.<lb/>
U.S. and Belgian troops also<lb/>
conducted weapons sweeps in<lb/>
Kismayu, 300 miles south of<lb/>
Mogadishu, and captured a large<lb/>
number of arms and ammunition,<lb/>
said MarineCol. Fred Peck, U.S. mili-<lb/>
tary spokesman in the capital.<lb/>
Despite the recent surge in vio-<lb/>
lence in Kismayu, representatives of<lb/>
Somalia's 14 rival factions have<lb/>
agreed on an agenda for a peace<lb/>
conference Marchl5in Addis Ababa,<lb/>
Ethiopia, U.N. officials said Sunday.<lb/>
Somalia has been without a<lb/>
government since dictator<lb/>
Mohammed Siad Barre was ousted<lb/>
in January 1991. U.Sled forces ar-<lb/>
rived in December to try to stop clan<lb/>
fighting and guard aid shipments in<lb/>
the famine-wracked nation.<lb/>
The agenda for the peace talks<lb/>
includes working out terms for an<lb/>
interim governmentand police force,<lb/>
a transitional constitution, regional<lb/>
autonomy and reconstruction. Also<lb/>
to be discussed are human rights,<lb/>
humanitarianassistanceand resettle-<lb/>
ment of refugees.<lb/>
Kismayu has remained tense<lb/>
since Morgan'ssupportersdrove Jess<lb/>
and 450 of his men out of the city on<lb/>
Feb. 22.<lb/>
The fighting forced U.S. offi-<lb/>
cials to postpone sending home 1,000<lb/>
GIs from the area and to send in<lb/>
about 600 more. It also sparked anti-<lb/>
foreigner rioting Wednesday in<lb/>
Mogadishu by supporters of war-<lb/>
lord Mohamed Farrah Aidid, an ally<lb/>
of Jess.<lb/>
An estimated two dozen<lb/>
people died in the initial Kismayu<lb/>
battle, and relief workers estimate<lb/>
100 more have been killed since.<lb/>
In Kismayu on Sunday, sup-<lb/>
porters of Morgan and Jess staged<lb/>
marches that met at a central arch,<lb/>
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and the participants began pelting<lb/>
each other with rocks, Peck said.<lb/>
As the clash began to subside,<lb/>
a Somali man threw a grenade at<lb/>
nearby Belgian soldiers, who shot<lb/>
and killed him. Twoother confronta-<lb/>
tions between Somalis killed two<lb/>
people, Peck said. No soldiers were<lb/>
injured.<lb/>
U.S. and Belgian troops have<lb/>
conducted widespread searches for<lb/>
weapons in Kismayu and have im-<lb/>
posed a nighttime curfew since Fri-<lb/>
day, officials said.<lb/>
Arms seized overthe weekend<lb/>
included 222 small arms,58 grenades,<lb/>
567 mortar shells, 244 rocket-pro-<lb/>
pelled grenades, 1,200 land mines<lb/>
and 8,800 pounds of ammunition,<lb/>
said Chief Warrant Officer Eric<lb/>
Carlson,anotherUS.m!litaryspokes-<lb/>
man. In other violence, a U.S. patrol<lb/>
in Merca, 100 miles south of<lb/>
Mogadishu, was fired on by Somalis.<lb/>
The soldiers killed one Somali man<lb/>
and captured three others, Peck said.<lb/>
Australian troops on patrol in<lb/>
Baidoa, 150 miles northwest of<lb/>
Mogadishu, killed a Somali as he<lb/>
aimed his gunatthem late Saturday,<lb/>
Carlson said.<lb/>
The University Media Board<lb/>
Positions Vacancies<lb/>
The Media Board wishes to increase the<lb/>
number of applicants interested in serving<lb/>
in the following positions for 1993-1994:<lb/>
?Media Board Day Student Representative<lb/>
?General Manager, WZMB-FM radio station<lb/>
?Editor, The Rebel fine arts magazine<lb/>
Contact: University Media Board<lb/>
2nd Floor, Student Publications Bldg.<lb/>
Telephone: 757-6009<lb/>
Applicants should have a grade<lb/>
point average of at least 2.5<lb/>
Application deadline:<lb/>
5 p.m Wednesday, March 17<lb/>
j<lb/>
 ?<lb/>
j<lb/>
THE<lb/>
EAST<lb/>
CAROLINIAN<lb/>
ACCOUNT<lb/>
EXECUTIVES<lb/>
Karen Bilyj<lb/>
Lindsay Fernandez<lb/>
Matt Hege<lb/>
Aimee Lewis<lb/>
Brandon Perry<lb/>
CALL 919-757-6366<lb/>
Today for<lb/>
more advertising<lb/>
information.<lb/>
TT P I "  " ?"  !TTTT<lb/>
Tuesday<lb/>
is<lb/>
Student Appreciation<lb/>
Day<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/>
$029<lb/>
Excluding platters &amp; family packs.<lb/>
Not valid with any other discounts<lb/>
Beverages and desserts not included<lb/>
Illl!llll!lll!lll!l!TTTT<lb/>
DEADLINES<lb/>
Deadlines for all advertising are:<lb/>
Friday at 4 p.m. for Tuesday Editions<lb/>
Tuesday at 4 p.m. for Thursday Editions<lb/>
ADVERTISING RATES<lb/>
Local Open Rate<lb/>
$5.00 per column inch<lb/>
Campus Organization Rate<lb/>
$@.50 per column inch<lb/>
CLASSIFIED<lb/>
Students (25 words or less) $2.00<lb/>
Non-Students (25 words or less) $3.00<lb/>
Eash additional word over 25 $.05<lb/>
Overtoil's<lb/>
is Eastern North Carolina's<lb/>
Swimsuit Headquarters<lb/>
Styles by the Industries Leading Manufacturers<lb/>
VENUS<lb/>
DE LA MER<lb/>
BENDINGO<lb/>
JAG<lb/>
SOLAR<lb/>
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SPEEDO<lb/>
CATALINA JRS<lb/>
PORTA DO SOL<lb/>
OP<lb/>
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ONE RACK OF LADIES' SWIMSUITS REDUCED<lb/>
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Overtoil's<lb/>
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M-F 9 AM - 8 PM<lb/>
Sat 9 AM-7 PM<lb/>
 111 <lb/>
fatifl<lb/>
RED BANKS RD.<lb/>
(Comer of Red Banks Rd. &amp; Evans St.)<lb/>
355-5783<lb/>
?HMMH<lb/>
y<lb/>
<pb facs="00058371_0005"/><lb/>
TheEastCarolinian<lb/>
March 2, 1993<lb/>
Classifieds<lb/>
Page 5<lb/>
KINGS ARMS APARTMENTS :1 and<lb/>
2 bedroom apartments. Energy-effi-<lb/>
cient, several locations in town. Car-<lb/>
peted, kitchen appliances, some water<lb/>
and sewer paid, washerdrver hook-<lb/>
ups. Call 752-8915.<lb/>
HOUSES FOR RENT: 2608 Tryon<lb/>
Drive; 3 bedroom 1 bath; 5550.00 p<lb/>
m. 404 S. Eastern Street; 3 bedroom2<lb/>
bath;S680.00pm. No pets. Leaseand<lb/>
Deposit Required. Duffus Realty, Inc.<lb/>
Call 756-2675.<lb/>
A 7TH STORY luxury suite hanging<lb/>
over the whit sand and clear water of<lb/>
South Florida's most beautiful beach.<lb/>
Completely furnished, sleeps five in<lb/>
unbelievable luxury; minutes from Jai<lb/>
Alai, airport, horses dogs, Ft. Lauder-<lb/>
dale Beach, Miami Action. $800 for<lb/>
Week36-3 13 at Hollywood Beach<lb/>
Tower. Call (205) 948 - 7493.<lb/>
1 BR APARTMENT on 13th St Great<lb/>
for pets, esp. dogs. Available immedi-<lb/>
ately. $275 mo. Call 752-9197.<lb/>
FEMALEroommate need May through<lb/>
Aug to share 2 bdrm apt at Tar River.<lb/>
SI00.00 per mo 1 3 utilities. Call 752-<lb/>
8000<lb/>
KINGS ARM APARTMENT for rent<lb/>
One bed room. Available immediately.<lb/>
No deposit required 5265mo. Call<lb/>
Coflect(919)2fi9-7844 Ask for Yvonne<lb/>
SUBLEASE: 2 bedroom apartment at<lb/>
OakmontSquare. RentisS380 month.<lb/>
Available March 1st through end of<lb/>
May Call 355-5803.<lb/>
IBRAPARTMENTacrossfrom cam-<lb/>
pus call 752 -2615<lb/>
SUBLEASE TAR RIVER APT. for<lb/>
summer ASAP. 2 bedroom $460 a<lb/>
month. Call 830-9421.<lb/>
ALL NEW UNRELEASED live con-<lb/>
cert&amp;srudio recordings for sale. Over<lb/>
lOOOnewritlesavailablethisweekfrom<lb/>
thefollowingartists:ROCK-U2,R.E.M,<lb/>
Clapton, Zeppelin, Hendrix, Black<lb/>
Crowes, Springsteen, SRV, VanHalen,<lb/>
Rush, Beatles, Doors, G-N-R, etc. AL-<lb/>
TERNATIVE-Nir'ana,PearlJam,Chili<lb/>
Peppers, Cure, Depeche Mode, MORE<lb/>
OTHERS INCLUDE-Bob Marley, Ma-<lb/>
donna, Prince, and more. Ca 11931 -2573<lb/>
to leave name, number, and requested<lb/>
artist on message (all new CD's and<lb/>
tapes in stock).<lb/>
CHEAP! FBIUSSEIZED: 89Mercedes<lb/>
-200, 86 VW - $) ?&amp; Mercedes -<lb/>
SI 00, 65 Mustang -55. Choose form<lb/>
thousandsstartingS50.FREElnforma-<lb/>
tion 24 hour hot I ine 801 -379-2929 copy-<lb/>
nghtNC 030610.<lb/>
FOR SALE! Admiral Delux full-sized<lb/>
refrigerator. Old but in very good con-<lb/>
dition, 758-6998.<lb/>
HONDA 1988 Nx 125 J, 1127 miles,<lb/>
SI ,200.756-1910.<lb/>
MOUNTAIN BIKE Trek 820,1 year<lb/>
old, good condition. 5175 OBOand its<lb/>
yours! Call 752-9601.<lb/>
RINGGOLD TOWERS<lb/>
Now Taking Leases for<lb/>
1 bedroom, 2 bedroom &amp;<lb/>
Efficiency Apartments.<lb/>
CALL 752-2865<lb/>
ROOMMATE FOR LG house near<lb/>
downtown and campus. 1 3 utilities,<lb/>
deposit, $155moth, call Jay 758-4375'<lb/>
FEMALE ROOMMATE NEEDED:<lb/>
S150.00permonth l3urilities. Easy<lb/>
going, non-smoker preferred. Please<lb/>
call 757-1262.<lb/>
TWOGRAD STUDENTS insearchof<lb/>
3rd roommate to live in 3 bdr. house.<lb/>
$160moperson,S160depositrefund-<lb/>
able end of August. Please inquire Ja-<lb/>
son or Mandel 756-6614 or Jason 757-<lb/>
6318.<lb/>
$10 - S360UP WEEKLY Mailing bro-<lb/>
chures' Spa refull time.Setownhours!<lb/>
RUSH stamped envelope: Publishers<lb/>
(Gl) 1821 Hillandale Rd. 1B-295<lb/>
Durham, NC 27705<lb/>
OUTER BANKS largest watersports<lb/>
center iring enthusiastic persons for<lb/>
sailing windsurfing instruction,<lb/>
powerboat and equipment rentals, re-<lb/>
tail. NorthBeachSailing,Inc. Box 8279,<lb/>
Duck, NC 27949. (919) 261-6262.<lb/>
CHEERLEADING INSTRUCTORS<lb/>
NEEDED. Looking for enthusiastic<lb/>
people with strong cheering and inter-<lb/>
personal skills to teach cheerleading<lb/>
camps in NC &amp; SC. Great pay and<lb/>
flexible scheduling. Up to 10 weeks<lb/>
possible! If you love cheerleading, this<lb/>
is the summer job for you! To apply<lb/>
Call 1-800-280-3223.<lb/>
ATTENTION STUDENTS: Earn ex-<lb/>
tra cash stuffing envelopes at home.<lb/>
All Materials provided. SendSASEto<lb/>
National Distributors PO Box 9643<lb/>
Springfield, MO 65801. Immediate re-<lb/>
sponse.<lb/>
ATTENTION FASHION MER-<lb/>
CHANDISING MAJORS! Gain valu-<lb/>
able work experience in your field of<lb/>
study.Brody'sisacceptingapplications<lb/>
for Secretary to Buyer. Work with buy-<lb/>
ers in tracking and replenishing inven-<lb/>
tory levels. Computer experience<lb/>
needed. Must be available 3 days by 12<lb/>
p.m 15-20 hours per week. Apply<lb/>
Brady's The Plaza, Monday - Wednes-<lb/>
day, 1-4 pm.<lb/>
AQUATIC DIRECTORS &amp; LIFE-<lb/>
GUARDS Summer positions in<lb/>
Greenville and Nags Head areas. Call<lb/>
Bob, 756-1088.<lb/>
THE CITY OF RALEIGH PARKS<lb/>
AND RECREATION department is<lb/>
seeking enthusiastic hardworking in-<lb/>
dividus for summer employment.<lb/>
Position- include pool managers, life-<lb/>
guard, park maintenance, camp coun-<lb/>
selors, nature, athletic, arts and lake<lb/>
personnel, and therapeutic programs.<lb/>
EOE MFH Contact: 2401 Wade Av-<lb/>
enue, Raleigh, NC 27602 Phone: (919)<lb/>
831-6640.<lb/>
200 - $500 WEEKLY. Assemble prod-<lb/>
uctsathome. Easy! No selling. You're<lb/>
paid direct. Fully Guaranteed. Free<lb/>
Information-24hourhotline. 801-379<lb/>
-2900 Copyright NC 030650.<lb/>
WILLING TO TRADE free horseback<lb/>
ridinginexchangeforoccasionalstable<lb/>
help. Private stable near Winterville.<lb/>
Experienced riders only. Call 756 -<lb/>
5784 after 6 pm.<lb/>
LOOKING FOR responsible Child-<lb/>
hood Education or Nursing student<lb/>
(preferably) who could watch my 4 vr.<lb/>
old son in our home - 2 davs a week,<lb/>
830 - 5:30. Transportation and refer-<lb/>
ences necessary. Call Lori or Dennis<lb/>
756-576S (leave message).<lb/>
WANTEDusedCD's,NES, and Super<lb/>
NES games. Call 756 - 3319 and leave<lb/>
message.<lb/>
WANTED TO BUY: Rolex-and other<lb/>
high grade watches CASH PAID<lb/>
Call David at 756-9290 Mon-Sat 10-6<lb/>
Leave Message after 6 pm<lb/>
PARTY HOUSES - North Myrtle<lb/>
Beach. Welcomegroupsof4-34people.<lb/>
Group-Leader discounts. Call Myrtle<lb/>
Beach Tours 9 - 4 pm (703) 250-2125.<lb/>
LET'S PARTY experienced DJ from<lb/>
Bogies available for all occasions: Fra-<lb/>
ternity and Sorority socials, Weddings,<lb/>
Birthdays. All types of music from<lb/>
Classic Rock to Top 40 Dance. Highest<lb/>
quality Best Prices Call Rob @ 757 -<lb/>
2658.<lb/>
A GREAT OPPORTUNITY for stu-<lb/>
dent group fund raising sell greeting<lb/>
cards. Receive half profit. Call 919-<lb/>
758-49016. Ask for Northern Lamer or<lb/>
see Lisa Shibley.<lb/>
BUSY SCHEDULE; no time for typ-<lb/>
ing Mary will do your typing for you<lb/>
atS2.50apage. FurtherDetailscall752-<lb/>
5228 after 6:00pm.<lb/>
SPRING ON THE OUTER BANKS<lb/>
Sun Realty extends a special invitation<lb/>
to students at ECU to vacation this<lb/>
spring on the sunny Outer Banks of<lb/>
NC through May 22nd. Certain restric-<lb/>
tions apply. 5300 security deposit<lb/>
requireed. Call for availabilities 1-800-<lb/>
334-4745.<lb/>
WORD PROCESSING AND PHO-<lb/>
TOCOPYING SERVICES: We offer<lb/>
typingandphotocopyingservices. We<lb/>
also sell software and computer dis-<lb/>
kettes. 24hours in and out. Guaranteed<lb/>
typing on paper up to 20 hand written<lb/>
pages.SDFProfessionalComputerSer-<lb/>
vices, 106 East 5th Street (beside<lb/>
Cubbie's) Greenville, NC 752-3694.<lb/>
Typing Services<lb/>
Resumes, Term Papers, Letters<lb/>
Master Thesis or Presentations<lb/>
Professionally printed on "LaserJet' printer<lb/>
Reasonable Rates<lb/>
Same Day Service available<lb/>
C?ll J. Canon at 756-1341<lb/>
RESEARCH INFORMATION<lb/>
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6MVES PROFESSIONAL TYPING &amp;<lb/>
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'Professionally Composed Resumes<lb/>
'Competitive Rates<lb/>
CALL 758-7218<lb/>
Butbeing with you willmakeitthebest<lb/>
time 1 could ever have. I love you,<lb/>
forever, your mister man.<lb/>
COORS: Congratulationsongoingto<lb/>
Tennessee for the Billiards Nationals!<lb/>
I'm sure you did an awesome job<lb/>
HOTROD! By thewaydid the little red<lb/>
headed girl come along and play with<lb/>
you, I heard she might just for support<lb/>
you know! See ya later and how about<lb/>
Lifestyle? Mo<lb/>
Brian, Cliff, Missy, Lisa, Sean, and<lb/>
Jeremy: Thanks a lot for making this<lb/>
semester a lot easier and one 111 never<lb/>
forget! No matter where 111 be next<lb/>
year, I'll always remember vou guys<lb/>
and all the support you've given me!<lb/>
Brian, watch out for the puck;Missy,<lb/>
don't cut your hair;Cliff, don't forget<lb/>
the study room;Lisa, feel it<lb/>
burn,Sean,can 1 bum a smoke?and<lb/>
Jeremy,Teli Prince I said Hi! I love you<lb/>
guys! Your friend always, Lisa Marie.<lb/>
To the Phi Kappa Tau brother who<lb/>
enjoys being tied up and loves to wear<lb/>
a tuxedo bikini: too bad you turned out<lb/>
to be just a big Italian weenie. (Well, I<lb/>
guess BIG is exaggerating it a bit!)<lb/>
EAST<lb/>
CAROLINIAN<lb/>
ACCOUNT<lb/>
EXECUTIVES<lb/>
Karen Bilyj<lb/>
Lindsay Fernandez<lb/>
Matt Hege<lb/>
Aime'e Lewis<lb/>
?<lb/>
Brandon Perry<lb/>
CALL 919-757-6366<lb/>
today for more<lb/>
advertising information<lb/>
GREEKS &amp; CLUBS<lb/>
RAISE A COOL<lb/>
$1,000<lb/>
IN JUST ONE WEEK!<lb/>
PLUS $1,000 FOR THE<lb/>
MEMBER WHO CALLS!<lb/>
No obligation. No cost.<lb/>
And a FREE<lb/>
IGLOO COOLER<lb/>
if you qualify. Call<lb/>
1-800-932-0528, exL 65<lb/>
SUMMER JOB OPPORTUNITY<lb/>
Did you save any money last summer?<lb/>
Earn $4,00C $5,000 this Summer!<lb/>
3 Credit Hours<lb/>
Contact VARSITY INTERNSHIP PROGRAM<lb/>
1-800-251-4000 Ext. 1576<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/>
NJ2WI USED CD'S<lb/>
BRAND NEW APARTMENTS<lb/>
Get deposits in now for Summer and Fall.<lb/>
Available March 1st Ideal location, close to<lb/>
campus with ECU Bus transportation<lb/>
provided. One and two bedrooms.<lb/>
Water and sewer is paid by us.<lb/>
Call 752-8320 from 8:30 am to 5:00 pm.<lb/>
SUNSHINE, I want to thank you for a<lb/>
wonderful four month anniversary to<lb/>
be. I know New York City will be fun<lb/>
and 1 cannot wait to see the Phantom.<lb/>
EXCEPTIONAL VALUE FOR<lb/>
. SPACIOUS DUPLEXES<lb/>
Get deposits in now for Summer and Fall.<lb/>
2 and 3 bedroom duplexes offering<lb/>
lots of space and convenient locations<lb/>
close to campus.<lb/>
Water and sewer is paid by us<lb/>
Call 752-8320 from 8:30 am to 5:00 pm.<lb/>
THE ?<lb/>
EASTli J iII y J<lb/>
CARPI Man fJJ'iJ,<lb/>
The Advertising Deadline For March 16, 1993<lb/>
Edition Will Be This Thursday, March 4th at 4 PM.<lb/>
Thank you for your cooperation!<lb/>
Announcements<lb/>
COMMUTERS &amp;RFTlipNIN-<lb/>
ADULTSTI.jpFNTS<lb/>
Need help? Have ques-<lb/>
tions? complaints? suggestions?<lb/>
Here's your opportunity to talk<lb/>
with the experts in person on Wed<lb/>
March 3 from 11:30 -1:00 and 5:00<lb/>
- 6:30 plus Thurs March 4 from<lb/>
11:30-1:00 on the first floor of GCB<lb/>
outside room 1008.<lb/>
NAIT<lb/>
NAIT will be holding a<lb/>
meeting Tues March 2nd at 5:00<lb/>
pm inRawl 105. Todd Skinner, Vice<lb/>
President with Industrial Construc-<lb/>
tion for C. A. Lewis, Inc. will be the<lb/>
guest speaker For more informa-<lb/>
tion call PatrickCarrollat830-1765.<lb/>
ENGLISH DFPT -Fi<lb/>
Susan V. Smith, a gradu-<lb/>
ate student in the English depart-<lb/>
ment who was working to com-<lb/>
plete her thesis, died recently. A<lb/>
memorial fund has been set up in<lb/>
her name. Anyone wishing to con-<lb/>
tribute to the Memorial fund for<lb/>
Susan Smith may contact St.Peter's<lb/>
Catholic Church (757-3259).<lb/>
CAMPUSrHRl?:TMN<lb/>
FELLOWSHIP<lb/>
Looking for a fellowship<lb/>
of Christians, a placeto pray, study<lb/>
God's word, be involved in social<lb/>
and service projects7 Need a ref-<lb/>
uge from time to time? Campus<lb/>
Christian Fellowship may be wh.it<lb/>
you .ire looking for Our weekly<lb/>
meetings are at 7pm Wednesdays<lb/>
at our Campus House located at<lb/>
200 E. Sth St directly across<lb/>
CotancheSt. from Mendenhall Stu-<lb/>
dent Center. For more informa-<lb/>
tion, Call Tim Turner, Campus<lb/>
Minister, at 752-7199 .<lb/>
EAST CARPI TNi A HoNoRC<lb/>
ORGANIZATION<lb/>
ECHO will have its next<lb/>
meeting Wednesday, March 3, at<lb/>
5:00 p.m. in GCB. Rm 2017. We will<lb/>
be doing a personality evaluation.<lb/>
All students with a 3.4 CPA are<lb/>
welcome<lb/>
ECUENVlROMMFiTM<lb/>
HEALTH rillR<lb/>
The next meeting will be<lb/>
held on Wed March 3 at 5:00 in the<lb/>
2nd floor student lounge of the<lb/>
Allied Health Building Everyone<lb/>
is invited to come!<lb/>
RECSERVICFS<lb/>
Spring Fling Get Away<lb/>
Give Away! Free prizes will be<lb/>
given away during all aerobics<lb/>
classes on Wed March 3 And don't<lb/>
forget to register for the Crand<lb/>
Prize - A night's accommodation<lb/>
for 2 and breakfast - compliments<lb/>
of the Greenville Hilton Inn! For<lb/>
more information call Kec.Services<lb/>
at 757-6387<lb/>
GOLDEN KFYNA,TfnM a,<lb/>
HONOR SOCIFTV<lb/>
Golden Key will have <lb/>
meeting March 3rd in Speight 313.<lb/>
all members are urged to attend.<lb/>
Questions7 Please Call 756 - 5381.<lb/>
GAMMASIC,MAqrrMA.<lb/>
Gamma Sigma Sigma will<lb/>
be holding its first annual Karaoke<lb/>
Contest at MUGSHOTS on Tues-<lb/>
day March 2 starting at 10:00 pm.<lb/>
Sing the night away with over 300<lb/>
songs to choose from! Prizes<lb/>
awarded! Don't miss out on this<lb/>
great event! For more details con-<lb/>
tact jenny 931 -8279 or Michelle 758-<lb/>
7546.<lb/>
LEARN TO SWIM<lb/>
The children's Learn to Swim<lb/>
program in the Water Safety<lb/>
Instructor's Class will start Mar.<lb/>
15th. For further information, con-<lb/>
tact Melrose Moore, Minges Coli-<lb/>
seum 757-4632 or 4633.<lb/>
STUDENT GOVFR'MFNT<lb/>
ASSOCIATION<lb/>
Filing for executive elections<lb/>
begins Thurs , Feb. 25, 1993. Must<lb/>
have 48 semester hours, 2 semes-<lb/>
ters at ECU, a 2.0 overall G.P.A<lb/>
and be in good standing. Contact<lb/>
SCA office at 757-4726 for more<lb/>
info Positions available include<lb/>
president, vice-president, trea-<lb/>
surer, secretary S10.00 filing fee<lb/>
ECU FENCING PI lip<lb/>
ECU Fencing Club will<lb/>
hold orientation on February. 23 and<lb/>
Mar 2 Tues . at 6:30 p.m in<lb/>
Christenbury Gym. Fencers at all<lb/>
levels are welcome or contact 752-<lb/>
3052.<lb/>
SOCIAI WORKrpilUirHAJ<lb/>
JUSTICE<lb/>
Applicants for the S.W. &amp;<lb/>
C.J. majors are reminded to attend<lb/>
an Admissions group meeting in<lb/>
Ragsdale 218 on Monday Mar. 1<lb/>
or Tues Mar. 2 at 5 p.m. Appli-<lb/>
cants must attend one of these meet-<lb/>
ings!<lb/>
ECU EQUESTRIAN CLLffi<lb/>
ECU Equestrian Club will<lb/>
be holding a meeting Thursday<lb/>
March 4th at 5:30 in GC 1009. This<lb/>
meeting is open for anyone inter-<lb/>
ested in horses. Contact Angela at<lb/>
931-8453 or Adrienne at 931-7722<lb/>
for any questions.<lb/>
PRE-OCCUPATIOMAI<lb/>
THERAPY STUDENT<lb/>
ADVISING<lb/>
Early registration for sum-<lb/>
mer and fall sessions will begin<lb/>
March 29th. There will be an advis-<lb/>
ing session Thursday night, March<lb/>
18th from 4:00 - 7:00 in room 306 of<lb/>
the Belk Building. If you are unable<lb/>
to attend this meeting please call<lb/>
the OT office for other advising<lb/>
hours. Please see the video at the<lb/>
Joyner Library before you come for<lb/>
advising.<lb/>
G'VILIFBUSINiFSSfc<lb/>
PROFESSIONAI WOMFN"<lb/>
CLUB<lb/>
SCHOLARSHIP' Deadline<lb/>
March 15, 1993 criteria for selec-<lb/>
tion: Rising Junior have a 3.2 over-<lb/>
all GPA, meet before a scholarship<lb/>
committee. For applications and<lb/>
more info, CONTACT: Mrs. Dot<lb/>
Searv, 503 Eleanor St Greenville,<lb/>
NC 27858, 746 - 6742.<lb/>
ASH WEDNESDAY.SFRVIGFS<lb/>
The NEWMAN CATHO-<lb/>
LIC STUDENT CENTER wishes to<lb/>
announce special Ash Wednesday<lb/>
Masses with the distribution of<lb/>
ashes: 12 noon in the Great Room<lb/>
of Mendenhall StudentCenter and<lb/>
5:30 p.m. at the Newman Center,<lb/>
953 E. 10th Street at the foot of<lb/>
College Hill.<lb/>
REC. SERVICES<lb/>
Softball registrationwill be<lb/>
held Tuesday, March 16th at 5:00 pm<lb/>
in Biology 103. There will be a mini-<lb/>
mum oflOpeopleper team. Formore<lb/>
information call 757-6387.<lb/>
Classifieds Announcements Displayed<lb/>
25 words or less<lb/>
Students $2.00<lb/>
Non-Students $3.00<lb/>
Each additional word $0.05<lb/>
?All ads must be pre-paid?<lb/>
Any organization may use the Announce-<lb/>
ments Section of The East Carolinian to list<lb/>
activities and events open to the public two<lb/>
times fteeof charge. Duetothelimited amount<lb/>
of space, The East Carolinian cannot guaran-<lb/>
tee the publ ication of announcements.<lb/>
$5.50 per inch:<lb/>
Displayed advertisements may be<lb/>
cancelled before 10 a.m. the day<lb/>
prior to publication however, no<lb/>
refunds will be given.<lb/>
Deadlines<lb/>
EAST<lb/>
CAROLINIAN<lb/>
Friday 4 p.m. for Tuesday's edition.<lb/>
Tuesday 4 p.m. for Thursday's Edition<lb/>
For more<lb/>
information call<lb/>
757-6366.<lb/>
1<lb/>
'???,mmm4mm.m?<lb/>
<pb facs="00058371_0006"/><lb/>
?<lb/>
The East Carolinian<lb/>
March 2, 1993<lb/>
TuesdayOpinion<lb/>
Safer sex campaign<lb/>
geared to save lives,<lb/>
provide information<lb/>
Students exposed to different<lb/>
viewpoints as they mature, go<lb/>
out into the real world<lb/>
Recently, The East Carolinian ran a four-part safer sex<lb/>
campaign designed to increase awareness to the AIDS prob-<lb/>
lem that this country faces every day. Through what some<lb/>
may have deemed controversial or even disgusting photo-<lb/>
graphs, we tried to provoke some thoughts and questions to<lb/>
a subject that is all too often swept under the carpet to lie in<lb/>
darkness with the dust.<lb/>
AIDS has been coined the "Black Plague" of the 1980s<lb/>
and 1990s. More and more cases of HIV and AIDS are being<lb/>
reported daily; the demographics of this disease know no<lb/>
boundaries. Men, women, gays, heterosexuals,blacks, whites<lb/>
? everyone is susceptible to this disease if they engage in<lb/>
high-risk behavior.<lb/>
Having sexual intercourse without using a condom and<lb/>
other means of protection defines high-risk behavior. We at<lb/>
The East Carolinian do not promote individuals having sex.<lb/>
Rather, we promote that individuals who do have sex make<lb/>
an informed and knowledgeable decision when they make<lb/>
this potentially life-threatening choice.<lb/>
Though abstinence is a viable choice for any person to<lb/>
make, the reality of life today proves that more and more<lb/>
people are engaging in sexual intercourse. Over half of the<lb/>
young people in the United States who are asked say that<lb/>
they have had sex by the time they turn 17. Though this<lb/>
statementmay be likea splash of cold water in the face of some<lb/>
people, turning away from it and ignoring it will not make it<lb/>
go away or diminish its reality.<lb/>
Some have argued that parents send their children to<lb/>
college to get a better education so as to become productive<lb/>
membersof society. They havesaid that this liberal viewpoint<lb/>
towards sex only serves to demoralize the youth of toda y and<lb/>
promote promiscuity and degeneracy.<lb/>
One fact that remains hidden by this smoke screen of an<lb/>
argument is that students at this university ? and others<lb/>
around the state ? are adults and make their own decisions<lb/>
as such. When a high school student graduates and goes to<lb/>
college, especially a liberal-arts college such as ECU, the<lb/>
prime motive behind his or her education is to have a well-<lb/>
rounded experience so that he or she can go out into the real<lb/>
world, knowing full well what to expect from it.<lb/>
This well-rounded experience includes exposure to many<lb/>
ideas that may be considered radical and new, some that<lb/>
people may have never been faced with before ? AIDS,<lb/>
homosexuality, inter-racial relationships ? just to name a<lb/>
few. By turning a blind eye or condemning without ta king the<lb/>
time to gain knowledge, people close their minds to the<lb/>
variety that humanity has to offer.<lb/>
As students, we seek knowledge. We seek this knowl-<lb/>
edge not just on one particular subject, but knowledge on life<lb/>
as we will experience it. The majority of students who gradu-<lb/>
ate from ECU will move and take up jobs around this country.<lb/>
They will be faced with day-to-day surprises and awakenings<lb/>
that will test their inner resolve and fortitude.<lb/>
If we do not see this world as it is, ever-changing and<lb/>
forever moving, we will stagnate in the mire of ignorance and<lb/>
narrow-mindedness. People must realize that this nation,<lb/>
and this world, are made up of many varied lifestyles and<lb/>
approaches. Different lifestyles are neither vulgar nor degen-<lb/>
erate ? they are what serves to promote the advancement<lb/>
and progress of our society into the future.<lb/>
The East Carolinian wholeheartedly agrees with the state-<lb/>
ment that there is more to life than sex. But with this agree-<lb/>
ment comes the necessary addend that there is more to life<lb/>
than one view of the world. Students?and parents alike-<lb/>
must realize that only through knowledge and information<lb/>
can we ever hope to perpetuate our lives.<lb/>
Opinion<lb/>
Page 6<lb/>
A View from Above<lb/>
By T. Scott Batchelor<lb/>
Weather dog to correct meteorologists' errors<lb/>
Do you ever wonder if<lb/>
broadcast meteorologists really<lb/>
know what the heck they're talk-<lb/>
ing about? Are they just winging<lb/>
it, or is hit-and-miss forecasting<lb/>
the best we can hope for in this<lb/>
age of almost magical scientific<lb/>
advancement?<lb/>
Take this week's weather<lb/>
occurrences for example. Living<lb/>
in eastern North Carolina doesn't<lb/>
afford one much opportunity to<lb/>
build a respectable snowman. So<lb/>
when the local weather shamans<lb/>
predicted sizable amounts of<lb/>
snowfall for Friday, 1 was excited.<lb/>
See, I love snow.<lb/>
I'm not sure where I got this<lb/>
fascination with snow. Maybe it<lb/>
comes from my younger days<lb/>
when even the hint of frozen pre-<lb/>
cipitation would send local school<lb/>
administrators into a panic, at the<lb/>
very least delaying school open-<lb/>
ings, or cancelling classes alto-<lb/>
gether.<lb/>
Those days I stayed home, I<lb/>
wou Id play in whatever snow had<lb/>
accumulated until my feet and<lb/>
The East Carolinian<lb/>
James R. Knisely, General Manager<lb/>
Blair Skinner, Managing Editor<lb/>
Arthur A. Sutorius, Advertising Director<lb/>
hands were water-logged and<lb/>
numb. When I got so cold I<lb/>
couldn't stand it anymore, I<lb/>
would retire to a nice spot on the<lb/>
floor of our toasty living room,<lb/>
right in front of the TV, and switch<lb/>
the channel to ? get ready for<lb/>
this ? PBS!<lb/>
That's right, PBS. The Elec-<lb/>
tric Company, Sesame Street and<lb/>
Zoom kept me company on those<lb/>
days off. (By the way, did you<lb/>
know that the gifted actor Mor-<lb/>
gan Freeman was one of the play-<lb/>
ers on The Electric Company in<lb/>
his earlier days?)<lb/>
We were talking about last<lb/>
week's blizzard.<lb/>
On Thursday, a local news-<lb/>
paper reported that an appre-<lb/>
ciable amount of snow would fall<lb/>
early Friday morning. Every lo-<lb/>
ca 1 television station said the same<lb/>
thing, with the usual qualifiers<lb/>
like "probably" and "85 percent<lb/>
chance<lb/>
Have you ever noticed that<lb/>
a 60 percent chance of rain means<lb/>
it will definitely rain, whereas an<lb/>
85 percent chance of snow means<lb/>
it probably won't?<lb/>
Well, as most of you who<lb/>
were unfortunate enough to be in<lb/>
this part of the state know, Friday<lb/>
morning brought nothing but<lb/>
bone-chilling rain and depressed<lb/>
spirits. Yes, I was up late Thurs-<lb/>
day night and saw a little precipi-<lb/>
tation hit the ground,but it wasn't<lb/>
enough to talk about. Maybe if<lb/>
that much had fallen in say, mid-<lb/>
August in Puerto Rico, we'd have<lb/>
a story.<lb/>
Perhaps I expect too much<lb/>
from meteorologists. I mean,<lb/>
they're only highly educated<lb/>
people who ha ve completed a rig-<lb/>
orous course of study involving<lb/>
calculus, statistics, geology and<lb/>
other demanding subjects. Why<lb/>
should we hold these men and<lb/>
women to any higher standards<lb/>
of accuracy than we do to certain<lb/>
national news networks whose<lb/>
name contains the three lettersC,<lb/>
N and B, or to certain heads of<lb/>
state pushing fancy new "eco-<lb/>
nomic stimulus" packages?<lb/>
I guess what I'm trying to<lb/>
say is, meteorologists are only<lb/>
human, and like all the rest of us<lb/>
they make mistakes sometimes.<lb/>
My friend who is a meteorolo-<lb/>
gist in the U.S. Air Force tells me<lb/>
that two days is about the limit<lb/>
on accurate weather forecasting,<lb/>
and that these three-day fore-<lb/>
casts are really unreliable. At<lb/>
least he's honest.<lb/>
1 was talking to a man re-<lb/>
cently who sa id tha t the ci ty he i s<lb/>
from doesn't even have a<lb/>
weatherperson.<lb/>
"How do you know what<lb/>
the weather's going to be ?" I<lb/>
asked.<lb/>
"We have a local weather<lb/>
dog he said.<lb/>
"A weather dog?"<lb/>
"Yeah, we send him out-<lb/>
side, and if he comes back dry,<lb/>
the weather's going to be clear. If<lb/>
he comes back wet, it's going to<lb/>
rain. If he doesn't come back at<lb/>
all, it's going to be very windy<lb/>
A weatherdog, huh? It defi-<lb/>
nitely has potential.<lb/>
Elizabeth Shitnmel, News Editor<lb/>
Karen H assell, Asst. News Editor<lb/>
Dana Danielson, Lifestyle Editor<lb/>
John Billiard, Asst Lifestyle Editor<lb/>
Joe Horst, Opinion Page Editor<lb/>
Robert Todd, Sports Editor<lb/>
Warren Sumner, Asst. Sports Editor<lb/>
Sean Herring, Copy Editor<lb/>
Gregory Dickens, Copy Editor<lb/>
Michael Albuquerque, Business Manager<lb/>
Jody Jones, Circulation Manager<lb/>
Cori Daniels, Utyout Manager<lb/>
Monique Campbell, Asst Layout Manager<lb/>
Woody Barnes, Creative Director<lb/>
Dail Reed, Photo Editor<lb/>
Richard Hasting, Staff Illustrator<lb/>
Matt MacDonald, Systems Manager<lb/>
Deborah Daniel, irrelir<lb/>
The East Carolinian publishes 12,000 copies every Tuesday ami<lb/>
Thursday. The masthead editorial in each edition is the opinion of the<lb/>
Editorial Board The East Carolinian welcomes letters, limited to 250<lb/>
words, which may be edited for decency or brevity<lb/>
The East Carolinian reserves the right to edit or reject letters for<lb/>
publication. Letters should be addressed to The Editor. Vie East Carolinian.<lb/>
Publications Bldg ECU, Greenville, N C . 27858-4??. lor more inform<lb/>
tion, call (919) 757-6366<lb/>
Printed<lb/>
100<lb/>
5<lb/>
I tuou&amp;i-i t The: A?rATte:AAAH<lb/>
SAC? THAT IT WA5 GOAtSTo &amp;?"<lb/>
QuoteoftheDay:<lb/>
I advise you to go on living solely to enrage<lb/>
those who are paying your annuities. It is the<lb/>
only pleasure I have left.<lb/>
Voltaire<lb/>
Letters to the Editor<lb/>
Alumni disgusted with safer-sex campaign<lb/>
To the Editor:<lb/>
My wife and I are 1963<lb/>
and 1964 graduates of East<lb/>
Carolina. I have always had<lb/>
great appreciation for the edu-<lb/>
cations we received and a<lb/>
sense of pride about the uni-<lb/>
versity in eastern N orth Caro-<lb/>
lina that is sometimes ignored<lb/>
and scornfully dubbed "The<lb/>
Party School<lb/>
That withstanding, I<lb/>
want to express my utter dis-<lb/>
gust regarding the full page<lb/>
endorsement (Feb. 16) of pre-<lb/>
marital sex, promiscuity and<lb/>
degeneratehomosexual "sex"<lb/>
that you, the "enlightened in-<lb/>
tellectuals ram down the<lb/>
throats (no pun intended) of<lb/>
moral people while proclaim-<lb/>
ing the "normality" of such<lb/>
vulgar, degenerate and per-<lb/>
verted behaviorally learned<lb/>
"life-styles<lb/>
Parents work hard to<lb/>
pay tuition for their children<lb/>
(and, you are children  you<lb/>
didn't know that, did you?)<lb/>
and provide for them the op-<lb/>
portunity toattend an institu-<lb/>
tion of higher (sic) learning to<lb/>
acquireskills and abilities that<lb/>
will help them become a pro-<lb/>
ductive and yes, normal per-<lb/>
son that contributes to the<lb/>
betterment of society. What<lb/>
you are promoting by your<lb/>
degenerate, liberal mindset,<lb/>
under the guise of providing<lb/>
"valuable" information, is<lb/>
crap! Get your (institutional)<lb/>
head out of your anal cavity,<lb/>
discover again the smell of<lb/>
roses instead of the pungent<lb/>
odors associated with your<lb/>
head placement and do some-<lb/>
thing good for yourself, your<lb/>
fellow students and society<lb/>
? tell them to seek wisdom<lb/>
(for your information, wis-<lb/>
dom is not found in a<lb/>
condom)! Yes, I have stressed<lb/>
the moral side of this issue,<lb/>
but what bothers me equally<lb/>
as much is that you are en-<lb/>
dorsing high risk behavior<lb/>
which has devastating conse-<lb/>
quences. I realize that you are<lb/>
on a "mission from God to<lb/>
save the world but for your<lb/>
information, and maybe you<lb/>
have never been told this,<lb/>
there is more to life than sex,<lb/>
whatever "style" you might<lb/>
"embrace<lb/>
The East Carolinian staff<lb/>
needs professional help. Try<lb/>
your Department of Psychol-<lb/>
ogy if there is anyone there<lb/>
who understands reality. If<lb/>
not, then find help on your<lb/>
knees. Maybe that is where<lb/>
you should start, on your<lb/>
knees!<lb/>
Kenneth Webster<lb/>
Alumni<lb/>
By Amy E. Wirtz<lb/>
Education rests on<lb/>
parents' shoulders,<lb/>
not on schools'<lb/>
Are schools really to blame for the<lb/>
country's millions of dropouts and the esti-<lb/>
mated 20-40 million Americans who can<lb/>
scarcely read street signs? Schools have al-<lb/>
ways been the ones dumped on throughout<lb/>
the years. A few people think it may be time<lb/>
to point a finger someplace else. This time<lb/>
it's at the parents.<lb/>
Richard Haynes and Don Chalker, two<lb/>
Western Carolina University professors who<lb/>
studied educational systems in lOcountries,<lb/>
found that U.S. standards were often among<lb/>
the best in the world. Unlike counterparts in<lb/>
Germany or Japan, parents in the United<lb/>
States are slow to make students keep up<lb/>
their end of the bargain. With this discovery,<lb/>
they predict that establishing world-class<lb/>
schools is not jome distant goal that will<lb/>
require years of painful academic progress.<lb/>
They believe that the American reform<lb/>
movement of the past 10 years has over-<lb/>
looked an extremely important fact ? virtu-<lb/>
ally every developed country in the world<lb/>
went through significant school reforms in<lb/>
the 1980s. The United States, on the other<lb/>
hand, focused almost entirely on restructur-<lb/>
ing schools. We haven't spent any time try-<lb/>
ing to bring about world-class parents.<lb/>
So there may be truth in what Haynes<lb/>
and Chalker have reported. America's<lb/>
schools do need serious help. Head Start is a<lb/>
by-product of a failing educational system.<lb/>
Started in 1965 as a pre-kindergarten pro-<lb/>
gram for poverty-level children, it mandated<lb/>
parent participation. Research showed that<lb/>
a preschool in which parents were involved<lb/>
could massively improve the social and cog-<lb/>
nitive ability of children at risk. <lb/>
Head Start began as a summer pro-<lb/>
gram, which was almost immediately ex-<lb/>
panded to a full-year program with 400,000<lb/>
kids. The 1992-93 program enrolled 583,471<lb/>
children and its budget is $2.2 billion. This<lb/>
was the first major education reform that<lb/>
took the heat off the schools. Schools weren't<lb/>
to blame, parents who couldn't adequately<lb/>
prepare their children for school were.<lb/>
Yet, the federal government has never<lb/>
provided funds to pay for the master teach-<lb/>
ers called for in Head Start legislation. In-<lb/>
stead, they have relied wholly on teachers<lb/>
recruited from host communities. Most of<lb/>
these community-based teachers have no<lb/>
more than high school educations. Obvi-<lb/>
ously, the Head Start program of today can-<lb/>
not compare to the one in the '60s, so it is<lb/>
under fire.<lb/>
There is no definite evidence that Head<lb/>
Start offers more than the most modest help<lb/>
I to poor kids. Research supports both sides of<lb/>
the question, but negative research is all but<lb/>
ignored by educationists or child advocates.<lb/>
Surely there should be some debo bout a<lb/>
multibillion-dollar program that shows surh<lb/>
r modest results, especially before more bil-<lb/>
- - lions of dollars are invested in it.<lb/>
Intellect is, to a large extent, a product<lb/>
of experience, not inheritance. Clearly, poor<lb/>
children do not have the same advantages as<lb/>
wealthier children. Since 61 percent of chil-<lb/>
- dren bom outof wedlock will live in poverty<lb/>
at least seven of their first 10 years, America<lb/>
has a serious problem on their hands. The<lb/>
larger problem is the state of America's fami-<lb/>
lies, though. Start fixing that and we may<lb/>
actually get somewhere.<lb/>
- 1<lb/>
ltd<lb/>
m<lb/>
llllililllUN i!IW!i!<lb/>
<pb facs="00058371_0007"/><lb/>
? The East Carolinian<lb/>
March 2, 1993<lb/>
Lifestyle<lb/>
Spanish photographers 'Open Spain'<lb/>
By Lisa Baumann<lb/>
Staff Writer<lb/>
EastCarolina University will present<lb/>
Open Spain; Espana Abierta, an interna-<lb/>
tional exhibition of 169 documentary<lb/>
photographs, in the Wellington B. Gray<lb/>
Gallery. It will be on display from Jan. 29<lb/>
to March 25.<lb/>
The exhibition was organized by the<lb/>
Museum of Contemporary Photography<lb/>
in Chicago. It will continue to travel to<lb/>
other museums in the United States, Eu-<lb/>
rope, and Latin America.<lb/>
Open Spain; Espana Abierta features<lb/>
the work of 16 contemporary Spanish<lb/>
photographers. The photographs were<lb/>
taken in documentary style and at least<lb/>
half of them are in black and white.<lb/>
Subjects in the display include im-<lb/>
ages of Spanish sacred festivalsand rites,<lb/>
religious and historical pageants, fiesta<lb/>
and traditional events, countryside, ar-<lb/>
chitecture, people and their gathering<lb/>
places.<lb/>
Charles Lovell, gallery director,<lb/>
played a major role in getting the exhibit<lb/>
to stop at East Carolina. "1 heard about<lb/>
theSpanish display and knew right away<lb/>
it would be rewarding to the university<lb/>
since we (ECU) are trying hard to pro-<lb/>
mote international studiesand increased<lb/>
awareness of othercultu res said Lovell.<lb/>
Lovell also said that normally the<lb/>
university would not be able to afford to<lb/>
bring such a display to Greenville. The<lb/>
showing was made possible by the sup-<lb/>
port of the SG A Fine ArtsFundingBoard,<lb/>
Vice Chancellor for Academic Affairs<lb/>
Dr. Marlene Springer, The Center for<lb/>
International Studies and the Latin<lb/>
American Resource Center.<lb/>
Most of the photographs were ta ken<lb/>
by photojournalists whose work has<lb/>
never appeared before in the United<lb/>
Photo courtesy Museum ol Contemporary Photography<lb/>
'Unfitted, Madrid Area 1987 by Cristobal Mara<lb/>
States. The artists and their subjects in-<lb/>
clude Carmelo Alcala Ezquerro: a series<lb/>
on Basque games, Carlos de Andes: con-<lb/>
temporary punk culture, Clemente Ber-<lb/>
nard: street photography, Jaume Blassi:<lb/>
color landscapes,CarlosCanovas: indus-<lb/>
trial landscapes of Catalonisjuan Manuel<lb/>
Castro Prieto: working class portraits,<lb/>
KoldoChamorro: festivalsand pageants,<lb/>
Juan Manuel Diez Burgos: portraits of<lb/>
Gypsies and circus performers, Cristina<lb/>
Garcia Rodero: religious festivals,<lb/>
Cristobal Hara: a bullfight, Manolo<lb/>
Laguillo: building construction for the<lb/>
1992 Olympics, Xurxo Lobato: color street<lb/>
photographs, MartaPovo: Catalonianar-<lb/>
chitecture,HumertoRivas: ethnographic<lb/>
portraits, Manuel Sendon: color interiors<lb/>
and Alejandro Sosa-Suarez: landscape-<lb/>
panoramas. Lovell said that students, as<lb/>
well as other visitors to the exhibit seem<lb/>
to speak most highly ofCristina Rodero's<lb/>
religious photographs.<lb/>
"One of the unique things about this<lb/>
art displav is that the photographs are<lb/>
taken from different perspectives said<lb/>
Lovell. "Rodero's religious photographs<lb/>
are taken with a popular art perspective<lb/>
that stands out<lb/>
The collection of Spanish photo-<lb/>
graphs seeks to illustrate the new open-<lb/>
mindedness of Spanish culture and<lb/>
lifestyle which has transformed during<lb/>
the past 15 years of democracy.<lb/>
Open Spain; Esptnfl Abierta was orga-<lb/>
nized to coincide with the 500th anniver-<lb/>
sary celebration of Columbus' voyage<lb/>
from Spain to the Americas.<lb/>
The exhibition is free and open to the<lb/>
public. The Wellington Gray Gallery is<lb/>
located off of 5th and Jarvis St. in the<lb/>
Jenkins Fine Arts building and is open<lb/>
Monday-Saturday from 10a.m. to5p.m<lb/>
and on Thursday evenings until 8 p.m.<lb/>
Pianist Richard Fields guides audience<lb/>
By Joe Horst<lb/>
Staff Writer<lb/>
"I'd liketo serve as your musical guide<lb/>
tonight<lb/>
With that statement, pianist Richard<lb/>
Fieldsopened a performance Friday night<lb/>
that showed his audience a side of classi-<lb/>
cal music that many may have missed.<lb/>
"All too often, classical concerts are<lb/>
viewed as stuffy said Fields in a phone<lb/>
interview. "With the pieces of music I<lb/>
have selected, I want people to be able to<lb/>
enjoy classical music<lb/>
The selections that Fields played<lb/>
ranged from the "Organ Prelude in G<lb/>
Minor" by Johann Sebastian Bach to<lb/>
"Honey" by R. Nathaniel Dett. Before each<lb/>
piece began, Fields gave a little history<lb/>
behind it to help explain why he had<lb/>
chosen it.<lb/>
One of the most memorable pieces<lb/>
was WilliamGrantStiH's"Three Visions<lb/>
Broken into three parts ? "Dark Horse-<lb/>
men "Summerland" and "Radiant Pin-<lb/>
nacle" ?Still's piece told a story of death,<lb/>
heaven and rebirth.<lb/>
"Dark Horsemen" evoked the image<lb/>
of the Four Horsemen of the Apocalypse.<lb/>
Through the harsh, discordant rhythm,<lb/>
the audience could picture the gallop of<lb/>
the horses' hooves and the neighing of<lb/>
their voices. "Summerland" played light<lb/>
and breezy, envisioning a peaceful field<lb/>
on a warm summer day. "Radiant Pin-<lb/>
nacle" mixed the first two to create a pic-<lb/>
ture of life and death with a positive end-<lb/>
ing.<lb/>
Field s played the piano as if it was an<lb/>
extension of his body and hands. Not only<lb/>
did his hands flow effortlessly across the<lb/>
field of 88 black and white keys, but his<lb/>
body also moved with his own internal<lb/>
Page 7<lb/>
Photo by Dail Reed<lb/>
Mark Bryan of Hootie and the Blowfish posed the question "to dance or not to<lb/>
dance?" during Friday's Attic show. Decision Makers opened the show.<lb/>
Hootie blows the<lb/>
minds of Attic crowd<lb/>
Richard Fields<lb/>
Hhoto Dy Uail Heed<lb/>
rhythm. Constantly in sync with the music<lb/>
he played, Fields provided more of a pic-<lb/>
ture with his body language than with his<lb/>
playing alone.<lb/>
Fields has been playing concert piano<lb/>
for 10-15years,alsoteaching pianotobach-<lb/>
elor of music and doctor of music patronsat<lb/>
the Cincinnati College Conservatory of<lb/>
Music. He hasalsoreceived critical acclaim<lb/>
for his performances with the San Francisco<lb/>
Symphony, the Los Angeles Philharmonic<lb/>
and concerts in Europeand North America.<lb/>
Fields hasalso won several awardsand<lb/>
prizes throughout his pianist career. Some<lb/>
include a Ford Foundation grant, a prize in<lb/>
the Berkeley PianoClub Young Artist com-<lb/>
petinonand the American prizeoftheViotti<lb/>
International competition.<lb/>
Fields oime to ECU through the Mi-<lb/>
nority Presence Initiative Series. This en-<lb/>
deavor brings in noted African-American<lb/>
scholars and performers to provide an al-<lb/>
ternative perspective, said Dr. Mar)' Ann<lb/>
Rose.<lb/>
"The program started a few years ago<lb/>
geared tobring in minority scholarstocam-<lb/>
pus Rose said. "We bring in role itii dels<lb/>
to provide a different perspective to stu-<lb/>
dents and faculty<lb/>
Fields commented that his purpose<lb/>
behind his performance at ECU was to<lb/>
provide insight into the African-American<lb/>
culture.<lb/>
"1 want toshow part of African-America<lb/>
that is not known to tix many people<lb/>
Fields said.<lb/>
By Julie Totten <lb/>
Staff Writer<lb/>
Todanceor not todance. Friday night,<lb/>
Hex itie and the Blowfish played toa packed<lb/>
Attic crowd.<lb/>
Flowever, it was the kind of night in<lb/>
which I just couldn't getquitecomfortable.<lb/>
Many people, including myself, couldn't<lb/>
decide whether to be drawn into thedanc-<lb/>
ing mob or stand back and watch the band<lb/>
withourevesfixrused intobright lightsand<lb/>
artistic minds.<lb/>
The air was filled with fight sensa-<lb/>
tional sound whilevocalsdanced through<lb/>
the crowd with ease.<lb/>
Hixitie and the Blowfish have brought<lb/>
some of the lawsoffineart into their music.<lb/>
To create a painting an artist considers<lb/>
unifyand varietyasa means of expression.<lb/>
Like most bands, Hootie creates unity with<lb/>
constant svnehronized riffs, but the en-<lb/>
semble also dabbles into the world of vari-<lb/>
ety with tunesvaguely reminiscentof heavy<lb/>
blues to a sporadic use of stop and go.<lb/>
The combination and understanding<lb/>
of unity and variety is an important ele-<lb/>
ment in music and has taken these four<lb/>
guys toa higher level with their sound.<lb/>
Five years ago these guys came to-<lb/>
gether at the University of South Carolina<lb/>
and began playingwith theirmusical ideas.<lb/>
The band iscomposed of DariusRucker<lb/>
(vcvals), Mark Bryan (guitar), JimSonefield<lb/>
(drums) and Dean Felber (bass).<lb/>
The members all possess a variety of<lb/>
talenton their respective instruments,and<lb/>
amazingly, they all can sing.<lb/>
It's difficult to find even one voice,<lb/>
especially in the amateur scene, that is<lb/>
technically good and clean ? and they've<lb/>
found four.<lb/>
"I knew they would give a dynamite<lb/>
show, they always do. Lots of times I go<lb/>
see bands and I don't feel like 1 got my<lb/>
money's worth, but after a show I ike this I<lb/>
know it was money well spent said V i nee<lb/>
Norris, an ECU graduate student.<lb/>
Their EP Time released last year, con-<lb/>
sists of four songs that really do not com-<lb/>
pare with seeing the band live. "Drown-<lb/>
ing and "Let Her Cry the last two songs<lb/>
on the EP, sound decent, but their live<lb/>
show gives their music life ? complete<lb/>
with a heartbeat and soul.<lb/>
Mv biggestcomplaintsabout the night<lb/>
were the opening band, Decision Makers,<lb/>
and the band name Hootie and the Blow-<lb/>
fish.<lb/>
Without being distasteful, I would<lb/>
suggest the Decision Makers rethink their<lb/>
approach to music. Replicating Dillon<lb/>
Fence and the Connells creates a cringing<lb/>
sensation throughout my body and al-<lb/>
most sends me back to the door where I<lb/>
paid to come in.<lb/>
And as for the name Hootie and the<lb/>
Blowfish ? well somehow it underminds<lb/>
them as a group. I can't exactly pin the<lb/>
problem down, but it's difficult to match<lb/>
this sophisticated sound to such a silly<lb/>
name.<lb/>
However, once you see Hootie and<lb/>
the Blowfish live, minor problems fade<lb/>
behind thesoundsthat will haveyoudanc-<lb/>
ingaway.<lb/>
Leon Bates and the N.G Symphony will 'liff ECU<lb/>
By Marjorie McKinstry<lb/>
STarTWriter"<lb/>
People are often shocked by<lb/>
Leon Bates' physical appear-<lb/>
ance. He's a young<lb/>
("thirtysomethingish"), hand-<lb/>
some and incredibly athletic man,<lb/>
and much has been written about<lb/>
his ability to bench press 300<lb/>
pounds. Noneofthis soundstcx)<lb/>
unusual, but it is not really his<lb/>
appearance that shocks; it is his<lb/>
profession. Batesisaconcertpia-<lb/>
nist.<lb/>
Unfortunately, many review-<lb/>
ers overwhelmed by Bates'physi-<lb/>
cal attributes fail to mention his<lb/>
talent as -nusician. Hehasbeen<lb/>
studying piano since the first cal and cas-<lb/>
grade, and his powerful perfor- cades of notes<lb/>
mances pulled from a lifetime of that all made<lb/>
study garner him awards, praise m e 1 o d y . "<lb/>
and chances toappear worldwide Hates at-<lb/>
with some of the best sympho- tributes his<lb/>
nies. range of tech-<lb/>
His notes have intertwined nical skills<lb/>
with thoseof the New York Phil- and strength<lb/>
harmonic, the National Sym to his addic-<lb/>
phony, the Strasbourg Symphony tion to physi-<lb/>
in France, the Sinfonica dell cal fitness.<lb/>
'Accademia Nazionale di Santa The emotion<lb/>
Cecilia in Rome, and the Vienna heengenders,<lb/>
Symphony. h o w e v e r ,<lb/>
In Ireland, Hates' music was rises from a<lb/>
acclaimed as a "power that was loveol music,<lb/>
never hard, and always singing, and not tech-<lb/>
firework that were always lyn nical prowess<lb/>
Ia'oii Bates<lb/>
"Sure tech-<lb/>
nique is impor-<lb/>
tant Bates<lb/>
says, "But I<lb/>
think you have<lb/>
to transcend be-<lb/>
yond that, rise<lb/>
above it, and let<lb/>
the music<lb/>
speak. It's not<lb/>
enough to just<lb/>
negotiate the<lb/>
notes<lb/>
As .1 musi-<lb/>
cal navigator,<lb/>
Bates en joj s the<lb/>
(lassk al v oi ks,<lb/>
but he is more<lb/>
"at home ith<lb/>
American music He is enam-<lb/>
ored with jazz and fusion, and<lb/>
claims that Gershwin was the first<lb/>
fusion composer. Batesalsocom-<lb/>
pliments the more modern music<lb/>
of Chick Corea and VVynton<lb/>
Marsalis, and says he has "been<lb/>
playing jazz piano since his teen<lb/>
days, and still settles into jazz for<lb/>
relaxation<lb/>
Besides being an interpreter<lb/>
nf music, a jazz fan and a fanati-<lb/>
cal lifter, Hates also attempts to<lb/>
bring pianomusic tochildren. He<lb/>
relaxes his formal appearance for<lb/>
them, and v ill strip down to a t-<lb/>
shirt if his physique will help to<lb/>
break the traditional geeky ste-<lb/>
reot pe ol .m in ei t pianist. I le<lb/>
also gives free concerts for chil-<lb/>
dren, and will tutor young musi-<lb/>
cians of exceptional ability.<lb/>
Bates will play with the North<lb/>
Carolina Symphony Thursday at<lb/>
8 p.m. in Wright Auditorium. Un-<lb/>
der the direction of Gerhardt<lb/>
Zimmermann, the symphony will<lb/>
perform Prokofiev's Clatticnl<lb/>
Symphony, Opus 25 (Symphony<lb/>
No. 1), and Schumann's Sym-<lb/>
phony No. 1 in B-flat major, Opus<lb/>
38, Spring<lb/>
Tickets for students and se-<lb/>
nior citizens are $13, and tickets<lb/>
for adults are $15 rickets maybe<lb/>
ordered in advance from theen-<lb/>
tral rickel Office (757-4788), or<lb/>
Dun based ,M the dool.<lb/>
 I<lb/>
?? ????<lb/>
<pb facs="00058371_0008"/><lb/>
8 The East Carolinian<lb/>
MARCH 2. 1993<lb/>
That's pee-cans, not pa-cons<lb/>
<lb/>
By Richard Cranium<lb/>
Lifestyle Columnist<lb/>
Some people prefer their<lb/>
brownies without nuts. Me, I like<lb/>
nuts?walnuts or pecans. By the<lb/>
way, that's pee-cans, not pa-cons.<lb/>
I don't eat brownies that often. I<lb/>
try and stay away from that sort<lb/>
of stuff. I hardly succeed. I avoid<lb/>
brownies, not french fries, not<lb/>
Krispy Kreme doughnuts, not<lb/>
Skor bars, not Hfesaversor Baskin<lb/>
Robbins peanut butterand choco-<lb/>
late ice cream. What the hell, give<lb/>
' me the syrup and the sprinkles?<lb/>
1 love ya!<lb/>
Anyway, I don't want to talk<lb/>
about sweets; I want to talk about<lb/>
those low-life under-agepartyani-<lb/>
mals who swear by the quantity,<lb/>
not quality rule. I hate 'em. You<lb/>
know what I'm talking about.<lb/>
Someone who goes to the liquor<lb/>
store with five dollars and comes<lb/>
out with a fifth of some rotten<lb/>
Vodka made in Connecticut. Or<lb/>
they want to have a good ol' time<lb/>
so they take up a collection for<lb/>
beer and come back with a case of<lb/>
Milwaukee's Best?oops! I'mhip:<lb/>
The Beast ? or some rot-gut bot-<lb/>
tom of the barrel brew like Mike's<lb/>
Malt Likker.<lb/>
Look here now, I'm not telling<lb/>
people what todrink. I haven't got<lb/>
to my beef yet. Here's my beef:<lb/>
These cheap little drunkards are<lb/>
always wantingtobragabout their<lb/>
drinking and carrying on and stuff.<lb/>
That's what kills me.<lb/>
You see them everywhere. At<lb/>
Food Lion, there'll always be one<lb/>
guybuyingacoupleofsuitcasesof<lb/>
Black Label or paint thinner or<lb/>
whatever.<lb/>
At the ABC store, Joe Blow<lb/>
walks out with an armful of<lb/>
BooBoo's Genuine Florida Whis-<lb/>
key to a carfull of shiney-eyed<lb/>
funsters gawking like they're<lb/>
eyeballing their first dirty maga-<lb/>
zine.<lb/>
So they go back to their dorm<lb/>
orapartmentor cardboard box and<lb/>
start having a hoe-down. They put<lb/>
on some Metallica or Michael Jack-<lb/>
son or Marvin Gaye? ifchicksare<lb/>
coming over?and start drinking.<lb/>
So they all get drunk, one of them<lb/>
cuts his hand, half of'em throw up<lb/>
and one of them gets it on with<lb/>
Myrtle Hogg. Life is good.<lb/>
So the next day they're enter-<lb/>
taining their classmates by telling<lb/>
them how drunk they were and<lb/>
howmanybeaststheydrank. I just<lb/>
don't get it. Why brag about how<lb/>
much you drank last night? And<lb/>
really, why stress that you drank<lb/>
rot-gut? That's what gets me. The<lb/>
pride in drinking and that kind of<lb/>
stuff.<lb/>
But hey, drink whatever you<lb/>
want. Just understand they don't<lb/>
all taste the same, so why not buy<lb/>
something that tastes good? This<lb/>
dude tells me they all do the same.<lb/>
I ask, "Wouldn't you rather it taste<lb/>
good?"<lb/>
"Who cares they say.<lb/>
Maybe as they mature they'll<lb/>
stop drinking for effect and drink<lb/>
for taste. Hey, don't get me wrong.<lb/>
If I'm putting 'em back during a<lb/>
ga me or whatever, I'mdrinkingjim<lb/>
Beam or George Dickel. But if I'm<lb/>
havingmyeveningcocktaiU'msip-<lb/>
ping back Wild Turkey or Old<lb/>
Granddad. I guess I'm just a cul-<lb/>
tured gentlemen.<lb/>
Mississippi Mud Cake: Follow<lb/>
directions for brownies, only add a<lb/>
cup of pecans and a half cup of<lb/>
chocolate chips to the batter. Just<lb/>
before it's done sprinkle with min-<lb/>
iature marshmallows, more pecans<lb/>
and ch.xolate chips. Return pan to<lb/>
oven. When it's finished spread<lb/>
homemadechcxrolate frostingon top<lb/>
while the stuff's still melted and<lb/>
gooey. Yum!<lb/>
EUYRHTM<lb/>
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<pb facs="00058371_0010"/><lb/>
I<lb/>
?  ? ??<lb/>
The East Carolinian<lb/>
March 2, 1993<lb/>
Sports<lb/>
Whitfield, Sanburn nearlv toss<lb/>
Page 10<lb/>
By Michael Albuquerque<lb/>
Staff Writer<lb/>
East Carolina (8-3) had two<lb/>
outstanding pitching perfor-<lb/>
mances as Howard Whitfield and<lb/>
Mike Sanburn both nearly no-hit<lb/>
Howard (1-11) in a doubleheader<lb/>
sweep Sunday at Harrington<lb/>
Field.<lb/>
Whitfield (1-0) came within<lb/>
one strike of a no-hitter with two<lb/>
outs in the seventh and finished<lb/>
with a one-hit shutout as the Pi-<lb/>
rates defeated Howard 9-0 in<lb/>
the second game of a double-<lb/>
header.<lb/>
"I knew it the whole game<lb/>
Whitfield said of his no-hit bid.<lb/>
"I was just trying to think about<lb/>
pitching ahead, pitching smart<lb/>
and not making a mistake.<lb/>
"I had control over most all<lb/>
my pitches early. I got my curve<lb/>
ball over, and my change up was<lb/>
working good. I kinda lost my<lb/>
curveball in the middle innings<lb/>
and found it late, and my change<lb/>
.up was just working all day. It<lb/>
Was kinda my go-to pitch<lb/>
First game starter Sanburn<lb/>
1-1) pitched almost as well in a<lb/>
?-0 victory, throwing five and<lb/>
.one-third innings of no-hit ball<lb/>
before settling with a two-hit<lb/>
shutout against the Bison.<lb/>
"Both of them did everything<lb/>
necessary to beoutstandingpitch-<lb/>
ers on the day ECU Head Coach<lb/>
Gary Overton said. "The keys to<lb/>
both games were those two pitch-<lb/>
ers. They did the job pretty much<lb/>
themselves<lb/>
Whitfield, who struck out<lb/>
seven and walked one, had an 0-<lb/>
2 count on Howard's Donnell<lb/>
Brown with two outs in the sev-<lb/>
enth before an infield single ended<lb/>
the no-hit bid. Brown hit a chop-<lb/>
ping ground ball over Whitfield's<lb/>
head and shortstop Chad Puckett<lb/>
could not make the play as the<lb/>
speedy Brown ran down the first<lb/>
baseline.<lb/>
"If Puckett comes up with the<lb/>
ball clean, he throws the guy out,<lb/>
butitwasa tough play" Whitfield<lb/>
said. "Hedid all he could. You've<lb/>
got to come hard in that situation,<lb/>
and that's what he did. He just<lb/>
happened to bobble it that split<lb/>
second, and thatguy (Brown) has<lb/>
got good wheels. He got down<lb/>
the line pretty good<lb/>
In the first game, Sanburn did<lb/>
not allow a hit until Marvin Spin-<lb/>
ner knocked an infield single past<lb/>
the diving third baseman Chris<lb/>
Westand right to shortstop Frank<lb/>
Fedak, who did not attempt a<lb/>
throw. Sanburn finished with five<lb/>
strikeouts and one walk to<lb/>
GAME 1<lb/>
GAME 2<lb/>
EAST CAROLINA 4 EAST CARC JNA<lb/>
HOWARD r<lb/>
Howard000 000 0-0<lb/>
E??t Carolina100 300 x -4<lb/>
HOWARD<lb/>
Spinner, cf<lb/>
Hammond. It<lb/>
Attaway. 1b<lb/>
Webb,<lb/>
Crawford, it<lb/>
D. Brown. 3b<lb/>
Hani, e<lb/>
QOyard, 2b<lb/>
Scott, ??<lb/>
TotaS<lb/>
ab I h hi<lb/>
0 1<lb/>
0 0<lb/>
0 0<lb/>
0 0<lb/>
0 1<lb/>
0 0<lb/>
0 0<lb/>
0 0<lb/>
0 0<lb/>
24 0 2<lb/>
M ?o<lb/>
Howardooo 000<lb/>
East Carolina013 212<lb/>
HOWARTF ab r h<lb/>
Baaarunntng?CS: Crawford (1, taoond bate<lb/>
by CronanLayton; Taam LOB: 4.<lb/>
Spinner cf<lb/>
Hammond, If<lb/>
Kenan, If<lb/>
Crawford, rf<lb/>
Attaway, c<lb/>
D. Brown, 3b<lb/>
Battle, 1b-2b<lb/>
Green, ph<lb/>
Duplessis, dhp<lb/>
Gilyard, 2b<lb/>
Webb, lb<lb/>
Scott, as<lb/>
Total.<lb/>
3<lb/>
2<lb/>
1<lb/>
2<lb/>
3<lb/>
3<lb/>
2<lb/>
1<lb/>
2<lb/>
2<lb/>
0<lb/>
2<lb/>
23 0 t<lb/>
EAST BaaMUaW<lb/>
, ?oto by Biff Ranaon<lb/>
In the second game of a split double-header, the Bucs came within<lb/>
an out of a no-hitter.<lb/>
complement his two-hitter.<lb/>
"Everything was working<lb/>
pretty good Sanburn said. "They<lb/>
were just hitting ground balls. I<lb/>
was getting them to hit my<lb/>
pitches<lb/>
Sanburn has now pitched two<lb/>
strong outings for ECU after a<lb/>
shaky first start at Georgia South-<lb/>
ern on Feb. 14, and he attributes<lb/>
his success to a new found pitch.<lb/>
"I've developed a slider, and<lb/>
I've been using it a lot more he<lb/>
said. "I think it has really helped<lb/>
me keep the hitters off balance<lb/>
Although the Pirates were able<lb/>
to get their hits when they needed<lb/>
them, they d id not seem to be com-<lb/>
pletely in sync at the plate for most<lb/>
of game one.<lb/>
"Offensively, I'm disappointed<lb/>
with the way we swung the bats in<lb/>
the first eame Overton said. "We<lb/>
seemed to be lethargic with the<lb/>
bats. It seemed to be a carry over<lb/>
from last night (a 3-0 loss to George<lb/>
See HOWARD pageU<lb/>
Bora), cf<lb/>
Utes.ef<lb/>
Fedak. ts<lb/>
West, 3b<lb/>
Kushnar, lb<lb/>
Cronan, c<lb/>
PKtdh<lb/>
Wattdns, rf<lb/>
Edwards, rf<lb/>
Haad.lt<lb/>
Clark, 2b<lb/>
Puckett ?b<lb/>
totals<lb/>
ab rbbl. Jah-ao<lb/>
2<lb/>
1<lb/>
3<lb/>
3<lb/>
3<lb/>
"3<lb/>
3<lb/>
1<lb/>
1<lb/>
1<lb/>
1<lb/>
1<lb/>
31 8 10 6<lb/>
Baaerunnmg ? SB: Spinner. Taam LOB: 3.<lb/>
Fielding ? E: Hammond 2, Attaway.<lb/>
EAST CAROLINA"<lb/>
26 13<lb/>
Batting ? 28: Fadak (1, oft Smith). SF: Clark<lb/>
Baaanmntng ? SB: Boral (5) CS: Crawford<lb/>
(second base by CronarVSanbum). Team LOB: 6<lb/>
FlafoTng ? E: Watt<lb/>
Borel. cf<lb/>
Fedak, ss<lb/>
Puckett, ph-ss<lb/>
West. 3b<lb/>
Kushner, lb<lb/>
Pitt, dh<lb/>
Watkins, rf<lb/>
Obholz, 2b<lb/>
Clark. 2b<lb/>
Head. If<lb/>
Triplet pMf<lb/>
Peters, c<lb/>
ab<lb/>
bl<lb/>
"6"<lb/>
o<lb/>
o<lb/>
o<lb/>
1<lb/>
2<lb/>
2<lb/>
1<lb/>
0<lb/>
0<lb/>
1<lb/>
0<lb/>
29 9 12 7<lb/>
2<lb/>
3<lb/>
4<lb/>
3<lb/>
4<lb/>
4<lb/>
2<lb/>
0<lb/>
2<lb/>
2<lb/>
2<lb/>
bb<lb/>
HOWARD<lb/>
Totals<lb/>
Baiting?2B: Obhota(2, oil Duplessis); Fedak<lb/>
(2. oil Duplessis); Peters (1, oft Duplessis); Kushnar<lb/>
(2, off Duplessis). HR: Watkins (5, off Duplessis).<lb/>
Baserunnlng ?SB: Watkins (7), Obholz (1)<lb/>
Team LOB: 8.<lb/>
Smith (L, 0-2)<lb/>
EAST (ROLtNA"<lb/>
tp h r ar bb ao<lb/>
6?irm<lb/>
HOWARD rp<lb/>
Duplessis (L, 0-2) 6<lb/>
h r ar bb so<lb/>
12 B 6 6 1<lb/>
Ip I<lb/>
ar bb ac"<lb/>
0 1 5<lb/>
Sanburn (W, 1-1) 7 2 0<lb/>
HBP: Boral and Head by MacMXan. WP: Smith 2<lb/>
GAME DATA ? T: 1:34. A: 108. Tamp: 44.<lb/>
UMPIRES ? HP: Satksrfiald 2B: Boyatta.<lb/>
EAST CARODRI"<lb/>
Sanbum(W, 1-0)<lb/>
Tp IT<lb/>
ar bb ao<lb/>
?<lb/>
Seahawks end season with win over Bucs<lb/>
By Warren Sumner<lb/>
'Assistant Sports Editor<lb/>
; TneEQJnasn'srjasketballteamended<lb/>
a season full of disappointment and heart-<lb/>
ache Saturday night, with a 79-66 loss to<lb/>
JJNC-Wilmington. The Pirates were out-<lb/>
Shot, out-defensed and out-hustled in a<lb/>
?ame that lowered their record to 4-10 in<lb/>
conference play and broke their momen-<lb/>
tum for this weekend's CAA tournament.<lb/>
The Seahawks, who narrowly escaped<lb/>
the Pirates in a double-overtime win in<lb/>
Wilmington earlier this season,shota phe-<lb/>
nomenal 63 percent in the second half to<lb/>
bury the Pirates' chances forawinathome.<lb/>
The Pirates, after playing an emotionally-<lb/>
charged first half, seemed flat in the sec-<lb/>
ond period and could not stop Seahawk<lb/>
guard Chris Meighan, who blasted the<lb/>
Pirates with a 20-point scoring perfor-<lb/>
mance.<lb/>
The Pirates, as in the majority of their<lb/>
losses this season, started the game com-<lb/>
petitively, as they traded the lead with the<lb/>
Seahawks seven times in the first half.<lb/>
Pirate guard Lester Lyons confounded the<lb/>
Seahawks in the opening period with 14of<lb/>
his 27 points and two steals. Despite the<lb/>
Seahawks' better shooting margin, the Pi-<lb/>
rates trailed by only one point with one<lb/>
second remaining in the half. TheSeahawks<lb/>
then completed a play that may have bro-<lb/>
ken ECU's back with an inbounds score<lb/>
under their own basket, giving them the<lb/>
momentum and a three-point lead at the<lb/>
half.<lb/>
The Seahawks returned at halftime<lb/>
and quickly built a six-point lead. The<lb/>
Pirates were unable to defensively solve<lb/>
the problems the Seahawk offense pro-<lb/>
vided them and got no closer than four.<lb/>
After the Seahawks eventually built a<lb/>
double-digit lead, they were able to quell a<lb/>
Pirate comeback at the free-throw line.<lb/>
Pirate coach Eddie Payne said thathis<lb/>
team has a lot of work to do in this week of<lb/>
practice to have a chance in the tourna-<lb/>
ment. "We have to try to salvage and<lb/>
restructure attitude as far as what can<lb/>
ECU (66)<lb/>
Mingftrb<lb/>
m-am-ao-tato?p<lb/>
Lyons 359-195-62-23227<lb/>
Richardson 311-43-30-1155<lb/>
Hunter 60-10-00-1000<lb/>
Young 182-60-02-4025<lb/>
Long 10-00-00-0000<lb/>
Peterson 285-140-01-31214<lb/>
Gill 244-72-22-30110<lb/>
Armstrong 70-00-21-2100<lb/>
Toliver 10-00-00-0000<lb/>
Lewis 110-00-40-2000<lb/>
Copeland 382-41-77-11205<lb/>
Totals 200 23-5511-2415-29 8 15 66<lb/>
Percentages: PG - .418, Ft. 458, 3 pt Goals: 9-22<lb/>
409, Team Rebounds - 0, Blocked Shots - 2,<lb/>
Turnovers - 15, Steals -8.<lb/>
UNCW (79)<lb/>
Mingftrb<lb/>
m-am-?o-tatotrt<lb/>
Adkins 172-32-20-1037<lb/>
Spann 121-11-10-1103<lb/>
Jones 366-100-02-93315<lb/>
Phillips 92-40-00-1124<lb/>
Veney 332-87-100-66412<lb/>
Petin 10-00-00-0000<lb/>
Meighen 256-87-91-1?)020<lb/>
Shaw 356-110-03-83112<lb/>
Boykin 10-00-00-0000<lb/>
Moore 312-32-23-6116<lb/>
Totals 20027-48 19-24 10-35171479<lb/>
Photo by Biff Ranaon<lb/>
Lester Lyons (above) jams one home in ECU's last home game of the season. The<lb/>
Pirates finshed the regular season 4-10 in the Colonial Athletic Association.<lb/>
Percentages: PG - .563, Ft. 792, 3 pt. Goals: 6-11<lb/>
.545, Team Rebounds - 2, Blocked Shots - 0,<lb/>
Turnovers - 15, Steals - 9.<lb/>
happen in the tournament he said. "We<lb/>
have to try to get a hunger for the tourna-<lb/>
ment Payne also expressed his apprecia-<lb/>
tion for the 5300 fans in attendance at<lb/>
1st half 2nd half OT<lb/>
Saturday's game.<lb/>
'To have that many people there with<lb/>
our record says a lot about East Carolina<lb/>
fans<lb/>
ECU<lb/>
UNCW<lb/>
32<lb/>
35<lb/>
34<lb/>
44<lb/>
Final<lb/>
66<lb/>
79<lb/>
Bucs destroy Howard 14-0'lose to George Washington 3-0<lb/>
By Michael Albuquerque<lb/>
Staff Writer <lb/>
Watkins, Hartgrove lead<lb/>
Pirates over Howard 14-0<lb/>
Pat Watkins went 3-3 with a double, a<lb/>
home run and five RBIs to lead the Pirates<lb/>
to a 14-0 win over the Howard Bison Satur-<lb/>
day at Harrington Field. The victory came<lb/>
in the first game of an unusual splitdouble-<lb/>
header.<lb/>
"We came out to play and did a very<lb/>
fine job of putting the game away early<lb/>
ECU head coach Gary Overton said.<lb/>
The Pirates (6-2) sent 15 batters to the<lb/>
plate for a 10-run first inning against<lb/>
Howard (1-9) and scored four more runs in<lb/>
the third before the game was called after<lb/>
four and one-half innings.<lb/>
Lyle Hartgrove (3-0), who retired 13<lb/>
tf<lb/>
straight at one point, allowed only two hits<lb/>
and struck out six in five innings for his<lb/>
second consecutive two-hit shutout.<lb/>
"Lyle pitched a<lb/>
great game for us to-<lb/>
day Overton said.<lb/>
Following a lead-<lb/>
off walk to Jamie Borel,<lb/>
Frank Fedak began the<lb/>
Pirates scoring with a<lb/>
two-run homer in the<lb/>
first inning. Watkins<lb/>
followed with a run-<lb/>
scoring double, and<lb/>
Steven Pitt added a two-run single to give<lb/>
the Pirates a 5-0 lead before Howard re-<lb/>
corded its first out.<lb/>
Howard startingpitcherTerrill Hill (0-<lb/>
1) had trouble finding the strike zone early<lb/>
with five walks and two wild pitches in the<lb/>
We came out to<lb/>
play and did a<lb/>
very fine job of<lb/>
putting the game<lb/>
away early, "<lb/>
Gary Overton,<lb/>
first inning in addition to six ECU hits.<lb/>
ThePirates continued their scoringbar-<lb/>
rage in the fourth. Watkins followed a<lb/>
Howard fielding error<lb/>
and a walk to Lee<lb/>
Kushnerwitha three-run<lb/>
homer for his fourth of<lb/>
the year and a 13-0 ECU<lb/>
lead. Kushner ended his<lb/>
14-gameWttingstreakan<lb/>
0-2 performance and a<lb/>
couple walks.<lb/>
head coach<lb/>
George Wash-<lb/>
ington blanks<lb/>
Pirates 3-0<lb/>
Three George Washington pitchers<lb/>
braved below freezing weather and scat-<lb/>
tered four Pirate hits as the Colonials (3-0)<lb/>
shut out the Pirates (6-3) with a 2-0 win in<lb/>
the second game of a split doubleheader<lb/>
Saturday at Harrington Field.<lb/>
GWU'sRichRosenberger (1-0) pitched<lb/>
one and one-third innings in relief of in-<lb/>
jured starter Bill Anderson for the win, and<lb/>
Scott Under allowed three hits in five in-<lb/>
nings to earn his first save of the year.<lb/>
Johnny Beck (2-2) took the loss for ECU<lb/>
despite allowing only one earned run and<lb/>
striking out nine in five and one-third in-<lb/>
nings.<lb/>
"I thought we battled well ECU head<lb/>
coach Gary Overton said. "Wejustweren't<lb/>
able to put together many hits, and that's<lb/>
certainly a credit to their pitching. Johnny<lb/>
threw a very fine game We just couldn't<lb/>
find the hits when we needed them<lb/>
See BASEBALL page 12<lb/>
WP: Duplessis.<lb/>
GAME DATA ? T: 1:55. A: 83. Temp: 46<lb/>
UMPIRES ? HP: Boyette. 2B: SatlerfiekJ<lb/>
Ice'Kaieem<lb/>
dreams of<lb/>
bright future<lb/>
By Warren Sumner<lb/>
Assistant Sports Editor<lb/>
ECU basketball has its own force<lb/>
of constant motion. Their freshman<lb/>
guard, "Ice" Kareem Richardson has<lb/>
brought his brand of hustle to the<lb/>
courts of Greenville and, subse-<lb/>
quently, has become a regular starter<lb/>
for a struggling ECU basketball team.<lb/>
Richardson, a native of Rantoul,<lb/>
BL, has played in every game this<lb/>
year as the Pirates' point guard.<lb/>
Richardson has started in several of<lb/>
those contests and has become East<lb/>
Carolina's most deadly ball-handler.<lb/>
His quick, penetrating style on the<lb/>
court is quite the opposite of his cool<lb/>
demeanor off of it.<lb/>
Richardson said basketball has<lb/>
always been a part of his life, and said<lb/>
he had inherited the love of the game<lb/>
from his family.<lb/>
"Everyone in my family has<lb/>
played basketball at one point and<lb/>
time. I used to go to the gym with my<lb/>
dad, so I grew up with the basketball<lb/>
atmosphere around everything he<lb/>
said. Richardson said he experienced<lb/>
much of the game through watching<lb/>
his dad play during his career in the<lb/>
Air Force.<lb/>
Richardson, a communications<lb/>
major, carries the nickname of "Ice<lb/>
a legacy of his playing days at Rantoul<lb/>
High School.<lb/>
"(The nickname) started in my<lb/>
sophomore year in high school. I made<lb/>
this shot in a game against<lb/>
Bloomington, our rivals, at the last<lb/>
secondthey just kinda caught on<lb/>
with 'Ice KareemI like to think I'm<lb/>
pretty cool under pressure, but its<lb/>
just a nickname like everybody else<lb/>
has<lb/>
Richardson said he has adapted<lb/>
well to the Pirates' game plan as well<lb/>
as the pressure he has faced as a regu-<lb/>
lar player for the Pirate roster.<lb/>
Richardson has been the victim of<lb/>
standard criticism of his inexperience<lb/>
throughout much of the season, but<lb/>
accepts this criticism as par-for-the-<lb/>
course for any freshman athlete.<lb/>
"That just comes with being a<lb/>
freshman, they try to put that 'lack of<lb/>
experience' label on youthat pretty<lb/>
much just comes with the territory<lb/>
Richardson said that he has fo-<lb/>
cused much of his energy this year on<lb/>
off-the-court success, the academic<lb/>
success that eludes most athletes.<lb/>
"I'm trying to keep my grades up<lb/>
as high as I can, my goal is to make<lb/>
honor role every semester, that's the<lb/>
goal 1 want to try to keep for myself<lb/>
Richardson said the strict aca-<lb/>
demicenvironrnentthatECU athletes<lb/>
face at school will make it easier to<lb/>
See KAREEM page 12<lb/>
1<lb/>
<pb facs="00058371_0011"/><lb/>
MARCH 2, 1993<lb/>
Lady Pirates overwhelmed by<lb/>
undefeated ODU Monarchs<lb/>
ii<lb/>
By Billy Weaver<lb/>
Staff Writer<lb/>
Friday night, the Lady Pirates fell<lb/>
71-59toOld Dominionu hopostedan<lb/>
impressive 12-0CAA record and are<lb/>
no strangers to the women's NCAA<lb/>
championships.<lb/>
The Lady Monarchs came out to<lb/>
shake up the ECU offense with an<lb/>
early full court press which resuJ ted in<lb/>
22firsthalftumovers.AlthoughODU<lb/>
only scored 13 points from the 22<lb/>
turnovers, this proved to be the differ-<lb/>
ence in the 32-23 ODU lead in the first<lb/>
half and eventually became thediffer-<lb/>
enceinthegame.<lb/>
ODU continued todominate the<lb/>
lyPiratesinthesecondhalf.Itw'asn't<lb/>
until late in the game that Rhonda<lb/>
Smith scored her only four points of<lb/>
the game to cut the ODU lead to five,<lb/>
5lM5.Themomentumand the crowd<lb/>
seemed to be swinging in favor of the<lb/>
Lady Pirates but with 757 left to plav,<lb/>
Rhonda Smith committed her fifth<lb/>
personal foul taking her out of the<lb/>
game with a mere four total points.<lb/>
The turning point of the game<lb/>
came with 334 left as Toina Coley<lb/>
fouled out on a steal attempt Toni<lb/>
Thurman also followed suit fouling<lb/>
out short after Colev.<lb/>
With three of ECU's starters out<lb/>
and three freshman in the game, the<lb/>
Lad Monarchs reeled off 10 unan-<lb/>
swered points tokill any ECU hopesof<lb/>
ALFREDO'S<lb/>
New York Pizza By The Slice<lb/>
ECU<lb/>
(59)<lb/>
Min fg<lb/>
Coley 33<lb/>
O Onnnell 36<lb/>
Thurman 26<lb/>
rWgrr?on 4<lb/>
Jame 6<lb/>
Si.tten 7<lb/>
Smith 16<lb/>
Baker 6<lb/>
Samuels 37 6-lfi<lb/>
Biackman 27 fVB<lb/>
ft<lb/>
m-a nva<lb/>
1-7 0-0<lb/>
3-9 4 5<lb/>
4 6 3-J<lb/>
112 II<lb/>
0-0 O-i)<lb/>
1-3<lb/>
2-4<lb/>
0-1<lb/>
22<lb/>
0-0<lb/>
0-0<lb/>
0-0<lb/>
X4<lb/>
rb<lb/>
o-t<lb/>
1-4<lb/>
' 0-3<lb/>
1-4<lb/>
2-2<lb/>
0-0<lb/>
0-1<lb/>
0-1<lb/>
1-3<lb/>
0-4<lb/>
4-10<lb/>
3<lb/>
11<lb/>
1<lb/>
0<lb/>
1<lb/>
0<lb/>
1<lb/>
1<lb/>
1<lb/>
?<lb/>
T<lb/>
2<lb/>
10<lb/>
11<lb/>
0<lb/>
0<lb/>
4<lb/>
4<lb/>
0<lb/>
13<lb/>
1?<lb/>
Totals 200 23-5612-15 12-40 19 31 59<lb/>
Percentages FC - 411, Ft -800, 3 Pt Goals 1-7-<lb/>
142. Team Rebounds - 6. Blocked Shots - 2,<lb/>
Turnovers - 31. Steals -10.<lb/>
ODU (71)<lb/>
Min fg<lb/>
Greenville Toy<lb/>
il v<lb/>
CATCH OUR SERVICE SPECIALS<lb/>
WHILE THEY LAST<lb/>
nva m-a<lb/>
0-1 0-0<lb/>
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2-6<lb/>
1-3<lb/>
1-2<lb/>
2-2<lb/>
Singletoa 2<lb/>
Huntley 21<lb/>
Deberry 9<lb/>
Rnbinaon 11<lb/>
Picache 13<lb/>
Ma ton 1<lb/>
Hill 29<lb/>
Reynold! 36 4-10 8-13<lb/>
v.n,iru. 37 2-10 2-5<lb/>
Willyerd 10 0-1 0-0<lb/>
Gilmorr 31 6-12 0-3<lb/>
0-3 0-0<lb/>
0-0 0-0<lb/>
5-9 4-5<lb/>
rb<lb/>
o-t<lb/>
0-0<lb/>
1-1<lb/>
1-2<lb/>
1-4<lb/>
0-0<lb/>
0-0<lb/>
1-9<lb/>
3-7<lb/>
1-4<lb/>
1-1<lb/>
5-6<lb/>
to<lb/>
0<lb/>
3<lb/>
0<lb/>
0<lb/>
1<lb/>
0<lb/>
3<lb/>
5<lb/>
0<lb/>
1<lb/>
24 20<lb/>
?P<lb/>
0<lb/>
13<lb/>
5<lb/>
4<lb/>
0<lb/>
0<lb/>
14<lb/>
16<lb/>
7<lb/>
0<lb/>
12<lb/>
95<lb/>
ToUU 20033-7019-29 11-49<lb/>
Percentages FG - .471, Ft. . 655. 3 pt Goals: 10-28 -<lb/>
357. Team Rebounds - 2. Blocked Shots - 0,<lb/>
Turnovers - 15, Steals - 7<lb/>
ECU<lb/>
ODU<lb/>
lit half<lb/>
23<lb/>
32<lb/>
2nd half OT<lb/>
36<lb/>
39<lb/>
Final<lb/>
59<lb/>
71<lb/>
an upset.<lb/>
Tc ina Cole'managed si x steals to<lb/>
put her at the top of the Lady Pirate<lb/>
career steals list. Coley is also third in<lb/>
the nation with a 4.6 per game.<lb/>
The Lady Monarchs improve to<lb/>
16-7 (124) in the CAA).<lb/>
The Lady Pirates fell to 12-11 (5-7<lb/>
in the CAA)<lb/>
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with fhis cot-pon<lb/>
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Coupon expires 3-20-93<lb/>
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?Install Toyota-brand spark plugs.<lb/>
?Check air. fuel and emission filters.<lb/>
?Inspect ignition wires, distributor cap<lb/>
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?6-cylinder or 60.000-nnle platinum plugs slightly higher MM mWfc<lb/>
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Couponexpires 3-20-93<lb/>
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Present Student I.D. For 10 Discount<lb/>
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EAST<lb/>
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The East Carolinian is currently<lb/>
accepting resumes for the<lb/>
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ADVERTISING ACCOUNT EXECUTIVES<lb/>
This job entails prospecting new<lb/>
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This job entails creating computer<lb/>
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<pb facs="00058371_0012"/><lb/>
12<lb/>
The East Carolinian<lb/>
MARCH 2, 1993<lb/>
Smith's 29 leads Bucs over Tribe KAREEM<lb/>
Continued from page 10<lb/>
Sports Information Department<lb/>
GREENVILLE, N.C.?<lb/>
Rhonda Smith scored a career-<lb/>
high 29 points as East Carolina's<lb/>
women's basketball teambrokea<lb/>
two-game losing streak with an<lb/>
81-73 win over William &amp; Mary<lb/>
Sunday in Greenville.<lb/>
Smith, who scored 18 points<lb/>
in the first half, was 12-18 from<lb/>
the floor and 5-7 from the line.<lb/>
She also led all rebounders with<lb/>
13.<lb/>
ECU scored first in the game<lb/>
with a 10-foot jumper by Smith<lb/>
and the Lady Tirates never looked<lb/>
back.<lb/>
The Lady Tribe tied the score<lb/>
6-6 with a lay-up by Yolanda<lb/>
Settles but that was as close as<lb/>
they ever got. ECU's largest lead<lb/>
in the first half was 35-23 at 3:08<lb/>
after an eight foot shot by Smith.<lb/>
The Lady Pirates shot 60.7<lb/>
percent in the first half and led 41-<lb/>
32 at intermission.<lb/>
In the second half, William &amp;<lb/>
Mary cut the ECU lead 47-42 after<lb/>
back-to-back three pointers but<lb/>
ECU pulled away again and had<lb/>
a 13 point lead with 12 minutes<lb/>
remaining.<lb/>
ECU had a season-high per-<lb/>
formance from Gaynor O'Donnell<lb/>
who scored 21 points. The nation's<lb/>
assists leader, O'Donnell also had<lb/>
Gaynor<lb/>
O'Donnell<lb/>
drives the<lb/>
lane and<lb/>
gets two<lb/>
for herself.<lb/>
The<lb/>
Pirates<lb/>
rebounded<lb/>
well from<lb/>
a loss to<lb/>
ODU<lb/>
earlier in<lb/>
the week.<lb/>
achieve this goal. Richardson said<lb/>
that Pirate coach Eddie Payne<lb/>
stresses class attendance over ev-<lb/>
er) thing and does<lb/>
hisbesttokeepthe ft , 1 n rV<lb/>
team motivated.  Lrll L IULI.<lb/>
of<lb/>
experience'<lb/>
lab elpretty<lb/>
much just<lb/>
comes with<lb/>
the<lb/>
Photo by<lb/>
Biff Hanson<lb/>
13 assists.<lb/>
For William &amp; Mary, Ashleigh<lb/>
Akens scored 21 points and had<lb/>
10 rebounds. Settles had 17points<lb/>
and had 11 rebounds.<lb/>
The win improved ECU's<lb/>
record to 13-11 and 6-7 in the Co-<lb/>
lonial Athletic Association, while<lb/>
the loss broke a two-game win<lb/>
streak for William &amp; Marv and<lb/>
dropped its record to 9-15 and 3-<lb/>
10 in the leaeue.<lb/>
Richardson said<lb/>
that he feels non-<lb/>
athletes fail to re-<lb/>
alize sometimes<lb/>
just how hard he<lb/>
and his peers ac-<lb/>
tually work.<lb/>
"I think they<lb/>
sometimes think<lb/>
that we only play<lb/>
basketball one or<lb/>
two nights a<lb/>
weekI don't<lb/>
think they see how<lb/>
much time we do put in lifting<lb/>
weights,goingtoclassand practic-<lb/>
ing<lb/>
Richardson also said that reli-<lb/>
HOWARD<lb/>
Washington). Yet, in the second<lb/>
game we put together some timely<lb/>
hits, and we swung the bats a<lb/>
little bit better. We swung the bats<lb/>
a little more with authority in the<lb/>
second game<lb/>
PatWatkinsled the Pirates in<lb/>
hitting with two singles, a home<lb/>
territory?<lb/>
Karecm Richardson<lb/>
gion is a big part of his c m and off-<lb/>
the-court routine.<lb/>
"You definitely gotta pray all<lb/>
the time, you never<lb/>
know what s going to<lb/>
happen from day-to-<lb/>
day.<lb/>
You can never tell<lb/>
if you're going to be<lb/>
here for another day<lb/>
Richardson said<lb/>
he is proud of his per-<lb/>
formance thus far, but<lb/>
will not make plans to<lb/>
lessen his intensity<lb/>
anytime soon.<lb/>
"I'mjusthappyto<lb/>
be in college basket-<lb/>
ball, its not an every-<lb/>
day thing for most<lb/>
kids, so you gotta be motivated<lb/>
coming in or you'll look real bad<lb/>
out there. I'm not planning on let-<lb/>
ting up<lb/>
BASEBALL<lb/>
Continued from page 10<lb/>
The Colonial pitchers allowed<lb/>
only one Pirate runner to reach sec-<lb/>
ond base ?Jason Head witha lead-<lb/>
off infield single and an error on the<lb/>
play in the third inning. However,<lb/>
Linder quickly ended the scoring<lb/>
threat by striking out the next two<lb/>
batters and retiring Frank Fedak<lb/>
with a harmless grounder to the<lb/>
shortstop.<lb/>
GWU's Brian Urda put the<lb/>
Colonials on the board with a lead-<lb/>
off home run todeep left field in the<lb/>
third inning, and Greg Patton, who<lb/>
reached on a ca tcher's error on strike<lb/>
three, scored on Scott Sharp's two-<lb/>
out single to center in the fourth<lb/>
inning.<lb/>
"I'm not sure the cold weather<lb/>
effected anybody Overton said.<lb/>
"It's always tough to play in cold<lb/>
weather. We thought the team that<lb/>
scored early would have a distinct<lb/>
advantage, and that proved to be<lb/>
the case<lb/>
Continued from page 10<lb/>
run (No. 5 on the year), a stolen<lb/>
base and two RBls.<lb/>
Fedak had three hits, includ-<lb/>
ing a pair of doubles, and an RBI<lb/>
in the doubleheader, and Lee<lb/>
Kushner added three hits and an<lb/>
RBI on the day. Also, Kevin<lb/>
Obholz went 2-2 with a double,<lb/>
an RBI and a stolen base as the<lb/>
starting second baseman in game<lb/>
two.<lb/>
East Carolina's next game will<lb/>
be a doubleheader against Vir-<lb/>
ginia State beginning at 2 p.m. on<lb/>
Wednesday, March 3, at<lb/>
Harrington Field.<lb/>
FREE PREGNANCY TEST<lb/>
while you wait<lb/>
Free &amp; Confidential<lb/>
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Silver Bullet's Female "Exotic" Dancers<lb/>
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Amateur Night for Female Dancers 11 pm-1 am<lb/>
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Silver Bullet's Female "Exotic" Dancers<lb/>
We do Birthdays, Bachelor Parties, Bridal Showers,<lb/>
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Attention<lb/>
Business Students!<lb/>
Give us a T-shirt design &amp; a slogan that will set us<lb/>
apart from the rest of ECU. The ECU Student Store<lb/>
will award a $100 gift certificate for the best<lb/>
T-ShirtSweatshirt design. This contest is open<lb/>
exclusively to you, the School of Business students.<lb/>
For more details, come by the Professional Programs<lb/>
office in Room 1200 of the General Classroom<lb/>
Building. Deadline for entering is March 31, 1993 so<lb/>
don't delay!<lb/>
?Free T-Shirts imprinted with the winning design lo the top five finalists.<lb/>
? $100 gift certificate from the ECU Student Store to first place winner.<lb/>
? Winner will be featured in the next S hool of Business newsletter.<lb/>
? Contest is limited to only students accepted to the School of Business and currently<lb/>
enrolled in courses.<lb/>
T-shirt and Slogan Contest<lb/>
hisoikI Ity thf omnuiie flub<lb/>
RED, BLUE OR WHITE<lb/>
Crapes<lb/>
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ITEMS AND PRICES GOOD SUNDAY FEB<lb/>
28 THROUGH SATURDAY, MAR. 6 1993 IN<lb/>
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The fastest way to<lb/>
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AVAILABLE AT ALL<lb/>
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ADVERTISED ITEM POLICY- Each of these<lb/>
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choice of a comparable item, when available,<lb/>
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tised item at the advertised price within 30<lb/>
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ed per item purchased.<lb/>
<pb facs="00058371_0013"/>
</div></body></text></TEI>