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<p rend="align(centerbold)">[This text is machine generated and may contain errors.]</p>
<pb facs="00058395_0001"/>
Pirates<lb/>
Rammed!<lb/>
Sports<lb/>
Pirates fall from NCAA<lb/>
Tournament in first game.<lb/>
See story page 10.<lb/>
Lucky 13<lb/>
Breed 13 rocked O'Rock's<lb/>
last Saturday night in<lb/>
celebration of their album<lb/>
release.<lb/>
See story page 7.<lb/>
Rjiny<lb/>
 <lb/>
? X <lb/>
The East Carolinian<lb/>
MA. 68 No. 18<lb/>
Circulation 12,000<lb/>
Greenville, North Carolina<lb/>
Tuesday, March 23, 1993<lb/>
12 Pages<lb/>
SEX, DRUGS AND LOVEHANDLES<lb/>
Health topics"<lb/>
of cor.cern<lb/>
with today's<lb/>
college<lb/>
students<lb/>
STDs<lb/>
Students voice concerns<lb/>
about health issues<lb/>
By Joe Horst<lb/>
2087 2055 418 413<lb/>
AIDS &amp; Prescription &amp; Need to loose How to use<lb/>
other STDs illegal drugs 10-15 pounds a condom<lb/>
200 calls Phone call statistics compiled from De Anza Community College<lb/>
Staff Writer<lb/>
Sex, drugs and those annoying love<lb/>
handles.<lb/>
Sound like a new alternative rock<lb/>
band? Well, it's not. After a De Anza, Cal<lb/>
survey, these three health topics rated as the<lb/>
top three that students are concerned with<lb/>
today.<lb/>
Between August 1992 and January<lb/>
1993, De Anza Community College spon-<lb/>
sored a free, 24-hour recording offering in-<lb/>
formation on drugs, alcohol and health is-<lb/>
sues. The recording received an average of<lb/>
2,500 anonymous calls a month from stu-<lb/>
dents and community members.<lb/>
The largest general category of calls<lb/>
fell under the concern about "AIDS and<lb/>
other STDs" with 2,087 calls. Running a<lb/>
close second, "Dlicitand Prescription Drugs"<lb/>
finished with 2,055 calls. Callers could then<lb/>
choose more specific headings under these<lb/>
and other general topics.<lb/>
The most requested specific message<lb/>
was various students' concerns about<lb/>
weight. The survey registered 418 calls un-<lb/>
der tiie "Need to lose 10-15 pounds The<lb/>
question of "How to use a condom and<lb/>
where to find them on campus" ran a sur-<lb/>
prisingly diverse second with 413 calls.<lb/>
The drug Ecstasy and concerns about<lb/>
effects of drugs on a fetus rounded out the<lb/>
list, receiving 316 calls and 256 calls, respec-<lb/>
tively.<lb/>
Ruth Foy, health educator for De Anza<lb/>
Community College, said that the students'<lb/>
picks came as no surprise.<lb/>
"Look at the emphasis in our society<lb/>
about being thin Foy said. "Look at the<lb/>
pressure that's put on. These are things mat<lb/>
people are thinking about<lb/>
Jennifer Phillips, peer health educator<lb/>
for ECU, agreed with Foy's comment, but<lb/>
said that ECU students are more concerned<lb/>
with STDs and pregnancy.<lb/>
"In my opinion, the two most com-<lb/>
mon calls into my office are concerning<lb/>
STDs and pregnancy Phillips said. The<lb/>
students call because they want to know<lb/>
about testing, where they can get tested and<lb/>
symptoms. "In the residence halls, program-<lb/>
ming targetsSTD education. Students seem<lb/>
to be most interested in this issue<lb/>
Systems similar to the one in De Anza<lb/>
are currently in operation in colleges such as<lb/>
the University of Nevada-Las Vegas, the<lb/>
University of New Mexico and the College<lb/>
of Staten Island in New York.<lb/>
Christine Whitten, spokeswoman for<lb/>
the firm that markets the message system,<lb/>
has said that some trends do exist as to<lb/>
geographical placement.<lb/>
"Systems on the West Coastarea little<lb/>
more interested in the health issues?diet<lb/>
and stress Whitten said. "Northeast sys-<lb/>
temsaremore focused on self-help options<lb/>
In the fall of 1993, ECU plans to con-<lb/>
duct an assessment of total lifestyle and<lb/>
health risks of incoming freshmen, accord-<lb/>
ing to Dr. David Emmerling, dean of stu-<lb/>
dent development.<lb/>
Created by Woody Barnes<lb/>
Trustees propose<lb/>
changes, renovations<lb/>
By Karen Hasseli<lb/>
Assistant News Editor<lb/>
The ECU Board of Trustees<lb/>
proposed on Friday to lease a<lb/>
piece of land in Ficklen Stadium<lb/>
to an ECU organization for the<lb/>
purpose of constructing needed<lb/>
seating.<lb/>
"Our athletic director Dave<lb/>
Hart tells us we are going to lose<lb/>
 seats in putting chair backs on<lb/>
the south side of the stadium<lb/>
said board member William E.<lb/>
Danseyjr. "It will create more leg<lb/>
room but we will lose 735 seats<lb/>
Dansey said that Hart did<lb/>
not feel that ECU's Ficklen Sta-<lb/>
dium could afford to lose seating<lb/>
at this time and so he proposed a<lb/>
creative idea.<lb/>
ECU will lease the parcel of<lb/>
land at the east end of Ficklen to<lb/>
theEastCarolina University Edu-<lb/>
cation Foundation for $. In re-<lb/>
turn, seating will be constructed<lb/>
whici. vill add 1,700 seats. The<lb/>
total cost is to be funded by the<lb/>
East Carolina Education Foun-<lb/>
dation Inc.<lb/>
The Board of Trustees<lb/>
passed several other proposals to<lb/>
repair and expand areas around<lb/>
campus.<lb/>
A motion was passed to al-<lb/>
low theexpansion of Wright Soda<lb/>
Shop. The expansion, at the cost<lb/>
of around $997,700, will increase<lb/>
the size of the soda shop about<lb/>
2,000 square feet, Dansey said. The<lb/>
asphalt is to be taken up in the<lb/>
direction of the Rawl Classroom<lb/>
Building and turned into a brick<lb/>
walk. There will also be renova-<lb/>
tions made in the existing space.<lb/>
The Old Austin Cupola is to<lb/>
be rebuilt. The dome-like struc-<lb/>
ture will be placed in front of<lb/>
Mendenhall Student Center and<lb/>
the new student recreational cen-<lb/>
ter.<lb/>
Dealing with the deteriorat-<lb/>
ing residence halls, Scott and<lb/>
Aycock Halls are to be reroofed at<lb/>
a cost of $331,500. The money will<lb/>
come out of capital funding.<lb/>
New dry wall is to be in-<lb/>
stalled in White Residence Hall<lb/>
See TRUSTEES page 4<lb/>
Pirate Prayer<lb/>
Photo by Biff Ransom<lb/>
PeeDee prays for a Pirate victory during the NCAA battle<lb/>
against UNC-CH. For more on the game, see p. 10.<lb/>
ECU to be exposed<lb/>
to potential majors<lb/>
By Stephanie Lassiter<lb/>
Staff Writer<lb/>
The Career Education<lb/>
Committee will be hosting a<lb/>
majorsminors fair tomorrow<lb/>
starting at 12:30 p.m. Accord-<lb/>
ing to Jim Pinkney, chair of the<lb/>
committee, IHaBKa<lb/>
tf<lb/>
"The fair is an<lb/>
opportunity<lb/>
for students to<lb/>
informally dis-<lb/>
cuss potential<lb/>
majors and mi-<lb/>
nors<lb/>
The fair is<lb/>
an annual<lb/>
event very<lb/>
similar to a ca-<lb/>
reer fair where<lb/>
students have<lb/>
the opportu-<lb/>
nity to chat with various repre-<lb/>
sentatives, Pinkney said. The fair<lb/>
will be very informal so stu-<lb/>
dents can either talk with repre-<lb/>
sentatives or simply pick up<lb/>
vritten materials regarding cer-<lb/>
The fair is<lb/>
most helpful<lb/>
for students<lb/>
trying to<lb/>
decide on a<lb/>
major, '<lb/>
Jim Pinkney<lb/>
tain majors and minors.<lb/>
"The fair is most helpful<lb/>
for students trying to decide on<lb/>
a major Pinkney said.<lb/>
Representatives from 40<lb/>
departments across campus will<lb/>
be present to give out informa-<lb/>
tion on typical careers for their<lb/>
mmmm.m majors, graduate<lb/>
programs which<lb/>
may be applicable<lb/>
and any unusual<lb/>
career opportuni-<lb/>
ties students can<lb/>
find in these de-<lb/>
partments. The fair<lb/>
will be held<lb/>
Wednesday in the<lb/>
Mendenhall Great<lb/>
Room from 12:30<lb/>
until 3 p.m and<lb/>
free refreshments<lb/>
will be provided.<lb/>
Check it Out<lb/>
Wednesday in the<lb/>
Mendenhall Great Room<lb/>
from 12:30 until 3 p.m.<lb/>
Career Services offers<lb/>
computerized career help<lb/>
Staff Reports<lb/>
The East Carolinian<lb/>
The Career Services office at ECU<lb/>
is now offering two computerized ca-<lb/>
reer-guidance systems that are avail-<lb/>
able through the summer.<lb/>
SIGI PLUS, developed by Educa-<lb/>
tional Testing Service, gives students<lb/>
access to a computer program that<lb/>
helps them learn the decision-making<lb/>
process involved in planning a career.<lb/>
"In only an hour or so, students<lb/>
identify which values are most impor-<lb/>
tant in planning a career said Assis-<lb/>
tant Director Margie Swartout. "Is<lb/>
making money most important or do<lb/>
they want to improve society? How<lb/>
important is status in management7<lb/>
"Another problem facing stu-<lb/>
dents is selecting and studying fur a<lb/>
career and finding out later that it's<lb/>
not what thev thought Swartout s,i id.<lb/>
"With SIGI PLUS, students can get<lb/>
information on hundreds of vocations,<lb/>
find out what skills are needed, ex-<lb/>
plore chances for ad vancement, check<lb/>
salary ranges, job security, employ-<lb/>
ment and find out where they're go-<lb/>
ing before they get there<lb/>
DISCOVER, developed by<lb/>
American College Testing, is a pro-<lb/>
gram being piloted by the Career Ser-<lb/>
vices office that also helps students in<lb/>
making career and educational deci-<lb/>
sions.<lb/>
Users may select the parts of the<lb/>
program that address their unique<lb/>
combination of needs to give them<lb/>
individualized and personalized ca-<lb/>
reer counseling.<lb/>
The program also includes mod-<lb/>
ules for adults in transition to help<lb/>
them in changing careers or re-enter-<lb/>
See CAREER page 4<lb/>
Students<lb/>
are now<lb/>
able to<lb/>
start their<lb/>
career<lb/>
search on<lb/>
campus<lb/>
with a new<lb/>
computer<lb/>
guidance<lb/>
service.<lb/>
4  !<lb/>
Photo by Dai! Reed<lb/>
<pb facs="00058395_0002"/><lb/>
2 The East Carolinian<lb/>
MARCH 23, 1993<lb/>
High school students to prepare for technical careers<lb/>
Student protesters burn state flag<lb/>
More than 3lK) students from Atlanta-area universities<lb/>
marched to the Capitol building and burned the state flag to<lb/>
protest a symbol of the Confederacy emblazoned upon it. The<lb/>
students assembled at Morris Brown College for the rally to<lb/>
support Co Zell Miler, who is leading a movement to remove<lb/>
the stars-and-crossed bars-symbol of the Confederacy from the<lb/>
Georgia flag. Despite Miller's pleas not to burn the flag, the<lb/>
students set it on fire. Amid chants of "burn, babv, burn" from<lb/>
the crowd of mostly blacks, a few whites and members of the<lb/>
media, the flag went u p in flames. More than 5(X) police officers,<lb/>
helicopters and secret service agents were stationed around<lb/>
and above the Capitol. One Atlanta police officer, who wished<lb/>
to remain anonymous, said the strong police presence was<lb/>
because they did not want a repeat of the riots that followed the<lb/>
Rodney King verdict in Los Angeles last May.<lb/>
Iowa students endorse gay rights<lb/>
Iowa State University's student senate recently passed a<lb/>
resolution recommending that partners of the same sex to be<lb/>
allowed to live in married-student housing. But is wasn't until<lb/>
after five hours of intense debate. "It started out very logical<lb/>
and rational, then it became emotional. There was a lot of fear.<lb/>
Some people just do not believe in recognizing gav or bisexual<lb/>
people said Eric Hamilton, president of the Government of<lb/>
the Student Body. Fair treatment of same-sex domestic partners<lb/>
has been a hot issue on the campus since last fall when a<lb/>
homosexual student requested housing with his partner, was<lb/>
denied and appealed to President Martin Jischke.<lb/>
The 'War of the Worlds round two<lb/>
It wasn't Orson Welles' "War of the Worlds" that got<lb/>
some radio listeners concerned this time, but a fictional broad-<lb/>
cast of a major earthquake in southern California. Roger Takacs,<lb/>
a senior at the University of California-Santa Cruz, created a<lb/>
make-believe broadcast in late February from the school radio<lb/>
station. The broadcast started with a bulletin that Los Angeles<lb/>
had been hit with a major earthquake. Despite a disclaimer at<lb/>
the beginning of the program and planned disclaimers that<lb/>
were to air about ever' 15 minutes, numerous listeners be-<lb/>
lieved there was a massive emergency and called the station.<lb/>
Compiled by Karen Hassell. Taken from CPS<lb/>
and other campus newspapers.<lb/>
Correction<lb/>
The March 18 edition of The East Carolinian stated that the<lb/>
Hospitality Management Carrer Day was to be held at the Human<lb/>
Resources Building. It will be held at the Human Environmental<lb/>
SciencesBuilding.Weregretany inconvenience this may havecaused.<lb/>
By Jason Williams<lb/>
Staff Writer<lb/>
Through a new program<lb/>
involving public schools and<lb/>
community colleges, high school<lb/>
students will be better prepared<lb/>
to continue their education or<lb/>
enter the workforce after gradu-<lb/>
ation.<lb/>
Though the State Board of<lb/>
Community Colleges recently<lb/>
endorsed the Tech PrepAsso-<lb/>
ciate Degree program, some lo-<lb/>
cal community o. ileges have<lb/>
had the program in place for<lb/>
more than three years.<lb/>
Susan Q. Nobles, director<lb/>
of marketing<lb/>
and public rela-<lb/>
tions at Pitt<lb/>
Community<lb/>
College ex-<lb/>
plained thepur-<lb/>
pose of the pro-<lb/>
gram. "Tech<lb/>
Prep is a cur-<lb/>
riculum pro-<lb/>
gram for county<lb/>
school systems<lb/>
designed to as-<lb/>
sist students in<lb/>
technical and<lb/>
academic<lb/>
courses in high<lb/>
school to pre-<lb/>
pare them for a hmb<lb/>
technical career<lb/>
"While high school coun-<lb/>
selors work mainly with those<lb/>
20 percent who go to a four year<lb/>
university, Tech Prep is de-<lb/>
signed for the 75 percent who do<lb/>
not. Before this program these<lb/>
students took mostly vocational<lb/>
courses instead of the upper<lb/>
level math and science courses<lb/>
they needed at a community col-<lb/>
lege or in their careers Nobles<lb/>
said.<lb/>
Dr. James W ingate, the vice<lb/>
president of programs for the<lb/>
Department of Community Col-<lb/>
leges cited a lack of prerequisite<lb/>
 Tech Prep<lb/>
shows the<lb/>
students the<lb/>
relevance of<lb/>
subjects like<lb/>
Geometry to<lb/>
work they may<lb/>
do in the<lb/>
future<lb/>
Gene Hembv<lb/>
swit<lb/>
dvo<lb/>
MiLLiort toKfj of:<lb/>
ie AHd&amp;XjOQOtohfS<lb/>
 vhW od?S couid be<lb/>
euitAAved eveRY YeAR.<lb/>
Yoop -eves woNt Notice<lb/>
YovJe. uohigs. fop.<lb/>
yoReNAYs-teheLp<lb/>
-tte eARtt, CALL<lb/>
1-988-8887<lb/>
courses as the ma in reason com-<lb/>
munity colleges must teach re-<lb/>
medial courses in the core cur-<lb/>
riculum. Gene Hemby, Tech<lb/>
Prep Coordinator at Pitt Com-<lb/>
munity College, said that Pitt<lb/>
had the same problem, espe-<lb/>
cially in the areas of science and<lb/>
math.<lb/>
"This agreement paves the<lb/>
way for community colleges to<lb/>
minimize remedial instruction<lb/>
and then use those same re-<lb/>
sources to extend the technical<lb/>
instruction in the associate de-<lb/>
gree program Wingate said.<lb/>
According to Hemby, Tech<lb/>
Prep will benefit those high<lb/>
school students<lb/>
who decide to en-<lb/>
ter the workforce<lb/>
immediately as<lb/>
well. "Tech Prep<lb/>
shows the stu-<lb/>
dents the rel-<lb/>
evance of subjects<lb/>
like Geometry to<lb/>
work they may do<lb/>
in the future<lb/>
"To give an<lb/>
example oi how<lb/>
the needs are<lb/>
changing, con-<lb/>
sider electronic en-<lb/>
gineering<lb/>
Nobles said.<lb/>
?hhhmbmm "Cor scs like calcu-<lb/>
lus, physics and geometry are<lb/>
necessary, and Tech Prep re-<lb/>
quires these in high school<lb/>
Hemby added that stu-<lb/>
dents who complete the pro-<lb/>
gram don't necessarily stop with<lb/>
community college. "We refer<lb/>
to it as a four plus two plus two<lb/>
program. The door is not closed<lb/>
with an associate degree<lb/>
In fact, Nobles pointed out<lb/>
that many students who com-<lb/>
plete the program at Pitt go on<lb/>
to ECU for a four year degree.<lb/>
In addition, Chancellor Ri-<lb/>
chard Eakin serves on the Tech<lb/>
Prep Steering Committee and<lb/>
sings the praises of the program.<lb/>
"It helps our young people pre-<lb/>
pare themselves for work in the<lb/>
world of technology. It also<lb/>
helps our employers obtain a<lb/>
trained workforce needed for<lb/>
the 21st century Eakin said.<lb/>
"The working relation-<lb/>
ships between ECU, Pitt Com-<lb/>
munity College, and Pitt county<lb/>
Schools have really blossomed<lb/>
with Tech Prep Nobles said.<lb/>
"The ECU Administration sees<lb/>
Tech Prep aiding the students<lb/>
coming to ECU<lb/>
The Department of Com-<lb/>
munity Colleges states the goal<lb/>
of the Tech Prep Associate De-<lb/>
gree program is "to prepare at<lb/>
least 85 percentofall high school<lb/>
students through a Tech Prep or<lb/>
College Prep course of study<lb/>
According to Hemby, the<lb/>
program seems to be working in<lb/>
Pitt County. "We've seen SAT<lb/>
scores increase, and the number<lb/>
of students applying to college<lb/>
increasedramatically. The drop-<lb/>
out rate has also gone down over<lb/>
the past two years<lb/>
"It is an outstanding re-<lb/>
source for our community. With<lb/>
the Tech Prep program, we are<lb/>
all winners Dr. Eakin said.<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/>
FAMILY<lb/>
HEALTH:<lb/>
A CHALLENGE<lb/>
FOR<lb/>
OUR NATION<lb/>
Dr. Mark<lb/>
Ginsberg<lb/>
MAJOR<lb/>
Speeder<lb/>
S-E-R-l-E-S<lb/>
March 30,1993<lb/>
8 PM<lb/>
Great Room, MSC<lb/>
Presented By The STUDENT UNION FORUM COMMITTEE<lb/>
For More Information Call The Student Union Hotline<lb/>
At 757-6004<lb/>
<pb facs="00058395_0003"/><lb/>
I<lb/>
wt<lb/>
MARCH 23, 1993<lb/>
The East Carolinian 3<lb/>
State News<lb/>
Burroughs Wellcome ready for AZT trial<lb/>
DURHAM (AP)<lb/>
Burroughs Wellcome officials are<lb/>
confident the company can de-<lb/>
fend its patent for the AIDS drug<lb/>
AZT from challenges by drugcom-<lb/>
panies in New York and Illinois.<lb/>
Twogeneric-drug manufac-<lb/>
turers say the U.S. government<lb/>
should be named as co-inventor<lb/>
of AZT, the leading drug treat-<lb/>
ment for AIDS. The Research Tri-<lb/>
angle Tark company rejects the<lb/>
suggestion that anybody other<lb/>
than Burroughs Wellcome should<lb/>
have its name on AZT's patent,<lb/>
which gives the company exclu-<lb/>
sive rights to the drug's use for<lb/>
AIDS.<lb/>
"It was Burroughs Wellcome<lb/>
scientists who conceived of the<lb/>
use of the compound AZT for the<lb/>
treatment of HIV infections<lb/>
Kathy Bartlett, a company spokes-<lb/>
woman, told The Herald-Sun of<lb/>
Durham.<lb/>
The two companies chal-<lb/>
lenging Burroughs Wellcome are<lb/>
Barr Laboratories of Pomona,<lb/>
NY and Novopharm of<lb/>
Schaumburg, 111. They contend<lb/>
National Cancer Institute re-<lb/>
searchers discovered that AZT<lb/>
could be used to halt HIV's spread<lb/>
by inhibiting the virus' ability to<lb/>
reproduce itself.<lb/>
If the government is named<lb/>
asco-inventor, then it could grant<lb/>
companies a license to manufac-<lb/>
ture their own versions of AZT.<lb/>
Right now, a generic copy can't be<lb/>
made until after Burroughs<lb/>
Wellcome's patent expires in 2005.<lb/>
Novopharm and Barr filed<lb/>
applications with the FDA for ge-<lb/>
neric versions of AZT, triggering<lb/>
Burroughs Wellcome patent-in-<lb/>
fringement suit against the two<lb/>
companies.<lb/>
"This was done under our<lb/>
resea rch program and this ap pears<lb/>
to be an attempt to redefine, after<lb/>
the fact, the relationship between<lb/>
Burroughs Wellcome and the gov-<lb/>
ernment Bartlett said. "We are<lb/>
confident of our patent position<lb/>
Both cases will be heard be-<lb/>
ginning June 28 in U.S. District<lb/>
Court in New Bern.<lb/>
Burroughs Wellcome will<lb/>
have a lot at stake in the court<lb/>
cases.<lb/>
A loss for the company<lb/>
would clear the way for less-ex-<lb/>
pensive generic versions of AZT<lb/>
to hit the market years ahead of<lb/>
time. That could seriously affect<lb/>
Burroughs Wellcome's standing<lb/>
in the stock market and drasti-<lb/>
cally cut into its AZT sales, which<lb/>
reached $388 million in 1992.<lb/>
From AZT's introduction in<lb/>
1987 through 1990, its sales jumped<lb/>
more than tenfold, from $24 mil-<lb/>
lion to $290 million. Company<lb/>
profits for Burroughs Wellcome<lb/>
rose 141 percent, from $145 mil-<lb/>
lion in net profits in 1987 to $350<lb/>
million in net profits in 1990.<lb/>
In 1992, Burroughs<lb/>
Wellcome had worldwide phar-<lb/>
maceutical sales of $3.2 billion, of<lb/>
which AZT accounted for $388<lb/>
million or 12 percent.<lb/>
Barr officials say the case is<lb/>
important not only to their com-<lb/>
pany, but also to AIDS patients.<lb/>
"Our motive is not prima-<lb/>
rily profit said Harold Cohen, a<lb/>
Ba rr spokesman. "They have been<lb/>
charging much too much in our<lb/>
opinion, and we think we can help<lb/>
a lot more people who maybe now<lb/>
can't afford their medication<lb/>
The NIH would receive roy-<lb/>
alties from Barr's sales, and the<lb/>
company has promised to sell its<lb/>
version of AZT at half the current<lb/>
cost, Cohen said. Selling AZT also<lb/>
benefits the company.<lb/>
"It is an opportunity for us<lb/>
to get our name recognized, and<lb/>
that'simportant said Paul Bisaro,<lb/>
a New York attorney who serves<lb/>
as Barr's general counsel.<lb/>
3<lb/>
One of Eastern North Carolina s<lb/>
Finest Restaurants For Over 14 Years<lb/>
Peking Palace<lb/>
Restaurant<lb/>
FAMOUS MANDARIN, SZECHUAN &amp; CANTONESE CUISINE<lb/>
LUNCH &amp; DINNER BUFFET<lb/>
7 DAYS A WEEK<lb/>
D<lb/>
G <lb/>
Controversial drug used for behavioral disorders<lb/>
WILMINGTON (AP) ? A<lb/>
drug introduced more than 35<lb/>
years ago to treat drug-induced<lb/>
lethargy, narcolepsy and mild<lb/>
depression is becoming more<lb/>
popular for helping children di-<lb/>
agnosed withattentiondeficitdis-<lb/>
order.<lb/>
Ritalin stimulates the brain<lb/>
and in adults has the same effect<lb/>
as speed, or amphetamine com-<lb/>
pound s. But in children, it has the<lb/>
opposite effect.<lb/>
Parents and teachers say the<lb/>
drug is becoming very popular,<lb/>
partially because of educators'<lb/>
enthusiasm for it.<lb/>
"It's very controversial, the<lb/>
issue if medicating children based<lb/>
onbehaviorPhyllisBayzle,acoun-<lb/>
selor at Gregory Elementary, told<lb/>
The Morning Star of Wilmington.<lb/>
Her first experience with<lb/>
Ritalin wasaboutsixyears ago when<lb/>
a child in her fou rth-grade class was<lb/>
failing. Knowing his parents had<lb/>
separated and thinking he was de-<lb/>
pressed, she suggested he get coun-<lb/>
seling.<lb/>
"A couple of weeks later, the<lb/>
child started working she said. His<lb/>
grades improved. Ms. Bayzleleamed<lb/>
the child was diagnosed with atten-<lb/>
tion deficit disorder and was taking<lb/>
Ritalin.<lb/>
"You have to stop the impulse<lb/>
not to want to do it for all kids with<lb/>
these problems she said. "We in<lb/>
education have to bevery careful not<lb/>
to jump on the bandwagon<lb/>
AngelaDavisknowsfirsthand<lb/>
of the popularity of Ritalin, or its<lb/>
generic equivalent,<lb/>
methylphenidate. She received sev-<lb/>
eral complaints from teachers about<lb/>
the short attention spans of her chil-<lb/>
dren, Matthew, 9, and Hannah, 8.<lb/>
A pediatrigan prescribed the<lb/>
drug after he and a child psycholo-<lb/>
gist diagnosed the children with the<lb/>
disorder, a label for a collection of<lb/>
neurological behaviors that keeps<lb/>
children from learning.<lb/>
Matthew and Hannah's be-<lb/>
havior improved drastically, but<lb/>
not to the teachers' satisfaction.<lb/>
"Some of the teachers,<lb/>
they've asked me to get the doc-<lb/>
tors to increase the dose Ms.<lb/>
Davis said. "The doctors are very<lb/>
firm. 'Tell the teachers this is not a<lb/>
tranquilizer I've had to relay the<lb/>
messages back and forth. That was<lb/>
really a weird feeling, the teachers<lb/>
wanting them to take more<lb/>
Experts agree that Ritalin<lb/>
should be used almost as a last<lb/>
resort.<lb/>
Often children who need<lb/>
Ritalin have problems that require<lb/>
counselingor tutoring,said pedia-<lb/>
trician Angelina Knox.<lb/>
LUNCH<lb/>
Mon-Fri llam-2:30pm<lb/>
DINNER<lb/>
Mon-Thur 5-9:30pm Friday 5- 10:30pm<lb/>
Open All Day Saturday &amp; Sunday<lb/>
Saturday 11 am-10:30pm<lb/>
Sunday llam-9:30pm<lb/>
Take Out Orders Available<lb/>
Greenville Square Shopping Center<lb/>
Greenville Blvd. across from The Plaza<lb/>
756-1169<lb/>
o o o o o o c<lb/>
CITY Of MOPE<lb/>
EXERCISE PARTY<lb/>
OF THE YEAR<lb/>
FOR AIDS RESEARCH<lb/>
Over 15.IXX) people in 85 cities nationwide will come together<lb/>
to workout to fight AIDS. Be a part of the workout solution on<lb/>
Tuesday, March 30 in Greenville, North Carolina<lb/>
oooooooc<lb/>
CITY OF MOPE<lb/>
O 0 c o c o o<lb/>
SPECIAL GUEST: MARK BRUNETZ<lb/>
mEast Carolina University Alumni<lb/>
?National Vice-Chair, Workout For Hope<lb/>
?Co-Star of "Body by VH-1" Cable Show<lb/>
?Creative Consultant for Jane Fonda Video Productions<lb/>
?International Fitness Consultant, Owner of ExerFit, USA<lb/>
ALSO FEATURING:<lb/>
Greenville finest fitness instructors from East<lb/>
Carolina University's Recreational Services and<lb/>
Local ClubsAgencies<lb/>
FREE PREGNANCY TEST<lb/>
while you wait<lb/>
Free &amp; Confidential<lb/>
Services &amp; Counseling<lb/>
Carolina Pregnancy Center<lb/>
111 E. 3rd Street Hours:<lb/>
The Lee Building 757-0003 Monday - Friday<lb/>
Greenville NC 8:30-3:30<lb/>
??:vy :?.?:?<lb/>
PLEASE JOIN US TO WORKOUT A CURE FOR AIDS<lb/>
?Sponsored by Recreational Services<lb/>
?Minges Coliseum, East Carolina University<lb/>
?5:3()-6:(H)p.m.<lb/>
?6:(H)-6:l()p.m.<lb/>
?6:10-6:30 p.m.<lb/>
?6:35-7:00 p.m.<lb/>
EVENT FORMAT:<lb/>
Participant Check-in<lb/>
Welcoming Warm-up<lb/>
Super Circuit Workout<lb/>
Cardio-Funk featuring Mark Brunei<lb/>
O O O O O O G<lb/>
CITY O' HO'E<lb/>
o fj o r<lb/>
?7:00-7:15 p.m. STEP Demonstration - Refreshment Break<lb/>
?7:15-8:00 p.m. Low Impact Fitness Workout<lb/>
TO PARTICIPATE OR<lb/>
REQUEST MORE INFORMATION CALL<lb/>
757-6387<lb/>
O O O G C<lb/>
ECU's<lb/>
STUDENT<lb/>
UNION IS<lb/>
STUDENT UNION<lb/>
ECU's<lb/>
STUDENT<lb/>
UNION IS<lb/>
? HAPPENINGS ?<lb/>
MOVIES I 8 PM HENDRIX THEATRE<lb/>
RAVISHINGLY<lb/>
BEAUTIFUL"<lb/>
-Sheila Benson. LA Times<lb/>
BRIGHTNESS<lb/>
Cinecom<lb/>
tfRUAH -u arurottv frx:<lb/>
WED &amp; SUN, MARCH 24 &amp; 28<lb/>
CRITICS CALL "UNFORGIVEir<lb/>
A SUREFIRE CLASSIC.<lb/>
engrossing:<lb/>
TOJkVTERFlL<lb/>
GRIPPING<lb/>
"CLASSIC<lb/>
"MASTERFUL"<lb/>
irtlanm 1.WSTTT M?M?ni (<lb/>
"REMARKABLE<lb/>
THUR, FRI, &amp; SAT, MARCH 25, 26, &amp; 27<lb/>
COFFEEHOUSE ? TONIGHT<lb/>
MIKE SWEENEY<lb/>
COMEDIAN<lb/>
TUE, MARCH 23, 8 PM<lb/>
ROOM 244, MSC<lb/>
SI Admission with Student I.D.<lb/>
$2 Admission for General Public<lb/>
FORUM FAMILIES &amp; HEALTH<lb/>
A CHALLENGE FOR OUR NATION<lb/>
DR. MARK GINSBERG<lb/>
ECU's<lb/>
STUDENT<lb/>
UNION IS<lb/>
TUES, MARCH 30, 8 PM<lb/>
GREAT ROOM, MSC<lb/>
For More Info Call The<lb/>
University Unions Program Hotline<lb/>
at 757-6004<lb/>
ECU's<lb/>
STUDENT<lb/>
UNION IS<lb/>
1<lb/>
<pb facs="00058395_0004"/><lb/>
4 The East Carolinian<lb/>
MARCH 23. 1993<lb/>
?<lb/>
National News<lb/>
Sudaf ed tampering trial<lb/>
rivals TV soap operas<lb/>
SEATTLE (AP)?Who needs<lb/>
"All My Children "Days of Our<lb/>
Lives" or "The Young and the Rest-<lb/>
less?"<lb/>
The Sudafed tampering trial<lb/>
of Joseph E. Meling in U.S. District<lb/>
Court offers a real-life plot as com-<lb/>
plex, characters as bizarre and cir-<lb/>
cumstances as wildly unlikely as<lb/>
any television soap opera.<lb/>
Take Meling's marriage.<lb/>
GaryLindbo,adecidedlystrict<lb/>
Lutheran minister, moved to Brush<lb/>
Prairie shortly after his 17-year-old<lb/>
daughter, Jennifer, completed high<lb/>
school in December 1979 in Kellogg,<lb/>
Idaho.<lb/>
The church secretary, Velma<lb/>
Meling, called the lonely girl to ask if<lb/>
she would go out with Meling's 18-<lb/>
year-old son.<lb/>
The teen-agers hit it off. Their<lb/>
parents didn't.<lb/>
"It was kind of a joke in the<lb/>
family Jennifer Meling testified.<lb/>
"He drove a fast car. He wore a<lb/>
leather jacket Hedranka lotofPepsi.<lb/>
That was not the kind of a person<lb/>
you ought to be going with<lb/>
In the fall of 1980, after she<lb/>
enrolled at Pacific Lutheran Univer-<lb/>
sity in Tacoma, Lindbo persuaded<lb/>
her to break up with Meling.<lb/>
Over the next several years,<lb/>
she heard her old flame had bad-<lb/>
mouthed her, had been married and<lb/>
divorced,and still wanted toseeher.<lb/>
After graduation, she found<lb/>
work as a teacher at Tumwater<lb/>
MiddleSchocJ.Hewasworkingasa<lb/>
receiving clerk at the Vancouver<lb/>
Columbian, nearly 100 miles away.<lb/>
Despite the distance the flame<lb/>
was rekindled. On four days notice,<lb/>
they were married Nov. 22,1986, by<lb/>
her father despite his strong misgiv-<lb/>
ings. By 1989, the elder Melings and<lb/>
Lindbos were at each others' throats<lb/>
in a dispute over Velma's salary at<lb/>
the church.<lb/>
The younger couple also had<lb/>
problems. Meling hurt his back lift-<lb/>
ing a heavy table and earned little<lb/>
but worker's compensation. Lilly<lb/>
Lindbo,Jennifer'smother,lentthem<lb/>
money, sometimes without telling<lb/>
her husband.<lb/>
Melingshowed early promise<lb/>
as a Prudential insurance agent in<lb/>
Olympiain 1990 and butsoon foun-<lb/>
dered.His wife took more and more<lb/>
extra work. They fought over sex<lb/>
and his profligate spending habits.<lb/>
After nearly dying of cyanide<lb/>
poisoning on Feb. 2, 1991, she left<lb/>
him and filed for divorce.<lb/>
Then, after the FBI paid her air<lb/>
farefora seven-week visittoa friend<lb/>
in Hawaii, she went back to him.<lb/>
But after repeatedly testifying<lb/>
that she loves him and believes he is<lb/>
innocent, she told reporters she<lb/>
hadn't decided whether she would<lb/>
stay with him when the trial is over.<lb/>
Here are some of the support-<lb/>
ing characters:<lb/>
? Keith Jerome Meling, Joe's<lb/>
uncle and the government's chief<lb/>
informant, has a criminal history of<lb/>
bigamy, forgery and bad checksand<lb/>
wasdiagnosed inthel970sasapara-<lb/>
noid schizophrenic.<lb/>
He testified he couldn't re-<lb/>
memberthenamesofall hissix wives,<lb/>
how many times he had been mar-<lb/>
ried, how often he had been in jail or<lb/>
whether he once offered to sell his<lb/>
unborn baby for $10,000.<lb/>
?Gifford W. "Sonny"Meling,<lb/>
Joe's father, tried to buy Portland<lb/>
MeadowsracetrackinPortland,Ore<lb/>
10 years ago. His application was<lb/>
rejected partly for failure to mention<lb/>
a grand larceny conviction that was<lb/>
vacated after he made restitution.<lb/>
He and Velma have yet to testify at<lb/>
their son's trial.<lb/>
? Kathleen Danneker of<lb/>
Tacoma, one of the people who died<lb/>
of cyanide poisoning, and her hus-<lb/>
band had at least as stormy a mar-<lb/>
riage as the Melings. Their son, Ken-<lb/>
CAREER<lb/>
Continued from page 1<lb/>
ing school. DISCOVER's files<lb/>
contain information on virtu-<lb/>
ally all community colleges,<lb/>
four-year institutions and<lb/>
graduate schools in the United<lb/>
States. Both SIGI PLUS and<lb/>
DISCOVER are free to students<lb/>
TRUSTEES<lb/>
funded by the capital improve-<lb/>
ments project at the cost of over<lb/>
$270,000.<lb/>
Attempting to confront the<lb/>
asbestos problem in the resi-<lb/>
dence halls, carpeting is to be<lb/>
installed over the existing tiles.<lb/>
When and if the tiles should<lb/>
become broken and require re-<lb/>
moval, the project may become<lb/>
more serious.<lb/>
The project has been<lb/>
funded at $135,000 from Uni-<lb/>
versity Housing Repairs.<lb/>
At the meeting, the board<lb/>
also discussed the negotiations<lb/>
and require no prior knowledge<lb/>
of computers.<lb/>
A counselor will be avail-<lb/>
able to assist, as well as to fol-<lb/>
low up with counselling if<lb/>
needed.<lb/>
Students who wish to<lb/>
schedule an appointment to<lb/>
use these systems should call<lb/>
Career Services at 757- 6050<lb/>
between 7:30 a.m. and 5 p.m.<lb/>
Monday- Thursday. SIGI<lb/>
PLUS is also available in the<lb/>
Counseling Center.<lb/>
Continued from page 1<lb/>
taking place to lease the old IBM<lb/>
Building on First Street. If the ne-<lb/>
gotiations go through, the build-<lb/>
ing will be leased for a period of<lb/>
ten years with the option to buy at<lb/>
the end of 10 years at around<lb/>
$800,000.Thebuildingwould pro-<lb/>
vide 5,600 square feet of office<lb/>
space in which to house Human<lb/>
Resources.<lb/>
During the meeting, Chair-<lb/>
man Wayne Peterson presented<lb/>
the board with the naming of vari-<lb/>
ous rooms in the General Class-<lb/>
room Building and the Joyner<lb/>
Library addition. Among the<lb/>
rooms named were two rooms<lb/>
in the Joyner Library after 2<lb/>
former U.S. senators. The Rob-<lb/>
ert Morgan room is located on<lb/>
the left side of the hallway and<lb/>
the John East room is located<lb/>
across the hall, on the right.<lb/>
Chancellor Richard<lb/>
Eakin announced the appoint-<lb/>
ment of Phil Dixon to the Board<lb/>
of Trustees and the resigna-<lb/>
tion of Peterson who was re-<lb/>
cently named to the Board of<lb/>
Governors.<lb/>
The next trustees meet-<lb/>
ing will be held on April 30.<lb/>
neth IV, testified one fight between<lb/>
his parents was so bad he nearly<lb/>
called the police.<lb/>
After beingdivorcedforayear,<lb/>
the Danekers had gotten remarried<lb/>
the night before she died.<lb/>
Her mother, Shirley Skinner,<lb/>
testified that she lived with Kenneth<lb/>
Daneker II and his children after her<lb/>
daughter died, men was asked to<lb/>
leave and told not to return for her<lb/>
belongings after a falling-out.<lb/>
?Paul A. Lindgren, who sold<lb/>
a pound of sodium cyanide toa man<lb/>
the government claims was Meling<lb/>
in disguise, knew the defendant ca-<lb/>
sually when the two were growing<lb/>
up in the Vancouver area but had<lb/>
not seen him in 20 years. Lindgren<lb/>
said he recognized his old acquain-<lb/>
tance only recently from newspaper<lb/>
pictures.<lb/>
? Several strippers ? from<lb/>
Kittens,NewPlayersClubandomer<lb/>
Tacoma night spots frequented by<lb/>
Meling while his marriage was at its<lb/>
stormiest?werecalledtothestand.<lb/>
EAST<lb/>
CAROLINIAN<lb/>
The East Carolinian is advertising account executives<lb/>
currently accepting<lb/>
resumes for the<lb/>
following positions:<lb/>
This job entails prospecting new clients, selling<lb/>
creative advertising campaigns and<lb/>
supporting advertising clients. Requirements:<lb/>
Minimum 2.0 G.P.A. No previous sales<lb/>
experience is required but is heipful. Open to<lb/>
all majors.<lb/>
CREATIVE DIRECTOR<lb/>
This job entails creating computer designed<lb/>
advertisements using sound design principles<lb/>
including; contrast and focal point. Requirements:<lb/>
Minimum 2.0 G.P.A. Working knowledge of<lb/>
Macintosh applications; PageMaker, Freehand,<lb/>
QuarkXPress, and image scanning. Open to all<lb/>
majors.<lb/>
Same restrictions apply<lb/>
JOSTENS<lb/>
Existing tooling only<lb/>
Date: MARCH 22-24 Time: 10:00-3:00<lb/>
Deposit Required: s20.00<lb/>
Place: ECU STUDENT STORE LOBBY<lb/>
VISA<lb/>
Jfi.<lb/>
VALUABLE COUPON<lb/>
SAVE $25.00<lb/>
ON YOUR 14K CLASS RING<lb/>
'AND REGISTER FOR A FREE GOLD RING TO BE GIVEN AWAY THIS WEEK!<lb/>
NAME:<lb/>
PHONE NO:<lb/>
ORDER NO.<lb/>
BRING THIS COUPON TO<lb/>
THE ECU STUDENT STORE MARCH 22-24, 10:00-3:00 ,<lb/>
UMfo<lb/>
mmm<lb/>
YOU HAVE ONE<lb/>
HOT CAR<lb/>
COME SHOW IT OFF<lb/>
SATURDAY, MARCH 27<lb/>
COME BE A PART OF THE<lb/>
FIRST ANNUAL ECU STUDENT<lb/>
CAR SHOW<lb/>
$50 FIRST PRIZE<lb/>
SPONSORED BY<lb/>
AYCOCK HALL<lb/>
CONTACT THE AYCOCK OFFICE FOR DETAILS<lb/>
COME BY OR CALL 757-6935<lb/>
<pb facs="00058395_0005"/><lb/>
TheEastCarolinian<lb/>
March 23, 1993<lb/>
Classifieds<lb/>
Page S<lb/>
WHY PAY $375 when you can pay<lb/>
$315 for an apartment at the conve-<lb/>
niently located Ringgold Towers.<lb/>
Sub-lease a spacious 1 Bedroom for<lb/>
1 or2 people for the summer months.<lb/>
Park conveniently in front of build-<lb/>
ing - no long walks! Call 758-4542.<lb/>
SUMMER APARTMENT 2 Bed-<lb/>
room 112 bath. Located in Cedar<lb/>
Ct. To be sub-leased for summer.<lb/>
365.00 Mo. Util. Ask for Brian or<lb/>
Dave. 752-0085.<lb/>
2 BEDROOM APT. HeatAC wa-<lb/>
ter, sewer, cable included. 2 blocks<lb/>
from campus. For rent NOW. Call<lb/>
746-4169.<lb/>
SINGLE ROOMS FOR RENT for<lb/>
summer sessions. $250 per s.s. in-<lb/>
cludes rent, utilities, and phone.<lb/>
More info contact Marcus at (919)<lb/>
758-3936.<lb/>
2BDRDUPLEX, across from Town<lb/>
Commons, close to campus and<lb/>
downtown. Rent $325mo cats<lb/>
neg. wdep Avail. 1 April. Sublet<lb/>
til 1 Aug. new lease thereafter.<lb/>
510-D East First St. Call 752-2400 or<lb/>
752-8951.<lb/>
APARTMENT TO SUBLEASE<lb/>
this summer. One room efficiency<lb/>
apartment at Ringgold Towers.<lb/>
$260month. Call Dennis at 757-<lb/>
0905.<lb/>
TWOBEDROOMAPARTMENT<lb/>
in Tar River. Available Mid-May!<lb/>
Just in time for summer school! If<lb/>
sign lease in April you get 1 2 OFF<lb/>
JUNE AND JULY'S RENT! New<lb/>
appliances and carpet. Normal rent<lb/>
$460.00 Deposit required. If inter-<lb/>
ested call 830-1791.<lb/>
RINGGOLD TOWERS<lb/>
Now Taking Leases for<lb/>
1 bedroom, 2 bedroom &amp;<lb/>
Efficiency Apartments.<lb/>
CALL 752-2865<lb/>
UNIQUE SITUATION FOR FE-<lb/>
MALE ROOMMATE. Full house<lb/>
privileges, unfurnished room, ad-<lb/>
joining bath, private entrance,<lb/>
smoker o.k small peto.k. 1 3 utili-<lb/>
ties, Wintervillearea. Callafter5pm<lb/>
756-5467.<lb/>
ROOMMATE wanted:Mustbe re-<lb/>
sponsible and mature. 1 2 milefrom<lb/>
campus, ECU bus. CALL: 752-1538,<lb/>
leave message.<lb/>
FEMALE ROOMMATE(S)<lb/>
NEEDED to share 3 bedroomhouse<lb/>
2 blocks from campus. House has<lb/>
cable, washerdryer,and A?C.Call<lb/>
Bonnie at 752-3472.<lb/>
FEMALE ROOMMATE needed<lb/>
May through Aug. to share 2 bdrm<lb/>
Apt. at Tar River. $100.00 per mo. <lb/>
13 utilities. Call 752-8000!<lb/>
FEMALE ROOMMATE wanted<lb/>
for May. Serious but fun, own bed-<lb/>
room. $157.50 a month 12 utili-<lb/>
ties. Call Penny at 830-3771, leave<lb/>
message.<lb/>
mm<lb/>
CHEAP! FBI7 US SEIZED: 89<lb/>
Mercedes -200, 86 VW - $50, 87<lb/>
Mercedes - $100,65 Mustang - $5.<lb/>
Choose form thousand s starting $50.<lb/>
FREE Information 24 hour hotline<lb/>
801-379-2929 copyright NC<lb/>
030610.<lb/>
GOVERNMENT SEIZED CARS,<lb/>
trucks, boats, 4 wheelers,<lb/>
motorhomes, by FBI, IRS, DEA.<lb/>
Available your area now. Call 1-<lb/>
800-436-4363 ext. C-5999.<lb/>
1981 YAMAHA "CHAPPY" Mo-<lb/>
tor Scooter 49cc very good running<lb/>
condition - great transportation for<lb/>
around campus. Ride forever on a<lb/>
gallon of gas. $400 931-7216.<lb/>
YUMMY GIRL SCOUT COOK-<lb/>
IES for sale! Call 7 to midnight931-<lb/>
7959 before April 1st. Campus Girl<lb/>
Scouts thank you!<lb/>
KING SIZE WATERBED. Book-<lb/>
shelfheadboard with mirror. Heater<lb/>
and accessories included. Excellent<lb/>
condition. $175. Call 752-3620.<lb/>
ALVAREZ 12 String $200.00 Call<lb/>
75d-7993.<lb/>
USED - CDs, Gameboy NES and<lb/>
SuperNES games, Nintendo, and<lb/>
Gameboy. Call 756-3319 and leave<lb/>
message.<lb/>
1988 HONDA PRELUDE SI 4 ws<lb/>
LOADED, CD player, amfm cas-<lb/>
sette,RearWing,Sunroof,foglights,<lb/>
power everything. High miles,<lb/>
$6200,746-9196n, 830-7355d.<lb/>
SNOWBOARD: Burton Elite 150<lb/>
with Burton bindings and size910<lb/>
Burton boots. Includes soft rack for<lb/>
car and leash. $100.00 for all 931-<lb/>
7392.<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/>
CimVi USED CD'S<lb/>
$10 - S360UP WEEKLY Mailing<lb/>
brochures! Sparefull time.Set own<lb/>
hours! RUSH stamped envelope:<lb/>
Publishers (GI) 1821 HillandaleRd.<lb/>
1B-295 Durham, NC 27705<lb/>
OUTER BANKS largest<lb/>
watersports center hiring enthusi-<lb/>
astic persons for sailing<lb/>
windsurfinginstruction,powerboat<lb/>
and equipmentrentals, retail. North<lb/>
Beach Sailing, Inc. Box 8279, Duck,<lb/>
NC 27949. (919) 261-6262.<lb/>
200 - $500 WEEKLY. Assemble<lb/>
products at home. Easy! No selling<lb/>
. You're paid direct. Fully Guaran-<lb/>
teed. Free Information - 24 hour<lb/>
hotline. 801 -379-2900. Copyright<lb/>
NC 030650.<lb/>
POSTAL JOBS Available! Many<lb/>
positions.Greatbenefits.Call 1-800-<lb/>
436-4365 ext P-3712.<lb/>
ALASKA SUMMER EMPLOY-<lb/>
MENT- fisheries. Earn $600week<lb/>
in canneries or $4,000 month on<lb/>
fishing boats. Free transportation!<lb/>
Room &amp; Board! Over 8,000 open-<lb/>
ings. No experience necessary.<lb/>
MALE or FEMALE. For employ-<lb/>
ment program call 1-206-545-4155<lb/>
ext. A5362.<lb/>
PT CLERICAL POSITION - Af-<lb/>
ternoons and evenings. Must have<lb/>
accurate typing skills 65 wpm ().<lb/>
Must be willing to perform a num-<lb/>
ber of duties and work hard. Apply<lb/>
in person at the Audit Bureau of<lb/>
Greenville, 1206 S. Charles Blvd<lb/>
Greenville, NC. No phone calls<lb/>
please.<lb/>
SUMMER INTERNSHIP -<lb/>
SalesAdvertising begin imme-<lb/>
diately part time. Have 4 weeks<lb/>
summer vacation, good pay -<lb/>
bring resume to Cooperative Edu-<lb/>
cation Office General Classroom<lb/>
Bldg. Will call for interview.<lb/>
SUMMER JOB ON THE OUTER<lb/>
BANKS: Kitty Hawk Pizza and<lb/>
the New Tomato Parch Pizzaria<lb/>
in Corolla are looking for sum-<lb/>
mer help. Waitresses, cooks, and<lb/>
dishwashers needed. Call Chris<lb/>
locally at 931-7085 for an applica-<lb/>
tion.<lb/>
ATTENTION FASHION MER-<lb/>
CHANDISING MAJORS! Gain<lb/>
valuable work experience in your<lb/>
field of study. Brody is accepting<lb/>
applications for Secretary to<lb/>
Buyer. Work with buyers in track-<lb/>
ing and replenishing inventory<lb/>
levels. Computer experience<lb/>
needed. Must be available 3 days<lb/>
by 12p.m 15-20 hours per week.<lb/>
Apply Brody's, The Plaza, Mon-<lb/>
day - Wednesday, 1-4 p.m.<lb/>
CRUISE SHIPS NOW HIRING<lb/>
- Earn $2,000month world<lb/>
travel (Hawaii, Mexico, the Car-<lb/>
ibbean, etc.) Holiday, Summer<lb/>
and Career employment avail-<lb/>
able. No experience necessary.<lb/>
For employment call 1-206-634-<lb/>
0468 ext. C5362.<lb/>
LIFEGUARDS. Summer, NAGS<lb/>
HEAD area, Country Club pool,<lb/>
Call Bob, 756-1088.<lb/>
RESPONSIBLE AND DEPEND-<lb/>
ABLE BABYSITTER needed.<lb/>
References and own transporta-<lb/>
tion required. Flexible hours.<lb/>
Ready to start now and or this<lb/>
summer. Please call 355-7512.<lb/>
WORD PROCESSING AND<lb/>
PHOTOCOPYING SERVICES:<lb/>
We offer typing and photocopy-<lb/>
ing services. We also sell software<lb/>
and computer diskettes. 24 hours<lb/>
in and out. Guaranteed typing on<lb/>
paper up to20hand written pages.<lb/>
SDF Professional Computer Ser-<lb/>
vices, 106 East 5th Street (beside<lb/>
Cubbie's) Greenville, NC 752-<lb/>
3694.<lb/>
HEADING FOR EUROPE this<lb/>
summer?Only $169 Jetthere any-<lb/>
time for only $169 with<lb/>
AIRHITCH! (Reported in Let'sGo!<lb/>
&amp; NY Times.) AIRHITCH @ 212-<lb/>
864-2000.<lb/>
NEED A FITNESS TRAINER to<lb/>
get the look the guys want? Call<lb/>
931 - 7866.<lb/>
WHERE'S THE PARTY? Wher-<lb/>
ever there's a Mobile Music Pro-<lb/>
ductionsdisc jockey. Proven HOT-<lb/>
TEST D.J. service in the area. Don't<lb/>
wait too late to book. Call 758-<lb/>
4644.<lb/>
CARPET CLEANING $12 per<lb/>
room 2 room minimum. Steamex<lb/>
cleaning serving Greenville for 4<lb/>
years. Call Marc at 758-1079.<lb/>
LET'S PARTY! Experienced D.J.<lb/>
from Bogies available for all occa-<lb/>
sions: Fraternity and Sorority So-<lb/>
cials, Weddings, Birthdays. All<lb/>
types of music from Classic Rock<lb/>
to Top 40 Dance. HIGHEST<lb/>
QUALITY BEST PRICESCall Rob<lb/>
' @ 757-2658.<lb/>
Typing Services<lb/>
Resumes, Term Papers. Letters<lb/>
Master Thesis or Presentations<lb/>
Professionally printed on "Laser Jet' printer<lb/>
Reasonable Rates<lb/>
Same Day Service available<lb/>
Call J. Carson at 756-1341<lb/>
RESEARCH INFORMATION!<lb/>
Largest Library of Information In U.S.<lb/>
all subjects<lb/>
Order Catalog Today with VisaMC or COD<lb/>
800-351-0222<lb/>
TOLL FREE<lb/>
HOT LINE<lb/>
InCaW. (213H77-B226<lb/>
Or, rush $2.00 to: Research Information<lb/>
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GREEKS &amp; CLUBS<lb/>
RAISE A COOL<lb/>
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IN JUST ONE WEEK!<lb/>
PLUS $1,000 FOR THE<lb/>
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And a FREE<lb/>
IGLOO COOLER<lb/>
if you qualify. Call<lb/>
1-800-932-0528, ext 65<lb/>
BRAVES PtOFBUONAL TYMN8 k<lb/>
wounottssiMsaviCE<lb/>
?Eng lish Literature Major<lb/>
'Editing &amp; Tutoring Available<lb/>
'Professionally Composed Resumes<lb/>
'Competitive Rates<lb/>
CALL 758-7218<lb/>
JOE: I'm so glad you made it to San<lb/>
Antonio- Spring break was truly a<lb/>
week to remember! Next time we'll<lb/>
actually see the ocean! Love, Jen.<lb/>
LAW FIRM NEEDS TWO FJLLY<lb/>
FURNISHED APARTMENTS<lb/>
during thesummer. 1 bedroomMay<lb/>
22 - June 27; 2 bedroom May 22 -<lb/>
August 1. Contact BertSpeichor 355-<lb/>
3030.<lb/>
JIMMY- Hey! How's life after<lb/>
anotherSundaynightatMugshots?<lb/>
I'm sure all of us wish we had gone<lb/>
home and not had that last shot! I<lb/>
know I do! Poor Brandy had to<lb/>
listen to me go a little nuts and you<lb/>
thought your hand was made of<lb/>
steel! Idiots! Later, Mo<lb/>
SUMMER JOB OPPORTUNITY<lb/>
Did you save any money last summer?<lb/>
Earn S4,000-05,000 this Summer!<lb/>
3 Credit Hours<lb/>
Contact VARSITY INTERNSHIP PROGRAM<lb/>
1-800-251-4000 Ext. 1576<lb/>
fact look on page 4 for an<lb/>
SSoTKA excellent employment opportunity<lb/>
4<lb/>
Announcements<lb/>
CAMPUS CHRISTIAN<lb/>
FELLOWSHIP<lb/>
Lookingforafellowshipof<lb/>
Christians, a place to pray, study <lb/>
God's word, be involved in social<lb/>
and service projects? Need a refuge<lb/>
form time to time? Campus Chrigf-<lb/>
tian Fellowship may be what yoli<lb/>
are looking for. Our weekly meefr<lb/>
ings are at 7pm Wednesdays at our<lb/>
CampusHouselocatedat200E.8th v<lb/>
Stdirectly acrossCotancheSt. from<lb/>
MendenhallStudentCenter. Every-<lb/>
one is welcome. For more informa-<lb/>
tion, call TimTumer,Campus Min-<lb/>
ister, at 752-7199.<lb/>
SPEECH-LANGUAGE &amp;<lb/>
AUDITORY PATHOLOGY<lb/>
All General College stu-<lb/>
dents who intend to major in<lb/>
Speech-Language and Auditory<lb/>
Pathology and have R. Muzzarelli<lb/>
or M. Dowries as their ad visor are to<lb/>
meet on Wednesday, March 24,5:00<lb/>
p.m. in General Classroom 1028.<lb/>
General advising for early registra-<lb/>
tion will take place at that time.<lb/>
Individual appointments can be<lb/>
made following the general advis-<lb/>
ing meeting. Pleasepreparea tenta-<lb/>
tive class schedule before the meet-<lb/>
ing.<lb/>
GAMMA BETA PHI<lb/>
The next Gamma Beta Phi<lb/>
meeting will be Tuesday, March 23<lb/>
at 5:00 in Mendenhall 244. Please<lb/>
bring 3 toiletry items to this meet-<lb/>
ing for our next service project.<lb/>
Donuts will also be distributed af-<lb/>
ter the meeting. Hope to see you<lb/>
there! Questions: call 931-9274.<lb/>
.GAMMA SIGMA SIGMA .<lb/>
"Jail House Rock" war-<lb/>
rants for sell atStudentStore March<lb/>
18,22,and23.Payonly$3.00tohave<lb/>
someone arrested on April Fool's<lb/>
Day! All proceeds go to needy fami<lb/>
lies. Sponsored by Gamma Sigma<lb/>
Sigma. ?'<lb/>
students, $15.00 faculty - staff- guest<lb/>
For more information call 757-6387.<lb/>
Tarticipants must register prior to<lb/>
the pre-trip meeting.<lb/>
TENNIS ANYONE?<lb/>
 TennisSinglesRegistration<lb/>
will be held on Tuesday, March 23<lb/>
a-?5:00 pm in Biology 103. For more<lb/>
information call 757-6387.<lb/>
CAMPUS CHRISTIAN<lb/>
FELLOWSHIP<lb/>
"CREATION'S TINY<lb/>
MYSTERY" SCIENTIFIC MYS-<lb/>
TERY UNRAVELED Dr. Rob-<lb/>
ert V. Gentry, an internationally rec-<lb/>
ognized authority on radiohalos will<lb/>
be a guest speaker at ECU on March<lb/>
23. He will present his work, which<lb/>
chal lenges the evol u tioni sts'4.6 bil-<lb/>
lion year age of the earth, in Hen-<lb/>
drix Theatre at 7pm. You will be<lb/>
amazed at his findings. Agree or<lb/>
disagree, but come and hear what<lb/>
many in the scientific community<lb/>
want to keep quiet. Be prepared to<lb/>
ask questions and challenge Dr.<lb/>
Gentry's findings. No admission is<lb/>
required, but donations will be ac-<lb/>
cepted. If you have questions call<lb/>
Tim Turner at 752-7199.<lb/>
ENIOY A DAY OF CANOEING<lb/>
Enjoy the Black River in<lb/>
Sampson County where Cypress<lb/>
trees and Spanish Mossdominated<lb/>
the riverscape. A pre-trip meeting<lb/>
will be held on Wednesday, March<lb/>
24at5:00pminBrewsterD-l()l.The<lb/>
actual trip will take place on Satur-<lb/>
day March 27. Theost is $12.00<lb/>
REC. SERVICES<lb/>
Indoor soccer registration<lb/>
will be held on Wednesday March<lb/>
24 at 5:00 pm in Biology 103. For<lb/>
more information call 757-6387.<lb/>
? 25 OR OLDER?<lb/>
Join us for brown bag<lb/>
lunches on T esdays from noon to<lb/>
130 pm. come for part or all of the<lb/>
time. Trusgroupisan informal gath-<lb/>
eringdesigned to be supportive and<lb/>
help meet the needs of students<lb/>
with family responsibilities. Infor-<lb/>
mal discussions and presentations<lb/>
are the format. Yes, there are many<lb/>
students at ECU facing the same<lb/>
corners as you. Let's leam from one<lb/>
another. Every Tuesday, noon to<lb/>
130 pmat theCounselingCenter in<lb/>
313 Wright building. For more in-<lb/>
formation, phoneGeorgeGressman<lb/>
at 757-6661.<lb/>
ATTENTION PRE - PHYSICAL<lb/>
THERAPY STUDENTS<lb/>
There will be a Pre - Physi-<lb/>
ca I Therapy Cl ub meeting Wednes-<lb/>
day, March 24 at 4:00 pm in the<lb/>
Underground at Mendenhall.<lb/>
Nominations for officers will be ac-<lb/>
cepted at this meeting, all are wel-<lb/>
come; please attend. If you have<lb/>
questions, please call Dawn at 757-<lb/>
0573.<lb/>
PEER HEALTH EDUCATORS<lb/>
The Peer Health Educators<lb/>
are taking applications to join our<lb/>
organization. If interested come by<lb/>
our information meeting on March<lb/>
25,4:00 pmStudent Health resource<lb/>
room. All majors welcome.<lb/>
WORKOUT FOR HOPE<lb/>
Join the fun and fight<lb/>
against AIDS at WORKOUT FOR<lb/>
HOPE on Tues March 30 from<lb/>
6:00 pm - 8:00 pm at Minges Coli-<lb/>
seum. Proceeds benefit City of<lb/>
Hope National Medical Center<lb/>
AIDS research. For more informa-<lb/>
tion contact ECU Recreational Ser-<lb/>
vices at 757-6387.<lb/>
FITNESS FANS<lb/>
Come join Greenville's<lb/>
finest fitness instructors and Mark<lb/>
Brunetz (consultant to Jane Fonda<lb/>
Video Productions and co-star of<lb/>
body by VH-1) on Tuesday,<lb/>
March 30 from 6:00 pm-8:00 pm<lb/>
at Minges Coliseum on the East<lb/>
Carolina University Campus in<lb/>
the Fifth Annual WORKOUT FOR<lb/>
HOPE. All ages and fitness levels<lb/>
are welcome in this nationwide<lb/>
event, held in 80-plus cities.<lb/>
WORKOUT FOR HOPE will raise<lb/>
more than $1 million for AIDS<lb/>
research at the City of Hope Na-<lb/>
tional Medical Center, a leader in<lb/>
discovering ways to stop this fa-<lb/>
tal disease. You can help WORK-<lb/>
OUT a cure for AIDS. This event<lb/>
is sponsored by ECU Recreational<lb/>
Services. For more information<lb/>
call 757-6387.<lb/>
P.U.S.H. THROUGH THE<lb/>
BARRIERS<lb/>
If you would like to work<lb/>
towards reducing the architectural,<lb/>
as well as the attitudinal barriers<lb/>
that students with special needs are<lb/>
faced with every day, then come to<lb/>
thenextmeetingofP.U.S.H. (People<lb/>
United to Support the Handi-<lb/>
capped.) Meeting will be 5:00-6:00<lb/>
on Thursday, March 25 in Cotten<lb/>
Hall lobby. Come join the fun<lb/>
RUSSIAN LITERATURE<lb/>
It's Back! 20th century Rus-<lb/>
sian Literature (taught in English),<lb/>
RUSS 2221, will be offered Fall se-<lb/>
mester, MWF 1:00 - 2:00pm. Sign<lb/>
up at pre-registration. the begin-<lb/>
ning Russian language course,<lb/>
RUSS 1001 will be offered MWF<lb/>
9:00-10:00pm.<lb/>
Classifieds<lb/>
25wordsorless:<lb/>
Students $21)0<lb/>
NrxrStudents $3jOO<lb/>
Each additional word $005<lb/>
?All ads must be pre-pakJ<lb/>
Announcements Displayed<lb/>
$5.50perinch:<lb/>
AnyorgarizatkrimayuserheAnnounce-<lb/>
merfcSertkriofTheEastCardritantofct<lb/>
activitiesarxlevenrscpmtothepurJctwo<lb/>
triTesfreeoftrHgatXjetotriekTitBdarnaunt<lb/>
orspaceJheEastCat ufc s i carrot gjaran-<lb/>
teethepiWcatkriofarTKLroaiHiti.<lb/>
teplayedadvertisementsmaybe<lb/>
cancelled before 10 a.m. the day<lb/>
priortopublication; however, no<lb/>
refunds wil be given.<lb/>
Deadlines<lb/>
Friday 4 p.m. forTuesday's edition.<lb/>
Tuesday 4 p. m. for Thursday's Edition<lb/>
Formore<lb/>
information call<lb/>
757-6366.<lb/>
<pb facs="00058395_0006"/><lb/>
March 23, 1993<lb/>
The East Carolinian<lb/>
Opinion<lb/>
Page 6<lb/>
TuesdayOpinion<lb/>
Athletics produces<lb/>
greater exposure on<lb/>
national level<lb/>
Football, basketball considered<lb/>
high visibility sports; success<lb/>
adds to school reputation<lb/>
Who says good things don't come out of television?<lb/>
Most recently, the East Carolina men's basketball<lb/>
team upset the Colonial Athletic Association with its stun-<lb/>
ning victories over teams such as James Madison and Old<lb/>
Dominion in the CAA tournament. These victories put<lb/>
ECU into the NCAA tournament, or "the Dance for the<lb/>
first time in over 20 years.<lb/>
The basketball team faced possibly the toughest oppo-<lb/>
nent it could possibly come up against, the UNC Tar Heels.<lb/>
Outsized and outmanned, EC U found itself facing a similar<lb/>
situation that General Custer might have faced. The spread<lb/>
had ECU losing by at least 25 points.<lb/>
Faced with this much opposition, any other team<lb/>
would havegivenup and thrown in the towel.<lb/>
But not ECU. They hung in there, played<lb/>
tough basketball and only lost by 20 (( , ' J points -<lb/>
which is very good, considering the L, afore-<lb/>
mentioned spread.<lb/>
By not accepting defeat and<lb/>
everyone's expectations, East Carolina<lb/>
showed the state ? and the country ?<lb/>
the type of student and athletic program<lb/>
we have here. On national television, our<lb/>
basketball team showed the pride that some<lb/>
in this state have sneered at us for not hav-<lb/>
ing. Hopefully, this pride will be evident in<lb/>
later years by increased attendance at bas-<lb/>
ketball games throughout the season,<lb/>
whether they be home or away.<lb/>
Football and basketball are the two<lb/>
big money sports when it comes to be-<lb/>
ing nationally televised. Our football<lb/>
team put us on the map with their 1991<lb/>
Peach Bowl upset over long-time rival<lb/>
N.C. State. ESPN televised last year's game against South-<lb/>
em Mississippi, and plans to televise next year's game<lb/>
against Syracuse.<lb/>
By just appearing in this year's NCAA tournament,<lb/>
the basketball team has increased its chances for future<lb/>
recruitment. Running against four of the biggest names in<lb/>
college basketball ? Duke, Wake Forest, UNC and N.C.<lb/>
State ? ECU is hard pressed to garner any big name<lb/>
recruits. With this exposure, ECU can more realistically<lb/>
compete for the remainder of in-state high school gradu-<lb/>
ates and possibly garner some out-of-state recruits.<lb/>
As much as some would vehemently deny the fact, a<lb/>
college's reputation is more often than not built upon its<lb/>
athletic program. If you don't have a decent football or<lb/>
basketball team, chances are you'll remain in obscurity<lb/>
until you do. Ever hear of Coppin State? Or Rider? How<lb/>
about Coastal Carolina? No, not the TV show, the basket-<lb/>
ball team. If you drew a blank on these names, then you<lb/>
obviously haven't kept up with the NCAA tournament.<lb/>
Everyone knows about Indiana, Kentucky or Duke ? the<lb/>
ones mentioned above only rise to fame once in a blue<lb/>
moon.<lb/>
Kudos to the basketball and football team for commit-<lb/>
ting themselves to the high ideal that they have shown the<lb/>
rest of the nation. Faced with what some termed insur-<lb/>
mountable odds, both teams have shown a determination<lb/>
and grit to persevere that will ensure their exposure in the<lb/>
future. Through this exposure, our university will benefit.<lb/>
Specifically, hats off to Ike Copeland, James Lewis and<lb/>
Ronnell Peterson for being the most recent visible examples<lb/>
of our university. They showed that ECU is not just a<lb/>
second-rate college to be laughed at, but rather a institution<lb/>
that produces first-rate graduates, in whatever field.<lb/>
By Amy E. Wirtz<lb/>
Jokes about Clinton becoming stale, old news<lb/>
The East Carolinian<lb/>
James R. Knisely, General Manager<lb/>
Blair Skinner, Managing Editor<lb/>
Arthur A. Sutorius, Advertising Director<lb/>
Elizabeth Shimmel, News Editor<lb/>
Karen Hasseil, Asst. News Editor<lb/>
Dana Danielson, Lifestyle Editor<lb/>
John Bullard, Asst. Lifestyle Editor<lb/>
Joe Horst, Opinion Page Editor<lb/>
Robert Todd, Sports Editor<lb/>
Warren Siimner, 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, Layout Manager<lb/>
Monique Campbell, Asm lnyout Manager<lb/>
Woody Barnes, Creative Director<lb/>
Dail Reed. Photo Editor<lb/>
Richard Haselrig, Staff Illustrator<lb/>
Matt MacDonald. Systems Manager<lb/>
Deborah Daniel. Secretary<lb/>
The East Carolinian publishes 12.000 copies every Tuesday and<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. The East Carolinian.<lb/>
Publications Bldg . ECU, Greenville. N C, 27858-4353. For more informa-<lb/>
tion, call CJ19) 757 6366<lb/>
I'rinted on<lb/>
w<lb/>
100 recycled<lb/>
paper<lb/>
You know, I'm getting quite<lb/>
sick of all the lame jokes that co-<lb/>
medians (and people who think<lb/>
they're funny) have been laying<lb/>
out about Clinton. I'm sure you<lb/>
know what I'm talking about: the<lb/>
ones about his obsession with<lb/>
McDonald's cuisine, his "folly"<lb/>
concerning the building of a jog-<lb/>
ging track in the backyard of the<lb/>
White House, etc.<lb/>
This upset me until I real-<lb/>
ized that the cause of this out-<lb/>
break is because of the fact that<lb/>
Clinton and his team are actually<lb/>
accomplishing things and work-<lb/>
ing hard to change the future of<lb/>
America (thank you very much).<lb/>
My, can you remember a time<lb/>
when a president worked so hard<lb/>
that the media felt compelled to<lb/>
write about his workaholic ten-<lb/>
dencies and stress-related insom-<lb/>
nia? Not I.<lb/>
In the eight weeks since he<lb/>
took office, Clinton, who is a gen-<lb/>
eration younger than his two pre-<lb/>
decessors in the White House, has<lb/>
The Many<lb/>
Faces of<lb/>
Bill Clinton<lb/>
maintained a pace few could<lb/>
match. Clinton has stuck toa high-<lb/>
energy schedule, shunned out-of-<lb/>
town vacations and grabbed mo-<lb/>
ments of relaxation when he could<lb/>
?usua 1 ly by gathering family and<lb/>
friends for an informal evening<lb/>
watching sports or movies.<lb/>
Since his inauguration Jan.<lb/>
20, Clinton has crisscrossed the<lb/>
country for a series of campaign-<lb/>
style rallies. His one visit to Camp<lb/>
David, the presidential retreat in<lb/>
Maryland, was a working session<lb/>
with Cabinet members. By com-<lb/>
parison, Bush regularly fit in va-<lb/>
cation time at his home in<lb/>
Kennebunkport, Maine. The<lb/>
Reagans frequently unwound at<lb/>
their ranch outside Santa Barbara,<lb/>
Calif. Clinton? He takes cat naps<lb/>
between visits with prime minis-<lb/>
ters and reporters. What a guy.<lb/>
The other ways mat he un-<lb/>
winds includes jogginga few miles<lb/>
most days, which leads us to the<lb/>
snide remarks about the jogging<lb/>
track. On his morning runsaround<lb/>
Washington's monuments,<lb/>
Clinton is followed by a motor-<lb/>
cade of Secret Service and media,<lb/>
which creates traffic jams. Can't<lb/>
we just let the man have his little<lb/>
jogging track and leave him alone?<lb/>
I'm sure there are more important<lb/>
concerns that we upstanding citi-<lb/>
zens can involve ourselves with<lb/>
right?<lb/>
Bill Clinton, after an admit-<lb/>
tedly misspent transition and a<lb/>
stumbling start in the White<lb/>
House, has shown increasing con-<lb/>
fidence in his job. He may, as some<lb/>
associates contend, still be trying<lb/>
to do too much himself, but his<lb/>
energy and range impress every-<lb/>
one who comes into contact with<lb/>
him.<lb/>
The majority in Congress is<lb/>
as impressed by Clinton's style in<lb/>
the early going but not driven by<lb/>
the new administration's agenda.<lb/>
They like the new guy, and were<lb/>
pleasantly surprised when Clinton<lb/>
took his economic plan on the road<lb/>
last month and made it public.<lb/>
They admire a guy who looks<lb/>
like he knows what he's doing.<lb/>
So far, that's how Clinton im-<lb/>
presses a lot of these people.<lb/>
In closing, an example of<lb/>
the kind of clout Clinton has.<lb/>
When conservative Democratic<lb/>
senators at a White House bud-<lb/>
get meeting pressed Clinton to<lb/>
take bolder steps to reduce the<lb/>
budget deficit, he replied that in<lb/>
hisdiscussions with British Prime<lb/>
Minister John Major, the Briton<lb/>
had urged him not to "step too<lb/>
hard on the brakes" and risk<lb/>
aborting what looks like a prom-<lb/>
ising economic recovery to the<lb/>
United States.<lb/>
Quoting Major and other<lb/>
sources, Clinton told the sena-<lb/>
tors that Western Europe might<lb/>
have no real growth this year<lb/>
and Japan very little, so the<lb/>
United States must be the engine<lb/>
to lead the industrial nations out<lb/>
of the doldrums.<lb/>
And this man isn't con-<lb/>
cerned about foreign affairs<lb/>
QuoteoftheDay<lb/>
Sports ? an order of chivalry, a code of<lb/>
ethics and aesthetics, recruiting its<lb/>
members from all classes and all peoples<lb/>
Rene Maheu<lb/>
Letters to the Editor<lb/>
Fleming Residence Hall dies studious death<lb/>
To the Editor:<lb/>
Very few people will un-<lb/>
derstand why I have written<lb/>
this. Even fewer will be able to<lb/>
relate, but here goes.<lb/>
I have lived in Fleming<lb/>
Residence Hall for the past three<lb/>
years. I have watched people<lb/>
come and go and all the ups<lb/>
and downs that occur when<lb/>
you put such a large group of<lb/>
people under one roof. I saw<lb/>
people come together to make<lb/>
Reming the Residence Hall of<lb/>
the Year. I was proud to say I<lb/>
lived in Fleming, not only be-<lb/>
cause of the awards, but also<lb/>
because it wasn't just another<lb/>
residence hall. I felt socomfort-<lb/>
able walking up and down the<lb/>
halls, joking and hanging out<lb/>
with whomever happened to<lb/>
be in the hall at the time. Every-<lb/>
one got along to a certain ex-<lb/>
tent, and we all seemed to look<lb/>
out for each other. Each night,<lb/>
people gathered in the lobby to<lb/>
play cards, joke around and<lb/>
watch an occasional game to<lb/>
cheer on their favorite teams.<lb/>
At times it was crowded and<lb/>
loud, but isn't that what the<lb/>
lobby is for? If people want to<lb/>
study in silence, they can go to<lb/>
their rooms or to the library.<lb/>
That's what they built it for.<lb/>
Over the years, Fleming<lb/>
has become more strictly the<lb/>
Honors residence hall,and with<lb/>
that "24 hours of quiet" has<lb/>
become more strictly enforced.<lb/>
Maybe ECU needs a residence<lb/>
hall for people who want to<lb/>
live in silence and seclusion. I<lb/>
only regret that Fleming had to<lb/>
become ECU's live-in library.<lb/>
There are restrictions at every<lb/>
turn and the feeling of freedom<lb/>
is gone. These are supposed to<lb/>
be the best years of our lives.<lb/>
Unfortunately, I think many of<lb/>
Heming's residents are barely<lb/>
living.<lb/>
I'll be living in Fleming<lb/>
for about five more weeks and<lb/>
then I'll be moving out. When 1<lb/>
walk down the halls and go to<lb/>
the lobby, nothing is there.<lb/>
There may be a few people<lb/>
watchingTV or talking. It's not<lb/>
the same. The bond, the chem-<lb/>
istry and the excitement are<lb/>
gone. With their loss, we may<lb/>
have a more studious environ-<lb/>
ment, but no classroom educa-<lb/>
tion could give me the memo-<lb/>
ries I gained from the atmo-<lb/>
sphere which used to exude<lb/>
from Heming.<lb/>
Many Fleming residents,<lb/>
namely the freshmen, can in no<lb/>
way understand the point I am<lb/>
trying to make. After all, you<lb/>
can't miss what you've never<lb/>
had. I believe most of thesopho-<lb/>
mores understand where I'm<lb/>
coming from. To the juniors,<lb/>
what can I say? We've certainly<lb/>
been through a lot and I'm sure<lb/>
you all join in my feelings.<lb/>
Many of us are moving<lb/>
out this semester. After we're<lb/>
gone, there will be nothing left<lb/>
of the way things used to be. I<lb/>
think that's why I felt I needed<lb/>
to write this. In a way, I look at<lb/>
this as an obituary for Fleming<lb/>
Hall. Fleming is survived only<lb/>
by our memories, and will be<lb/>
put to rest at the end of this<lb/>
semester. Fleming lived a long<lb/>
and prosperous life. May he<lb/>
rest in peace.<lb/>
Ron Clark<lb/>
Junior<lb/>
History<lb/>
Columnist praised for evaluation of society<lb/>
To the Editor:<lb/>
It is so easy to criticize.<lb/>
Rare is the day when one<lb/>
takes the time to pat some-<lb/>
one on the back for a job well<lb/>
done. Let me take the time to<lb/>
pat Mr. Jim Shamlin on the<lb/>
back for his superb editorial,<lb/>
"Knowing cause, effects dis-<lb/>
pels ignorance<lb/>
Shamlin is as "right as<lb/>
rain" in his evaluation of so-<lb/>
ciety and its problems. Only<lb/>
when society realizes the<lb/>
true nature of government<lb/>
and individual sovereignty<lb/>
is again respected will this<lb/>
country begin to solve its<lb/>
many problems; if not, those<lb/>
educated in the Freedom<lb/>
Philosophy must undertake<lb/>
another revolution and over-<lb/>
throw the current govern-<lb/>
ment.<lb/>
It is refreshing to read<lb/>
Shamlin's articles. Keep up<lb/>
the good work!<lb/>
R. Matthew Poteat<lb/>
Senior<lb/>
Public Historv<lb/>
A View from Above<lb/>
By T. Scott Batchelor<lb/>
Hypocrisy flows<lb/>
in government;<lb/>
no end in sight<lb/>
Hypocrisy, hypocrisy, hypocrisy.<lb/>
Our topic of discussion for today is hy-<lb/>
pocrisy. Last week, the Clinton<lb/>
administration's Secretary of Education reaf-<lb/>
firmed the validity of federally funded race-<lb/>
based scholarships. The administration's po-<lb/>
sition is mat blacks, Hispanics and American<lb/>
Indians should be given special consideration<lb/>
in the awarding of academic scholarships to<lb/>
promote "equal opportunity" among college<lb/>
candidates.<lb/>
Two points here. First, does anyone re-<lb/>
member the dream Martin Luther King, Jr.<lb/>
once had that people would be judged by the<lb/>
"content of their character" and not by the<lb/>
"color of their skin?" Or have King's teachings<lb/>
become passe in today's politically correct<lb/>
climate?<lb/>
Then there's the perversion of the con-<lb/>
cept of equal opportunity in this instance.<lb/>
Think about it. The goal is to win a scholarship<lb/>
to go to college. Everyone, regardless of race<lb/>
or ethnicity, should be free to compete for<lb/>
those scholarships. That's equality of oppor-<lb/>
tunity and should be legally protected. But<lb/>
guaranteeing an individual a scholarship be-<lb/>
cause he or she isblack, Hispanic or American<lb/>
Indian is equality of outcome,not opportunity,<lb/>
and the U.S. Department of Education ought<lb/>
to be ashamed of itself for misrepresenting its<lb/>
actions.<lb/>
Now, our next topic of hypocrisy. The<lb/>
Rev. Jesse Jackson came out several weeks ago<lb/>
and led the drive to ban Marge Schott from<lb/>
owning a major league baseball team. Jackson<lb/>
did this because of some racial remarks Schott<lb/>
allegedly maae.<lb/>
Well, isn't that the pot calling the kettle<lb/>
black? Remember when Jackson called New<lb/>
York City "hymie town" in reference to the<lb/>
substantial population of Jews living there?<lb/>
Yet he cruises right along unfazed and has the<lb/>
audacity to point his finger at those he calls<lb/>
"racist The man obviously hasnoconscience.<lb/>
Boston Globe columnist Derrick Z. Jack-<lb/>
son chastised the news media for using the<lb/>
word "Muslim" to describe the suspects ap-<lb/>
prehended in connection with thebombingof<lb/>
the World Trade Center. "The temptation for<lb/>
the reader writes Jackson, "is to decide that<lb/>
all Muslim 'fundamentalists' are death-deal-<lb/>
ingaliens Jacksonpreferstheheadlinewhich<lb/>
ran on page one of his own newspaper: "N.J.<lb/>
engineer held in blast of N.Y. tower<lb/>
However, using Jackson's "logic this<lb/>
isn't proper either. Does the Globe mean to say<lb/>
that residents of the Garden State are all<lb/>
wackos? I hope not. So we should drop the<lb/>
unnecessary reference to New Jersey and say,<lb/>
"Engineer held in blast of N.Y. tower<lb/>
Now my engineering friends are up in<lb/>
arms (excuse the pun). "What are you say-<lb/>
ing?" they indignantly ask. "That engineers<lb/>
are a group of bomb-building tenorists? No,<lb/>
of course not. So to play it safe, I guess the<lb/>
headline should read, "Man held in blast of<lb/>
N.Y. tower That unfairly targets males,<lb/>
doesn't it? The only tiling I can think of to be<lb/>
perfectly equitable would be the headline,<lb/>
"Homo sapien held in blast of N.Y. tower<lb/>
Theotherproblemwithjackson'sarticle<lb/>
is the important but overlooked fact that, from<lb/>
what we know at the moment, the bombing<lb/>
had something todo with ad vancing the cau se<lb/>
of Muslim fundamentalists engaged in a holy<lb/>
war. It would be disingenuous to pretend<lb/>
otherwise.<lb/>
i?<lb/>
?<lb/>
<pb facs="00058395_0007"/><lb/>
The East Carolinian<lb/>
March 23. 1993<lb/>
Lifestyle<lb/>
Page 7<lb/>
Breed 13 throws album release bash<lb/>
By John Builard<lb/>
Assistant Lifestyle Editor<lb/>
The line into The Breed 13<lb/>
show, thrown for the release of<lb/>
their new album, Saturated, at<lb/>
CRock's lastSaturday night, was a<lb/>
little longer than I thought it would<lb/>
be. Then again, I didn't know that<lb/>
theUltimaxtournamentwasgoing<lb/>
tobe played in Greenville last week-<lb/>
end. Throngs of students, from<lb/>
schools such as Yale and Vermont,<lb/>
came down South for frisbee and<lb/>
fun.<lb/>
Well, Saturday afternoon on<lb/>
the intramural fields was frisbee<lb/>
and lastSaturday night atO'Rock's<lb/>
was fun.<lb/>
Breed 13 and Lime Credo<lb/>
played to a packed house of famil-<lb/>
iar and not-so-familiar faces in an<lb/>
atmosphere where anyone would<lb/>
feel at home. The beer was free and<lb/>
socializin' was done with that spe-<lb/>
cialSauthemhospitality sofamous<lb/>
at ECU.<lb/>
Things were moving around<lb/>
10:30 p.m. when Lime Credo took<lb/>
tothestagt.Theydidn'tdisappoint<lb/>
the crowd of Ultimate players and<lb/>
Breed 13 fans. I hadn't been down-<lb/>
town for ages and the music and<lb/>
crowd at O'Rock's showed me that<lb/>
I was missing a lot of great local<lb/>
music and comradery.<lb/>
Anticipation for the appear-<lb/>
anceof Breed Dwaspretty high for<lb/>
me and half the crowd ? most of<lb/>
us had heard good things about the<lb/>
band, but hadn't had the chance to<lb/>
try them on. With the beer flowin<lb/>
I was ready to get my first taste of<lb/>
the band I had been told so much<lb/>
about.<lb/>
With the appearance of the<lb/>
Photo by Dail Head<lb/>
Breed 13 celebrated the release of their latest, Saturated, at O'Rocks Saturday night. They teamed up with<lb/>
the Ultimate tournament players to provide keg beer for all while it lasted.<lb/>
association with other bands. Per- At the end of the show, 1 was<lb/>
Breed 13, mynightcould'veswung<lb/>
either way. 1 was having a good<lb/>
time, but with a mediocre band, 1<lb/>
would be in a cab and on the way to<lb/>
my favorite pillow.<lb/>
But my pillow had to wait.<lb/>
Breed 13 provided the neces-<lb/>
sary dose of energy to keep me<lb/>
hyped from the very beginning of<lb/>
their set. Head bouncing, I walked<lb/>
around the crowd asking what<lb/>
people thought. Many listeners<lb/>
quicklysaid, 'Tmnotsure?they're<lb/>
hot though and turned their at-<lb/>
tentions back to the stage.<lb/>
The band defies definition or<lb/>
plexed, I walked over to Tim<lb/>
Johnson, the band's manager, and<lb/>
asked him totellmewho he thought<lb/>
the band resembled.<lb/>
"No he said. "Westeeraway<lb/>
from that sort of thing<lb/>
As the music kept the crowd in<lb/>
high spirits, I began to realize that<lb/>
Breed 13 defies definition because<lb/>
they just plain do. The band's line -<lb/>
up consists of four talented musi-<lb/>
cians: Brad Rice sings; Jason Nunn<lb/>
plays guitar; Lee Hylton thumps<lb/>
the bass; and Clay Kent emphati-<lb/>
cally beats on the drums.<lb/>
thoroughly impressed with what<lb/>
Greenvillenow offers forthedown-<lb/>
town scene. I'msure all those frisbee<lb/>
freaks will be going back to their<lb/>
schools with much to say about<lb/>
Greenville ? and it'll have a lot to<lb/>
do with the music.<lb/>
Not wanting to offend the<lb/>
band, I decided not to ask them<lb/>
what they sounded like. You'll just<lb/>
have to trust me. They sound like<lb/>
Breed 13 and you're going to be<lb/>
hearing more about them.<lb/>
Next chance, you should check<lb/>
them out. I will.<lb/>
Puppets to perform<lb/>
Wizard of Oz'<lb/>
By Lisa Baumann<lb/>
Photo by David Zeigvr<lb/>
A scene from the Center for Puppetry Arts' production of 'The<lb/>
Wizard of Oz to be shown in Wright Auditorium Saturday afternoon.<lb/>
Staff Writer<lb/>
The Center for Puppetry Arts<lb/>
will present an adaptation of the<lb/>
novel, "Wizard of Oz at ECU<lb/>
Saturday at 2 p.m. The program is<lb/>
part of ECU'S 199293 Young<lb/>
Audiences Performing Arts Se-<lb/>
ries and will be presented in<lb/>
Wright Auditorium.<lb/>
The hour-long presentation is<lb/>
a dramatic adaptation from the<lb/>
1900classictalebyL.FrankBaum<lb/>
and is intended for enjoyment by<lb/>
audiences of all ages.<lb/>
Stuart Secttor, marketing di-<lb/>
rector for EC U, wants the show to<lb/>
be a family affair. "We encourage<lb/>
people of all ages to come out and<lb/>
see thisshow Secttor saidPup-<lb/>
pets seem to bring out the kid in<lb/>
us all<lb/>
The performance takes view-<lb/>
ers on a fast paced journey to the<lb/>
Land of Oz and back to Kansas<lb/>
with a determined and self-reli-<lb/>
ant Dorothy leading the way.<lb/>
The unique thing about this<lb/>
puppet show ib the complicated<lb/>
style of puppetry used. The Cen-<lb/>
ter for Puppetry Arts' production<lb/>
is fashioned after Japanese-style<lb/>
Bunraku puppetry. This style in-<lb/>
volves puppeteers, generally<lb/>
dressed in black, who are visible<lb/>
behind the puppets.<lb/>
Traditionally, the rod pup-<lb/>
pets are manipulated by more<lb/>
than one puppeteer per puppet.<lb/>
Onepuppeteercontrolsthearms,<lb/>
while another puppeteer controls<lb/>
the feet. This form of art requires<lb/>
great skill and choreography.<lb/>
Following the performance, the<lb/>
techniques behind the craft will<lb/>
be briefly demonstrated by the<lb/>
'uppeteers.<lb/>
The Center for Puppetry Arts<lb/>
is a self-contained unit. They bring<lb/>
their own set which consists pri-<lb/>
marily of long, narrow<lb/>
playboardsthatcontinuallymove<lb/>
to instantly transfer the audience<lb/>
from one scene to the other. The<lb/>
puppeteers maneuver the<lb/>
playboards in a kind of choreo-<lb/>
graphed dance with the move-<lb/>
See PUPPET page 9<lb/>
Week at a Glance<lb/>
Tuesday:<lb/>
? Comedian<lb/>
Mike Sweeney will<lb/>
entertain students<lb/>
for $1 and every-<lb/>
one else for $2 in<lb/>
Room 244 of<lb/>
Mendenhall Stu-<lb/>
dent Center at 8<lb/>
p.m.<lb/>
? Reception for<lb/>
Gail Ritzer's exhibit<lb/>
of pottery, quilts,<lb/>
etc titled "Ameri-<lb/>
can Heiroglyphics"<lb/>
will be held in Mendenhall Student Center at 7<lb/>
p.m.<lb/>
Mike Sweeney<lb/>
? Classical guitarist<lb/>
Steve Aron will per-<lb/>
form at 8 p.m. in<lb/>
Fletcher Center Recital<lb/>
Hall.<lb/>
He will present two<lb/>
selections from Abel<lb/>
Carlevaro's "Preludios<lb/>
Americanos the<lb/>
Haydn Divertimento in<lb/>
G, "Elegie" by Johann<lb/>
Kaspar Mertz, "Five<lb/>
Bagatellas" by Sir<lb/>
William Walton,<lb/>
"Three Preludes" by<lb/>
Louis Richmond and<lb/>
"The Prince's Toys<lb/>
Suite" by Nikita<lb/>
Koshkin.<lb/>
Currently Aron heads the University of AKron<lb/>
guitar department and is teacher and founder of<lb/>
the classical guitar studies program at the Oberlin<lb/>
Consrevatory of Music.<lb/>
Thursday<lb/>
? "The Social Challenges of Science a free<lb/>
public lecture, will be presented by Thomas<lb/>
Malone, former national president of Sigma Xi<lb/>
honor society at 7:30 p.m. in Room 1031 of the<lb/>
General Classroom Building.<lb/>
Dr. Malone is among the nation's most promi-<lb/>
nent ethicists of science. Currently a Distin-<lb/>
guished University Scholar at N.C. State Univer-<lb/>
sity, he has been foreign secretary of the National<lb/>
Academy of Sciences and vice president of the<lb/>
International Council of Scientific Unions.<lb/>
? Suzanne Smioth Blancett, editor-in-chief of<lb/>
two noted nursing publications, will talk of the<lb/>
judgement calls and the dilemmas often faced by<lb/>
editors in a speech to nurse researchers and other<lb/>
nursing professionals at the spring banquet of<lb/>
Sigma Theta Tau International, the nursing honor<lb/>
society.<lb/>
"Behind the Editor's Desk" begins at 7 p.m. at<lb/>
the Greenville Hilton Inn.<lb/>
Blancett, a Sigma Theta Tau Distinguished<lb/>
Lecturer and member of its board of directors,<lb/>
has authored numerous articles and a book which<lb/>
won her the American Journal of Nursing Book of<lb/>
the Year Award.<lb/>
Mock political drama shown at Hendrix Theatre<lb/>
)ust in case you didn't see or hear enough in November<lb/>
By Lisa Baumann<lb/>
Staff Writer<lb/>
Mendenhall Student Union bhoweu<lb/>
Tim Robbins'acclaimed political dmma<lb/>
Bob Roberts as the Wednesday and Sun-<lb/>
day movie in Hendrix Theatre. Bob Rob-<lb/>
erts is a mock political documentary in<lb/>
which Robbins stars as an arrogant,<lb/>
pompous folk singer turned politician<lb/>
who makes a run for the U.S. Senate.<lb/>
Robbins, who makes his writing and<lb/>
directingdebut with this project, shines.<lb/>
His look and political smirk are very<lb/>
convincing.<lb/>
After impressive performances in<lb/>
Bull Durham and Jacob's Ladder, Bob Rob-<lb/>
erts only reaffirms Robbin's acting tal<lb/>
ents. Unfortunately, Robbin'sactingabil<lb/>
ity is not enough to salvage this political<lb/>
mayhem of a movie<lb/>
The plot unfolds as Roberts begins<lb/>
his campaign caravan across Pennsyl-<lb/>
vania. Like every gcx)d politician, he has<lb/>
a gimmick. He plays the guitar, "the<lb/>
instrument of the devil as one woman<lb/>
put it With a sincere, politician-like<lb/>
face, Roberts sings songs like "Drugs<lb/>
Stink "Complainer" and "Pride He<lb/>
isa politician with CDs and songs on the<lb/>
Top 40. A little far fetched, huh?<lb/>
Roberts runs on the Republican<lb/>
ticket. Since he is a self-made million-<lb/>
aire (worth around $40 million), he<lb/>
doesn't ask for money.<lb/>
Hecampaignson the sameold prom-<lb/>
ises that most politicians make and ap-<lb/>
peals to voters to vote for him because<lb/>
they have pride in themselves rind<lb/>
America.<lb/>
Supporters are awed by this slick<lb/>
talking, b.tfn-kissin, anti-drug, anti-<lb/>
'60s politician who promises to take<lb/>
Washington by storm. Sounds too fa-<lb/>
miliar.<lb/>
be full of the same old political cliches<lb/>
that surround every campaign. Scandal,<lb/>
sex, abuse of power, political mistrust,<lb/>
 misappropria-<lb/>
Roberts<lb/>
seems to have<lb/>
the campaign<lb/>
wrapped up<lb/>
since his demo-<lb/>
cratic opponent<lb/>
was caught<lb/>
with a teenage<lb/>
campaign sup- <lb/>
porter Trouble SCX, UbUSC OJ pOWCY, pOUtl-<lb/>
ertsWwhenRt cal mistrust misappro-<lb/>
S2SS?j: priation of funds <lb/>
covers informa- ?"?m??"?11?<lb/>
This movie seems to be full<lb/>
of the same old political<lb/>
cliches that surround<lb/>
every campaign. Scandal,<lb/>
tion tving Roberts to the S &amp; L scandal.<lb/>
The rest of the movie seems to spira I<lb/>
downhill after that. This movie seems to<lb/>
tion of funds<lb/>
It's all there. At<lb/>
times, the<lb/>
movie is hard to<lb/>
understand ?<lb/>
several charac-<lb/>
ters talk at once,<lb/>
distracting the<lb/>
viewer.<lb/>
Thescriptis<lb/>
full of political<lb/>
jargon which no<lb/>
one likes to<lb/>
11 ' "???? hear.<lb/>
The movie is full of Robert's cam-<lb/>
paign songs, which were somewhat<lb/>
funny at first, but became annoy.g in-<lb/>
tervals in the plot. Senator Bob Roberts<lb/>
is insincere, uncaring, superficial and,<lb/>
sadly enough, is probably a good repre-<lb/>
sentation of most politicians who just<lb/>
want to win.<lb/>
The movie contains special cameos<lb/>
by some famous faces. Susan Sarandon<lb/>
Robbins' real-life wife, appears as a TV<lb/>
anchorwoman. Allan Richman,(thebad<lb/>
guv in Robin Hood: Prince of Thieves),<lb/>
plays Roberts' campaign manager and<lb/>
is marginally funny. JamesSpader (White<lb/>
Palace), Fred Ward (Remo Williams) and<lb/>
John Cusack Say Anything) also make<lb/>
appearances.<lb/>
If you like politics, then Bah Roberts<lb/>
is definitely your movie.<lb/>
If you got enough politics this past<lb/>
November, leave Bob Roberts on video<lb/>
store shelf and spend your $3.75 on some-<lb/>
thing else.<lb/>
<pb facs="00058395_0008"/><lb/>
8 The East Carolinian<lb/>
MARCH 23, 1993<lb/>
At Wit's End<lb/>
By Stephen Conrad<lb/>
Staff Writer<lb/>
Two weeks ago this fine institu-<lb/>
tion of higher learning, otherwise<lb/>
knownasaglorified high school, par-<lb/>
ticipated in that almighty college tra-<lb/>
dition, Spring Break. Throngs of stu-<lb/>
dents flocked to the beaches, moun-<lb/>
tains. Momand Dad, thisarticle prob-<lb/>
ably does not pertain to you but read<lb/>
it for future reference anyway!<lb/>
What students did on Break is<lb/>
always something of a mystery, es-<lb/>
pecially to those who have never partici-<lb/>
pated (and to some who have). These<lb/>
experiences range from the mundane to<lb/>
the absurd and beyond.<lb/>
As a personal witness to this insane<lb/>
tradition 1 must say  the places that 1<lb/>
have visited (and there have been a few)<lb/>
are all weary of the "Spring Breaker<lb/>
The locals are mostly fed up with<lb/>
rude inconsiderate kids who feel as if<lb/>
they have the right to be so. They de-<lb/>
stroy, mutilate and generally disgust<lb/>
the local populace of wherever they go<lb/>
be it Vail, Key West, Cancun or Myrtle<lb/>
Beach.<lb/>
This is repulsive, you are suppos-<lb/>
edly mature enough to handle yourself<lb/>
responsibly without getting out of con-<lb/>
trol.ThisI realizeishard for most ofyou<lb/>
 but consider where you are visiting.<lb/>
Do you really think that they like having<lb/>
you there for Spring Break?<lb/>
Especially when you become an<lb/>
immature high school student or worse<lb/>
a drunk ass! The only thing that these<lb/>
people like about you is your money,<lb/>
even if it is soaked in beer and occasion-<lb/>
ally bong water (not you, you say? Yeah,<lb/>
right.).<lb/>
That's OK though, you can always<lb/>
return to Green-hell and that fine insti-<lb/>
tution we all attend. 1 suppose that you<lb/>
must release your tension somewhere<lb/>
now that downtown is boring and re-<lb/>
petitive so why not go trash someone<lb/>
else's town  after all they take all<lb/>
your money, give you a hangover and<lb/>
maybe a night in the slammer and then<lb/>
they spend your money to fix the dam-<lb/>
age that you did.<lb/>
Maybe (just maybe) you, a college<lb/>
student (or are you all in a high school?)<lb/>
could be a little more responsible and<lb/>
respectableor is that asking too much?<lb/>
You might have better memories than<lb/>
a headache, some strange STD or<lb/>
handcuff scars from the cops.<lb/>
Save the irresponsibility for<lb/>
Green-hell after all, as our wondrous<lb/>
radio station says, "what are you go-<lb/>
ing to do in Greenville? Study?"<lb/>
By the way, 1 am guilty of being<lb/>
irresponsible during break but I also<lb/>
wish we could all learn to act a little<lb/>
more befitting of our place in society;<lb/>
we are the future.<lb/>
Stimulating biography paints Picasso's portrait<lb/>
(AP) ? Of the many books<lb/>
written about Pablo Picasso, the<lb/>
latest, "Picasso, Life and Art" by<lb/>
Pierre Daix, is the most up-to-date,<lb/>
comprehensive one-volume biog-<lb/>
raphy of the great 20th-century art-<lb/>
ist.<lb/>
Although this is a translation<lb/>
of the 1986 book published in<lb/>
France, Daix writes that it "differs<lb/>
considerably" from the original.<lb/>
Several events that occurred<lb/>
after the French publication made<lb/>
the author drastically revise and<lb/>
expand the book: two major Picasso<lb/>
exhibits in Parisand New York; the<lb/>
coming into the market of a signifi-<lb/>
cant number of privately held<lb/>
Picasso paintings; and a dramatic<lb/>
increase in serious publications on<lb/>
Picasso.<lb/>
Daix is uniquely qualified as<lb/>
Picasso's biographer.<lb/>
He is not only an art critic and<lb/>
novelist, buthewasPicasso'sfriend.<lb/>
Armed with his personal and<lb/>
professional knowledge of the art-<lb/>
ist, he traceshislife from hisbirth in<lb/>
1881 in Andal usia, Spain?a prov-<lb/>
ince "scarcely touched by the En-<lb/>
lightenment" ? to his death as a<lb/>
world celebrity in Mougins, France,<lb/>
at the age of 91.<lb/>
In the book, Picasso emerges as<lb/>
alucky genius whowasrecognized<lb/>
early and who spent his long, suc-<lb/>
cessful career thrilling and scan-<lb/>
dalizing the world, and enjoying it.<lb/>
Dai x shows how he kept chang-<lb/>
ing his technique and style as he<lb/>
drew inspiration from various<lb/>
women in various stages of his life.<lb/>
The author concludes:<lb/>
"Picasso, to the last day of his life,<lb/>
was his art. Therein lies his great-<lb/>
ness<lb/>
Despite the sometimes awk-<lb/>
ward English translation, Daix's<lb/>
eruditionand insightshine through.<lb/>
This isa highly stimulating and<lb/>
thought-provoking book.<lb/>
Check it out<lb/>
Picasso, Life and Art<lb/>
by Pierre Daix<lb/>
HarperCollins<lb/>
450 pages<lb/>
$30<lb/>
WILSON ACRES<lb/>
2 &amp; 3 BEDROOM<lb/>
ENERGY EFFICIENT APARTMENTS<lb/>
Rent includes<lb/>
?Water ?Sewer -Cable ?Draperies<lb/>
?Self-cleaning Oven ?Frost-free Refrigerator<lb/>
?WasherDryer Connections ?Utility Room<lb/>
?Patio with Fence ?Living Room Ceiling Fan<lb/>
?Deadbolt Locks Walk-in Closets<lb/>
featuring<lb/>
?Swimming Pool ?Basketball Court<lb/>
?Tennis Court Laundry Facilities<lb/>
located<lb/>
4 Blocks From East Carolina with Bus Service<lb/>
?Yearly Lease ?Security Deposit<lb/>
I GREENVILLE'S FINEST APARTMENT COMMUNITY WITHIN<lb/>
FIVE MINUTES WALKING DISTANCE FROM CAMPUS<lb/>
752-0277<lb/>
qual Housing Opportunity<lb/>
THE<lb/>
EAST<lb/>
CAROLINIAN<lb/>
The East Carolinian is currently accepting<lb/>
resumes for the following positions:<lb/>
LAYOUT MANAGER<lb/>
This job entails creating computer aesigned layout for all<lb/>
sections of the newspaper by incorporating up-to-date<lb/>
design principles. Requirements: Minimum 2.0G.P.A.<lb/>
Working knowledge of Macintosh applications;<lb/>
PageMaker, Freehand, QuarkXPress, and image scanning.<lb/>
Open to all majors.<lb/>
ASSISTANT LAYOUT MANAGER<lb/>
This job entails working with the Layout Manager creating<lb/>
computer designed layout tor the Opinion and Classifieds<lb/>
sections of the newspaper by incorporating up-to-date<lb/>
design principles. Requirements: Minimum 2.0 G.P. A.<lb/>
Working knowledge of Macintosh applications,<lb/>
PageMaker, Freehand, QuarkXPress, and image scanning.<lb/>
Open to all majors.<lb/>
PHOTO EDITOR<lb/>
This job requires working knowledge of 35mm camera and<lb/>
darkroom operations ana will work with a staff of<lb/>
photographers to supply the photo needs of various<lb/>
meOia Requirements: Minimum 2.0 G.P.A. Work well with<lb/>
other staff members and meet deadlines. Open to all<lb/>
majors<lb/>
STAFF ILLUSTRATOR<lb/>
The chief duties are to create or oversee the creation of<lb/>
artwork using both traditional and computer-generated<lb/>
artwork to compliment the newspaper text ana<lb/>
advertising. Also, supervise the comics section. Minimum<lb/>
2,0 G.P.A. Knowledge of Macintosh applications,<lb/>
illustration, design and cartooning. Open to all majors.<lb/>
BUSINESS MANAGER<lb/>
This position is responsible for aOministering the<lb/>
newspapers funds available by controlling all requisitions<lb/>
for purchases and analyzing financial data for the<lb/>
Advertising Director and General Manager Requirements:<lb/>
Minimum 2.0 G.P.A. Working knowledge of marketing,<lb/>
management, finance ana economics and experience<lb/>
using Excel. Open to all majors.<lb/>
Apply at The East Carolinian, 2nd floor of the<lb/>
Student Pubs building ? 757-6366<lb/>
U.S. INSPECTED<lb/>
WAMPLERLONCACRE<lb/>
Boneless<lb/>
Chicken Breast<lb/>
GOLDEN RIPE<lb/>
IN THE DAIRY CASE"<lb/>
REGULAR, HOMESTYLE OR<lb/>
WITH CALCIUM, CHILLED<lb/>
Kroger<lb/>
Orange Juice<lb/>
WITH PRICES LIKE THIS<lb/>
WHY SHOP ANYWHERE ELSE?<lb/>
CONDITIONER OR<lb/>
style<lb/>
Shampoo<lb/>
C<lb/>
15 Oz.<lb/>
SAVE<lb/>
50<lb/>
WESTERN<lb/>
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IN GREENVILLE. WE RESERVE THE RIGHT<lb/>
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tised item at the advertised price within 30<lb/>
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ed per item purchased.<lb/>
?<lb/>
<pb facs="00058395_0009"/><lb/>
MARCH 23, 1993<lb/>
The East Carolinian<lb/>
9<lb/>
New CD-Rom game provides hours of excitement<lb/>
By John Bui lard<lb/>
Assistant Lifestyle Editor<lb/>
Just last Thursday, I finally<lb/>
got my Christmas present. My<lb/>
brand-spanking-new Applecom-<lb/>
puter with a CD-ROM drive at<lb/>
last arrived at the student store.<lb/>
For those unaware of what a<lb/>
CD-ROM drive is, like myself un-<lb/>
til last Thursday, it is like a regu-<lb/>
lar audio Compact Disc player.<lb/>
The only difference is that the<lb/>
information on the CD is a com-<lb/>
puter program.<lb/>
The computer came with<lb/>
some discs to mess around with,<lb/>
but what 1 want to tell you about<lb/>
is a CD game that's blown me<lb/>
away.<lb/>
The Journeyman Project, the<lb/>
first-ever interactive,<lb/>
photorealistic game for the<lb/>
Macintosh, contains 400 Mega-<lb/>
bytes (the Apples and PCs around<lb/>
campus usually contain 40 to 80<lb/>
MB hard drives) of information<lb/>
that makes for an out-of-this-<lb/>
world experience.<lb/>
The game was written and<lb/>
programmed by Presto Studios<lb/>
out of San Diego, Ca and incor-<lb/>
porates 3D animation, over 30<lb/>
minutes of QuickTime video, an<lb/>
original musical score, integrated<lb/>
arcade action and a branching<lb/>
storyline that plays like a detec-<lb/>
tive story.<lb/>
For the past couple days it's<lb/>
been hard pulling myself away<lb/>
from the game just to do trivial<lb/>
things like relieving myself.<lb/>
The premise of The Journey-<lb/>
man Project centers around time<lb/>
travel. You, the player, are a resi-<lb/>
dent of the sky-city Caldoria in<lb/>
the year 2318.<lb/>
The world has finally gained<lb/>
peace and tranquility only to be<lb/>
jeopardized by theadventof time<lb/>
travel. With time travel, the pos-<lb/>
sibility of sabotaging history ex-<lb/>
ists. As an employee of the Tem-<lb/>
fFaritastic Sanis<lb/>
 the Original Family Haircutters,<lb/>
South Park Shopping Center<lb/>
115 Red Banks Road<lb/>
355-9515<lb/>
NEW HOURS<lb/>
iOpen Sunday 1-6<lb/>
poral Security Annex, it is your<lb/>
job, Agent 5, to restore any time<lb/>
rip that may occur.<lb/>
At the beginning of the game,<lb/>
you wake up and put on your<lb/>
Biotech Interface, a device which<lb/>
fits around the head of your char-<lb/>
acter like sunglasses. The Inter-<lb/>
face enables you to see the action<lb/>
of the game much like the Termi-<lb/>
nator sees things in the movies.<lb/>
To players of the Journeyman<lb/>
Project, the computer's screen<lb/>
looks like an eye piece which dis-<lb/>
plays information about your<lb/>
health, possessions and status.<lb/>
Once a time rip occurs, you<lb/>
must go to the time machine, also<lb/>
called Pegasus, and travel back<lb/>
to the prehistoric times of dino-<lb/>
saurs, where an information disk<lb/>
is hidden that you must obtain.<lb/>
With this done you speed back to<lb/>
the Command Center and com-<lb/>
pare the disk with unaltered his-<lb/>
tory with that of the altered his-<lb/>
tory disk.<lb/>
TheCommand Center'scom-<lb/>
puter then gives a set of dates<lb/>
that are the most probable times<lb/>
where the disruption of history<lb/>
happened. You then must travel<lb/>
to these times and figureouthow<lb/>
best to "reset" history ? and it<lb/>
ain't easy!<lb/>
Success <lb/>
Starts with a<lb/>
Professional Resume.<lb/>
Stop in today and see what we<lb/>
can do for you.<lb/>
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The storyline is complicated<lb/>
and tests the player's ability to<lb/>
sort and figure clues to pinpoint<lb/>
what happened to change his-<lb/>
tory.<lb/>
Everything is related to the<lb/>
coming of aliens.<lb/>
These aliens, the Cyrollans,<lb/>
come in peace and someone, or<lb/>
something, is trying to stop them<lb/>
by changing events in history.<lb/>
My first attempts at the game<lb/>
were failures, ending in deaths<lb/>
caused by such clumsy acts as<lb/>
stepping off of cliffs. Once I got<lb/>
the hang of it, I began moving<lb/>
around with much more ease. So<lb/>
now, my deaths are due to cap-<lb/>
ture, su ffocation by seven-foot tall<lb/>
robots, a poison dart and being at<lb/>
a Mars mine when it explodes.<lb/>
I still haven't resolved thedis-<lb/>
ruption in history, but 1 plan on<lb/>
skipping classes until I do.<lb/>
The Journeyman Project re-<lb/>
quires a Macintosh with at least<lb/>
five megabytes of RAM, 256 color<lb/>
capability, at least a 13" monitor<lb/>
and System 6.07 or later.<lb/>
Ordering information may be<lb/>
obtained from Presto Studios,<lb/>
Inc P.O. Box 262535, San Diego,<lb/>
Ca. 92196-2535 or call (619) 689-<lb/>
4895.<lb/>
PUPPET<lb/>
Continued from page 7<lb/>
ments of the puppets themselves.<lb/>
Some of the stunning effects in-<lb/>
clude a dangerous cyclone, and .i<lb/>
yellow brick road that moves as<lb/>
Dorothy takes step after step to<lb/>
Oz.<lb/>
The music was composed for<lb/>
the performance in a way a score<lb/>
is made for a film or ballet. Ac-<lb/>
tions of the characters are linked<lb/>
with the music to create dramatic<lb/>
scenes. Also, all voices and lyrics<lb/>
are performed live by the fou.<lb/>
puppeteers in the production. The<lb/>
puppets, designed by Stephen<lb/>
Kaskel, were fashioned after the<lb/>
illustrations from the first edition<lb/>
of the "Wizard of Oz<lb/>
The Center for Puppetry Arts,<lb/>
based in Atlanta, offers special<lb/>
shows for adults, a family series<lb/>
and a "Xperimental Puppetry The-<lb/>
atre" which travels to theaters all<lb/>
over America.<lb/>
The concept of this produc-<lb/>
tion is simple ? to bring a kind-<lb/>
hearted adaptation of the classic<lb/>
tale to young audience members<lb/>
in a way that sparks and chal-<lb/>
lenges their imaginations.<lb/>
Tickets for the performance<lb/>
of the "Wizard of Oz" are $8 for<lb/>
adults, $6 for faculty and students<lb/>
and $5 for children. Tickets are on<lb/>
sale at the ECU central ticket of-<lb/>
fice in Mendenhall Student Cen-<lb/>
ter and can also be ordered by<lb/>
phone (1 -800-ECU- ARTS).<lb/>
5 MORGAN<lb/>
? PRIIMTERSrinc.<lb/>
3001 S. Evans St.<lb/>
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March 23<lb/>
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l lendrix Theatre - 7:00 PM<lb/>
Information: Contact Tim Turner at 732-7199<lb/>
Dr. Gentry will present his work challenging the scientific<lb/>
"establishment's" view of the theory of evolution. You will be aazed at<lb/>
his findings. Agree or disagree, come and hear what many want to keep<lb/>
quiet. Donations will be accepted.<lb/>
JOIN US FOR ALL THE<lb/>
TOURNAMENT ACTION!<lb/>
"Congratulations Pirates on your<lb/>
Performance at the Big Dancer<lb/>
. V?U.33 . (Shampoo includod) i<lb/>
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Enjoy The Games Along<lb/>
With These Specials:<lb/>
Margaritas$2.50<lb/>
Thursdays<lb/>
Bloody Marys  $2.25<lb/>
Sundays<lb/>
FREE Bar Snacks<lb/>
During The Games ?<lb/>
Half price Appetizers<lb/>
Sun. - Wed. After 9 P.M<lb/>
Dine-In Only<lb/>
? Mon. - Draft 95<lb/>
12 Price Pitchers<lb/>
of Beer<lb/>
?Tues. - Sangria $1.25<lb/>
?Wed. - Imports $1.25<lb/>
521 Cotanche St.<lb/>
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March 25, 26, 27, 29 and JO at 8:00 p.m.<lb/>
March 28 at 2:00 p.m.<lb/>
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<pb facs="00058395_0010"/><lb/>
The Hast Carolinian<lb/>
1arch 23, 1993<lb/>
Sports<lb/>
Page 10<lb/>
ECU takes two of three in Witaington, sweeps doubleheader<lb/>
By Michael Albuquerque<lb/>
Staff Writer<lb/>
TheE( L baseball team moved<lb/>
closer to its anticipated show-<lb/>
downs with Old Dominion and<lb/>
George Mason for the C A A base-<lb/>
ba 11 crc) wn by w i nn i ng two or" three<lb/>
at UNC-Wilmington (11-10 J-2)<lb/>
to improve to 5-1 in conference<lb/>
play<lb/>
The Pirate (19-7) swept a Sat-<lb/>
urday doubleheader from the<lb/>
Seahawks 10-2 and 6-1 before los-<lb/>
ing on Sunday f-4. The loss broke<lb/>
a season-high, eight-game win-<lb/>
ning streak and marked ECU'sfirst<lb/>
conference loss oi the year.<lb/>
"Coming down here to<lb/>
Wilmington and winning two out<lb/>
of three is important ECU Head<lb/>
Coach Gary- Overton said. "How-<lb/>
ever, we would have liked to have<lb/>
the last game after the double-<lb/>
header sweep Saturday<lb/>
In the first game on Saturda<lb/>
Johnny Beck (4-2) pitched seven<lb/>
strong innings, striking out nine<lb/>
and allowing only one earned run<lb/>
in the 10-2 win. Lee Kushner,<lb/>
Steven Pitt and Jason Head each<lb/>
led the team with three hits, one<lb/>
double and a pair of RBls as the<lb/>
Pirate bats overcame four error to<lb/>
out-hit UNCW.<lb/>
"1 thought we did a very fine<lb/>
jobofsv ingii ? the bats Overton<lb/>
said. 'We allowed too many in-<lb/>
field hits, kicked ,) couple ground<lb/>
balls around and did not play with<lb/>
defensive intensity, vet our ability<lb/>
toswing the bats in thatfirstgame<lb/>
overcame those saasssssssssssssssssssssssssi<lb/>
?<lb/>
flaws and al-<lb/>
lowed us to win<lb/>
the game<lb/>
Game two<lb/>
featured.) much<lb/>
different tone as<lb/>
the Pirates<lb/>
trailed 1-0 for<lb/>
most of the<lb/>
game behind the<lb/>
strong pitching<lb/>
of Sea hawk<lb/>
righthander<lb/>
Brian Baucom<lb/>
(2-3). However,<lb/>
with two out1- mmmmmimm<lb/>
and two men on<lb/>
base in the ti ip oi the sixth, K ushner<lb/>
hit a 1-2 pitch to deep center for his<lb/>
sixth home run oi the season for a<lb/>
3-1 ECU lead.<lb/>
'I really wasn't thinking about<lb/>
it (hitting the home run) to tell you<lb/>
the truth Kushner said. "I was<lb/>
lust thinking about hitting some-<lb/>
thing hard and getting a run in<lb/>
Thehomer marked Kushner's<lb/>
sixth game-winning hit of the sea-<lb/>
son and reinforced his ability to<lb/>
come up with the clutch hit. "The<lb/>
home run bv Kushner with two<lb/>
strikes on him, wecan'tsavenough<lb/>
about clutch hitting in that perfor-<lb/>
mance Overton said.<lb/>
mhhmi Pat Watkms<lb/>
added a solo blast<lb/>
to lead off the sev-<lb/>
enth for his 11th<lb/>
home run of the<lb/>
season, and Frank<lb/>
Fedak and Chris<lb/>
West finished the<lb/>
scoring for the Pi-<lb/>
rates with two-out<lb/>
RBIsinglesfora6-l<lb/>
win.<lb/>
L y I e<lb/>
Hartgrove (4-1),<lb/>
who struck out five<lb/>
and walked two,<lb/>
hihbbb overcame some<lb/>
early difficulties<lb/>
with the help of pitching coach<lb/>
Roger Williams to pitch six solid<lb/>
innings for the win.<lb/>
"He struggled a little bit, but<lb/>
he pitched out of a major jam and<lb/>
ust did a tremendous job the rest of<lb/>
the way Overton said of<lb/>
Hartgrove's performance.<lb/>
See BASEBALL page 11<lb/>
GAME 1<lb/>
EASTCAROUNA<lb/>
UNC-WILMINGTON<lb/>
GAME 2<lb/>
GAME 3<lb/>
EAST CAROLINA 6 II UNC-WILMINGTON 6<lb/>
UNC-WILMINGTON 1 II EAST CAROLINA 4<lb/>
Coming down<lb/>
here to<lb/>
Wilmington<lb/>
and winning<lb/>
two out<lb/>
of three is<lb/>
important,<lb/>
Gary Overton,<lb/>
ECU Head Coach<lb/>
99<lb/>
East Carolinan201 .02002C OOC032-000-10 2East Carolina UNC-Wilmlngton300 003 3 100 000 0-6 -1East CarolinaOOO 110 011 -4<lb/>
UNC-WilmingtcUNC-Wilmington EAST CAROLINA Borei. cl140 0 ab r h 5 0 000 01X-6<lb/>
EAST CAROLINA4rh 1bi.bb 0 2SO 1EAST CAROLINA Borei, cfJb 4thbi bbsob bb so<lb/>
Borei. cf140 G00 0 2<lb/>
Fedak, ss5101 01Fedak, ss4111 00Fedak. ss4 2 20 1 1<lb/>
West. 3b4i10 10West, 3b3111 11West. 3b4 0 21 0 2<lb/>
Kushner. lb4332 01Kushner. 1b2113 20Kushner, 1b4 0 01 0 0<lb/>
Pin. dh3032 10Pitt, dh3000 0?Obholz, dh4 0 00 0 1<lb/>
Obholz. pr-dh1100 00Watkins. rt3111 00Watkins, rt4 0 2o ;o o<lb/>
Watkins. rtb101 00Obholz. 2b3010 01Head. It4 2 100 0<lb/>
Head. Ifb132 00Clark. 2b0000 ;00Cronan, c4 0 100 0<lb/>
Cronan,c410 11Head. If3110 01Clark, 2b3 0 11 i i<lb/>
40Ul2 0Peters, c Cronan, c Totals1 20 n0 00 jo 0 01 1Totals3? 4 94 S 7<lb/>
1C1310 b5<lb/>
Batting ? 2B: West, Cronan Baserunning ? CS: Watkins (se BroomeSmtth). Team LOB: 7.<lb/>
Batting ? 2B Kushner BaserunningKush -SFner. ? BnPitt,Head. Clark SF:28610 6 I 3 R: Kushner7 (6)ond base by<lb/>
Batting ? 2B:ObholzH<lb/>
oft Broome'Penus,CS: DB: 93oreWest isecond baseWatkins (11 i. Basarunning ?Team LOB5.Fielding ?E: Clark UNC-WILMINGTON, Morse, Fed ab r hsk<lb/>
by perrus Town Lbi bb so<lb/>
Fielding ? E:FedaK2iark. Head.so 0Fielding ? E: 0 UNC-WILMINGTON D Esposito, cfbholz. Kjshner. hbi bbso 0D Esposito, cf Holley. 2b Broome, c5 1 3 5 2 2 5 0 21 o 0<lb/>
UNCWILMINGTCHat Sr nh ibi. bb 0 0abr<lb/>
Hooke 1!41?0 : 02 i 0 0<lb/>
Holley. 2bsnl0 00Holley, 2b3010 01McBride. 1b4 0 100 0<lb/>
Broome, c4000 02Broome, c4021 00Barnhardt. ss4 0 000 1<lb/>
Barnhardt. ss?n?0 10Barnhardt, ss3010 01Altman, If-p3 2 101 1<lb/>
Bans. 3b30n0 03McBnde. 1b2000 10Glasgow, dh4 1 200 1<lb/>
Artman, ph0000 10Altman, If3000 00Hooker. It0 0 000 0<lb/>
Cooper, 3b0000 00Robinson, rt2000 01Batts. 3b4 0 110 1<lb/>
McBnde, lb41i0 01Glasgow, dh2010 10Holstad. rt4 0 010 1<lb/>
Holstad, rt4 2 0i 0 02 0 00 0 0 1 0 11 1 0Tatum, 3b30 10 60 02Totals Batting ? 2B:DEs Baserunning ? SB-38 6 1261 5<lb/>
Chapman, dhTotals261 25rosito, Broomi : McBride (1 38: Holley<lb/>
Tatum, phBatting ? 2B:Broome.D Esposito.SH:second base<lb/>
D E sposrto, ct3001 01Robinsonon CronarVMillsl Team LOB: 9.<lb/>
Robinson, ph1000 00Baserunning ? Cronam Team LOB: Fielding ? E: B EAST CAROLINA Hartgrove (W. 4 11 Morse- CS: D Esposrt 8 aucom.o (homebyFielding ? E: Holley. Batts, Barnhardt<lb/>
Totals34l? i10EAST CAROLINAip h rer bb so<lb/>
Baserunning? C! iBec Bam?: Hooker. Barnhardt I t) Team LOB: e larrJt 2, McBridesee-Sanburn(L. 3-2) Mills Blackwell Morse6.3 11 5 0.7 0 0 03 1 t 0.7 0 05 0 4<lb/>
ond base by CronaIPhrer bbso0 0 0<lb/>
Fielding ? E:5 16 0 h 00t 2 0 0b 01 1 1<lb/>
EAST CAROLINA?ph 1ret bbso0 0 0<lb/>
Beck 'W, 4-2)221 2 0 29 1UNC-WILMINGTON Baucom (L, 2-3) Cheek"P 6T 03r 6 0er bb 6 i 0 1so 6 1UNC-WILMINGTONip h rar bb so<lb/>
laytonSmith W.0) Altman (S, 2)8 3 9 4 0.7 0 03 2 5<lb/>
UNC WILMINGTON?phrer bbso<lb/>
PettusfL. 3-111865 34HBP: Pin by BaucomHolley bv Hartarove.WP: Smith. BK: SanburrPB: Cronar.<lb/>
Rogersr.tUF nATA ? T fin A HR4GAME DATA ?T: 2 34A: 469 Temp: 68<lb/>
WP: iay1onUMPIRES ?HP: Powell IBreecri.38: WoodallUMPIRES ? HP: Creech. IB: Woodall 38: Powell<lb/>
GAME DATA ? T:250A: 3e4Temp: 61<lb/>
UMPIRES ?HP: Woodall IB: rwen3B: Creech.<lb/>
Pirates fall to UNC in first NCAA appearance since '72<lb/>
By Billy Weaver<lb/>
Staff Writer<lb/>
The Pirates went into the first<lb/>
round of the NCAA tou ma mentfac-<lb/>
ing, arguably, the best team in the<lb/>
country, the Tarheels from North<lb/>
Carolina. ECU ranked last out of the<lb/>
fS4-team field and was a 25-point<lb/>
underdog. Despite no tournament<lb/>
experience and very limited televi-<lb/>
sion appearances, the Pirates played<lb/>
tough and earned respect in their 2( V-<lb/>
point loss to the Tarheels.<lb/>
The Tarheels came out scoring<lb/>
early and often. UNC led by 14points<lb/>
early in the first half, but the Pirates<lb/>
settled down with afV-Orun to cut the<lb/>
Tarheel lead to nine. Despite UNC's<lb/>
early lead, ECU was out to show the<lb/>
nation that their CAA champion-<lb/>
ship was not a fluke<lb/>
The Pirate gameplan going into<lb/>
the tournament was to neutralize<lb/>
seven-footer Eric Montross, which<lb/>
proved to be easier said than done.<lb/>
Montross scored 11 pointsinthefirst<lb/>
half, leading all Tarheel scorers, and<lb/>
George Lynch went five for five from<lb/>
the field scoring 10 points<lb/>
Surprisingly, with Lynch and<lb/>
Montross both in double figures by<lb/>
halftime, the Pirates wereonlvdown<lb/>
by 11 points (45-34). Lester Lyons<lb/>
seemed to be taking control of the<lb/>
game as, at the half, he had hit three<lb/>
Lyons<lb/>
scores<lb/>
27,<lb/>
'Heels<lb/>
win, 85-<lb/>
65 in<lb/>
Winston<lb/>
Salem<lb/>
IkeCopeland (left)<lb/>
did his best against<lb/>
Mount Montross,<lb/>
while Curley<lb/>
Young, a transfer<lb/>
from Maryland<lb/>
(right) returned to<lb/>
ACC competition.<lb/>
Photos by Bitt Ranson<lb/>
o( four from the perimeter and led a II<lb/>
scorers with 13 points.<lb/>
In the second half, ECU came<lb/>
outhangingontohopesofan upset.<lb/>
Freshman Kareem Richardson<lb/>
showed the poise of a prized veteran<lb/>
and drove into the paint against a<lb/>
much bigger Tarheel team and<lb/>
showed range bv hitting two of four<lb/>
ECU (65)<lb/>
Minfgftrb<lb/>
m-am-ao-taPf?P<lb/>
Young 285-130-04-41210<lb/>
Cill 263-100-13-5126<lb/>
Coptland320-21-22-7241<lb/>
Lyons 378-116-60-24427<lb/>
Rirhirrjrton274-90-00-13410<lb/>
Peterson 182-50-01-2116<lb/>
Lewis 221-32-42-5024<lb/>
Hunter 100-31-20-1011<lb/>
Totals 200 23-10-15 14-31 12 20 65<lb/>
Percentages FG - 411, Ft - 667. 3 pt GoaLs: 9-21<lb/>
429. Team Rebounds - 4, Blocked Shots - 1,<lb/>
Turnovers - 11, Steals- 5.<lb/>
UNC<lb/>
(85)<lb/>
Min<lb/>
from three-point land.<lb/>
UNC then went on a second<lb/>
scoring rampage and led the Pirates<lb/>
by 21 points by the H:40 mark.<lb/>
"We were trying to play the<lb/>
game in four minute intervals but I<lb/>
thought we got off toa quicker pace<lb/>
See NCAA page 12<lb/>
Reese 26<lb/>
Lynch 30<lb/>
Montross 33<lb/>
Williams 26<lb/>
Rodl 25<lb/>
Sullivan 14<lb/>
Calabria 12<lb/>
Salvador) 13<lb/>
Phelps 14<lb/>
Davis 1<lb/>
Cherry 3<lb/>
Stephenson 1<lb/>
VVenstrom 2<lb/>
g<lb/>
m-a<lb/>
3-7<lb/>
7-0<lb/>
6-9<lb/>
3-9<lb/>
3-5<lb/>
0-0<lb/>
0-1<lb/>
2-4<lb/>
3-6<lb/>
1-1<lb/>
1-1<lb/>
0-0<lb/>
0-1<lb/>
ft<lb/>
m-a<lb/>
5-6<lb/>
1-2<lb/>
5-7<lb/>
0-0<lb/>
3-3<lb/>
4-4<lb/>
0-0<lb/>
4-4<lb/>
0-1<lb/>
0-0<lb/>
0-0<lb/>
0-0<lb/>
0-0<lb/>
1-2<lb/>
1-8<lb/>
9<lb/>
0-2<lb/>
0-0<lb/>
0-1<lb/>
0-0<lb/>
1-4<lb/>
2-2<lb/>
0-0<lb/>
0-0<lb/>
0-0<lb/>
0-1<lb/>
pf<lb/>
1<lb/>
0<lb/>
2<lb/>
0<lb/>
2<lb/>
0<lb/>
2<lb/>
1<lb/>
1<lb/>
0<lb/>
0<lb/>
0<lb/>
0<lb/>
T<lb/>
11<lb/>
15<lb/>
17<lb/>
9<lb/>
10<lb/>
4<lb/>
0<lb/>
8<lb/>
6<lb/>
3<lb/>
2<lb/>
0<lb/>
0<lb/>
Totals200 2? 5322271-34159H5<lb/>
Percent?ges FG s47" im Reboundsft 5hi .ip Hocked SGoalsif-<lb/>
313, Tehots-4.<lb/>
Turnovers8, Steals -<lb/>
HI halfInd halfOT1nal<lb/>
1CL343165<lb/>
UNC454085<lb/>
Soccer club travels to Raleigh<lb/>
for Indoor Soccer Tourney<lb/>
By inglis Davis<lb/>
Staff Writer<lb/>
The East Carolina Women's Soccer<lb/>
team traveled to Raleigh th is pa st weekend<lb/>
to play in the Indtxir Soccer Tournament in<lb/>
Raleigh's new Soccer Dome. With theclub<lb/>
enjoying high interest and hoping for fu-<lb/>
tu re a tm t a ffi I la tit in, EC U ta x k two teams,<lb/>
Purple and Gold, to the tournament. The<lb/>
uadseadn were sla ted toplaythree games<lb/>
in the tournament.<lb/>
?Tie Cold team, despite outstanding<lb/>
df rt, was unable to achieve the semifinal<lb/>
round, but their counterpart Purple team<lb/>
made it ti i the championship round<lb/>
Tie semifinal game on Sunday with<lb/>
Charli itte went in the Pirate's i, ,r. While<lb/>
there was noscore in the first half, the<lb/>
Pir.it,m stn ng in the set ond<lb/>
nv Warr n 54 l re1 twi l.<lb/>
mthetir -??minute-harl tl -vered<lb/>
iron . Kiki<lb/>
An. let . n -1 llrllt li t' 111 t(redagaii linuteand<lb/>
1, and ECU three<lb/>
sec oi 1fi in the hampii mship<lb/>
game Aii onRussell - ret makii<lb/>
final i re 1 1iddii ?' <lb/>
iti<lb/>
lh<lb/>
i unda . i ??<lb/>
in<lb/>
IL was ready for the challenge. How-<lb/>
ever, the Spartans stored the first 2 goals.<lb/>
Amy Warreni ke) player throughout the<lb/>
tournament for E L, scored with 6 min-<lb/>
utes left in the first half. The score wasnow<lb/>
2-1, Spartans.<lb/>
Knowing that the Pirates needed to<lb/>
score again, forward Alison Russell was<lb/>
able to tie the game with 2 minutes left in the<lb/>
first half<lb/>
The Pirates were not able to keep the<lb/>
Spartans from taking the lead. With ECU<lb/>
only down by one at the half, they had<lb/>
plenty of time to win the game.<lb/>
Fhe second half did not go as well as<lb/>
hail wanted, fhe Spartans stores 3<lb/>
gi alsin a n ?w and made the sc refV2. There<lb/>
were st:ll 6 minutes left on the game and<lb/>
ling could happen<lb/>
Missybnescored with 4 minutes left,<lb/>
a minute later the Spartansadded the<lb/>
last goal i .1 the game he final score was 7-<lb/>
I ms<lb/>
Check it Out<lb/>
Next Saturday ECU will<lb/>
host UNCW In a 2<lb/>
p.m. game.<lb/>
Pirates do us proud<lb/>
By Warren Sumner<lb/>
Assistant Sports Editor<lb/>
Sometimes it is difficult to be fu-<lb/>
eled by pride, to be armed with little<lb/>
else than your determination in facing<lb/>
the most insurmountable of odds and<lb/>
goliath of opposition.<lb/>
The few times this fuel carries you<lb/>
to victory it is a momentous occasion.<lb/>
To beat the odds and win as an under-<lb/>
dog draws everyone's attention. For a<lb/>
short time you are larger than life,<lb/>
truly a phenomenon to behold Un-<lb/>
likely victory builds status, gets you<lb/>
headlines, makes you feel good.<lb/>
It's when you give everything<lb/>
you've got: your sweat, tears, your<lb/>
very soul, and still come up short, that<lb/>
defines your character. You are ton til<lb/>
to accept defeat, an unthinkable propo<lb/>
sition, but a necessary one You muM<lb/>
walk a line, admitting the loss but<lb/>
conceding nothing.<lb/>
!he Fastarolina basketball pro<lb/>
gram was faced with this proposition<lb/>
when the pairings of theAA tour<lb/>
nament pitted them against fhe pow<lb/>
ertul North arolina larheels l"he<lb/>
fell in a aliant effort, but maybe just<lb/>
maybe earned the respect thev deserve<lb/>
from the overpaid idiots that populate<lb/>
sports TV broadcasting and the fans of<lb/>
big-time college basketball.<lb/>
The national sports media had a field<lb/>
day when the tournament pairings were<lb/>
announced, and it was discovered that<lb/>
the Tarheels, the ' irling powerhouse of<lb/>
college basketball, would diCf a 13-16<lb/>
ECU squad who had scrapped their way<lb/>
into the tournament by winning the CAA<lb/>
championship.<lb/>
I he Dick Vitalesand MikeFrancesas<lb/>
all had plenty to laugh about. "ECU mav<lb/>
as well had stay home" was their senti-<lb/>
ment. How could these upstarts dare to<lb/>
i ha lien ge the mighty I arheels, probably<lb/>
the best team in the nation) virtual lock<lb/>
tor the Final Four? Thev had no chance,<lb/>
no wav.<lb/>
I hey laughed and -idiculed the Pi-<lb/>
rates in their interviews, as they dis-<lb/>
i ussed the lynching the team would re-<lb/>
ceive at the hands at the larheels rhey<lb/>
snickered after running their tapes oi<lb/>
our pre game pep rally, "applauding"<lb/>
our enthusiasm while at the same time<lb/>
making a fan e ol it I hese Pirates were<lb/>
not foi real no matter whal then fans<lb/>
said what their coach said, or what 11 it-<lb/>
team itself said. We would fall and<lb/>
fall hard and our fluke NCAA ap-<lb/>
pearance would leave us crumpled<lb/>
and beaten. We would be put in our<lb/>
place as whipping boys and we<lb/>
would soon be forgotten as yet an-<lb/>
other first-round tournament victim.<lb/>
These "professionals" even dis-<lb/>
regarded the analysis of legendary<lb/>
Tarheel coach Dean Smith who said<lb/>
we were a ball club to be respected.<lb/>
Smith's wealth o( experience, how-<lb/>
ever, was lost on ESPN's Vita le, as he<lb/>
donned an ECU hat sent to him bv<lb/>
athletic director Dave Hart and<lb/>
laughed his condescending laugh<lb/>
and smiled hiscondescendingsmile<lb/>
"ECU, Babeee you've got a date<lb/>
with Carolina, welcome to the big<lb/>
time. You're in the reai work! now<lb/>
he slid.<lb/>
And the sports world kept on<lb/>
snickering<lb/>
I he Pirates entered Lawrence<lb/>
oel Coliseum on the night oi the<lb/>
game, toi used on the impossible task<lb/>
before them 1 he were faced with<lb/>
the know ledge that the 'Heels were<lb/>
See PIRATES page 12<lb/>
<pb facs="00058395_0011"/><lb/>
r<lb/>
MARCH 23. 1993<lb/>
77ie East Carolinian<lb/>
11<lb/>
Cal and Kidd kill Duke myth<lb/>
ROSEMONT, 111. (AP) ? The<lb/>
end of an era is always sad, yet<lb/>
that's not why Mike Krzyzewski<lb/>
was crying.<lb/>
A last-minute NCAA tourna-<lb/>
ment loss is tough, yet Coach K's<lb/>
tears were not those of a man bitter<lb/>
from defeat but those of a father<lb/>
whose sons were about to leave<lb/>
the nest.<lb/>
Krzyzewski was unlikely to<lb/>
get any sympathy from a college<lb/>
basketball world his Duke Blue<lb/>
Devils dominated for nearly a de-<lb/>
cade. Which was OK with Coach<lb/>
K. He didn't sound like a guy who<lb/>
wanted sympathy, anyway.<lb/>
"I wish you could all feel what<lb/>
I feel Krzyzewski said Saturday<lb/>
after Duke waseliminated by Cali-<lb/>
fornia in the second round of the<lb/>
Midwest Regional, 82-77. "College<lb/>
sports are great. I've been the lucki-<lb/>
est guy for four years to have spent<lb/>
time with these youngsters<lb/>
The two-time defending<lb/>
champion Blue Devils fell behind<lb/>
by 17 points midway through the<lb/>
second half. California was hitting<lb/>
almost every 3-pointer it hoisted,<lb/>
and freshman star Jason Kidd was<lb/>
weaving his way through Duke's<lb/>
vaunted defense.<lb/>
The Blue Devils looked beaten.<lb/>
But they wouldn't accept defeat.<lb/>
"I thought our team fought<lb/>
valiantly Krzyzewski said. "We<lb/>
gave a championship effort. We<lb/>
just couldn't do it anymore<lb/>
Duke actually rallied to take<lb/>
the lead, 77-76, on Thomas Hill's<lb/>
free throw with 2:21 to play. But<lb/>
Cal won on Kidd's off-balance 3-<lb/>
point play with 1:11 to go. Bobby<lb/>
Hurley, the Ail-American point<lb/>
guard who scored a career-high 32<lb/>
points in his finale, missed three 3-<lb/>
pointers in the closing minute.<lb/>
"It's tough said Hurley, who<lb/>
holds NCAA records for assists?<lb/>
1,076 overall and 145 in tourney<lb/>
play. "But I don't think there's<lb/>
been a luckier kid<lb/>
Hurley and Hill, the squad's<lb/>
only seniors, were 18-2 in tourna-<lb/>
ment play. Their only losses came<lb/>
Saturday and to UNLV in the 1990<lb/>
final. In between, there were 13<lb/>
consecutive tourney victories and<lb/>
the first back-to-back titles since<lb/>
UCLA in the early 1970s.<lb/>
"Losing a game, it doesn't<lb/>
mean a damn thing Krzyzewski<lb/>
said. "I won for a long time with<lb/>
these guys and I'll win for the rest<lb/>
of my life for my long association<lb/>
with them.<lb/>
"They've taken me to places<lb/>
and experiences that no college<lb/>
coach has had over the last 20 years.<lb/>
It's only sad that I can't do it any<lb/>
more with them. Bobby and Tho-<lb/>
mas have been like sons to me<lb/>
Duke's run is over. What a run<lb/>
it was.<lb/>
Under Krzyzewski, the Blue<lb/>
Devils reached the tournament ev-<lb/>
ery year since 1984. They advanced<lb/>
to the Final Four in 1986, 1988,<lb/>
1989, 1990, 1991 and 1992. They<lb/>
won titles in 1991 and 1992. Since<lb/>
1986, they were 33-6 in tourna-<lb/>
ment play.<lb/>
The nation's No. 10 team en-<lb/>
tering the tourney, Duke has been<lb/>
ranked in AP's poll since the fifth<lb/>
week of the 1986-87 season?well<lb/>
before the ratings were expanded<lb/>
from the Top 20 to the Top 25.<lb/>
"We got beat by a team that<lb/>
deserved to win said<lb/>
Krzyzewski, ever gracious. He<lb/>
then looked at Hurley and Hill. "It<lb/>
tears me up that we lost, only be-<lb/>
cause I don't have an opportunity<lb/>
to coach these two guys any more.<lb/>
Every time they stepped on the<lb/>
court, they gave their bodies,<lb/>
minds and hearts<lb/>
Cremins considering USC j ob<lb/>
ATLANTA (AP) ? Bobby<lb/>
Cremins, who has steered Georgia<lb/>
Tech to three Atlantic Coast Confer-<lb/>
ence championships in 12 seasons,<lb/>
said the appropriate time has ar-<lb/>
rived for him to consider the coach-<lb/>
ingvacancyathisalmamater,South<lb/>
Carolina.<lb/>
Rumorshavebeenrampantfor<lb/>
weeks that Cremins was the No. 1<lb/>
choice in Columbia, S.C to replace<lb/>
Steve Newton, who announced he<lb/>
was resigning at the end of the sea-<lb/>
son<lb/>
Cremins refused to discuss the<lb/>
situation. He mentioned it to his<lb/>
Tech team Saturday after it returned<lb/>
home from an opening-round loss to<lb/>
Southern UniversityintheNCAA tour-<lb/>
nament.<lb/>
"1 told them I had said I would<lb/>
consideritattheappropriate time and<lb/>
that this is the appropriate time<lb/>
Cremins said Sunday night<lb/>
"I told them I hope they would<lb/>
respect that he said. "I told them this<lb/>
has nothing to do with them or with<lb/>
Georgia Tech-Ihavealot of feeling for<lb/>
these kids. They never quit on me, but<lb/>
this is something I must consider<lb/>
One of his players, James Forrest,<lb/>
said his coach was not leaving.<lb/>
"Hetold ushe would not leave<lb/>
this team" Forrest said during a<lb/>
television interview on WSB-TV<lb/>
Sunday night<lb/>
Cremins denied making the<lb/>
statement to Forrest.<lb/>
Idcn'tknowwherejamesgot<lb/>
that he said. "I didn't say it Noth-<lb/>
ing I said could have been miscon-<lb/>
strued like that"<lb/>
Cremins has taken his last nine<lb/>
teams to the NCAA tournament,<lb/>
reaching the Final Four in 1990.<lb/>
Cremins said he is under no<lb/>
deadline pressure to make a deci-<lb/>
sion and will take his time.<lb/>
Athletic ib World<lb/>
714 Plaza Mall<lb/>
355-0500<lb/>
Hours: Mon-Sat 10-9<lb/>
Sun 1-6<lb/>
157 Carolina<lb/>
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ir<lb/>
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Coupon must be presented at time of<lb/>
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ATHLECTIC WORLD COUPON<lb/>
 Coupon must be presented at time of<lb/>
 I purchase. Limit 1 per customer. Sale<lb/>
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Coupon must be presented at time of purchase.<lb/>
Limit 1 per customer. Sale items excluded. Expires 4-15-93.<lb/>
ATHLECTIC WORLD COUPON<lb/>
BASEBALL<lb/>
Continued from page 10<lb/>
On Sunday, the Pirates were<lb/>
plagued by some early defensive<lb/>
lapses and never seemed to get on<lb/>
track as UNCW led theentire game<lb/>
after taking a 5-0 lead in the second<lb/>
inning on somedefensive mistakes<lb/>
by the ECU outfield.<lb/>
"I have to go back to those first<lb/>
two innings and they were by far<lb/>
the worst innings we've played all<lb/>
year Overton said. "Our outfield-<lb/>
ers made not only physical mis-<lb/>
takes but also mental mistakes as<lb/>
well thatreallycost us and allowed<lb/>
them to put that five spot on the<lb/>
ooard<lb/>
Mike Sanbum (3-2) pitched a<lb/>
better game than his line suggests,<lb/>
but the team fell too far behind<lb/>
early in the game to make up the<lb/>
deficit.<lb/>
"I thought Mike did a great job<lb/>
in the middle inningsof keeping us<lb/>
in the game, giving us a chance to<lb/>
come back and possibly win<lb/>
Overton said.<lb/>
Chris West led the team with<lb/>
two hits, including a double and<lb/>
one RBI, and Frank Fedak and Pat<lb/>
Watkins also had two hits for the<lb/>
Pirates.<lb/>
Brian Smith (2-0) pitched eight<lb/>
and one-third innings for the win,<lb/>
and Heath Altman struck out the<lb/>
final two batters for hissecond save<lb/>
of the year. Sal D'Esposito led<lb/>
UNCW with three hits from the<lb/>
leadoffspotincludingadoubleand<lb/>
one RBI. The Pirates next game is<lb/>
scheduled for 4 p.m. against Vir-<lb/>
ginia Commonwealth at the Dia-<lb/>
mond in Richmond.<lb/>
The East<lb/>
Carolinian<lb/>
is printed on<lb/>
recycled<lb/>
paper, but<lb/>
that's just a<lb/>
start. Please,<lb/>
when you are<lb/>
through<lb/>
reading<lb/>
The East<lb/>
Carolinian,<lb/>
recycle it.<lb/>
'Greenville's<lb/>
ONLY<lb/>
Exotic<lb/>
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CASH PRIZE ?s <lb/>
'Contestants nerd tc call &amp; register in advance. Must arrive by 8.00. 9&amp;jff&amp;t0tTs<lb/>
THURSDAYS -SATURDAYS<lb/>
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V-m<lb/>
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$2.00 OFF Admission Any Night with this coupon<lb/>
Doors Open 7:30pm Stage Time 9:00pm<lb/>
Call 756-6278<lb/>
5 miles west of Greenville on 264 Alt,<lb/>
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Valid N.C. ID. Required<lb/>
I fajM<lb/>
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WEDNESDAY MARCH 24, 1993<lb/>
WEEK 2<lb/>
BATTLE O F THE GREEKS<lb/>
LYP SERVICE CONTEST<lb/>
$1.00 TALLS 0 f DRAFT 754 KAMIKAZES<lb/>
LADIES FREE UNTIL 10:30 ADMISSION - $3.00<lb/>
THURSDAY MARCH 25, 1993<lb/>
4<lb/>
In Ass. with VENUS SW1MWEAR<lb/>
CSi-cI- $50.00<lb/>
BOGIES-752-4668SURFREPORT-2S5-6680<lb/>
lPs<lb/>
<pb facs="00058395_0012"/><lb/>
12<lb/>
The East Carolinian<lb/>
MARCH 23. 1993<lb/>
PIRATES<lb/>
looking for revenge for their<lb/>
loss to Georgia Tech in the ACC<lb/>
tou rna ment. Tha t Dean Smi th' s<lb/>
club would love to send a mes-<lb/>
sage, at ECU's expense, to the<lb/>
rest of the country. The 'Heels<lb/>
would be ready to play and<lb/>
their fans were preparing for<lb/>
an impending slaughter.<lb/>
As the Pirates walked on<lb/>
the floor they became aware of<lb/>
exactly what they were about<lb/>
to face. The size, the talent, the<lb/>
very awesomeness of Carolina<lb/>
basketball. This was a classic<lb/>
case of David and Goliath, and<lb/>
Goliath's last name was<lb/>
Montross.<lb/>
The seven-foot nearly three<lb/>
hundred pound giant had<lb/>
posed problems for every team<lb/>
in the nation unfortunate<lb/>
enough to have encountered the<lb/>
Tarheels. Only three teams had<lb/>
been able to overcome his mon-<lb/>
strosity and they too were na-<lb/>
tional powers. Surely the Caro-<lb/>
lina center alone would be able<lb/>
to slice through the Pirate de-<lb/>
fense and humiliate these up-<lb/>
starts from the East. Hell, if<lb/>
Continued from page 10<lb/>
Montross couldn't do it, they had<lb/>
two other seven-footers who<lb/>
could. This game would be no<lb/>
problem.<lb/>
As the two teams prepared<lb/>
for the opening tip, the laughter<lb/>
in the sports world was deafen-<lb/>
ing.<lb/>
That tip came and through-<lb/>
out the first half, the Pirates ex-<lb/>
ecuted a brilliant game plan con-<lb/>
cocted by coach Eddie Payne and<lb/>
hung tough with the Tarheels.<lb/>
They handled the Carolina trap-<lb/>
ping defense better than most<lb/>
teams the Tarheels had faced and<lb/>
kept Montross frustrated with a<lb/>
persistent zone defense of their<lb/>
own. With Lester Lyons dropping<lb/>
three-pointers at every opportu-<lb/>
nity and the Pirates handling the<lb/>
Tarheels' size, sports fans all<lb/>
scratched their heads at the inter-<lb/>
mission. These were just the Pi-<lb/>
rates after all. They weren't sup-<lb/>
posed to still be in a game against<lb/>
the Tarheels.<lb/>
But they were. And as they<lb/>
entered the locker room behind<lb/>
by only 11 the ridiculing laughter<lb/>
ceased.<lb/>
I wish I could have written<lb/>
this editorial cheering a Pirate vic-<lb/>
tory, but as ECU fans well know<lb/>
the Heels won the game. But the<lb/>
fact that ECU played as hard as<lb/>
they possibly could and gave the<lb/>
Heels as much as they could<lb/>
handle says much for ECU bas-<lb/>
ketball and the men who partici-<lb/>
pate in it. The 20-point defeat was<lb/>
less than some teams in the ACC<lb/>
had experienced and the Pirates<lb/>
never gave up. In defeat, the pro-<lb/>
gram gained respect. In defeat,<lb/>
the program gained valuable ex-<lb/>
posure. And in defeat, the pro-<lb/>
gram gained character.<lb/>
Next year, as the Pirates re-<lb/>
turn their main scoring threat,<lb/>
Lester Lyons, develop Kareem<lb/>
Richardson into a premiere point<lb/>
guard and add redshirt freshman<lb/>
Don Douglas, a near seven-footer,<lb/>
to their line up, no one should be<lb/>
foolish enough to count them out<lb/>
as contenders to repeat as CAA<lb/>
champions. But given the igno-<lb/>
rance of the sports media, they<lb/>
would probably meet with more<lb/>
underestimation.<lb/>
Whether a berth next year will<lb/>
become reality is probably a<lb/>
moot point, but there is an un-<lb/>
deniable fact that ECU will one<lb/>
day enter big time basketball<lb/>
despite the thoughts and<lb/>
wishes of the rest of the nation,<lb/>
and Thursday's game could<lb/>
prove to be the launching point.<lb/>
The game will fade in the<lb/>
memory of sports fans around<lb/>
the nation. The Pirates will join<lb/>
the ranks of those defeated in<lb/>
the first round of the tourna-<lb/>
ment and this year's bid will<lb/>
vanish into obscurity in the<lb/>
mind's of many.<lb/>
For Pirate fans, however, the<lb/>
1993 Pirates may leave a legacy<lb/>
for the next century. The names<lb/>
of Lyons, Copeland and Rich-<lb/>
ardson may be forever embed-<lb/>
ded in the hearts and minds of<lb/>
Pirate supporters as the team<lb/>
that turned around ECU basket-<lb/>
ball.<lb/>
In the state of North Caro-<lb/>
lina, thememoryof ECU'smatch-<lb/>
up with UNC will last a long,<lb/>
long time. In EastCarolina it will<lb/>
last forever. Well done guys,<lb/>
well done.<lb/>
NCAA<lb/>
Continued from page 10<lb/>
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Present your 1993 Student ID<lb/>
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Department of Foreign Languages and Literature<lb/>
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FIRST SUMMER SESSION May 18 to June 22<lb/>
French 1001 - 1002 &amp; Spanish 1001 - 1002<lb/>
SECOND SUMMER SESSION June 24 to July 30j<lb/>
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than we wanted and they got an<lb/>
early nine point lead Head Coach<lb/>
Eddie Payne said.<lb/>
The Pirates playedallbuttwoof<lb/>
Payne's four minute intervals very<lb/>
well against UNC, which proved to<lb/>
be the difference of the game.<lb/>
The Tarheels<lb/>
took note of Lester<lb/>
Lyons' three-point<lb/>
snooting ability in<lb/>
the first half and held<lb/>
Lyons in check early<lb/>
in the second half,<lb/>
but ECU's junior<lb/>
guard kept the score<lb/>
respectable by hit-<lb/>
ting 15 of his game<lb/>
high 27 points in the<lb/>
lastsixrninutesofthe<lb/>
game.<lb/>
"He has good shooting poten-<lb/>
tial and I think he exploited that to-<lb/>
night Eric Montross said.<lb/>
Despite the height differential,<lb/>
which drastically favored the<lb/>
Tarheels, ECUoutrebounded UNC<lb/>
on the offensive boards. "Although<lb/>
we out rebounded, it seemed like<lb/>
theirs led to a lot of baskets Payne<lb/>
said.<lb/>
' I really do<lb/>
respect their<lb/>
quickness<lb/>
and the job<lb/>
Eddie Payne<lb/>
has done. "<lb/>
UNC coach Dean Smith<lb/>
The Pirate road to the final four<lb/>
took a quick exit in Winston-Salem<lb/>
but not before turning a lot of heads.<lb/>
In Hie press conference after the<lb/>
game, well known sports authori-<lb/>
ties, writers, and broadcasters gave<lb/>
the Pirates high praise, including<lb/>
one of basketballs<lb/>
greatest coaches. "I<lb/>
really dorespect their<lb/>
quickness and the job<lb/>
Eddie Payne has<lb/>
done UNC Head<lb/>
Coach Dean Smith<lb/>
said.<lb/>
Ironically, losing<lb/>
to the Tarheels may<lb/>
be a blessing in dis-<lb/>
guise.<lb/>
Many say that<lb/>
this is the birth of<lb/>
ECU basketball, and it may be. Pi-<lb/>
rate fans are already looking for-<lb/>
ward to next season. ECU will re-<lb/>
turn four starters and hope that their<lb/>
new found national recognition will<lb/>
help in recruiting.<lb/>
"The exposure is good for re-<lb/>
cruiting out we've created a more<lb/>
winning oriented atmosphere<lb/>
Payne said.<lb/>
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Hell's Bells is an expose on rock music. "It's only Rock n' Roll<lb/>
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society? How might it be effecting you? Where is music headed<lb/>
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Where: Mendenhall Room 244<lb/>
When: Wednesday, March 24th<lb/>
7:00 pm<lb/>
Sponsored by:<lb/>
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<pb facs="00058395_0013"/>
</div></body></text></TEI>