<?xml version="1.0"?><TEI xmlns="http://www.tei-c.org/ns/1.0" xmlns:xsi="http://www.w3.org/2001/XMLSchema-instance" xsi:schemaLocation="http://www.tei-c.org/ns/1.0 http://digital.lib.ecu.edu/tei/xsd/tei_P5.xsd"><teiHeader><fileDesc><titleStmt><title></title><author></author><respStmt><resp>Text encoded by</resp><name>Digital Collections</name></respStmt></titleStmt><publicationStmt><distributor>East Carolina University. J. Y. Joyner Library</distributor><address><addrLine>Digital Collections</addrLine><addrLine>Joyner Library, East Carolina University</addrLine><addrLine>East Fifth Street, Greenville NC 27858-4353 USA</addrLine></address><date>2012</date></publicationStmt><sourceDesc><bibl></bibl></sourceDesc></fileDesc><encodingDesc><samplingDecl><p>All quotation marks retained as data.</p><p>All end-of-line hyphens have been removed, and the trailing part of a word has been joined to the preceding line.</p><p>All smart quotes have been converted into straight quotes.</p></samplingDecl><classDecl><taxonomy xml:id="LCSH"><bibl>Library of Congress Subject Headings</bibl></taxonomy></classDecl></encodingDesc><profileDesc><creation><date></date></creation><langUsage xml:lang="en-US"><language ident="en-US" usage="100">English</language></langUsage><textClass><keywords scheme="#LCSH"><list><item></item></list></keywords></textClass></profileDesc></teiHeader><text><body><div type="other">
<p rend="align(centerbold)">[This text is machine generated and may contain errors.]</p>
<pb facs="00058404_0001"/>
em<lb/>
Reuse it!<lb/>
With an award winning recycling<lb/>
program in Pitt County, there is<lb/>
no reason why you shouldn't<lb/>
recycle.<lb/>
See story page 7.<lb/>
Today<lb/>
Sfc<lb/>
f Partly cloudy <lb/>
 60? <lb/>
Partly cloudy <lb/>
Tomorrow<lb/>
The East Carolinian<lb/>
Vol. 08 No. 30<lb/>
Circulation 12.000<lb/>
Greenville, North Carolina<lb/>
Thursday, April 22, 1993<lb/>
14 Pages<lb/>
SGA debates funding of senior class project<lb/>
By Jason NX<lb/>
Staff Writer<lb/>
In addition to the usual business of<lb/>
appropriating funds and adopting con-<lb/>
stitutions, the 22nd and 23rd meetings of<lb/>
the S A Student Legislature were<lb/>
marked bv spirited debates on a number<lb/>
ot issues.<lb/>
n Monday April 12, the appro-<lb/>
priationscomi roughtoutabillto<lb/>
fundaSenioi t, a large clock<lb/>
to be built near the General Classroom<lb/>
Building ,in. a covered walkway lead-<lb/>
ing from Menden hail totheclocl and to<lb/>
the other side of campus. The cost of the<lb/>
project is over $10,000, and the appro-<lb/>
priation bill requested $5,000.<lb/>
S( A I reasurerBrad )sbomespoke<lb/>
in favor oi the expenditure in debate. He<lb/>
explained that Chancellor Eakin origi-<lb/>
nally considered allowing persons who<lb/>
donated over $100,000 to the school to<lb/>
have the clock named tor them. . iter<lb/>
talking with Senior Class President<lb/>
Michael O'Hoppe, Eakin agreed to fund<lb/>
all but $5,000 of the clock and allow the<lb/>
senior class to raise the additional funds.<lb/>
In opposition to the expenditure,<lb/>
several legislatorsoutlined reasons tovote<lb/>
against the bill. Mike I lad lev pointed out<lb/>
that the National Panhellenic Council<lb/>
would be unable to hold an activity if<lb/>
they do not receive funding from the<lb/>
S i -V Osbome countered by stating that<lb/>
the Panhellenic Council was late in ask-<lb/>
ing for money and said, "We need to<lb/>
prioritize things<lb/>
Mike Smith objected to the project<lb/>
because the senior class did not raise<lb/>
money for the project. Senior Class Secre-<lb/>
taryTreasurer George Sartiano said he<lb/>
learned oi the project only a few weeks<lb/>
prior to this bill, and indicated that most<lb/>
seniors would never even know about it.<lb/>
After four rounds of debate, the hi II<lb/>
was tabled until Monday April 19. At this<lb/>
time, Osbome presented an amended<lb/>
form of the hill that reduced the appro-<lb/>
priation from $5,(HK) to $3,(HM). He also<lb/>
said that the appropriations committee<lb/>
had funded-the Panhellenic Council for<lb/>
their event<lb/>
By a slim margin, SGA voted to<lb/>
bring the hill "off the table" and, by a<lb/>
single vote, SGA refused to hear debate<lb/>
on the measure. In a roll call vote, the<lb/>
legislatureapproved the bill by the count<lb/>
of 27 to 12 with four abstentions.<lb/>
After the meeting Sartiano said, "I<lb/>
know seniors who said they didn't like<lb/>
the idea. There is a lack of communica-<lb/>
tion between the senior class officers and<lb/>
the senior class<lb/>
In other action, the SGA unani-<lb/>
mously approved a resolution showing<lb/>
deep concern" oxer the North Carolina<lb/>
General Assembly sdelay in funding the<lb/>
renovationofjoyner Library, and urging<lb/>
the student body, faculty and alumni to<lb/>
"voice their concerns" to the General<lb/>
Assembly, because ECU is in danger oi<lb/>
losing its accreditation if the library isnot<lb/>
improved.<lb/>
Finally, the SGA approved a reso-<lb/>
lution supporting the restoration of the<lb/>
William B. Odum Memorial Wetland<lb/>
Park.<lb/>
The resolution also urged the uni-<lb/>
versity to fund a feasibility stud) on the<lb/>
ana and fund the restoration.<lb/>
In support of the measure, sponsor<lb/>
loseph 1 Imieleski said, "This will be the<lb/>
first naturally restored wetland on auni<lb/>
versify campus in the nation<lb/>
Grad student addresses<lb/>
professional geographers<lb/>
i<lb/>
By Stephanie Lassiter<lb/>
Staff Writer<lb/>
Melissa Tollmger. a gradu-<lb/>
ate student in the i 'epartment of<lb/>
Ceographv and Planning, ad-<lb/>
dressed professional geographers<lb/>
in Atlanta on April 8 on the pos-<lb/>
sible sea level rise in North Caro-<lb/>
lina.<lb/>
Tollinger and several ECU<lb/>
professors (<lb/>
conferred<lb/>
with other ge-<lb/>
ographers at<lb/>
the 1993 an-<lb/>
nual meeting<lb/>
of the Associa-<lb/>
tion of Ameri-<lb/>
can Geogra-<lb/>
phers held at<lb/>
the Marriott<lb/>
Marquis.<lb/>
"It was a<lb/>
good opportu-<lb/>
nity to make<lb/>
contacts with<lb/>
those in your<lb/>
field and to make people a ware of<lb/>
your research Tollinger said.<lb/>
She told the group th.it<lb/>
coastal management agencies<lb/>
should consider the possibility of<lb/>
a major rise in sea level and its<lb/>
impact on North Carolina.<lb/>
In North Carolina, accord-<lb/>
ing to Tollinger, 22 coastal coun-<lb/>
ties would experience at least<lb/>
Melissa Tollinger<lb/>
some degree oi inundation if the<lb/>
sea level rises. Inundation refers<lb/>
to the permanent flooding due to<lb/>
the rise in sea level.<lb/>
Tollinger said that if the pre-<lb/>
dicrionsofthe Environmental Pro-<lb/>
tection Agency are accurate, their<lb/>
estimate oi a tWO to six foot rise<lb/>
over the next 100 years would<lb/>
submerge half of the land area in<lb/>
tour counties.<lb/>
"In ad-<lb/>
dition to the<lb/>
loss of land<lb/>
and the dis-<lb/>
plai i<lb/>
coastal resi-<lb/>
dents, rising<lb/>
sea level<lb/>
would result<lb/>
in accelerated<lb/>
coastal ero-<lb/>
sion, intensi-<lb/>
fied storm<lb/>
damage and<lb/>
the intrusion<lb/>
oi salt water<lb/>
intoestuarine<lb/>
waters, disturbing fragile ecosys-<lb/>
tems and destroying valuable<lb/>
wetlands Tollinger said.<lb/>
She used maps of North<lb/>
Carolina's coastal counties to<lb/>
show where most oi the damage<lb/>
from sea level rise would be felt.<lb/>
Among the counties she stressed<lb/>
See GRAD page 4<lb/>
Barefoot<lb/>
on the<lb/>
Mall<lb/>
1993<lb/>
Last year's<lb/>
Barefoot on<lb/>
the Mall<lb/>
events<lb/>
included<lb/>
fake tattoos,<lb/>
tie-dying<lb/>
and<lb/>
painting.<lb/>
Many of the<lb/>
same events<lb/>
have been<lb/>
planned for<lb/>
this year's<lb/>
celebration<lb/>
to be held<lb/>
today.<lb/>
Photo by<lb/>
Da 11 Reed<lb/>
Former ECU<lb/>
staffer faces<lb/>
rape trial<lb/>
Staff Reports<lb/>
A former member of<lb/>
ECU's faculty is currently fac-<lb/>
ing rape charges in Pitt County<lb/>
Superior Court. James Wallace<lb/>
Stromer is facing several sexual<lb/>
assault offenses in his trial this<lb/>
week.<lb/>
Stromer, a former gradu-<lb/>
ate assistant at the ECU School<lb/>
of Industry and Technology,<lb/>
faces the charges of first de-<lb/>
gree rape, kidnapping, but<lb/>
glary and first-degree sexual<lb/>
offense after being tin tai<lb/>
of an ongoing investigation<lb/>
which led to the charges<lb/>
According to statements<lb/>
by the Greenville police to the<lb/>
Daily Reflector, a man alleg-<lb/>
edly broke into the apartment<lb/>
oi a 20-year -old Greenville<lb/>
woman early on the morning<lb/>
of Nov. 13,1989.The man then<lb/>
kidnapped herand repeatedly<lb/>
raped her behind her King's<lb/>
Row apartment building.<lb/>
Police reports sta ted that<lb/>
the woman was taken to the<lb/>
Riverview Trailer Park where<lb/>
she was raped again. I hen she<lb/>
was taken to a wooded area<lb/>
whereathirdassaultoccurred.<lb/>
Stromer is already serv-<lb/>
ing a prison sentence on previ-<lb/>
ous rape charges<lb/>
Fall rush dates<lb/>
announced for<lb/>
sororities<lb/>
By Shannon Cooper<lb/>
Staff Writer<lb/>
Ihe 1993 Fall Panhellenic Rush is<lb/>
expected to get under way on August<lb/>
15, and eight sororities will he looking<lb/>
for new members.<lb/>
Dorms will open for fall rushees<lb/>
five day - before the semester begins<lb/>
During tins time, women can become<lb/>
more acquainted with the different<lb/>
Panhellenic sororitiesand Greek life.<lb/>
Anna Harrington, a member of<lb/>
the Sigma Sigma Sigma sorority and<lb/>
Panhellenic President said, "Weexpect<lb/>
a really big turn out for fall rush. We've<lb/>
done ,i lot of rush promotion through<lb/>
dormsand mailings. Its really an excit-<lb/>
ing time for rushees mm sorority<lb/>
women We really look forward to this<lb/>
year's rush Rush begins with round<lb/>
one. On the first day rushees meet dif-<lb/>
ferent sorority members. Round two<lb/>
(i insists of ton ring the different hi oises,<lb/>
learning about the different personali<lb/>
besof each sorority. Roun I three;<lb/>
kn( iwri as skit day where rushees lea m<lb/>
 See RUSH page 4<lb/>
Habitat dedicates home to Greenville family<lb/>
By Maureen Rich<lb/>
Staff Writer<lb/>
If you are an ECU student, re-<lb/>
gardless of the amount of time you<lb/>
have held this student status, consider<lb/>
Greenville your home.<lb/>
Now consider the community of<lb/>
Greenville. Not everyone has a roof<lb/>
without leaks, a kitchen without rats<lb/>
or a floor without holes. Habit.it tor<lb/>
Humanity of Greenville 'Pitt County,<lb/>
wants to eradicate this poverty alto-<lb/>
gether, hut thev need help.<lb/>
This Saturday, April 24, from 10<lb/>
a.m. until 2 p.m a house dedication<lb/>
i eremony will take place for the third<lb/>
Habitat home built in Greenville, at<lb/>
the corner of 12th and Pitt Streets.<lb/>
"This isan opportunity for people<lb/>
to come out and meet the Parsons fam-<lb/>
ily, who will be moving into the home<lb/>
thai Habitat has helped them build<lb/>
said Sylvia McCreary, chairperson oi<lb/>
Habitat's Tamil SeIection( ommittee.<lb/>
"And this js,i (ham e for people to find<lb/>
out about our organization<lb/>
I he new house w ill be held open<lb/>
tnr tours from 10 a m. until 2 p m ! he<lb/>
dedii ation cen mony w ill take plai i al<lb/>
11 .i m , and the Par; ons w ill be pre<lb/>
sented w itha Bible from I labit.it mem<lb/>
! theii ministei . ill ondui t a<lb/>
scripture reading.<lb/>
The public is invited and encour-<lb/>
aged to attend. Refreshments will be<lb/>
available, as well as information about<lb/>
Habitat for Humanity.<lb/>
Habitat for Humanity is an ecu-<lb/>
menical Christian <lb/>
housing organization.<lb/>
It is non-profit and<lb/>
does not accept gov-<lb/>
ernment funding.<lb/>
Ha hi tat operates<lb/>
through private dona-<lb/>
tions, fund raisers and<lb/>
interest-tree mortgage<lb/>
payments from those<lb/>
houses that are built<lb/>
through the organiza-<lb/>
tion. I hose housesare<lb/>
built on land donated<lb/>
by the i ity, and built<lb/>
by community volun-<lb/>
teers no" members of<lb/>
the family who will<lb/>
live in the house<lb/>
"Habitat's<lb/>
purpose is to<lb/>
give people a<lb/>
hand-up,<lb/>
and not a<lb/>
hand-out,99<lb/>
David Snead,<lb/>
president ot Habitat's<lb/>
Hoard ot Directors.<lb/>
a b l ta I s pun<lb/>
to give<lb/>
peopleahand up, and not a hand out<lb/>
said David Sue.id, president oi<lb/>
I labitat's hoard of I Jirei tots<lb/>
"V e're no! pr n iding families<lb/>
with just a housi A'e'n<lb/>
pn n iding them with a hi ime an<lb/>
portunity to brine then ei ononiii ta<lb/>
tus up, and an opportunity to live in a<lb/>
better neighborhood<lb/>
Snead said Habitat's goal is more<lb/>
than a housing issue, it is a community<lb/>
issue.<lb/>
"There is a great need for this type<lb/>
 of sen ice in (Ireenville<lb/>
said Debra Shoenherg.<lb/>
an ECU student and<lb/>
Habitat volunteer.<lb/>
families who are inter-<lb/>
ested must till out an<lb/>
initial application. "I<lb/>
mail out at least five ap-<lb/>
plications each dav to<lb/>
people who have<lb/>
called Shoenbergsaid.<lb/>
Habitat for<lb/>
Humanity's family Se-<lb/>
lection Committee<lb/>
s reens these applicants<lb/>
very carefully<lb/>
Mireary said. Within<lb/>
two weeks atter tiling<lb/>
?"??" then application, the<lb/>
family will receive either a lettei ol<lb/>
denial, oi a letter informing them that<lb/>
Habitat is interested in learning more<lb/>
about the family.<lb/>
' ui mam ntei i.i is ,e lamiK<lb/>
reary said, "II theii present<lb/>
situation is inadequati<lb/>
Mc rear) cited electrical problems, lack<lb/>
ot central heat, leaking roots and tire<lb/>
hazards as some of the main faults<lb/>
commonly reported by appli ants.<lb/>
"Our second consideration is<lb/>
whether the family has sufficient in-<lb/>
come to repay the interest free loans<lb/>
UC reary said "Depending upon the<lb/>
size of the family, an income as low as<lb/>
$9,000 to $10,000 is able to meet these<lb/>
requirements<lb/>
If these priorities are met, the fam-<lb/>
ily selection committee will choose to<lb/>
meet with the family to consider othei<lb/>
factors. McCreary said the committee<lb/>
looks at debt obligations, employ men!<lb/>
stability, and basic charactei referem es.<lb/>
" I he greatest frustration is meet-<lb/>
ing people with real ni. bul pooi<lb/>
credit because their poverty le el makes<lb/>
them unable to establish c ? . credit<lb/>
M reaps- said "We try not to I<lb/>
someone without giving them some<lb/>
kind ofdira tion weoften refer them<lb/>
to counseling<lb/>
Mi reary said it will usually take<lb/>
at least 4-6 months p, fore the family<lb/>
know s it they ha e be ai i e ti d "Bv<lb/>
tin tune v, e gel ready to make<lb/>
mendatii in we're ven confident a Knit<lb/>
imii de ision M n u<lb/>
Once a famih is i<lb/>
eHABITAl paa (<lb/>
<pb facs="00058404_0002"/><lb/>
?<lb/>
?-?<lb/>
APRIL 22, 1993<lb/>
Study discovers what makes a voice sexy<lb/>
Ipril 13<lb/>
9: 10 a.m<lb/>
valued .ii $250 fi om ih<lb/>
11:15 a.Ill<lb/>
?ne stole ? hand-held walkie-talkie from an unlocked<lb/>
vehicle that wa I near die ??asi side t' the Fletcher Music<lb/>
Center,<lb/>
2 p.m.<lb/>
? guitai valued .u $600 ?n stolen from an unlocked room on<lb/>
ihe fourth Door ol Aycock Residence Hall.<lb/>
April 11<lb/>
8:34 a.m.<lb/>
An unidentified person broke into two coin-operated machines<lb/>
on the second Boor of Jones Hall.<lb/>
12:20 a.m.<lb/>
ALout $60 worth of clothing wm stolen from a dorm room on<lb/>
the third floor of BeJk Hall.<lb/>
5:30 p.m.<lb/>
Two 19-year-old men and an 18-year-old man were found in<lb/>
possession of marijuana and drug paraphernalia in a room on the<lb/>
founh floor of Scott Hall.<lb/>
April 15<lb/>
3:25 p.m.<lb/>
A j70-parking decal was removed from a vehicle north of Scott<lb/>
Hall.<lb/>
April 16<lb/>
12:48 a.m.<lb/>
A 19-year-old male was cited for violence and domestic<lb/>
disturbance, on the third floor of Belk Hall, after ingesting a<lb/>
combination of non-prescnption strength sleeping pills and an<lb/>
alcoholic beverage.<lb/>
10:49 p.m.<lb/>
A SSO-shin was stolen from a vehicle located on the comer of<lb/>
9th and Cotanche Street.<lb/>
April 18<lb/>
9:14 p.m.<lb/>
Two youths, aged 15 and 17, were banned from the ECU<lb/>
campus after being cited for disorderly conduct. As the boys ran out<lb/>
the lobby door of Fletcher Hall, one of the boys pulled a toy handgun<lb/>
and aimed it toward the second boy's head.<lb/>
Compiled by Karen Hassell. Taker from ECU<lb/>
Public Safety records.<lb/>
By Karen Hassell<lb/>
Assistant News Editor<lb/>
Do you have a sexy voice?<lb/>
Two ECU scientists havebeen<lb/>
studying voice patterns to deter-<lb/>
mine what constirutesa sexy voice.<lb/>
Hal J. Daniel III and Robert B.<lb/>
McCabeof the speech-languageand<lb/>
auditory pathology, ECU School of<lb/>
Allied Health Sciences, observed<lb/>
the perception of "vocal sexiness"<lb/>
in regards todefinitegenderdiffer-<lb/>
ences.<lb/>
The two scienri sts compiled a<lb/>
research group of ECU students,<lb/>
and their findings are reported in<lb/>
The Nature of the Sexes: The Sociobiol-<lb/>
ogy of Sex Differences, a book edited<lb/>
byJohan van der Dennen and pub-<lb/>
lished in the Netherlands.<lb/>
"Even though there were sig-<lb/>
nificant differences between the<lb/>
male and female respondents in<lb/>
their ratings of mid-pitch voices,<lb/>
both rated mid-pitch voices as'most<lb/>
sexy the Daniel-McCabe report<lb/>
said. "These ratings probably re-<lb/>
flecta preferencefor normality over<lb/>
pathology as the low-or high-pitch<lb/>
voices in both sexes cou Id be si mila r<lb/>
to that ofa voice witha pitchdisor-<lb/>
der<lb/>
Theresultsconfirm whatother<lb/>
scientistshavereported,and that is<lb/>
mat human gender differences ex-<lb/>
ist in the perception of auditory<lb/>
stimuli, for both sound intensity<lb/>
and frequency.<lb/>
Daniel said that males and<lb/>
females respond to vocal pitch dif-<lb/>
ferently and that "certain aspectsof<lb/>
humanspeech production and per-<lb/>
ception have evolved for different<lb/>
reasons as a function of gender<lb/>
This distinctiveness in hu-<lb/>
mans seems to be that humans as-<lb/>
sociate voice quality with sexual<lb/>
attractiveness. Researchers suggest<lb/>
that the highness of lowness of a<lb/>
speaker's voice has a significant<lb/>
bearing on how high or low the<lb/>
speaker scores on a scale of "sexi-<lb/>
ness<lb/>
Daniel and McCabe's research<lb/>
methodology included asking 244<lb/>
student volunteers to listen to 18<lb/>
tape-recorded samplesofhigh, mid-<lb/>
range and low-pitch voices, then<lb/>
rate each according to degree of<lb/>
"sexiness<lb/>
All vocal samples were fur-<lb/>
nished by native speakers of En-<lb/>
glish, aged 20-25, who recited num-<lb/>
bers into a microphone held six<lb/>
inches from the speaker's mouth.<lb/>
Males' vocal frequencies ranged<lb/>
from a low of 101.9 Hz to highs in<lb/>
the 140s, and females, from 175.2<lb/>
Hz up to 229.2 Hz.<lb/>
Surprisingly, the legendary<lb/>
sex appeal of the husky-voiced was<lb/>
rated as "least sexy" by males.<lb/>
"The stereotype of the 'sexy'<lb/>
female having a low-pitched voice<lb/>
appears tobea myth McCabe said.<lb/>
Conversely, females rated thehigh-<lb/>
pitched male voice as least sexy.<lb/>
The scientists believe that ex-<lb/>
tremely high vocal pitch in adult<lb/>
males is probably associated with<lb/>
pre-pubescence and that extremely<lb/>
low pitch in females suggests hor-<lb/>
monal imbalance ? both condi-<lb/>
tions likely to be unsuitable for suc-<lb/>
cessful mating and reproduction.<lb/>
"Certain qualities of speech<lb/>
and language perception may have<lb/>
evolved tofulfilldifferingfunctions<lb/>
in human males and females<lb/>
Daniel said.<lb/>
Since the publication of their<lb/>
research, the two scientists have<lb/>
been approached by telephone<lb/>
marketing firms who want them to<lb/>
apply their studies to a vocal "blue-<lb/>
print" for selection of the most ef-<lb/>
fective (i.e. sexy) phone sales staff.<lb/>
However, these proposals were re-<lb/>
fused.<lb/>
MASCOT TRYOUTS<lb/>
WHEN: APRIL 23-25, 1993<lb/>
WHERE: MINGES COLISEUM LOBBY<lb/>
TIME: 7:00 PM<lb/>
<lb/>
FROG LEVEL MINI STORAGE<lb/>
"Share Storage Space<lb/>
With A Friend<lb/>
10 STUDENT DISCOUNT<lb/>
vVw.<lb/>
Out Dickinson Ave. to<lb/>
Hwy 264 West Alt.<lb/>
HOURS:<lb/>
9 AM - 6 PM<lb/>
Monday - Saturday<lb/>
756-8256<lb/>
ATTIC<lb/>
758-7303 I 209 E. 5th St<lb/>
Every<lb/>
Wednesday<lb/>
The<lb/>
CoMedY<lb/>
2PNE<lb/>
Undefeated, Undisputed!<lb/>
Thanks For Voting Us<lb/>
The "Best Place To Hear<lb/>
Live Music"<lb/>
1987 1988 1989 1990-1991 ?1992<lb/>
GREENVILLE TIMES READERS' POLL<lb/>
Thursday, April 22<lb/>
COLLEGE NIGHT?COLLEGE NIGHT-COLLEGE NIGHT<lb/>
PURPLE SCHOOLBUS<lb/>
990 Highballs ? 990 32 oz. Draft ? 990 Memberships<lb/>
Friday, April 23<lb/>
BLUE<lb/>
OYSTE<lb/>
CULT<lb/>
$ 10 Advance Tickets Available A<lb/>
MUSIC G'ftIshop<lb/>
$2.(X)032oz DRAFT<lb/>
Saturday. April 24<lb/>
(gQi)03<lb/>
Video<lb/>
?(30? lb?? Ik<lb/>
is here!<lb/>
?? ??(p5?sof the<lb/>
Tr ea sure<lb/>
Chest<lb/>
SpringZingWingDingFlingThing<lb/>
ifiraision<lb/>
$2.00 32oz DRAFT<lb/>
w3<lb/>
Tuesday, April 27<lb/>
READING DAY EVE CONCERT<lb/>
DILLON<lb/>
FENCE<lb/>
be ?jQ7?m away<lb/>
UtOQODf'sd, April to<lb/>
sOoocsteiafta with wall8(3 ECU<lb/>
0.?. cards a ft Barefoot ? ra<lb/>
the fiteM). First (2@gm) ?-first<lb/>
8?i?Wift Look tfoop your<lb/>
3?(py at (h?WZMB DaDO1.<lb/>
Of<lb/>
$2.00 32oz DRAFT<lb/>
5jDsao8s(??s lb ft foes 33Q0 &amp;fl?cc8a EBocaardl<lb/>
a tract! ??(pot?(rrao?rrafl' ?? 3?airaiJii)ao8scatflJc2tra<lb/>
4<lb/>
?? ? ? ? ?"? ?<lb/>
<pb facs="00058404_0003"/><lb/>
APRIL 22, 1993<lb/>
'<lb/>
ih,it<lb/>
1 lelped<lb/>
n ? i i feel<lb/>
11 VOU I in<lb/>
tyou<lb/>
? mid<lb/>
lid olunteers<lb/>
me t? ? v. .H k an Satur-<lb/>
Habitat day.BuildinghoursareHa.m to<lb/>
12 p.m and 1 p.m. to 5 p.m. No<lb/>
hewould one has to stay the entire time,<lb/>
students i lenn said,<lb/>
become involved in the pro- "Ifwehave the volunteers,<lb/>
gram. "My main push is to get the houses .ire built faster'<lb/>
the students more aware of their Mc reary said,<lb/>
communit) Habitat is really Anyone interested in vol-<lb/>
a wonderful organization unteering or receh ing nmre in-<lb/>
It's ,i re.il interesting formation is encouraged to call<lb/>
project Snead said, 'Our vol- the Habitat for Humanity office<lb/>
unteers cm actually work at 758-2947. ECL students may<lb/>
hands-on, and stand back and alsocallKelleHenryat931-9681.<lb/>
so m<lb/>
Henr) is ?<lb/>
becamt in<lb/>
thrs<lb/>
like '<lb/>
COLLEGE CRADMF<lb/>
IT'S TIME TO RETIRE<lb/>
YOUR COLEGE LOAN.<lb/>
M W I ired oi copingwith<lb/>
ttfcfc ivnicnts? HioArnn can<lb/>
"? put your college loan toresl<lb/>
ft W in just<lb/>
fyou have a loan Dial's<lb/>
not in default, well payoff 1 3of it up to<lb/>
a $55,000 limit for each year you serve<lb/>
asasoldier. And well not onlyretire<lb/>
your loan, well give you other benefits<lb/>
to last a lifetime. Ask your Army Recruiter.<lb/>
Call: 9197569695<lb/>
ARMY. BE ALL YOU CAN BE.<lb/>
GET A JOB  Check out the April 29<lb/>
Career Issue of TJw East Carolinian.<lb/>
3R00KQREEN<lb/>
LflTORTMENTS<lb/>
H08E. I Oth St reel<lb/>
PRE-LEASINC; FOR<lb/>
JUNE, JULY &amp; AUGUST 1993<lb/>
Brand new 2 bedroom, 2 lull bath units<lb/>
with all major appliances.<lb/>
Located within walking distance to campus.<lb/>
The East Carolinian 3<lb/>
THE EAST CAROLINA UNIVERSITY<lb/>
HONORS PROGRAxM<lb/>
takes pleasure in congratulating the fhilomnjj<lb/>
graduating seniors of spring 1993 for completing<lb/>
tin- requirements to become<lb/>
GRADUATES OF THE HONORS PROGRAM<lb/>
fill Marie Adams<lb/>
Gillian Kim Ashley<lb/>
Melissa I )avn Daniel<lb/>
fames Quinn Lanier<lb/>
1'crry Ann I ight<lb/>
fennifer I ,ynn Wish<lb/>
Andrew Barl Daniels s.tiuira Rupcsh Kaur Singl<lb/>
Susan Shumei ilu Elisa Ann Thigpen<lb/>
eresa Lynn Freeman Kevin Kugcne Varncr<lb/>
Jennifer Anne Wardrep<lb/>
ennis John W'ilhclm<lb/>
CALL 752-8900 or stop by the office<lb/>
Apartment 1-H Monday - Friday 9:00 - 5:30<lb/>
Headed<lb/>
home<lb/>
for the<lb/>
summer?<lb/>
Store your "stuff" with us!<lb/>
U N I I N F N I A L CUISINE<lb/>
Greenville's Finest<lb/>
Congratulates ECU's Finest!<lb/>
TREAT YOURSELF &amp; YOUR FAMILY<lb/>
TO A SPECIAL EVENING! MAKE<lb/>
RESERVATIONS AT CHRISTINNE'S!<lb/>
Free campus pick-up and delivery We Will Be Opening At 3:00 pm<lb/>
? Individual storage containers<lb/>
Six 40" x 48x 60"<lb/>
? You pack it, iou lock it. you keep the key<lb/>
? IjkuI, climate controlled warelwuse<lb/>
? Secure, licensed and insured<lb/>
tudent tofoge Call Now. <lb/>
nCtlUOfk Container quantities are limited!<lb/>
800-4U2-LOCK<lb/>
800-482-5625<lb/>
Open Monday through Friday<lb/>
9:00 a.m. until 5:00 p.m. EOT<lb/>
Checks and major credit cards accepted<lb/>
When the dorms lock you out,<lb/>
WC lm k xoit in!<lb/>
on Saturday, May 8th. So Don't Delay,<lb/>
Make Your Reservations Now'<lb/>
CALL 355-9500<lb/>
Over 51 Entrees to Choose From!<lb/>
Now Serving Lunch!<lb/>
Tues-Fri XlL Casm but nice attire<lb/>
11:30-2:00 SolSR MasterCard<lb/>
$3.95 - $6.95 ((Jylfyk VISA<lb/>
Dinner tV&amp;?' American Express<lb/>
5:00-until<lb/>
115 Red Banks Rd.<lb/>
Accepted<lb/>
Next to Overton 's behind<lb/>
Blockbuster Video<lb/>
would you <lb/>
drink Buffalo wing sauce, shop in the nude<lb/>
or snap mouse traps to parts of your body?<lb/>
EAST COAST MUSIC &amp; VIDEO<lb/>
invites you to stop by and intrigue them with your<lb/>
most outrageous act and<lb/>
GET A FREE CD!<lb/>
judging is up to the East Coast family of employees<lb/>
sday, April 27, 1993<lb/>
from 10:00 - 11 pm<lb/>
lot any ?uest,ons? ca"<lb/>
Liuuiuuiiill 758-4251<lb/>
shop East Coast for all your<lb/>
audio &amp; video needs<lb/>
1109 Charles Blvd.<lb/>
OPEN UNTIL MIDNIGHT ALL WEEK<lb/>
(Sw<lb/>
Ja6<lb/>
RA<lb/>
. RIDflV. APRIL 23 8:00pm - 2:00am<lb/>
MUG SHOTS. Downtown Greenville<lb/>
SPONSORED BY THE VISUAL RR1S<lb/>
 FORUM. ECU. SCHOOL OFRflT<lb/>
TICHETS: S5.00 STUDENTS<lb/>
I S8.00 NON-STUDENTS<lb/>
3 CALL 7S7-0SSB FOR INFO.<lb/>
IfilE BflLLM<lb/>
BENEFITING THE BEflUX ARTS SCHOLARSHIP FUND.<lb/>
<pb facs="00058404_0004"/><lb/>
.???? .<lb/>
APRIL 22, 1993<lb/>
Continued from page 1<lb/>
to expand.<lb/>
ma<lb/>
icientists that global warm-<lb/>
ing is occurring, Follinger said.<lb/>
This vs arming is due to an inten-<lb/>
i?up hergradu-<lb/>
I in May,<lb/>
hut w ? r n 'u'r "<lb/>
i n eption and Choice: Sea<lb/>
Level Rise in North Carolina's<lb/>
Future<lb/>
"Due to the uncertainty sur-<lb/>
RUSH<lb/>
rounding the prediction of sea<lb/>
U el rise, the actual estimates may<lb/>
change' Tollinger said.<lb/>
"Decision making processes<lb/>
should include the participation<lb/>
of coastal residents, and an at-<lb/>
tempt should be made to increase<lb/>
public awareness of sea level rise<lb/>
by offering information concern-<lb/>
ing the causes and effects of this<lb/>
potentially hazardous event<lb/>
Tollinger said.<lb/>
Continued from page 1<lb/>
even more about the sororities as the<lb/>
members entertain them.<lb/>
On the last night or preference<lb/>
night, rushees give the Panhellenic<lb/>
advisor a preference card listing the<lb/>
sororities the rushee is interested in.<lb/>
"It'snotnecessarilyuschoosingthem,<lb/>
but them choosing us Anna<lb/>
Harrington said.<lb/>
On bid day, mshees receive<lb/>
their bid and join their new sorority<lb/>
sisters. That night is filled with all<lb/>
sorts of activities and celebrations.<lb/>
Anyone interested in joining a<lb/>
Panhellenic sorority should get in<lb/>
contact with Laura Sweet,<lb/>
Panhellenic advisor, in VVhichard<lb/>
204. The deadline for registration<lb/>
forms is August 9,1993.<lb/>
Lisa Berting, a member of the<lb/>
Alpha Omicron Fi sorority and<lb/>
Panhellenic Chair said, "Sorority<lb/>
rush is the first step in Greek life. It's<lb/>
a weekof fun touringhouses, watch-<lb/>
ing skits, meeting sisters and seeing<lb/>
what the eight sororities are all<lb/>
about<lb/>
I<lb/>
FREE PREGNANCY TEST<lb/>
while you wait<lb/>
Free &amp; Confidential<lb/>
Services &amp; Counseling<lb/>
Carolina Pregnancy Center<lb/>
1<lb/>
111 E. 3rd Street<lb/>
The Lee Building<lb/>
Greenville NC<lb/>
757-0003<lb/>
Hours:<lb/>
Monday - Friday<lb/>
8:30-3:30<lb/>
$200-$500 WEEKLY<lb/>
Assemble products at<lb/>
home. Easy! No Selling.<lb/>
You're paid direct. Fully<lb/>
Guaranteed. FREE<lb/>
Inform ation-24 Hour<lb/>
Hotline 801-379-2900<lb/>
The '93 Spring Sandals by<lb/>
GURKEES<lb/>
Don't be caught in imitations<lb/>
GURKEES<lb/>
10 OFF<lb/>
With this ad<lb/>
L<lb/>
BLUE REGION SCOTA<lb/>
26 Carolina East Centre<lb/>
Greenville 321-2670<lb/>
ee<lb/>
??ty<lb/>
FAMOUS FROZEN YOGURT!<lb/>
 SPRING SPECIALS<lb/>
OF THE WEEK<lb/>
May l-May 9<lb/>
? ?.<lb/>
v<lb/>
99C ZINGER SUNDAE<lb/>
Show ECU ID for 10 discbunt<lb/>
1898 Greenville Blvd. M-Sat 11:30-10:30<lb/>
75Z-9440 Sun 110:3?<lb/>
WE CAN HELP YOU WITH<lb/>
EVERYTHING YOU NEED TO<lb/>
00 ABROAD?from- the<lb/>
lowest student airfares, your<lb/>
International Student ID &amp; your Eurail<lb/>
pass totravel guides, backpacks &amp;<lb/>
info on work abroadCome by and<lb/>
talk to us sometime, we'll give you<lb/>
our FREE "Student Travels" Magazine<lb/>
&amp; answer any travel questions you<lb/>
may haveWe've been there!<lb/>
137 E. Franklin Street, Suite 106<lb/>
Chapel Hill, NC 27514<lb/>
919-942-2334<lb/>
 Call NOW <lb/>
ECONOMY MINI<lb/>
STORAGE<lb/>
USE YOUR<lb/>
STUDENT<lb/>
DISCOUNT<lb/>
SHARE WITH A ROOMMATE<lb/>
SPECIAL RATES MAY 1-AUG 31<lb/>
3C0 FARMER ST<lb/>
GREENVILLE<lb/>
757-0373<lb/>
am inan mm mm mm re mm<lb/>
UNISEX<lb/>
HAIR<lb/>
STYLING<lb/>
gearges<lb/>
hair designers<lb/>
MONDAY- FRIDAY<lb/>
10 am-8pm<lb/>
SATURDAY<lb/>
9am - 6pm<lb/>
CHARLES BOULEVARD SHOPPES830-5537<lb/>
5 NEW TANNING BEDS<lb/>
??<lb/>
r<lb/>
JWfl<lb/>
r<lb/>
( ?<lb/>
L<lb/>
George's Hair Designers<lb/>
$5.00 OFF<lb/>
10 Visit Tanning Package<lb/>
t-xpires April 27, 1993<lb/>
coupon good at Charles Blvd. Shoppes onty<lb/>
George's Hair Designers<lb/>
$2.00 OFF<lb/>
Men'sWomen's Haircuts<lb/>
expires April 27, 1993<lb/>
coupon goad at Charles Blvd. Shoppes only<lb/>
1<lb/>
CALIFORNIA<lb/>
STRAWBERRIES<lb/>
PINT<lb/>
PtRDUC GRADi "A"<lb/>
BREAST m<lb/>
QUARTERS<lb/>
LIMIT 3 WITH<lb/>
ADDITIONAL<lb/>
PURCHASE,<lb/>
PLEASE<lb/>
DIET COKE OR<lb/>
COCA-COLA<lb/>
HARRIS TEETER LOW PRICES ALL DAY, EVERY DAY<lb/>
WORK AT<lb/>
THE BEACH!<lb/>
OUR MYRTLE BEACH<lb/>
AND HILTON HEAD<lb/>
LOCATIONS ARE<lb/>
NOW HIRING FOR<lb/>
THE SUMMER.<lb/>
IF INTERESTED, APPLY AT THE<lb/>
MYRTLE BEACH AND HILTON<lb/>
HEAD LOCATIONS OR MAIL<lb/>
APPLICATION TO: Xr<lb/>
WALDENSIAN QUALITY<lb/>
DESSERT<lb/>
CUPS<lb/>
IN THE DAIRY SECTION - CAN<lb/>
REDDI-WIP<lb/>
TOPPING 701.<lb/>
.15 OZ.<lb/>
PILLSBURY<lb/>
ALL READY<lb/>
PIE CRUSTS<lb/>
HOMESTYLE<lb/>
BREAD24 OZ. LOAF<lb/>
.99<lb/>
I<lb/>
21<lb/>
AF ?<lb/>
49<lb/>
69<lb/>
49<lb/>
JERRY ALLEN<lb/>
HARRIS TEETER, INC.<lb/>
UTCHFIELD LANDING<lb/>
SHOPPING CENTER<lb/>
ROUTE 2, BOX 288<lb/>
UTCHFIELD, S.C. 29585<lb/>
Harrisfeeter<lb/>
A GREAT PLACE TO WORK!<lb/>
IN THE DELI-BAKERY<lb/>
LOW SALT<lb/>
BOILED HAM<lb/>
LB.<lb/>
FRESHLY SLICED<lb/>
TO ORDER<lb/>
ALL FLAVORS<lb/>
HIGHLAND CREST<lb/>
ICE MILK<lb/>
REGULAR OR SALSA FLAVORED<lb/>
DORITOS<lb/>
THINS<lb/>
HALF<lb/>
GAL.<lb/>
J<lb/>
Prices Effective Through April 27, 1993<lb/>
??'???? pan<lb/>
<lb/>
<pb facs="00058404_0005"/><lb/>
TheEastCarolinian<lb/>
Classifieds<lb/>
FO ffgf<lb/>
(1 M PA RIMINI 1<lb/>
ormid-Mai<lb/>
SlNGLEROOMSFORRENTrorsum-<lb/>
mersessionh S250pers.s. includes rent,<lb/>
uhhties.and phone More info contact<lb/>
Marcus at (919) 758-3936.<lb/>
KINGSTON PLACE 2 bedroom, 2 1 <lb/>
2 bath, furnished units, available May<lb/>
15 and August 1 $140 00 per month<lb/>
with 4 people. Call Pro Management<lb/>
756-1234.<lb/>
CHARLES STREETTOWNHOUSES<lb/>
available in May. Located behind the<lb/>
Pantry on 10th street. 2 bedroom, 11<lb/>
2 bath units with all appliances. 450.00<lb/>
per month Call Pro Management of<lb/>
Greenville 756-1234.<lb/>
EFFICIENCY APT.FIFTH AND ELM;<lb/>
IMvateentranceff street parking, S200<lb/>
plus utilities, 752-5296.<lb/>
TWO BEDROOM, RINGGOLD<lb/>
TOWERS SUBLEASE Available in<lb/>
May. Fully furnished, kitchen appli-<lb/>
ances, water included, laundry, AC,<lb/>
great location. No deposit required.<lb/>
Rent negotiable Call 752-3598.<lb/>
2 BEDROOM APT. HeatAC, water,<lb/>
sewer, cable included. 2 blocks from<lb/>
campus. For rent now. Call 746-4169<lb/>
SUBLEASE1STSUMMERSESSION.<lb/>
Fully furnished 1 Bdrm Apt. Kitchen,<lb/>
bath. Convenient walk to campus<lb/>
downtown. S360 for entire 1st session<lb/>
at Ringgold Towers. Call 758-4542.<lb/>
APARTMENT FOR RENT, available<lb/>
after exams, 2 BR, 1 bath, Regency<lb/>
House, spacious, furnished, S400 per<lb/>
month, call 758-7422 for info.<lb/>
SUBLEASE: Room for rent. Fully fur-<lb/>
nished house. Pay 5200 a month plus<lb/>
13 utilities. Available for summer.<lb/>
Please contact 7561735.<lb/>
SUMMER ON LIT - Mid-May - Au-<lb/>
gust. 3 bedroom 1 bathroom. Front<lb/>
porchswing. 1102 Cotanche (across<lb/>
from Travel Express and East Coast<lb/>
Music) S450 per month. Call Charlie at<lb/>
830-5582 leave message.<lb/>
1 BEDROOM, FULLY FURNISHED,<lb/>
May-July. Ringgold Towers-1st floor<lb/>
Parking included in 5375month and<lb/>
utilities (cheap). CaU ASAP 830-6278.<lb/>
RINGGOLD TOWERS<lb/>
Now Taking Leases for<lb/>
1 bedroom, 2 bedroom &amp;<lb/>
Efficiency Apartments.<lb/>
CALL 752-2865<lb/>
2 PEOPLE NEEDED to sublet 2 bed-<lb/>
room apt. over summer. 144 utilities.<lb/>
Call 355-5986 anytime.<lb/>
FEMALE NEEDED to share 3 bed-<lb/>
roomapt ?Stratford Arms. 145 utili-<lb/>
ties Call 355-5986 anytime.<lb/>
ROOMMATES needed for summer<lb/>
fall; 3 bdrm. house, 1 block from cam-<lb/>
pus; low utilities, ac, washerdryer<lb/>
Ca Stephanie at 752-2560.<lb/>
BEST PLACE IN GREENVILLE TO<lb/>
LIVE. Needed: ONE GOOD<lb/>
ROOM ATE. 3 bedroom house, cathe-<lb/>
dra) ceiling, fireplace, loft, outdoor pa-<lb/>
tio, AC, wooded lot, close to campus<lb/>
ARTIST or MUSICIAN preferred. No<lb/>
pets (we have the world's smartest cat<lb/>
already) should be laid back, respon-<lb/>
sible and courteous. 5200 13 util.<lb/>
THISISTHELJVINGSPACEYOU'VE<lb/>
BEEN DREAMING ABOUT Call us<lb/>
758-7993.<lb/>
MALE GRADUATE STUDENT<lb/>
LOOKNG FOR RESPONSIBLE<lb/>
ROOMMATE toshare2bedroom 11 <lb/>
2 bath Townhouse. One half rent plus<lb/>
12 utilities. CaU 830-3961 after 6.00<lb/>
pm.<lb/>
ROOMM VI h NEEDEDbothsummer<lb/>
' n room Fullv<lb/>
Sharon 830-6844<lb/>
FEMALE ROOMMATE WANTED<lb/>
for apartment 1 2blockfrom ArtBldg,<lb/>
3 blocks from downtown, and 2 blocks<lb/>
from supermarket. Great for art stu-<lb/>
dents Call 757-1947.<lb/>
FEMALE ROOMMATE WANTED<lb/>
for Wildvvood Villa Apartment start-<lb/>
ing Mav 15 (S150 per month plus utili-<lb/>
ties) please call 757-0321.<lb/>
URGENT! FEMALE ROOMMATE<lb/>
NEEDED to share 2 bedroom apart-<lb/>
ment in Tar River. 5155a month plus 1 <lb/>
3 utilities. Call Kelly or Linda 931 -7821<lb/>
FEMALE ROOMMATE NEEDED<lb/>
starring May 10th to share 1 3 of rent<lb/>
and utilitiesover summer and 1 4dur-<lb/>
ing fall and spring at Wildwood Villas<lb/>
call 931-781 lor 931-7786.<lb/>
2ROOMMATES NEEDED to share4<lb/>
bedroom house very near campus.<lb/>
Please caU Brittany 931-8628 or Cathy<lb/>
931-8637. (For summer only!)<lb/>
FEMALE ROOMMATE NEEDED<lb/>
both summer sessions S170.00mth <lb/>
half utilities. Own room. Fully fur-<lb/>
nished. Call Leigh or Allyson 758-5661<lb/>
anytime!<lb/>
FEMALE non-smoker, responsible,<lb/>
socialdrinker.Toshare3bedroom brick<lb/>
house 3 miles from campus. S147.00<lb/>
per month plus 1 3 utilities. Available<lb/>
fall semester. Call 756-0899 after 5pm.<lb/>
HOUSEMATEWANTEDQuiet loca-<lb/>
tion near ECU. 5162.50 per month plus<lb/>
12 utilities. Available May 1 call 758-<lb/>
3311.<lb/>
FEMALE ROOMMATE NEEDEDfor<lb/>
1st summer session only. Kings Row<lb/>
Apts. SI 80 plus utilities. Call757-0779.<lb/>
CHEAP! FBI US SEIZED: 89 Mer-<lb/>
cedes - 5 200,86 VW - S50,87 Mercedes<lb/>
- 5100,65 Mustang - S5. Choose form<lb/>
thousandsstartingS50. FREE Informa-<lb/>
tion 24 hour hotline 801 -379-2929 copy-<lb/>
nghtNC 030610.<lb/>
GOVERNMENT SEIZED CARS,<lb/>
trucks, boats,4 wheelers, motorhomes,<lb/>
by FBI, IRS, DEA. Available your area<lb/>
now. Call 1-800-436-4363 ext. C-5999.<lb/>
IBMPC XT - 640K Includes keyboard<lb/>
nnd RGB monitor. 5350 - Call Rod at<lb/>
321-1032.<lb/>
1984 KA WAS AKIGPZ 750: Red, stage<lb/>
3 carburetor kit, Kerker pipe, one hel-<lb/>
met. 51000. Negotiable. 754920.<lb/>
50 GALLON Specially designed tank<lb/>
with stand. Many accessories. Ask for<lb/>
Rob 830-5423.<lb/>
MUST SELL - nice white desk for<lb/>
studying. Almost brand new. BEST<lb/>
OFFER. CALL 931-8455.<lb/>
CLUB FOR WOMEN ONLY MEM-<lb/>
BERSHIP. Save 559 initiation fee<lb/>
ONLY 529 per month. UNLIMITED<lb/>
TAN 510additional. FULL FACILITY<lb/>
GYM! 321-6831.<lb/>
SOFA BED AND 2 CHAIRS - S100<lb/>
Ent.Ctr.S25. Computer desk whutch<lb/>
-550. Dining tablew4chairs-S50. Call<lb/>
752-9347andlv.msg.<lb/>
CRUISER BIKE - S50. Stealth radar<lb/>
detector - S50. Solcflex wleg ext and<lb/>
butterfly att. - S500. Tandy PC wcolor<lb/>
monitor and DWP-S300. Call 752-9347<lb/>
and lv. msg.<lb/>
1979 BMW 320i, runs good, only 88,500<lb/>
miles, AMFM cassette, 4 Pioneer<lb/>
speakers, rieeds some work, only<lb/>
51500.00. Call 355-7412<lb/>
FOR SALE: A nice sofa and armchair<lb/>
that are in very good condition Ask-<lb/>
ing S300 ? Call 321-3440 and leave a<lb/>
message.<lb/>
S10 - 5360UP WEEKLY Mailing bro-<lb/>
chures' Spa re full time. Set own hours!<lb/>
RUSH stamped envelope: Publishers<lb/>
(Cl) 1821 Hillandale Rd. 1B-295<lb/>
Durham, NC 27705<lb/>
200 - 5500 WEEKLY. Assemble prod-<lb/>
uctsathome. Easy! No selling. You're<lb/>
paid direct. Fully Guaranteed. Free<lb/>
Information-24 hour hotline. 801 -379<lb/>
- 2900. Copyright NC 030650.<lb/>
NURSERY WORKERS NEEDED at<lb/>
Jarvis Memorial United Methodist<lb/>
Church, 510 South Washington St on<lb/>
Sunday mornings from 9am until<lb/>
12:30pm. To work with toddlers<lb/>
through 3 year olds. Applicants must<lb/>
be punctual and dependable. Appli-<lb/>
cants also should have cheerful, friendly<lb/>
andcaringattitudesintheirinteraction<lb/>
with children and their parents. For<lb/>
application information contact the<lb/>
Church office 752-3101.<lb/>
TOPLESS DANCERS WANTED<lb/>
Great money, great club. Easy hrs<lb/>
Thurs Fri Sat. 9pm - 2am. Cash SSS<lb/>
Cash SSS Cash SSS Call Paul (919) 736-<lb/>
0716 Mothers Playhouse.<lb/>
ATTENTION STUDENTS: Earn ex-<lb/>
tracashstuffingenvelopesat home. All<lb/>
materials provided. Send SASE to Na-<lb/>
tional Distributors, PO Box 9643,<lb/>
Springfield, MO 65801. Immediate re-<lb/>
sponse.<lb/>
POSTAL JOBS AVAILABLE! Many<lb/>
positions. Great benefits. Call 1-800-<lb/>
436-4365 ext. P-3712.<lb/>
ALASKASUMMEREMPLOYMENT<lb/>
- fisheries Earn S600week in canner-<lb/>
iesor 54,000 month on fishing boats.<lb/>
Free Transportation! Room and Board!<lb/>
Over 8,000 openings. No experience<lb/>
necessary Male or Female. For em-<lb/>
ployment program call 1 -206-545-4155<lb/>
ext A5362.<lb/>
PERSONAL CARE ATTENDANT<lb/>
NEEDED: beginning end of Spring<lb/>
semester. Mornings and some week-<lb/>
ends, transportation required $5.00 per<lb/>
hour. Call 758-9098.<lb/>
NEEDED 100 people to lose weight<lb/>
now. New product recommended by<lb/>
doctors. 100 natural, 100 guaran-<lb/>
teed. Call 321-1046.<lb/>
INTERNATIONALEMPLOYMENT<lb/>
- Make money teaching basic conver-<lb/>
sational English abroad. Japan and<lb/>
Taiwan. Make 52,000 - S4,000 per<lb/>
month. Many provide room and board<lb/>
 other benefits! No previous training<lb/>
or teaching certificate required. For In-<lb/>
temationalEmploymentprogram,call<lb/>
the International EmplovmentGroup:<lb/>
(206) 632-1146 ext. J5362.<lb/>
BANQUETWAIT HELP FOR SUM-<lb/>
MER JOBS Apply Ramada Inn, 203<lb/>
W. Greenville Blvd Greenville, N.C.<lb/>
FULL-TIME<lb/>
POSITION<lb/>
Applicant must<lb/>
be able to work<lb/>
flexible hours.<lb/>
50 hours per week-$275<lb/>
weekly. After 90 days-$400<lb/>
weekly with half paid medical<lb/>
expenses. Apply in person<lb/>
between 2-4PM M-F<lb/>
1534 E. 14th St.<lb/>
Summer Positions<lb/>
Vector Marketing has openings for its<lb/>
summer work program. $9.25 starting<lb/>
rate No door to door or telemarketing<lb/>
involved. Build resume and communica<lb/>
tions skill. All majors may apply<lb/>
Scholarships awarded to top students.<lb/>
Raleigh 248-9630<lb/>
Durham: 549-6934<lb/>
Greensboro: 333-1519<lb/>
Charlotte: (704) 527-0073<lb/>
Hickory: (704) 323-4665<lb/>
Fayetteville: 630-4000<lb/>
Knoxville: (615) 691-3214<lb/>
Greenville, SC: (803) 235-0009<lb/>
WORD PROCESSING AND PHO-<lb/>
TOCOPYING SERVICES We offer<lb/>
typingandphotocopvingservices. We<lb/>
also sell software and computer dis-<lb/>
kettes. 24 hours in and out. Guaranteed<lb/>
typing on paper up to 20 hand written<lb/>
pages. SDF Professional Computer Ser-<lb/>
vices, 106 East 5th Street (beside<lb/>
Cubbie's) Greenville, NC 752-3694.<lb/>
HEADING FOR EUROPE this sum-<lb/>
mer7 Only S169H Jet there anytime for<lb/>
only S169with AIRH1TCH! (Reported<lb/>
in Let's Co! &amp; NY Times.) AIRH1TCH<lb/>
6212-864-2000.<lb/>
MINISTORAGE-148Brandnewstor-<lb/>
ageunits, vervclose to university, cheap<lb/>
rates, EVANS STREET CENTRE <lb/>
MINI STORAGE 355-7443.<lb/>
HANG GLIDE AT NAGS HEAD,<lb/>
NORTH CAROLINA! Fora weekend<lb/>
or a week of adventure and fun! Kitty<lb/>
Ha wkKites'beginner hanggliding les-<lb/>
son S49 per person (show college ID).<lb/>
1-800-334-4777. Sun Realty's modern<lb/>
beach cottages 5250 per weekend or<lb/>
S350 per week (plus applicable taxes,<lb/>
fees and security deposit) 1-800-334-<lb/>
4745. Offer good through early May<lb/>
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Dorm Refrigerators<lb/>
Microwaves<lb/>
Stereo Equipment<lb/>
II you .? sHIini) yr.u must be 18<lb/>
wrth a pcture ID CNCDL. ECU)<lb/>
EVANS STREET MALL<lb/>
7523866<lb/>
Mon 10-12 1-5<lb/>
Tues-Fri 10-12 1-3 Sat 10-12<lb/>
KEYS LOST! If you found a setof keys<lb/>
(5-7keyson a plain key ring) in Biology<lb/>
Dept. of Howell Complex, or possibly<lb/>
in the large commuter parking lot on<lb/>
april 19,1993, please call 752-9939.<lb/>
LA TOY A: Good luck with your step<lb/>
shows this weekend! Have fun! Your<lb/>
roomie, Lisa Marie.<lb/>
HEY, KEITH! The photo shoots were<lb/>
fun and I'm glad we became better<lb/>
friends So when are we going to the<lb/>
Waffle Houseagain?!YourBuddy, Lisa<lb/>
Marie<lb/>
EVERYONE Stopby theREA1 Crisis<lb/>
Center's stand for food and drinks! We<lb/>
hope to see you a t Barefoot on the MaII<lb/>
on Thursday.<lb/>
Page 5<lb/>
IQP<lb/>
mm<lb/>
HAPPY LATE 23RD BIRTHDAY<lb/>
ROBIN -NO MIDDLE NAME-GRIF-<lb/>
FIN! We hope it was wonderful! This is<lb/>
your final present, so enjoy it! - Your<lb/>
roommates.<lb/>
PI KAPPA ALPHA: Thanks for all the<lb/>
support at the 1 st Annual Pikefest last<lb/>
Saturday.PIKES<lb/>
PIKES: Let's get fired up for Spring<lb/>
Formal 1993 in Charleston, South Caro-<lb/>
lina PIKES<lb/>
CONGRATULATIONSTO ALLTHE<lb/>
NEW INITIATES OF ZETA TAU<lb/>
ALPHA: Ashley Good, Amanda Inscoe,<lb/>
Kimberlee Edgerton, Leslie Chandler,<lb/>
Jennifer Reed, Amy Hargraves, Suzi<lb/>
Nesbitt, Amv Willoughby, Jennifer<lb/>
Coxe, Christi Athas, Shana Rishel, Amy<lb/>
Barber,CourtneyHinson,SusanStroup<lb/>
- We love you all! The Sisters.<lb/>
ALL CAMPUS: Everyone come out<lb/>
and get a pie from an Alpha Phi, no lie.<lb/>
Get psyched to throw it at a cop, cause<lb/>
you m ight not stop! See you at Barefoot<lb/>
on the Mall - Pie Throwing Contest.<lb/>
TO THE BETA SIGMAS OF ALPHA<lb/>
OMICRON PI - Get ready for Satur-<lb/>
day. It will be a day you will never<lb/>
forget<lb/>
ALPHA OMICRON PI would like to<lb/>
rongratulate ?he Softball team ona great<lb/>
season. We'll get 'em next year<lb/>
ALPHA OMICRON PI would like to<lb/>
congratulate Bonnie Hiser on her ac-<lb/>
ceptance into the Physical Therapy Pro-<lb/>
gram<lb/>
ALPHA OMICRON PI congratulates<lb/>
TamiJohnsononherSAMaward! Great<lb/>
jobTami.<lb/>
GREEKS - hope to see you all Saturday<lb/>
- April 24th at 9:00am for the "Ronald<lb/>
Run" for the Ronald McDonald House!<lb/>
It starts at Town Commons Park. For<lb/>
info and applications call 830-6849! -<lb/>
Sponsored by Pi Delta.<lb/>
PI DELTA -Get psyched girls! Satur-<lb/>
day will be a long day - but guess<lb/>
what! Semi is on its way! You can get<lb/>
your dates ready at last - For once<lb/>
again we'll have a BLAST!<lb/>
THE COCKTAIL WAS GREAT<lb/>
Thanks to all of our dates for an awe-<lb/>
some evening! Love, The sisters of<lb/>
ALPHA DELTA PI!<lb/>
CONGRATULATIONS to the new<lb/>
officers of Sigma Nu for the '9394<lb/>
academic year. Co-Rush Chairmen -<lb/>
Jeremy Bolich and Cory Estes; Pledge<lb/>
Marshall - Mike Collini; Chaplain -<lb/>
Mac McDowell; Social Chairman -<lb/>
Brian Murphy; Assistant Social Chair-<lb/>
man - Steve Mann; Co-Athletic Direc-<lb/>
tors -Jason Linder and Mike Murphy;<lb/>
Assistant Treasurer-Jon Tart; Histo-<lb/>
rian - Bryan Thomas; Scholarship<lb/>
Chairman - Chris Paith; Reporter -<lb/>
Jeremy Shirtz; Sentinel - Read<lb/>
Williamson; Philanthropy - Doni<lb/>
Peterson.<lb/>
HEY DZ'S AND THEIR DATES -<lb/>
Saturday night in Kinston was quitea<lb/>
bash. Candeeand that palm tree made<lb/>
quite a crash. Cassie showed up a few<lb/>
hours late and hey Denise, who was<lb/>
your date? All the a wards were taken<lb/>
in fun as N iki go t that lava Her she had<lb/>
worked so hard to earn. Noland and<lb/>
Encka were quite the pair, the way<lb/>
they were dancing made EVERYONE<lb/>
stare! Becca winning Dream Girl was<lb/>
a wonderful surprise and Nancy who<lb/>
was that guy beside you when you<lb/>
opened your eyes? Douglas and<lb/>
Christi went for a Midnight Snack<lb/>
and had one hell of an elevator ride<lb/>
back! Thanks to the Kinston Police<lb/>
for letting Shane and Jen off with a<lb/>
"little" fine so they could return and<lb/>
have a good time. For those of you<lb/>
who don't believe, Shannon got it all<lb/>
on videotape for everyone to see!<lb/>
BUY IT, SELL IT, OR SAY IT<lb/>
in The East Carolinian Classifieds<lb/>
CALL 757-6366<lb/>
SUMMER CAMPSTAFF: Counselors, Instructors,<lb/>
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good physical shape, love the outdoors and have<lb/>
reliable transportation. Salary plus milage. Excel-<lb/>
lent opportunity for college students and teachers<lb/>
looking for summer work.<lb/>
Send resume to: MCSI, PO Box 179, Grifton, NC 28530<lb/>
or FAX to 919-524-3215.<lb/>
Announcements<lb/>
ECU PIRATE BASFBAI.I ON<lb/>
worn<lb/>
91.3 WZMB-FM will broad-<lb/>
cast ECU Pirate Baseball on Saturday,<lb/>
April 24 as the Pirates face conference<lb/>
opponent George Mason in the first<lb/>
game of a key three-game weekend<lb/>
series. Game time is 2pm.<lb/>
CARF.GIVERS<lb/>
CaregiversofPittCounty,an<lb/>
organization of volunteers providing<lb/>
help to older adults, announces a Vol-<lb/>
unteer Training session on Saturday,<lb/>
April 24, 1993 from 9am to 1pm at<lb/>
Hooker Memorial Christian Church<lb/>
Trained volunteers are matched to an<lb/>
older "carefriend" and asked to give<lb/>
1-3 hours a week including compan-<lb/>
ionship, transportation, shopping and<lb/>
errand, or relief for family members<lb/>
Makea difference in somone's life, call<lb/>
752-2398 for more information<lb/>
PERFORMING ARTS SFRIFS<lb/>
The King's Singers .ire a six-<lb/>
member internationally known vocal<lb/>
group which will be performing on<lb/>
Monday, April 26, 1993 at 8:00pm<lb/>
They have performed everything from<lb/>
Renaissance to Rock fornearly twenty-<lb/>
five years.<lb/>
GOLDEN KEY NATIONAL<lb/>
HONOR SOCIETY<lb/>
Golden Key National Honor<lb/>
Societv wil I meet everv 3rd Wednesda v<lb/>
of each month, 3:00 pm, GC Rm 3(X)6<lb/>
Meetings will continue throughout the<lb/>
summer. Members - attendance and<lb/>
participation will be officially recog-<lb/>
nized<lb/>
REGISTER YOUR<lb/>
ORGANIZATION BF.FORF YOU<lb/>
LEAVEFOR SUMMER!<lb/>
Registration is required for<lb/>
organizations touse university facilities<lb/>
and to be eligible to receive funding<lb/>
from Student Government A ssoriation.<lb/>
rurnwre information, contact Ms hckie<lb/>
Jackson or Ms Lisa Shihlev, 757-4796<lb/>
ATTENTION PHYSICAL<lb/>
EDUCATION MAIORS<lb/>
The Physical Education Mo-<lb/>
tor and Physical Fitness Competency<lb/>
Test is scheduled as follows: Minges<lb/>
Coliseum, 10:00am, Wednesday, April<lb/>
28,1993. A passing score on this test is<lb/>
required of all students pnor to declar-<lb/>
ing physical education as a major. 1)<lb/>
Mi inta in an a verage T-score of 45 on the<lb/>
six-item test batterv. 2) Having a T-score<lb/>
of 45 on the aerobics run Any student<lb/>
with a medical condition that would<lb/>
contraindicate participation in the test-<lb/>
ingshouldcontactMikeMcCammonor<lb/>
Dr. Gay Israel at 757-4688. To be ex-<lb/>
empted from any portionof the test, you<lb/>
must have a physician's excuse. A de-<lb/>
tailed summary of the test components<lb/>
is available inRoom 371, Sports Medi-<lb/>
cine Building. Your physician's excuse<lb/>
mustspecificallvstatefromwhichitems<lb/>
vou are exempt SIGN UP FOR THE<lb/>
TESTATMINGESCOLISEUM.ROOM<lb/>
177, PRIOR TO At?RI L 28TH. BRING A<lb/>
PICTURE ID.<lb/>
  <lb/>
<pb facs="00058404_0006"/><lb/>
ThursdayOpinion<lb/>
Volunteers help community<lb/>
Students assist local agencies<lb/>
by giving their time and effort<lb/>
for good causes<lb/>
Education ? it's not just for breakfast any-<lb/>
more.<lb/>
Education is not something that is limited to<lb/>
a book or a classroom. A person receives educa-<lb/>
tion his or her entire life ? from friends, co-<lb/>
workers, even from teachers. What is now being<lb/>
discovered, and has been overlooked in the past,<lb/>
is a new form of education that exposes people to<lb/>
new and different perspectives ? volunteering.<lb/>
Volunteering can range from something as<lb/>
simple as giving blood to something as involved<lb/>
as working with service clinics such as P1CASO.<lb/>
The one thing that stays constant, however, is the<lb/>
fact that the person not only helps others but also<lb/>
achieves a feeling of pride as well.<lb/>
ECU currently has a volunteer program that<lb/>
serves 42 separate agencies in the Pitt County<lb/>
area. These volunteers are valuable to the opera-<lb/>
tion of some of these agencies; the time and effort<lb/>
expended sometimes ensure that the agency stays<lb/>
open. This community involvement also helps to<lb/>
bridge any gap between the campus and the<lb/>
Greenville community.<lb/>
Some have referred to past ages as the "year<lb/>
of the woman" or the "me" generation. Maybe<lb/>
the '90s should be called the "volunteer" decade.<lb/>
By focusing on others rather than ourselves, our<lb/>
society can achieve a level previously thought to<lb/>
be unattainable.<lb/>
Recycling saves planet<lb/>
Pitt County and ECU program<lb/>
pave way for students to<lb/>
make ecological difference<lb/>
Aluminum, paper, plastic, cardboard and<lb/>
glass ?just to name a few.<lb/>
Ring a bell? Remind you of that last trip you<lb/>
made to the dumpster? Let's hope not, since the<lb/>
above items comprise the major parts of what<lb/>
people should recycle.<lb/>
Pitt County recently won the 1992 Outstand-<lb/>
ing Recycling Program award from the North Caro-<lb/>
lina Recycling Association. Based on the program's<lb/>
extent and the diversity of goods the program<lb/>
takes in ? ranging from appliances to lead acid<lb/>
batteries to shoes ? the award honors Pitt County<lb/>
for saving valuable landfill space, which currently<lb/>
has one year left unless other options are explored.<lb/>
In a smaller perspective, ECU also makes<lb/>
inroads into this all-important topic in today's<lb/>
society. Currently, the university has a pickup<lb/>
program w hert students can bring their recyclables<lb/>
and drop them off in separate bins. This program<lb/>
has three different sites on campus for disposal.<lb/>
The time it takes to set aside a recyclable item<lb/>
is negligible when compared to the impact it makes<lb/>
globally. By taking a few more moments to care<lb/>
about the place you live in, a person can prolong<lb/>
that life and make it just a little better.<lb/>
Separate your items before you recycle. Know<lb/>
what is and is not recyclable, too. Take the time to<lb/>
show that you care about where you live and its<lb/>
condition.<lb/>
? The East Carolinian ?<lb/>
Opinion<lb/>
Page 6<lb/>
By Gregory Dickens<lb/>
The East Carolinian<lb/>
Lindsay Fernandez General Manager<lb/>
Blair Skinner, Managing Editor<lb/>
Matthew A. Hege, Advertising Director<lb/>
Elizabeth Shimmel, News Editor<lb/>
Karen Hassel). Asst. News Editor<lb/>
Dana Danielson, Lifestyle Editor<lb/>
John BuUard, Ass: Lifestyle Editor<lb/>
Joe Horst, Opinion Page Editor<lb/>
Robert Todd, Sports Editor<lb/>
Warren Sumner, Asst. Sports Editor<lb/>
Sean Herring, Copy Editor<lb/>
Gregory Dickens, Copy Editor<lb/>
Michael Albuquerque, Business Manager<lb/>
Jody Jones, Circulation Manager<lb/>
Cori Daniels, Ixryout Manager<lb/>
Monique Campbell, Asst. Layout 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 even Tuesday and<lb/>
Thursday. The masthead edilorial in pach 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 Carolinum reserves the right to edit or reject letter for<lb/>
publication. Letters should bt addressed to The Editor, The Eiist Carolinion.<lb/>
Publications Bldg. ECU, Greenville, N.C 27858-435?. For more informa-<lb/>
tion, call (919) 757-6366.<lb/>
Printed on<lb/>
w<lb/>
100 recycled<lb/>
paper<lb/>
FBI handling of Waco situation warranted<lb/>
We all can agree that the con-<lb/>
clusion to the stand-off in Waco<lb/>
ended in a manner no one would<lb/>
hope for. Eighty-six people are pre-<lb/>
sumed dead at the time of this writ-<lb/>
ing, killed by oneof the most horrific<lb/>
means of death: cremation. Appar-<lb/>
ently several fires were set inside the<lb/>
compound by David Koresh's fol-<lb/>
lowers in a ceremony honoring his<lb/>
threats to employ fire if the FBI at-<lb/>
tacked.<lb/>
Such an act, be it for faith or<lb/>
desperation, puzzles those outside<lb/>
the situation. There are many ques-<lb/>
tions that we, the observers, wish<lb/>
answers to. Why did they follow<lb/>
him? Why would they restrict them-<lb/>
selves to thediscipline of such a man,<lb/>
someone who would sleep with the<lb/>
v ives of his followers while dictat-<lb/>
ing the men be celibate? Why were<lb/>
they convinced the end of the world<lb/>
was approaching? So many ques-<lb/>
tions remain about these Branch<lb/>
Davidians, who are now all gone.<lb/>
Dead at their own hands.<lb/>
This lack of understanding is<lb/>
compounded with the doubts and<lb/>
second-guessing of the FBI's deci-<lb/>
sion to move in now being hurled at<lb/>
Attorney General Janet Reno. Not<lb/>
only are the complaints and accusa-<lb/>
tions coming from the cult mem-<lb/>
bers' families, but the FBI is under<lb/>
fire from noted psychologists and,<lb/>
amazingly, Congress as well.<lb/>
Jerry Mungadze, a cult expert<lb/>
whoworked with the FBI in negotia-<lb/>
tions, claimed the use of intrusion<lb/>
and tear gas was  the worst thing<lb/>
you cou Id do The med ia constantly<lb/>
asked if President Clinton was more<lb/>
responsible then Reno claimed or if<lb/>
the outcome should have been fore-<lb/>
seen . Senator Arlen Specter (R-Pa.) is<lb/>
requesting a Senate Judiciary hear-<lb/>
ing concerning the FBI's actions<lb/>
throughout the 51-day ordeal.<lb/>
This is wrong.<lb/>
The Bureau of Alcohol, To-<lb/>
bacco and Firearms was dispatched<lb/>
to Waco, acting on charges that the<lb/>
cult was modifying semi-automatic<lb/>
weapons to fire automatically (not<lb/>
because they had a large amount of<lb/>
weapons; the NRA would've gone<lb/>
ballistic) and that Koresh was abus-<lb/>
ing the children in the compound.<lb/>
Koresh still has outstanding war-<lb/>
rants against him in California on<lb/>
similar grounds. For whatever rea-<lb/>
son, federal bunglingora tip-off, the<lb/>
raid becamea mess with four federal<lb/>
agents dead and 15 others injured.<lb/>
The stand-off lasted so long<lb/>
because the FBI hoped to negotiate<lb/>
Koresh's surrender so as not to risk<lb/>
harm to the children inside. This<lb/>
lasted 51 days, longer than the Per-<lb/>
sian Gulf War. The FBI finally de-<lb/>
cided enough was enough, warned<lb/>
Koresh they were coming in and<lb/>
proceeded to do so. This is a large<lb/>
complaint of those whoquestion the<lb/>
FBI and ask, why then? Why not<lb/>
longer?<lb/>
The tone of the questions sug-<lb/>
gest that Koresh was a citizen who<lb/>
had every right toexpectto be treated<lb/>
in a civil manner bv his accusers. He<lb/>
was in fact a criminal who, had he<lb/>
survived,wouldnodoubtfacemul-<lb/>
tiple charges for his actions. The<lb/>
FBI had no obligation to wait as<lb/>
long as they did and had incentive<lb/>
to be even more violent in the face<lb/>
of such a heavily-armed faction.<lb/>
The FBI can in no way be<lb/>
held accountable for the mass sui-<lb/>
cidein Waco. Facing arrest,the cult<lb/>
had three options: fight, run or kill<lb/>
themselves. Their choice must be<lb/>
seen as theirs and theirs alone. The<lb/>
tear-gasdid not fuel thefireand the<lb/>
agents met with resistance from<lb/>
those who could've been rescued.<lb/>
The cult members acted on their<lb/>
own,and in the process, killed their<lb/>
own children.<lb/>
Koresh, had he honestly<lb/>
cared for the well-being of his fol-<lb/>
lowers, should have surrendered.<lb/>
Instead, he alone is to be held re-<lb/>
sponsible for the deaths of his cult<lb/>
members and the pangs of hurt<lb/>
and doubt being directed at the<lb/>
FBI.<lb/>
THIS IS<lb/>
? Mrbflh devefopn in BsviV<lb/>
?Kt rcwtAms or c"iwrKS W?4<lb/>
?be- Settrte cUlxrte<lb/>
?CObrucVcY totskap v<lb/>
. TW DMm HaI)<lb/>
Ma yes -to ke<lb/>
Kansas G-u CUicfi<lb/>
?Tke T&amp;fcidrt Show vJh<lb/>
LeftarMM juts ?CG5<lb/>
1<lb/>
d<lb/>
QuoteoftheDay:<lb/>
As life is action and passion, it is required of man<lb/>
that he should share the passion and action of his<lb/>
time, at peril of being judged not to have lived.<lb/>
Oliver Wendell Holmes, Jr.<lb/>
Letters to the Editor<lb/>
Bible-thumping omits human need for caring<lb/>
To the Editor:<lb/>
I am writing in response<lb/>
to Keith Webb's recent letter<lb/>
which was in turn written in<lb/>
response to Jim Senyszyn's let-<lb/>
ter.<lb/>
I've noticed there seems<lb/>
to be a lot of Bible to Bible com-<lb/>
bat going on lately. As far as I<lb/>
know, no one has the answers<lb/>
in the back of the book, so how<lb/>
is everyone so exactly right? I<lb/>
read Romans 1:23, and I sure<lb/>
didn't get the same interpreta-<lb/>
tion that Webb did and that is<lb/>
exactly my point. The Bible is a<lb/>
book. Albeit the word of God, it<lb/>
still had to be handed down to<lb/>
a man to be put on paper.<lb/>
Wehaveall seen firsthand<lb/>
through TheEast Carolinian just<lb/>
how much of a difference a<lb/>
single translation between two<lb/>
men can be. Much less hun-<lb/>
dreds of translations between<lb/>
hundredsofmen,culturesand<lb/>
languages.<lb/>
Every priest, psalmist and<lb/>
scribe using their favorite edi-<lb/>
tion and adding their own per-<lb/>
sonal twist to the scri ptures over<lb/>
literally thousands of years has<lb/>
had to have had more than a<lb/>
little impact on God's original<lb/>
intent. But I'm not here to ar-<lb/>
gue individual scripture.<lb/>
No matter which side of<lb/>
the Bible you 're thumping (and<lb/>
some of us aren't thumping<lb/>
Bibles at all, but maybe Korans<lb/>
or Buddhas or trees or what-<lb/>
ever) we all seem to be missing<lb/>
the point.<lb/>
Love. Love a little more<lb/>
people! Wehaveenough todeal<lb/>
with in life without always be-<lb/>
ing ready to serve an all-you-<lb/>
can-eat buffet of it to our un-<lb/>
suspecting or nghtfully suspi-<lb/>
cious neighbors. Besides, no<lb/>
matter what a person's gender,<lb/>
race, creed, sexual orientation or<lb/>
religion is, I haven't met a per-<lb/>
son yet who didn't want to be<lb/>
happy and loved on at least one<lb/>
level. A little acceptance goes a<lb/>
long way and a lot of acceptance<lb/>
goes even further.<lb/>
If you want to be "right<lb/>
then fine, be "right but I don't<lb/>
see heaven being any sweeter<lb/>
because someone is roasting in<lb/>
helland IknowtheBibledoesn't<lb/>
say that anyone other than God<lb/>
has the right to make group res-<lb/>
ervations. Yes, my glasses may<lb/>
be rose-tinted, but the prescrip-<lb/>
tion is fine; I simply believe that<lb/>
everyone has a right to be here.<lb/>
Tracy Stanley<lb/>
Senior<lb/>
English<lb/>
Issue of gays and Bible should focus on response<lb/>
To the Editor:<lb/>
In response to Jim<lb/>
Senyszyn's claim that neither<lb/>
Leviticus 18:22 nor<lb/>
Deuteronomy 23.18 make ref-<lb/>
erence to homosexuality,<lb/>
Leviticus 18:22 does.<lb/>
The verse is part of a<lb/>
chapter devoted to the prohi-<lb/>
bition of various sexual prac-<lb/>
tices, including but not lim-<lb/>
ited to incest, adultery, homo-<lb/>
sexuality and bestiality.<lb/>
The particular command of<lb/>
verse 22 is to "not lie with a<lb/>
male as one lies with a female<lb/>
The word "lie"isa trans-<lb/>
lation of the Hebrew word<lb/>
shakab, meaning to lie down,<lb/>
as upon a bed. The Old Testa-<lb/>
ment uses its n ot form 52 times<lb/>
to refer to the act of sexual<lb/>
intercourse. Note David, who<lb/>
"went in to Bathsheba and<lb/>
lay with her; and shegave birth<lb/>
to a son" (2 Samuel 12:24), and<lb/>
the wife of Potiphar, who de-<lb/>
sired Joseph and insistently<lb/>
cried, "Lie with me (Gen.<lb/>
39:12).<lb/>
The context of Leviticus<lb/>
18:22 and the Old Testament<lb/>
usage of shakab in reference to<lb/>
the act of intercourse make it<lb/>
clear that the verse refers to<lb/>
sexual intercourse or activity.<lb/>
The only question remaining<lb/>
is, does the verse prohibit the<lb/>
male from homosexuality, or<lb/>
the female from heterosexual-<lb/>
ity? The second option seems<lb/>
unlikely.<lb/>
Deuteronomv 23:17, 18<lb/>
also refer to homosexual itv, al-<lb/>
beit indirectly. Senyszyn's ref-<lb/>
erenced author, Dr. Ide, is cor-<lb/>
rect that the context of 23:18 is<lb/>
the barring of qadesh, temple<lb/>
prostitutes, but he disregards<lb/>
the habit of the male prostitutes:<lb/>
the practice of homosexuality.<lb/>
The mention of maleculticpros-<lb/>
titution brings the issue of ho-<lb/>
mosexuality into this passage.<lb/>
I would be happy to an-<lb/>
swer the rest of Senyszyn'scom-<lb/>
ments in detail. Since theEible's<lb/>
stance on homosexuality is<lb/>
clear, the important question is<lb/>
not "What does the Bible say?"<lb/>
but rather, "What is my re-<lb/>
sponse?" God says to straight<lb/>
and gay alike, "Come, let us<lb/>
reason together " (Isaiah 1:18)<lb/>
Jeff Gross<lb/>
Non-student<lb/>
Riding the Mobius<lb/>
By Jason Tremblay<lb/>
Book buyback<lb/>
policy deemed<lb/>
rape of students<lb/>
If you happened to read last week's<lb/>
installment of RtM, you may recall that I was<lb/>
discussing the philosophical aspects of educa-<lb/>
tion. Well, never one to cut a topic loose before<lb/>
its time is done, I feel the need to express my<lb/>
views on the monetary aspects of "higher<lb/>
learning<lb/>
They suck. The aspects, I mean. Perhaps<lb/>
the people that cause these aspects as well,<lb/>
beca use tha t's another way to make a fast buck,<lb/>
although slightly less acceptable.<lb/>
I'd like to share the reason why I'm<lb/>
about to launch into the following tirade. Re-<lb/>
cently, while thumbing through a used book I<lb/>
purchased from a certain bookstore down- -<lb/>
town, lea me upon theprice sticker in thefront.<lb/>
Curious as to what the original price of the<lb/>
book was, I peeled back a few of the "used"<lb/>
pricetags underneath. I paid $2250 for this<lb/>
book; being the last used one available, it was<lb/>
in such poor shape that 1 will likely not be able<lb/>
to sell it back. Imagine my shock seeing the<lb/>
pricetagfrom several semestersagoread $1650.<lb/>
Now, being an English major with little<lb/>
skill in mathematics fail tooomprehend many<lb/>
mathematical concepts and I accept that ?<lb/>
that's what accountants an? for. Still, I was<lb/>
always under the impression thatasa product<lb/>
falls in quality, particularly if that product fits<lb/>
into the category of "used the price of that<lb/>
product should fall at some comparable rate.<lb/>
"Not so the bookstore seems to say.<lb/>
"We can sell substandard books to ya for<lb/>
jacked up prices, but you can't sell 'em back to<lb/>
us. Period<lb/>
They can be nasty about buying their<lb/>
own wares back, too. Last semester I bought a<lb/>
used textbook in poor cond ition from the pre-<lb/>
viously mentioned store and took excellent<lb/>
careofit,keepingitinthesameconditionfrom<lb/>
when I bought it. So I wait a half-hour in line<lb/>
during buyback, reach the front of the lineand<lb/>
the woman behind the counter tells me that<lb/>
they won't buy it back because it has a few-<lb/>
pages loose. All were present, but a few were<lb/>
loose. Socan you guess what I d idYup, I went<lb/>
to the back of a different line, ripped out the<lb/>
loose pages, wadded 'em upand sold the book<lb/>
back not five feet from where I had been.<lb/>
The difference between the bookstore<lb/>
and me is the fact that I felt guilty about<lb/>
depriving whoever bought the book after me<lb/>
of those pages. The bookstore couldn't care<lb/>
less about education, they just want to see<lb/>
thosepresidentsstacked in their cash registers.<lb/>
This, ladies and gentlemen, is a good<lb/>
example of "screwing the consumer Why?<lb/>
Because they can, and will continue to do so<lb/>
because it's profitable.<lb/>
Every time I go to resell my books, and<lb/>
even when I buy my books, 1 feel monetarily<lb/>
raped. Yes, raped. Doesn't it feel like we're<lb/>
being taken advantage of? Doesn't this piss<lb/>
anyone else off? I understand that this is some-<lb/>
one else's livelihood, but it could at least be<lb/>
done with some degree of fairness, no?<lb/>
It could be that I'm overreacting, and<lb/>
you, dear reader, may think so too, but I think<lb/>
we'll both react the same way v hi "i we get15<lb/>
for a book we paid $45 for, then watch help-<lb/>
lessly as they turn around and sell it to some<lb/>
other shmuck for $40, regardless of its condi-<lb/>
tion.<lb/>
What can we do? I don't think there's<lb/>
any escape, lt'sgreed, and it's very frustrating.<lb/>
That doesn't mean we have to like it.<lb/>
Now Stop t ead ing, think about it, go get<lb/>
a pizza, and watch some cartoons<lb/>
?? -<lb/>
BggglpBgsg ? i ?"<lb/>
MMHMHMBHM<lb/>
<pb facs="00058404_0007"/><lb/>
The East Carolinian<lb/>
Lifestyle<lb/>
Page 7<lb/>
Bard's tale to conclude theater season<lb/>
St.it! Writer<lb/>
Violence, passion and intrigue.<lb/>
AIIof these, and more, will evpkxte m<lb/>
staged mightwith EastCarolina Playhouse's<lb/>
dosing mainstage of the 1992-43 season,<lb/>
VVilliamShakespeareV'Romeoand Juliet<lb/>
Performances begin at 8 p.m. on April<lb/>
22-24 and April 2h-27. A special matinee<lb/>
performance will start at 2 p.m. on the<lb/>
aftermxm of April 25. Two special high<lb/>
school matinees will be held at noon on<lb/>
April 23 and 26.<lb/>
Can Faircloth, Playhouse general<lb/>
manager, said that high school matinees<lb/>
have traditionally been held to give the<lb/>
students an opportunity to experience the<lb/>
theater. Previous performances of "Ham-<lb/>
let "Our Town" and 'TheCmcible"lvve<lb/>
also hosted sold-out performances to high<lb/>
school students.<lb/>
"We chose Romeo and Juliet' be-<lb/>
cause they teach it in the school system<lb/>
here Faircloth said. "We always try to<lb/>
offer onematineeforhighschoolstudents<lb/>
As many know, "Romeoand Juliet" is<lb/>
the quintessential story of tragic romance.<lb/>
Virtually synonymous with any definition<lb/>
of love, "Romeo and Juliet" has survived<lb/>
for its 400th anniversary (first produced in<lb/>
1593) and transcends its original bound-<lb/>
aries to become one of the Bard's greatest<lb/>
works.<lb/>
Though many have termed the story<lb/>
to be one of "two star-crossed lovers<lb/>
"Romeoand Juliet" goes beyond thissimple<lb/>
definition and includes stories of intrigue<lb/>
and passion beyond the two lead charac-<lb/>
ters. Subplots unfold continuously, inun-<lb/>
dating the theater-goer with action as he or<lb/>
she watches the saga of the Montague and<lb/>
Capuletfeud.<lb/>
Though "Romeo and Juliet" focuses<lb/>
on many different themes, they all revolve<lb/>
around the love and romance of Romeo<lb/>
and Juliet. Any person who has been told<lb/>
thattheyaretooyoungtofeelwhattheyare<lb/>
Alecia<lb/>
Hillis and<lb/>
Kirk<lb/>
Wilson<lb/>
rehearse<lb/>
for their<lb/>
leading<lb/>
roles in<lb/>
'Romeo<lb/>
and<lb/>
Juliet<lb/>
7<lb/>
Bike irex to<lb/>
raise funds<lb/>
this weekend<lb/>
By Gregory Dickens<lb/>
feeling will sympathize with the two char-<lb/>
acters as the audience watches their love<lb/>
transcend even the grave.<lb/>
Ali Hillis, whoplaysJuliet,saidthather<lb/>
characterismulti-dimensional, flesh ingout<lb/>
whatsomemayconsidera very simple role.<lb/>
"0 u liet has so many d intensions to her,<lb/>
more so than most people would think<lb/>
Hillis said. "She's got the youngness, she's<lb/>
very spunky, she's vulnerable<lb/>
Though Hillis sees her characterasvul-<lb/>
nerable, she said that this feature is soon<lb/>
overwhelmed by the factors that force Juliet<lb/>
to grow up.<lb/>
"She's vulnerable at first, and then she<lb/>
has to grow up very quickly Hillis said.<lb/>
"By her circumstances, she's forced to ma-<lb/>
ture very quickly<lb/>
Kirk Wilson, whoplays Romeo,echoes<lb/>
Hillis'sen timentinthatRomeo'syouth plays<lb/>
an important part of his character. He said<lb/>
tha t Romeo is a person caught between two<lb/>
stages of growing up.<lb/>
"I see Romeo as a helpless romantic, a<lb/>
very passionate young man Wilson said.<lb/>
"He's at a stage between manhood and<lb/>
childhood, wimallofmoseoonflictmgemo-<lb/>
tions.<lb/>
This leads him to be a very virile, pas-<lb/>
siorwteperson.Themterestingthingis,after<lb/>
he meets Juliet, that 'puppy love' he has<lb/>
transcends to a love that he's willing to die<lb/>
for<lb/>
Ticketsfor"RomeoandJuliet"are$750<lb/>
Photo by<lb/>
Garrett Killian<lb/>
for general public and $450 for students<lb/>
with valid l.D. Individuals may purchase<lb/>
tickets in person at the McGinnis Theatre<lb/>
box office, Monday through Friday from 10<lb/>
a.m. to 4:15 p.m. and until 8:15 p.m. on<lb/>
performance nights; by Visa or MasterCard<lb/>
by phoning 757-6829; or by mail addressed<lb/>
to East Carolina Plavhouse, ECU, Green-<lb/>
ville, N.C. 27858-4353.<lb/>
Season tickets for East Carolina<lb/>
Playhouse's 1993-94 season go on sale Au-<lb/>
gust 23 for S40. The upcoming season will<lb/>
include Broadway great "Guys and Dolls<lb/>
'The Road to Mecca "The Servant of Two<lb/>
Masters Tony award-winning "Dancing<lb/>
at Lughnasa"and EastCarolina Dance The-<lb/>
atre.<lb/>
Staff Writer<lb/>
The American Lung Association<lb/>
Of North Carolina (ALANC) is now<lb/>
taking registrations for its 10th An-<lb/>
nual Coastal Carolina BikeTrek.The<lb/>
Bike Trek is conducted to both raise<lb/>
money for ALANC and raise con-<lb/>
sciousness of lung disease, which<lb/>
affects over 650,000 people in the<lb/>
state and is the third-leading cause<lb/>
of death in North Carolina.<lb/>
Money goes to varied projects<lb/>
including Camp Challenge for chil-<lb/>
dren withasthma,school health edu-<lb/>
cation programsand efforts to com-<lb/>
bat pollution.<lb/>
Two treks are scheduled this<lb/>
year; Trek I is April 23-25and Trek II<lb/>
is April 30-May 2. Touted as "the<lb/>
finestridealongthecoast'both treks<lb/>
begin and end in Kure Beach. The<lb/>
route runs through New Hanover<lb/>
and Brunswick Counties and passes<lb/>
by such attractions as Fort Fischer,<lb/>
Greenfield Lake Park and the Cape<lb/>
Fear River channel over a two-day<lb/>
period.<lb/>
Participants must raise a mini-<lb/>
mum of $250 in pledges or dona-<lb/>
tions and pay a $25 registration fee.<lb/>
Both fees entitle bikers to two nights<lb/>
hotel lodging food and opportuni-<lb/>
ties to win prizes according to how<lb/>
much each biker raises.<lb/>
Trekkers who raise $300 receive<lb/>
biking accessories while $500 earns<lb/>
a $50 gift certificate from Two<lb/>
Wheeler Dealer in Wilmington. A<lb/>
See TREK page 9<lb/>
Fitting chemistry, vocal harmony for EJS<lb/>
By Layton Croft<lb/>
Staff Writer<lb/>
On the inside sleeve of their<lb/>
second and recently-released LP,<lb/>
The Survivors Parade, The Ellen<lb/>
James Society writes:  . .and<lb/>
thanks to The Jody Grind for your<lb/>
constant inspiration, although<lb/>
we'll never be as nice a band as<lb/>
you are<lb/>
Perhaps true, but also EJS<lb/>
sadly comes nowhere close to be-<lb/>
ing as good a band as The Jody<lb/>
Grind, who's now defunct.<lb/>
To play O'Rockefellers Friday,<lb/>
April 23, The Ellen James Society<lb/>
? a gender-split quartet from At-<lb/>
lanta ? will bring their uninten-<lb/>
tionally minimalist scrag rock to<lb/>
Greenville to win new fans and<lb/>
jam the town violet. Tribal Lulla-<lb/>
bies opens the show.<lb/>
With a unique sound of iden-<lb/>
Photo courtesy Daemon Records<lb/>
Tire Ellen James Society<lb/>
tity crisis-ridden '80sovergrowns<lb/>
Scandal, The Fixx, The Alarm,<lb/>
Cher), EJS has persevered five<lb/>
years of band personnel changes<lb/>
and mega-extensive touring<lb/>
throughout the US. For all that<lb/>
jazz, credit is due.<lb/>
Also, the band has one of the<lb/>
coolest mottoes in rock: "girls,<lb/>
guitars and Guiness the latter<lb/>
component most crucial.<lb/>
Sadly, The Survivors Parade,<lb/>
EJS' follow-up to their 1990 debut<lb/>
Reluctantly We (both albums are<lb/>
onDecatur,GasDaemon Records,<lb/>
Amy Ray's (Indigo Girls) non-<lb/>
profit label which is also home to<lb/>
acoustic folkrock greats Kristen<lb/>
Hall and Gerard McHugh),carries<lb/>
a heavy load of mediocrity among<lb/>
its 10tunes,someof which, though,<lb/>
are quite good.<lb/>
"Squinting at the Sun "Say<lb/>
Goodbye" and "Falling" are lyri-<lb/>
cally rich compositions about<lb/>
women's struggles as humans<lb/>
snagged up in the human condi-<lb/>
tion, and with men-affected rela-<lb/>
See EJS page 9<lb/>
Ijp Bititi<lb/>
Thursday April 22<lb/>
The Attic:<lb/>
THUPurple Schoolbus<lb/>
FRI. -Blue Oyster Cult with<lb/>
Fall From Grace<lb/>
SATIndecision (Final Appearance)<lb/>
Corrigan's<lb/>
THUBruce Frye<lb/>
SAT King Bees<lb/>
<lb/>
(Band<lb/>
NIGHTCLUB<lb/>
Mug-Shots<lb/>
THUBus Stop with<lb/>
The Mosaics<lb/>
FRIBeaux Arts<lb/>
Ball<lb/>
SATRolly Grey<lb/>
&amp; Sunfire<lb/>
Today: Moles<lb/>
Answered by Jeanie<lb/>
Tomkalski<lb/>
Barefoot on the Mall kicks off at noon with bands, food, fun<lb/>
and games. The festivites are on the center mall area of campus.<lb/>
The recent need for Health Care reform will be discussed in<lb/>
a the program The Insiders and Governmental Perspective on<lb/>
Health Care Reform The program begins at 7 p.m. in the Brody<lb/>
Building and will feature Sen. George Daniel( D-Almanance) and<lb/>
Suite Rep. Karen Gottovi (D-New Hanover). Contact; Linda<lb/>
Bolin, School of Nursing, 551-4303.<lb/>
The fictional work by William Carios Williams and a 20th<lb/>
Century physician, -Old Doc Rivers will be dramatized by die<lb/>
Medical Students Readers Group. The show stains at 7:30 p.m.<lb/>
and will be at the Humber House in downtown Greenville. For<lb/>
more information call 551-2797<lb/>
The ECU Plavhouse opens its run of "Romeo and Juliet"<lb/>
at 8 p.m. in McGinnis Theatre. The play will be performed on<lb/>
campus through April 27. All of die performances are in the evening<lb/>
except on Sunday when the play begins at 2p.m. For ticket infor-<lb/>
mation call the Playhouse Ticket Office at 757-6829.<lb/>
Saturday April 24<lb/>
A doubleheader between ECU and George Mason begins at<lb/>
2 p.m. at Harrington Field.<lb/>
Sunday April 25<lb/>
ECU plays George Mason in a second day of baseball.<lb/>
Game time at Harrington Field is 2 p.m.<lb/>
A matinee performance of "Romeo and Juliet" begins at 2<lb/>
p.m. in McGinnis Theatre. For tickets call 757-6829.<lb/>
The ECU Wind Ensemble will perform at 3 p.m. in<lb/>
Wright Auditorium. The concert is free.<lb/>
Q: 1 have a number of moles on my<lb/>
body. How can I tell if they are cancer-<lb/>
ous?<lb/>
A: The only way to know for sure, is<lb/>
toseea physician. But, there are specific<lb/>
signs you can look for.<lb/>
Just about everyone has a number<lb/>
of small colored spots ? moles, freckles<lb/>
or birthmarks ? on their bodies. Some<lb/>
of these spots are present at birth, while<lb/>
others may develop during the first few<lb/>
decades of life. Once fully de-<lb/>
veloped, a mole normally re-<lb/>
mains the same size, shape and<lb/>
color.<lb/>
However, if a mole or spot<lb/>
on the skin begins to change, it<lb/>
may be an early sign of some<lb/>
type of skin cancer.<lb/>
In its earlystages skin can-<lb/>
cer may appear as just a discol-<lb/>
oration of theskin. Therefore, vou should<lb/>
not ignore any unusual or persistant<lb/>
skin condition. Pay particular attention<lb/>
to any of the following changes:<lb/>
? a skin growth that increases in size<lb/>
and appears pearly, translucent, tan,<lb/>
brown, black and multicolored;<lb/>
Student Health Services<lb/>
? a mole or<lb/>
borthmark that changes<lb/>
color, increases in size<lb/>
or thickness, changes in<lb/>
texture, or is irregular<lb/>
in outline;<lb/>
? a spot or growth<lb/>
that continues to itch,<lb/>
hurt, crust, scab, erode<lb/>
or bleed;<lb/>
? or an open sore or owund on the<lb/>
skin that does not heal or persists for<lb/>
mroethan four weeks, or heals and then<lb/>
reopens.<lb/>
Anyone can be affected by skin can-<lb/>
cer, butr it is prevalent among two<lb/>
groups; people with fair skin, light hair<lb/>
and eye color, and people of any skin<lb/>
type who allow themselves consider-<lb/>
able exposure to the sun. Skin cancer<lb/>
also tends to sun in families.<lb/>
Exposure to the sun has cumulative<lb/>
effects. Even though a suntan may dis-<lb/>
appear, the signs of skin cancer can show<lb/>
up years later. Repeated suntanningalso<lb/>
contributes to wrinklesand blotchy dis-<lb/>
coloration of the skin.<lb/>
You can still have fun in the sun. Just<lb/>
be especially careful to protect yourself<lb/>
from its effects.<lb/>
? Apply a liberal amount of high<lb/>
sun protection factor (15 plus offers the<lb/>
best protection)sunscreen at least 15-30<lb/>
minutes before going out into the sun.<lb/>
? Avoid direct exposure between 10<lb/>
- 2 p.m. when the sun's rays are stron-<lb/>
gest.<lb/>
? Avoid using indoor sun lamps or<lb/>
tanning beds.<lb/>
? Perform regular skin checks for<lb/>
any new growths amd for changes in old<lb/>
growths. <lb/>
If you notice any abnormal skin<lb/>
changes, please call the Student Health<lb/>
Service and schedule and appointment<lb/>
with a physician.<lb/>
If you haveany health-related ques-<lb/>
tions, please direct them to Jennifer<lb/>
Phillips, Student Health Services, ECU<lb/>
campus.<lb/>
Hi1, " ?<lb/>
!T-?-T?.?P-<lb/>
<pb facs="00058404_0008"/><lb/>
?1<lb/>
APRIL 22, 1993<lb/>
lard Cranium's Flying Circus<lb/>
. a anuntUTstandingot<lb/>
itbysayingrodc,we<lb/>
are not invoking "rockness No, we<lb/>
are inw king a human conception of<lb/>
nxkness.<lb/>
So consider this. We all have<lb/>
dittenjntrtTceprjoniMvunderstiixl-<lb/>
ing nt 'rode" may he different from<lb/>
yours, Kitweboth know whata rock<lb/>
js. lor this er'reason, transplants of<lb/>
the sensory organs will never be suc-<lb/>
cessful. If on sawarodc through my<lb/>
eyes, although we both understand<lb/>
lodcness, the differences in my sen-<lb/>
sory perceprionswouldcreateanalien<lb/>
presence in your sensory inputs; you<lb/>
. erload.<lb/>
transnd all<lb/>
? ? ? hing and<lb/>
Witha<lb/>
i - ? lisdain, we take<lb/>
one last look at our abandoned o<lb/>
laundi ourselves into the<lb/>
poBen-ladenair. As we flutter and flit,<lb/>
.1 robin, on her maiden flight, awk-<lb/>
wardly dashes down and snap you<lb/>
up into her beak and gulp ? you're<lb/>
dead.<lb/>
That's right 1 want to talk about<lb/>
spnng. Spring they say, is mat season<lb/>
when a young man's fancies turn to<lb/>
thoughtsdflove.Wellladeda.rvegot<lb/>
a love thing going on. So I definitely<lb/>
don't need pollen floating in my open<lb/>
windows and clogging up my stereo<lb/>
vents and a bunch of bees trying to<lb/>
gently place their stingers in my flesh<lb/>
when I reach under a bush to retrieve<lb/>
a frisbee that went soaring way over<lb/>
? ad. But I love the spring.<lb/>
1 he on !v tiling I don't I ike is that,<lb/>
ixio1 again, mv winter indulgences<lb/>
prevent me from squeezir?gmyfatass<lb/>
into mv cool spnng ensembles. Oh<lb/>
woe is me! So now, I'm sipping up<lb/>
egg vi 'Iks and bacon grease and grits<lb/>
and trench tries and hot dogs and<lb/>
bacon cheeseburgers with lard<lb/>
slathered on top of them and then<lb/>
breaded and fried. Then,I turn the TV<lb/>
ti i one of those fitness programs. I'm<lb/>
stirring to feel like a new man!<lb/>
But look around. All the trees are<lb/>
blooming and the birds are singing<lb/>
tl peoplearegoingtotanningKxiths<lb/>
and galsare wearing their short shorts<lb/>
and the guvs are sporting their tank<lb/>
tops and oh it's a beautiful thing. I'm<lb/>
gushing with spring emotion.<lb/>
I'm glad I don't have allergies.<lb/>
Spring reminds me of Vandora<lb/>
Springs Elemen ta ry School. Iremem-<lb/>
ber those pans of rolls, all brown on<lb/>
top,and how they'd beall hard if they<lb/>
sattcxilong.UmmmAndthatgravy<lb/>
and those mashed potatoes. I had a<lb/>
little girlfriend named Mandi Green.<lb/>
Her whole name, I still remember,<lb/>
was Amanda DorisGreen. Westayed<lb/>
at the same nursery after school,<lb/>
Ridoutt's. Yes I kissed her. Her and<lb/>
Lisa Grossman. Mandi did my math<lb/>
one afternoon while I roughhoused<lb/>
wi th the fellas, and this nutty kid fell<lb/>
off his chair and hit his head and it<lb/>
started bleedingCool! And you know<lb/>
what? Mandi did my homework all<lb/>
sloppy and stuff, not neat like hers, I<lb/>
loved her. Oh Mandi! Oh Spring!<lb/>
Spring is here. Spring is us. We<lb/>
are spring. We are nature. I love you.<lb/>
The End. p.s. If you don't like it,<lb/>
don't eat it, and don't run my life.<lb/>
Kingston<lb/>
Place<lb/>
Don't pass this upBIG Savings!<lb/>
SUMMER SPECIAL<lb/>
May 24 - August 4, 1993<lb/>
Parking, laundromats, bus service,<lb/>
:lubhouse, basketballtennis courts nearby,<lb/>
swimming pool &amp; large patio<lb/>
CALL 758-5393<lb/>
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AVOCADOS<lb/>
2 for $1<lb/>
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BROCCOLLI<lb/>
99bunch<lb/>
M-F 10-6:30pm<lb/>
SAT 8-6.30pm<lb/>
757-3311<lb/>
COOL DOWN &amp; RELAX!<lb/>
with an ice cold<lb/>
MARGARITA<lb/>
or enjoy these<lb/>
Drink Specials!<lb/>
Sunday Bloody Mary $2.25<lb/>
Monday Draft 950<lb/>
Tuesday Sangria $1.25<lb/>
Wednesday Mexican Imports $1.25<lb/>
Thursday Lime Margaritas $2.50<lb/>
Mondays<lb/>
12 Price Pitchers of Draft Beer<lb/>
Sunday- Wednesday<lb/>
12 Price Appetizers<lb/>
after 9:00 pm<lb/>
Maxlcan Bestauxaai<lb/>
2?<lb/>
521 Cotanche Street-757-1666<lb/>
Serving Vegetarian Caryy-out Meals. Sandwiches<lb/>
Salads and Assorted Goodies 11 30 ? 2 00. Mon Fn<lb/>
Hot and Thirsty?<lb/>
Tree of Life Unfiltered East Coast<lb/>
APPLE JUICE<lb/>
$4.25Gallon<lb/>
M<lb/>
BL.UE PLANETLjfeFoods<lb/>
If<lb/>
Organic Groceries &amp; Proc<lb/>
Bulk Foods Herbs<lb/>
3<lb/>
405 EVANS STREET MALL<lb/>
758-0850<lb/>
Hours 10-6,M-Sat<lb/>
&amp; Beauty Aid.1-<lb/>
v.<lb/>
EasLCarplina<lb/>
PlayhOUSe presents<lb/>
19924993<lb/>
oeason<lb/>
April 22, 23, 24, 26 and 27 at 8:00 p.m.<lb/>
April 25 at 2:00 p.m.<lb/>
Tickets: $4.50<lb/>
McGinnis Theatre<lb/>
Call - 757-6829<lb/>
Greenville 1 Athletic I Club<lb/>
The Place For Heart And Soul<lb/>
Steam &amp; Sauna<lb/>
Hot Tub<lb/>
Gymnasium<lb/>
Indoor Track<lb/>
Juice Bar<lb/>
Free Weights<lb/>
Cardiovascular Center<lb/>
Year-Round Swimming Pool<lb/>
Racquetball<lb/>
Pro Shop<lb/>
Nautilus<lb/>
Aerobic Exercise<lb/>
Nursery<lb/>
Call or visit us today!<lb/>
We've got a membership plan<lb/>
just for you!<lb/>
REGULAR HOURS<lb/>
Mon-Fri 6am- 10pm<lb/>
Sat &amp; Sun 8am-7pm<lb/>
STUDENT HOURS<lb/>
Mon-Fri 6am-4:30 pm<lb/>
Sat &amp; Sun 8am-2:30pm<lb/>
140 Oakmont Drive Greenville, NC 756-9175<lb/>
<pb facs="00058404_0009"/><lb/>
APRIL 22, 1993<lb/>
The East Carolinian<lb/>
9<lb/>
for an<lb/>
missi . sophomon<lb/>
EJS. The band Chris McGuire<lb/>
(lead vocals, guitar), Cooper Seay<lb/>
(bandfounder,guitar,vocals) Scotl<lb/>
Bland (drums) and Bryan Lilje<lb/>
(bass) ? enlist the studio assis-<lb/>
tance of producer George Fappas<lb/>
and guru augment musicians Bar-<lb/>
bara Marino on percussion, lane<lb/>
Scarpantoni (Tiny Lights, Lounge<lb/>
Lizards) on cello, and Yvonne Tol I<lb/>
an underde-<lb/>
- r?gv ? iting<lb/>
? sa dispar-<lb/>
ate tawdrii i<lb/>
rode that's n t d  a m thing,<lb/>
though heartily underlined with a<lb/>
capital E for effort.<lb/>
The critics, on the other hand<lb/>
from mine, tend to laud the band.<lb/>
College Music Journal (CM) writes:<lb/>
 EJS successfully incorporates<lb/>
abnormal, artsier arrangements<lb/>
and words, and blends them with<lb/>
the good parts o( sweaty rock and<lb/>
Continued from page 7<lb/>
roll. Lor a debut, Reluctantly We<lb/>
refreshes with tight playing and<lb/>
inspired lyrics'OpfioH magazine,<lb/>
reviewing live EJS, notes: "(Their)<lb/>
performance positively blew me<lb/>
away. CooperSeay,a LeeRenaldo<lb/>
(of Sonic Youth)-inspired guitar-<lb/>
ist, dug deep into her instrument,<lb/>
while Chris McGuire, the band's<lb/>
Tatti Smith-inspired singer, lyri-<lb/>
cally confronted some tough emo-<lb/>
tional issues. Meanwhile, the bass-<lb/>
ist and drummer provided a rock-<lb/>
solid rhythm foundation for the<lb/>
musical muscle of the two<lb/>
fronrwomen. "That's what thecrit-<lb/>
ics said. Go see for yourself at<lb/>
O'RocksFridavnight,and remem-<lb/>
ber, in this Society, women rule.<lb/>
TREK<lb/>
Continued from page 7<lb/>
collected total o( $1LXX) gamers a<lb/>
$100gift certificate, gloves, bikelight<lb/>
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The biker with the most pledges<lb/>
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HAVE FUN AT BAREFOOT TODAY<lb/>
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For more information contact Shannon Smith at<lb/>
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"?"?? II<lb/>
The East Carolinian<lb/>
Sports<lb/>
Page 11<lb/>
Pirates fend off Campbell Camels, 4-2 at Harrington: <lb/>
Whitfield pulls it<lb/>
together after a two-run<lb/>
first inning<lb/>
By Michael Albuquerque<lb/>
Staff Writer<lb/>
Howard Whitfield survived a<lb/>
shaky two-run first inning to shut<lb/>
down Campbell in the final eight<lb/>
innings to lead East Carolina's 4-2<lb/>
win over the Camels in college base-<lb/>
ball action Tuesday at Harrington<lb/>
Field.<lb/>
After allowing four hits in the<lb/>
first Whitfield (4-1 )surrendered only<lb/>
" two more hits in thegame, both com-<lb/>
ing in the sixth inning, and walked<lb/>
four batters for his third complete<lb/>
game of the season.<lb/>
Campbell (15-26) scored twice<lb/>
when Paul Curlee knocked a two-<lb/>
out double to left and scored on a<lb/>
single up the middle by Andy Priest.<lb/>
Kent Cox then smacked a double<lb/>
over right fielder Pat Watkins' head<lb/>
for a run-scoring double.<lb/>
The Pirates (31-12) struck back<lb/>
in the fourth on a leadoff triple by<lb/>
Watkins, whoconnnuestoswingthe<lb/>
hot bat for the Pirates with three hits<lb/>
in four at bats for his fourth consecu-<lb/>
tive three-hit game and sixth straight<lb/>
multi-hit game. Steven Pitt followed<lb/>
wi than opposite field, two-run homer<lb/>
to right for his fourth of the season.<lb/>
Frank Fedakgave ECU the lead<lb/>
for good in the fourth with a run-<lb/>
scoring double down the third base<lb/>
lineoffCampbell starter Bob Wharton<lb/>
(0-8). The Pirates added another run<lb/>
in the fifth after Jason Head walked,<lb/>
took second on a single by Watkins<lb/>
and scored on two wild pitches by<lb/>
Wharton.<lb/>
The Pirates return to action this<lb/>
weekend with a three-game series<lb/>
against CAA leader George Mason<lb/>
beginning with a Saturday double-<lb/>
header at 2p.m.<lb/>
Baseball This Week<lb/>
&amp;?org. Mason<lb/>
Ota Dominion<lb/>
East Carolina<lb/>
UNC-WflmlngtoR<lb/>
Jam Madison<lb/>
WIKiam i. Mary<lb/>
Ricnmond<lb/>
COLONIAL ATHymC ASSOCIATION BASEBALL STANDINGS<lb/>
?M?Pet. 'Owrall Pet. Homa Away Nautral Str.sk<lb/>
1.000<lb/>
000<lb/>
.750<lb/>
.500<lb/>
.000<lb/>
.182<lb/>
.167<lb/>
15<lb/>
25<lb/>
27<lb/>
17<lb/>
14<lb/>
16<lb/>
17<lb/>
6<lb/>
4<lb/>
10<lb/>
16<lb/>
12<lb/>
12<lb/>
12<lb/>
714<lb/>
862<lb/>
.730<lb/>
.515<lb/>
538<lb/>
.571<lb/>
586<lb/>
10<lb/>
18<lb/>
22<lb/>
10<lb/>
11<lb/>
9<lb/>
10<lb/>
3<lb/>
0<lb/>
9<lb/>
10<lb/>
9<lb/>
6<lb/>
6<lb/>
Won 4<lb/>
Won 7<lb/>
Won 3<lb/>
Losi 1<lb/>
Lost 2<lb/>
Lost 3<lb/>
Lost 3<lb/>
COLONIAL ATHLETIC ASSOCIATION BATTING LEADERS<lb/>
Batting Avaraga ci??? Po?. G AB H AVG.<lb/>
PAT WATKINS, ECU<lb/>
Rob Mummau, JMU<lb/>
Kevin Gibbs, ODU<lb/>
Mark Baron, ODU<lb/>
LEE KUSHNER, ECU<lb/>
Greg Deares, GMU<lb/>
Sean Casey, UR<lb/>
Geoff Edsell. ODU<lb/>
Brad Edsell, JMU<lb/>
Jeff Dausch, UR<lb/>
Corey Broome, UNCW<lb/>
Jude Donato, ODU<lb/>
Turner Williams, ODU<lb/>
Lonnie Goldberg, GMU<lb/>
Mike Cowell, ODU<lb/>
WINS<lb/>
No. PlayerTeam<lb/>
JR<lb/>
SR<lb/>
FR<lb/>
SR<lb/>
SR<lb/>
SR<lb/>
FR<lb/>
JR<lb/>
FR<lb/>
JR<lb/>
SR<lb/>
JR<lb/>
SR<lb/>
SR<lb/>
SO<lb/>
RF<lb/>
ss<lb/>
OF<lb/>
CF<lb/>
1B<lb/>
OF<lb/>
1B<lb/>
42<lb/>
30<lb/>
34<lb/>
34<lb/>
42<lb/>
26<lb/>
34<lb/>
147<lb/>
113<lb/>
116<lb/>
108<lb/>
142<lb/>
109<lb/>
119<lb/>
66<lb/>
48<lb/>
48<lb/>
42<lb/>
55<lb/>
42<lb/>
45<lb/>
1BP 34 120 44<lb/>
3B<lb/>
OF<lb/>
C<lb/>
2B<lb/>
LF<lb/>
2B<lb/>
c<lb/>
29<lb/>
34<lb/>
39<lb/>
34<lb/>
32<lb/>
26<lb/>
32<lb/>
97<lb/>
116<lb/>
155<lb/>
127<lb/>
93<lb/>
107<lb/>
78<lb/>
35<lb/>
41<lb/>
54<lb/>
44<lb/>
32<lb/>
36<lb/>
26<lb/>
W L<lb/>
7 JOHNNY BECK. ECU 7 3<lb/>
7 LYLE HARTGHOVE. ECU 7 2<lb/>
7 Geoff Edsell. OOU 7 3<lb/>
7 Sean Hennessy, OOU 7 3<lb/>
STRIKEOUTS<lb/>
Wo. PlayerTeam<lb/>
.449<lb/>
.425<lb/>
.414<lb/>
.389<lb/>
.387<lb/>
.385<lb/>
.378<lb/>
.367<lb/>
.361<lb/>
.353<lb/>
.348<lb/>
.346<lb/>
.344<lb/>
.336<lb/>
333<lb/>
Innings<lb/>
SAVES<lb/>
No. PlayarTsam<lb/>
6 Heath Altman. UNCW<lb/>
4 Wayne Gomes. OOU<lb/>
4 Adam Butler. W&amp;M<lb/>
65 JOHNNY BECK, ECU 74 7<lb/>
58 John Smith. ODC 64.7<lb/>
40 Geoff Edsell. OOU 46.7<lb/>
48 MIKE SANBURN, ECU 66<lb/>
47 Brian Smith. UNCW 56<lb/>
46 RICHIE BLACKWELL. ECU 37<lb/>
45 Scott Foster. JMU 46.3<lb/>
3 1 44 Wayne Gomes. ODU 20.3<lb/>
1 1 44 Heath Attmsn. UNCW 32.7<lb/>
2 2 44 Sean Hennsssy, ODU 70.3<lb/>
W L<lb/>
COLONIAL ATHLETIC ASSOCIATION PITCHING LEADERS<lb/>
Earned Run Average Class W L IP R ER ERA<lb/>
Bobby Walker, GMU<lb/>
Geoff Edsell, ODU<lb/>
RICHIE BLACKWELL, ECU<lb/>
MIKE SANBURN, ECU<lb/>
John Smith, ODU<lb/>
Sean Hennessy, ODU<lb/>
JOHNNY BECK, ECU<lb/>
Mike Ragadale, W&amp;M<lb/>
Bobby St. Pierre, UR<lb/>
Greg Whlteman, JMU<lb/>
LYLE HARTGROVE, ECU<lb/>
DOUBLES<lb/>
No. PlayecTaamGames<lb/>
16 Corey Broome. UNCW 39<lb/>
15 Sean Casey. UR 34<lb/>
14 LEE KUSHNER, ECU 42<lb/>
14 Rob Mummau. JMU 30<lb/>
SR<lb/>
JR<lb/>
SO<lb/>
JR<lb/>
JR<lb/>
SR<lb/>
JR<lb/>
SO<lb/>
FR<lb/>
SO<lb/>
JR<lb/>
37.0<lb/>
46.7<lb/>
37.0<lb/>
69.0<lb/>
1 64.7<lb/>
3 70.3<lb/>
3 74.7<lb/>
1 52.7<lb/>
2 38.7<lb/>
2 40.3<lb/>
2 66.7<lb/>
8 5 1.22<lb/>
15 10 1.93<lb/>
12 8 1.95<lb/>
23 16 2.09<lb/>
21 19 2.64<lb/>
25 21 2.60<lb/>
29 23 2.77<lb/>
27 18 3.07<lb/>
18 14 3.26<lb/>
20 15 3.35<lb/>
31 27 3.64<lb/>
No.<lb/>
RUNS BATTED IN<lb/>
PlayerTeam<lb/>
TRIPLES<lb/>
No. PlayerTaam<lb/>
Games<lb/>
4 Kevin Gibbs, ODU 34<lb/>
HOME RUNS<lb/>
No. PlayerTeam Games<lb/>
42<lb/>
42<lb/>
39<lb/>
47<lb/>
43<lb/>
40<lb/>
38<lb/>
31<lb/>
31<lb/>
No.<lb/>
Geoff Edsell. ODU<lb/>
LEE KUSHNER. ECU<lb/>
PAT WATKINS. ECU<lb/>
Mike Ruberti. W&amp;M<lb/>
Corey Broome. UNCW<lb/>
Jude Donato. OOU<lb/>
STOLEN BASES<lb/>
PlaysrTeam<lb/>
37<lb/>
42<lb/>
42<lb/>
35<lb/>
39<lb/>
34<lb/>
17 PAT WATKINS. ECU<lb/>
10 LEE KUSHNEa ECU<lb/>
10 Corey Broome, UNCW<lb/>
36 Kevin Gibbs, OOU 34"<lb/>
31 Shawn Knight. W&amp;M 32<lb/>
19 PAT WATKINS, ECU 42<lb/>
17 JAMIE BOREL. ECU 42<lb/>
15 Kevin Nehnno. JMU 30<lb/>
EAST ROLINA<lb/>
CAMPBELL<lb/>
tampball200 000 000-2<lb/>
East Carolina020 110 00x-4<lb/>
CAMPBELLabrhbl bbso<lb/>
Maddocks.lf401000<lb/>
Stanley, 2b300011<lb/>
Curlee. ss311010<lb/>
Priest, dh412100<lb/>
Cox, 3b402100<lb/>
Brinson, r!400000<lb/>
Rogers, lb300011<lb/>
Huckt.c100010<lb/>
Gay, el300001<lb/>
Total.2926243<lb/>
Batting-2B:Curlee, CorSH:Hucks.<lb/>
Baa (running TeemLOB:5.<lb/>
Flek?n0DP. 1.<lb/>
EAST CAROLINAabrhblbbo<lb/>
Boral.cl400001<lb/>
Hasd.lt310012<lb/>
Vt.3b300011<lb/>
Mbenrter, lb VVa?!ins, If400001<lb/>
413000<lb/>
Pitt,221211<lb/>
Clark. 2b301012<lb/>
Antal, c400001<lb/>
Fedek.se302111<lb/>
TotalsJQ.473510<lb/>
? 2B: Fedsk. 3B: Welkins. HR: Pin<lb/>
Batting-<lb/>
(4). SH: Borel<lb/>
Baserunning ? Team LOB: 9.<lb/>
Rawing ? DP: 2.<lb/>
Photo by Biff Ranson<lb/>
Outfielder Pat Watkins (22), the CAA player of the week for the second time, was safe but called out<lb/>
due to batter interference against the Camels of Campbell.<lb/>
CAMPBELLthrer bb so<lb/>
Wharton (L 0-8)1744 5 if?<lb/>
EAST CAROLINAIPhrer bb ee<lb/>
Whitfield (W, 4-1)9622 4 3<lb/>
iy<lb/>
HBP: Pitt by Wharton.<lb/>
GAME DATA ? T: 2:06 A: 474. Temp: 70.<lb/>
UMPIRES ? HP: Satterfield. IB: Kennedy. SB:<lb/>
Brock.<lb/>
Charlotte beginning NFL marketing<lb/>
ORLANDO, Fla. (AP) ? The<lb/>
NFL's expansion committee on<lb/>
Tuesday gave the go-ahead to the<lb/>
five cities in line for new franchises<lb/>
to begin marketing campaigns for<lb/>
luxury boxes and other premium<lb/>
seats.<lb/>
The committee made thedeci-<lb/>
sion after hearing from represen-<lb/>
tatives of Charlotte, N.C which<lb/>
will finance its new stadium by<lb/>
selling those seats. Its plan is simi-<lb/>
lar to ones used to build Texas<lb/>
Stadium by the Dallas Cowboys<lb/>
and Joe Robbie Stadium by the<lb/>
Miami Dolphins.<lb/>
But NFL officials stressed that<lb/>
the merchandising also will ben-<lb/>
efit the other four cities in the run-<lb/>
ning for two new teams ? Mem-<lb/>
phis, Tenn Jacksonville, Fla St.<lb/>
Louis and Baltimore. The league<lb/>
hopes to announce the new cities<lb/>
next fall with the teams to begin<lb/>
play in 1994. It also hopes to have<lb/>
a formula for the prices the new<lb/>
teams will pay to enter the league<lb/>
at its meetings in Atlanta at the<lb/>
end of May.<lb/>
Jerry Richardson, a<lb/>
Spartanburg businessman head-<lb/>
ing the bid to bring an NFL team<lb/>
to the North Carolina-Sou thCaro-<lb/>
lina region, called the action "won-<lb/>
derful, the best news we could<lb/>
have at this stage of the game<lb/>
The decision allows<lb/>
Richardson to begin a plan for<lb/>
financinga 71,042-seat stadium in<lb/>
downtown Charlotte based on<lb/>
sales of the right to buy rickets for<lb/>
stadium events.<lb/>
Organizers could raise more<lb/>
than $100 million if they can sell<lb/>
50,000 ticket rights for about $2,500<lb/>
each, he said. The estimated sta-<lb/>
dium cost is $160 million.<lb/>
"The process now comes<lb/>
down to lOmillionfansintheCaro-<lb/>
linas Richardson's son, Mark,<lb/>
said. "The fans have had to sit on<lb/>
the sidelines for a long time. Now<lb/>
they get to get involved and make<lb/>
a difference<lb/>
The Richardsons and market-<lb/>
ing consultant Max Muhleman<lb/>
presented their financing plan to<lb/>
NFL commissioner Paul Tagliabue<lb/>
and three expansion committee<lb/>
members Tuesday morning.<lb/>
Jimmy V roasted in Greensboro<lb/>
GREENSBORO(AP)?ESPN and ABC bas-<lb/>
ketball commentator Dick Vitale will be the guest<lb/>
of honor at a celebrity roast that will benefit the<lb/>
Jimmy V Cancer Foundation.<lb/>
The roast is scheduled forjune 1 atthe special<lb/>
events center at the GreensboroCoiiseu m. It was<lb/>
organized by the basketball coaches committee of<lb/>
the Atlantic Coast Conference, chaired by North<lb/>
Carolina State coach Les Robinson.<lb/>
All nine coaches will participate in the roast,<lb/>
Robinson told reporters at a news conference<lb/>
Monday afternoon.<lb/>
The Jimmy V Cancer Foundation was<lb/>
formed earlier this year by former N.C. State<lb/>
basketball coach Jim Valvano and ESPN to<lb/>
fund cancer research programs.<lb/>
Valvanohasbeen receivingperiodic treat-<lb/>
ments for cancer. HewashospitalizedatDuke<lb/>
University Medical Center until early April,<lb/>
and is resting at his home in Cary.<lb/>
Tickets for the event are $100 per person<lb/>
and $1,000 per table of 10, and reservations<lb/>
may be made through the Greensboro Coli-<lb/>
seum.<lb/>
Clinton runs with world elite<lb/>
President runs 2.9 miles in 25<lb/>
minutes with 18 Secret<lb/>
Service Agents<lb/>
WASHINGTON (AP)?PresidentClinton<lb/>
jogged with a group of the world'selite runners<lb/>
Wednesday when he ran with the various divi-<lb/>
sion winners of the Boston Marathon, includ-<lb/>
ing overall champ Cosmas N'deti.<lb/>
U.S. presidents traditionally invite sports<lb/>
champions to the White House. But Clinton<lb/>
took the six winners of Monday's Boston Mara-<lb/>
thon an extra step.<lb/>
They met Clinton, Boston Mayor Ray Flynn<lb/>
and Boston Athletic Association Director Guy<lb/>
Morse at Washington's waterfront for an early<lb/>
morning jog.<lb/>
Could he keep up with this crowd? "You<lb/>
know I can he said at the outset.<lb/>
He did. Or perhaps the marathoners re-<lb/>
sisted the urge to up the pace.<lb/>
The pack, 18 strong with Secret Service<lb/>
agents, ran 2.9 miles in 25 minutes ? a<lb/>
shorter and slower jog than Clinton has run<lb/>
in recent weeks.<lb/>
Asked if he had ever run a marathon<lb/>
before, Clinton said, "Never. But I did run<lb/>
one in 1992, and it looks like I'm about to run<lb/>
another one apparent references to the<lb/>
presidential campaign and the ongoing fight<lb/>
in the Senate over his stimulus package.<lb/>
Along for the jog, in addition to N'deti,<lb/>
a Kenyan, were Olga Markova of Russia,<lb/>
the women's winner; Jean-Michel<lb/>
Charbonnel of France, men's masters divi-<lb/>
sion; Bernardine Portenski of New Zealand,<lb/>
women's masters division; Jim Knaub of<lb/>
Long Beach, Calif overall wheelchair divi-<lb/>
sion; Jean Driscoll of Champaign, 111<lb/>
women's wheelchair division.<lb/>
Chiefs hopes<lb/>
fulfilled wiih<lb/>
Montana<lb/>
(AP)-Thereare precedents for this<lb/>
kind of thirty even if rndstof them ended<lb/>
Sadly.<lb/>
There was Johnny Unitas and his<lb/>
crew cut in San Diego, hanging on long<lb/>
after footballand evenfashionhadpassed<lb/>
him by. There w-Rick Barry struggling<lb/>
toget hisshots inHouston long after they<lb/>
- re being parceled out to somebody<lb/>
use. And Bobby Orr skating unsteadily<lb/>
to his last shift in Chicago.<lb/>
And maybe the saddest ending of<lb/>
them all: Willie Mays in New York on<lb/>
the wrong side of twilight In his lumi-<lb/>
nous career, stumbling so badly after<lb/>
routine fly balls that he wasn't beyond<lb/>
asking for pity. Growing bid Mays<lb/>
explained once, 'is a helpless hurt<lb/>
And now we have Joe Montana go-<lb/>
ing . going gone to KansasCity. The<lb/>
same Joe Montana who has a recon-<lb/>
structed elbow that is every bit of 36<lb/>
(even if the rest ijf him isnt who hasn't<lb/>
thrown a meaningful pass in two years,<lb/>
and who leaves the franchise inhispast,<lb/>
the San Francisco 49ers, an emotional<lb/>
wreck, and the one in his future, the<lb/>
Chtefsexpecngfhe rnoon.<lb/>
But before weforget, this Is also the<lb/>
same Joe Montana who never met a<lb/>
clock or a defense he could not manipu-<lb/>
late, who wort four Super Bowls and<lb/>
who came back twice after being left for<lb/>
deadon the football fieldi And thesame<lb/>
Montana who wouldn't surprise all that<lb/>
manjpeople by doing it all one mo -<lb/>
time. V<lb/>
s Montanapage 13<lb/>
N'deti of Kenya, Markova of Russia win Boston Marathon<lb/>
BOSTON (AP) ? Cosmas N'deti<lb/>
glanced at the men struggling to stop his<lb/>
surge into marathon history. He looked and<lb/>
looked and saw them running out of steam.<lb/>
CHga Markova would have needed a<lb/>
telescope to spy her competition.<lb/>
N'deti'scome-from-behind upsetin the<lb/>
Boston Marathon was surprising. Markova's<lb/>
runaway win was expected. Both triumphs<lb/>
confirmed Monday that at the 26.2-mile test<lb/>
of endurance, the country of Kenya and the<lb/>
skills of Markova dominate.<lb/>
Led by N'deti's 10-second win over<lb/>
Kim Jae-Yong of Korea in 2 hours, 9 min-<lb/>
utes, 33 seconds, Kenyans claimed seven of<lb/>
the top 24 spots on an unseasonably warm<lb/>
day.<lb/>
Markova, of Russia, won her second<lb/>
consecutive women's competition at the<lb/>
Boston Marathon in 2:25:27, a whopping<lb/>
433 over runner-up Kim Jones of Spokane,<lb/>
Wash.<lb/>
"Olga is the undisputed queen sixth-<lb/>
place finisher Joan BenoitSamuelson said.<lb/>
IbrahimHussein,whostood apart from<lb/>
all other runners by winning the last two<lb/>
Boston Mara thons,wasisolated again Mon-<lb/>
day. But this time, he was a rare Kenyan<lb/>
disappointmentashedroppedoutatabout<lb/>
ISmiles after beingamongtne favorites and<lb/>
part of the early lead pack.<lb/>
For most of the race, N'deti, 23, gave no<lb/>
clue he was about to win just four months<lb/>
after running his first marathon, a second-<lb/>
place finish at Honolulu. He didn't lead at<lb/>
anyofthefirst24checkpointsspacedatone-<lb/>
mile intervals andwasllthat the mid point.<lb/>
The race had been shaping up asa two-man<lb/>
duel between Kim and Lucketz Swartbooi<lb/>
of Namibia.<lb/>
Butatthe22-milemark, the li toe-known<lb/>
Swartbooi pulled 20 yards ahead. And at<lb/>
243 miles, the little-known N'deti pulled<lb/>
alongside Swartbooi.<lb/>
Forty secondsafter he caught up, he left<lb/>
Swartbooi way behind. N'deti was 90 sec<lb/>
onds away from crossing the finish line<lb/>
when Kim surged back into view as the<lb/>
Korean turned the last comer.<lb/>
"Because he was so far away, I knew it<lb/>
would be very difficult Kim said.<lb/>
Again and again ? four times in 56<lb/>
seconds?N'deti swiveled hishead tokeep<lb/>
a concerned eye on h' s opponent.<lb/>
"There was no way he could catch up<lb/>
with me N'deti said.<lb/>
Because of the weather?60degreesat<lb/>
the starting line at noon, 73 degrees at the<lb/>
finishlinewhenN'deticrossedit?the first-<lb/>
half pace was slow. That allowed N'deti to<lb/>
stay in contention with energy to spare. His<lb/>
time wasl :4$slower than thecourse record.<lb/>
Swartbooi wasthird in2:0957,followed<lb/>
See MARATHON page 12<lb/>
!Wm.mmmim.<lb/>
<pb facs="00058404_0012"/><lb/>
APRIL 22, 1993<lb/>
suffering through worst streak of best season<lb/>
thi, we<lb/>
them all.1 can't sa)<lb/>
jt this team coach<lb/>
5ttn.iv 1 omjanovich said after the<lb/>
ii k kets won for the 10th straight<lb/>
JJJme and their fifth consecutive<lb/>
Joad game, 111 -97 over the Suns.<lb/>
ST Houston concluded a four-<lb/>
MARATHON<lb/>
3<lb/>
?I<lb/>
5 Continued from page 11<lb/>
ft Hiromi Taniguchi of Japan in<lb/>
11:02and Sammy Lelei of Kenya in<lb/>
?12:12. Mark Piaatjes, a South Afri-<lb/>
Jgm about to become a US. citizen,<lb/>
JSvas sixth in 2:12:39. The fastest na-<lb/>
SBve-born American was Keith<lb/>
?Brantlv, whocamein ninthin2:1258.<lb/>
game Western Conference trip<lb/>
with four .straight wins, giving<lb/>
the Rockets 13 victories in their<lb/>
6 away from the Summit.<lb/>
For the Suns, the defeat was<lb/>
their third straight, their longest<lb/>
losing streak of the best season in<lb/>
franchise history.<lb/>
" Absolutely We were embar-<lb/>
rassed said Danny Ainge, who<lb/>
missed the two previous games<lb/>
with the flu.<lb/>
Richard Dumas sat out with<lb/>
the flu, but the big absence for the<lb/>
Suns was Charles Barkley, who<lb/>
has been on the injured list for<lb/>
five games while the Suns have<lb/>
slumped to 1-4. Barkley is ex-<lb/>
pected to return in time for a<lb/>
ThursdaynightgameinPorUand.<lb/>
The Rockets were aggressive<lb/>
from the opening tip, forcing the<lb/>
Suns into their worst 24 minutes<lb/>
of the season.<lb/>
"Our defense really closed<lb/>
the middle said Hakeem<lb/>
Olajuwon, who had 30 points, 14<lb/>
rebounds and five blocks.<lb/>
"They are missing a key<lb/>
player and a lot of leadership in<lb/>
Charles Olajuwon said. "You<lb/>
lose some confidence with a guy<lb/>
like that out. I don't know if that's<lb/>
what happened, but you see him<lb/>
play every night, and you know<lb/>
how much he means<lb/>
Olajuwon got all five blocks<lb/>
in the first half, when the Rockets<lb/>
took a 33-13 first-quarter lead and<lb/>
stayed ahead 57-37 at halftime.<lb/>
He then scored 12 pointsafter the<lb/>
Rockets took an 88-67 lead into<lb/>
the fourth period.<lb/>
Houston, which went 15-0 to<lb/>
start a 27-4 stretch since Feb. 13,<lb/>
set a franchise record by winning<lb/>
10 straight for the second time in<lb/>
a season.<lb/>
The Suns, who have streaks<lb/>
of 14 and 11, are the only other<lb/>
team to accomplish that this sea-<lb/>
son.<lb/>
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2 Large Pizzas<lb/>
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ECU STUDENTS RECEIVE ADDITIONAL DISCOUNTS<lb/>
Comic Books Baseball Cards<lb/>
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Carolina East Mall 355-7695<lb/>
Mon-Sat 10-9 Sun 1-6<lb/>
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Opening April 17th<lb/>
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Winner of three National CNBAM Awards<lb/>
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Please return them to:<lb/>
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Closed from 12-lpm<lb/>
ONE OF THt ANHtu&amp;EH BUSCH COMPANIES<lb/>
?mmm-sT<lb/>
CAROLINIAN<lb/>
The East Carolinian is currently accepting<lb/>
resumes for the following positions:<lb/>
CREATIVE DIRECTOR<lb/>
This job entails creating computer designed<lb/>
advertisements using sound design principles. Also<lb/>
responsible for creating advertising promotions and<lb/>
ali in-house documents. Great portfolio builder for<lb/>
printed pieces. Requirements; Minimum 2.0G.P.A<lb/>
Working knowledge of Macintosh applications<lb/>
PageMaker, Freehand. Quark XPress and Image<lb/>
scanning. Open to all majors.<lb/>
COPY EDITOR<lb/>
This position edits stories for spelling and grammatical<lb/>
errors. Must be able to understand newspaper style<lb/>
in accordance with the guidelines set by the<lb/>
Associated Press Stylebook. Requirements: Minimum<lb/>
2.0G.P.A. Open to all majors.<lb/>
PHOTO EDITOR<lb/>
This job requires working knowledge of 35mm<lb/>
camera and darkroom operations and will work with<lb/>
a staff of photographers to supply the photo needs<lb/>
of various media. Requirements: Minimum 2.0 G.P.A.<lb/>
Work well with other staff members and meet<lb/>
deadlines. Open to all majors.<lb/>
CIRCULATION MANAGER<lb/>
The Circulation Manager is responsible for all aspects<lb/>
of distribution and circulation of The East Carolinian,<lb/>
both on and off campus. The manager also Is<lb/>
responsible for sales of new subscriptions, location<lb/>
and maintenance of all newspaper boxes, the<lb/>
scheduled maintenance of The East Carolinian van<lb/>
&amp; other assigned tasks. Requirements: Minimum 2.0<lb/>
G.P.A. Must be an East Carolina student and have a<lb/>
working knowledge of Excel. Open to all majors.<lb/>
Apply at The East Carolinian,<lb/>
2nd floor of the Student Pubs building<lb/>
757-6366<lb/>
Attention<lb/>
Returning Students<lb/>
If you plan to live off campus, you can eliminate at least one long line by arranging<lb/>
your utility service in advance. By planning ahead, you can save valuable time  and<lb/>
possibly money. The following options are available:<lb/>
FAST, FREE DELIVERY<lb/>
Receive $1.00 OFF<lb/>
Any Size Pizza or<lb/>
Pokey Stix<lb/>
by showing us your rented<lb/>
video. Pick-up only.<lb/>
Get A Small<lb/>
Cheese Pizza<lb/>
or Small Pokey Stix<lb/>
for $1.88 with any purchase at<lb/>
our already low coupon price<lb/>
Additional items 50? each.<lb/>
Option A: No Deposit Required<lb/>
At your parents' request, your utility<lb/>
service may be put in their name. Just pick<lb/>
up a "Request for Utility Service" applica-<lb/>
tion from room 211 in the Off-Campus<lb/>
Housing Office, Whichard Building or af<lb/>
Greenville Utilities' main office, 200 W. 5th<lb/>
Street.<lb/>
Have your parents complete the<lb/>
application (which must be notarized) and<lb/>
mail it to GUC, P.O. Box 1847, Greenville,<lb/>
N.C. 27835-1847, att: Customer Service.<lb/>
?Remember to attach a "letter of<lb/>
credit" from yourparenls' power company.<lb/>
Option B: Deposit Required<lb/>
If you wish to have the utility service put in<lb/>
your name, a deposit will be required. Deposits<lb/>
arc as follows: wilh gjj OT wout electric<lb/>
gas space healing or gas space heating<lb/>
Electric Only $100$75<lb/>
Electric &amp; Water $100S85<lb/>
Electric, Water &amp; Gas $110$85<lb/>
Electric &amp; Gas SI00$75<lb/>
III<lb/>
YOU NEED A BREAK?<lb/>
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ATTACK<lb/>
large<lb/>
2 item pizza<lb/>
$6.74<lb/>
TRIPLE<lb/>
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small<lb/>
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$9.99<lb/>
PIRATE<lb/>
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X-Large 1 item<lb/>
&amp; 2 sodas BLOWOUT<lb/>
$7.36<lb/>
Greenville<lb/>
You can save time by mailing the deposit<lb/>
in advance. Be sure to include your name, where<lb/>
service will be required, when service is to be cut<lb/>
on and a phone number where we may reach you<lb/>
prior to your arrival at the service address.<lb/>
Utilities<lb/>
2 small<lb/>
2 item pizzas<lb/>
&amp; 2 sodas<lb/>
$8.18<lb/>
EXAM<lb/>
SPECIAL<lb/>
Medium<lb/>
2 item pizza<lb/>
$5.18<lb/>
CARRY OUT SPECIAL<lb/>
Large 1 item pizza<lb/>
$4.99<lb/>
BURNOUT<lb/>
2 large<lb/>
2 item pizzas<lb/>
&amp; 4 sodas<lb/>
$12.38<lb/>
STUDY<lb/>
BREAK<lb/>
large<lb/>
1 item pizza<lb/>
&amp; small Pokey Stix<lb/>
$7.17<lb/>
PURPLE<lb/>
PEOPLE EATER<lb/>
3<lb/>
large<lb/>
1 item pizzas<lb/>
$14.99<lb/>
Prices Do Not Include Sales Tax?Offers May Expire Without Notice?$5.CO Minimum for Delivery<lb/>
HOURS<lb/>
SUN-THURS.<lb/>
11:OOAM-1:30 AM<lb/>
FRI-SAT:<lb/>
11:00AM-2:30 AM<lb/>
321-GUM-B<lb/>
315 S.E. GREENVILLE BLVD.<lb/>
Located next to Blockbuster Video<lb/>
PERSONAL CHECKS<lb/>
50c Check OMfC<lb/>
<pb facs="00058404_0013"/><lb/>
APRIL 22, 1993<lb/>
The East Carolinian<lb/>
13<lb/>
Montana<lb/>
Continued from page 11<lb/>
RpH Soy<lb/>
play in a game<lb/>
i er played said<lb/>
rtJe'vlan-<lb/>
iheir<lb/>
fourth straight victory, iohn<lb/>
Valentin and Mike Grenweli hit<lb/>
home runs. Clemens (3-0), who<lb/>
has a history of fast starts, allowed<lb/>
only one run on tlixee singles,<lb/>
walked six and struck out two.<lb/>
In his fourth start of the sea-<lb/>
son, the three-time AL Cy Young<lb/>
Award winner lowered his ERA<lb/>
to 1.48 in 301-3 innings.<lb/>
Greg Harris pitched two in-<lb/>
ningsand leftwith the basesloaded<lb/>
and one out in the ninth.<lb/>
Valentin, activated Tuesdav<lb/>
after being sidelined because of a<lb/>
broken right ring finger, homered<lb/>
off the foul pole to break a 1-all tie<lb/>
in the seventh.<lb/>
? i ford<lb/>
'I let;<lb/>
 h now coaches at<lb/>
d Montana out<lb/>
d directed the 49ers<lb/>
ree oi their tour titles.<lb/>
"Personal accolades have<lb/>
never been a factor with Joe. Win-<lb/>
is all that matters. He wants<lb/>
to be in the competitive arena<lb/>
doing what is of great enjoyment<lb/>
and satisfaction to him Walsh<lb/>
added, "and that's plaving foot-<lb/>
ball<lb/>
In fact, the beauty of this<lb/>
move is not simply that it could<lb/>
turn out well for Joe; it could turn<lb/>
out to be the best thing that hap-<lb/>
pened to ail involved.<lb/>
For all the wailing and<lb/>
gnashing of teeth that will be<lb/>
aired on call-in shows in San<lb/>
Francisco, it allows the 49ers to<lb/>
crawl out from under Montana's<lb/>
impenetrable shadow.<lb/>
It means that ever)' time quar-<lb/>
terback Steve Young throws an<lb/>
incompletion, he won't have to<lb/>
look over his shoulder, feel the<lb/>
crowd buzz, and watch a legend<lb/>
he can't fairly compete against<lb/>
unlimbering on the sideline. It<lb/>
means coach George Sei fert won't<lb/>
have to ramble on incomprehen-<lb/>
sibly about the "designated<lb/>
starter" into the fall. Montana is<lb/>
not stupid enough to believe that.<lb/>
And by the time the ink on the<lb/>
deal dries, it means San Francisco<lb/>
will have a feu- newcomers.<lb/>
At the same time, on paper at<lb/>
least, it makes the Chiefs the<lb/>
AFC's best team, while sparing<lb/>
them a little cash and a lot of<lb/>
embarrassment.<lb/>
In another precedent for this<lb/>
kind of thing, the San Francisco<lb/>
49ers traded away an agingquar-<lb/>
terback to the New York Giants<lb/>
some 30 years ago. And 36-year-<lb/>
old Y.A. Tittle went on to take his<lb/>
new teammates to the NFL cham-<lb/>
pionship game three years in a<lb/>
row.<lb/>
STORE YOUR STUFF!<lb/>
IPM Mini-Storage<lb/>
Student Discount<lb/>
$15-$50 per month<lb/>
757-2471 10th STREET<lb/>
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Eye Exam, Fitting &amp; Contact Lenses<lb/>
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Professional fees for extended wejr'MOO<lb/>
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Open MonFri. 9-6, Sat. 9-1 Phone 756-4204<lb/>
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<pb facs="00058404_0014"/><lb/>
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<pb facs="00058404_0015"/>
</div></body></text></TEI>