<?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="00058405_0001"/>
Opinion<lb/>
Action!<lb/>
nethc )ation.<lb/>
o lay<lb/>
<lb/>
 I<lb/>
<lb/>
; f67?)<lb/>
 Partly c!oudy <lb/>
 72 )<lb/>
( Partly cloudy <lb/>
Tomorrow<lb/>
e East Carolinian<lb/>
nlation 12,(HH)<lb/>
Greenville, North Carolina<lb/>
Tuesday, April 27. 1993<lb/>
14 Pages<lb/>
Second survey documents continuing air problem<lb/>
? ?<lb/>
?mber sur-<lb/>
tXl<lb/>
I hat l<lb/>
.Hi CO<lb/>
I2(X<lb/>
 Kl ppm.<lb/>
;se recommenda-<lb/>
mfort le els ac-<lb/>
ting to Herbert Oxendine, director<lb/>
ironmental Health and Safety.<lb/>
Though the February survey re-<lb/>
sults have not come in yet, Oxendine<lb/>
said that an increase in C02 levels<lb/>
occur, but was a minor one.<lb/>
"Theresultsw ere somt what higher<lb/>
than last time Oxendine said. "The<lb/>
surveyors wanted a more representa-<lb/>
ti e sample of the building, so they con-<lb/>
ducted the survey .it a time when more<lb/>
pie were in the building. With more<lb/>
? ,i higher level i C02 is to he<lb/>
i v pe ted<lb/>
Along with higher C02 levels, sur-<lb/>
veyors found lower levels of volatile<lb/>
organic compounds, cm ?K s, than the<lb/>
February survey. The survej studied<lb/>
rmine whether they might<lb/>
cause odor complaints that were preva-<lb/>
lent at the time of the surv ev 1 he survev<lb/>
in November showed that the levels ob<lb/>
tained (714-940 micrograrns per cubic<lb/>
meter) exceeded the optimum comfort<lb/>
range ol less than 220 micrograrns per<lb/>
cubic meter.<lb/>
cendine stated that the second<lb/>
la decline in the levels of<lb/>
e le els were below any report-<lb/>
able quantities Oxendine said. "This<lb/>
ma uired fx ause of the n<lb/>
dean air policy, which hasalso prod<lb/>
a decline in the number of com<lb/>
One of the major reasons that the<lb/>
(General Classroom Building is facing<lb/>
"bad air" problem<lb/>
specifications. Ac cordingtol<lb/>
physical plant engineer, the buii '<lb/>
built according to standards put<lb/>
after the 1970s energy cri-<lb/>
"The CC Building was built un-<lb/>
der codes that were written for maxi-<lb/>
mum energy conserval<lb/>
"It's the best building on campus<lb/>
follows the codes ol thost timi<lb/>
In a memo I<lb/>
sical Plant, assistant directoi foi<lb/>
See AiR page 4<lb/>
New video yearbook<lb/>
meets mixed reviews<lb/>
like<lb/>
the<lb/>
the Media Board tffke and pic k up<lb/>
a copy Brown aid 'But they must<lb/>
ith the<lb/>
way TreasureChest" turned out.<lb/>
idering the fact that thi was<lb/>
the first time we had done it, the<lb/>
equipmentwasbrand new and the<lb/>
staff was ? Brown<lb/>
Brown<lb/>
lat<lb/>
. still cor<lb/>
were. Ii air<lb/>
Bi v n saistu-<lb/>
See YEARBOOKpage3<lb/>
Pholo by Dsii Head<lb/>
Over 2,000 copies of the "Treasure Chest the nev !I video yearbook were distributed at Barefoot on The<lb/>
Mall last week.<lb/>
Roll one<lb/>
Dancers promote talent<lb/>
through continued excellence<lb/>
Staff VV riter<lb/>
lour EC U dancers have performed<lb/>
above and beyond the call ol duty, fulfilling<lb/>
any expectations that anyone may have n.uf<lb/>
when the department awarded them schol-<lb/>
arships this past year.<lb/>
JenniierMcGord, Stacy Mercier, Bonnie<lb/>
White and Kristy Waters all received scholai<lb/>
ships based on their past performances in the<lb/>
dance department. All four hue been fea-<lb/>
tured in the acclaimed Eastarolina Dance<lb/>
Theatre, entertaining audiences with then<lb/>
spirited performances.<lb/>
McCord is a 21 year-old senior who<lb/>
hasbeenaprincipJedancerand 12-year m<lb/>
her of the Dance Theater ol Fayetteville, her<lb/>
home town. She has appeared in 1 asfan <lb/>
lina Dance Theater for tht<lb/>
dancing primarily in ballet pieces Mc ord<lb/>
also danced in "Am. .nl and the<lb/>
tors" a - horeographed piei i<lb/>
ed at the American<lb/>
iin1ar<lb/>
I amuiti -talenteddancer,said<lb/>
that hei biggest Step personally was per-<lb/>
forming in guest arc 11 arley's'Tton<lb/>
Phenomenon" in th<lb/>
cert.<lb/>
"Thisdanceconcertwasabigstepfor<lb/>
me Ma ord said. 1 felt I grew by being<lb/>
giventhe i show my talent outside<lb/>
of ballet"<lb/>
? presents .in unassum-<lb/>
losetsthequal 'tarn<lb/>
i she performs in. Originalh from<lb/>
Maine, Mercier is preside East<lb/>
olina Dance AssociatiCH X) and<lb/>
has trained in Pi andNewYork.<lb/>
See DANCE page 2<lb/>
Ly Dail Reed<lb/>
Human bowling ,h one thing many students participated in during the 1995<lb/>
Barefoot on the Mall spring i elebration<lb/>
Alumni honored during<lb/>
PurpleGold Weekend<lb/>
By Karen Hassell<lb/>
Assistant News Editor<lb/>
Two alumni and a retired faculty<lb/>
member were honored bv I he ECU<lb/>
Alumni Association with the 1943 Dis-<lb/>
tinguished Service ward during<lb/>
Alumni Weekend, April 16 17.<lb/>
lack S. Everton ol Virginia h<lb/>
Va Marguerite Perry ol Greem Die and<lb/>
leySlaughter aiootVirginia K<lb/>
were honored fa tl i ir continued<lb/>
vice to the urn-<lb/>
Alumni Wei I '<lb/>
Each of the honorees, selected<lb/>
by the alumni association board of<lb/>
d on nominations sub-<lb/>
mitted by alumni, received a<lb/>
memorative pew t?<lb/>
The Distinj???<lb/>
Award, one of the high<lb/>
Alumni Associationbesl given<lb/>
to those who symbolize and epito-<lb/>
the spirit of service to their alma<lb/>
mater said Donald V Leggett, asso-<lb/>
llor for al<lb/>
ALUMNI<lb/>
ECU chosen<lb/>
to transmit<lb/>
TV station<lb/>
By Jason Williams<lb/>
Staff Writer<lb/>
"Lights, camera action" w<lb/>
be a i ommon phra an und<lb/>
pus later this year when an r<lb/>
teIeisionchannelbi-ginsbi<lb/>
ingfrom Joyner ' .it<lb/>
Th-<lb/>
three access channe<lb/>
thmugh the new 15-year frai<lb/>
agreement between thecityol<lb/>
vilk<lb/>
The campus-based channel v ill be<lb/>
an educational channel, wl<lb/>
CommunityCollegewillcoordinate<lb/>
a public access channel, and Green-<lb/>
ville City Hall will broadcast me<lb/>
ings and public hearings on a g<lb/>
ernment access channel<lb/>
The Pitt County S -<lb/>
ministration as aske I<lb/>
site of the proposed stations After<lb/>
s? iliciting bids from FCC an.<lb/>
TCttCountvSurrinttTidentHoward<lb/>
Sosne award<lb/>
ontheba hfactorsasl<lb/>
cal stafi available, access b<lb/>
11.<lb/>
. us.<lb/>
Both<lb/>
shongarnmitmenttothesucces<lb/>
the Education<lb/>
to working with and supporting<lb/>
Counrv Schools and other edu<lb/>
tional institutioi<lb/>
Sosne said.<lb/>
hi distribute -r the<lb/>
demict i immui ii at u iSupp al<lb/>
 ices area injoynei<lb/>
A<lb/>
sitecould support up I<lb/>
weekol,<lb/>
cu n<lb/>
staff.<lb/>
The proposal . -<lb/>
the School . Education ha<lb/>
portfacilit) whichcouldbi<lb/>
and telecom ;<lb/>
BrodyBuildii<lb/>
?<lb/>
vated but unequipped i' stu<lb/>
114 oynei<lb/>
Supp managei<lb/>
Weathersbeesaid besides trad<lb/>
With<lb/>
channel could bi<lb/>
pipel<lb/>
such programi<lb/>
horn<lb/>
<pb facs="00058405_0002"/><lb/>
APRIL 27, 1993<lb/>
DANCE<lb/>
Job outlook remains tight<lb/>
The job market remains tight for graduating college stu-<lb/>
dents this year, with fewer employers visiting campuses and<lb/>
bringing only limited opportunities, according to the College<lb/>
Placement council's March 1993 Salary Survey. For students<lb/>
who received job offers, starting sa laries showed little movement<lb/>
since the September 1992 survey, the council said.<lb/>
Political science and government majors saw their initial<lb/>
salary offers drop 1.6 percent, while humanities majors experi-<lb/>
enced a 9.3 percent drop. Management information systems<lb/>
graduates received an average offer of $29,267, up 2.6 percent<lb/>
from September 1992 figures.<lb/>
Graduate school tuition rises<lb/>
Tuition increases for public and private graduate schools<lb/>
ranged from 3 percent to 9 percent this year, according to<lb/>
Peterson's Annual Survey of Graduate Institutions. Enrollment<lb/>
in graduate programs also is on the rise, the survey found.<lb/>
The average cost, which includes tuition and fees, rose the<lb/>
most at public institutions.<lb/>
State residents paid an average of $2,445 for the academic<lb/>
year, an 82 percent increase over last year, and out-of-state<lb/>
residents paid an average of $5,715, or 9.1 percent more from last<lb/>
year.<lb/>
Graduate student at private institutions paid $6,996, a 3.1<lb/>
percent increase. "Considering the effects of our nation's linger-<lb/>
ing recession on both public and private sources of educational<lb/>
funding, these increases might be considered quite reasonable<lb/>
said Peter Hegener, president of Peterson's Guides.<lb/>
University, employee settle case<lb/>
A secretary at the University of Alabama who accused<lb/>
formerbasketball coach Wimp Sandersonofpunchingher settled<lb/>
for $275,000 just before the case was to go to trial in mid-April,<lb/>
officials said.<lb/>
Nancy Watts had been Sanderson's administrative assis-<lb/>
tant, school officials said. She claimed he hit her during an<lb/>
argument.<lb/>
The settlement resolved Watts' sexual discrimination claim<lb/>
against Sanderson, the university and Athletic Director Hootie<lb/>
Ingram. Assault and battery charges from the March 17, 1992<lb/>
incident also were dropped.<lb/>
Sanderson resigned under protest in May 1992. Watts<lb/>
remained at the university and will retire in two years.<lb/>
Compiled by Karen Hassell. Taken from CPS<lb/>
and other campus newspapers.<lb/>
Among her cred its are four years of<lb/>
Dance Theatre, NYC-Dance Space<lb/>
Workshop performance and sum-<lb/>
mer classesatMuhlenberg College.<lb/>
Mercier plans to work and<lb/>
study dance in Salt Lake City, Utah<lb/>
during .he next summer. She then<lb/>
plans ti move to Holland and then<lb/>
come back to the United States to<lb/>
dance professionally in New York.<lb/>
Bonnie White has graced the<lb/>
ECU stage with breath-taking bal-<lb/>
let performances on a consistent<lb/>
basis. Transferring to ECU in 1990,<lb/>
Whiteattended community college<lb/>
in Washington and became 1st<lb/>
Dancer of Balletacoma in the two<lb/>
years spent there.<lb/>
White has performed in nu-<lb/>
merous student composition<lb/>
projects and equally numerous<lb/>
Dance Theatres, most recently as<lb/>
soloistlead in the 1993<lb/>
"Variationen White has also<lb/>
worked on full scholarships with<lb/>
Ballet Hawaii and Meribeth Kisner<lb/>
in Chicago. White's future plans<lb/>
include auditioning in Houston,<lb/>
Chicago and Seattle for dancing<lb/>
position in major dance companies.<lb/>
Lastly, Kristy Waters has in-<lb/>
toxicated audiences withher vibrant<lb/>
Continued from page 1<lb/>
and exciting dancing that explodes<lb/>
off the stage. Waters' accomplish-<lb/>
ments include scholarships at the<lb/>
Marie Wallace dance school, the<lb/>
Conservatory of American Dance <lb/>
Chi-Town jazz Dance Company<lb/>
and various workshops and train-<lb/>
ing under dance professionals.<lb/>
Choreographing various<lb/>
marching bands and musicals in<lb/>
the Greenville and surrounding ar-<lb/>
eas, Waters also has taught jazz<lb/>
tap at a dance theater in New Bern.<lb/>
Her future plans include working<lb/>
in a professional jazz company and<lb/>
possibly choreographing commer-<lb/>
cial materials, including movies,<lb/>
videos, etc.<lb/>
Waters summed up the dedi-<lb/>
cation and perseverance that all<lb/>
dancers must have and these four<lb/>
have shown while at ECU.<lb/>
"You start with a dream<lb/>
Waters said. "Everyone has one.<lb/>
You set some goals and work hard<lb/>
committing yourself totally men-<lb/>
tally and physically. There will al-<lb/>
ways be setbacks, but you survive,<lb/>
pick yourself up and keep reaching<lb/>
for that star. You never let go of<lb/>
your goals and eventually your<lb/>
dream will come true<lb/>
ALFREDO'S<lb/>
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OPEN UNTIL MIDNIGHT ALL WEEK ?<lb/>
School of Business<lb/>
Graduate<lb/>
Recognition<lb/>
Ceremony<lb/>
Honoring Spring and Summer '93<lb/>
Graduates and Undergraduates<lb/>
Friday, May 7<lb/>
5:00 p.m.<lb/>
Wright Auditorium<lb/>
Reception following program<lb/>
First Floor<lb/>
General Classroom Building<lb/>
Celebrating:<lb/>
?t Outstanding seniors from<lb/>
each department<lb/>
?? Commerce Club Scholarship<lb/>
? Masters Hooding Ceremony<lb/>
?? Teaching Excellence Award<lb/>
Sponsored by the Commerce Club<lb/>
in recognition and appreciation<lb/>
of graduating Business students<lb/>
and their families<lb/>
RSVP 7576377<lb/>
nnpimui?iniii1 iuwny?n?i<lb/>
mmmmmmmm<lb/>
<pb facs="00058405_0003"/><lb/>
APRIL 27, 1993<lb/>
The East Carolinian 3<lb/>
U<lb/>
?<lb/>
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a u rant<lb/>
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ALLYOU-CAN-EAT<lb/>
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Mon-Fri llam-2:30pm<lb/>
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Take Out Orders Available<lb/>
Greenville Square Shopping Center<lb/>
Greenville Blvd. across from The Plaza<lb/>
756-1169<lb/>
YEARBOOK<lb/>
Continued from page 1<lb/>
GREENVILLE ? TOYOTA<lb/>
COLLEGE GRAD PROGRAM<lb/>
? SPECIAL FINANCE RATE<lb/>
? NO DOWN PAYMENT<lb/>
? NO PAYMENT FOR 90 DAYS<lb/>
? 6 MONTHS PRIOR TO GRADUATION<lb/>
321-3000<lb/>
dents can receive their copies at no<lb/>
charge.<lb/>
"We really feel proud of this<lb/>
production said Dr. Xue-Mei<lb/>
Zhanj instructor of the video pnv<lb/>
duction class. "But we're still col-<lb/>
lecting ideas from people<lb/>
"We'll have a much more ex-<lb/>
perienced staff next year,and in the<lb/>
future I see the video yearbook be-<lb/>
coming the first step for a TV chan-<lb/>
nel or TV show Brown said.<lb/>
Brown said thatUNC-Chapel<lb/>
Hill has two cable stations. "1 think<lb/>
that's something we could do<lb/>
Brown said. "It would take a lot of<lb/>
planning, butitcould be done it is<lb/>
a possibility<lb/>
The actual production of<lb/>
"Treasure Chest" took place in a<lb/>
class consisting of 12-15 students<lb/>
meeting certain criteria, Zhang said.<lb/>
Oily communication majors<lb/>
can register for this class, and they<lb/>
must receive special permission<lb/>
from Zhang.<lb/>
Previous audio and or video<lb/>
experience isnecessary,and thestu-<lb/>
dents must be "extremely moti-<lb/>
vated Zhang said.<lb/>
"The students learn to edit<lb/>
and shoot basically they all learned<lb/>
how to do every part of the video<lb/>
Brown said. "For the first edition,<lb/>
this was an excellent product<lb/>
During the fall of 1992, the<lb/>
class had to submit a five-minute<lb/>
demo tape to the Media Board. That<lb/>
tape metwith approval, Zhang said,<lb/>
so production began.<lb/>
During the fall the class spent<lb/>
the ma jority of the time filmingcam-<lb/>
pus life in general, but once spring<lb/>
semester began the various campus<lb/>
organizations were covered, Zhang<lb/>
said.<lb/>
"This is not a conventional<lb/>
class Zhang said. "This isall hands-<lb/>
on experience<lb/>
Zhang said the deadline for<lb/>
completed video was April 1, which<lb/>
was met by the students after a<lb/>
great deal of hard work. "We only<lb/>
have a few students returning next<lb/>
semester Zhang said. "Some will<lb/>
vl<lb/>
FEATURI<lb/>
THE<lb/>
UJ43?7iY4<lb/>
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CLASSICS NIGHT<lb/>
$3.00 Members $4.00 Guests<lb/>
K DRAFT ALL NIGHT!<lb/>
$3.00 Teas &amp; Bahama Mamas ? 504 Jello Shots ? 754 Kamikazes<lb/>
SWEET 16 NIGHT<lb/>
$1.00 Domestics ? $2.75 Pitchers ? $3.00 Teas &amp; Bahama Mamas<lb/>
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"JeEkend<lb/>
DRNcE PaRTY<lb/>
leave in December, and we only<lb/>
keep the very, very good ones<lb/>
Steve Lewis will replace<lb/>
graduating senior Sam Matheny as<lb/>
executive producer.<lb/>
Student response to the video<lb/>
was mixed, and several students<lb/>
offered ideas for future videos.<lb/>
"I thought it was pretty good<lb/>
overall said senior Lisa Hicks. "It<lb/>
showed a wide range of campus<lb/>
ictivities<lb/>
"The ideas were OK, but a lot<lb/>
of the video rolled by far too<lb/>
quickly Bruce Erickson, an ECU<lb/>
senior, said.<lb/>
"ItwasOKfora first edition<lb/>
Erickson slid. "But hopefully it will<lb/>
get better and better<lb/>
Erickson said future produc-<lb/>
tions should include more local<lb/>
music.<lb/>
ALUMNI<lb/>
Continued from page 1<lb/>
"These three people have<lb/>
rendered continued, outstand-<lb/>
ing service to this university.<lb/>
They are people who go the ex-<lb/>
tra mile ? rime and time again<lb/>
? to enhance the growth and<lb/>
progressof theuruversity,and it<lb/>
is a greater institution because<lb/>
of mem Leggett said.<lb/>
Everton retired in 1985<lb/>
from the United States General<lb/>
AccountingOiT.cein its Norfolk<lb/>
Regional Office and the Far East<lb/>
Branch in Tokyo, japan, and was<lb/>
honored with a Meritorious Ser-<lb/>
vice Award by theorganization.<lb/>
He is the current vice presi-<lb/>
dent of the ECU Alumni Asso-<lb/>
ciation, and is an active member<lb/>
of the Tidewater ECU Alumni<lb/>
Chapter, the Pirate Ciub and the<lb/>
Hampton Roads Rotary Club.<lb/>
Everton received both his<lb/>
BS and MA degrees from ECU<lb/>
in 1950 and 1958.<lb/>
Perry taught French and<lb/>
Spanish at ECU for nearly half a<lb/>
century, eight years of which<lb/>
she spent as chairman of the<lb/>
Department of Foreign Lan-<lb/>
guages and Literature.<lb/>
She has been treasurer of<lb/>
the Retired Faculty Association<lb/>
since its formation in 1987, and<lb/>
is a member of the Chancellor's<lb/>
Society and the Planned Giving<lb/>
Council.<lb/>
Slaughter grad uated from<lb/>
East Carolina in 1952, and<lb/>
taught in high schools in<lb/>
Harriett Ccwmty, Asheboroand<lb/>
Norfolk where her husband, ihe<lb/>
late Marvin Slaughter, ran a<lb/>
floor covering business.<lb/>
She is active in the Tide-<lb/>
water Chapter of the Alumni<lb/>
Association, the Chancellor's<lb/>
Society, the ECU Foundation<lb/>
and the Children's Hospital of<lb/>
the King's Daughter Circle.<lb/>
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<pb facs="00058405_0004"/><lb/>
i m !??! ? -? -<lb/>
APRIL 27. 1993<lb/>
m page 1<lb/>
TV<lb/>
Continued from page 1<lb/>
stem.<lb/>
-?nt<lb/>
mmunica-<lb/>
tver has<lb/>
luntofworkhis<lb/>
e to do in the<lb/>
ssroom building.<lb/>
i sed the length of<lb/>
when ent?tments so mv students<lb/>
more impI spend as much time in the<lb/>
Floyd saidHowever weallagreebuilding Power said. "It's a ma-<lb/>
thatsomeimprovementscan nowjor problem that needs to be<lb/>
be made by certain adjustmentssolved<lb/>
"Ultimately, we'd like to con-<lb/>
nect several sites with a switching<lb/>
device so thata meeting or class held<lb/>
at Titt Community could be broad-<lb/>
cast live from Joyner said jack<lb/>
Postma, chairman of the Greenville<lb/>
Cable Television Commission.<lb/>
Chancellor Richard Eakin and<lb/>
Greenville City Council woman Inez<lb/>
Fridley have been enthusiastic sup-<lb/>
porters of the proposed public ser-<lb/>
vice channels, and the school sys-<lb/>
tems' involvement in the channels<lb/>
"Every institution involved will<lb/>
havea role to play, and all will benefit<lb/>
greatly Fridley said.<lb/>
BLUE PI ANET CAFE IS OPEN!<lb/>
Serving Vegetarian Caryy-out Meals; Sandwiches, :<lb/>
1 Salads and Assorted Goodies: 11:30 - 2:00, Mon - Fri<lb/>
Hot and ThirsW?<lb/>
Tree of Life Unfiltered East Coast<lb/>
APPLE JUICE<lb/>
$4.25Gallon<lb/>
ft 0<lb/>
BL-UE PLANET LjfeFoods)<lb/>
Organic Groceries &amp; Produce VitaminsSupplements<lb/>
Bulk Foods - Herbs Health &amp; Beauty Aids<lb/>
405 EVANS STREET MALL<lb/>
758-0850<lb/>
Hours 10-6.M-Sat<lb/>
WANTED<lb/>
Students interested in becoming<lb/>
representatives for the<lb/>
Department of Athletics<lb/>
as members of The<lb/>
Pirate Crew. The<lb/>
Pirate Crew is a<lb/>
volunteer<lb/>
organization that<lb/>
assists ECU<lb/>
Athletics in fund<lb/>
raising activities and the<lb/>
recruitment of student-<lb/>
athletes.<lb/>
For an application and more information call<lb/>
757-4570<lb/>
,rr?rwrmwf'm?i<lb/>
'ssrsrmssssss'ssssjsj'rs-<lb/>
CUFF'S<lb/>
Seafood House &amp; Oyster Bar<lb/>
Washington Hightuay (NC 33 6xt-2 miles past 10th St Putt-Putt) i<lb/>
MONDnV-THURSDRV NIGHTSf<lb/>
.Shrimp Plate $3.95<lb/>
Shrimp &amp; Trout $4.95<lb/>
Steamed Oysters &amp; Shrimp<lb/>
Beer, UJinc &amp; Brown Bogging OK.<lb/>
7523172<lb/>
SUPERMAN<lb/>
IS BACK.<lb/>
BUT IS ANY<lb/>
OF THEM<lb/>
THE REAL<lb/>
MAN OF STEEL?<lb/>
<lb/>
"REIGN OF<lb/>
THE<lb/>
SUPERMEN"<lb/>
BEGINNING IN<lb/>
ADVENTURES OF<lb/>
SUPERMAN 501<lb/>
ACTION COMICS 687'<lb/>
SUPERMAN 78<lb/>
SUPERMAN: THE MAN<lb/>
OF STEEL 22<lb/>
ALL ON SALE THE SAME DAT<lb/>
HE LAST WEEK OF APRIL, 1993'<lb/>
THE COMIC BOOK STORE<lb/>
919Dickenson Ave.<lb/>
Greenville, NC 27834<lb/>
'OPEN 7 DAYS (919) 758-6909 Mon-Sat 9:30-6<lb/>
A WEEK Sun 2:00-6<lb/>
Captain D's new lightly breaded fish is lighter<lb/>
and crispier than ever before. Dinner<lb/>
includes coleslaw, golden fries and hushpuppies.<lb/>
This offer won't last long so get yours today!<lb/>
SEAFOOD<lb/>
626 South Memorial Drive<lb/>
758-6761<lb/>
SUPER SENIOR WEDNESDAY<lb/>
ANY DINNER $029<lb/>
Plus Free Drink O<lb/>
(E?dud? Ptanm ?nd Packs) (AGE 60 &amp; OVERI<lb/>
KIDS EAT FREE<lb/>
ON THURSDAY<lb/>
Kid 12 &amp; younger Limit 2<lb/>
with each -dull dinner at reg<lb/>
price. Dining room only.<lb/>
BRING ALL<lb/>
GRADUATION<lb/>
PICTURES IN FOR<lb/>
FREE SECOND SET OF PRINTS<lb/>
TO ALL ECU STUDENTS<lb/>
355-5050 ?THE PLAZA<lb/>
Gain Valuable<lb/>
Sales Experience<lb/>
TODAY<lb/>
For Your Resume<lb/>
TOMORROW<lb/>
The East Carolinian<lb/>
is currently accepting<lb/>
applications in the<lb/>
award-winning Advertising<lb/>
Department for an<lb/>
ACCOUNT<lb/>
EXECUTIVE<lb/>
?Work with leaders in the<lb/>
business community<lb/>
?Create advertising campaigns<lb/>
?Unlimited Income potential<lb/>
?No previous sales experience<lb/>
necessary<lb/>
?Own personal transportation<lb/>
Apply at<lb/>
The East Carolinian<lb/>
2nd floor Student Pubs<lb/>
757-6366<lb/>
EAST<lb/>
CAROUNIAN<lb/>
FAST, FREE DELIVERY<lb/>
??????<lb/>
an ????<lb/>
MMmumam muwAMEtfr<lb/>
a?k MtMl IT<lb/>
 ? A i ? i i h ? S.<lb/>
I U.8JL ?<lb/>
$1<lb/>
88<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 50c each.<lb/>
Sign up today for Overton's 1st Annual 3<lb/>
on 3 Basketball Tournament to be held on<lb/>
Saturday, May 1, 1993.<lb/>
? 4 Players per team (one injury sub if needed). Open<lb/>
to ages Iff and up.<lb/>
? Teams will be placed according to height, skill level,<lb/>
and experience. Single Elimination Tournament.<lb/>
? Entry 40.00 per team.<lb/>
? Rain Date Sunday, May 2, 1993.<lb/>
? For more details call Jake Jacobs at 355-5783 or<lb/>
come by Overton's for complete rules and entry form.<lb/>
Your Complete Sporting Goods Store<lb/>
Hours: Monday thru Friday, 8 to 7 pm ? Saturday, 8 to 6 pm<lb/>
It<lb/>
YOU NEED A BREAK?<lb/>
SNACK<lb/>
ATTACK<lb/>
large<lb/>
2 item pizza<lb/>
$6.74<lb/>
TRIPLE<lb/>
TROUBLE<lb/>
3<lb/>
small<lb/>
1 item pizzas<lb/>
$9.99<lb/>
&amp;<lb/>
EXAM<lb/>
SPECIAL<lb/>
Medium<lb/>
2 item pizza<lb/>
$5.18<lb/>
PIRATE<lb/>
SPECIAL<lb/>
X-Large 1 item<lb/>
&amp; 2 sodas BLOWOUT<lb/>
$7.36<lb/>
2 small<lb/>
2 item pizzas<lb/>
S. 2 sodas<lb/>
$8.18<lb/>
STUDY<lb/>
BREAK<lb/>
large<lb/>
1 item pizza<lb/>
S. small Pokey Stix<lb/>
$7.17<lb/>
PURPLE<lb/>
PEOPLE EATER<lb/>
u<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/>
large<lb/>
1 item pizzas<lb/>
$14.99<lb/>
111 Red Banks Road, Greenville<lb/>
355-5783<lb/>
NC Wildlife Agent<lb/>
Prices Do Not Include Sales Tax-OHers May Expire Without Notice-$5.00 Minimum for Delivery<lb/>
11<lb/>
11<lb/>
HOURS<lb/>
SUN-THURS:<lb/>
00 AM-1:30 AM<lb/>
FRI-SAT:<lb/>
:00AM-2:30 AM<lb/>
321-GUM-B<lb/>
315 S.E. GREENVILLE BLVD.<lb/>
Located next to Blockbuster Video<lb/>
PERSONAL CHECKS<lb/>
?<lb/>
Mltf Check Cli.irpc<lb/>
<pb facs="00058405_0005"/><lb/>
Apri!<lb/>
?93<lb/>
TheEastCarolinian<lb/>
Classifieds<lb/>
Page 5<lb/>
11<lb/>
forRant<lb/>
nispj<lb/>
"XT'j1<lb/>
ONI BEDROOM APARTMENT 1<lb/>
BLOCK i R. M i VMPUS. Laundry<lb/>
i.hgenoughf.r<lb/>
2. Stirting beginning or mid-May! Call<lb/>
now 7: 6-2( 28<lb/>
SINGLEROOMSFORRENTfor sum-<lb/>
mer session . SZ3t per s.s. includes rent,<lb/>
utilities,and phone. More info contact<lb/>
Marcus at (919) 758-3936.<lb/>
APARTMENT FOR RENT, available<lb/>
after exams, 2 BR, 1 bath, Regency<lb/>
House, spacious, furnished, S4O0 per<lb/>
month, call 758-7422 for info.<lb/>
SUBLEASE: Room for rent. Fully fur-<lb/>
nished house. Pay S200 a month plus<lb/>
13 utilities. Available for summer.<lb/>
Please contact 756-4735.<lb/>
SUMMER ONLY - 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 S375month and<lb/>
utilities (cheap). Call ASAP 830-6278.<lb/>
SUBLEASE APARTMFNT located at<lb/>
King's Arms Apartments. Rent 5265 a<lb/>
month. Available May lOthrough July<lb/>
31.1 will pay all of May's rent. Deposit<lb/>
SI 70. Call Angela 757-2437.<lb/>
2 ROOMS IN LARGE HOUSE on<lb/>
Eastern St Few blocks from campus.<lb/>
Available May 1st. 14400 utilities.<lb/>
Call Todd or Mark at 830-1371.<lb/>
RINGGOLD TOWERS<lb/>
Now Taking Leases for<lb/>
1 bedroom, 2 bedroom &amp;<lb/>
Efficiency Apartments.<lb/>
CALL 752-2865<lb/>
ONE OR TWO ROOMMATES<lb/>
IrV A rFDtosharetownhouseinYVild-<lb/>
wood Villas. S155.00 per month. Call<lb/>
931-8906 or 830-1359.<lb/>
FEMALE ROOMMATE WANTED<lb/>
SI 50.00 month rent. 1 2 utilities. Avail-<lb/>
able June 1st own bedroom 12 mile<lb/>
from campus. Call 752-0874 ask for<lb/>
Frankie. Leave message.<lb/>
TWO FEMALE ROOMMATES<lb/>
NEEDED for a newly renovated Wild-<lb/>
wood Villa apartment. Each person<lb/>
pays SI 27 a month plus 1 5 of utilities.<lb/>
Needed soon, please call 931-9333.<lb/>
ROOMMATE for apartment at<lb/>
Stratford Arms, next to Allied Health<lb/>
Bldg nonsmoker, free cable and wa-<lb/>
ter, starting in June. Rent 185. plus 1 2<lb/>
utilities, phone. Call 756-1603.<lb/>
MALE ROOMMATE NEEDED IM-<lb/>
MEDIATELY. Must be responsible,<lb/>
honest and nonsmoking. 1 2 rent, 12<lb/>
utilities. Rent includes AC,heat,cable,<lb/>
watersewage. 2 blocks from campus.<lb/>
Call Robert at 931-7112 or 757-3697.<lb/>
ROOMMATES needed for summer<lb/>
fall; 3 bdrm. house, 1 block from cam-<lb/>
pus; low utilities, ac, washerdryer.<lb/>
Call Stephanie at 752-2560.<lb/>
BEST PLACE IN GREENVILLE TO<lb/>
LIVE. Needed: ONE GOOD<lb/>
ROOMATE. 3 bedroom house, cathe-<lb/>
dral 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. S200 13 util.<lb/>
THISISTHELTVINCSPACEYOU'VE<lb/>
BEEN DREAMING ABOUT. Call us<lb/>
758-7993.<lb/>
FEMALE ROOMMATE WANTED<lb/>
for Wildwood Villa Apartment start-<lb/>
ing May 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. SI 55 a month plusl<lb/>
3utilities.CanKellyorLinda931-7821.<lb/>
2ROOMMATES NEEDED to share4<lb/>
bedroom house very near campus.<lb/>
Please call Brittany 931-8628 or Cathy<lb/>
931-8637. (For summer only!)<lb/>
FEMALE non-smoker, responsible,<lb/>
socia 1 d rinker. To share 3 bed room 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. SI 62.50 per month plus<lb/>
12 utilities. Available May 1 call 758-<lb/>
3311.<lb/>
FEMALE ROOMMATE WANTED<lb/>
for apartmentl 2block from Art Bldg<lb/>
3 blocks from downtown and 2 blocks<lb/>
from supermarket. Great for art stu-<lb/>
dents. Call (919)867-6211.<lb/>
(<lb/>
CHEAP! FBIUSSFJZED: 89 Mercedes<lb/>
-S200,86VW-S50,87Mercedes-S100,<lb/>
65 Mustang - 55. Choose form thou-<lb/>
sands starting S50. FREE Information<lb/>
24 hour hotline 801 -379-2929 copyright<lb/>
 NC 030610.<lb/>
GOVERNMENT SEIZED CARS,<lb/>
trucks, boats, 4 wheelers, motorhomes,<lb/>
bv FBI, IRS, DE A. Available your area<lb/>
now. Call 1-800436-1363 ext. C-5999.<lb/>
1984KAWASAKIGPZ750Red,stage<lb/>
3 carburetor kit, Kerker pipe, one hel-<lb/>
met. SI 000. Negotiable. 7584920.<lb/>
CLUB FOR WOMEN ONLY MEM-<lb/>
BERSHIP. Save S59 initiation fee.<lb/>
ONLY S29 per month. UNLIMITED<lb/>
TAN S10 additional. FULL FACILITY<lb/>
GYM! 321-6831.<lb/>
SOFA BED AND 2 CHAIRS - $100.<lb/>
Ent. Ctr. 525. Computer desk whutch<lb/>
-S50. Dining tablew4chairs-S50. Call<lb/>
752-9347 and lv.msg.<lb/>
CRUISER BIKE - S50. Stealth radar<lb/>
detector - S50. Soloflex wleg ext and<lb/>
butterfly att. - 5500. Tandy PC wcolor<lb/>
monitor and DWP-S300. Call 752-9347<lb/>
and lv. msg.<lb/>
1979 BMW320i,runsgood,only 88,500<lb/>
miles, AMFM cassette, 4 Pioneer<lb/>
speakers, needs 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 ecve a<lb/>
message.<lb/>
QUEENSIZE WATERBED, heater,<lb/>
cushioned siderails, headboard,<lb/>
pumps, hook-ups. Great condition.<lb/>
5145 neg. Call 758-9341 today.<lb/>
COUCH AND CHAIR FOR SALE.<lb/>
Good condition. Graduating! Must sell<lb/>
ASAP. I don't have room to take them<lb/>
with me. S75.00 Cal 830-6665.<lb/>
SOFA, LOVESEAT, DRESSER,<lb/>
CHEST OF DRAWERS, RECLINER,<lb/>
COFFEETABLE,2ENDTABLES.Sale<lb/>
for cheap. Call 752-6491.<lb/>
1988 YAMAHA FZ-600: redwhite,<lb/>
Fl R pipe, new back tire, helmet, SI 750.<lb/>
negotiable. 931-9041 leave message.<lb/>
CDs USED S5;Futon, matching tables<lb/>
w glass, dark green cover, 5400; 355-<lb/>
9502 leave message.<lb/>
200 - $500 WEEKLY. Assemble prod-<lb/>
ucts at home. 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/>
cantsalsoshouldhavecheerful, friendly<lb/>
and ca ring attitudes in their interaction<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 $$$<lb/>
Cash SSS Cash SSS Call Paul (919) 736-<lb/>
0716 Mothers Playhouse.<lb/>
ATTENTION STUDENTS: Earn ex-<lb/>
tra cashstuffingenvelopesathome. 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/>
4364365 ext. P-3712.<lb/>
ALASKASUMMER EMPLOYMENT<lb/>
- fisheries Earn $600week in canner-<lb/>
ies or $4,000 month on fishing boats.<lb/>
Free Transportation! Room and Board!<lb/>
Over 8,000 ooenings. No experience<lb/>
necessary. iaie or Female For em-<lb/>
ployment program call 1 -206-545-4155<lb/>
ext. A5362.<lb/>
NEEDED45 people to loseweightnow.<lb/>
New product recommended by doc-<lb/>
tors. 100 natural, 100 guaranteed.<lb/>
Call 321-1046.<lb/>
INTERNATIONALEMPLOYMENT<lb/>
- Make money teaching basic conver-<lb/>
sational English abroad. Japan and<lb/>
Taiwan. Make $2,000 - $4,000 pa-<lb/>
month. Many provide room and board<lb/>
 other benefits! No previous training<lb/>
or teaching certificate required. For In-<lb/>
te ma rionalEmploym ent program, call<lb/>
the International Employment Group:<lb/>
(206) 632-1146 ext. J5362.<lb/>
BANQUETWAIT HELP FOR SUM-<lb/>
MER JOBS. Apply Ramada Inn, 203<lb/>
W. Greenville Blvd Greenville, NC.<lb/>
CRUISE SHIPS NOW HIRING -Earn<lb/>
$2,000month world travel (Hawaii,<lb/>
Mexico, The Caribbean, Etc.) Holiday,<lb/>
Summer and Career employmentavail-<lb/>
able. No experience necessary. For<lb/>
employment program call 1-206-634-<lb/>
0468 ext. C5362.<lb/>
CURBSIDE WAITRESSES NEEDED<lb/>
- Flexible hours. Apply in person at<lb/>
West Ford End Drive-In.<lb/>
WANTED: Students interested in be-<lb/>
comingrepresentativesforthe Depart-<lb/>
ment of Athletics as members of the<lb/>
PirateCrew. The Pirate crew isa volun-<lb/>
teer organization that assists ECU ath-<lb/>
letics in fund raising activities and the<lb/>
recruitment of student athletes. Call<lb/>
757-4570 for an application and more<lb/>
information.<lb/>
PART -TIME HELP NEEDED morn-<lb/>
ing hours only. Apply in person at<lb/>
Carpet BargainCenterl009 Dickinson<lb/>
Ave.<lb/>
$10 - $360UP WEEKLY Mailing bro-<lb/>
chures! Sparefull time. Setown hours!<lb/>
RUSH stamped envelope: Publishers<lb/>
(GI) 1821 Hillandale Rd. 1B-295<lb/>
Durham, NC 27705<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/>
EXCITING NEW<lb/>
CONCEPT COMING TO<lb/>
GREENVILLE AREA<lb/>
Great Summer Job Opportunity.<lb/>
Looking for delivery drivers<lb/>
(Drivers average $8-1 2), cooks<lb/>
and management personnel.<lb/>
Apply In Person<lb/>
Saturday, May 1 st<lb/>
10-3<lb/>
1414-A Charles Blvd.<lb/>
(next to Dino's)<lb/>
WORD PROCESSING AND PHO-<lb/>
TOCOPYING SERVICES: We offer<lb/>
typingand photocopyingservices. 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/>
pa ges.SDFProfessionalComputer Ser-<lb/>
vices, 106 East 5th Street (beside<lb/>
Cubbie's) Greenville, NC 752-3694.<lb/>
HEADING FOR EUROPE this sum-<lb/>
mer? Only $169 Jet there anytime for<lb/>
only $169 with AIRHJTCH! (Reported<lb/>
in Let's Go! &amp; N Times.) AIRHITCH<lb/>
?212-864-2000.<lb/>
MINI STORAGE-148 Brand newstor-<lb/>
ageunits, very close touniversity, cheap<lb/>
rates, EVANS STREET CENTRE <lb/>
MTNI STORAGE 355-7443.<lb/>
HANG GLIDE AT NAGS HEAD,<lb/>
NORTH CAROLINA! Fora weekend<lb/>
or a week of adventure and fun! Kitty<lb/>
HawkKites'beginnerhanggli dingles-<lb/>
son $49 per person (show college ID).<lb/>
1-800-334-4777. Sun Realty's modern<lb/>
beach cottages $250 per weekend or<lb/>
$350 per week (plus applicable taxes,<lb/>
fees and security deposit). 1-800-334-<lb/>
4745. Offer good through early May<lb/>
1993.Call today foravailabilities. (Some<lb/>
restrictions apply).<lb/>
GRAVES PROFESSIONAL TYPING &amp;<lb/>
WORD PROCESSING SERVICE<lb/>
'English Literature Major<lb/>
'Editing &amp; Tutoring Available<lb/>
'Professionally Composed Resumes<lb/>
'Competitive Rates<lb/>
CALL 758-7218<lb/>
BOOKTRADER<lb/>
BUY AND TRADE<lb/>
PAPERBACK BOOKS<lb/>
OVER<lb/>
50,000 TITLES<lb/>
919 Dickinson Ave.<lb/>
Greenville, NC<lb/>
758-6909<lb/>
COMICS OLD &amp; NEW<lb/>
NjQWi USED CD'S<lb/>
JSELL<lb/>
iYOUR<lb/>
STUFF!<lb/>
 We're paying<lb/>
I CASH for<lb/>
Furniture<lb/>
? Men's Clothing<lb/>
- Dorm Refrigerators<lb/>
Microwaves<lb/>
Stereo Equipment<lb/>
If you axe selling you must be 18<lb/>
with a picture ID (NCDL. ECU)<lb/>
TUDENT<lb/>
WAP<lb/>
HOP<lb/>
t EVANS STREET MALL<lb/>
Park behind Globe Hardware<lb/>
&amp; use our new rear entrance<lb/>
752-3866<lb/>
Mon 10-12 1-5<lb/>
Tues-Fri 10-12 1-3 Sat 10-12<lb/>
RESEARCH INFORMATION!<lb/>
Largest Library of Information In U.S.<lb/>
all subjects<lb/>
Order Catalog Today with vteaMC or COD<lb/>
800-351-0222<lb/>
TOLL FREE<lb/>
HOT LINE<lb/>
in Calif. 213 ?77-8226<lb/>
Or, rush $2.00 to: Resoarch Information<lb/>
11322 Idaho Ave. H206-A, Los Angles. CA 90025<lb/>
KEYS LOST! If you found a set of keys<lb/>
(5-7 keys on 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/>
FOUND keys at Howell ScienceCom-<lb/>
plex.GradNite92KeychainandMace.<lb/>
See secretary in BN108.<lb/>
LOST - A very important book bag that<lb/>
is needed to graduate! Please return if<lb/>
found! Contact The East Carolinian at<lb/>
757-6366 and leavea messageorask for<lb/>
Dana.<lb/>
USA: Saturday night was really fun!<lb/>
I'm still recovering from my drunken<lb/>
state! Like flies to honey, those guys<lb/>
sure were funny, next time we'll drink<lb/>
before we go, and then we'll dance all<lb/>
night at the Elbo! Love ya, Lisa Marie.<lb/>
ANNETTE: Nowyou'rereallyold! At<lb/>
22, In only 18 years you'll be 40. Oh my<lb/>
God! You're life is almost over. Don't<lb/>
you just love my sense of humor? Re-<lb/>
ally, I hope you have the bestest birth-<lb/>
day everand good luck on yourexams.<lb/>
See ya . Karen<lb/>
BUBBA You are wonderful, and I<lb/>
never could have made it this semester<lb/>
without you. Thanks for all the higs,<lb/>
kisses, and support. I know we are<lb/>
goingto makeit.Wehaveto-youstill<lb/>
owe me an Explorer! You are very spe-<lb/>
cial and I'll miss you this summer! I<lb/>
love you bunches! Hon.<lb/>
CORI &amp; MO - Well, here it is, the<lb/>
personal you've been waiting for all<lb/>
semester! You know you both annoy<lb/>
me, but you love me anyway. Cori -<lb/>
Best of luck with roomates A,J, and W,<lb/>
leant waitto visit. And Mo-I'll see you<lb/>
in Raleigh! Thanks for all the Thurs-<lb/>
days! I'll only say it once - I'm gonna<lb/>
miss you both! Love ya-Buffy.<lb/>
THE SISTERS OF ALPHA D ELTA PI<lb/>
would like to wish everyone good luck<lb/>
on exams and have a great summer!<lb/>
See you in the fall!<lb/>
PHI SIGMA PI National Honor Fra-<lb/>
ternity wants to wish all our senior<lb/>
brothers congratulations and best<lb/>
wishes for bright and successful fu-<lb/>
tures. Paula Anderson Borsman, John<lb/>
Congleton, Joi Edmundson, Charlotte<lb/>
Grady, Mary Henderson, Kandyce<lb/>
Hemdon, Charl Humphreys, Trish<lb/>
Lang, Christie Lawrence, Terry Light,<lb/>
Karen McLamb, Cherie Matthews,<lb/>
Michael Means, Brenda Smith, Kim<lb/>
Smothers, Scott Tippins, Melani Wells,<lb/>
JameyTisdaie,Tracey Wilson and Lisa<lb/>
Willis.<lb/>
SUMMER CAMP STAFF: Counselors, Instructors.<lb/>
Kitchen, Office, Grounds for western NCs finest Co-<lb/>
rf ten t irjsirt edyouth summer sports camp. Will train. Over 25<lb/>
L.AIVIr 1 IaKWIHIU activities including water skiing, heated pool, tennis,<lb/>
artCool Mountain Climate, good pay and great fun! Non-smokers. For applica-<lb/>
tionbrochure: 704-692-6239 or Camp Pinewood, Hendersonville, NC 28792.<lb/>
FIELD SCOUTS - Late to Mid-September.<lb/>
Must be trustworthy, reliable, conscientious, in<lb/>
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/>
BRAND NEW APARTMENTS<lb/>
Exceptional Value<lb/>
Available Immediately. One and two<lb/>
bedroom apartments close to campus.<lb/>
Water and sewer is FREE.<lb/>
Laundry facility and ECU bus service.<lb/>
Call 752-8320 from 8:30 am to 5:00 pm.<lb/>
NOW ACCEPTING APPLICATIONS FOR<lb/>
Permanent Part-Time Sales. Must have previous<lb/>
retail sporting goods experience. Reliable transportation.<lb/>
Able to work morningsnights and some weekends. Apply<lb/>
in-person ONLY. ATHLETIC WORLD at The Plaza Mall and<lb/>
Carolina East Mall. No phone calls please. E.O.E.<lb/>
EVANS STREET CENTRE<lb/>
&amp; MINI STORAGE<lb/>
? Cheap Rate<lb/>
? Month-to-Month lease<lb/>
? Brand New Units<lb/>
?Share with Roommate<lb/>
(3SS-74430 1528 S. Evans St.<lb/>
Announcements<lb/>
CAMPUS CHRISTIAN FEI.l.OW-<lb/>
SHIP.<lb/>
Looking for a fellowship of<lb/>
Christians, a place to pray, study<lb/>
God's word, be involved in social<lb/>
and service projects? Need a refuge<lb/>
form time to time? Campus Christian<lb/>
Fellowship may be what you are look-<lb/>
ing for.Our weekly meetings are at<lb/>
7pm Wednesdays at our Campus<lb/>
House located at 200 E. 8th St di-<lb/>
rectly across Cotanche St. from Men-<lb/>
denhall Student Center. Everyone is<lb/>
welcome. For more information, call<lb/>
Tim Turner, Cam pus Minister, a 1752-<lb/>
7199.<lb/>
ATTENTION PHYSICAL EDUCA-<lb/>
TION MAJORS<lb/>
The Physical Education<lb/>
Motor and Physical Fitness Compe-<lb/>
tency Test is scheduled as follows:<lb/>
Minges Coliseum, 10:00 am,<lb/>
Wednesday, April 28,1993. A pass-<lb/>
ing score on this test is required of<lb/>
all students prior to declaring physi-<lb/>
cal education as a major. 1) Main-<lb/>
tain an average T-score of 45 on the<lb/>
six-item test battery. 2)<lb/>
Having a T-score of 45 on the<lb/>
aerobics run. Any student with a<lb/>
medical condition that would<lb/>
contraindicate participation in the<lb/>
testing should contact Mike<lb/>
McCammon or Dr. Gay Israel at 757-<lb/>
4688.<lb/>
To be exempted from any portion<lb/>
of the test, you must have a<lb/>
physician's excuse. A detailed sum-<lb/>
mary of the test components is avail-<lb/>
able in the Human Performance<lb/>
Laboratory (Room 371, Sports Medi-<lb/>
cine Building). Your physician's ex-<lb/>
cuse must specifically state from<lb/>
which items you are exempt.<lb/>
DESIGN ASSOCIATES<lb/>
Design Associates student<lb/>
group is hosting a visit from Interna-<lb/>
tionally recognized designer David<lb/>
Carson and ECU School of Art Alum-<lb/>
nus, Hayes Henderson.<lb/>
You are invited to attend: David<lb/>
Carson - Art Director - Ray Gun and<lb/>
Surfer magazines: Slide lecture -<lb/>
Thursday April 29, 1993, 7pm in<lb/>
Speight Auditorium. Hayes<lb/>
Henderson - IllustratorDesigner:<lb/>
slide lecture - Friday, April 30,1993,<lb/>
10am in Room 1303, Jenkins Bldg.<lb/>
BUY IT, SELL IT, OR SAY IT<lb/>
in The East Carolinian Classifieds<lb/>
CALL 757-6366<lb/>
?-?J???VI"?r.M?<lb/>
<pb facs="00058405_0006"/><lb/>
The East Carolinian<lb/>
Opinion<lb/>
Page 6<lb/>
"uesdayOpinion<lb/>
Educational channel beneficial<lb/>
By T. Scott Batchelor<lb/>
Final exams to be replaced by EASE questions<lb/>
University's television channel<lb/>
will provide additional<lb/>
community service<lb/>
Once again, East Carolina has proven that its<lb/>
goal is not only to better itself, but to better the<lb/>
Greenville community as well.<lb/>
East Carolina has recently been selected to house<lb/>
a new education channel that will assist students<lb/>
with homework, broadcast live college classes and<lb/>
screen documentaries and classic films to enrich the<lb/>
school's curriculum. The channel will provide com-<lb/>
munity members with a service that, until now, had<lb/>
been unavailable to some.<lb/>
East Carolina will join Pitt Community College<lb/>
and City Hall in a three-channel broadcast that will<lb/>
offer public and governmental access programs, as<lb/>
well as the educational programs. All three have<lb/>
striven to raise the level of education offered at all<lb/>
schools in Pitt County.<lb/>
With new technological improvements in the<lb/>
near future, East Carolina has put itself in a position<lb/>
tobe a ground-breaker in education. By showing this<lb/>
strong commitment to the community, the univer-<lb/>
sity provides greater access to the various services<lb/>
available to the general public.<lb/>
Education does not stop when a person walks<lb/>
out of a classroom. It is something that continues<lb/>
long after one has graduated from any college. By<lb/>
providing this service, East Carolina has made the<lb/>
means for a higher education that much easier, and<lb/>
should definitely be congratulated for it.<lb/>
Air problem in GC continues<lb/>
Solution must be reached to<lb/>
solve serious problem to<lb/>
student, faculty health<lb/>
It looks like students can continue to use "bad<lb/>
air" as an excuse for not going to class in the General<lb/>
Classroom building.<lb/>
A recent survey reported that the level of carbon<lb/>
dioxide in the building has increased since the first<lb/>
survey in November of 1992. Officials have cited the<lb/>
increase as happening because of more people being<lb/>
in the building when the second survey was con-<lb/>
ducted. However, this still does not solve the prob-<lb/>
lem of the original levels, which were higher than<lb/>
federal recommendations.<lb/>
Officials have also cited that the General Classroom<lb/>
building was built obeying codes that focused on energy<lb/>
conservation rather than comfort. They say that this<lb/>
explains why people have complained of odors, head-<lb/>
aches and upset stomachs.<lb/>
Comfort is now an important part of any workplace.<lb/>
ECU should recognize the change in society's priorities<lb/>
and adjust their standards to meet those changes.<lb/>
Though complaints have declined since the first<lb/>
survey, a problem still exists. No quick fix will be<lb/>
found for this dilemma; the administration must look<lb/>
for a long-term solution to provide safe education. As<lb/>
everyone already knows, this is a serious problem<lb/>
that will not go away if it is ignored.<lb/>
Future surveys must be conducted; but first, a<lb/>
plan of action must be implemented. Find a way to<lb/>
correct the problem and embark on that action as<lb/>
soon as possible. Students must understand, though,<lb/>
that this will take money that will come out of their<lb/>
pockets in the long run.<lb/>
That's a small price to pay for your health and<lb/>
safety. You can't set a dollar value on a person's life.<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 Hassell, Assi. News Editor<lb/>
Dana Danielson, Lifestyle Editor<lb/>
John Bullard, Asst. Lifestyle Editor<lb/>
Joe Horst, Opinion Page Editor<lb/>
Robert Todd, Sports Editor<lb/>
Warren Sumner, Asst. Sports Editor<lb/>
Sean Herring, Copy Editor<lb/>
Gregory Dickens, Copy Editor<lb/>
Stress, stress, stress. (Read<lb/>
as "exams, exams, exams)<lb/>
Exams. Who needs 'em<lb/>
anyhow? Do they really prove<lb/>
anything, except that it's pos-<lb/>
sible for a human to remain<lb/>
awake and coherent for 72 hours<lb/>
straight? In my opinion ?which<lb/>
I readily admit is a completely<lb/>
biased one ? final exams are<lb/>
not worth the mental and physi-<lb/>
cal anxiety they produce.<lb/>
However, perhaps I'm be-<lb/>
ing too hasty in my condemna-<lb/>
tion of this antiquated and bar-<lb/>
baric system. Perhaps my loath-<lb/>
ing of the final exam regimen<lb/>
comes from my propensity for<lb/>
procrastination. 1 acknowledge<lb/>
that putting off reading Dante's<lb/>
Inferno till the day before exams<lb/>
causes some stress. Yet even my<lb/>
most conscientious friends suf-<lb/>
fer the same symptoms.<lb/>
A friend of mine came up<lb/>
to me yesterday, sticking out his<lb/>
tongue, and said, "Thee thith<lb/>
"What'd you say?"<lb/>
"Thee the ultherths on my<lb/>
thongue?" he asked, pointing to<lb/>
a patch of white bumps on his<lb/>
tongue.<lb/>
"Talk normally for good-<lb/>
ness sake I said to him.<lb/>
He withdrew his tongue.<lb/>
"Did you see those ulcers? That's<lb/>
from pre-exam stress<lb/>
"How are your grades<lb/>
looking?" I asked.<lb/>
"Oh, I've got A's in all my<lb/>
classes<lb/>
"Are you behind on read-<lb/>
ings or something?"<lb/>
"Nope. I'm all caught up<lb/>
he replied.<lb/>
"You're disgusting I said.<lb/>
"I hope your tongue falls out<lb/>
You see? Even the most<lb/>
well-prepared among us get<lb/>
stressed out during final exams.<lb/>
The technical name for these<lb/>
people is "wimp<lb/>
I propose a new system for<lb/>
measuring a student's intellec-<lb/>
tual growth. I call this new sys-<lb/>
tem the Experimental Anti-<lb/>
Stress Examination, or EASE for<lb/>
short.<lb/>
This new examination con-<lb/>
sists of the following seven ques-<lb/>
tions (to be answered honestly):<lb/>
? Did you enjoy this<lb/>
course? If so, why? If not, why<lb/>
not?<lb/>
? On a scale of one to four,<lb/>
with one being a failing grade<lb/>
and four being an A, which score<lb/>
do you think you would get if<lb/>
you had studied hard and kept<lb/>
up with your assignments?<lb/>
? What is your professor's<lb/>
name? (Just one.)<lb/>
? Did you at any time sleep<lb/>
with your professor? (Univer-<lb/>
sity of Virginia students only.)<lb/>
? What is the air speed ve-<lb/>
locity of an unladen swallow?<lb/>
? Do you mean a European<lb/>
or an African swallow?<lb/>
? If Superman can stop<lb/>
bullets with his bare hand, why<lb/>
does he duck when the bad<lb/>
guy throws a pistol at him?<lb/>
Explain.<lb/>
I know to many of you<lb/>
this list of questions may seem<lb/>
a bit silly, but so would your<lb/>
questions if you were a chronic<lb/>
procrastinator writing against<lb/>
a deadline.<lb/>
Anyway, with the EASE<lb/>
examination completed, the<lb/>
student's answers are then tal-<lb/>
lied (using a byzantine and<lb/>
wholly ambiguous formula)<lb/>
and a grade is assigned, usu-<lb/>
ally an "A<lb/>
Maybe this doesn't sound<lb/>
like much of a way to assess a<lb/>
student's progress in gaining<lb/>
knowledge, but wouldn't the<lb/>
beautiful spring days seem<lb/>
much nicer without all the<lb/>
stress of traditional finals?<lb/>
1 H&amp;iRP THAT Vou'O<lb/>
GOT A CLASS IN TU&amp;<lb/>
GENERAL. CLAGSKOOtYi<lb/>
BUILPINC. HOWPO<lb/>
YOU UK? TU?: ty?LL.<lb/>
PLPtC? Xf V<lb/>
Michael Albuquerque, Business Manager<lb/>
Jody Jones, Circulation Manager<lb/>
Cori Daniels, Layout Manager<lb/>
Monique Campbell, Asst. Layout Manager<lb/>
Woody Barnes, Creative Director<lb/>
Dail ReeJ, Photo Editor<lb/>
Richard Haselrig, Staff illustrator<lb/>
Matt MacDonald, Systems Manager<lb/>
Deborah Daniel, Secretary<lb/>
The East Carolinian publishes 12,000 copies every Tuesday and<lb/>
Thursday. The masthead editorial in each edition is the opinion of the<lb/>
Editorial Board. The East Carolinian welcomes letters, limited to 250<lb/>
words, which may be edited for decency or brevity.<lb/>
The East Carolinian reserves the right to edit or reject letters for<lb/>
publication. Letters should be addressed to The Editor, The East Ca rolinum,<lb/>
Publications BldgECU, Greenville, N.C 27858-4353. For more informa-<lb/>
tion, call (919) 757-6366.<lb/>
Printed on<lb/>
Jrr<lb/>
w<lb/>
100 recycled<lb/>
paper<lb/>
.tmcv tsieep" to po<lb/>
SoMerrufNe a&amp;got<lb/>
rue. ventilation'7<lb/>
&amp;(t othsk thaw<lb/>
tut<lb/>
QuoteofthcDay<lb/>
I'm glad I don't have to explain to a man from Mars<lb/>
why each day I set fire to dozens of little pieces of<lb/>
paper, and then put them in my mouth.<lb/>
Mignon McLaughlin<lb/>
Letters to the Editor<lb/>
Everyone wants world to conform to beliefs<lb/>
To the Editor:<lb/>
I would like to respond<lb/>
to Ms. Peacock's letter to the<lb/>
editor. What are your mor-<lb/>
als? What are your beliefs?<lb/>
Well, we all know now that<lb/>
one of your beliefs is that<lb/>
homosexuality is okay with<lb/>
you. Perhaps you are also<lb/>
pro-choice, or maybe you<lb/>
believe in euthanasia.<lb/>
Whatever your morals<lb/>
are, I'm sure that you sup-<lb/>
port them in many different<lb/>
ways, such as voting for<lb/>
people who share your be-<lb/>
liefs or strongly supporting<lb/>
legislation that fits with your<lb/>
beliefs.<lb/>
As you pointed out, not<lb/>
everyone shares the same be-<lb/>
liefs as you do; therefore,<lb/>
someone will lose out if you<lb/>
get your way.<lb/>
Christians are not the<lb/>
only people on the face of<lb/>
this earth who want people<lb/>
to think like they do. Liber-<lb/>
als do, atheists do, feminists<lb/>
do ? the list is endless. This<lb/>
is why we all fight for what<lb/>
we believe. We all want the<lb/>
world to be a certain way. It<lb/>
is ignorant, arrogant and<lb/>
hypocritical for you to single<lb/>
out Christians.<lb/>
Melody W. Cutler<lb/>
Junior<lb/>
Spanish<lb/>
Truth's definition does not hinge on belief<lb/>
To the Editor:<lb/>
Truth is truth. No mat-<lb/>
ter how we look at it, or how<lb/>
we want to look at it, truth is<lb/>
still truth. Even if we decide<lb/>
in our own wisdom that<lb/>
something else is truth, that<lb/>
doesn't change the original<lb/>
truth from being truth.<lb/>
It seems that we all have<lb/>
fallen away from that con-<lb/>
cept to believe that truth is<lb/>
relative to whoever per-<lb/>
ceives it. So, in essence, we<lb/>
are saying that even though<lb/>
we all have different views<lb/>
of the truth, our views are<lb/>
just as much truth as what<lb/>
everybody else sees as truth.<lb/>
Another view of the truth<lb/>
that has become widely ac-<lb/>
cepted is to equate truth with<lb/>
absolutes and say, "The only<lb/>
absolute is that there are no<lb/>
absolutes<lb/>
Both of these philoso-<lb/>
phies are erroneous ideas.<lb/>
How can something really<lb/>
be tru th i f the exact opposite<lb/>
is truth also? By definition,<lb/>
truth has to agree with itself.<lb/>
Therefore, if two "truths"<lb/>
oppose each other, one (or<lb/>
both) cannot really be truth.<lb/>
The other idea that<lb/>
states that the only absolute<lb/>
is that there are no absolutes<lb/>
is problematic because taken<lb/>
to its logical end, it contra-<lb/>
dicts itself. If the only abso-<lb/>
lute is that there are no abso-<lb/>
lutes, then the absolute of<lb/>
there being no absolutes can-<lb/>
not be absolute, and there-<lb/>
fore, there must be absolutes.<lb/>
If there are absolutes, then<lb/>
there must be a truth, be-<lb/>
cause for something to be<lb/>
absolute, there must be in<lb/>
itself an element of truth.<lb/>
What is truth then?<lb/>
Jesus said in John 14:6, "I am<lb/>
the way and the truth and<lb/>
the life. No one comes to the<lb/>
Father except through me<lb/>
Jesus proclaimed himself to<lb/>
be the truth. So, if what Jesus<lb/>
said was true, then by defi-<lb/>
nition there can be no other<lb/>
truth, because he proclaimed<lb/>
that he was truth and there<lb/>
are no others.<lb/>
I realize that not every-<lb/>
one believes that Jesus is<lb/>
truth, but logically if we<lb/>
don't believe he is tru th, then<lb/>
we must believe that he is a<lb/>
liar, because the definition<lb/>
of truth only allows for one<lb/>
truth. Just because there are<lb/>
people who don't believe he<lb/>
is truth does not change the<lb/>
fact that he is. In the same<lb/>
way, truth does not depend<lb/>
on what I believe. The truth<lb/>
is just what it simply is. No<lb/>
one has to believe it to make<lb/>
it truth, it just is.<lb/>
Stuart Mizelle<lb/>
Junior<lb/>
Music Education<lb/>
By Amy E. Wirtz<lb/>
Pro-lifers faced<lb/>
with voicing<lb/>
complex message<lb/>
After 12 years as outsiders, sup-<lb/>
porters of abortion rights are trying to<lb/>
make the most of their new influence in<lb/>
the White House and on Capitol Hill.<lb/>
However, leaders of the movement are<lb/>
finding that success brings a different<lb/>
set of problems.<lb/>
They have to decide how hard to<lb/>
push their new allies on issues like fed-<lb/>
eral financing of abortion and the pro-<lb/>
posed Freedom of Choice Act; already,<lb/>
there is disagreement over how much to<lb/>
compromise, and when.<lb/>
They have a far more complicated<lb/>
message for the American people than<lb/>
they did during the years of Presidents<lb/>
Ronald Reagan and George Bush, when<lb/>
the abortion rights movement was sim-<lb/>
ply defending the constitutional right to<lb/>
choose an abortion.<lb/>
Now they are trying to move be-<lb/>
yond the debate about keepingabortion<lb/>
legal toward the goal of making it more<lb/>
accessible and free of state restrictions.<lb/>
They now deal with taxpayer financing<lb/>
of abortions for poor women, which is<lb/>
encountering little public support.<lb/>
At the same time, they have to fight<lb/>
complacency among many of their sup-<lb/>
porters who saw the battle won with the<lb/>
election of President Clinton. Polls show<lb/>
that public opinion remains stuck be-<lb/>
tween the orthodoxy of both sides in the<lb/>
abortion debate. The New York Times<lb/>
CBS News Poll, for example, has shown<lb/>
that a majority of Americans support<lb/>
keeping abortion legal and generally<lb/>
available.<lb/>
However, polls have not shown a<lb/>
majority behind taxpayer financing of<lb/>
abortions for poor women or for includ-<lb/>
ing abortion services in any basic ben-<lb/>
efits package as part of health-care re-<lb/>
form. These are the primary goals of the<lb/>
abortion rights movement this year.<lb/>
In the midst of all this, a squabble<lb/>
has broken out among various support-<lb/>
ers of abortion rights over just what is<lb/>
attainable in a Freedom of Choice Act.<lb/>
At issue is how much ground to give in<lb/>
two areas of dispute: state laws that re-<lb/>
quire parental involvement in cases of<lb/>
minors seeking abortion and state laws<lb/>
that ban public financing of abortions<lb/>
for poor women.<lb/>
While President Clinton has deliv-<lb/>
ered much to the abortion rights move-<lb/>
ment in the first few months of his ad-<lb/>
ministration, including calling for the<lb/>
repeal of the ban on federal financing of<lb/>
abortion, it is not yet clear how far he is<lb/>
willing to go ? pushed or unpushed.<lb/>
One thing remains: The voters have<lb/>
been repelled by what they perceive as<lb/>
pro-life extremism, but there's no rea-<lb/>
son to believe that they won't be just as<lb/>
turned off by pro-choice extremism.<lb/>
In the words of President Clinton<lb/>
during his campaign, I believe I would<lb/>
be content with abortion being "safe,<lb/>
legal and rare ou can be anti-abor-<lb/>
tion and pro-choice. What needs to be<lb/>
understood is that none of us have the<lb/>
right to make a decision for another ra-<lb/>
tional human being. It is, very simply,<lb/>
unconstitutional.<lb/>
<pb facs="00058405_0007"/><lb/>
?I ,I 111. ? ??"?<lb/>
The East Carolinian<lb/>
Biography on Hunter<lb/>
S. Thompson reveals<lb/>
all the nasty details<lb/>
By John Bullard<lb/>
Assistant Lifestyle Editor<lb/>
Tottedelightofrnanv college students thatread "Fear and Loathing<lb/>
inLisVegasibkigraphyofHunterS.TrKirnpsxri,theinspirarionforthe<lb/>
Unde Duke character in "Doonesbury was released in February. And<lb/>
what a biography it is!<lb/>
"Hunter. The Strange and Savage Life of Hunter S. Thompson is<lb/>
written in a style that pays great homage to the "Gonzo" journalist that<lb/>
brought us "Hell's Angels "Fear and Loathing in Las Vegas 'The<lb/>
GreatSharkHunt"and "Fearand Loathing:On theCampaignTrail 72<lb/>
The author of "Hunter E. jean Carroll, gives us a story that rivals<lb/>
Hunter S. Thompson'sown writing style that changed the way writers<lb/>
write. The biography can be seen to lay somewhere between Studs<lb/>
Terkell, with his interview style, and HST himself, with his "Gonzo"<lb/>
appnwch to writing.<lb/>
The structureof "Hunter" juxtaposes chapters of interviews includ-<lb/>
ing people that surrounded Hunter S. Thompson his whole life with<lb/>
chapters of a fictional account of E. Jean Carroll's stay with Thompson.<lb/>
Theprerruserftr fictional chaptersishilarioustosaythe least These<lb/>
chapters tell the story of Miss Laetitia Snap the super-intellectual debu-<lb/>
tanteandformerMissIndiara(aixt-sofe<lb/>
herself) that was lured to HSTs farm, seduced by "The Doctor" and<lb/>
forced by Hunter S. Thompson to write a biography of him in his<lb/>
backyard cesspool.<lb/>
This is where the outrageous style of E jean Carroll comes out The<lb/>
See HUNTER page 10<lb/>
VNCSS??WNVW v<lb/>
.S. -isSKKSiiXX<lb/>
sl fa nee<lb/>
and sktvape<lb/>
Hunter S.<lb/>
ThompsofK<lb/>
t.<lb/>
f<lb/>
E . J e a n C a r r o 1<lb/>
Hunter S. Thompson<lb/>
Lifestyle<lb/>
Page 7<lb/>
Barefoot'n<lb/>
1993<lb/>
Col. Bruce<lb/>
Hampton &amp; the<lb/>
Aquarium<lb/>
Rescue Unit<lb/>
jammed out<lb/>
Barefoot, joining<lb/>
Roily Cray and<lb/>
1964 on the<lb/>
stage.<lb/>
Photo by<lb/>
Dail Reed<lb/>
Barefoot festivities successful despite cold weather<lb/>
By John Bullard<lb/>
Assistant Lifestyle Editor<lb/>
As a veteran of six Barefoot On the Malls, I<lb/>
woke early Thursday and put on my favorite<lb/>
pair of shorts and a long sleeved T-shirt. It was<lb/>
cold that morning, but I just knew it would<lb/>
warm up for the festivities. It didn't Disap-<lb/>
pointed, I hurried home after the one class I had<lb/>
to go to and put on some warmer gear.<lb/>
Used to tiie blaring sun of past Barefoots, I<lb/>
didn'tplan on stayinglong.Of course thatdidn't<lb/>
last long when Eric G a student and self-help<lb/>
employee of ECU, came up to me and declared,<lb/>
Tm drunk and have taken the whole day off<lb/>
Eric had just gotten out of the human bowling<lb/>
ball and was trying to fight off the desire to hurl.<lb/>
"Man, this is going to be a blast he said, walk-<lb/>
ing sideways towards the Velcro Fly Wall.<lb/>
Bumpingintosomeonehavingsomuchfun<lb/>
put me in the right spirit. Then again, just about<lb/>
everyone was having a good time. That is of<lb/>
course if you don't count the priest that was being<lb/>
dunked in the BallTossor the two guys that were<lb/>
having real coconut cream pies thrown at them.<lb/>
Shortly afterlarrived,RollyGray and Sunfire<lb/>
hit the stage to a small crowd that quickly grew<lb/>
larger. They were the perfect band to get things<lb/>
goingbecause they got everyone jumpingaround<lb/>
with their reggaecalypso beats.<lb/>
Not to break tradition, a score of miscella-<lb/>
neous freebies were thrown at the crowd all day<lb/>
long by those hardworking Student Union folks<lb/>
and a lot of prizes were given away to boot,<lb/>
including a CD player and a free CD every week<lb/>
for a year for naming some tunes.<lb/>
Whatwould Barefoot on the Mall be without<lb/>
a trio of bands? I'm not sure cause there have<lb/>
always been at least three and it was so this year.<lb/>
Col.Bruce Hampton cameonwithhis Aquarium<lb/>
Rescue UnitafterRolly and his bunch had warmed<lb/>
up the crowd. His sound was very bluesy with<lb/>
somejazz,rockandbluegrass thrown in. The band<lb/>
wasalotoffunandtheaowd,likemyself,seemed<lb/>
especiallyreceptivetothetalentsofthebassplayer.<lb/>
Tobreak with tradition, the Barefoot commit-<lb/>
tee went with a look at the past and the Beatles.<lb/>
With pastacts like OceanBlueJohnnyQuestand<lb/>
Love Tractor giving a taste of new alternative<lb/>
music, this year's headline band 1964 gave us a<lb/>
look at yesterday. I was skeptical at first, but once<lb/>
the memories of my parents hopping around to<lb/>
"Can't Buy Me Love" came flooding into my<lb/>
head, I started having some real fun.<lb/>
The day, like all other Barefoot On the Mall<lb/>
days, wasa complete success. Where else, besides<lb/>
ECU, could you catch a cool buzz, head for the<lb/>
central campus mall, buy greasy food, take spins<lb/>
in human bowling balls, fling yourself at Velcro<lb/>
walls, have free stuff thrown at you and see and<lb/>
hear some really great music?<lb/>
Thank You ECU Student Union!<lb/>
-School's Out<lb/>
By Richard Cranium<lb/>
Staff Writer<lb/>
I've often wondered that if<lb/>
a black cat crosses your path<lb/>
and you rum and wa Ik the other<lb/>
way, is it still bad luck? I ask<lb/>
about luck because it's about<lb/>
that tirne. Some of us ? you,<lb/>
not me ? will be needing luck<lb/>
soon.<lb/>
Here we are, the last day of<lb/>
school. Tomorrow is reading<lb/>
day, a day of fun and frivolity.<lb/>
Unless, of course, you have one<lb/>
of those turd teachers that has<lb/>
class on reading day for what-<lb/>
ever ridiculous reason. Then it's<lb/>
the old exam gambit. What about<lb/>
this: look at "exam it becomes<lb/>
"X-a.m So the key here is to<lb/>
watch porn videos the morning<lb/>
of exams. Try it, you'll like it.<lb/>
And look, before you start<lb/>
bitching, statistics show that<lb/>
women rent dirty movies more<lb/>
than men (of course, maybe men<lb/>
just buy them). I read that a new<lb/>
film-makeris producing porn for<lb/>
women now. Mercy.<lb/>
But Idon'twant to talk about<lb/>
porn. Or exams. It's that last day<lb/>
of class thing and I want to talk<lb/>
about the last day of school. And<lb/>
people.<lb/>
I know a few folks that will<lb/>
have the pleasure of retaking<lb/>
some of their classes. I feel for<lb/>
them; no, 1 don't. It seems to me<lb/>
when you go off to college you<lb/>
have committed yourself to sev-<lb/>
eral years of reading, writing,<lb/>
and brown-nosing. It's an edu-<lb/>
cation. It's knowledge. It's the<lb/>
perpetuation of culture! Care,<lb/>
why don't you. So why don't<lb/>
peopledowhatthey're supposed<lb/>
to? Take it from the Cranium-<lb/>
Man: you got to go baby go!<lb/>
Just do the work, make the<lb/>
grade, you can graduate.<lb/>
And what about those<lb/>
graduates? Hopefully, there's<lb/>
a business in the family. Other-<lb/>
wise, it's who they know or<lb/>
who they blow. Or graduate<lb/>
school. Rrrretchhh!<lb/>
Remember that Dallas sea-<lb/>
son when it was all just a dream?<lb/>
It's like that. Or let me tell you.<lb/>
I had this woman once who<lb/>
used to stomp on me regularly,<lb/>
See SCHOOL page 9<lb/>
Coping with the end of<lb/>
the semester<lb/>
By Jennifer Phillips<lb/>
Student Health Service<lb/>
Question:<lb/>
I have two papers to write, one presenta-<lb/>
tion to give, four final exams to study for, and<lb/>
if that wasn't enough, I'm searching for sum-<lb/>
mer employment. Talk about STRESS! What<lb/>
can I do to better manage it?<lb/>
Answer.<lb/>
Stress is the body's phj'sical and emo-<lb/>
tional reaction to change or to a situation that<lb/>
may be dangerous, confusing, irritating or<lb/>
boring.<lb/>
Stressisa part of everyday life and itmay<lb/>
be either positive or negative. Graduating<lb/>
fromcoUegeorgettingmarried are the typical<lb/>
examples of positive stress. A breakup in a<lb/>
relationship, wrecking a car and final exams<lb/>
are examples of negative stress. Although<lb/>
negative stress situations can, at times, be<lb/>
avraded,negativesfresscanrotbeeUminated<lb/>
entirely. In fact, life would be rather dull and<lb/>
purposeless without it The trick is to face and<lb/>
manage these stresses appropriately.<lb/>
Signsof stress include,butare not limited<lb/>
to: concentration problems, insomnia, eating<lb/>
disorders, cramps, body aches, irritability, fa-<lb/>
tigue,diajrr,headachesaml'butterfliesin<lb/>
thestomachSorTWwaystoreducesrress,par-<lb/>
ticularly for the end of the semester, include<lb/>
? Finding a quiet place to study<lb/>
? Plan your study time on a calendar,<lb/>
devoting blocks of time to specific subjects.<lb/>
See STRESS page 10<lb/>
lWC? BveOt . ? ? UPWi 6vfr . .UfW<lb/>
Today and Tonight:<lb/>
ECU hosts a scries of summer institutes for grade school science and math beginning today. The institutes<lb/>
provide in-service and continuing education in areas of mathematics and science.<lb/>
The final show of "Romeo and Juliet" plays tonight at McGinnis Theatre at 8 p.m. The show ??<lb/>
member cast of ECU students and faculty. Ticket to the show are S7.50 for the general public and S4.50 for ECU<lb/>
students. Call 757-6829 for more information.<lb/>
See EVENTS page 8<lb/>
Beaux<lb/>
Arts<lb/>
(LtoR)<lb/>
Dail<lb/>
Reed,<lb/>
Billy jean<lb/>
Snuggs<lb/>
and<lb/>
Dietrich<lb/>
Maune of<lb/>
Flat Sided<lb/>
Buffalo<lb/>
were<lb/>
joined by<lb/>
Seven<lb/>
Feathers<lb/>
and St. &amp;<lb/>
M Friday<lb/>
night at<lb/>
the Beaux<lb/>
Arts<lb/>
Festival at<lb/>
Mug<lb/>
Shots.<lb/>
Photo by<lb/>
Jason Bosch<lb/>
<pb facs="00058405_0008"/><lb/>
?<lb/>
" It<lb/>
William Shakespeare's<lb/>
 Timeless Love Story<lb/>
md -<lb/>
??&amp;&amp;<lb/>
. 3<lb/>
'fyji<lb/>
Headed<lb/>
home<lb/>
for the<lb/>
summermn<lb/>
Store your "stuff" with us!<lb/>
Free campus pick-up and delivery<lb/>
? Indivii<lb/>
? <lb/>
? Iam<lb/>
? s<lb/>
n (in<lb/>
tudcnt tofogc Call Now.<lb/>
network<lb/>
800-4U2-LOCK<lb/>
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Ope<lb/>
,<lb/>
SILVER;<lb/>
rBULLET<lb/>
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AYS<lb/>
AYS<lb/>
T&amp;eat?e?i<lb/>
We do Birthdays, Bachelor Parties, Brida<lb/>
Corporate Parties &amp; Divorces<lb/>
3<lb/>
2EiESii332ZZ<lb/>
?i<lb/>
?Uf4 . . WNTlNLieD<lb/>
i April 28:<lb/>
STORE YCH<lb/>
Stud<lb/>
$15-$<lb/>
April 29:<lb/>
SPECIAL<lb/>
Of Interest:<lb/>
blues <lb/>
?8<lb/>
98<lb/>
Qfi<lb/>
m<lb/>
?<lb/>
<pb facs="00058405_0009"/><lb/>
APRIL 27. 1993<lb/>
The East Carolinian<lb/>
9.<lb/>
as his weapon<lb/>
i 1432 photomontage of<lb/>
I Spouts<lb/>
: he Fuhrer,<lb/>
ns,a swastika tor a heart.<lb/>
 - - m tfthi most<lb/>
e century, in a new exhibition<lb/>
Many are originals that have never<lb/>
ecauseofhis leftist political leanings,<lb/>
;ld's work has rarelv been shown in<lb/>
i learrfield (1891-1968) was an artist-activist who helped invent<lb/>
photomontage and used it to fight Nazism in bitterly satirical images,<lb/>
mam designed for book and left-wing magazine covers. He manipu-<lb/>
lated news photographs, snipped, re-posi tioned and re-touched them,<lb/>
and sharpened them with witty captions to skewer the hated regime.<lb/>
The exhibition, "John Heartfield: Photomontages will remain<lb/>
on show at the museum through July 6. It will then be shown at:<lb/>
- The San Francisco Museum of Modem Art, July 23-Sept. 19.<lb/>
- The Los Angeles County Museum of Art, Oct. 7-Jan. 2,1994.<lb/>
SCHOOL<lb/>
Continued from page 7<lb/>
God bless her. She went out of<lb/>
town after we had been fighting<lb/>
orsomethingand I wentoutwith<lb/>
the fellas and drank just enough<lb/>
to say that I had drank too much.<lb/>
1 called her answering machine<lb/>
all night and blubbered all over it<lb/>
like a drunk, blubbering fool, talk-<lb/>
ing 'bout love. She used to play<lb/>
that tape for her friends. That<lb/>
hurt me.<lb/>
So try to understand. It's<lb/>
exam time. Don't shove books<lb/>
under your pillows and don't<lb/>
form al 1 night study sessions with<lb/>
that cutey-pie across the room. If<lb/>
you don't know it, you don't<lb/>
know it. What are grades any-<lb/>
way? If I look at your grades, do<lb/>
I get a sense of the person? The<lb/>
humanity? The light you bring to<lb/>
this world? No! All 1 know is<lb/>
whether or not you're a stupid-<lb/>
ass.<lb/>
The world is about people.<lb/>
I'm people, you're people. If I'm<lb/>
refraining from being the harsh,<lb/>
cynical RC to which you're ac-<lb/>
customed, it's because I know the<lb/>
year is about over. I'm feeling the<lb/>
orgiastic release of summer thun-<lb/>
deringoverthehorizon. And I'm<lb/>
sensitive. You need support right<lb/>
now.<lb/>
I remember those last days of<lb/>
school years ago when you'd get<lb/>
little treats and everybody was<lb/>
all happy and teachers were nice<lb/>
and stuff and life was good. The<lb/>
bus once dropped me and Steven<lb/>
and Benji and Tootsie off at the<lb/>
end of our dirt road. We went in<lb/>
Steven's house and called WKIX<lb/>
and asked the D) to play Alice<lb/>
Cooper's "School's Out We<lb/>
must have waited an hour for<lb/>
that redneck to get on the good<lb/>
foot. But we heard it and we<lb/>
knew what life was all about. It<lb/>
was about happiness. And<lb/>
friends. Oh, the impetuous ide-<lb/>
ology of youth!<lb/>
Anyway, it's been a great<lb/>
year.<lb/>
I know because I've seen the<lb/>
ECU Video Yearbook (thank God<lb/>
it's free!). Grrr Good luck on<lb/>
your exams. And if you have a<lb/>
chance, stop by the Writing Cen-<lb/>
ter in the General Classroom<lb/>
Building.<lb/>
That's where you'll find C. A.<lb/>
She's one of the kindest, cutest,<lb/>
wonderfullest people you'll ever<lb/>
meet, but she'll drink you out of<lb/>
house and home if given the<lb/>
chance. Nahhh Say hey to her.<lb/>
So look, be good and be<lb/>
happy.<lb/>
If you're a shithead and ev-<lb/>
erybody tells you what a peon<lb/>
you are, remember, Richard Cra-<lb/>
niumlovesyou. And I mean that.<lb/>
And hey, if a black ca t crosses<lb/>
your path, kick it in the ribs and<lb/>
say, "Don't run my life<lb/>
FREE PREGNANCY TEST<lb/>
while you wait<lb/>
Free &amp; Confidential<lb/>
Services &amp; Counseling<lb/>
Carolina Pregnancy Center<lb/>
111 E. 3rd Street Hours:<lb/>
The Lee Building 757-0003 Monday - Friday<lb/>
Greenville NC 8:30-3:30<lb/>
Sndtch Shop"<lb/>
215 E. 4th Street<lb/>
Greenville, NC<lb/>
(919)752-2183<lb/>
316 S.W. Greenville Blvd.<lb/>
(919)756-7171<lb/>
Every Tuesday is<lb/>
COLLEGE NIGHT<lb/>
7 PM till Close<lb/>
990 SUBS<lb/>
Your Clurice<lb/>
I lani &amp; Cheese Ham.Bologna &amp; Cheese<lb/>
Boh )gna &amp; C Cheese Turkey &amp; Cheese<lb/>
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HONOR<lb/>
CAROLINA HEART PRESENTS ANOTHER<lb/>
"Ask the Doctor Seminar"<lb/>
? How concerned should I be about chest pain?<lb/>
?Ill don't have any family history of heart disease, what is my<lb/>
risk?<lb/>
? How does blood pressure affect heart disease?<lb/>
? How long does it take tor a low-fat diet to reduce cholesterol<lb/>
levels?<lb/>
Eric B. Carlson, M.D.<lb/>
Presents<lb/>
"Early Warning Signs of Heart Disease"<lb/>
A Short Lecture Followed by a Question and Answer Session<lb/>
Free to the Public ? Refreshments Provided<lb/>
Monday, May 3rd. 7 to 8 PM, at the Gaskins-Leslie Center, Conference Room "A" (Turn<lb/>
onto Stantonsburg Road off of Memorial Drive, then right at the 2nd light. Enter the 4th<lb/>
driveway) Call 757-1000 lor more information.<lb/>
golden<lb/>
corral<lb/>
STEAKS, BUFFET &amp; BAKERY<lb/>
Golden Choice Buffet<lb/>
with carved meats nightly<lb/>
$5.19<lb/>
Weekend Buffet Breakfast<lb/>
$4.49<lb/>
present school I.D. and receive a<lb/>
FREE BEVERAGE<lb/>
504 SW Greenville Blvd.<lb/>
k ?<lb/>
? A A<lb/>
THANK YOU SENIORS!<lb/>
OUR<lb/>
GRADUATION<lb/>
GIFT<lb/>
TO YOU!<lb/>
DROP<lb/>
25<lb/>
POUNDS<lb/>
GRADUATING SENIORS<lb/>
15 OFF<lb/>
ALL STUDENTS<lb/>
K. Regular priced<lb/>
T-shirts, Sweats<lb/>
V &amp; Shorts '<lb/>
coupon expires<lb/>
 May 9. 1993 <lb/>
SELL YOUR BOOKS<lb/>
We buy all books with current market value<lb/>
AND MAYBE WIN A GREAT PRIZE<lb/>
WRIGHT PLACE SODA SHOP<lb/>
April 29<lb/>
April 30<lb/>
May 1 (Sat)<lb/>
May 3 - 5<lb/>
May 6<lb/>
8:30 AM<lb/>
8:30 AM<lb/>
11:00 AM<lb/>
8:30 AM<lb/>
8:30 AM<lb/>
7:00 PM<lb/>
5:00 PM<lb/>
4:30 PM<lb/>
7:00 PM<lb/>
5:00 PM<lb/>
ON THE HILL &amp; ON THE MALL<lb/>
April 29 &amp; 30 10:00 AM - 4:00 PM<lb/>
May 3 - 5 10:00 AM - 4:00 PM<lb/>
lWF?KASh<lb/>
Student Stores<lb/>
More than just books  Your dollars support student scholars<lb/>
Wright Building ? 757-6731<lb/>
Mon-Thurs 8am-8pm<lb/>
Fri 8am-5pm<lb/>
Sat llam-6pm<lb/>
<pb facs="00058405_0010"/><lb/>
APRIL 27, 1993<lb/>
HUNTER<lb/>
nued from page 7<lb/>
published in such m<lb/>
quire, Playboy and<lb/>
The interspersing ot the fictional<lb/>
chapters vith the interview chapters<lb/>
gives insight into the childhood, ado-<lb/>
lescence and adulthood of Humter S.<lb/>
Thompson. Carroll tracked down<lb/>
those that either love him or hate him<lb/>
(sometimesboth). Those interviewed<lb/>
irKJudeHSThimself,mLstresses,Hell's<lb/>
Angels, drug dealers, pom stars, edi-<lb/>
tors and pals from childhood to the<lb/>
present<lb/>
The interviews cover many top-<lb/>
ics of Hunter S. Thompson's life in-<lb/>
duding the first time he was arrested,<lb/>
the literary dub thatgotitall started for<lb/>
rurrvhistravels,hisnriningforaColc-<lb/>
rado sheriff position under the Freak<lb/>
Power ticket (and almost winning)<lb/>
and his outrageous lifestyle.<lb/>
: rom angry as<lb/>
? mother said: "Hunter was<lb/>
i. Hnthemomaitofhisbirth"<lb/>
j when lim Harrison was<lb/>
saying Hunter his been<lb/>
t kting journalist of our<lb/>
?rung with the motorcycle<lb/>
book ("Hell's Angels"). In terms of<lb/>
journalism, Hunter gave tiv lead. I<lb/>
always though totHunter as basically<lb/>
an artist Certaintv you wouldn't<lb/>
think of the Vegas book ("Fear and<lb/>
Loathing in Las Vegas") as journal-<lb/>
ism There are also those quotes that<lb/>
show his personality outside of writ-<lb/>
ing.<lb/>
"At the Pittsburgh-Minnesota<lb/>
Super Bowl 1 offered him (HST) a<lb/>
cough drop. He said, 'Oh thank you.<lb/>
Here let me give you some add said<lb/>
DickSchapp, television journalist and<lb/>
sportswriter. Carroll's biography<lb/>
breaks the typical mold for the genre<lb/>
and rightly so. The structure of<lb/>
"Hunter" puts the life of a very differ-<lb/>
ent and eccentric American Hero into<lb/>
a light that reflects the true essence of<lb/>
what Hunter SThompson 'sail about.<lb/>
Continued from page 7<lb/>
? Take breaks from studying! ten<lb/>
minute breaks for every hour can be<lb/>
energizing. (Don't take "beerbreaks")<lb/>
? Maintain healthy eating habits.<lb/>
All tooften, "stressed" students binge<lb/>
on caffeine, alcohol and high sugar<lb/>
foods ? all contribute to fatigue and<lb/>
irritability.<lb/>
? GET ENOUGH SLEEPIItis<lb/>
not uncommon for students to study<lb/>
all night for exams and then sleep<lb/>
through then or during them.<lb/>
? Try stretching and progressive<lb/>
music relaxation. The ECU Counsel-<lb/>
ing Center has information available<lb/>
on relaxation techniques; 757-6661.<lb/>
? Allow time for exercise.<lb/>
? Keep your sense of humor.<lb/>
Stuck here this<lb/>
summer? Need<lb/>
some extra cash?<lb/>
Can you write?!<lb/>
I need people to<lb/>
check out books,<lb/>
movies, food,<lb/>
bands, parties,<lb/>
plays, festivals,<lb/>
symphonies, con-<lb/>
certs, comics,<lb/>
people, etC. I itestyle<lb/>
'V <lb/>
S<lb/>
WtfAOUS FROZEN YOGURTj<lb/>
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?SgFpt THE WEEIP<lb/>
'r Mayi-Mayf <lb/>
99c ZINGER SUNDAE<lb/>
Show ECU ID for 10 discount<lb/>
1898 Greenville Blvd. M-Sat 11:30-10:30<lb/>
759440 Sun <lb/>
staff writer positions open tor<lb/>
both sessions of summer<lb/>
school. Please apply with Dana<lb/>
or Deborah at Tl C, Student<lb/>
Pubs building.<lb/>
Need Temporary<lb/>
Medical Insurance?<lb/>
? LAID OFF<lb/>
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Hours: Monday-Friday 9-6, Saturday 10-5<lb/>
520 S. Cotanche Street<lb/>
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DID YOU GET ONE?<lb/>
We gave away 2,000 copies ot the<lb/>
TREASURE CHEST<lb/>
a<lb/>
YEARBOOK<lb/>
at Barefoot on the Mall<lb/>
WE HAVE MORE<lb/>
to distribute between<lb/>
8:30AM and 4PM<lb/>
TUESDAY &amp; THURSDAY<lb/>
in Mendenhall Student Center<lb/>
Pick up your copy of the<lb/>
1990JBID<lb/>
and the year-end issue ol<lb/>
EXPRESSIONS<lb/>
Congratulations to the<lb/>
newly elected officers of<lb/>
Gamma Beta Phi<lb/>
National Honor Society<lb/>
for the 1993-1994 school year.<lb/>
They are:<lb/>
RuthannBass President<lb/>
Rob Gluckman Vice-President<lb/>
Bobbie Sue Burgess Roll Secretary<lb/>
Allison Fulghum Corresponding Secretary<lb/>
Laura Siegal Treasurer<lb/>
Kelly Kellis Reporter<lb/>
Penny Ashley Historian<lb/>
The inductions took place on April 20th, 1993 and Gamma Beta Phi wishes<lb/>
to thank the Master of Ceremonies and current advisor Dr. Don Parkerson<lb/>
of the history department for all of his help this year.<lb/>
ECUfs Closest Beach<lb/>
WHICHHRD'S BEflCH<lb/>
Located on the Pamlico River in Washington<lb/>
?Sandy Beach ?$ 1.00 per person<lb/>
?Conviently located Mini-Mart -$2.00 per person on weekends<lb/>
Beer, Snacks, Lotion &amp; Bathing Suits<lb/>
?Tube Rentals for "Good Times" ?A Great Place to Study for Exams<lb/>
?3 Flume Waterslide<lb/>
??fs<lb/>
?TSS<lb/>
Washington<lb/>
Whic lard's Beach Rd.<lb/>
10th Street<lb/>
Hwy33 I<lb/>
&amp;<lb/>
o<lb/>
-a<lb/>
CO<lb/>
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Chocowinity<lb/>
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wfcfci Hpw.llUlll.llli!<lb/>
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?:???  ?? ??<lb/>
<pb facs="00058405_0011"/><lb/>
The East Carolinian<lb/>
Sports<lb/>
Page 11<lb/>
vinning streak ends over weekend<lb/>
home<lb/>
winning<lb/>
streak was<lb/>
i arr a<lb/>
fourgame<lb/>
loosing<lb/>
streak.<lb/>
Pholo by<lb/>
Bift Ranson<lb/>
By Michael Albuquerque<lb/>
Staff Writer<lb/>
Mtcr winning 19 straight games at<lb/>
the friend lyconfinesof Harrington Field,<lb/>
the f'CU baseball team (31-16, 11-7)<lb/>
dropped four straight at home with an<lb/>
extra inning loss to Virginia Common-<lb/>
wealth and ,i three-game,weekend sweep<lb/>
K.eorge Mason.<lb/>
On Wednesday, April 21, Jim<lb/>
I ewentowicz knocked a one out, solo<lb/>
home run in the 10th inning to propel<lb/>
V i 1(21-14)toa4-3winoverthe Pirates.<lb/>
1 .ew entowicz' homer, his fifth of the sea-<lb/>
son, i ame after HCU scored two runs in<lb/>
'bet ighth and another in the ninth to tie<lb/>
the score .it 3-3.<lb/>
The Rams took the early lead when<lb/>
Luke Berry singled with one out in the<lb/>
fifth, Mole second and scored on con-<lb/>
secutive singles by Mike Bell and Eric<lb/>
Sauve. Jeff Yarbrough continued VCU's<lb/>
scoring with a leadoff home run to start<lb/>
thesixthandasingleby rodd Campbell,<lb/>
who later scored on RyanDixon'sdouble.<lb/>
VCU Starter left Bounds baffled the<lb/>
Pirates, allowing only three hits in six<lb/>
scoreless innings before yielding to<lb/>
Michael Ketterman to start the seventh.<lb/>
After striking out the side in the sev-<lb/>
enth, Ketterman allowed two runs in the<lb/>
eighth aftera leadoff walk to Frank Fedak,<lb/>
who Uxik two bases on a wild pitch and<lb/>
scored on a sacrifice fly by Jamie Borel.<lb/>
One out later, Jason Head hit his fifth<lb/>
homer of the season in to right field to put<lb/>
the Pirates within one at 3-2.<lb/>
With VCU closer Adam Bryant (2-3)<lb/>
pitching, Pat Watkins led off the ECU<lb/>
ninth with a bloop double into right field,<lb/>
took third on a bunt single by Steven Pitt<lb/>
and scored on a shallow pop fly to left by<lb/>
Chris West to tie the score before ECU<lb/>
lost in the 10th.<lb/>
On Saturday, George Mason (26-7,<lb/>
10-1) clinched its second straight first-<lb/>
place finish in the Colonial Athletic As-<lb/>
sociation by sweeping ECU 12-10 and 7-<lb/>
4 in college baseball action Saturday at<lb/>
Harrington Field.<lb/>
In game one, the Patriots were led<lb/>
Micky Storie, whose three-run homer to<lb/>
right field capped a five-run fifth asCMU<lb/>
took the lead 5-4 over the Pirates. GMU<lb/>
added two more runs in the eighth and<lb/>
three in the ninth to take what seemed to<lb/>
be a secure 10-4 lead.<lb/>
See BASEBALL page 14<lb/>
Ward breaks ECU, NCAA record<lb/>
Sports Information<lb/>
East Carolina University<lb/>
Michelle Ward broke former<lb/>
ECU player LauraCrowder's record<lb/>
of 69 stolen bases in 1W2, and set a<lb/>
new NCAA single season record<lb/>
Sunday against theTarht vlsi iNx rth<lb/>
Carolina, to o include the 1993 regu-<lb/>
lar season.<lb/>
The Lady Pirates split thedouble<lb/>
header, winning garni: i toe 1-0, giv-<lb/>
ing senior Jenny Parsons her 101st<lb/>
career victory on a four hit shutout,<lb/>
and dr pped game twi , 2 -1 b i finish<lb/>
the tegular season with a record of<lb/>
33-20.<lb/>
'Today a highlight film could<lb/>
have been made from both teams'<lb/>
defense ECU Head Coach Sue<lb/>
Manahan said. Both teams' outfield-<lb/>
ers made diving catches at crucial<lb/>
points in both games.<lb/>
Michelle Ward led off the first<lb/>
inning of game one with a walk and<lb/>
then stole the record King base. Lisi<lb/>
( orprew hit behind Ward to move<lb/>
her to third. Senior Cheryl Hobson<lb/>
flieddeep to left to bring Ward across<lb/>
the plate.<lb/>
The Pirates jumped out to an<lb/>
early lead in game two, but the<lb/>
I arheels rallied in the sixth inning.<lb/>
Ward led off thefirstinningwith<lb/>
a high ch pper ti sh rt and beat out<lb/>
the throw to first. Two pitches later<lb/>
Ward stole her 70th base of die sea-<lb/>
son. Corprew and Hobson followed<lb/>
w ith singles toaccount U r the Pi rates<lb/>
solemn.<lb/>
Titcher Jenny Parsons allowed<lb/>
only two hits until the sixth inning<lb/>
when three hits, two sacrifice bunts<lb/>
and a bad throw latter, UNC ttxik the<lb/>
lead. ECU tried to rally in the seventh<lb/>
but could not convert the tying run.<lb/>
"We got great leadership from<lb/>
our three seniors Manahan said.<lb/>
"Everyone played well when they<lb/>
had to and we hope to get to play<lb/>
more in May<lb/>
ECU will not find out if they an<lb/>
invited to the EC AC post-seasi m tx ur-<lb/>
nament.<lb/>
Mediate follows through in GGO<lb/>
Great Scott!<lb/>
GREENSBORO, N.C (AP) ?<lb/>
It all added up this rj me a round for<lb/>
Rocco Mediate.<lb/>
Mediate, who led after three<lb/>
rounds of last year's Greater<lb/>
(Jreensboro Open only to fall vic-<lb/>
tim to Davis Love Ill's record-set-<lb/>
ting 62, birdied the fourth playoff<lb/>
holeSunday to beat Steve flkington<lb/>
and win the $1.5 million even<lb/>
Mediate, whose other PC A<lb/>
Tour win came in a playoff at the<lb/>
1991 Doral Open, overcame a<lb/>
double bt gey i in the par-515th and<lb/>
then had to save pars on the second<lb/>
and third extra holes before sink-<lb/>
ing a 4-foot putt to finish it.<lb/>
Mediate trailed 34-hole lead-<lb/>
ers El kington and MikeSulli van by<lb/>
four strokes, marking the biggest<lb/>
final-day move by a tournament<lb/>
winner this season. I ledosed with<lb/>
a.3-under-par69 Sunday fora four-<lb/>
day total of 2H1.<lb/>
Elkington, who is now 1-3 in<lb/>
playoffs, matched that figure with<lb/>
a 1-over 73.<lb/>
The drama tic playoff was held<lb/>
on the Course's last three holes, con-<lb/>
sidered among the most difficult<lb/>
on the695H-yard ForestOaksCoun-<lb/>
try Club layout. And with w inds<lb/>
gusting to30mph, the players took<lb/>
turns scrambling to keep alive.<lb/>
Elkington sank a 4-footer for<lb/>
par on the first playoff hole. Medi-<lb/>
ate got up and down from the sind<lb/>
See GGO page 13<lb/>
File Pholo<lb/>
Former offensive tackle (No. 7.3) Tom Scott went in the sixth round<lb/>
of the NFL draft, 148th overall, to the Cincinnati Bengals.<lb/>
Wallace ready<lb/>
to contribute<lb/>
in Chapel Hill<lb/>
immediately<lb/>
PHILADELPHIA (AP) ??<lb/>
Rasheed Wallace can make good on<lb/>
his commitment to attend North<lb/>
Carolina<lb/>
Wallace, a 6-foot-ll center for<lb/>
Simon Gratz High, scored above a<lb/>
combined 700on his Scholastic Ap-<lb/>
titude Test, his mother confirmed<lb/>
Saturday.<lb/>
"I always thought he would<lb/>
come through, but I'm still relieved<lb/>
now that he has Jackie Wallace<lb/>
told The Philadelphia Inquirer. She<lb/>
dki not disclose her son'sexact score.<lb/>
Schools in the Atlantic Coast<lb/>
Conference require student-athletes<lb/>
to score at least 700 on tine SAI.<lb/>
When he announced his choice of<lb/>
North Carolina on April 8, Wallace's<lb/>
latest score was 690.<lb/>
Although he had signed a na-<lb/>
tional letter of intent with North<lb/>
Carolina, he would have been re-<lb/>
jected for admission if he had not<lb/>
scored more' than 7( M) before July 31.<lb/>
Wallace now will be eligible to<lb/>
play in his freshman year for the<lb/>
1993 nation,tl champion Tar Heels<lb/>
next season.<lb/>
The " ore also ensures he will<lb/>
become the firs! member i f his im-<lb/>
mediate family to attend ollege.<lb/>
NBA playoffs offer breath of fresh air<lb/>
PHOENIX (AP) ? The final regular-sea-<lb/>
son meeting between Houston and Phoenix<lb/>
meant more to the Rockets than theSuns,and<lb/>
both teams played like it.<lb/>
"Onanvidtriplikethis,wegooutandget<lb/>
fJiemall.Ican'tsayanymoreaboutthisteam<lb/>
coach Rudy Tomjanovich said after the Rock-<lb/>
ets won for the 10th straight time and their<lb/>
fifth consecutive road game, 111-97 over the<lb/>
Suns.<lb/>
Houston concluded a four-game Western<lb/>
Conference trip with four straight wins, giv-<lb/>
ing the Rockets 13 victories in their last 16<lb/>
away from the Summit<lb/>
The Rockets (54-25) also stayed a game<lb/>
ahead of Seattle in the battle for homecourt<lb/>
advantage between the No. 2 and 3 seeds in<lb/>
the Western Con ference. The Su perSonics kept<lb/>
pace with a 96-89 victory over San Antonio in<lb/>
the only other NRA game Monday night.<lb/>
For the Suns, the defeat was their third<lb/>
straight, their longest li sing streak i if the best<lb/>
season in franchise history.<lb/>
"Absolutely. We were embarrassed<lb/>
said Danny Ainge, who missed the two pre-<lb/>
vious games with the flu.<lb/>
Richard Dumas sat out with the flu, but<lb/>
the big absence for the Suns was Charles<lb/>
Darkley, who has been on the injured list for<lb/>
fivegames while theSuns have si umped to 1-<lb/>
4. Barkley is expected to return in time for a<lb/>
Thursday night game in Portland.<lb/>
During their skid, the Suns clinched<lb/>
homecourt advantage throughout the play-<lb/>
offs when the New York Knicks lost to Indi-<lb/>
ana.<lb/>
"This does not mean that we will nc it be<lb/>
ready for the playoffs when the playoffs n ill<lb/>
around, but it does mean that we have<lb/>
some work to do Suns coach Paul<lb/>
Westphal saiil.<lb/>
The Rockets were aggressive from the<lb/>
opening tip, forcing the Suns into their<lb/>
worst 24 minutes of the season.<lb/>
"Ourdefensereallyclosedthemiddle<lb/>
said I lakeemOlajuwon,whohad30points,<lb/>
14 rebounds and five blocks.<lb/>
"They are missing a key player and a<lb/>
lot of leadership in Charles Olajuwon<lb/>
sud. "You lose some confidence with a guy<lb/>
like that out. I don't know if that's what<lb/>
happened, but you see him play every<lb/>
night,and you know h iw much he means<lb/>
Olajuwon got all five bkxks in the first<lb/>
half, when the Rockets tmk a 33-13 first-<lb/>
See ROUNDUP page 12<lb/>
NFL draft not effected by free agency<lb/>
NEWYORK(AP)?Iftherewasachangein<lb/>
theM'l. draft in the first yearoffa-eagency,it was<lb/>
a subtle one.<lb/>
After quarterbacks went 1-2 in Sunday's<lb/>
draft for the first time in 22 years, teams got down<lb/>
to the basks. As in rrx Bt years, the big guys went<lb/>
quickly ?- a half di OBI I rflensive linemen in the<lb/>
first 19 picks ami an equal number of defensive<lb/>
linemen in the first n Hind.<lb/>
"It's always a land' (if the elephants gen-<lb/>
eral manager (ieorgje Young of the New York<lb/>
( SantS said after the first round. "You got five<lb/>
offensive tan klc-s that go. All the big guys go,<lb/>
whether they're linebackers or defensive line-<lb/>
men I hey always goearry<lb/>
there were nosurprisesal tin top other than<lb/>
the trade by the NewVe.ms Stints ot line<lb/>
backer Pat Swilling, the 1991 defensive MVP, to<lb/>
Di-troit. In return, the Saints got the eighth over-<lb/>
all pit kin thedraft, which they ustil on offer isie<lb/>
tickle Willie RoafofLi uisiana I eif.<lb/>
Iew Bledw e, die Washington Sta tequar-<lb/>
terlK'k,wtTitUiNew England and RickMirerof<lb/>
Notre Dame to Seattle. Hill I 'andl the Patriots'<lb/>
newt oach,sakiBledsoehadbeenhisteam'sfirst<lb/>
choice all along, although heo nsidered !th<lb/>
Mirer ami a trade.<lb/>
TeamslikeAtlanta, I li usb m, Washington,<lb/>
Philadelphia, San Francisco and Indianapolis<lb/>
drafted sperifJcaDytofiUholeslostbydefei ting<lb/>
bee agents, and there were seven first round<lb/>
tr.K tes sixswapsiif draft position, theseventh<lb/>
(me Ihe Swilling deal.<lb/>
But there were others who went to the<lb/>
Ut available athlete theory, like Pittsburgh,<lb/>
which needs ltoebackers, had plenty ofdefen-<lb/>
sive backs and sti II went fi r u MTterback De m<lb/>
Figures of Cotorada<lb/>
"When you're drafting 23rd in the first<lb/>
round, von don't always hive fix luxury of<lb/>
(k ling tiiat Steetersam h Hill'owner siid.<lb/>
So itwasa typical draftday. After Btedsoe<lb/>
and Mirer, no quarterbacks went until<lb/>
Washington's Hill vloe I lohertwenttotheLos<lb/>
Angeli s Raiders on tlie last pick i il tlie second<lb/>
round and was the onlv oilier quarterback<lb/>
See DRAFT page 13<lb/>
NFL draft too<lb/>
long, teams<lb/>
take their time<lb/>
(AP)?This was supposed to<lb/>
be an easy one.<lb/>
For a change, most NFL clubs<lb/>
knew exactly what they were<lb/>
shopping for and the merchan-<lb/>
dise on the shelves was plentiful,<lb/>
properly tagged and, best of all,<lb/>
cheap. On top of which,any pieces<lb/>
a cl ub missed or still needed for a<lb/>
matched set could be purchased<lb/>
via free agency until July 15.<lb/>
So how come it took some of<lb/>
those guys seated behind the hel- j<lb/>
mets and in front of the phones<lb/>
five hours to get through the first<lb/>
round of the draft?<lb/>
Assuming the phone bills<lb/>
were paid, the only other expla-<lb/>
nation was to make the draft look<lb/>
harder than it really was.<lb/>
In recent weeks, everyone<lb/>
with a 1-900 line ? including<lb/>
"Sabrina! YourPersonal Psychic"<lb/>
and even ESPN draftnik Mel<lb/>
Kiper Jr.?had Washington State<lb/>
quarterback Drew Bledsoe<lb/>
pegged as the No. 1 pick by New<lb/>
England. Yet Bill Parcells played<lb/>
the suspense for a 11 itwas worth.<lb/>
He dutifully hid out in a "bun-<lb/>
ker" since assuming the post of<lb/>
do-it-nli for the Patriots three<lb/>
months ago to mull things o<lb/>
He held just three news confid-<lb/>
ences over tha t span . And he d i s-<lb/>
missed questions about the draft<lb/>
at his last public appearance only<lb/>
Wednesday by saying, "There's<lb/>
no one who knows. No one.<lb/>
"My wife hasasked Parcells<lb/>
added, "and she doesn't have a<lb/>
clue<lb/>
Wrong.<lb/>
She knew. And he probably<lb/>
knew she knew. Even without<lb/>
telling her.<lb/>
Fact is, so much of the first<lb/>
round went according to form<lb/>
this year that with a little bit of<lb/>
study, Judy Parcells might a!so<lb/>
have known that Seattle wen f<lb/>
take Notre Dame quarterba. k<lb/>
Rick Mirer with the second pi I<lb/>
And that somebody would fleet e<lb/>
Phoenix in a trade. And even that<lb/>
wheeler-dealer Bobby Beathard<lb/>
? now employed by the Ch.<lb/>
era but still wearing his Red<lb/>
thinking cap ? would ba<lb/>
away a first-round pick to get his<lb/>
hands on some guy even the<lb/>
psychics haven't heard of.<lb/>
The selectionsof Bledsoe and<lb/>
Mirer were virtual gimmes, b<lb/>
cause the only way to turn a fra<lb/>
chise around fast is to hire a gu; ?<lb/>
who can throw the forward pass.<lb/>
And taking Phoenix or Beathard<lb/>
for a ride on draft day are fast<lb/>
becoming time-honored tradi<lb/>
lions.<lb/>
No wonder the Cardinal<lb/>
ways draft high; they're alway<lb/>
running in place. With all the<lb/>
holes that needed plugging, this<lb/>
year the club's braintrust traded<lb/>
SeeUTKEpagen<lb/>
<pb facs="00058405_0012"/><lb/>
?1<lb/>
APRIL 27,1993<lb/>
-? in s<lb/>
treaks<lb/>
?<lb/>
? omplish that this season.<lb/>
Kevin fohnsonsoored 18points<lb/>
for the Sun while Kennj Smith<lb/>
had 18 points and 12 assists for the<lb/>
Rockets. His Thorpe had 16points<lb/>
andWinstonGariand I4afterstart-<lb/>
ing for Vemon Maxwell, who has a<lb/>
strained wrist.<lb/>
"They respect Hakeem so<lb/>
ibout<lb/>
hi 's Inpointsand<lb/>
pvetheSuns<lb/>
h edge over the Rock-<lb/>
iminated the re-<lb/>
boum ' '? h period but the<lb/>
fourth en route to a 51 -42 margin.<lb/>
"1 think we re just coasting a<lb/>
little bit. It's nothing to worry<lb/>
about Kmht said.<lb/>
Phoenix heat the Rockets 133-<lb/>
110 here Dec. 30 and got out of<lb/>
I loustonwitha I06-104victoryjan.<lb/>
5, but the Rockets solved the Suns<lb/>
after the All-Star break, allowing<lb/>
Phoenix a previous season-low 17<lb/>
points in the first quarter of a 131-<lb/>
104 rout at the Summit on Feb. 25.<lb/>
I he Suns hit just 23 percent in<lb/>
theopermigquarter of the final regu-<lb/>
lar season mwtingand missed nine<lb/>
of their first 10 shots in the second.<lb/>
Phoenix appeared to have got-<lb/>
ten momentum when Dan Majerle<lb/>
hit a 3-pointer with 6:20 left in the<lb/>
first quarter, leaving the Rockets<lb/>
ahead 13-9.<lb/>
But Smith sank a pair of out-<lb/>
side shots during a 14-0 run while<lb/>
the Suns went4:35withouta point<lb/>
Houston opened a 20-point lead on<lb/>
a hook by Olajuwon with 1.6 sec-<lb/>
onds to play.<lb/>
"Wecameoutwithagreatdeal<lb/>
of intensity Smith said. "We<lb/>
played well, trying to get ready for<lb/>
Continued from page 11<lb/>
the playoffs<lb/>
Carl Herrera made a pair of<lb/>
jump hooksearly in thesecond quar-<lb/>
ter, and the Rockets were up 39-13.<lb/>
Ma tt Dullard hit two3-pointers<lb/>
before halftime and sank a third<lb/>
with 503 left in the game, cutting<lb/>
off a Phoenix rally and putting the<lb/>
Rockets ahead 101-83.<lb/>
SuperSonics 96, Spurs 89<lb/>
Seattle beat visiting San Anto-<lb/>
nio for the first time in four tri's this<lb/>
season behind Ricky Pierce's 27<lb/>
points on 8-for-13 shooting from<lb/>
thefield and 11-for-12accuracy from<lb/>
the free-throw line.<lb/>
Dale Ellis scored 17 points for<lb/>
the Spurs, who had a season-high<lb/>
27 turnovers.<lb/>
Tuesday, April 27<lb/>
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<pb facs="00058405_0013"/><lb/>
APRIL 27, 1993<lb/>
The East Carolinian<lb/>
13<lb/>
? d the hole<lb/>
? ediate hitting out of a fair-<lb/>
ia bunker, chipped to 6 feet and<lb/>
made the par putt<lb/>
I returned again to the 16th<lb/>
ocontinue the playoff, but this<lb/>
time Mediate won it.<lb/>
'Once it lett the putter it was<lb/>
right in thecenter Mediate said of<lb/>
his winning putt.<lb/>
Gil Morgan, Faul Azingerand<lb/>
Dudley Hart were tied at 282. r fart<lb/>
shot 71, Azinger 72 and Morgan 73.<lb/>
Sullivan, who led for the first<lb/>
three rounds, ballooned to a final-<lb/>
round 77 and finished at 285.<lb/>
m the<lb/>
tn't sit<lb/>
Witi ind last pick in the<lb/>
first round after winning the Super<lb/>
Bowl he traded itawayforthreelater<lb/>
 1 k aces. Then his first two pickscame<lb/>
from the college he used to coach ?<lb/>
vwdereoenKevinWifliarnsand line-<lb/>
backer Damn Smith of Miami, who<lb/>
will join a half-dozen other ex Miami<lb/>
players on the Cowboys.<lb/>
SanDfego'sBobby Beathard, who<lb/>
nevermetafirst-n iund pick hewan ted,<lb/>
got stuck with taking Stanford defen-<lb/>
sive back Darrien Gordon with his<lb/>
first pick.<lb/>
But BeathaRl, who had just one<lb/>
No. 1 in his dozen years in Washing-<lb/>
ton, niadeupforit in thesecond round<lb/>
Continued from page 11<lb/>
bj tradingtoSanrrancisconextyear's<lb/>
tip pick to rnove up and take running<lb/>
bade Natrone Means of North Caro-<lb/>
lina, fhatwasa reprise of whathedid<lb/>
twoyearsagowhenhetraded his 1992<lb/>
o 1 totheRedskmstomoveupinthe<lb/>
second round tor guard Eric Moten<lb/>
atxttl-i.itpickrum?.1outtobeDesnxind<lb/>
Howard.<lb/>
Parcells' choice of Bledsoe was<lb/>
hardly a surprise. But unlike Troy<lb/>
Aikman, who was made an instant<lb/>
starter in 1989, when Johnson took<lb/>
him No. 1 for a 3-13 Dallas team,<lb/>
Bledsoe may not be an instant starter.<lb/>
"In the final analysis, we thought<lb/>
Bledsoe had a little more ability to<lb/>
throw the ball effectively Parcells<lb/>
said.<lb/>
LITKE<lb/>
Continued from page 11<lb/>
away one very good running back,<lb/>
Johnny Johnson, to move up one<lb/>
place to No. 3 and draft ? what<lb/>
else? ? another very gtxxi run-<lb/>
ning back, Georgia's Garrison<lb/>
Hearst. Think the New York Jets'<lb/>
general manager was happy that<lb/>
his phone bill was paid Sunday?<lb/>
With one call from Phoenix, he<lb/>
picked up Johnson AND a prom-<lb/>
ising linebacker in Florida's<lb/>
Marvin Jones with the No. 4 pick.<lb/>
And it wasn't even his quarter.<lb/>
Beathard is another story.<lb/>
Trading top draft picks for veter-<lb/>
ans worked in Washington be-<lb/>
cause the Redskins were a player<lb/>
or two from reaching the Super<lb/>
Bowl nearly every season. It'squite<lb/>
another matter, however, in San<lb/>
Diego. Two years ago, to get Eric<lb/>
Moten ? Eric Moten??Bea tha rd<lb/>
gave away the first-round pick<lb/>
that was eventually used to get<lb/>
Desmond Howard. This time, as<lb/>
part of a multi-pick swap with San<lb/>
Francisco, he gave away a 1994<lb/>
first-round rounder to come up<lb/>
with Natrone Means. Bet on this:<lb/>
The Chargers are not just a<lb/>
Natrone Means ? Natrone<lb/>
Means? ? away from reaching<lb/>
the Super Bowl.<lb/>
The maneuvering aside, it<lb/>
should seem scary to everyone<lb/>
that it took well-paid, full-time<lb/>
football men two monthsof prepa-<lb/>
rationsand five hours toannounce<lb/>
enough names to complete one<lb/>
round of the draft.<lb/>
Because the bad news is it<lb/>
could get longer.<lb/>
With free agents getting richer<lb/>
and a salary cap of about $30 mil-<lb/>
lion set to go into effect one year<lb/>
from now, the clubs' only source<lb/>
of cheap labor will be draftees,<lb/>
whose wages are already artifi-<lb/>
cially depressed because of a sepa-<lb/>
rate salary cap on rookies. Mak-<lb/>
ing the right picks will become<lb/>
more important than ever and the<lb/>
guys hiding behind the helmets<lb/>
will want more time than ever.<lb/>
And everybody won't have the<lb/>
chance to draft behind Phoenix or<lb/>
deal with Beathard.<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/>
300 FARMER ST<lb/>
GREENVILLE<lb/>
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iysgi<lb/>
Budweiser<lb/>
Jeffreys Beer &amp; Wine will buy back<lb/>
EMPTY A-B KEGS<lb/>
Please return them to:<lb/>
Jeffreys Beer &amp; Wine, N. Greene St.<lb/>
Greenville, NC, 758-1515.<lb/>
Closed from 12-1 pm<lb/>
15?1"W5l ? ONE OF THt ANHtUbfcH BUSCH COMPANIES<lb/>
D<lb/>
?MOTE-<lb/>
ATTIC<lb/>
a; The<lb/>
EVERY WEDNESDAY<lb/>
Undefeated, Undisputed<lb/>
Thanks For Voting Us<lb/>
The "Best Place To Hear<lb/>
live Music<lb/>
1987 1988 ? 1989 ? 19901991 ? 1992<lb/>
GREENVILLE TIMES READERS' POLL<lb/>
Tuesday, April 27<lb/>
TONIGHT<lb/>
READINGDAY<lb/>
EVE CONCERT<lb/>
THIS WEEK'S SPECIALS<lb/>
Wednesday, April 28<lb/>
WRQR<lb/>
lite<lb/>
LEWIS<lb/>
S&amp;SR-JOHNSON, JR.<lb/>
JPlE $1 50HTRAT I .S?1 SOTAM ROV<lb/>
$ 1.50 HIBALLS?$ 1.50 TALL BOYS<lb/>
Thursday, April 29<lb/>
COLLEGE NIGHT ? COLLEGE NIGHT ? COLLEGE NIGHT<lb/>
BENEFIT FOR JOHNY QUEST<lb/>
Billyclub Fest, Old School &amp; AKC<lb/>
990 Highballs ? 990 32 oz. Draft ? 990 Memberships<lb/>
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Special Guest INCUN?D<lb/>
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GRADUATION WEEK SPECIALS<lb/>
Wednesday, May 5<lb/>
WRQR<lb/>
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CoMedY<lb/>
2&amp;NE<lb/>
$1.50 HIBALLS?$.l .50 TALL BOYS<lb/>
Thursday, May 6<lb/>
COLLEGE NIGHT ? COLLEGE NIGHT ? COLLEGE NIGHT<lb/>
CONCERT FOR<lb/>
THE ANIMALS BENEFIT<lb/>
990 Highballs ? 990 32 oz. Draft ? 990 Memberships<lb/>
Friday, May 7<lb/>
ICE WATER MANSION<lb/>
NEW YORK POWER ROCK<lb/>
$2.00 32 oz DRAFT<lb/>
Saturday, May 8<lb/>
GRADUATION REGGAE PARTY<lb/>
THE AMATEURS<lb/>
$2.00 32 oz DRAFT<lb/>
jgBHg mmqggmmmmmmmm mmmmmmmmmmmmmm ?m<lb/>
<pb facs="00058405_0014"/><lb/>
.? -<lb/>
Continued from page 11<lb/>
t the year.<lb/>
he Pat:<lb/>
rtj-run<lb/>
itthita blast to<lb/>
ifthhome<lb/>
ok the lead for<lb/>
in the 11th in-<lb/>
double bv Ken<lb/>
?<lb/>
ne run in the<lb/>
fourth fora l-01ead,and J.J.Picollo<lb/>
followed in the fifth with a two-<lb/>
run homer.<lb/>
The Pirates leftrunnerson first<lb/>
and second in the last inning as<lb/>
nk, the potential tying<lb/>
J out to the second<lb/>
man in foul territory.<lb/>
son Hoffman (4-1 (pitched<lb/>
md one-third innings for the<lb/>
win and Wastey picked up his<lb/>
third save tor the Patriots while<lb/>
Johnny Beck (7-4) took the loss for<lb/>
the Pirates.<lb/>
On Sunday, Munoz hit a two-<lb/>
run homer with one out in the<lb/>
ninth inning to lead George Ma-<lb/>
son to a 6-4 win over the Pirates at<lb/>
Harrington Field.<lb/>
Although ECU scored first<lb/>
with a run in each of the first two<lb/>
innings, the Patriots battled back<lb/>
to take a 4-2 lead in the seventh<lb/>
inning when Frulioledoff with a<lb/>
triple and scored on a sacrifice fly<lb/>
by Goldberg. Frulio also had two<lb/>
doubles on the day for GMU.<lb/>
The Pirates did come back to<lb/>
tie the score 4-4 in the eighth in-<lb/>
ning when Pitt hit a one-out home<lb/>
run into right field, but Munoz,<lb/>
who finished with two hits and<lb/>
three RBIs, followed in the ninth<lb/>
with his game-winning homer.<lb/>
GMU starter Jamie Campbell<lb/>
(5-2) went the distance for the Pa-<lb/>
triots while Howard Whitfield (4-<lb/>
2) pitched one-third of an inning<lb/>
in relief of Mike Sanbum and took<lb/>
the loss.<lb/>
The Pirates will play again<lb/>
against the Tarheels on Wednes-<lb/>
day, April 28, at 3 p.m. in Chapel<lb/>
Hill.<lb/>
We would like to thank<lb/>
all the sports writers<lb/>
who turned in their<lb/>
stories on time and<lb/>
attended the required<lb/>
meetings. Thanks for<lb/>
your help, whoever<lb/>
you are. The Editors<lb/>
coring Jerry Frulio and<lb/>
LonnieGoldbergfrom second and<lb/>
Third, respectively.<lb/>
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</div></body></text></TEI>