<?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="00058412_0001"/>
ravel<lb/>
M<lb/>
Summer Funk Aerobics<lb/>
Dionne Evans helps<lb/>
summer school students<lb/>
keep the calories off<lb/>
with intense instruction<lb/>
at Christenbury Gym.<lb/>
Story page 7.<lb/>
Today<lb/>
Tomorro<lb/>
The East Carolinian<lb/>
Vol. 68 No. 39<lb/>
Circulation 5,000<lb/>
Greenville, North Carolina<lb/>
Wednesday, June 23,1993<lb/>
8 Pages<lb/>
Construction set to begin on video facility<lb/>
By Molly Perkins<lb/>
Staff Writer<lb/>
Construction of a new<lb/>
video production facility will<lb/>
soon begin in Joyner Library.<lb/>
The studio, which will be lo-<lb/>
cated on the first floor of<lb/>
Joyner's east wing where the<lb/>
library's in-house bindery used<lb/>
to be, is the first broadcast qual-<lb/>
ity television facility on theaca-<lb/>
demic campus.<lb/>
The studio will provide<lb/>
services for two groups on cam-<lb/>
pus. It will serve as an instruc-<lb/>
tional facility for students, as<lb/>
well as a studio for many types<lb/>
of production by the Academic<lb/>
Communication Support Ser-<lb/>
vices.<lb/>
"ACSS, which is a depart-<lb/>
ment within Joyner Library, is<lb/>
involved in video and image<lb/>
production for east campus<lb/>
explained Kenneth Marks, di-<lb/>
rector of Joyner Library. "There<lb/>
is a similar department that does<lb/>
the same thing for the medical<lb/>
school he said.<lb/>
Gary VVeathersbee, of<lb/>
ACSS, said that now there is<lb/>
only one studio where broad-<lb/>
casting is taught, but it is not of<lb/>
broadcasting quality. This fa-<lb/>
cility will bring ECU up to date<lb/>
in the broadcasting area.<lb/>
The new studio will add to<lb/>
other highly technical multi-me-<lb/>
dia equipment used by ACSS.<lb/>
The facility will have the new-<lb/>
est type of BetacamSP equip-<lb/>
ment, the kind that is purchased<lb/>
by major networks and TV sta-<lb/>
tions. It will be hooked to the<lb/>
statewide CoNCert video net-<lb/>
work, as well as the cable tele-<lb/>
vision educational channel. The<lb/>
studio will also have an on-line<lb/>
editing system and a laser-disc<lb/>
recording system.<lb/>
Students in Advanced<lb/>
Television Production in the<lb/>
Communications department<lb/>
will greatly benefit from the new<lb/>
video facilities. Thestudiowill<lb/>
enable students to gain experi-<lb/>
ence with modern video equip-<lb/>
ment by viewing and taking part<lb/>
in video and television produc-<lb/>
tions.<lb/>
Marks said construction of<lb/>
the new facility will begin in<lb/>
not before August first. "The<lb/>
studio should be completed by<lb/>
November, but won't be avail-<lb/>
able for production use until<lb/>
the spring semester of 1994<lb/>
Marks said.<lb/>
He explained that after the<lb/>
construction is completed, there<lb/>
will be a lot of internal work to<lb/>
do to make sure all of the equip-<lb/>
ment is working properly.<lb/>
Communications major<lb/>
Greg Spencer was very excited<lb/>
to hear about the new studio.<lb/>
"The studio we work in now is<lb/>
have to be able to put your<lb/>
hands on the equipment that<lb/>
the places where you'll apply<lb/>
for jobs are using.<lb/>
" I realize the equipment<lb/>
is expensive, but it really does<lb/>
make a difference. You can't<lb/>
prepare for a job in a high-<lb/>
tech market by using a 10-year-<lb/>
old camera<lb/>
The money to build the<lb/>
studio in Joyner Library was<lb/>
allocated by Chancellor Rich-<lb/>
ard Eakin. The designers of<lb/>
the studio are Walter Davis<lb/>
the latter part of the summer, pitiful Spencer said. "You Associates.<lb/>
Congress considers new<lb/>
student lending program<lb/>
By Warren Sumner<lb/>
Photo by Cedric Van Bur�n<lb/>
Students in the Financial Aid office on ECU campus stand in line and apply for assistance to help them during<lb/>
their college careers. With Clinton's new loan system, colleges will find it easier to access thes" funds.<lb/>
Assistant News Editor<lb/>
The U.S. Congress is now<lb/>
considering a revolutionary<lb/>
new bill proposed by the<lb/>
Clinton administration.<lb/>
This proposal deals with a<lb/>
new student lending program<lb/>
to reform the current loan sys-<lb/>
tem.<lb/>
The objective of the pro-<lb/>
posal is to grant students enter-<lb/>
ing college easier access to funds<lb/>
that would lessen the burden of<lb/>
college expenses, while at the<lb/>
same time saving taxpayers<lb/>
money.<lb/>
Clinton's proposal would<lb/>
establish a system of direct lend-<lb/>
ing which would eliminate<lb/>
"middlemen such as banks<lb/>
and other financial institutions,<lb/>
from involvement in the loan<lb/>
process.<lb/>
If the bill achieves its de-<lb/>
sired results, the students will<lb/>
be able to receive loans at lower<lb/>
interest rates and be granted<lb/>
greater flexibility in loan repay-<lb/>
ment.<lb/>
In a May 26 written pro-<lb/>
posal to Congress, Madelein<lb/>
Kunin, the Deputy Secretary of<lb/>
Education, showed support for<lb/>
the proposal and defended<lb/>
against what she labeled as false<lb/>
accusations from lobbyists rep-<lb/>
resenting the interests of the<lb/>
current lending system.<lb/>
"The intensity of recent<lb/>
lobbying efforts against student<lb/>
reform is a useful reminder that<lb/>
the purpose of the student loan<lb/>
program is to serve students,<lb/>
not to preserve a system for the<lb/>
benefit of providers Kunin<lb/>
wrote.<lb/>
"These groups have<lb/>
hired some of the highest paid<lb/>
lobbyists in town to help con-<lb/>
vince you and the public that<lb/>
the President's proposal will<lb/>
not work.<lb/>
"What they have been<lb/>
saying is, at best, misleading<lb/>
and often just plain wrong<lb/>
In the Congressional<lb/>
proposal, Kunin set out to dis-<lb/>
pel a number of myths that<lb/>
she believes the lobbyists<lb/>
have fostered.<lb/>
She stated that the popu-<lb/>
lar notion that the bill's effec-<lb/>
tiveness has been overempha-<lb/>
sized is incorrect, as well as the<lb/>
conception that a direct lend-<lb/>
See CONGRESS page 2<lb/>
Workshop offered to<lb/>
help adult students<lb/>
By Gina Jones<lb/>
Staff Writer<lb/>
On Saturday, June 26, a<lb/>
"Return to Campus" workshop<lb/>
will be held for returning adult<lb/>
students. The workshop, spon-<lb/>
sored by the ECU University<lb/>
College and Undergraduate Ad-<lb/>
missions, is not new. It has been<lb/>
held in the past and has been<lb/>
very successful.<lb/>
The workshop is designed<lb/>
to help adults not to feel left out<lb/>
of the college experience.<lb/>
"It the workshop is an<lb/>
effort the university i s making to<lb/>
encourage adults said Dr. Rob-<lb/>
ert Denney, associatedirectorof<lb/>
University College. "The goal is<lb/>
to reassure adults that they can<lb/>
return, and are welcome<lb/>
The workshop will offer<lb/>
sessions explaining the admis-<lb/>
sions process, career choices,<lb/>
payment of tuition, financial aid,<lb/>
cooperative education and col-<lb/>
lege stress. There will also be in-<lb/>
formationaboutstudentlife. The<lb/>
Student Life Handbook, Bridg-<lb/>
ing the Gap, will answer ques-<lb/>
tions about housing, child care<lb/>
and othersocial opportunities re-<lb/>
turning students may need.<lb/>
"Although there will be<lb/>
many changes awaiting return-<lb/>
ing students, the largest obstacle<lb/>
will be the students' commit-<lb/>
ments Denney said.<lb/>
"They have to continue<lb/>
with their lives and with adjust-<lb/>
ing their activities and sched-<lb/>
ules<lb/>
The "Return to Campus"<lb/>
workshop wi 11 be held on June 26<lb/>
from 8:30-1130 a.m. in the Nurs-<lb/>
ing Build ing. There is no charge,<lb/>
but enrollment is limited. For<lb/>
advance registration,call Univer-<lb/>
sity College at (919) 757-6488.<lb/>
11th professional school opens in July<lb/>
By Warren Sumner<lb/>
Assistant News Editor<lb/>
With chairman appointed,<lb/>
departmentsreorganized and fac-<lb/>
ulty motivated, ECU is preparing<lb/>
to open its 11th professional<lb/>
school.<lb/>
The School of Health and<lb/>
Human Performance will begin<lb/>
operation on July 1 after integrat-<lb/>
ing three university departments<lb/>
into one of the largest schools at<lb/>
the university. Formerly the De-<lb/>
partment of Health, Physical Edu-<lb/>
cation, Recreation and Safety, the<lb/>
new school will provide valuable<lb/>
health education opportunities to<lb/>
an already-expanding medical<lb/>
base at ECU.<lb/>
The School will now house<lb/>
 the department of Health Educa<lb/>
tion, Physical Education, and Lei-<lb/>
sure Systems Studies.<lb/>
Dr. David White, acting<lb/>
chairman of the Department of<lb/>
Health Education, said he is ex-<lb/>
cited about the new possibilities<lb/>
the school will create.<lb/>
"This school has the poten-<lb/>
tial to draw more top quality stu-<lb/>
dents White said. "It creates an<lb/>
opportunity for these depart-<lb/>
ments tobecome more visibleand<lb/>
for our faculty to have a better<lb/>
chanceat get tingresearch grants<lb/>
White said that he thinks the<lb/>
contributions the centerwill make<lb/>
to Eastern North Carolina will<lb/>
greatly benefit the region, espe-<lb/>
cially in the health arena.<lb/>
"I think we provide a great<lb/>
deal of support in disease preven-<lb/>
tion and health promotion. I think<lb/>
we will strengthen the university's<lb/>
overall impact on the health of<lb/>
the citizens of North Carolina<lb/>
and on the region tha t we serve<lb/>
Each department will<lb/>
house its own sub-divisions to<lb/>
create a large variety in the<lb/>
school. The Department of<lb/>
Physical Education will include<lb/>
Human Performance and Bio-<lb/>
mechanics laboratories, while<lb/>
the Department of Health Edu-<lb/>
cation will house the university's<lb/>
popular Sports Medicine cur-<lb/>
See SCHOOL page 2<lb/>
EC pledges troops to safe areas in Bosnian cities<lb/>
COPENHAGEN, Denmark<lb/>
(AP) � European Community<lb/>
leaders promised today io send<lb/>
troops to protect Muslim civil-<lb/>
ians in six Bosnian cities, but re-<lb/>
buffed a German proposal to arm<lb/>
therepublic'sembattled Muslims.<lb/>
The community stance in<lb/>
Copenhagen piled pressure on<lb/>
Bosnia to concede defeat in the<lb/>
war and accept a Serb-Croat pro-<lb/>
posal to carve Bosnia-<lb/>
Herzegovina into three ethnic re-<lb/>
gions. Bosnia's collective presi-<lb/>
dency voted today to go toGeneva<lb/>
on Wednesday todiscuss the pro-<lb/>
posal with Serb and Croat lead-<lb/>
ers.<lb/>
In a final statement issued at<lb/>
the end of a two-day summit, EC<lb/>
leaders said they had "decided to<lb/>
respond positively" to the United<lb/>
Nations' call for 7,600 troops to<lb/>
guard civilians in six besieged<lb/>
Muslim regions designated as<lb/>
"safe areas<lb/>
Member states were urged<lb/>
to "comply with that request<lb/>
within their abilities but no spe-<lb/>
cific number of troops was men-<lb/>
tioned in the statement.<lb/>
Dutch Prime Minister Ruud<lb/>
Lubbers said no EC states had<lb/>
offered troops except the Nether-<lb/>
lands, which pledged 400on Mon-<lb/>
day.<lb/>
France and Britain already<lb/>
provide most of the 10,000 U.N.<lb/>
troops already in Bosnia guard-<lb/>
ing food and medicine convoys.<lb/>
A resolution to send 7,600<lb/>
more troops to the six Muslim<lb/>
cities was approved by the Se-<lb/>
curity Council last week. But<lb/>
deployment was expected to<lb/>
See TROOPS page 2<lb/>
School buses save environment with natural gas power<lb/>
HIGH POINT (AP) � The snub-<lb/>
nosed school bus, that a High Point sales-<lb/>
man isdriving across the country lookslike<lb/>
hundreds of others that roll off the assem<lb/>
bly line each year. But the gas tanks hold<lb/>
natural gas instead of gasoline or diesel<lb/>
fuel.<lb/>
Ken Hedgecock, sales training man-<lb/>
ager for Thomas Built Buses, set off Mon-<lb/>
day on a 3,500-mile, 35-day "Carolina-to-<lb/>
CalifomiaTour<lb/>
The cross-country jaunt will include<lb/>
nine stops where school administrators,<lb/>
state and local officials will be able to see<lb/>
and test drive the vehicle.<lb/>
Hedgecock's ultimate destination is<lb/>
the National Conference of State Legisla-<lb/>
tures annual convention in San Diego, said<lb/>
Allan Haggai, advertising and sales pro-<lb/>
motion manager with ThomasBuiltBuses.<lb/>
"Our market is asking for these<lb/>
buses he said. "We started building pro-<lb/>
totypes about a year and a half ago. We've<lb/>
got an order for about 15 that we're build-<lb/>
ing now<lb/>
Vehicles powered by natural gas are<lb/>
better for the environment, Haggai said.<lb/>
While the busHedgecockwillbedrivingto<lb/>
California was made to use natural gas,<lb/>
gasoline-powered buses can be retrofitted<lb/>
to bum natural gas.<lb/>
Until recently, buses powered by<lb/>
na rural gashaven'tcaughton because there<lb/>
are few fuel stations. But the increasing<lb/>
availability of fuel makes natural-gas ve-<lb/>
hicles more practical, Haggai said.<lb/>
"The state of Texas now requires all<lb/>
systems with more than 50 school buses to<lb/>
purchase natural-gas buses when buying<lb/>
replacements Haggai said.<lb/>
The natural-gas tanks give the buses<lb/>
a 300-mile travel range, Haggai said.<lb/>
ThebusHedgecock isdriving is pow-<lb/>
ered by a 5.6-liter engine developed jointly<lb/>
by Hercules Engine Company, of Canton,<lb/>
Ohio, and The Gas Research Institute of<lb/>
Chicago. The tour is jointly sponsored by<lb/>
Hercules and Thomas Built.<lb/>
<lb/>
Squirrel<lb/>
eats j fries m lbto <lb/>
A squirrel, r fffjB tired of the Iwrfrilfl. , la<lb/>
same old j1 . Yj�<lb/>
nuts, feastsM flfl<lb/>
on some-i .f3ir 1<lb/>
one's ��w�li" tiPtp �J5<lb/>
leftovers. fM?11fp � <lb/>
<lb/>
Photo by m Cedric 1 lfc.<lb/>
1<lb/>
Van Buren 1 mf�m-i- aft!<lb/>
<lb/>
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nmn � n. n�pli iiETiWPWajp ill ikJiliii<lb/>
<pb facs="00058412_0002"/><lb/>
June 23, 1993<lb/>
round Othfi<lb/>
iwpuses<lb/>
Defectors challenge Japan's governing party rule<lb/>
More students work while in school<lb/>
ording t report by the American Council on<lb/>
I ducation, a greati ol undergraduate college stu-<lb/>
dents ,nv working while enrolled in college than ever before.<lb/>
The Council's report said that working student percentages<lb/>
have risen steadily in the past dec ade, largely attributed to the<lb/>
growing number of older, non-traditional students attending<lb/>
classes. The majority of students surveyed for the report cite<lb/>
"financial need" as their reason for working.<lb/>
New York university sponsors voter drive<lb/>
The City University of New York is holding a student<lb/>
registration drive to enable its students to register to vote. The<lb/>
drive is being implemented throughoutthe university 'sschools,<lb/>
and is a part of it's two-year and four-year programs. The<lb/>
university has had such drives since 1987, but this is the first<lb/>
time in its history of having them in the summer. University<lb/>
officials said more than 160,000 voter forms have been distrib-<lb/>
uted in the past six years. Officials will distribute thousands of<lb/>
forms to their summer enrollment and to all applicants to the<lb/>
admissions office of the university. The deadline for the regis-<lb/>
tration is Aug. 20 for the primary election. School officials claim<lb/>
theCUN Yeffort is the largest voter registration effort in America.<lb/>
"This summer registration initiative is intended to help our<lb/>
students gain a head start in order to meet the voter registration<lb/>
deadline said Chancellor W. Ann Reynolds.<lb/>
Libraries share electronic texts<lb/>
Five Virginia university libraries will provide student and<lb/>
faculty access to literary databases in a project described as the<lb/>
largest sharing consortium of its type. George Mason Univer-<lb/>
sity, the College of William and Mary, the University of Vir-<lb/>
ginia, Virginia Polytechnic Institute and Virginia Common-<lb/>
wealth University will all share the works of 1350 poets. The<lb/>
poetry, collected in 4,500 volumes, will be available to users by<lb/>
computers in their dormitories, offices or homes through a<lb/>
Chadwyck-Healey database program. The database contains<lb/>
the collected works of the entire body of English poetry, from<lb/>
Anglo-Saxon times to 1900. Users will be able tc access the<lb/>
database; identify specific poems; trace themes; and compare<lb/>
usage in poems by different authors in different centuries.<lb/>
Compiled by Warren Sumner. Taken from CPS<lb/>
and other campus newspapers.<lb/>
rOKYO(AP) Puv-reform<lb/>
lawmakers furthei chipped away<lb/>
atalmost 40 years of Liberal Demo-<lb/>
cratic rule today as a second fac-<lb/>
tion ol governing party defectors<lb/>
prepared to launch theirown splin-<lb/>
ter group.<lb/>
The departure of the group<lb/>
led by former Finance Minister<lb/>
Tsutomu Hata came a day after 10<lb/>
lawmakers announced the creation<lb/>
olfa new party called Sakigake.<lb/>
The defections are eroding<lb/>
the Liberal Democrats' once<lb/>
TROOPS<lb/>
unchallengeable grasp on power<lb/>
and haveleftPrinuMinisterKiichi<lb/>
Miyazawa bereft of influence just<lb/>
as Japan prepares to host an eco-<lb/>
nomic summit next month of ma-<lb/>
jor industrialized nations.<lb/>
Lawmakersdismayedbythe<lb/>
pa ssage of a vote of no confidence<lb/>
against Miyazawa last Friday are<lb/>
now maneuvering to win backdis-<lb/>
illusioned supporters ahead of July<lb/>
18 elections by distancing them-<lb/>
selves from their scandal-tainted<lb/>
party.<lb/>
Continued from page 1<lb/>
Hata, 57, and about 40other<lb/>
legislators submitted resignations<lb/>
at the Liberal Democratic Party<lb/>
headquarters today, according to<lb/>
an aide who spoke on the condi-<lb/>
tion of anonymity.<lb/>
"We must create a true poli-<lb/>
tics that can be really and easily<lb/>
understood by the people Hata<lb/>
said in an interview reported in<lb/>
the Nihon Keizai Shimbun,a lead-<lb/>
ing economic daily.<lb/>
Hata's group led the revolt<lb/>
in parliament Friday that forced<lb/>
CONGRESS<lb/>
entity Council last week. But de-<lb/>
ployment was expected to take<lb/>
months, in part because of the<lb/>
difficulty the United Nationsan-<lb/>
J<lb/>
ticipated in marshaling that<lb/>
many soldiers and equipment.<lb/>
Lubbers said the statement<lb/>
did not include the German pro-<lb/>
posal to lift the U.N. arms em-<lb/>
bargo because "it creates the ex-<lb/>
pectation that you don't believe<lb/>
in your own policy" to step up<lb/>
humanitarian aid.<lb/>
Producing a letter of sup-<lb/>
port from President Clinton,<lb/>
SCHOOL<lb/>
riculum.<lb/>
Dr. Carolyn Hampton has<lb/>
been named acting dean of the<lb/>
school.<lb/>
A veteran of ECU science<lb/>
education, Hampton is cur-<lb/>
rently an associate dean for re-<lb/>
search in the ECU College of<lb/>
Arts and Sciences.<lb/>
Chancellor Helmut Kohl of Ger-<lb/>
many had urged the community<lb/>
to press the United Nations to<lb/>
lift an arms embargo to help<lb/>
Muslim forces repel advancing<lb/>
Serbs and Croats.<lb/>
The Muslims say the em-<lb/>
bargopenalizes them more than<lb/>
Croats and Serbs, who are much<lb/>
better armed and get weapons<lb/>
from neighboring Croatia and<lb/>
Serbia.<lb/>
The IJC did, however,<lb/>
soften its longstanding opposi-<lb/>
tion to lifting the arms ban.<lb/>
Continued from page 1<lb/>
In an interview with the<lb/>
ECU News Bureau, she ex-<lb/>
pressed her optimism for the<lb/>
new program.<lb/>
"These programs and<lb/>
the other academic disciplines<lb/>
will help the new school be-<lb/>
come one of the best in the<lb/>
country she said.<lb/>
Miyazawa, 73, to call early elec-<lb/>
tions. Hata'sgroup was expected<lb/>
to set up a new party Wednes-<lb/>
day.<lb/>
The chances for the newly<lb/>
emerging parties to unite with<lb/>
older opposition parties in suc-<lb/>
cessfully challenging the Liberal<lb/>
Democrats remain unclear.<lb/>
Allthenewgroupsclaimto<lb/>
want to clean up Japan's notori-<lb/>
ously corrupt political system,<lb/>
with its system of pork barrel<lb/>
spoils and influence-buying.<lb/>
Continued from page 1<lb/>
ing program will ,uft the finan-<lb/>
cial loan burden to the nation's<lb/>
colleges.<lb/>
"We do not foresee in-<lb/>
creased administrative costs to<lb/>
institutions and have carefully<lb/>
crafted the legislation to meet<lb/>
that intent she wrote.<lb/>
"Moreover, no institution<lb/>
will be forced to originate<lb/>
loansD3 lending will save<lb/>
$4.3 billion over the next five<lb/>
years by substituting federal<lb/>
borrowing for private capital<lb/>
Kunin said that the new<lb/>
bill proposal would not serve to<lb/>
provide a substitute to private<lb/>
sector involvement in loan<lb/>
grants, but would instead cre-<lb/>
ate a partnership between the<lb/>
government and private indus-<lb/>
try for loan revamping.<lb/>
"The reality is that the<lb/>
President's proposal will build<lb/>
a new publicprivate partner-<lb/>
ship, through the competitive<lb/>
selection of contractors, who<lb/>
will be chosen on the basis of<lb/>
price and quality, to act as al-<lb/>
ternative originators and to<lb/>
service loans. The current sys-<lb/>
tem uses private lenders to<lb/>
provide capital to students and<lb/>
to service loans, but it does not<lb/>
use competitive forces to re-<lb/>
duce costs or ensure quality<lb/>
service.<lb/>
"Instead, by statute, all<lb/>
lenders, no matter how they<lb/>
perform, receive the same ftit<lb/>
of return, 3.1 percentage points<lb/>
over the treasury bill rate<lb/>
ALFRE,<lb/>
NEW YORK STYLE<lb/>
f �<lb/>
s<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<lb/>
The Lee Building<lb/>
Greenville NC<lb/>
757-0003<lb/>
Hours:<lb/>
Monday - Friday<lb/>
8:30-3:30<lb/>
S<lb/>
Pizza-Beer Pick-up<lb/>
Combo Special<lb/>
Lg Pizza w I 1 large one I<lb/>
topping topping<lb/>
Pitcher of beer<lb/>
$7.49<lb/>
218E.5thSt.<lb/>
752-0022<lb/>
$4.99<lb/>
ALFREDOS<lb/>
E�pirt� fUMS<lb/>
1<lb/>
ALFREDO<lb/>
Expire ��W�<lb/>
RECREATIONAL SERVICES<lb/>
SUMMER 1993 ADVENTURE PROGRAMS<lb/>
LIMBING PROGRAM (Jj<lb/>
ow to get started eastcakounaunotuty<lb/>
If you have never climbed before, you must participate in a Climbing<lb/>
I workshop before you are eligible to purchase a Drop-In Pass. Two<lb/>
large group workshops are being held second session; Wednesday,<lb/>
June 30 &amp; Wednesday, July 14 from 3:00-5:00pm for $5.00. Or, you<lb/>
may sign up on Wednesday or Thursday for a daily workshop at a<lb/>
cost of $5.00.<lb/>
I E A T U R I N<lb/>
?rop-in climbing hours<lb/>
Wednesday<lb/>
Thursday<lb/>
4:00pm-7:00pm<lb/>
4:00pm-7:00pm<lb/>
Purchase a Pass<lb/>
Register for any Adventure<lb/>
Program in the ROC,11 7<lb/>
Christenbury Gym, on<lb/>
Monday from<lb/>
1:30pm 5:30pm<lb/>
Tuesday, Wednesday, it<lb/>
Thursday from<lb/>
3:30pm 5:30pm<lb/>
Friday from<lb/>
11:00am 1:30pm<lb/>
Passes may be purchased in room 204 Christenbury Gymnasium<lb/>
Monday-Thursday from 7:30am-5:00pm and on Friday from<lb/>
7:30am-11:30am. Prices are as follows:<lb/>
Day Pass:<lb/>
Session Pass:<lb/>
$1.00 for Students<lb/>
$2.00 for FacultyStaffGuest<lb/>
$10.00 for Students<lb/>
$15.00 for FacultyStaffGuest<lb/>
B<lb/>
AKE A TRIP WITH US!<lb/>
Take a weekend off and enjoy the outdoors with an adventure trip<lb/>
unlike anything you'll do this summer.<lb/>
Windsurfing Outing<lb/>
When? July 8 from 3:00-6:00pm<lb/>
Where7 at Whichards Beach<lb/>
How Much? $8 for Students, $10 for FacultyStaffGuest<lb/>
Beach Horseback Riding<lb/>
When? Sunday, July 11<lb/>
Where7 Cedar Island, NC<lb/>
How Much? S45 for Students, $50 for FacultyStaffGuest<lb/>
Hanggliding &amp; Windsurfing<lb/>
When? Friday &amp; Saturday, July 16-1 7<lb/>
Where7 the Outer Banks, Kitty Hawk, NC<lb/>
How Much? $70 for Students, $80 for FacultyStaffGuest<lb/>
register NOW through<lb/>
July 8<lb/>
1<lb/>
register NOW through<lb/>
July 7<lb/>
register NOW through<lb/>
July 14<lb/>
11� Inf wm.llor. regarding Okm program or c<lb/>
TUESDAY<lb/>
RCIV0<lb/>
0 DRAFT ALL NIGHT1<lb/>
WEDNESDAY<lb/>
CLASSICS NIGHT<lb/>
with the best in classic Rock &amp; Dance Music<lb/>
$3.00 Members $4.00 Guests<lb/>
0 DRAFT ALL NIGHT!<lb/>
$3.00 Teas &amp; Bahama Mamas � 50 Jelo Shots � 75 Kamknes<lb/>
THURSDAY<lb/>
DANCE RANCH!<lb/>
All your favorite Country, Southern Rock &amp; Dance Tunes.<lb/>
$1.00 Members $3.00 Guests<lb/>
$1.00 Domestics &amp; $2.75 Pitchers<lb/>
FRIDAY<lb/>
RUSH HOUR<lb/>
FREE Admission for All 8 til 9:00<lb/>
for Members &amp; Greek ID's<lb/>
$3.00 Teas &amp; Bahama Mamas � $2.75 Pitchers �<lb/>
750 Kamikazes � 75$ 100 M.P.H.<lb/>
SATURDAY<lb/>
Saturday!<lb/>
$1.00 Members $3X10 Guests $1.50 anas! $3XX) Pitchers<lb/>
r ���<lb/>
mrim-mmm�<lb/>
<pb facs="00058412_0003"/><lb/>
The East Carolinian<lb/>
Lifestyle<lb/>
Page 3<lb/>
Our<lb/>
itry's Good' kicks off summer theatre<lb/>
Photo by Cedric Van Buren<lb/>
"Our Country's Good" mixes entertainment and a theatrical message to provide quality theatre. Performances<lb/>
start at 8 p.m. and will run through Saturday night.<lb/>
Hollywood animation<lb/>
makes 'Jurassic Park'<lb/>
By Ike Shibley<lb/>
Staff Writer<lb/>
Trying to criticize a film like<lb/>
Jurassic Park that has all the ear-<lb/>
ma rks of being one of the biggest<lb/>
grossing movies of all time pro-<lb/>
vides innumerable challenges.<lb/>
First, one must try to ignore<lb/>
the hype preceding the film and<lb/>
the marketing ploys that run con-<lb/>
comitant with the film's release.<lb/>
Secondly, one needs to try to<lb/>
look on a more challenging time<lb/>
course than two hours or even the<lb/>
length of the summer to chart the<lb/>
quality of the film. One tries to<lb/>
judge what the long-term impli-<lb/>
cations of a film like Jurassic Park<lb/>
maybe. Will it galvanize the cin-<lb/>
ema tic consciousness the way Star<lb/>
Wars did or will it quickly fade<lb/>
into a mere cinematic footnote as<lb/>
Batman has done?<lb/>
Thirdly, a critic needs to ac-<lb/>
knowledge the technology and<lb/>
special effects used to create the<lb/>
film while not being over-<lb/>
whelmed by them. Many pictures<lb/>
have created new technologies,<lb/>
but most of that technology then<lb/>
gets used in much more solid cin-<lb/>
ematic productions.<lb/>
Ji4rassic Park provides a pleas-<lb/>
ant summer diversion and may<lb/>
even become the highest grossing<lb/>
film of the year, but it will not be<lb/>
long remembered as anything<lb/>
more than a slick Hollywood pro-<lb/>
duction mat tells a tired tale of<lb/>
monsters chasing humans.<lb/>
The only novelty Jurassic Park<lb/>
offers comes in the form of the<lb/>
monsters. Although they aredino-<lb/>
saurs, these creatures bearstriking<lb/>
similarities to King Kong, Godzilla<lb/>
and the aliens in Aliens. Instead of<lb/>
exploring the truly unique side of<lb/>
creating dinosaurs, Steven<lb/>
Spielberg instead explored the Hol-<lb/>
lywood side of creating them.<lb/>
As soon as a worker on the<lb/>
island makes a shady deal to steal<lb/>
someembryosanda tropical storm<lb/>
is tracked by the National Weather<lb/>
Service, the audience can see the<lb/>
huge cogs of the transparent plot<lb/>
beginning to show. They can hear<lb/>
the groans and squeaks of the tired<lb/>
plot machinery trying to muster<lb/>
enough energy to reach the pre-<lb/>
determined conclusion.<lb/>
JurasskPark suffers from the<lb/>
same ills as Cliffhanger. The film-<lb/>
makers begin with a novel con-<lb/>
cept with great promise, then bas-<lb/>
tardize it by imposing a sagging<lb/>
Hollywood plot.<lb/>
Spielberg, who has been re-<lb/>
sponsible for some truly great<lb/>
Hollywood films like Jaivs, E.T.<lb/>
and Raiders of the Lost Ark, has<lb/>
faltered recently with Hook, and<lb/>
though Jurassic Park is better,<lb/>
Speilberg has not regained his<lb/>
touch.<lb/>
Though Jurassic Park can in<lb/>
no way compa re to the sheer mag-<lb/>
nitudeof incompetence exhibited<lb/>
in Hook, it does suffer from the<lb/>
same major ill�too many inter-<lb/>
esting sets and not enough story.<lb/>
As in many Spielberg fables,<lb/>
children get introduced into the<lb/>
melee. Try as he may, Spielberg<lb/>
ca nnotcon vince the a ud ience tha t<lb/>
thechild ren are really in any dan-<lb/>
ger. Youngsters in the audience<lb/>
may be convinced, which is just<lb/>
one reason why they should not<lb/>
see this film, but most anyone<lb/>
See JURASSIC page 4<lb/>
7�6t?s Pap smears<lb/>
Question: Exactly what is the<lb/>
purpose of having a Pap smear?<lb/>
Answer. A Pap smear is done<lb/>
to see whether the cells of the<lb/>
cervix are normal. Sometimes a<lb/>
Pap smear will reveal other<lb/>
changes on the cervix. These<lb/>
changes do not necessarily indi-<lb/>
cate cervical cancer.<lb/>
A Pap smear is considered a<lb/>
screening test only. Upon receiv-<lb/>
ing an abnormal result, further<lb/>
tests are needed to confirm the<lb/>
nature of the abnormality.<lb/>
During a Pap smear, random<lb/>
samples of cellsare obtained from<lb/>
the cervix.<lb/>
A device known as a spatula<lb/>
is used to gather cells from the<lb/>
cervical area. The cells are stud-<lb/>
Answered by Jennifer Phillips<lb/>
Student Health Services<lb/>
ied under a microscope by trained<lb/>
technicians who classify the cells<lb/>
according to their microscopic<lb/>
characteristics.<lb/>
There are five classes: Class 1<lb/>
is considered a normal result;<lb/>
Class 11 usually indicates some<lb/>
type of infection or inflammation<lb/>
of the vagina; Classes HI and IV<lb/>
are suspicious for tumors but not<lb/>
definite; Class V is definite for<lb/>
tumors.<lb/>
It is important that women<lb/>
hav a Pap smear done annually<lb/>
after the age of 18 whether they<lb/>
are sexually active or not (unless<lb/>
otherwise advised by a physi-<lb/>
cian). Risk factors for cervical can-<lb/>
cer include:<lb/>
� Sexual intercourse at an<lb/>
early age (teen or younger)<lb/>
� Sexual intercourse with<lb/>
more than two partners<lb/>
� Sexual intercourse with<lb/>
someone who has had more than<lb/>
two partners<lb/>
� Genital herpes<lb/>
� Genital warts<lb/>
Questions for the health col-<lb/>
� umnshould bedirected tojenni-<lb/>
fer Phillips, Student Health Ser-<lb/>
vice, ECU, Greenville, 27858.<lb/>
By Joe Horst<lb/>
Staff Writer<lb/>
Over the years, the theater has<lb/>
striven to provide the masses with a<lb/>
three-fold prod uction: entertainment,<lb/>
theatricality and a thematic sense all<lb/>
in one two-and-a-half hour play.<lb/>
This season's Summer Theatre<lb/>
at the ECU Playhouse doubles this<lb/>
triad by providing three individual<lb/>
plays thatrepresentthisrombination<lb/>
of showmanship and subject matter.<lb/>
"If you take thissummer, in toto,<lb/>
as a whole, each of these plays has a<lb/>
great deal of intellectual content as<lb/>
well as theatrical content as well as<lb/>
entertainment value said John<lb/>
Shearin,artisricdirectorproducerof<lb/>
ECU's Summer Theatre. "Each of<lb/>
these plays embodies an idea and a<lb/>
theme, a very strong thematic mes-<lb/>
sage, as well as great entertainment<lb/>
value<lb/>
When asked about his choice of<lb/>
plays, Shearin commented thata the-<lb/>
ater company working out of a uni-<lb/>
versity has a need to reflect the mis-<lb/>
sion of that university in its work.<lb/>
"A great part of that university<lb/>
mission is to try to elevate the stan-<lb/>
dards, to try to com-<lb/>
municate themes, to<lb/>
try to exercise<lb/>
ideas'Shearinsaid.<lb/>
 I would never<lb/>
foresake theatrical-<lb/>
ity and entertain-<lb/>
ment for a message.<lb/>
For me, the best the-<lb/>
ater is the theater of<lb/>
ideasexpressedinahighry entertain-<lb/>
ing way<lb/>
This year's season opened yes-<lb/>
terday with the Olivier Award-win-<lb/>
ning play, "Our Country's Good<lb/>
Providing the meat between thebread<lb/>
willbethemusicalQuiltersastory<lb/>
about pioneer women. The season<lb/>
will conclude with "Letrice and<lb/>
Lovage'acornedyfromPeterShaffer,<lb/>
who also wrote "Equus" and<lb/>
"Amadeus<lb/>
"Our Country's Good written<lb/>
by Timberlake Wertenbaker and<lb/>
adapted from Thomas Keneally's<lb/>
'ThePlayhousedironiclesthestory<lb/>
of the penal system in New South<lb/>
Wales, the Bri tish colony tha tevenru-<lb/>
ally became Australia. Set in the late<lb/>
1780s, the play centers around the<lb/>
convicts' treatment and behavior in<lb/>
this horrible, often violent, micro-<lb/>
cosm of society.<lb/>
The thrust of the play occurs<lb/>
when theGovernor announces that<lb/>
a play will be presented with the<lb/>
convicts as actors. The focus is<lb/>
turned on toa lieutenant in the Royal<lb/>
Marines who is named director,<lb/>
and is thus simultaneously inun-<lb/>
dated by potential actors looking<lb/>
for any form of mental escape and<lb/>
constrained by the rigors of mili-<lb/>
tary discipline.<lb/>
With the concept of a play-<lb/>
within-a-play, "Our Country's<lb/>
Good"allowsforacertain amount<lb/>
of cross-casting. According to<lb/>
Shearin, this forces actors to main-<lb/>
tain a high sense of concentration<lb/>
See SUMMER page 4<lb/>
Summer soars with Ultimate<lb/>
players in Emerald City<lb/>
MarjorieMcKinstry<lb/>
Staff Writer<lb/>
While some students suffer<lb/>
through the boring summer eve-<lb/>
ningswatchingrerunsof "The Andy<lb/>
Griffith Show" and chugging down<lb/>
cheap combinations of malt and<lb/>
hops, many other students are rev-<lb/>
eling in a summer activity that of-<lb/>
fers exercise, competition and fun,<lb/>
as well as a great chance to meet a<lb/>
variety of different people.<lb/>
The sport is Ultimate, a fast<lb/>
paced game similar to frisbee foot-<lb/>
ball. The summer league mles are<lb/>
informal, perfect for both the peop le<lb/>
wanting to learn to play, and those<lb/>
who just wanta relaxed athleticand<lb/>
social environment.<lb/>
Ultimate is a non-contact<lb/>
sport that is self-officiated; in other<lb/>
words, players are on the honor<lb/>
system and must be willing to call<lb/>
fouls on themselves as well as on<lb/>
the other team. Games are played<lb/>
until a score of 15 is reached, one<lb/>
point at a time.<lb/>
UnJike the regular season, sum-<lb/>
mer league teams are co-ed. This<lb/>
summer, the league boasts a roster<lb/>
of about60participants,divided up<lb/>
intoaround fourteams, butnew-<lb/>
comers are always welcome, ac-<lb/>
cording to the league director<lb/>
Gary Hurley.<lb/>
Many of the players thissum-<lb/>
mer are first rimers, like Kim<lb/>
Edwards who plays ultimate be-<lb/>
cause "it's fun, and a little differ-<lb/>
ent, plus ifs great exercise. They<lb/>
throw everyone together, and<lb/>
even though you leam mostly on<lb/>
your own, the regular ultimate<lb/>
people help you figure things<lb/>
out<lb/>
See ULTIMATE page 4<lb/>
Need info on financial aid, career options, admissions?<lb/>
ECU Career Workshop<lb/>
East Carolina University will hold a "Return to Campus" work-<lb/>
shop on Saturday, June 26 for people thinking about beginning or<lb/>
re-entering college.<lb/>
Sponsored by the ECU University College and Undergraduate<lb/>
Admissions, the workshop is scheduled for 8:30-11:30 a.m. in the<lb/>
Nursing Building on campus.<lb/>
Workshop sessions will include information about financial<lb/>
assistance, career options, the admission process, academic sup-<lb/>
port services and student services. In addition, adult students will<lb/>
discuss their decisions to return to school and provide insight on<lb/>
some of their experiences. Basic strategies on how to balance work,<lb/>
home and school obligations will also be discussed.<lb/>
There is no charge for the workshop, but enrollment is limited.<lb/>
For advance registration call the University at 919-757-6488.<lb/>
Who's There ?�<lb/>
AtticHard TimesCorrigans<lb/>
Thursday:Thursday:Thursday:<lb/>
Follow for NowDance LessonsBruce Frye<lb/>
Friday:Friday:(Ladies free)<lb/>
AmateursBillie Joe RoyalSaturday:<lb/>
Saturday:Saturday:Abandon Real<lb/>
StegmondsSilverwings<lb/>
Sweaty, dreamy imagery: Insane Jane is tight on newest release, 'Sweet Finger'<lb/>
By Mark Brett<lb/>
Staff Writer<lb/>
Insane Jane likes breasts. Or<lb/>
at least I assume they do; both of<lb/>
their albums feature mammaries<lb/>
prominently on the cover.<lb/>
Their newest release, Each<lb/>
Finger, has infrared, photo-<lb/>
graphed, glittered-covered<lb/>
breasts, with a cross hanging be-<lb/>
tween them. An appropriate im-<lb/>
age for an album that concerns<lb/>
itself mostly with sex and reli-<lb/>
gion.<lb/>
The first track, "Daisy is<lb/>
about the orgasm of a masturbat-<lb/>
ing peep-show dancer. Her at-<lb/>
tempt to just lie back and enjoy it<lb/>
for once, however, sends her au-<lb/>
dience into a rape-bent frenzy.<lb/>
Continuing in this vein is "I'm<lb/>
Flying which mixes drugs with<lb/>
orgasm, creating a lofty effect.<lb/>
Filled with sweaty, dreamy<lb/>
imagery, these two songs set the<lb/>
tone for Enci Fwfr. Insane Jane's<lb/>
musical style, which also tends to<lb/>
be sweaty and dreamy, works<lb/>
well in these pieces. The listener<lb/>
is carried along by the flow of the<lb/>
album. For the first 20 minutes or<lb/>
so, Each Finger is fascinating.<lb/>
Then we get to "1 Won't<lb/>
� Stand an excellent piece of mu-<lb/>
sic about the futility of martyr-<lb/>
� dom. "I Won't Stand" breaks the<lb/>
spell. This is a tough song about<lb/>
the underlying meaning of Chris-<lb/>
tianity. martyrdom is a good<lb/>
thing. When lead singer Yellow<lb/>
declares "I won't stand For the<lb/>
man of the cross she's not only<lb/>
refusing to be a majtyr, she's re-<lb/>
fusing to worship one. This song<lb/>
is a shift in Each Finger, a shift in<lb/>
topic and in complexity. Inequal-<lb/>
ity of the music soars.<lb/>
Normally, a good song is not<lb/>
a bad thing. "I Won't Stand" is so<lb/>
very good that the rest of the al-<lb/>
bum suffers in comparison. Plac-<lb/>
ing a song this spectacular in the<lb/>
middle of an album is a lot like<lb/>
premature ejaculation, and Insane<lb/>
Jane has blown their load real<lb/>
good this time.<lb/>
After "I Won't Stand the<lb/>
band returns to the dreamy stuff,<lb/>
but the thrill is gone. Their style<lb/>
flattens out and every song<lb/>
sounds the same. The listener's<lb/>
attention wanders on to more in-<lb/>
teresting things�the patterns in<lb/>
the wallpaper or that familiar<lb/>
household chore. There's a glar-<lb/>
ing error in musical judgmentthat<lb/>
needs to be pointed out.<lb/>
"Smoke! Smoke! I'm gonna<lb/>
smoke you up, roll you in my<lb/>
fingers and lighta torch for love<lb/>
Sound juicy? It should. It's from<lb/>
"Lollipop Serenade another sex<lb/>
song. Exclamation pointsabound<lb/>
as Insane Jane glories in the plea-<lb/>
sure of oral fornication. Thisone<lb/>
should be air fast and bubbly<lb/>
and shuddering, shouldn't it?<lb/>
Sorry, but it'sdelivered with all<lb/>
the emotion and raw sexuality<lb/>
of a dead muskrat.<lb/>
Despite their second-half<lb/>
fade, Insane Jane is a talented<lb/>
band, and Each Finger offers 25<lb/>
minutes of tight, will-be muzak,<lb/>
for all its listenability.<lb/>
My verdict? If you can find<lb/>
it in the bargain bin, pick it up.<lb/>
Just don't pay full price for<lb/>
half an album.<lb/>
<pb facs="00058412_0004"/><lb/>
June 23. 1993<lb/>
Continued from page 3<lb/>
xact same<lb/>
In otht I very little<lb/>
surprises lurk on the this island. In<lb/>
fact, excepting the explanation for<lb/>
how the dinosaurs were created,<lb/>
ULTIMATE<lb/>
I no creativity.<lb/>
is watched movies<lb/>
ave written it.<lb/>
spite all the negative<lb/>
-in that surfaces after think-<lb/>
ing about the film, one cannot deny<lb/>
heer power of Jurassic Park.<lb/>
The beauty and strength of the di-<lb/>
nosaurs provides much enjoyment.<lb/>
The beasts�from Brachiosaurusto<lb/>
Tyrannosaurus Rex to a bird-like<lb/>
Continued from page 3<lb/>
dinosaur called a velociraptor�<lb/>
kok incredibly real.<lb/>
The actors do a workman-like<lb/>
job of handling their duties through<lb/>
most of their characters are one di-<lb/>
mensional. Sam Neill as the head<lb/>
paleontologist provides a compe-<lb/>
tent lead whose disgust for children<lb/>
gradually fades as he spendsa har-<lb/>
rowing night alone in the park with<lb/>
them. Laura Dern, Jeff Goldblum<lb/>
and Richar3 'Attenborough (as<lb/>
John Hammond, the curator of<lb/>
the park and whose grandchil-<lb/>
dren get stuck in the park fill their<lb/>
roles with aplomb. . -<lb/>
One admirable touch that the<lb/>
filmemploysappearswhenGrant<lb/>
asks Hammond how he created<lb/>
the dinosaurs. Hammond shows<lb/>
Gran t and the aud ience a f il m sta r-<lb/>
ring "Mr. D.N.A" that succinctly<lb/>
Plenty of veteran players, from<lb/>
both the Iratesand Helios (the ECU<lb/>
club teams) are playing this sum-<lb/>
mer. Some, said Hurley, "have<lb/>
played for six or seven years, and<lb/>
they're out there with people who<lb/>
have never picked up a disc<lb/>
Many of the newcomers are<lb/>
hoping toplay with either the bates<lb/>
or Helios next fall, and members of<lb/>
both teams have mentioned that<lb/>
they are recruiting for regular sea-<lb/>
son play. But as Dave Bundy said,<lb/>
summer league allows "guys and<lb/>
girls to come out here and play a<lb/>
good game that makes everyone<lb/>
happy, whether you're looking for<lb/>
exercise, social interaction or com-<lb/>
petition<lb/>
After the first few practice<lb/>
weeks of the season, the teams will<lb/>
start keeping score for each game,<lb/>
and every day will bring different<lb/>
teams into play against each other.<lb/>
The games will lead to an end of the<lb/>
league tournament, where the win-<lb/>
ners will take home a trophy. Until<lb/>
that time, the players hit the ECU<lb/>
practice fields behind Ficklen sta-<lb/>
diumevery Tuesday and Thursday<lb/>
at5:30p.m. The only gear necessary<lb/>
to play is shorts and T-shirts, but<lb/>
cleats are the most prevalent form<lb/>
of footwear. A175 gram disc is also<lb/>
suggested, but not required.<lb/>
Along with the regularly sched-<lb/>
uled gameson Tuesdays and Thurs-<lb/>
days, informal practicesareheld on<lb/>
Wednesdays and Sundays. "We<lb/>
might also travel down to<lb/>
Wilmington toplay with fheirsum-<lb/>
mer league<lb/>
Payment of su mmer dues ($10)<lb/>
insures each player a summer<lb/>
league T-shirt and entrance to the<lb/>
end of the season tou mament party.<lb/>
"If you just want to play first ses-<lb/>
sion, second session or both, we're<lb/>
at your disposal Hurley said.<lb/>
Interested people should either<lb/>
call Hurley at 758-5793, or show up<lb/>
on the practice field. You will know<lb/>
you are in the right place if dogs are<lb/>
swarming the field; water bottles,<lb/>
coolers and bicycles are scattered<lb/>
along the sidelines and crazed ath-<lb/>
letes are diving headlong into the<lb/>
air after discs. One of the blood and<lb/>
dust covered participants might be<lb/>
Trevor Burnette, who after numer-<lb/>
ous aerial acrobatics, has decided<lb/>
"it's gotta begood foryouif ithurts<lb/>
SUMMER<lb/>
Continued from page 3<lb/>
and continuity in order to maintain<lb/>
the play's integrity.<lb/>
"All of those charactersare very<lb/>
different in the kinds of demands<lb/>
they make on the actor � they're<lb/>
different emotionally, they'rediffer-<lb/>
ent physically, they have different<lb/>
voices, different points of views<lb/>
Shea rin said. "Theactor must be able<lb/>
to not only master these differences<lb/>
in character, but be able to shift gears<lb/>
in a matter of seconds � go out of<lb/>
one scene, make an immediate shift<lb/>
ofgearsa id a coat change and come<lb/>
on as another character in a very<lb/>
demanding scene<lb/>
"Our Country's Good" hosts<lb/>
several veteransofSummer Thea tre,<lb/>
including Tom Spivey, Elizabeth<lb/>
Townsend, Dan Strickler and Donn<lb/>
Youngstrcm. Audienceswill remem-<lb/>
ber these favorites from past perfor-<lb/>
mancesof'The Fantasticks "A Mid-<lb/>
summer Night's Dream "Lend Me<lb/>
a Tenor" and "Dracula<lb/>
Ticketpricesare$1750 for adults,<lb/>
$1250 for senior citizens and $750<lb/>
for chi Id ren. ECU students may buy<lb/>
discounted tickets (with a valid I.D.)<lb/>
for $10 if bouth between 7:45 and 8<lb/>
p.m. the night of the performance.<lb/>
Greenville Aquarium's<lb/>
JUNE COUPONS<lb/>
SAVE<lb/>
25<lb/>
C i<lb/>
I<lb/>
ONANY I<lb/>
WHISPER PCiWER j<lb/>
FILTER j<lb/>
BUY2GET1<lb/>
FREE<lb/>
PLANTASTIC<lb/>
PLANTS<lb/>
WILDCARD<lb/>
20 PF�<lb/>
ANY NON-SALE<lb/>
! ITEMS-NO TANKS<lb/>
EXP. 63093<lb/>
EXP. 63093<lb/>
e<lb/>
a.<lb/>
4<lb/>
4<lb/>
CHECK OUT OUR WEEKLY FISH SPECIALS<lb/>
UNIVERSITY CENTER<lb/>
14th &amp; CHARLES ST.<lb/>
757-0056<lb/>
M-F 11-9 � SAT 10-9 SUN 1-6<lb/>
TDSPrnviiie<lb/>
w&amp;cj MMWCMI; 1 � 1<lb/>
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MasterCard.<lb/>
v " .<lb/>
Attention<lb/>
Returning Students<lb/>
If you plan to live off campus, you can eliminate at least one long line by arranging<lb/>
your utility service in advance. By planning ahead, you can save valuable time � and<lb/>
possibly money. The following options are available:<lb/>
Option A: No Deposit Required<lb/>
At your parents' request, your utility<lb/>
service may be put in their name. Just pick<lb/>
up a "Request for Utility Service" applica-<lb/>
tion from room 211 in the Off-Campus<lb/>
Housing Office, Whichard Building or at<lb/>
Greenville Utilities' main office. 200 W. 5th<lb/>
Street<lb/>
Have your parents complete the<lb/>
application (which must be notarized) and<lb/>
mailittoGUC, P.O. Box !847, Greenville,<lb/>
N.C. 27835-1847. alt: Customer Service.<lb/>
?Remember to attach a "letter of<lb/>
credit" from your parents' power company.<lb/>
Option B: Deposit Required<lb/>
If you wish to have the utility service put in<lb/>
your name, a deposit will be required. Deposits<lb/>
are as follows:  . . , . . .<lb/>
wilh electric or woul electric<lb/>
gas space heating or gas space heating<lb/>
Electric Only SI00S75<lb/>
Electric &amp; Water SI00S85<lb/>
Electric. Water &amp; Gas SI 10S85<lb/>
Electric &amp; Gas SI00S75<lb/>
Greenville<lb/>
You can save time by mailing the deposit<lb/>
in advance Be sure to include your name, where<lb/>
service will be required, when service is to be cut<lb/>
on and a phone number where we may reach you<lb/>
prior ) your arrival at the service address.<lb/>
Utilities<lb/>
"Our Country's Good" will<lb/>
run through June 26, with matinee<lb/>
perforances at 2 p.m. on the 23rd<lb/>
and the 26th. "Quilters" will open<lb/>
its weekof performances on July 6.<lb/>
explains the procedure in layman's<lb/>
terms. Thisavoidstalkingdown to<lb/>
the audience. If the "Mr. D.N.A"<lb/>
film had not been employed, the<lb/>
scientist would have had to ex-<lb/>
plain the procedure in language he<lb/>
would not normally use.<lb/>
The sequence avoids that trap<lb/>
by having a film within a film.<lb/>
JurassicPark should have been<lb/>
either a family film, with some<lb/>
lightweightdangerbutlittleactual<lb/>
violence, or a realistic adult film<lb/>
rife with suspense.<lb/>
Instead, Spielberg tried to wal k<lb/>
a fine line between the two<lb/>
worlds and ended with a com-<lb/>
promise that, while exciting,<lb/>
probably will not lead to a lot of<lb/>
repeat business. JurassicPark is<lb/>
too adult for children and too<lb/>
childish for adults.<lb/>
Still, unless you want to be<lb/>
the only one on the block or in<lb/>
the dorm who has not seen the<lb/>
summer movie, you 'I I probably<lb/>
have to seeurossic Park. No mat-<lb/>
ter what any critic says, Jurassic<lb/>
Park does provide summertime<lb/>
fun.<lb/>
BOOKTRADER<lb/>
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i<lb/>
Newman Catholic Student Center<lb/>
953 E. 10th St,(2nd house from Fletcher music Bldg.)<lb/>
757-3760757-1991<lb/>
Mass Schedule:<lb/>
SUN: 11:30 AM and 8:30 PM<lb/>
WED: 5:30 PM<lb/>
All Masses are at the Center.<lb/>
H.<lb/>
Fr. Paul Vaeth, Chaplain &amp; Campus Minister<lb/>
Teresa Lee, associate Campus Minister.<lb/>
M<lb/>
ATTIC<lb/>
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CoMedY<lb/>
VONE 1987 1988 1989 �1990 1991 �1992<lb/>
GREENVILLE TIMES READERS' POLL<lb/>
Wednesday June 25<lb/>
iThe GoMedY 23CNE<lb/>
w Al Katz<lb/>
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$1.50 TALLBOYS � $1.50 HIBALLS<lb/>
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Friday June 27<lb/>
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$2.00 32 oz DRAFT<lb/>
Saturday June 28<lb/>
$2.00 32 oz DRAFT<lb/>
COMING FRI JULY 9<lb/>
r CAPITOL RECORDS<lb/>
<pb facs="00058412_0005"/><lb/>
The East Carolinian<lb/>
Sports<lb/>
Page 7<lb/>
Sports med still improving<lb/>
Student trainers spend man<lb/>
gaining valuable first-hand<lb/>
Photo courtesy ot Sports Medicine<lb/>
y hours helping the various athletic programs while<lb/>
experience.<lb/>
MatthewWright<lb/>
Staff Writer<lb/>
The Sports Med icine program at East<lb/>
Carolina University is one of the true<lb/>
unsung heroesinECU'sathletic program.<lb/>
The program is not only an invaluable<lb/>
part ofPirateathletics, but isalsoa strong<lb/>
academic program for aspiring trainers.<lb/>
The Sports Medicine Division of ECU<lb/>
is working on its 23rd year of involve-<lb/>
ment with the athletics department.<lb/>
Started by Rod Compton in 1970, the<lb/>
division also instructs its students in the<lb/>
academic background they need to help<lb/>
become athletic trainers.<lb/>
Acting Director Mike Hanley stresses<lb/>
the importance of the relationship be-<lb/>
tween the student's practical work and<lb/>
classroom requirements. "Many people<lb/>
see the student trainers at various ath-<lb/>
letic events, but don't realize that they<lb/>
also have academic requirements they<lb/>
have to fulfill in the classroom Hanley<lb/>
said.<lb/>
There are three levelsof achievement<lb/>
for those involved with the program:<lb/>
rookie, curriculum and staff positions.<lb/>
When students enter the program, they<lb/>
are already on the rookie level. This is<lb/>
the stage where the student observes,<lb/>
handles routine duties and gets ac-<lb/>
quainted with the program. Prospective<lb/>
trainers decide at this level whether or<lb/>
not sports medicine is for them.<lb/>
Students who choose to take the next<lb/>
step advance to the curriculum level. At<lb/>
this point, students have decided to be-<lb/>
come more involved in the program and<lb/>
are on the road leading to their certifica-<lb/>
tion as an athletic trainer.<lb/>
If the first part of this road is trav-<lb/>
eled with success, the student advances<lb/>
to the final and most prestigious level.<lb/>
Only 12 students are selected for "staff"<lb/>
positions. "They are the best of the best<lb/>
according to former director Rod<lb/>
Compton.<lb/>
Best of the best in ECU's sports medi-<lb/>
cine program is really an accomplish-<lb/>
ment. Students leam from certified ath-<lb/>
letic trainers who are working within<lb/>
their field on a daily basis. This oppor-<lb/>
tunity is seen as an advantage because<lb/>
"many programsdon'tevenallow their<lb/>
student trainers to talk to their physi-<lb/>
cians according to Compton.<lb/>
Another big advantage for ECU's<lb/>
student trainers is the number of hours<lb/>
they spend on their hands-on training.<lb/>
The National Athletic Trainers Asso-<lb/>
ciation (NATA) requires a minimum<lb/>
of 800 hours over the two-year period<lb/>
of a student's junior and senior year.<lb/>
The average ECU student trainer<lb/>
spends between 2,300 and 2,500 hours<lb/>
in practical hands-on training. "Thisis<lb/>
a great advantage for our students<lb/>
Hanley said.<lb/>
ECU's Sports Medicine Division<lb/>
is only getting better. NATA is in the<lb/>
process of delegating part of the ac-<lb/>
creditation process to the American<lb/>
Medical Association (AMA).<lb/>
Hanley said, "this (move) will pro-<lb/>
videaccreditedprogramssuchasours<lb/>
with greater recognition, and even<lb/>
more respect<lb/>
Bailey serves sports fans well<lb/>
By Robert S.Todd<lb/>
Sports Editor<lb/>
Brian Bailey's office at<lb/>
WNCT-TV isjustwhatyou would<lb/>
expect from a sports fan � or<lb/>
Greenville's premier sports caster.<lb/>
The walls are covered with<lb/>
memorabilia, autographs,<lb/>
plaques and photosof Bailey with<lb/>
Harry Carey, the Hall-of-Fame<lb/>
ChicagoCubs Announcer, former<lb/>
Dallas Cowboy coach Tom<lb/>
Landry, Michael Jordan and Ri-<lb/>
chard Petty.<lb/>
Bailey is the consummate<lb/>
sports fan, whether it is riding<lb/>
donkeys or playing golf at<lb/>
Pinehurst. Unfortunately, being<lb/>
a sports caster is not all glory.<lb/>
"We had to do a donkey bas-<lb/>
ketball game for charity Bailey<lb/>
said. "Some were really easy to<lb/>
ride and some would just dump<lb/>
you off. Right when 1 got in the<lb/>
game I hopped on a donkey and<lb/>
tried to be real gutsy about it.<lb/>
Hop on this donkey and go after<lb/>
it. And right when I got on, he<lb/>
dumped me.I landed righton my<lb/>
back and thought I was paralyzed.<lb/>
I thought 'this is the way to go.<lb/>
I'm going to be paralyzed from<lb/>
the waistdown because I fell off a<lb/>
damn donkey But it turned out<lb/>
it was just bruised really bad<lb/>
He has had his moments in<lb/>
the spotlight though. Shooting a<lb/>
round at Pinehurst with Gary<lb/>
Overton, ECU's baseball coach,<lb/>
Bailey teed-off the 257-yard "Hall-<lb/>
of-Fame Hole" No. 4 with players<lb/>
on the green. After his swing the<lb/>
players on the green waved a<lb/>
towel at him. Bailey apologized<lb/>
for leaving his ball only ten feet<lb/>
away from the pin and interrupt-<lb/>
ing their game. He scored an eagle.<lb/>
"That might be my most glori-<lb/>
ous moment in everything Bailey<lb/>
said.<lb/>
After graduating from Old<lb/>
Dominion University in 1984, he<lb/>
began work as the sports editor of<lb/>
a newspaper in Franklin, Va. He<lb/>
quit two weeks later because he<lb/>
had to do the obituaries every<lb/>
morning. After a short tenure at a<lb/>
sporting goods store, he came to<lb/>
Greenville and has been working<lb/>
for WNCT ever since.<lb/>
bailey began doing news re-<lb/>
ports and sports on the weekend,<lb/>
but quickly found himself at the<lb/>
reigns of the nightly sports cast.<lb/>
For the past two years AP has hon-<lb/>
ored Bailey and his crew as the<lb/>
best sports cast. Bailey describes<lb/>
the award as a total team effort,<lb/>
much like the team effort required<lb/>
to win in sports.<lb/>
As a child Bailey, like all other<lb/>
sports casters, fell in love with ath-<lb/>
letics.<lb/>
"When you get into the fifth or<lb/>
sixth grade, you made the deci-<lb/>
sion you wanted to be an athlete<lb/>
and you get to junior high school<lb/>
and you're not a great athlete and<lb/>
you've got to do something else<lb/>
He said. "I knew I wanted to be a<lb/>
sports writer or sports caster<lb/>
Bailey played offensive tackle<lb/>
in high school and is a member of<lb/>
a growing li st of stars who attended<lb/>
Indian River in Chesapeake, Va.<lb/>
He was a teammate of William<lb/>
Fuller,now playingwith the Hous-<lb/>
ton Oilers. NASCAR driver Rickey<lb/>
Rudd also went to Indian River<lb/>
and, most recently, Alonzo Mourn-<lb/>
ing.<lb/>
Bailey's sports background<lb/>
has helped light the path to his<lb/>
Brian Bailey<lb/>
success today, and sports are very<lb/>
much a part of his family's life as<lb/>
well. He and his wife have a daugh-<lb/>
ter and son (named Ryne after<lb/>
Chicago Cubs second baseman<lb/>
Ryne Sandburg).<lb/>
"My wife wouldn't go for<lb/>
Roger (as a name) Bailey said.<lb/>
His childhood hero was Dallas<lb/>
quarterback Roger Staubach. "He<lb/>
was 'H' number one<lb/>
Despite this seemingly perfect<lb/>
job there air many drawbacks. He<lb/>
must spend less time with his fam-<lb/>
ily and sometimes findsitdifficult<lb/>
to enjoy sporting events the way<lb/>
he would like.<lb/>
Football season proves io be<lb/>
the most challenging time of the<lb/>
year, "because on Friday nights<lb/>
we do a 15 minute show Bailey-<lb/>
said. "I begin working on that, the<lb/>
Sunday before that Friday. We<lb/>
send out seven or eight different<lb/>
crews to maybe 14 or 15 games.<lb/>
The hardest part is the organiza-<lb/>
tion<lb/>
Through all the stress of orga-<lb/>
nization and the speed with which<lb/>
television operates, Bailey main-<lb/>
tains his cool and overcomes the<lb/>
stereotypes of TV sports casters.<lb/>
"I think a lot of sports writers<lb/>
give TV sports casters a bum<lb/>
wrap Bailey said. "See, we're<lb/>
more of a headline service. We<lb/>
See BAILEY page 8<lb/>
Esquinas' needs to do more soul searching<lb/>
(AP) � This was a better world<lb/>
when people did their rehabilhaungin<lb/>
private. A much better world, in fact<lb/>
Historically speaking, everyone<lb/>
has their share of trouble. Adam and<lb/>
Eve couldn't resist temptation, and<lb/>
it's been a struggle for everyone else<lb/>
since.<lb/>
Whafs different today is that<lb/>
some of the most troubled among us<lb/>
arealsopedcUingbooks-Soitwaslast<lb/>
week with Richard Esquinas' self-<lb/>
published,self-flagellating little tome:<lb/>
"Michael &amp; Me: Our Gambling Ad-<lb/>
diction  My Cry for Help<lb/>
Esquinasdid somanyinterviews<lb/>
and took such a beating in such a<lb/>
short time Thursday that it seemed<lb/>
like he was usinga stuntdouble. But,<lb/>
no.<lb/>
In each interview, the belea-<lb/>
guered but still-standing Mr.<lb/>
Esquinas had his story and he was<lb/>
sticking to it He wrote the book, he<lb/>
insisted, to take the final step in his<lb/>
own recovery and to prod Michael<lb/>
Jordan into taking the first one. And<lb/>
hereleased iton theeveof the biggest<lb/>
game of the NBA playoffs, he said, to<lb/>
put the record straight before swirl-<lb/>
ing rumors clouded the whole mat-<lb/>
ter.<lb/>
Sounds reasonable. Of course,<lb/>
Esquinas probably could have<lb/>
See LITKE page 8<lb/>
Evans stars in ECU<lb/>
aerobic program<lb/>
By Misha Zonn<lb/>
Assistant Sports Editor<lb/>
While most ECU students<lb/>
are taking it easy during the<lb/>
summer, watching TV or bar<lb/>
hopping downtown, Dionne<lb/>
Evans keeps up a rigorous ath-<lb/>
letic schedule as a fitness in-<lb/>
structor. For any student who<lb/>
is interested in getting off the<lb/>
couch and shaping up, classes<lb/>
will be available all through-<lb/>
out summer school at<lb/>
Christenbury Gym.<lb/>
Evans says she became in-<lb/>
terested in fitness at an early<lb/>
age. "At first, I started teach-<lb/>
ing dance and gymnastics<lb/>
classes. Then, at the age of 16,<lb/>
I began teaching aerobics.<lb/>
Shortly after that, I went<lb/>
through the process of getting<lb/>
officially certified Evans<lb/>
said.<lb/>
Now, Evans teaches a<lb/>
wide variety of classes that in-<lb/>
tegrate all of the different ath-<lb/>
letic moves that she has<lb/>
learned in the past. Classes<lb/>
range from beginner routines<lb/>
to the advanced workouts that<lb/>
involve longer, high impact<lb/>
work outs. The list of options<lb/>
includes a basic class, high im-<lb/>
pact, a high-low impact mix<lb/>
tnat involves both high and<lb/>
low impact equally, and an<lb/>
aquatic aerobics class. A popu-<lb/>
lar step class is also offered, in<lb/>
which participants use a stabi-<lb/>
lized step in order to trans-<lb/>
form a normal aerobics rou-<lb/>
tine into high muscle oriented<lb/>
work.<lb/>
Two of the more difficult<lb/>
classes are the thirty minute<lb/>
abdominal workout, and the<lb/>
relatively new funk aerobics.<lb/>
"Funk aerobics combines hip<lb/>
hop dance moves and aerobics.<lb/>
People that take the class usu-<lb/>
ally have a lot of fun Evans<lb/>
said. "People shouldn't be<lb/>
afraid to come out and give<lb/>
this stuff a try<lb/>
The classes that Evans<lb/>
teaches are open to all ECU<lb/>
students, but she finds that the<lb/>
only class that the men show<lb/>
Dionne Evans<lb/>
up for in great numbers is the<lb/>
step class. "Not that "many<lb/>
guys take the classes. Most of<lb/>
the ones that do come out go<lb/>
to the step classes because it is<lb/>
more muscle oriented work<lb/>
Evans said.<lb/>
Evans worked briefly<lb/>
with members of the football<lb/>
teaminordertoworkon their<lb/>
stamina and coordination. She<lb/>
said that at first, some of tne<lb/>
players were skeptical be-<lb/>
cause they were already go-<lb/>
ing through a lot of running to<lb/>
keep in shape, but that even-<lb/>
tually, attitudes changed.<lb/>
"At first some of them<lb/>
were like 'Okay, this is going<lb/>
to be a joke But then, they<lb/>
realized how hard it really is.<lb/>
They end up liking it, and their<lb/>
attitudes end up changing a<lb/>
lot Evans said.<lb/>
For all those interested<lb/>
in the classes mentioned, they<lb/>
should stop by Christenbury<lb/>
Gym for more information.<lb/>
Class times include an early<lb/>
morning 6:30a.m. classas well<lb/>
as 3 p.m 6:15p.m. and 7 p.m.<lb/>
classes.<lb/>
Tobacco ban adjustment may be difficult<lb/>
Baseball officials cite health reasons<lb/>
NEW YORK (AP) � Tobacco<lb/>
won't be worth spit in the minor<lb/>
leagues anymore.<lb/>
Players are now banned from<lb/>
smoking and chewing tobacco at<lb/>
minor league stadiums for health<lb/>
reasons, baseball officials said.<lb/>
"Many businesses have<lb/>
banned tobacco in the workplace<lb/>
said Peter Widdrington, adminis-<lb/>
trator of the commissioner's office<lb/>
and chairman of the Toronto Blue<lb/>
Jays. "That is what we're doing<lb/>
Players will be penalized $300<lb/>
for violating the rule. While offi-<lb/>
cials can unilaterally put the rule<lb/>
into effect in the minor leagues, it<lb/>
is the subject of collectivebargain-<lb/>
ing with the Major League Base-<lb/>
ball Players Association.<lb/>
"I think it's a good idea said<lb/>
Pat O'Conner, chief operating of-<lb/>
ficer of the National Association of<lb/>
Professional Baseball Leagues, the<lb/>
governing body of minor league<lb/>
baseball.<lb/>
Chewing tobacco is a baseball<lb/>
institution dating back to the 19th<lb/>
century, and tobacco companies<lb/>
have been one of the sport's big-<lb/>
gest advertisers.<lb/>
Government officials have<lb/>
pressured baseball teamsin recent<lb/>
years tp decrease their alliance on<lb/>
tobacco advertising.<lb/>
Widdrington said he hoped<lb/>
the players' association wou Id con-<lb/>
sider enlarging the ban to the ma-<lb/>
jor leagues at some point.<lb/>
"It's an important health is-<lb/>
sue he said.<lb/>
Six teams in outdoor stadiums<lb/>
have imposed full or partial bans<lb/>
on smoking: the BaltimoreOrioles,<lb/>
Detroit Tigers, Los Angeles Dodg-<lb/>
ers, Oakland Athletics, San Diego<lb/>
Padres and Toronto Blue Jays.<lb/>
Anti-smoking groups have<lb/>
pressured the New York Met to<lb/>
remove a large cigarette ad from<lb/>
the outfield at Shea Stadium.<lb/>
Janzen becomes youngest Open champ<lb/>
SPRINGFIELD, NJ. (AP)�He<lb/>
didithis way, which is tosay the way<lb/>
it is almost never done.<lb/>
Leejanzen skipped much of the<lb/>
suffering, most of the dues-paying<lb/>
and the entire bit about having to<lb/>
learn to lose a major before you can<lb/>
win one.<lb/>
lnthreepreviousU.S.Opens,he<lb/>
failed to so much as make the cut.<lb/>
And despite sharing the first-round<lb/>
lead in both the most recent Masters<lb/>
and British Open, the-fourth-year<lb/>
pro was never in serious contention<lb/>
for either of those, nor golfs two<lb/>
other major championships.<lb/>
Yet, in the course of a single<lb/>
round, by holding a lead and hold-<lb/>
ing off one of the game's best chas-<lb/>
ers, Janzen's reputation made the<lb/>
leap from unknown to unbreakable.<lb/>
"He's one of the so-called new<lb/>
breed out here said Payne Stewart,<lb/>
thel9910pen champion who trailed<lb/>
janzen at day's end by the same two<lb/>
strokes he began it<lb/>
"I'm 36 and he's 28, so I guess<lb/>
it's OK for me to call him that. And<lb/>
like I said, he's got the game and<lb/>
he's got the ability and he's going<lb/>
to be around for a long time<lb/>
And so the collective groan<lb/>
that accompanied Janzen's final<lb/>
putt dropping amid the New Jer-<lb/>
sey foothills for a record-tying 272<lb/>
was not the pros who pu 'sued him<lb/>
all week, but teaching pros every-<lb/>
where who wi 11 now have an even<lb/>
harder time convincing their best<lb/>
pupils how genuinely tough the<lb/>
road is ahead of them.<lb/>
'Itsurprised melittlebit Janzen,<lb/>
the youngest Open champion in 15<lb/>
years, said Sunday without so much<lb/>
as a trace of guile.<lb/>
"I have a belief that just because<lb/>
Idon'thaveexperiencedoesn'tmean<lb/>
I couldn't do it. 1 still knew how to<lb/>
hold thedub, where to aim and all I<lb/>
had todo he added, "was hit good<lb/>
shots<lb/>
Lest anyone think it was really<lb/>
that simple, however, think again.<lb/>
Janzen madeplentyofhisbreaks<lb/>
himself, principally bv refusing to<lb/>
back down on those occasions when<lb/>
caution would have killed his<lb/>
chances. Htfe was also the benefi-<lb/>
See GOLF page 8<lb/>
- -<lb/>
<pb facs="00058412_0006"/><lb/>
June 23, 1993<lb/>
himself from<lb/>
the flocl ting a olumn for<lb/>
Thci � and said he loves<lb/>
putting his ideas to paper. He is<lb/>
also quite the prognosticator. Be-<lb/>
fore the NBA finals began, he cor-<lb/>
rectly predicted a Bulls win in the<lb/>
opening game and expects them<lb/>
to take the series in six. Never one<lb/>
to turn down requests from the<lb/>
jed from page 7<lb/>
isibilityof<lb/>
itl think il � the job.<lb/>
mall ant! someone<lb/>
�Tt you Brian Bailey<lb/>
fcer?' and 1 turn mv<lb/>
ip, then the 'say. Yeah, he's<lb/>
i ter, but he'salsoa jerk<lb/>
reenville sports fans would<lb/>
feel the loss should Bailev leave for<lb/>
a larger market. Hehas the love for<lb/>
sports that is necessary to succeed.<lb/>
"Anyone can get up there and<lb/>
read the scores Bailey said.<lb/>
"You've got tohave your own per-<lb/>
sonality and inflect your own fla-<lb/>
vor into the sports cast<lb/>
That he does.<lb/>
Trivial Trivia<lb/>
�Jake Gibbs, later a big league ballplayer, was<lb/>
third in the Heisman voting as a Mississippi quar-<lb/>
terback in 1960.<lb/>
�In four seasons at Notre Dame, George Gipp<lb/>
averaged 6.3 yards per carry on 369 attempts.<lb/>
�Former heavyweight champion Floyd Patterson<lb/>
won eight title fights by a knockout and lost four<lb/>
the same way.<lb/>
�Georges Carpentier of France, a one-time light-<lb/>
heavyweight champion, was known as the "Orchid<lb/>
Man<lb/>
�In 1989, U.S. International scored 150 points<lb/>
in a basketball game and lost to Loyola, Calif, 181-<lb/>
150.<lb/>
�In a 1950basketballgame, Duke trailed Tulane<lb/>
by 29 points at halftime and eventually won, 74-<lb/>
72.<lb/>
Kingston<lb/>
Place<lb/>
WE HAVE<lb/>
OPENINGS FOR STUDENT RENTALS<lb/>
FOR FALL SEMESTER<lb/>
INTERESTED STUDENTS SHOULD<lb/>
CALL 758-5393<lb/>
BUILT ESPECIALLY FOR ECU STUDENTS<lb/>
WE PROVIDE: FULLY FURNISHED APARTMENTS<lb/>
ALL GLASSES DISHES SILVERWARE<lb/>
DISHWASHER POTS &amp; PANS<lb/>
MAIL SERVICE<lb/>
�CLUBHOUSE'LAUNDROMAT<lb/>
SWIMMING POOL<lb/>
�FREE CABLE &amp; LOTS MORE<lb/>
AT A PRICE THAT WILL<lb/>
COMPETE AVITH THE DORMS!<lb/>
LITKE<lb/>
Continued from page 7<lb/>
ed tlie desired effects with a<lb/>
letter to Jordan, or by submitting an<lb/>
article with the names deleted and<lb/>
without all tiie celeb photos to some<lb/>
obscure psychiatric newsletter. But<lb/>
then, how many of us would have<lb/>
slvired his inspiring story?<lb/>
The really scary thing is that<lb/>
Esquinas might realize he's onto<lb/>
somethingand if so, thathispublish-<lb/>
ing career might be beginning in-<lb/>
stead of ending. If this first book sells,<lb/>
he presumably could acquire other<lb/>
GOLF<lb/>
ices, buddy up to other similarly<lb/>
fixated pro athletes and have a shelf<lb/>
of sports titles in the bookstores by<lb/>
Christmas.<lb/>
For baseball, "Jose &amp; Me: Our<lb/>
Need for Speed  My Squeal for<lb/>
Brakes For football, "Jimmy<lb/>
(Johnson) &amp; Me: Our Hair Care Prob-<lb/>
lem  My Cry for a Mousse That<lb/>
Doesn't Flake For hockey, "Dale<lb/>
(Hunter) &amp; Me: Our Craving for Late<lb/>
Hits My Plea for Some Time in the<lb/>
Penalty Box<lb/>
Continued from page 7<lb/>
ciary of so many other breaks that<lb/>
right about the time the first one oc-<lb/>
curred, he was moved to wonder<lb/>
aboutdivineintervention. After send-<lb/>
ing his tee ball into the right rough at<lb/>
No. 10, a thinly hit, seeing-eye 5-iron<lb/>
sailed untouched through a stand of<lb/>
trees and came torest25 feet from the<lb/>
flag.<lb/>
"Iturned tomycaddyand said it<lb/>
was amazing that the ball went<lb/>
through. Then I thought, Those are<lb/>
the kind of things thathappentoguys<lb/>
tha t are destined to win<lb/>
"I knew there was still a lot of<lb/>
work to bedone'Janzen added. "But<lb/>
I started feeling that way rightthere<lb/>
Reasons to keep feelingthatway<lb/>
followed with almost stunning fre-<lb/>
quency. The second bogey ofjanzen's<lb/>
round atNo. 12had leveled the match<lb/>
at five-under, and when he settled<lb/>
over a difficult left-to-right curling<lb/>
18-fboterfor birdie twoholes la ter,he<lb/>
was drained.<lb/>
"I'd used up every ounce of en-<lb/>
erg)' in my body. I was tired. 1 didn't<lb/>
know ff I would have enough to fin-<lb/>
ish the round. Then making that putt<lb/>
gavemeasurgeofadrenaline.Iwas<lb/>
Janzen said, "a completely different<lb/>
person<lb/>
ECU'S NATURAL FOODS<lb/>
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NaturalOrganic Groceries - Produce<lb/>
Vitamins - Supplements<lb/>
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Close to Campus in Downtown G'ville<lb/>
405 EVANS ST.<lb/>
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Hours 10-6, M-Sat.<lb/>
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Doors Open 7:30pm Stage Time 9:00pm<lb/>
Call 756-6278<lb/>
5 miles west of Greenville on 264 Alt.<lb/>
Dickinson Ava.<lb/>
(behind John's Convenient Man)<lb/>
Valid N.C. I.D. Required<lb/>
Coming to Wake Tech<lb/>
Fall Quarter<lb/>
Scientific Visualization<lb/>
Computer Graphics Technology<lb/>
Graduates of this associate degree program will help explore new frontiers in<lb/>
medicine, law, engineering, physical science, architecture, manufacturing, or<lb/>
create special effects in television and films.<lb/>
Scientific Visualization Computer Graphics Technology will prepare tech-<lb/>
nicians in an exciting new communications process � the transforming of<lb/>
abstract, numerical concepts and data sets into concrete, multidimensional<lb/>
images that give a new perspective and understanding.<lb/>
Students will learn the latest visualization techniques, hardware and software<lb/>
environmentsand specific graphics applications. Through a Coop arrange-<lb/>
ment, they will gain valuable experience in the field as paid employees of a<lb/>
participating industry.<lb/>
'This new program will appeal especially to persons who are<lb/>
creative and possess strong math and logic skillssays<lb/>
Barbara Hower. Engineering Technology Admissions Counselor.<lb/>
Tuition: $185.50<lb/>
per quarter<lb/>
(in-state)<lb/>
For more information<lb/>
call Ms. Hower at<lb/>
Apply NOW<lb/>
for Fall Quarter<lb/>
(919)772-7500 <lb/>
Wake Technical Community College<lb/>
9101 layttcvillc Road, Raleigh, North Carolina 27603-5696<lb/>
AWARD! I in I<lb/>
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1108 E. 10th Street<lb/>
PRE-LEASING FOR<lb/>
JULY &amp; AUGUST 1993<lb/>
Brand new 2 bedroom, 2 full bath units<lb/>
with all major appliances.<lb/>
Located within walking distance to campus.<lb/>
CALL 752-8900 or stop by the office Apartment 1-H<lb/>
Monday-Friday 8:30-5:30<lb/>
Greenville's Source<lb/>
for Books, Magazines &amp; Newspapers<lb/>
Hardback and Paperback Books<lb/>
3500 Magazine Titles<lb/>
Bargain Book Collection from2.98 up<lb/>
Local and Out of State Newspapers (-p ��.<lb/>
Large Selection of Trading Cards<lb/>
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1993-94 Calendars<lb/>
Gift Certificates Available<lb/>
Central Book<lb/>
&amp;News<lb/>
Mon-Sat 9:30am-9:30pm<lb/>
Greenville Square Shopping Center next to Kmart<lb/>
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located<lb/>
4 Blocks From East Carolina with Bus Service<lb/>
�Yearly Lease 'Security Deposit<lb/>
 GREENVILLE'S FINEST APARTMENT COMMUNITY WITHIN<lb/>
FIVE MINUTES WALKING DISTANCE FROM CAMPUS<lb/>
752-0277<lb/>
Equal Housing Opportunity<lb/>
Summer<lb/>
Frame Sale<lb/>
50 Off Any Frame in Stock<lb/>
(with purchase of lenses)<lb/>
Lenses must include scratch<lb/>
resistant coating and<lb/>
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Great Time For Rx Sunglasses<lb/>
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PRESCRIPTION EYEGIAS5ES<lb/>
SUNGLASSES-MAGNIFIERS<lb/>
IOW VISION AIDS<lb/>
EYE EXAMS AVAIIABIE NEXT DOOR<lb/>
AT GREENVILLE EYE CLINIC<lb/>
EYE WEAR AT REASONABLE FRICES<lb/>
Doctors Park, Bldg. 1<lb/>
Slanlonsburg Road<lb/>
Greenvi e, NC 27834<lb/>
ExPEC<lb/>
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Wilhelmina Nelson<lb/>
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(919) 752-4018<lb/>
<pb facs="00058412_0007"/>
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