<?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="00058419_0001"/>
??<lb/>
di<lb/>
ur tickets now!<lb/>
tr's Pirate<lb/>
Go by Mendenhall<lb/>
See story for<lb/>
Lifestyle<lb/>
Hilell encourages participation<lb/>
Hilell, the Jewish Student<lb/>
Organization at ECU, gives<lb/>
Jewish students a forum to<lb/>
let their voices be heard.<lb/>
See story page 7.<lb/>
The East Carolinian<lb/>
Vol. 68 No. 46<lb/>
Circulation 12,000<lb/>
Greenville, North Carolina<lb/>
Tuesday, August 31,1993<lb/>
14 Pages<lb/>
NC residents brace for hurricane Emily<lb/>
NAGS HEAD, N.C. (AP) ?<lb/>
Officials ordered as many as<lb/>
100,000 residents and tourists to<lb/>
evacuate Dare County and coastal<lb/>
areas of Currituck County Mon-<lb/>
day as Hurricane Emily twisted<lb/>
on a path toward North Carolina.<lb/>
Surf was 3 to 4 feet Monday,<lb/>
although surfers enjoyed waves<lb/>
up to 9 feet Sunday, and forecast-<lb/>
ers warned waves would begin to<lb/>
build all along the East Coast.<lb/>
Gale-force wind also could reach<lb/>
North Carolina Monday.<lb/>
"Nobody's going to be ar-<lb/>
rested for not leaving, but they're<lb/>
probably going to be asked for<lb/>
their next of kin said Ray Sturza,<lb/>
a spokesman for Dare County.<lb/>
"Use common sense ? and then<lb/>
go-<lb/>
South of the Outer Banks,<lb/>
Carteret County was expected to<lb/>
ask tourists to leave Bogue Banks,<lb/>
the islands off Morehead City,<lb/>
Monday afternoon, said Tom<lb/>
Hegele of the North Carolina Di-<lb/>
vision of Emergency Manage-<lb/>
ment.<lb/>
The mandatory evacuation<lb/>
designation allows state officials<lb/>
to prevent traffic headed toward<lb/>
the beaches from using the two<lb/>
bridges connecting the Outer<lb/>
Banks with the North Carolina<lb/>
mainland.<lb/>
Sturza estimated Dare<lb/>
County's population at 100,000<lb/>
people?three-quarters of them<lb/>
tourists.<lb/>
Officials ordered about<lb/>
2,500 people to leave Ocracoke<lb/>
Sunday. Ferries, that give the is-<lb/>
land its only access to the main-<lb/>
land, ran through the night. There<lb/>
were few people around to leave<lb/>
the island this morning.<lb/>
NationalParkServicecamp-<lb/>
groundsatCape Pointand Frisco<lb/>
on Hatteras Island are also being<lb/>
evacuated.<lb/>
Hegele warned tourists and<lb/>
local residents against riding out<lb/>
the storm on the state's fragile<lb/>
Outer Banks.<lb/>
"If Emily picks up strength<lb/>
and intensifies, they may not be<lb/>
able to survive it he said.<lb/>
AtOcracoke Monday morn-<lb/>
ing, the sky was blue with light<lb/>
clouds and water along the coast<lb/>
was relatively calm, but people<lb/>
knew that might not last.<lb/>
Jean Fletcher, who runs a<lb/>
bed and breakfast inn on<lb/>
Ocracoke, said she had reserved a<lb/>
spot on the ferry for Swan Quar-<lb/>
ter on the mainland. She found<lb/>
out today that ferry reservations<lb/>
had been cancelled, and had to<lb/>
wait in line with others evacuat-<lb/>
ing the island.<lb/>
"You get the feeling<lb/>
nothing's going to happen she<lb/>
said today as the sun rose on a<lb/>
relatively cloud less day over calm<lb/>
coastal waters. "But a good run is<lb/>
better than a poor stand anytime<lb/>
The National Hurricane<lb/>
Center in Coral Gables, Fla is-<lb/>
ECU professor featured on PBS<lb/>
By Richard Holt<lb/>
Photo courtesy Susan Askew, ECU News Bureau<lb/>
Dr. Stan Riggs stretches his legs after a three-hour dive in the<lb/>
JOHNSON SEA-LINK submersible at Onslow Bay.<lb/>
Staff Writer<lb/>
A research project led by<lb/>
Dr. Stanley Riggs of the ECU<lb/>
geology department will be fea-<lb/>
tured on a PBS program to be<lb/>
broadcast August 31. The pro-<lb/>
gram, SEARCH, will air at 7:30<lb/>
p.m. on University of North<lb/>
Carolina Television.<lb/>
The program contains a<lb/>
segment dedicated to the re-<lb/>
search project begun by Dr.<lb/>
Riggs and colleagues from sev-<lb/>
eral universities during 1991.<lb/>
The project entails the<lb/>
studying of the continental shelf<lb/>
and mid-shelf areas off of the<lb/>
coast of North Carolina. Spe-<lb/>
cifically, the analysis of<lb/>
rockbottom sea floois on the<lb/>
continental shelf is an attempt<lb/>
to determine their viability to<lb/>
sustaining artificial and natu-<lb/>
ral rock reefs.<lb/>
The project was initiated<lb/>
after a significant decline in the<lb/>
North Carolina reef fish popu-<lb/>
lation. These reefs are impor-<lb/>
tant as they attract many fish,<lb/>
as well as the huge North Caro-<lb/>
lina sportfishing industry.<lb/>
"It is estimated that<lb/>
sportfishing represents $120-<lb/>
200 million of North Carolina's<lb/>
economy says Riggs.<lb/>
Because of the large<lb/>
amount of revenue that<lb/>
sportfishing tourism generates,<lb/>
many coastal states are inclined<lb/>
to create artificial reefs in an<lb/>
attempt to attract fish.<lb/>
"The government spends<lb/>
a great deal of tax money on<lb/>
reef building by dumping gar-<lb/>
bage such as old barges and rail-<lb/>
road cars Riggs said.<lb/>
A problem exi- 3 when<lb/>
there is no responsible manage-<lb/>
ment in creating these reefs.<lb/>
"Instead, we should be cul-<lb/>
tivating and developing the sea<lb/>
bottom instead of irresponsible<lb/>
dumping of waste he said.<lb/>
"There needs to be manage-<lb/>
ment as far as what and where<lb/>
to dump certain things, to un-<lb/>
derstand the dynamics of the<lb/>
(reef) system<lb/>
The problem of pollution<lb/>
can occur when old ships are<lb/>
used as artificial reefs.<lb/>
"Dumping old ships can<lb/>
reveal a legacy of toxic things<lb/>
such as petroleum residues<lb/>
Riggs said.<lb/>
The research that has been<lb/>
done by Dr. Riggs and his col-<lb/>
leagues reveal insight into reef<lb/>
formation.<lb/>
"Drifting sands keep<lb/>
many organisms from adhering<lb/>
to hardbottom rock surfaces<lb/>
he said. "Also, different kinds<lb/>
of rocks influence growth of<lb/>
reefs and organisms. Not all<lb/>
rocks are the same as far as fish-<lb/>
ing potential<lb/>
The research party ana-<lb/>
lyzed different kinds of rocks<lb/>
as well as the different chemi-<lb/>
cals and nutrients in their im-<lb/>
mediate environment. All of<lb/>
See PBS page 2<lb/>
Magazine receives grant and design awards<lb/>
By Tammy Carter<lb/>
Staff Writer<lb/>
The "North Carolina Liter-<lb/>
ary Review a literary magazine<lb/>
based at ECU, recently received a<lb/>
$5,000 grant from the North Caro-<lb/>
lina Arts Council, in addition to<lb/>
two national awards for publica-<lb/>
tion design.<lb/>
According to Alex Albright,<lb/>
editor of "NCLR" and nonfiction<lb/>
writingprofessoratECU,the grant<lb/>
was given to increase the pay for<lb/>
writers who will publish material<lb/>
in the third and fourth issues of the<lb/>
magazine.<lb/>
Although some literary<lb/>
magazines do not offer money to<lb/>
writers, Albright said thathehopes<lb/>
such compensation will help at-<lb/>
mKSmoreprofessional writers. The<lb/>
grant will nearly double the pay<lb/>
received in earlier editions of the<lb/>
magazine.<lb/>
The Spring 1993 issue re-<lb/>
ceived two design awards. The<lb/>
American Center for Design will<lb/>
include mat issue in its 16th annual<lb/>
"100 Show which opens in Chi-<lb/>
cago in September, 1993, and will<lb/>
tour throughout the United States<lb/>
during 1994.<lb/>
"Print" magazine presented<lb/>
the second BfffjBjff<lb/>
award. The<lb/>
cover of the<lb/>
"North Caro-<lb/>
lina Literary Re-<lb/>
view" received<lb/>
recognition in<lb/>
"Print's" an-<lb/>
nual competi-<lb/>
tion which<lb/>
drew more than<lb/>
35,000 entries.<lb/>
Eva Rob-<lb/>
erts, a faculty ????????????<lb/>
member of the ECU School of Art,<lb/>
designed theaward-winningissue.<lb/>
The cover featured a drawing by<lb/>
Catherine Walker, also with the<lb/>
School of Art.<lb/>
The "NorthCarolina Literary<lb/>
Review" is published semi-annu-<lb/>
ally by the North Carolina Literary<lb/>
Albright said he<lb/>
hopes such<lb/>
compensation<lb/>
will attract more<lb/>
professional<lb/>
writers.<lb/>
and Historical Association and the<lb/>
ECU Department of English. Its<lb/>
premiere issue was published in<lb/>
the summer of 1992 and was the<lb/>
only university-produced maga-<lb/>
zinehonored by the Society for Pub-<lb/>
 lication De-<lb/>
signers in a<lb/>
competition<lb/>
among 7,000<lb/>
items.<lb/>
The third<lb/>
edition of the<lb/>
magazine will<lb/>
be published<lb/>
early in 1994<lb/>
and will in-<lb/>
clude two the-<lb/>
matic sections.<lb/>
mmm The first is de-<lb/>
voted to Paul Green and the 100th<lb/>
anniversary of his birth. The sec-<lb/>
ond will include literature about<lb/>
the period from the Civil War until<lb/>
the turn of the century.<lb/>
"North Carolina Literary<lb/>
Review's" fourthedition will focus<lb/>
onBlack Mountain College and the<lb/>
sued a hurricane watch Sunday<lb/>
for the mid-Atlantic coast from<lb/>
Cape Romain, S.C northward to<lb/>
Fenwick Island, Del.<lb/>
"The watch area is still the<lb/>
same hurricane specialist Ed<lb/>
Rappaport in Coral Gables said.<lb/>
"A portion of that area may have<lb/>
a warning posted later today<lb/>
Monday<lb/>
At 11 a.m. Monday, the cen-<lb/>
ter of the storm was located about<lb/>
325 miles to the southeast of Cape<lb/>
Hatteras. At 9 p.m. the storm was<lb/>
located at latitude 32.2 degrees<lb/>
north and longitude 73.0 degrees<lb/>
west. The storm's highest sus-<lb/>
tained winds were near 95 mph<lb/>
and some strengthening was<lb/>
likely during the next 24 hours.<lb/>
60th anniversary of its founding.<lb/>
Although the next two edi-<lb/>
tions of the magazine will have spe-<lb/>
cial sections, Albright said that he,<lb/>
along with associate editors and<lb/>
colleagues Bertie Fearing and John<lb/>
Patterson, is still interested in manu-<lb/>
scripts on other topics. Persons<lb/>
interested inpublishing their manu-<lb/>
scripts in the "North Carolina Lit-<lb/>
erary Review" should send copies<lb/>
to 101 English Annex, ECU.<lb/>
Albright said that one reason<lb/>
for the magazine's success was the<lb/>
hard work by the student interns<lb/>
and writers. The 13 students cur-<lb/>
rently working are excellent work-<lb/>
ers who get to learn how a maga-<lb/>
zine works.<lb/>
Copies of the "North Caro-<lb/>
lina Literary Review" are available<lb/>
atindependentbookstores through-<lb/>
out North Carolina, or by subscrip-<lb/>
tion for$15. Individual copies may<lb/>
be purchased for $9.50, postpaid.<lb/>
Mail orders should be senttoNCLR,<lb/>
Department of English, ECU,<lb/>
Greenville, N.C. 27858.<lb/>
"I mink the odds favor it<lb/>
gettinga little stronger because<lb/>
of coming over warmer wa-<lb/>
ter, traversing the Gulf<lb/>
Stream meteorologist Joe<lb/>
Pelissier said during an emer-<lb/>
gency management meetingin<lb/>
Raleigh today. "The upshot is<lb/>
that, yes, it will probably get a<lb/>
little stronger, but, no, it won't<lb/>
become a Hugo or an An-<lb/>
drew<lb/>
The storm was expected<lb/>
to turn gradually back to the<lb/>
northwest within 12 to 24<lb/>
hours, Rappaport said. De-<lb/>
pending on how extreme mat<lb/>
turn was, the storm could miss<lb/>
See EMILY page 4<lb/>
Allied Health<lb/>
celebrates 25 years<lb/>
By Jason Williams<lb/>
Staff Writer<lb/>
Throughout the 1993-94<lb/>
year, the School of Allied Health<lb/>
Sciences will celebrate its 25th<lb/>
anniversary. Featured events to<lb/>
commemorate the anniversary<lb/>
include a national conference on<lb/>
health reform and a banquet and<lb/>
research day in the spring.<lb/>
According to Dr. Steve Tho-<lb/>
mas, professor and director of the<lb/>
25th Anniversary Steering Com-<lb/>
mittee, the major event will be a<lb/>
one-day conference to be held<lb/>
during National Allied Health<lb/>
Week. The conference will begin<lb/>
with a keynote address Tuesday,<lb/>
September 28 at 7:30 p.m. in<lb/>
Wright Auditorium.<lb/>
Thomas is currently work-<lb/>
ing to obtain Dr. Ira Magaziner,<lb/>
chair of the National Task Force<lb/>
on Health Care Reform, todeliver<lb/>
the address. Previously, Thomas<lb/>
tried to get First Lady Hillary<lb/>
Rodham Clinton, but her sched-<lb/>
ule conflicted with the dates for<lb/>
the conference.<lb/>
"I feel like Dr. Magaziner<lb/>
will be able to make it They like to<lb/>
send out people to support one<lb/>
program or another Thomas<lb/>
said.<lb/>
The address is to be entitled<lb/>
"National Health Reform: Direc-<lb/>
tions for the'90s" and will beopen<lb/>
to the public.<lb/>
On Wednesday, September<lb/>
29, the conference will convene at<lb/>
8 a.m. for registration at<lb/>
Mendenhall Student Center. Al-<lb/>
lied health professionals, stu-<lb/>
dents and alumni will make up<lb/>
the majority of the conferees.<lb/>
The day-long conference will<lb/>
be entitled "The Future of Al-<lb/>
lied Health: Reform, Resources,<lb/>
and Roles<lb/>
The morning keynote,<lb/>
"Future Resources for Allied<lb/>
Health in Education, Research<lb/>
and Service will be followed<lb/>
by four concurrent sessicris that<lb/>
further address resource issues<lb/>
in the following settings: 1) ru-<lb/>
ral, 2) hospital-based, 3) private<lb/>
(third party), and 4) public ser-<lb/>
vice (local, state, federal).<lb/>
"Basically wearegoingto<lb/>
be focusing on what we need to<lb/>
dointhefieldtoimprove'Tho-<lb/>
mas said. "We expect a good<lb/>
crowd<lb/>
A second event to com-<lb/>
memoratethe25th Anniversary<lb/>
isabanquettobeheldonThurs<lb/>
day evening April 14, and a<lb/>
research day scheduled for Fri-<lb/>
day April 15,1991 in the Belk<lb/>
Building. This will involve fac-<lb/>
ulty, staff, students and alumni<lb/>
from all departments of the<lb/>
school.<lb/>
"WewiD honor pastdeans<lb/>
and look atthe pastaccomplish-<lb/>
ments of the school as well as<lb/>
the future of the school Tho-<lb/>
mas said.<lb/>
Both the conference and<lb/>
research day will be free of<lb/>
charge; however, due to lim-<lb/>
ited space, participants wiUneed<lb/>
See HEALTH page 3<lb/>
The<lb/>
happy<lb/>
Bard<lb/>
A singer from<lb/>
New Life<lb/>
Christian<lb/>
Ministries<lb/>
performed in<lb/>
front of<lb/>
Mendenhall on<lb/>
Friday.<lb/>
Photo by Cedric<lb/>
Vsn Buren<lb/>
U1J1LUL JillUUU.<lb/>
?l!li )??? ??'<lb/>
???<lb/>
??<lb/>
<pb facs="00058419_0002"/><lb/>
-?? ?<lb/>
August 31, 1993<lb/>
Music School hosts drums r<lb/>
By Richard Elkins<lb/>
Students freed from Bosnian prison<lb/>
Two University of Nebraska-Lincoln students working as<lb/>
relief volunteers in Croatia were released this summer after being<lb/>
held in a Bosnian detention center for about 18 days. The two<lb/>
students, who are natives of Pakistan, were distributing supplies<lb/>
from a relief office in divided Bosnia when they were captured.<lb/>
Arshad Syed, information systems manager for the College of<lb/>
Business Administration, went to Croatia in July to help negotiate<lb/>
the students' release, said his wife, Lucretia Syed. Syed convinced<lb/>
the American Embassy in Croatia to assist in the rescue effort after<lb/>
much persuading, his wife said. Through Syed's efforts, the two<lb/>
students were safely released.<lb/>
Feminist art project was student idea<lb/>
Officials at the University of Maryland say a feminist art<lb/>
project that caused a firestorm of protest on campus was initiated<lb/>
by the students and not the professor. Fliers stating, "These men are<lb/>
potential rapists and listing the names of thousands of male<lb/>
students appeared throughout the campus on April 30 during an<lb/>
event called Art Attack. The.project, created by nine women<lb/>
students enrolled in the course "Issues in Feminist Art" also<lb/>
included building a wall that included the names of about 15,000<lb/>
male students. The artwork outraged many members of the stu-<lb/>
dent body, brought a statement of censure from university Presi-<lb/>
dent William Kirwan and put the school in the national media<lb/>
spotlight that included a harsh editorial in US A Today newspaper.<lb/>
Professor Josephine Withers, who led the class, came under fire for<lb/>
her participation in the project. After an investigation by the<lb/>
university, however, it was determined that the project was not a<lb/>
class project and was not included in Withers' syllabus.<lb/>
Wartburg College cooks up mom's meals<lb/>
In an effort to make students feel at home, the Wartburg<lb/>
College cafeteria staff has been dishing up home-style cookin' with<lb/>
dozens of "comfort food" recipes gathered from students' own<lb/>
homes. To rouse student interest at the Waverly, Iowa institution,<lb/>
the college food service flooded dorms with fliers asking them to<lb/>
get beloved family recipes. After several dozen recipes were col-<lb/>
lected, whipped up by the Wartburg chefs, and sampled by student<lb/>
diners who gave them a "yea" or a "nay it was clear that<lb/>
competition was stiff. Only culinary delights with the highest<lb/>
ratings were elevated to the illustrious permanent cafeteria menu.<lb/>
The recipe contest, according to officials, is another way for the<lb/>
college to keep its No. 1 ranUig for food service among college<lb/>
campuses, which it earned in 1991.<lb/>
Compiled by Maureen Rich. Taken from CPS<lb/>
and other campus newspapers.<lb/>
Staff Writer<lb/>
On Friday and Saturday,<lb/>
August 27 and 28, the ECU<lb/>
School of Music played host to a<lb/>
festival of marching percussion.<lb/>
Members of the ECU drum line<lb/>
and members of drum lines from<lb/>
five high schools participated<lb/>
in the two-day festival.<lb/>
The festival featured two<lb/>
clinicians who work with drum<lb/>
lines for DCI Drum and Bugle<lb/>
Corps.<lb/>
Since 1984, Bret Kuhn has<lb/>
been on the staff of the Cava-<lb/>
liers Drum and Bugle Corps, the<lb/>
1992 DCI world champions. He<lb/>
is an alumnus of the Cavaliers,<lb/>
and currently teaches at a Chi-<lb/>
cago-area high school and<lb/>
PBS<lb/>
Northern Illinois University,<lb/>
while his summers are spent<lb/>
with the Cavaliers. Kuhn<lb/>
worked for 45 minutes with each<lb/>
of the high school drum lines<lb/>
and had two separate rehears-<lb/>
als with the ECU Drum Line.<lb/>
Scotty Sells has been the<lb/>
instructor and arranger of the<lb/>
DCI Santa Clara Vangaurd pit<lb/>
percussion section. Sells is noted<lb/>
for his participation with the<lb/>
Vanguard and Spirit of Atlanta<lb/>
corps. He was the 1990 winner<lb/>
of the DCI solo competition on<lb/>
timpani.<lb/>
Sells, now holds a gradu-<lb/>
ate degree from the University<lb/>
of Miami, but he received his<lb/>
undergraduate degree from<lb/>
See MUSIC page 3<lb/>
Continued from page 1<lb/>
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Start Stocking up<lb/>
for Labor Day.<lb/>
located Behind the<lb/>
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Locally Grown<lb/>
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ALFREDO'S 752 0022<lb/>
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WELCOME BACK to ECU'S Fmriti Plzzi Plici<lb/>
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36 SLICES 1 Topping<lb/>
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FIKIELIVEIY<lb/>
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?1<lb/>
SIN-MM-TIES<lb/>
these factors were compiled in<lb/>
hopes of determining growth<lb/>
factors for reef formation.<lb/>
One essential element of<lb/>
the research involves being at<lb/>
sea thirty to forty days a year.<lb/>
"Sea time is extremely ex-<lb/>
pensive says Riggs.<lb/>
Different kinds of ships are<lb/>
used including a submersible<lb/>
and a smaller 110 ft. platform<lb/>
that acts as a homebase.<lb/>
Another essential element<lb/>
of the project includes diving<lb/>
on a daily basis. "There are four<lb/>
dives per day that last 30 to 50<lb/>
minutes per dive, close to three<lb/>
hours per day for each diver<lb/>
says Riggs. Two of the divers<lb/>
are Keil Schmid and Bob Wyrick,<lb/>
both ECU geology graduate stu-<lb/>
dents.<lb/>
"The act of diving was the<lb/>
most valued thing to be gained<lb/>
from this experience says<lb/>
Wyrick.<lb/>
"A lot of teamwork as well<lb/>
as hard work is involved<lb/>
Schmid said. "Not everything is<lb/>
as cut and dry as you learn in a<lb/>
classroom<lb/>
The four-year project is in<lb/>
its third year. The $500,000 study<lb/>
is funded through several<lb/>
sources. These include The Na-<lb/>
tional Undersea Research Cen-<lb/>
ter at UNC-Wilmington and the<lb/>
N.C. Sea Grant College Pro-<lb/>
gram. Both agencies are headed<lb/>
by the National Oceanic and At-<lb/>
mospheric Administration<lb/>
(NOAA). The other financial<lb/>
source is the Cooperative Insti-<lb/>
tute for Fisheries and Oceanog-<lb/>
raphy which is part of the Na-<lb/>
tional Marine Fisheries Service.<lb/>
The other researchers be-<lb/>
sides Dr. Riggs include Dr. Will<lb/>
Ambrose, an ECU biologist;<lb/>
Martin Posey, a UNC-W biolo-<lb/>
gist; Dr. Scott Snyder, an ECU<lb/>
geologist; Steve Snyder, a N.C.<lb/>
State geochemist; and Dr. Bill<lb/>
Burnett, a Florida State Univer-<lb/>
sity geochemist. In addition,<lb/>
some ECU graduate and under-<lb/>
graduate students worked on<lb/>
the project as well.<lb/>
The research will be fea-<lb/>
tured again on the PBS program<lb/>
"Return to the Sea" during the<lb/>
coming year.<lb/>
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! FIRST VISIT !?Sjen7<lb/>
? WTTHTHS COUPON LIMIT 1 PER CUSTOMER WITH ID -??<lb/>
i 409 SOUTH EVANS STREET 5 DaYs<lb/>
v?:2f22S)?????.Weck,y<lb/>
STEAKS, BUFFET &amp; BAKERY<lb/>
LUNCHEON<lb/>
BUFFET<lb/>
MON-SAT 11-5<lb/>
$499<lb/>
NIGHTLY<lb/>
BUFFET<lb/>
5-CLOSE<lb/>
$529<lb/>
 Carved Meat Nightly<lb/>
SUNDAY<lb/>
BUFFET<lb/>
$549<lb/>
 Carved Meat<lb/>
WEEKEND<lb/>
BREAKFAST<lb/>
$469<lb/>
ENTREES ?29M6W?W<lb/>
SEAFOOD,CHICKEN<lb/>
FEATURING<lb/>
AT,<lb/>
TUESDAY<lb/>
Rove<lb/>
0 DRAFT ALL NIGHT!<lb/>
WEDNESDAY<lb/>
CLASSICS NIGHT<lb/>
with the best in classic Rock &amp; Dance Music<lb/>
&amp; 0 DRAFT EVERY WEDNESDAY NIGHT!<lb/>
THURSDAY<lb/>
R ComejobuseveryThursdayaswe<lb/>
Gount down to our 25th year serving ECU<lb/>
EVERYTHURSDAY IS NEW YEAR's EVE with<lb/>
Chanpaspe &amp; MoreBar Specials Each Week!<lb/>
FRIDAY<lb/>
DOLLAR NIGHT<lb/>
FREE Admission for Members &amp; Greek ID's.<lb/>
Reduced guest Admission 7-9. $50 Prize to the Fraternity &amp;<lb/>
Sorority with the Best Attendance Before 9.<lb/>
$1.00 HOUSE HIGHBALLS<lb/>
SATURDAY<lb/>
zaturdag<lb/>
i<lb/>
Kick off football season with Coors Light!<lb/>
$1.50 Zimas, $1.5016oz Coors Lights, &amp; $3.00 Noxzima Every Saturday!<lb/>
Come Early<lb/>
Bar Specials All Nite Every Friday.<lb/>
u<lb/>
<pb facs="00058419_0003"/><lb/>
August 31, 1993<lb/>
The East Carolinian 3<lb/>
center offers<lb/>
mental relief<lb/>
Staff Writer<lb/>
The Counseling<lb/>
available at East Carolina of<lb/>
wide variety of programs and<lb/>
counsel. Over 25 cost-free services<lb/>
and workshops are offered<lb/>
through the center.<lb/>
Programs range from indi-<lb/>
vidual help with academic deci-<lb/>
sions, to crisis and drug counsel-<lb/>
ing, to support groups. These<lb/>
groups cover topics such as stress,<lb/>
eating disorders or coping with<lb/>
death. Students are encouraged<lb/>
to call 757-6661 or to stop by to<lb/>
register for counseling or to leam<lb/>
more about the services being of-<lb/>
fered.<lb/>
East Carolina's Counseling<lb/>
Center is accredited by the Inter-<lb/>
national Association of Counsel-<lb/>
ing Services. The center adver-<lb/>
tises its programs through flyers,<lb/>
posters and media. However, not<lb/>
many students at East Carolina<lb/>
are aware that a counseling center<lb/>
is available, or where it is located.<lb/>
Located in 316 Wright (en-<lb/>
trance left of the Student Stores),<lb/>
the counseling center has a staff of<lb/>
five professional full-time coun-<lb/>
selors, two that work part-time<lb/>
and two practicum students. Al-<lb/>
though the service has a small<lb/>
staff of around 10 people, volun-<lb/>
teers help toeasethe burden. The<lb/>
counseling staff is small in com-<lb/>
parison to the 18,000 students at<lb/>
ECU. If the counseling staff were<lb/>
doubled, claims Wilbert Ball,<lb/>
counseling center director, the<lb/>
office would still be very busy.<lb/>
A counseling program be-<lb/>
gan in 1964 with an emphasis on<lb/>
helping academic achievement.<lb/>
This all changed, however, in the<lb/>
late '60s and throughout the 70s<lb/>
for several reasons, one being<lb/>
drugs.<lb/>
The center has since ex-<lb/>
panded to offer a comprehensive<lb/>
variety of services. It tries to reach<lb/>
out to all students.<lb/>
In another branch of the<lb/>
center's Counseling Service, two<lb/>
clinical psychologists are located.<lb/>
This makes the third year the<lb/>
mental health services have been<lb/>
available. Close contact is main-<lb/>
tained by the two services through<lb/>
weekly meetings.<lb/>
U.S. Soldiers<lb/>
raid U.N.<lb/>
MOGADISHU,Somalia (AP)<lb/>
? It sure looked good.<lb/>
Elite American troops under<lb/>
thecover of darknessdropped from<lb/>
helicopters on ropes. They tied up<lb/>
people inside and forced them to lie<lb/>
on the floor. It was quick, precise,<lb/>
thestuff of a recruiting commercial.<lb/>
There was just one problem.<lb/>
They raided the wrong target. In<lb/>
fact, they raided a building housing<lb/>
U.N. personnel.<lb/>
Three foreign U.N. workers<lb/>
and five Somali employees were<lb/>
briefly detained today in what the '<lb/>
chief UN.militaryspdcesrnan,Maj.<lb/>
David Stockwell, nevertheless de- '<lb/>
scribed as "a successful operation<lb/>
"They were searching a place I<lb/>
they had every reason to believe<lb/>
was hostile and they acted appro-<lb/>
priately until they determined oth-<lb/>
erwise Stockwell said.<lb/>
The building's entrance is f<lb/>
marked by a sign identifying it as a <lb/>
project office of the U.N. Develop-<lb/>
ment Program, one of many U.N.<lb/>
agencies operating in Somalia.<lb/>
Stockwell said the building was in <lb/>
an "unauthorized area<lb/>
Stockwell declined to charac-1<lb/>
terize the objective of the mission, <lb/>
which involved more than a dozen<lb/>
helicopters, U.S. Rangers and sol-<lb/>
diers from the Army's Quick Reac-1<lb/>
tion Force.<lb/>
Asked if he would categori-<lb/>
cally say that the objective was not<lb/>
the capture of fugitive warlord f<lb/>
Mohamed Farrah Aidid, Stockwell<lb/>
replied, "No, what I'm saying isi<lb/>
that I will not go into detail on the j<lb/>
purpose of our operation<lb/>
But he declared it "a textbook<lb/>
example of how these operations I<lb/>
should go" using "lightning speed<lb/>
and overpowering force<lb/>
An Egyptian woman, whol<lb/>
would identify herself only as the<lb/>
MUSIC<lb/>
Cont'd from page 2<lb/>
ord coordinates<lb/>
ion activities in the<lb/>
: Musi He is an active<lb/>
r noted for mallet per-<lb/>
n. Ford is also an alum-<lb/>
: ECL and served as coor-<lb/>
dinator of the weekend festival.<lb/>
Scott Harris is a graduate<lb/>
student in percussion at ECU,<lb/>
where he currently serves as stu-<lb/>
dent assistant to the Marching<lb/>
Pirates, and aids with the Drum<lb/>
Line. His undergraduate degree<lb/>
is from the University of Massa-<lb/>
chusetts, and while he was in<lb/>
attendance there, he toured with<lb/>
the Star of Indiana Drum and<lb/>
Bugle Corps, the 1991 World<lb/>
Champions.<lb/>
High school drum lines<lb/>
participating in the festival were<lb/>
Greenville Rose, West Carteret,<lb/>
White Oak, Roanoke Rapids and<lb/>
Trinity high schools.<lb/>
The Marching Pirates are<lb/>
directed by a new conductor this<lb/>
year, Chris Knighten.<lb/>
Cont'd<lb/>
HEALTH page 1<lb/>
to register in advance.<lb/>
"We are excited about our<lb/>
anniversary celebration and hope<lb/>
rheeventswillhelpdevelopabetter<lb/>
understand ingamongdepartments<lb/>
and greatervisibility across thecam-<lb/>
pus, the community, and the state<lb/>
Thomas said.<lb/>
G.I. Back Packs, Hammocks. Canteens. Tents<lb/>
Cook Sets. Netting, Cots, Ammo Cans, Sizes<lb/>
2-60-Mtary Clothing Boots, Shoes, Rainwear,<lb/>
Sleeping Bags, Trunks, Fool Lockers. 4,000<lb/>
Ditlerenl Items, Browsers Welcome<lb/>
FORT HENRY'S ARMY NAVY<lb/>
1501 S. EVANS STREET 756-8781<lb/>
<lb/>
I<lb/>
V<lb/>
mi 5S55 -i<lb/>
 CK g-1 ? ?-??"Hi? J-WM- -J<lb/>
FTFrTrTJVj<lb/>
s3<lb/>
Q&amp;<lb/>
Call Today!<lb/>
757.4540<lb/>
Welcomes New &amp; Returning Students<lb/>
1. Croup Seating at Pirate Football &amp; Basketball games.<lb/>
2. Priority in purchasing Bowl tickets.<lb/>
3. Full membership in the Pirate dub at the Crew level for oniy halt the cost<lb/>
4. The "Purple Report: monthly newtetter.<lb/>
5. Bumper sticker, window deal, membership certificate, membership ard<lb/>
and key chain.<lb/>
6. Invitations to Pirate Club social events.<lb/>
7. Priority points that accumulate over time.<lb/>
8. Special Student Pirate Oubactivites(Pre-cjamescMk,coo<lb/>
coaches socials, plus many other exciting events).<lb/>
9. Special discounts from local businesses supporting the Student Pirate dub.<lb/>
iJUJL?I<lb/>
ygsg.<lb/>
<lb/>
1<lb/>
111111111111111111111111 llllllllllllllll<lb/>
D CTW NTOWN GREENVILLE, NC.<lb/>
presents<lb/>
THE ANIMAL HOUSE<lb/>
(a free your mind party)<lb/>
O b DRAFT<lb/>
Ladies FREE Admission<lb/>
BOGIES personally invites Clement, White, Green, Fletcher, Tyler &amp;<lb/>
Cotten to join the party at BOGIES THIS WEDNESDAY NIGHT!<lb/>
Playing the Best in Top 40 Dance &amp; Classics. ? Live Rer?vjte from WHTE 103.7 ? T-Shirt &amp; CD Giveaways<lb/>
CommngSept16<lb/>
Surf Report Surf<lb/>
Shop Bikini Classic<lb/>
(Call Surf 355.6680 or<lb/>
Bogies 752.4688)<lb/>
$1.00 OFF ADMISSION<lb/>
COUPON for Wednesday,<lb/>
Sept 1st<lb/>
<lb/>
See SOMALIA page 4<lb/>
llllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllll<lb/>
<pb facs="00058419_0004"/><lb/>
??<lb/>
August 31, 1993<lb/>
EMILY<lb/>
Continued from page 1<lb/>
"It was something else yes-<lb/>
terday, thenicest it's been all sum-<lb/>
merCharles Iriain said. "I surfed<lb/>
in the morning and it was four or<lb/>
five feet. Then I moved last night<lb/>
and it was just giant, line eight- or<lb/>
nine-foot faces coming in. Nice,<lb/>
clean waves.lt was good<lb/>
Thain decided against riding<lb/>
out the storm.<lb/>
"I'm worried enough, I'm<lb/>
getting off the island he said. "I<lb/>
would hate to be stuck here and<lb/>
have the ferry service get cut off<lb/>
Evacuees were urged to take<lb/>
along insurance policies, fuel their<lb/>
cars and gather their pets. They're<lb/>
also being ad vi sed to gather what-<lb/>
ever cash they have available be-<lb/>
fore expected power outages dis-<lb/>
SOMALIA<lb/>
able automatic teller machines.<lb/>
' Money is going to talk once<lb/>
the power goes out Sturza said.<lb/>
Construction barges used to<lb/>
double the width of the two-lane<lb/>
Wright Memorial Bridge leading<lb/>
to the Outer Banks will be sunk to<lb/>
prevent them from crashing into<lb/>
the bridge and damaging it, Sturza<lb/>
said.<lb/>
Sturza said the evacuation<lb/>
of Dare County is taking place in<lb/>
two directions. Those located<lb/>
south of Whalebone, including<lb/>
Hatteras Island, will be directed<lb/>
onto U-S Highway 64 west from<lb/>
N.C. 12, which is dangerously<lb/>
prone to flooding. Those north of<lb/>
Whalebone, including Kitty Hawk<lb/>
and Kill Devil Hills, will be di-<lb/>
rected along state route 158.<lb/>
The American Red Cross<lb/>
was setting up shelters at Rocky<lb/>
Mount Senior High School in Nash<lb/>
County, at Fike High School and<lb/>
Continued from page 3<lb/>
Toisnot Middle School in Wilson<lb/>
County and at Tarboro High<lb/>
School in Edgecombe County.<lb/>
Carteret County was closing<lb/>
schools at 1 p.m. and setting up<lb/>
shelters at several elementary<lb/>
schools and West Carteret High<lb/>
for people leaving the beaches,<lb/>
including the Cape Lookout Na-<lb/>
tional Seashore. The Marine Corps<lb/>
Air Station New River may move<lb/>
its 150 helicopters to inland today<lb/>
if conditions along the south-cen-<lb/>
tral coast worsen, said Chief War-<lb/>
rant Officer Hartman Slate.<lb/>
Base residents are unlikely<lb/>
to move, and service families<lb/>
forced to evacuate homes along<lb/>
the coast are being encouraged to<lb/>
go to the base, he said.<lb/>
"Military bases by their na-<lb/>
ture are set up as good shelters, so<lb/>
an evacuation of the air station is<lb/>
an extreme move Slate said.<lb/>
Eight two-hour sessions designed to prepare you<lb/>
for the format and content of the<lb/>
October 16,1993 GMAT Exam<lb/>
fJu<lb/>
EAST<lb/>
CAROLINA<lb/>
UNIVERSITY<lb/>
GMAT<lb/>
administrative officer of the raided<lb/>
U.N. compound, said she and other<lb/>
foreign employees were tied upand<lb/>
forced to lie on the floor.<lb/>
"They just told us to behave<lb/>
properly, to keep flat on the floor<lb/>
she said. "Then we started telling<lb/>
Kthem who we are and they said it<lb/>
KWould be alright, don't worry, but<lb/>
we have to do our thing and that's<lb/>
it"<lb/>
She said three colleagues?a<lb/>
. Canadian, Irishman and Belizian<lb/>
? were taken away by the raiding<lb/>
"troopsalongwithfiveSomalihouse-<lb/>
' hold employees. They were later<lb/>
released.<lb/>
No one was hurt in the action,<lb/>
and the woman said the troops<lb/>
"acted properly although she ac-<lb/>
knowledged being terrified.<lb/>
Reporters visiting the walled,<lb/>
two-story villa found several empty<lb/>
shotgun shells on the floor of the<lb/>
entrance, windows blown out, the<lb/>
telephone and radiodestroyed and<lb/>
vehicles damaged by gunfire. At<lb/>
least two muffled explosions were<lb/>
heard, butno gunfire. The raid came<lb/>
after an earlier mortar attack by<lb/>
Somali militiamen on Mogadishu's<lb/>
old international airport, now a<lb/>
lAistlmgU.N.miUtaryerKarnpment.<lb/>
Stockwell said three Rangers<lb/>
were slightly injured by flying<lb/>
gravel from the explosions, treated<lb/>
at a field hospital and released. It<lb/>
was the latest in weeks of almost<lb/>
nightly harassing attacks on U.N.<lb/>
positions. The raided building is in<lb/>
an area of southernMogadishu long<lb/>
considered a stronghold of Aidid,<lb/>
wanted by the United Nations for a<lb/>
series of ambushes on June 5 that<lb/>
killed 24 Pakistani peacekeepers.<lb/>
Review<lb/>
1 mwm m mm<lb/>
?Fresii Saltwater Rsti ? Parateets Cadtatets ? Rnches ? Smal Anmais<lb/>
? Supples &amp; Tanks Cages<lb/>
rparakeels $9951<lb/>
ii<lb/>
HOURS Men-Sat 12-8<lb/>
903 Stokes Highway<lb/>
(2 Miles from Burroughs Wellcome)<lb/>
758-0777<lb/>
Show ECU ID for 10 Discount!<lb/>
Course<lb/>
Course Schedule:<lb/>
TuesdaySeptember 14<lb/>
ThursdaySeptember 16<lb/>
TuesdaySeptember 21<lb/>
ThursdaySeptember 23<lb/>
TuesdaySeptember 28<lb/>
ThursdaySeptember 30<lb/>
TuesdayOctober S<lb/>
ThursdayOctober 7<lb/>
Course Time:<lb/>
6:30 p.m. - 8:30 p.m.<lb/>
ONLY $149<lb/>
Cost includes<lb/>
all instructional fees<lb/>
and two popular GMA T<lb/>
review manuals<lb/>
Verbal and Math Topics to Be Reviewed:<lb/>
? Sentence Correction<lb/>
? Reading Compreheasion<lb/>
?S" Critical Reasoning<lb/>
? Problem Solving (AriUimetic. Algebra, Geometry)<lb/>
? Data Sufficiency<lb/>
Location:<lb/>
General Classroom Building, Room 1017<lb/>
Instructors:<lb/>
Dr. Patrick Bizaro, Associate Professor, English<lb/>
Dr. Mark A. Coffin. Assistant Professor, Decision Sciences<lb/>
Texts:<lb/>
The Princeton Review: Cracking the System: The GMAT<lb/>
The Official Guide for GMAT Review<lb/>
(indudes at-ruul GMAT questions with solutions) <lb/>
REGISTER AT:<lb/>
School of Business ? Professional Programs<lb/>
1200 General Classroom Building<lb/>
(919)757-6377<lb/>
Highlights<lb/>
Perms<lb/>
Cuts<lb/>
t<lb/>
Professional<lb/>
Designers<lb/>
Listed in journal<lb/>
Magazine as "top<lb/>
Salons in US"<lb/>
Coloring<lb/>
Ftm<lb/>
Consultations<lb/>
Professional Products<lb/>
By<lb/>
appointment<lb/>
only<lb/>
830-5593<lb/>
830-5597<lb/>
w<lb/>
NEWMAN CTHQLJC STUDENT CENTKR<lb/>
;Locafe953E 10th St(bottom ofCoUegehiU &amp; the east end of campus<lb/>
757-3760757-1991<lb/>
AlVTNTefYf TMtfTC AnnuaJ?Backto School<lb/>
ITNrN WfJINliTO: opfm HOUSE &amp; PIG PIOaN1<lb/>
VT<lb/>
WheniWed Sept. 1,1993,4:00pm-7:30pm<lb/>
H Fr. Paul Vaeth Chaplain &amp; Campus Minister<lb/>
Si<lb/>
EADERS!<lb/>
TITDENT<lb/>
Learn from<lb/>
XPERIENCE<lb/>
The Council of Student Organization Leaders<lb/>
presents:<lb/>
Congresswoman<lb/>
Eva Clayton<lb/>
Wednesday, September 1,1993<lb/>
4pm MSC Great Room<lb/>
for more info call 757-4796<lb/>
Sponsored by Student leadership Programs<lb/>
 <lb/>
Expressions Mm<lb/>
UlrifJ<lb/>
O<lb/>
Be a part of an award-winning team that has won critical acclaim<lb/>
over the past several years from the American Scholastic Press<lb/>
Association and the Associated Collegiate Press.<lb/>
We are now accepting applications.<lb/>
Positions Available:<lb/>
? Business Manager<lb/>
?Advertising &amp; Circulation Director<lb/>
? Associate Editor<lb/>
? Copy Editor<lb/>
? Typesetter<lb/>
? Staff Writers<lb/>
? Art Director<lb/>
? Staff Illustrators<lb/>
? Ad Reps<lb/>
We will meet at 3:30 Tuesday, September 7th.<lb/>
If you would like to see a job description for a particular position, please<lb/>
call the office at 757-6927 and arrange an appointment.<lb/>
Our office is on the second floor of the Publications Building.<lb/>
DAY STUDENTS DO YOU<lb/>
WANTTOMAKE<lb/>
A DIFFERENCE?<lb/>
Apply now for position of<lb/>
Day Student Representative on the EOU<lb/>
Media Board. (A student living off campus<lb/>
and not a member of a fraternity or sorority.)<lb/>
Help set policies for operation of WZMB,<lb/>
The Rebel, The East Carolinian,<lb/>
Expressions &amp; The Photo Lab.<lb/>
Apply in The Media Board Office 757-6009<lb/>
2nd Floor Publications Building.<lb/>
?<lb/>
? " i' "i.jiii??<lb/>
-<lb/>
<pb facs="00058419_0005"/><lb/>
August 31? 1993<lb/>
TheEastCarolinian<lb/>
Classifieds<lb/>
Page 5<lb/>
Help Wanted H Help Wanted<lb/>
For Sale<lb/>
IE Services Offered<lb/>
I717T7<lb/>
Personals<lb/>
WIN<lb/>
REEDY BRANCH APARTMENTS New<lb/>
2 bedrooms on East 10th Street. Readv for<lb/>
fall semester. Now taking applications.<lb/>
$385.00 pm. Lease and deposit required.<lb/>
Duffus Realty, Inc 756-2675.<lb/>
HUGE ROOM with 2 closets and private<lb/>
bath. Furnished, walk to ECU, kitchen privi-<lb/>
leges, utilities included. Prefer quiet female<lb/>
non-smoker. $230mo. Call 752-2636.<lb/>
FURNISHED ROOM for rent. Utilities in-<lb/>
cluded. Across from campus Phone 758-<lb/>
2585.<lb/>
ATTENTION STUDENTS: Two bedroom<lb/>
apartment across from campus. Rent $325<lb/>
and one year lease. Call 757-3191.<lb/>
FEMALE CHRISTIAN roommate to share<lb/>
2 BR, 1-12 bath townhouse. Rent $140<lb/>
(includes water, sewer and cable) and 13<lb/>
utilities. Call 321-4931.<lb/>
2-BEDROOM APT - Roommate needed.<lb/>
$150.00 mo12 util. Central air and heat,<lb/>
bus route, deck, cable included in rent.<lb/>
Mature student or grad preferred. Nice<lb/>
neighborhood; must like animals. Call 830-<lb/>
1293 and ask for Kelly.<lb/>
MALE ROOMMATE NEEDED to share a<lb/>
2-bedroom apartment. 3 miles from cam-<lb/>
pus, $175 per month, 12 utilities, Christian<lb/>
non-smoker, non-drinker preferred. Call<lb/>
321-0812.<lb/>
2-BEDROOM, 2 full baths, furnished<lb/>
townhouse close to campus. 4 person ca-<lb/>
pacity, $495mo. On site laundry mat and<lb/>
pool. Call 752-6953 days, 823-7067 nights.<lb/>
RINGGOLD TOWERS<lb/>
Now Taking Leases for<lb/>
1 bedroom, 2 bedroom &amp;<lb/>
Efficiency Apartments.<lb/>
CALL 752-265<lb/>
LEASED PARKIN AyA J p,<lb/>
$15 PER MONTH.<lb/>
LOCATION: BEHIND CLEMENT<lb/>
DORM. THE CORNER OF READE<lb/>
DICKINSON<lb/>
CALL 752-8585 TODAYl<lb/>
Roommate Wanted<lb/>
ROOMMATE NEEDED IMMEDIATELY<lb/>
to fill one of three bedrooms in a large house<lb/>
located near the intersection of Charles &amp;<lb/>
10th Streets. Rent is $150, location is superb<lb/>
(approx. 1 2 mile from campus). Call Mark<lb/>
or Trey at 752-8927 today<lb/>
ROOMMATE Need FM for2 bd. 2 bath. 2<lb/>
blk from ECU. $225 rent. $225 dep. Mature,<lb/>
Responsible. 830-9595 or 830-3702. Drop a<lb/>
note in box 51 Biol graduate office.<lb/>
FEMALE ROOMMATE NEEDED. Non-<lb/>
smoking. Furnished Courtney Squareapart-<lb/>
ment wwasher &amp; dryer. Thru May. $160<lb/>
month plus 13 utilities. 321-1876.<lb/>
ROOMMATEWANTED.Nice2-bedroom,<lb/>
partially furnished. $175mnth , $175de-<lb/>
posit, 1 2 utilities. Male preferred. 807 Col-<lb/>
lege View Apts near ECU. Call Rich 758-<lb/>
6196 weekdays, (919)455-0603 weekends.<lb/>
E'l Help Wanted<lb/>
PARTNERS NEEDED- Recreational Ser-<lb/>
vices is hiring individuals for the Partners in<lb/>
Well-Being Adapted Recreation Program.<lb/>
Individuals experienced in working with<lb/>
disabled populations in fitness activities, ie.<lb/>
swimming, weight training, are encouraged<lb/>
to apply in 204 Christenbury Gym. Call Kari<lb/>
Cleveland at 757-6387 for more details.<lb/>
BABYSITTER NEEDED Thurs. mornings.<lb/>
One year old boy. References appreciated<lb/>
and muM have transportation. 355-2088.<lb/>
PIANO PLAYER NEEDED. Small Chris-<lb/>
tian Church near Greenville, salary neg.<lb/>
Call 757-3207.<lb/>
THE GREENVILLE RECREATION AND<lb/>
PARKS DEFT is recruiting 12-16part-time<lb/>
youth soccer coaches for the fall youth soc-<lb/>
cerprogram. Applicants mustpossess some<lb/>
knowledge of soccer skills and have the<lb/>
ability and patience to work with vouth.<lb/>
Applicants must be able to coach voung<lb/>
people ages 5-16 in soccer fundamentals.<lb/>
Hours are from 3:00 pm until 7:00 pm with<lb/>
some nights and weekend coaching. This<lb/>
program will run from September to mid-<lb/>
November Salary starts at $4.35 per hour.<lb/>
For more information, please call Ben James<lb/>
or Michael Daly at 830-4550.<lb/>
THEGREENVILLE RECREATION AND<lb/>
PARKS DEPT. is seeking certified soccer<lb/>
officials for its Fall Adult Soccer League.<lb/>
The league runs Saturdays and Sundays<lb/>
from mid-September till mid-November.<lb/>
For more information, please contact<lb/>
Michael Daly at 8304550.<lb/>
WANTED: Female to care for 4 children, 6<lb/>
hrswk, flexible schedule, $5hr. Must be<lb/>
non-smoker, have had CPR. Prefer early<lb/>
childhood ed. major or nursing. No house-<lb/>
work involved. Call 355-8223.<lb/>
SPRING BREAK '94 - SeU trips, eam cash<lb/>
and go free Student Travel Services is now<lb/>
hiring campus reps. Call 1-800-648-4849.<lb/>
WELCOME BACK STUDENTS! Brady's<lb/>
is accepting sales applications for the fall<lb/>
semester. We have part-time availabilities<lb/>
to fit everyone's busy schedule: 10to2,12to<lb/>
9, or 6 to 9. We offer good salariesclothing<lb/>
discounts. Apply at Customer Service,<lb/>
Brady's, the Plaza, Monday and Thursday 1<lb/>
to 4 pm.<lb/>
WANTED: PART TIME VAN DRIVERS:<lb/>
CTS Management Company is looking for<lb/>
van drivers to operate the PATS vans. PATS<lb/>
is a local paratransit system for the elderly<lb/>
and handicapped citizens of Pitt County.<lb/>
Some early morning and afternoon hours,<lb/>
as well as midday. Duties include operation<lb/>
of the vehicle and some assistance of eld-<lb/>
erly, handicapped and disad vantaged pas-<lb/>
sengers. Criteria for the job; 1-Positive Atti-<lb/>
tude, 2-21 years of age, 3-Clean driving<lb/>
record, 4-Clean criminal record. If you are a<lb/>
people person with interest, please contact<lb/>
CTS Management Company, Wilcar Ex-<lb/>
ecutive Center, Suite 107, 223 W 10th St,<lb/>
Greenville NC 27834,830-1939.<lb/>
CAMPUS REPRESENTATIVES needed<lb/>
by Sportswear Company to sell to fraterni-<lb/>
ties and sororities. Average$50 - $100 work-<lb/>
ing one night per week. Call 1 -800-242-8104.<lb/>
NEED AFTER SCHOOL caregi ver to care<lb/>
for 2 children (1st and 3rd grades), 230-<lb/>
5:30. M-F near Univ. Area. Mature, respon-<lb/>
sible wreliable transportation; Child de-<lb/>
velop or education background preferred.<lb/>
Refs required. 757-1378.<lb/>
MOTHER'S HELPER Needed to transport<lb/>
toddler to from preschool. Tues and Thurs,<lb/>
Aug-May, 8-9 am (to) 12-1 pm (from). Will<lb/>
payperhourplusgas. 756-3224 evenings or<lb/>
leave message.<lb/>
LAW FIRM needs mailroom messengers<lb/>
part-time 2O30 hours wk, 5 day s per week.<lb/>
Mornings 7:30 to 12:30. also, Microfilm op-<lb/>
erators morning or afternoon. Applications<lb/>
from Receptionist. Ward and Smith, 120<lb/>
West Firetower Road.<lb/>
IMMEDIATE OPENINGS for sales per-<lb/>
sons and secretarial jobs, pply between 2-<lb/>
5 pm: SDF computers, 106 E. 5th St (near<lb/>
Cubbies) Greenville 752-3694.<lb/>
PROFESSORCCOOLSRestaurantisnow<lb/>
accepting applications for waitstaff posi-<lb/>
tions. No phone calls - apply in person 2-4<lb/>
pm daily. Located behind Quincy's at 605<lb/>
Greenville Blvd.<lb/>
ST. TIMOTHY'S Episcopal Church needs<lb/>
nursery worker (male or female) each Sun-<lb/>
day 8:30-12:30. References required. For in-<lb/>
terview call Winston Kobe, 756-9507.<lb/>
EXPERIENCED babysitter wanted to care<lb/>
for two young children (ages 1 and 3) in my<lb/>
home on Wednesdays from 8:30-5:00. Own<lb/>
transportation and references required. Call<lb/>
756-0941.<lb/>
HELP WANTED: Students to clean cars at<lb/>
car dealership. Flexible hours. Call or apply<lb/>
at Lee of Greenville, 3200 Bismark St,<lb/>
Greenville, NC 756-6905.<lb/>
DELIVERY DRIVERAVhse worker. Appx<lb/>
20 hrs per week. Flexible scheduling. Must<lb/>
havecleandrivingrecord and handle heavy<lb/>
freight. Applv in person at R.E. Michel Co<lb/>
309 W 9th St'<lb/>
PART-TIME SALES. Need 10 part-time<lb/>
salespeople for number 1 company in num-<lb/>
ber 1 industry. Work 8-10 hours per week<lb/>
with earning potential of $1000.00 per<lb/>
month. Call Richard Rabin at 758-0645 after<lb/>
2:00 pm.<lb/>
FACULTY MEMBER needs responsible<lb/>
babysitter for 8-yr old two days a week,<lb/>
Monday and Wednesday or Thursdav,3:00-<lb/>
5:30. 7-9394 after 6:00.<lb/>
ENTHUSIASTIC hard workers wanted to<lb/>
join the wait staff at Ryan's Family Steak<lb/>
House. Eam above average income! Apply<lb/>
during non-meal hours. No wimps needed!<lb/>
PART-TIME telephone callers for credit<lb/>
verification needed. Flexible hours, between<lb/>
8-5, perfect for energetic student Good tele-<lb/>
phone voice and great personality required.<lb/>
Apply in person at: Equifax Credit Bureau<lb/>
of Greenville: 1206 S. Charles Blvd<lb/>
Greenville, NC between 8-5 Mon-Fri.<lb/>
EARN $2500 &amp; FREE SPRING BREAK<lb/>
TRIPS! SeU only 8 trips and you go free! Best<lb/>
trips &amp; prices! Bahamas, Cancun, Jamaica,<lb/>
Panama City! Great Resume Experience! 1-<lb/>
800-678-6386!<lb/>
$10-5400 WEEKLY. Mailing brochures!<lb/>
Sparefull-time. Set own hours! Rush<lb/>
stamped envelope: Publishers (Gl) 1821<lb/>
Hillandale Rd. 1B-295 Durham NC 27705.<lb/>
AA EARN $5,000Mo. GUARANTEED!<lb/>
FAST Huge money-making jobs and op-<lb/>
portunities on your campus. Call today for<lb/>
complete details. Free cruise! America's 1<lb/>
Company! 919-929-3139.<lb/>
STOCKSALES person wanted. Apply at<lb/>
Youth Shop Boutique, Arlington Village.<lb/>
ATTENTION STUDENTS: Eamextracash<lb/>
stuffing envelopes at home. All material<lb/>
provided. Send SASE to Midwest mailers,<lb/>
PO Box 395, OUthe KS 66051. Immediate<lb/>
response.<lb/>
SOCCER OFFICIALS NEEDED - games<lb/>
on Saturday. Call 830-4240.<lb/>
LEAGUE SUPERVISORS NEEDED (soc<lb/>
cer)- games on Saturday. Pay $6.00 and up.<lb/>
Call 830-4240.<lb/>
JBOOKTRADER<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/>
NOW! USED CD'S<lb/>
on each end, 2 years old - perfect condition,<lb/>
$600 or best offer. Call 355-3993.<lb/>
BIKEFORSALE: 19 inch Schwinn Frontier.<lb/>
Excellent condition! $130 or Best Offer. Call<lb/>
752-9633, ask for Heather.<lb/>
CERWIN VEGA speakers, 15" Woofers,<lb/>
405 watts, $400. Call 830-6665. Ask for Josh.<lb/>
LOFT FOR SALE:Great for dorm lifeor just<lb/>
an apartment. Great condition. $5OB0. Call<lb/>
758-6363. Ask for Kevin.<lb/>
FOR SALE: 1985 Honda CRX-SI. Perfect<lb/>
Mech. Condition - Sporty car. $3200.00.830-<lb/>
4910.<lb/>
DORM CARPET - Various sizes and colors<lb/>
- from $10 up. Wilcar Executive Center,<lb/>
Room 101 (Manager's Office), 233 W 10th St,<lb/>
M-F, 9:00 AM -4:00 PM, 752-8072.<lb/>
FOR SALE - Contemporary style couch and<lb/>
matching chair. Beigetan color - goes with<lb/>
everything. Call 757-9681.<lb/>
286 IBM comp, with VGA, 40 mb hard<lb/>
drive, 2400 Bawd modem, sound card and<lb/>
printer. $700. Call Todd: 758-8324.<lb/>
FOR SALE: Men's 26" Takara 12-speed.<lb/>
Red. Very good condition. $125. 752-3345.<lb/>
Ask for David.<lb/>
FOR SALE: MOUNTAIN BIKE. Ladies'<lb/>
Huffy Rough Rider. Seldom used, like new<lb/>
condition. Grea t campus transportation! $70<lb/>
neg. 752-0820. Leave message.<lb/>
MOPED. Excellent condition, only 2,000<lb/>
miles, complete with helmet and basket, no<lb/>
license required, 100 m.p.g $400.756-9133.<lb/>
COMPUTER, Macintosh SE, 1 MB RAM, 30<lb/>
MB Hard Drive, 2 floppy drives, imagewri ter<lb/>
printer. $500. A great word processor. Call<lb/>
752-2261 after 5 pm.<lb/>
COMPUTER FOR SALE: AT&amp;T 6300. with<lb/>
WordPerfect 1.0. $50. Call 321-2229.<lb/>
COMPUTER: IBM compatible 386SX, 14"<lb/>
SVGA, 3.5 &amp; 5.25 FDD, 85Mb HDD, 2 Mb<lb/>
RAM, DOS 6.0, mouse, wp 5.1, Lotus 123,<lb/>
Nortons, Windows 3.1, Norton's antivirus.<lb/>
Reflex 2.0, Printshop. $875 firm. Call 830-<lb/>
4824.<lb/>
ZENITH Z-320SX computer w83 MB<lb/>
Hard disk, 3.5 in. 1.44 floppy, 4 meg RAM,<lb/>
super VGA, 28 dp color monitor, keyboard,<lb/>
mouse, DOS 5.0, Windows 3.1, Word Per-<lb/>
fect 5.1. Quattio Pro 4.0 spread sheet, 2-D<lb/>
and 3-D mathematics plotting software,<lb/>
chemistry tutor. Like new, software un-<lb/>
opened. $1500. Call 757-6087 day or 758-<lb/>
3330 evening.<lb/>
14CT. Italian Gold by the Gram.<lb/>
Ropes, Herringbones, links, Rings,<lb/>
Watches, Diamonds, RrecJous Stones<lb/>
and work.<lb/>
Call Tim 758-3425<lb/>
&amp; Deluxe Orthopedc Mattress Set<lb/>
in Factory Box. Cant Use Cost<lb/>
750, Sooifioe $385 Cash,<lb/>
White, Iron &amp; Brass<lb/>
w 2 Twin Size Orthopedic Mat-<lb/>
tresses &amp; Rollout Popup Trundle<lb/>
Never Used, In Box. Cost $700.<lb/>
$310Cash.<lb/>
(919)637-2645<lb/>
For Sale B3 Services Offered<lb/>
BOOKS FOR SALE. Stats 3228 $15, Music<lb/>
3018 and recorder $20, Psych Nursing 3800<lb/>
$20. Call 758-6363 (Jeff).<lb/>
DORM FRIDGE FOR SALE - Perfect for<lb/>
dorm life. Paid $100, Sale $40 firm. Call<lb/>
Suzanne at 758-0700.<lb/>
CONTEMPORARY L-shape sofa, recliner<lb/>
PAINTBALL: 100 pure adrenaline rush.<lb/>
Anyone, regardless of your size, strength or<lb/>
physical abilities, can be successful at<lb/>
Paintball. Have a blast Call 752-8380.<lb/>
PAINTABLL: It's the most intense and elec-<lb/>
trifying sport you will ever play. Call 752-<lb/>
8380 for information and reservations. WE<lb/>
BREED EXCITEMENT!<lb/>
Announcements<lb/>
PAINTBALL: That's right, Paintball is here<lb/>
in Greenville Come by yourself or with a<lb/>
group. Come and feel the excitement. Call<lb/>
752-8380.<lb/>
PIRATE PAINTBALL: We are on the cut-<lb/>
ting edge of high energy entertainment.<lb/>
Call 752-8380 for reservations and informa-<lb/>
tion.<lb/>
PIRATE PAINTBALL: Great for clubs, or-<lb/>
ganizations and groups. We can organize<lb/>
tournaments, and company or group pic-<lb/>
nics. Call 752-8380 for info and reserva-<lb/>
tions. WE BREED EXCITEMENT<lb/>
TRAVEL FREE! Sell quality vacations. The<lb/>
hottest destinations in Jamaica, Cancun,<lb/>
South Padre, Florida. Most reliable Spring<lb/>
Break Company with the easiest way to-<lb/>
wards free trip! Best commissions! Sun<lb/>
Splash Tours 1-800-426-7710.<lb/>
LOOK YOUR BEST for the brand new<lb/>
year. Call Kimberly at 931-7863 for your<lb/>
persona! fitness training.<lb/>
PARTY WITH MMP! Mobile Music Pro-<lb/>
ductions is on the road again to jam the<lb/>
biggest, best Greek socials. Top 40, Dance,<lb/>
Alternative, Rap, Beach, Classic Rock and<lb/>
Country. Call Lee at 758-4644 for booking.<lb/>
TUTORING SERVICES Offered for chil-<lb/>
dren in Kindergarten through seventh grade<lb/>
in math and or reading. Masters in Educa-<lb/>
tion. Call 752-5542.<lb/>
ATTENTION<lb/>
RAGWEED<lb/>
SUFFERERS:<lb/>
108 Volunteers needed<lb/>
September 18th and 19th<lb/>
(all day) to help test two<lb/>
investigarjonal medications<lb/>
for the treatment of allergic<lb/>
rhinitis. Age 12 or older. Male<lb/>
or female. If interested, please<lb/>
call East Carolina University<lb/>
Asthma &amp; Allergy Clinic at<lb/>
816.3426 or 816.3424<lb/>
($180.00for completed study)<lb/>
10 Off Alterations<lb/>
Fast Service<lb/>
Quality Work<lb/>
Elvie s Specialty<lb/>
Sewing<lb/>
2609 B East 10th St.<lb/>
SBS Personals<lb/>
JOIN THE STUDENT PIRATE CLUB TO-<lb/>
DAY. Have benefits of Pirate Club Mem-<lb/>
bers, receive benefits from local businesses<lb/>
and nightclubs. Call 757-4540 or 758-7005<lb/>
and apply today.<lb/>
TO: LAURA, who I met at UBE with Mary<lb/>
on Thursday 819, I lost your number<lb/>
Please give me a call at 355-33835. Bob.<lb/>
WRITERMUSICIAN and poetic soul<lb/>
seeks like-minded lady for friendship<lb/>
and fun. Send photos and correspon-<lb/>
denceto: KANE, POBox8663,Greenville,<lb/>
NC 27835<lb/>
IF YOU go to ECU. why do you live in<lb/>
B-M F"K Brasswood???<lb/>
SOME WOMEN to figure will be com-<lb/>
plex. And on some men will place a hex.<lb/>
A mystery they are as we all search for<lb/>
clues. To up our hand and kill our blues.<lb/>
Some women around they will bewitch.<lb/>
And by us, but not all, they will be labeled<lb/>
a bitch. It's in the sex and in the mind. The<lb/>
two will cross and you will find their<lb/>
dilemma with the men of three. One's for<lb/>
sex. Two's for love. Threes a real friend.<lb/>
One's for a night, two's for a year. Three's<lb/>
a friend. Ones are different. Twos get old.<lb/>
Three's a friend who may be told of her<lb/>
confused mental thoughts between ones<lb/>
and twos. One's for flirting, two's for<lb/>
hurting. Ones are kept ready, twos are<lb/>
kept steady. One's discarded, two's re-<lb/>
garded. Ones are different, twos the same.<lb/>
And threes are friends she cannot blame<lb/>
for her confused mental thoughts be-<lb/>
tween ones and twos. Ones, she means<lb/>
nothing, two she means something. And<lb/>
three will always be a friend. Think like a<lb/>
man, she think's you 're not. Some women<lb/>
you meet will like you a lot. Jeff Jones.<lb/>
IQ<lb/>
Greek<lb/>
CONGRATULATIONS to all the new<lb/>
officers of Pi Delta Sorority for 1993-94!<lb/>
This is going to be our best year yet girls!<lb/>
SUSAN &amp; ELIZABETH FALK - Thanks<lb/>
for the "Welcome Back" get-together to<lb/>
kick off the new semester! Love, your Pi<lb/>
Delta Sisters.<lb/>
THANK YOU ANN SELDEN for a won-<lb/>
derful Rush. All of your hard work paid<lb/>
off with the most awesome pledge class!<lb/>
Love, your Sigma Sisters.<lb/>
THE SIGMAS would like to welcome<lb/>
everyone back to school<lb/>
CONGRATULATIONS to the 1993<lb/>
Sigma Sigma Sigma Pledgeclass, Cynthia<lb/>
Bell, Robin Brickley,ColleenCarey, Crys-<lb/>
tal Chase, Dorothy Darrow, Elissa Earl,<lb/>
Julie Farmer, Paige Gantt, Kathy<lb/>
Harrison, Kate Hartnett, Elizabeth<lb/>
Holliman, Jenny Johnston, Sarah<lb/>
Koerselman, Susan Laird, Amy Lamb,<lb/>
Cindy Langston, Melanie Lee, Laura<lb/>
McCabe, Kelli McCartney, Jennifer<lb/>
McKeon, Chandra Martin, Tracy Maurer,<lb/>
Christine Rogers, Meredith Ruark, Amy<lb/>
Schellhaas, Jennifer Sutton, and Kristi<lb/>
Usilton. Love, the Sisters.<lb/>
PHI SIGMA PI Brothers- First meeting<lb/>
of the 93-94 school year will be held<lb/>
Wednesday September 1, 1993, in GtB<lb/>
1028. Hope to see everyone there <lb/>
PI DELTA-Wants to welcome everyone<lb/>
back and have a great semester!<lb/>
ALPHA OMICRON PI would like to<lb/>
congratulate and welcome all the new<lb/>
members: Monica Arnold, Melanie<lb/>
Burke, Caren Cantrell, Heather Edmonds,<lb/>
Jennifer Gorka, Sloan Hawley, Jennifer<lb/>
Lane, Jenny Lucas, Ashley McAlexander,<lb/>
Maureen McKenna, Stephanie MinkcjVe,<lb/>
Jude Nagle, Anne Rossiter, Kristen<lb/>
Sierocki, and Nan Woods.<lb/>
?USEDCOMPUTERS ?NEW&amp; USEDCOMPUTER FURNITURE<lb/>
?DESKS-CHAIRS<lb/>
COME AND SEE US AT BUSINESS EQUIPMENT RENTAL AND SALES. WE ARE<lb/>
LOCATED WITHIN WALKING DISTANCE EROM CAMPUS.<lb/>
FREE DELIVERY LOCALLY.<lb/>
"Your Offia Furniture Piaa,<lb/>
752 6585601 Reade Circle Greenvllle.NC<lb/>
SPECIAL OLYMPICS<lb/>
The Greenville-Pitt Co. Special<lb/>
Olympics is recruiting for volunteer<lb/>
coaches in the following sports: soccer,<lb/>
basketball skills, team basketball,<lb/>
swimming, gymnastics, bowling,<lb/>
power-lifting and rollerskating. NO<lb/>
EXPERIENCE NECESSARY-JUST A<lb/>
WILLINGNESS TO WORK WITH<lb/>
MENTALLY HANDICAPPED CHIL-<lb/>
DREN AND ADULTS. Special train-<lb/>
ing sessions for coaches will be held.<lb/>
Last day to volunteer for fall sports is<lb/>
September 28th. Volunteer hours may<lb/>
be used as part of practicum require-<lb/>
ments for several ECU courses. For<lb/>
more information, contact Connie<lb/>
Sappenfield at 830-4541.<lb/>
COURSE FOR CMA EXAM<lb/>
A review course for the Certified<lb/>
Management Accountant(CMA)exam<lb/>
will be held at East Carolina Univer-<lb/>
sity , beginning on October 2nd, from<lb/>
8-5pm. The review will be held on<lb/>
eight consecutive Saturdays, ending<lb/>
on November 20th. The review is be-<lb/>
ing sponsored by the East Carolina<lb/>
Chapter of the Institute of Manage-<lb/>
ment Accountants and will be taught<lb/>
by instructors from ECU. For more<lb/>
information please contact Carolyn<lb/>
Caslow, Director of CMA Programs,<lb/>
at 919 321-2474.<lb/>
EXCEL COURSE<lb/>
The Department of Decision Sci-<lb/>
ences will offer a non-credit EXCEL<lb/>
course at no cost. Classes are 2-4 p.m.<lb/>
Fridays from Sept. 3 - Oct. 1, 1993.<lb/>
Enrollment is limited; preference will<lb/>
be given to students who received<lb/>
transfer credit DSCI 2223 (Introduc-<lb/>
tion to Computers). To register, call<lb/>
(919) 757-6893 by Sept. 2, 1993. EX-<lb/>
CEL is the spread sheet and graphics<lb/>
package used in business courses.<lb/>
BECOMING A SUCCESSFUL<lb/>
STUDENT<lb/>
This five-part series is designed<lb/>
for students who wish to sharpen their<lb/>
study skills and for students who wish<lb/>
to gain the necessary tools for aca-<lb/>
demic success. The first session be-<lb/>
gins Sept. 7. For more information,<lb/>
please call or stop by the Counseling<lb/>
Center, 316 Wright Building, 757-6661.<lb/>
SCHOOL OF EDUCATION<lb/>
The Department of Speech-Lan-<lb/>
guage and Auditory Pathology<lb/>
(SLAP) will be providing the speech<lb/>
and hearing screening for students<lb/>
who are fulfilling requirements for<lb/>
admission to Upper Division on Sept.<lb/>
13,14 and 15,1993 from 5-6 p.m. each<lb/>
day. These are the only screening dates<lb/>
during the fall semester.<lb/>
The screening will be conducted<lb/>
in the Belk Annex (ECU Speech and<lb/>
hearing Clinic) located next to the<lb/>
Belk Building (School of Allied Health<lb/>
Sciences), near the intersection of<lb/>
Charles St. and the 264 by-pass. No<lb/>
appointment is needed. Waiting is<lb/>
outside the clinic waiting room, sign-<lb/>
in begins at 4:50 p.m. Screenings are<lb/>
conducted on a first-come, first-serve<lb/>
basis.<lb/>
HONORS PROGRAM<lb/>
Interested faculty from all schools<lb/>
are reminded of the opportunity to<lb/>
propose honors seminars to be taught<lb/>
spring or fall semester 1994. All pro-<lb/>
posals for spring 1994 need to be sub-<lb/>
mitted to David Sanders, co Honors<lb/>
Program, GCB 2026, by Mon Sept. 6.<lb/>
Please call the office by Fri Sept. 3.<lb/>
The Honors Program Committee will<lb/>
make the final selection. Call 6373 for<lb/>
information.<lb/>
EAST CAROLINA FRIENDS<lb/>
East Carolina Friends is a Big<lb/>
Brother BigSisterorganization. We pair<lb/>
undergraduates, graduates and faculty<lb/>
with children between the ages of 6<lb/>
and 12. A positive adult role model<lb/>
could change a child's life. Interest<lb/>
meetings are being held in Brewster<lb/>
B305 Aug. 30,31 and Sept. 1 at 5 p.m.<lb/>
LDS INSTITUTE<lb/>
LDS Institute will begin Sept. 2<lb/>
6:30 p.m LDS church at 307<lb/>
Martinsborough Rd. and will be on<lb/>
Thurs. evenings. Lew Williams is the<lb/>
new CES instructor (523-1755). This<lb/>
year's study is D&amp;C and Church His-<lb/>
tory. Members or non-members are<lb/>
welcome (age limit 18-30).<lb/>
RECREATIONAL SERVICES<lb/>
Get crowned this semester! Rec<lb/>
Services will be naming its annual King<lb/>
and Queen of the Halls on Wednesday,<lb/>
Sept 1 at 4pm at the bottom of the hill.<lb/>
Come out and show some residential<lb/>
pride and maybe even get crowned<lb/>
King or Queen. For more information,<lb/>
Call Rec Services at 757-6387. Free t-<lb/>
shirts and prizes while supplies last.<lb/>
LAMBDA DELTA SIGMA<lb/>
LDS sorority (Lambda Delta<lb/>
Sigma) will be held immeidately after<lb/>
LDS institute class 8-9 p.m. First meet-<lb/>
ing will be Sept. 1 at the LDS church.<lb/>
Contact Niki Jenkins for info. (753-<lb/>
3286). All single women 18-30 are in-<lb/>
vited to join.<lb/>
CHOOSING A MAJOR AND A<lb/>
CAREER<lb/>
This five session workshop is the<lb/>
beginning step in Career Counseling<lb/>
at ECU. Take assessment instrument.<lb/>
Learn how to do majorcareer re-<lb/>
search. Get a list of possible career<lb/>
fields that fit your interests. Classes<lb/>
begin the weeks of Sept. 6 and Sept. 20.<lb/>
Limited enrollment. For more infor-<lb/>
mation, a schedule and to register,<lb/>
stop by the Counseling Center, 316<lb/>
Wright Building.<lb/>
RECREATIONAL SERVICES<lb/>
Get flagged this semester! Rel<lb/>
Services will be hosting its annual Flag<lb/>
Football season. To find out more in-<lb/>
formation, there will be a regristration<lb/>
meeting on Tuesday, Aug. 31 in Bio<lb/>
103. CallRecreational Services at 757-<lb/>
6387 for more information.<lb/>
ECU LACROSSE CLUB<lb/>
ECU Men's La Crosse Club will<lb/>
hold a meeting for interestedand re-<lb/>
turning players Aug. 31. at 5:00 pm<lb/>
in Christenbury 102. Call David<lb/>
LeSage at 752-7641 for more details.<lb/>
WOMEN'S SOCCER<lb/>
If you missed the organizational<lb/>
meeting for the ECU Women's Soc-<lb/>
cer Team, and are interested in play-<lb/>
ing, please call 752-7914 for informa-<lb/>
tion. All skill levels are welcome.<lb/>
ECU WATERSKI CLUB<lb/>
Join the ECU Waterski Club!<lb/>
Beginners are welcome. Meetings are<lb/>
every Tuesday nights from 9-10 p.m.<lb/>
in Mendenhall room 14. For more<lb/>
information, call Jason or Thomas at<lb/>
758-8215.<lb/>
DISABILITY SUPPORT<lb/>
SERVICES<lb/>
Employment opportunities are<lb/>
available to students who are inter-<lb/>
ested in becoming personal care at-<lb/>
tendants to students in wheelchairs,<lb/>
readers and tutors. Past experience<lb/>
is desired, but not required. If inter-<lb/>
ested, contact either of the follow-<lb/>
ing: Officeof Corrdinator, 103Greene<lb/>
Hall, (919) 757-6110 or Office of Dis-<lb/>
ability Support Services, Brewster<lb/>
A-116 or A-114, (919) 757-6799.<lb/>
.?<lb/>
<pb facs="00058419_0006"/><lb/>
The East Carolinian<lb/>
TuesdayOpinion<lb/>
Recycling imperative<lb/>
Greenville adopts a residential<lb/>
recyclins program as ECU<lb/>
continues promotion 5<lb/>
At the center of every environmental issue<lb/>
lies a problem: whether to appeal to the heart or<lb/>
the head?whether to urge people to make sac-<lb/>
rifices on behalf of the planet or to accept that<lb/>
they will not and instead fix it so that the<lb/>
general public finds it rational to be environ-<lb/>
mentalists. In other words: make it so that they<lb/>
have to do it.<lb/>
It is no longer merely enough to accuse<lb/>
environmental wrong-doers of selfishness or to<lb/>
morally shame them into action. Lately, the<lb/>
trend has been to impose laws that require said<lb/>
wrong-doers to shape up or literally pay the<lb/>
price.<lb/>
In part, it seems to be working.<lb/>
Across this vast land, a similar noise can<lb/>
be heard. Ah, yes, you know the one; that beau-<lb/>
tiful melody that American ideals were founded<lb/>
on; the sound of the cash-register: ka-CHING<lb/>
The city of Greenville has recently im-<lb/>
posed an additional "refuse fee" on residents'<lb/>
monthlv utility bill. Area residents can expect<lb/>
to pav S3-S4 a month for residential recycling<lb/>
which began this month. With this program,<lb/>
traditional trash bins will be replaced with ad-<lb/>
equate reevciing containers.<lb/>
Closer to home, the dorms will once again<lb/>
promote aluminum can recycling, in add.tion<lb/>
to recycling in the dorms, students are encour-<lb/>
aged to use recycling sites across campus. 1 here<lb/>
has even been some discussion of moving to a<lb/>
one-container site where all recyclables can be<lb/>
dumped, but an adequate facility has vet to be<lb/>
discovered.<lb/>
But until that happens, recycling facilities<lb/>
will be located on College Hill (Monday 8 a.m<lb/>
Tuesday 4 p.m.), outside Greene Hall (Wednes-<lb/>
day 8 a.mThursday 4 p.m.) and on the Cam-<lb/>
pus Mall (Friday 10 a.mMonday 8 a.m.).<lb/>
To make things easier for the collectors,<lb/>
campus recyclers ask that students place card-<lb/>
board boxes outside the recycling bins, since it<lb/>
is illegal to dump cardboard in landfills. Also,<lb/>
bottles and cans should be emptied before plac-<lb/>
ing them in the facilities.<lb/>
So, what's the big deal about recycling?<lb/>
Obviously, environmentalists are convinced of<lb/>
its importance. Some people may say that it<lb/>
tends to get a little out of hand at times. But a<lb/>
very fair question to ask is "Why me?" Why -<lb/>
should little 'ole you care about what happens<lb/>
to your garbage?<lb/>
The answer is quite simple: you're not the<lb/>
only one inhabiting this planet. And every day,<lb/>
hundreds of billions (evenbazillions) of people<lb/>
around the world make just as much garbage.<lb/>
Add it all up, and we have quite a mess.<lb/>
Recycling allieviates some of the garbage<lb/>
crunch. Yes, it can be time consuming and an-<lb/>
noying every so often, but certainly the planet<lb/>
that has sustained and nurtured human life for<lb/>
thousands of years deserves to be nurtured and<lb/>
coddled itself.<lb/>
Really consider it. And then recycle that<lb/>
soda can, beer bottle, magazine and (most im-<lb/>
portantly) this and every issue of The East Caro-<lb/>
linian.<lb/>
Remember: you're a part of this planet. Try-<lb/>
not to screw it up.<lb/>
Opinion<lb/>
Page 6<lb/>
By Alex Ferguson<lb/>
NASA accomplishments eclipsed by mishaps, accidents<lb/>
Well, it's happened again.<lb/>
 something like this<lb/>
transpires .ill I can think ot is<lb/>
Oliver WendelJ rtes.thecomputer<lb/>
hacker from ?' ?oin8<lb/>
"AAARRGGI II1 w rule venting<lb/>
his frustrations out on poor( pus<lb/>
tin' Penguin via pummeling. 1 am,<lb/>
oficourse, referring to the Mars<lb/>
Observe! fiasco th.it has blos-<lb/>
somed this past week. Haven't<lb/>
been following? rooengrossed on<lb/>
who Michael ackson's been fon-<lb/>
dling as of late? Let's review.<lb/>
Back in September ot 1992<lb/>
(( uid, how time flies), NASA sent<lb/>
(deep breath) a $980 million satel-<lb/>
lite tostudy Mars. Yes, that's right,<lb/>
$980 million. Last week, while<lb/>
using rockets to reduce speed and<lb/>
place it's clunky carcass into orbit,<lb/>
the Mars Observer stopped talk-<lb/>
ing. So now, NASA has no way ot<lb/>
knowing it the probe is orbiting<lb/>
Mars, streaking out towards space,<lb/>
or (and this is my personal favor-<lb/>
ite) spending its final days in what<lb/>
the experts eloquently call "bitty<lb/>
little pieces Who savs scientists<lb/>
can't wax poetic1<lb/>
There are those at NASA<lb/>
who are hopeful communications<lb/>
can be restored, although, with<lb/>
each passing day, the chance of<lb/>
salvaging this mission fizzles like<lb/>
day-old Coke. Most have resorted<lb/>
to therapeutic screaming. Some,<lb/>
trving to forget the pain, have<lb/>
turned their eyes towards the<lb/>
Galileo probe, another satellite<lb/>
zooming towards a rendezvous<lb/>
with Jupiter in 1995.Sure,it'smain<lb/>
antennae is jammed, photos taken<lb/>
of passing asteroids take longer to<lb/>
develop and deliver than K-Mart,<lb/>
but at least it's not trekking<lb/>
through space in "bitty little<lb/>
pieces<lb/>
Pile on top of these blun-<lb/>
ders the Hubble Telescope'scan-<lb/>
dal and the Challenger disaster<lb/>
(not to mention all the bad jokes),<lb/>
and NASA seems less like a repu-<lb/>
table, proud-to-be-American-and-<lb/>
on-the-moon organization these<lb/>
days and more like, well, the<lb/>
Fxxon's Valdez Fiasco in Space!<lb/>
And darn it! It makes me<lb/>
mad! They haven't done any<lb/>
wrong. It's time that NASA got a<lb/>
break. For with every mishap, the<lb/>
public grows more wary of over-<lb/>
hyped promises of stations in<lb/>
space, perfectly formed spacecrys-<lb/>
tals and boldly going where no<lb/>
one's gone before! (Personally, I've<lb/>
never understood all those space<lb/>
crystal experi ments, seeing as how<lb/>
we're up to our necks in cheesy<lb/>
novelty shops selling crystals al-<lb/>
ready.)<lb/>
All kidding aside, I think<lb/>
NASA is in some trouble here.<lb/>
Grumbles of dismantling the Mis-<lb/>
sion to Mars program and cuts in<lb/>
NASA's funding have been circu-<lb/>
lating for years, increasing with<lb/>
each effort that goes awry. Every<lb/>
year, mounds o' money are poured<lb/>
into research and development.<lb/>
And what did we get1 A robotic<lb/>
arm that could do dexterous ma-<lb/>
neuvers and tie boy scout knots<lb/>
blind-tolded, yet couldn't grab a<lb/>
damaged satellite. And the sad<lb/>
thing is, the mistakes and<lb/>
accidents really are just mistake<lb/>
and accidents, a cruel joke of Fate<lb/>
and nothing more.<lb/>
But these women and<lb/>
men are really trying. Thanks to<lb/>
them, we've conquered gravity,<lb/>
danced on the moon and waved<lb/>
enthusiastically at a twinkling<lb/>
spread of lights that hold secrets<lb/>
untold and unimagined. Their<lb/>
lives have been spent pushing<lb/>
towards this New Frontiei, ot<lb/>
which we know nothing about.<lb/>
And will continue to know noth-<lb/>
ing about if we allow this move-<lb/>
ment to die or become entangled<lb/>
in the webs of bureaucracy.<lb/>
Besides, I think we owe it<lb/>
to ourselves to forge ahead, so<lb/>
that one day we can say "Warp<lb/>
speed?ngage" and really mean<lb/>
it.<lb/>
QuoteofthcDay:<lb/>
Nature never did betray the heart that loved her.<lb/>
William Wordsworth<lb/>
-b1<lb/>
4<lb/>
4! 11 Hit,<lb/>
1, '<lb/>
ttl<lb/>
W<lb/>
C?T off wv Foot<lb/>
AM . v 6?<lb/>
?l?<lb/>
Wk<lb/>
?.V<lb/>
sv<lb/>
'<lb/>
The East Carolinian<lb/>
Lindsay Fernandez, General Manager<lb/>
Gregory Dickens, Managing Editor<lb/>
Matthew A. Hege, Advertising Director<lb/>
Wes Tinkham, Account Executive<lb/>
Kelly Kellis, Account Executive<lb/>
Brandon Perry, Account Executive<lb/>
Karen Hassell, News Editor<lb/>
Maureen Rich, Asst. News Editor<lb/>
Julie Totten, Lifestyle Editor<lb/>
Laura Wright, Asst. Lifestyle Editor<lb/>
Robert S. Todd, Sports Editor<lb/>
Brian Olson, Asst Sports Editor<lb/>
Amy E. WirtZ, Opinion Page Editor<lb/>
Amelia Yongue, Copy Editor<lb/>
Jessica Stanley Copy Editor<lb/>
Tonya Heath, Account Executive<lb/>
Jennifer Jenkins, 4 count Executive<lb/>
Tony Dunn, Business Manager<lb/>
Margie O'Shea, Cin ulation Managi<lb/>
Burt Aycock, Layout Manager<lb/>
Franco Sacchi, Awi Layout Manag<lb/>
Tony Chadwick, Creative Directoi<lb/>
Cedric Van Buren, Photo Editor<lb/>
Chris Kemple, Stafl Illustrator<lb/>
Matt MacDonald, Systems Managi<lb/>
Deborah Daniel, Secretary<lb/>
Al&amp;ght, class!clew<lb/>
youe tess,rme.E our a<lb/>
r?BN AVb ??SP0rVfc TD THE<lb/>
FOLlouirVC M NO -soeo??S?ULS<lb/>
CHZKTMC! IN SHrSltSpem's g,<lb/>
OntUO " SLArl SLAH ?LAH"<lb/>
KEMPL6 3<lb/>
Letters to the Editor<lb/>
Recreational opportunities kept from students<lb/>
The East Carolinian publishes i 2.HK copies every Tuesday and<lb/>
Thursday. The masthead editorial in each edition is the opinion ol ihc<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 tor<lb/>
publication. Letters should be addresed to The Editor, Tin East Carolinian.<lb/>
Publications Bldg. ECU. Greenville. N.C 27858-4353. F:oi more informa-<lb/>
tion, cafl (919) 757-6366.<lb/>
Printed on<lb/>
100<lb/>
i re <lb/>
papei<lb/>
To the Editor:<lb/>
When I left ECU over<lb/>
one year ago, the recreational<lb/>
facilities for students were<lb/>
less than adequate. With very<lb/>
limited facilities such as bas-<lb/>
ketball courts and swimming<lb/>
pools, a student trving to es-<lb/>
cape from the pressures of.<lb/>
academic life could easily be-<lb/>
come frustrated. As I re-<lb/>
turned to campus for some<lb/>
post-graduate work at the<lb/>
beginning of the second, sum-<lb/>
mer session, I found that the<lb/>
situation was even worse.<lb/>
A good deal of the fa-<lb/>
cilities we do have are taken<lb/>
apart, closed or otherwise<lb/>
made unavailable to the stu-<lb/>
dents. What right does the<lb/>
administration or whoever<lb/>
is in charge of such facilities<lb/>
have to take down the bas-<lb/>
ketball goals on College Hill?<lb/>
These four goals were<lb/>
the only goals which can be<lb/>
used after 5 P.M. and now<lb/>
they are not open. Don't<lb/>
summer school students pay<lb/>
for these services, too? There<lb/>
is a gross discrimination<lb/>
against students who choose-<lb/>
to take classes in the sum-<lb/>
mer.<lb/>
The problem of vandal-<lb/>
ism is a well documented<lb/>
one in our society But<lb/>
should students who pay-<lb/>
tuition and fees be forced to<lb/>
suffer for the action of oth-<lb/>
ers7 The city of Greenville<lb/>
uses reinforced rims that<lb/>
will withstand the pressures<lb/>
administered by the van-<lb/>
dals. Whatever the solution,<lb/>
punishing students is not<lb/>
acceptable and should not<lb/>
be tolerated.<lb/>
Tom Woerner<lb/>
(Ireenville resident<lb/>
By T. Scott Batchelor<lb/>
Enrollment<lb/>
increase creates<lb/>
annoyances<lb/>
The University Book Exchange smells<lb/>
like a locker room. 11 takes 15 minutes to walk<lb/>
from the third floor of Brewster to the General<lb/>
Classroom building and I have to wait in line<lb/>
20 minutes to buy a Coke at Wright Soda<lb/>
Shop. What do all of these peeves have in<lb/>
common? They are all problems resulting<lb/>
from overcrowding here at ECU.<lb/>
The ECU administartion estimates an<lb/>
enrollment of about 18,000 students this fall,<lb/>
and that's about 13,000 too many.<lb/>
One of the problems with my outlook<lb/>
on ECU'sswelling student population comes<lb/>
from being surrounded by friends who went<lb/>
to small private colleges. One went to<lb/>
Harvard; the other to Wake Forest. Both<lb/>
schools have populations one third or less the<lb/>
size of ECU's. I didn't get a chance to visit fair<lb/>
Harvard,but Wake Forest's campus is nice. It<lb/>
just looks so "collegiate Dignified, even.<lb/>
ECUisadifferentstory. Although main<lb/>
campus isn't very large, there is a surplus of<lb/>
students crawling around. When I first came<lb/>
to ECU in the fall of 1985, enrollment was<lb/>
around 13,000. In less than eight years, that<lb/>
number has shot up by 5,000 students. If the<lb/>
pirates win another bowl game, ECU will<lb/>
have to build a second campus.<lb/>
This rise in enrollment comes inspiteof<lb/>
an increase in academic selectivity. The aver-<lb/>
age SAT score for this fall's freshman class<lb/>
was up a significant amount. This is a good<lb/>
thing, but it needs to increase more, to per-<lb/>
haps 1300 or 1,400. Then we could be called<lb/>
the Harvard of the South, actstuck up, move<lb/>
the campus to New Jersey, shout silly things<lb/>
like "Boolah, Boolah" at football games, md<lb/>
Well, mavbe raising SAT scores mat much<lb/>
isn't such a good idea after all.<lb/>
tfnomingelse.asimplerefreshercourse<lb/>
in etiquette would help conditions. People<lb/>
cannot stroll four abreast along a walkway<lb/>
that is onlv four feet wide without running<lb/>
on-coming pedestrians into the grass Side-<lb/>
walks and other paed walkways a re not tl it-<lb/>
proper spot for groups to stop and talk about<lb/>
how much beer they drank last night or who<lb/>
has the stupidest professor. Common sense<lb/>
should tell vou not to stop at the bottom of a<lb/>
crowded stairwell and conduct meetings.<lb/>
There are 18,000 other students trying to get<lb/>
up or down the stairs, so be courteous.<lb/>
Yet all of these qualms related to ECU s<lb/>
increased enrollment are insignificant com-<lb/>
pared to the real problems that exist. The<lb/>
inadequate space and resources in loyner<lb/>
Library hasbeenaround tor quite some time.<lb/>
While the student population has increased<lb/>
over the past several years, additions to the<lb/>
1 library have been on hold due to budgetary<lb/>
constraints. Fortunately it looks like ECU will<lb/>
be receiving state money to fund the much-<lb/>
needed renovation of Joyner.<lb/>
While having a large number of stu-<lb/>
dents on campus can be a major inconve-<lb/>
nience, overcrowding in the classroom is a<lb/>
more serious aspect of ECU's growth. Semi-<lb/>
nar-style classes and classes based tin work-<lb/>
shop formats, which should contain 10 or 15<lb/>
students, suiter when overloaded This may<lb/>
bean inaccurate perception, but it seems like<lb/>
the ratio of class sections offered to the num-<lb/>
berof students who need to take thoset lasses<lb/>
is inordinately high.<lb/>
In short, having enough applk ants to<lb/>
select from is a good thing on the whole. Yet<lb/>
when thenunirxTSbeetmea detriment to tIn-<lb/>
individual student, new priorities shoul I be<lb/>
addressed.<lb/>
<pb facs="00058419_0007"/><lb/>
The East Carolinian<lb/>
Lifestyle<lb/>
Page 7<lb/>
Chong to exhale on Attic<lb/>
'Reefer Madness' sure to infect Emerald City.<lb/>
By Danial Willis<lb/>
Photo courtesy of the Attic<lb/>
Tommy Chong, seen here in 1989's 'Far Out Man to play at the Attic<lb/>
on September 1st. Tickets on sale at Quicksilver Records.<lb/>
Staff Writer<lb/>
Tommy Chong, best known as<lb/>
half of the Cheech and Chong duo<lb/>
with CheechMarin, has hitthecom-<lb/>
edy circuit during the past couple<lb/>
years.<lb/>
Together they made such far<lb/>
out films as "Up In Smoke and<lb/>
"Still Smokin They also re-<lb/>
corded six gold albums, includ-<lb/>
ing one Grammy winner, "Big<lb/>
Bambu "Big Bambu" is consid-<lb/>
ered one of the biggest-selling<lb/>
comedy albums of all time.<lb/>
During the 70s and early 80s<lb/>
Cheech and Chong represented a<lb/>
burned-out counter culture. They<lb/>
split up in 1985 because Cheech<lb/>
wanted to change this image. In<lb/>
an interview with the Grand Rapid<lb/>
Press Chong replied: "Cheech<lb/>
wanted to get away from me. He<lb/>
didn't want the doper image. He<lb/>
wanted to go straight.<lb/>
Two years later, Chong de-<lb/>
cided to get involved in the stand-<lb/>
up comedy circuit. Chong real-<lb/>
izes that the comedy circuit is<lb/>
more suited for him than it once<lb/>
was. "Comedy now is much more<lb/>
acceptable Chong said to the<lb/>
Grand Rapid Press. "When I first<lb/>
started out, there just weren't<lb/>
many clubs<lb/>
Chong has been successful in<lb/>
creating fans with his off-color<lb/>
'Hard Target7 considered<lb/>
artistic, witty but predictable<lb/>
By Ike Shibley<lb/>
Staff Writer<lb/>
I must make some confes-<lb/>
sions.<lb/>
First, I rarely spend time<lb/>
watching martial arts films and<lb/>
canr.ot remember ever reviewing<lb/>
one. Occasionally I will succumb<lb/>
to the mindless, derivative sto-<lb/>
ries that pass as entertainment<lb/>
and usually feel somehow hol-<lb/>
low when the credits roll?like I<lb/>
should have been using my time<lb/>
more constructively.<lb/>
Secondly, I have never seen,<lb/>
nor had the desire to see, a Jean-<lb/>
Claude Van Damme film. Most<lb/>
reviews of his films emphasize<lb/>
the "bv-the-numbers" plots.<lb/>
Thus, nothing compelled me to<lb/>
spend time watching Van Damme<lb/>
battle some nefarious villain.<lb/>
The drawing card of the lat-<lb/>
est Van Damme vehicle, Hard<lb/>
Target, was the film's director,<lb/>
John Woo. Woo recently<lb/>
Emigrated from Hong Kong to Los<lb/>
Angeles, fearing the imminent<lb/>
changes there when China re-<lb/>
gainscontrol in 1997. Woo gained<lb/>
manv admirers while working in<lb/>
the Hong Kong film industry be-<lb/>
cause of his stylized ultra-vio-<lb/>
lence, most notably in The Killer.<lb/>
While I was aware that the<lb/>
storv in Hard Target lacked origi-<lb/>
nality, the prospect of seeing<lb/>
Woo's first American film proved<lb/>
too great a temptation and I went<lb/>
to see it.<lb/>
The plot of Hard Target has<lb/>
been repeated countless times be-<lb/>
ginning in 1932 with The Most<lb/>
Dangerous Game, which was itself<lb/>
an adaptation of a story by Rich-<lb/>
ard Connell.<lb/>
The story this time, takes<lb/>
place on the streets of New Or-<lb/>
leans instead of on an island like<lb/>
in the original. A businessman<lb/>
named Emil Fouchon (Lance<lb/>
Henriksen) arranges hunts for<lb/>
wealthy patrons. The quarry are<lb/>
homeless veterans living on the<lb/>
streets of New Orleans.<lb/>
A glitch occurs when a wrong<lb/>
man gets hunted. The man hap-<lb/>
pens to have a family. When his<lb/>
daughter, Natasha Binder (Yancy<lb/>
Butler, looking radiant but con-<lb/>
fused) starts looking for him,<lb/>
questions begin to surface. Be-<lb/>
cause Natasha knows little about<lb/>
Today: Sexual Abuse<lb/>
Question: How can a history<lb/>
of childhood sexual abuse affect<lb/>
my current life?<lb/>
Answer: Sexual abuse of<lb/>
young children and adolescents is<lb/>
recognized to be a common prob-<lb/>
lem in our society, and a number<lb/>
of both female and male college<lb/>
students continue to suffer from<lb/>
past experiences of sexual abuse.<lb/>
Forms of sexual abuse range from<lb/>
sexualized remarks or inappro-<lb/>
priate displays of affection, which<lb/>
cause feelings of discomfort, to<lb/>
fondling or intercourse. The of-<lb/>
fender may bea family member or<lb/>
stranger, and the event may occur<lb/>
once or repeatedly over a period<lb/>
of years. In many cases, there is a<lb/>
lasting impact on abused<lb/>
children's or adolescents' percep-<lb/>
tion of themselves and their reac-<lb/>
tions to others. This is both di-<lb/>
rectly due to the abuse and indi-<lb/>
rectly to their learned responses<lb/>
as well as their attempts to adapt<lb/>
to psychological trauma.<lb/>
Some survivors of sexual<lb/>
abuse may perform quite well aca-<lb/>
demically but create high levels of<lb/>
stress for themselves through ex-<lb/>
cessive perfectionism. Others may<lb/>
underachieve as a result, because<lb/>
they lack confidence in them-<lb/>
selves. Often, they gravitate to-<lb/>
ward careers in education or in<lb/>
helping professions, such as nurs-<lb/>
ing or social work. Despite exter-<lb/>
nal appearances, however, many<lb/>
feel that they are only projecting a<lb/>
facade of normality. Whatever<lb/>
their actual accomplishments may<lb/>
comedy style for the past 20 years<lb/>
and he doesn't plan to stop any<lb/>
time soon. As reported by the<lb/>
Vie St. Thomas Times, he replies<lb/>
"I'll be doing this until I'm like<lb/>
George Burns- except I'll be do-<lb/>
ing it with an unlit joint<lb/>
Three years ago, Chong re-<lb/>
leased a movie called "Far Out<lb/>
Man which he wrote and di-<lb/>
rected. His daughter Rae Dawn<lb/>
was also featured in the movie.<lb/>
But since then most of his<lb/>
time has been dedicated to stand-<lb/>
up. He once said in the Review<lb/>
Journal , " One of the reasons I<lb/>
went back is that I realized no<lb/>
body was doing what we were<lb/>
doing. We always had our little<lb/>
niche and I kind of missed it. No<lb/>
one's gonna do it until I do it. It's<lb/>
really great, because a lot of clubs<lb/>
I worked at had this 'no dope<lb/>
joke' policy until I walked in. I<lb/>
walked in there and that's my<lb/>
whole act<lb/>
He's performing two shows<lb/>
at the Attic Wednesday Septem-<lb/>
ber 1st at 7:00 and 10:00 p.m.<lb/>
If you are in the mood for some<lb/>
pretty off- the- wall, not to mention,<lb/>
famous humor?check it out.<lb/>
Tickets are on sale now at<lb/>
Quicksilver Records for $12. For<lb/>
more information about this or any<lb/>
upcoming event, at the Attic, call<lb/>
752-7303.<lb/>
Hillel invites I<lb/>
students to join<lb/>
New Orleans, she hires another<lb/>
homeless man, Chance<lb/>
Boudreaux (Van Damme), to help<lb/>
her.<lb/>
Luckily for her, and the plot,<lb/>
Chance turns out to be an expert<lb/>
in self-defense and in aggressive<lb/>
offense. He almost single-<lb/>
handedly uncovers the opera-<lb/>
tions?and almost single-<lb/>
handedly kills every man who<lb/>
tries to stop him.<lb/>
The trite story merely pro-<lb/>
vides a backdrop for Woo to craft<lb/>
his art. Admirers of this film genre<lb/>
will be treated to a first-rate artis-<lb/>
tic experience and will still be<lb/>
entertained.<lb/>
Woo uses slow-motion as a<lb/>
way to accentuate the action, to<lb/>
create a mood or to highlight the<lb/>
violence. Motorcycles move in<lb/>
slow-motion as do jaws that are<lb/>
being kicked and bullets that are<lb/>
being loaded.<lb/>
Concomitant with the slow-<lb/>
motion are loud noises that serve<lb/>
to increase the intensity of the<lb/>
motion. Grating sounds, blaring<lb/>
music and reverberating gun-<lb/>
See TARGET page 8<lb/>
Answered by Jennifer Philips<lb/>
Student Health Service<lb/>
be, they sense that they are inter-<lb/>
nally defective and different from<lb/>
others.<lb/>
Sexual abuse survivors fre-<lb/>
quently have difficulty with rela-<lb/>
tionships. Their shame and guilt<lb/>
about their past, together with<lb/>
their lifelong habit of keeping se-<lb/>
crets, will cause them to fear that<lb/>
others will not like them if they<lb/>
find out what they are "really like<lb/>
Not wanting to reveal themselves<lb/>
or to become vulnerable, they keep<lb/>
others at a distance, which can<lb/>
add to their feelings of disconnec-<lb/>
tion and isolation.<lb/>
Their insecurity may lead<lb/>
them to attempt to control others<lb/>
or to avoid conflict, preventing<lb/>
them from meeting their own<lb/>
needs. Sexuality may be problem-<lb/>
atic as a result of anxiety about the<lb/>
past. Thus, the abused may be<lb/>
hypersensitive to a partner's ac-<lb/>
tion, use of sex to gain approval,<lb/>
orsexual inhibition based on early<lb/>
See ABUSE page 10<lb/>
By Laura Wright<lb/>
Assistant Lifestyle Editor<lb/>
Hillel,a Jewish rabbi who lived<lb/>
100 years before the common era,<lb/>
stated the golden rule before Jesus<lb/>
Christ. Hillel wanted to teach all Jews,<lb/>
not just an elite few. It is appropriate<lb/>
that Hillel is also the name of the<lb/>
Jewish StudentOrganization at ECU.<lb/>
"There is a core group of stu-<lb/>
dents admitting that they're proud<lb/>
to be Jewish said Hillel's faculty<lb/>
advisor Adam Schonbrun. Now tl ie<lb/>
goal is to reach the rest of ECU's<lb/>
Jewish population. Schonbrun esti-<lb/>
mates that there are several hundred<lb/>
Jewish studentsat ECU and he hopes<lb/>
that by becoming involved in Hillel,<lb/>
they will be able to help provide a<lb/>
voice for their overlooked minority.<lb/>
Last spring, the organization<lb/>
hosted thedebutof the film TheShvitz<lb/>
and this year Hillel hopes to bring<lb/>
Jewish-American poet Milton<lb/>
Kessler to speak at ECU. Kessler co-<lb/>
founded the creative writing pro-<lb/>
gram at SUNY, Binghamton, with<lb/>
John Gardner. The Jewish Student<lb/>
Organization also has informal<lb/>
monthly meetings and social events<lb/>
such as bowling, pizza parties, pic-<lb/>
nics and movie outings.<lb/>
"It's a chance to socialize with<lb/>
people from our own tribe<lb/>
Schonbrun said. He hopes to teach a<lb/>
Hebrew language class at ECU in<lb/>
the not- to- distant future in order<lb/>
to help preserve and to transmit<lb/>
that aspect of Jewish culture.<lb/>
Schonbrun claims that Jews<lb/>
have a long history in the south<lb/>
and he notes that since he has<lb/>
lived in North Carolina, he has<lb/>
experienced very little anti-<lb/>
Semitism. He hopes that Jewish<lb/>
students will embrace their past<lb/>
and not be ashamed of their heri-<lb/>
tage.<lb/>
Schonbrun stresses that stu-<lb/>
dents have to make the first move<lb/>
because, unlike other minority<lb/>
groups, Jewishness is not out-<lb/>
wardly visible?it is not based<lb/>
upon some physical attribute like<lb/>
skin color. The Jewish population,<lb/>
is often excluded from minority<lb/>
affairs discussions because it does-<lb/>
notlooclikeaminority.Hopefully<lb/>
Hillel will raise awareness and'<lb/>
provide a voice for an overlooked<lb/>
community at ECU. Presently<lb/>
Hillel has about 20 members.<lb/>
If you are interested in join-i<lb/>
ing Hillel or finding out more about<lb/>
the organization, call Adam<lb/>
Schonbrun at 757-6781 (office) or<lb/>
758-4871 (home). Also, students;<lb/>
are invited to share dinner and<lb/>
HighHolidayserviceswirhmenv<lb/>
bers of Greenville's Jewish com-<lb/>
munity. If you are interested, call<lb/>
Carmela Zionit at 756-7821 for<lb/>
more information.<lb/>
Photo courtesy of Dahli Llama<lb/>
Charlotte-based Dahli Llama finally brought their tunes to Greenville. They made their debut with Dillon<lb/>
Fence last Friday at the Attic. This quintet hopes to capture the hearts of East Carolina music-lovers.<lb/>
Dahli Llama moving upward,<lb/>
expanding audience appeal<lb/>
By Kris Hoffler<lb/>
Staff Writer<lb/>
Since their forming in 1991,<lb/>
Dahli Llama has expanded their<lb/>
repertoire and fan base.<lb/>
Although their appearances<lb/>
in our part of the state, including<lb/>
the Research Triangle, have been<lb/>
few, the band is a popular attrac-<lb/>
tion at the beach and college<lb/>
towns of the Carolinas, Georgia<lb/>
and Tennessee.<lb/>
This past Saturday night was<lb/>
their first appearance in the<lb/>
Greenville area as an opening act<lb/>
for Dillon Fence at the Attic.<lb/>
Dahli Llama's sound is a mix-<lb/>
ture of retro-sixties psychedelic,<lb/>
blues, metal and a hefty helping<lb/>
of soul. Their music is quite dis-<lb/>
tinct and even has some gothic<lb/>
elements although the band says<lb/>
their heaviest influences are from<lb/>
the 60s and 70s psychedelia.<lb/>
The group is made up of mem-<lb/>
bers that had played in previous<lb/>
bands of the Charlotte area that<lb/>
vary in sound and style, yet they<lb/>
all work together well. Bill Kirch,<lb/>
guitarist, and Ann Johnson, key-<lb/>
boards, both previous members<lb/>
of The Wake, were the two<lb/>
founders of the band. The quintet<lb/>
was completed by vocalist Tara<lb/>
Busch, bassist Jason Ramirez and<lb/>
drummer Trey Walker.<lb/>
Their lyrics have a political<lb/>
and social edge that is reminiscent<lb/>
of the era from which they draw<lb/>
their inspiration.<lb/>
There is even a Pink Floyd<lb/>
type multi-media mixing in the<lb/>
song " How Do You Sleep?" with a<lb/>
sampling from a speech by George<lb/>
Bush on the Cold War.<lb/>
The band has accumulated<lb/>
a large fan base who return loy<lb/>
aily for their live shows. Their<lb/>
live performances are heralded<lb/>
as their forte, an experience of<lb/>
energy and passion that their<lb/>
music creates. Vocalist Tara<lb/>
Busch has been compared to the<lb/>
late Janis Joplin, which is prob-<lb/>
ably stretching it a bit, but you<lb/>
can't deny her obvious talen;<lb/>
There has been a big "buzl?'<lb/>
about this band since their first<lb/>
show at the 13-13 Club in Char-<lb/>
lotte back in 1991. Not since<lb/>
Fetchin' Bones have the hopes<lb/>
of success for a local band been<lb/>
so high.<lb/>
The future looks good for<lb/>
Dahli Llama, so keep an eye out<lb/>
for their first full- length CD and<lb/>
try to catch one of their live<lb/>
shows if you can.<lb/>
Governor Hunt to Address Greenville.<lb/>
Staff Reports<lb/>
The East Carolinian<lb/>
Governor Jim Hunt and two of<lb/>
the top education leaders in the<lb/>
country will address East Carolina<lb/>
University'sChancellor's Forum on<lb/>
September 16.<lb/>
The theme of the annual forum<lb/>
is "Supporting Community Lead-<lb/>
ers' Initiatives forQuality Sessions<lb/>
begin at 10 a.m. in ECU's<lb/>
MendenhallStudentCenterandare<lb/>
open to the public.<lb/>
Appearing with the North<lb/>
Carolina governor will be Or. Emest<lb/>
Bover, president of the Carnegie<lb/>
Foundation for the Advancement<lb/>
of Teaching, and William F. Winter,<lb/>
the former governor of Mississippi.<lb/>
Winter holds chair positionson<lb/>
both the Commission on the Future<lb/>
of the South and the Southern Re-<lb/>
gional Education Board. Bover. the<lb/>
former U.S. Commissioner of Edu-<lb/>
cation, leads the advisory group on<lb/>
School Readiness for the National<lb/>
Education Goals Panel.<lb/>
Bover will give the opening<lb/>
address. A response bv Dr. Cha rips<lb/>
Coble, dean of the ECU School pf<lb/>
Education, will follow.<lb/>
Governor Hunt will speak at<lb/>
noon and will field questions from<lb/>
the audience after completing his<lb/>
prepared remarks.<lb/>
Winter's address is at 2 p.m.<lb/>
See HUNT page 10<lb/>
<pb facs="00058419_0008"/><lb/>
August 31, 1993<lb/>
TARGET<lb/>
Continued from page 7<lb/>
0<lb/>
R<lb/>
N<lb/>
E<lb/>
R<lb/>
AREER jakv Advantage of<lb/>
Career Services<lb/>
ptions,<lb/>
;h your resume and interviewing skills, research part-<lb/>
time and summer jobs and register for comprehensive<lb/>
career planning sen ices'<lb/>
Career Services, ot course.<lb/>
Whatever your student classification, ou"ll lind<lb/>
invaluable aids to plan your career at Career Services.<lb/>
Career Decisions Room: Visit our On-campus Interviews: Register tor<lb/>
Career Decisions Room if you are our services to receive newsletters and<lb/>
undecided about a major or career path; participate in on-campus interviews h ith<lb/>
it offers lots of information add two whh companies from across the United<lb/>
computerized assessment tools. States.<lb/>
Career Days: Join your classmates at Summer and Part-time Jobs: Gain<lb/>
one of our Career Days where you can leads on pan-time or summer jobs;<lb/>
meet personally with represntatives from review our job boards and register. It's<lb/>
employers like Xerox, Duke Medical painiess.<lb/>
Center and various school systems.<lb/>
Employer Information Room:<lb/>
Investigate panicular employers by<lb/>
visiting our Employer Information Room.<lb/>
Workshops and Mock Interviews:<lb/>
Fine-tune your resume and job-<lb/>
interviewing skills. Attend our<lb/>
workshops or arrange for a videotaped<lb/>
mock interview.<lb/>
All these benefits and more are available through Career Services.<lb/>
Why not visit us at Bloxton House to plan your career strategy?<lb/>
shots till the theater. This aural<lb/>
flamboyance deviates from the<lb/>
usually visual experience of cin-<lb/>
ema . The effect jars the viewer and<lb/>
allows, the audience to view the<lb/>
violence as an intense form of po-<lb/>
etry.<lb/>
Woo creates many memorable<lb/>
scenes.<lb/>
One shot is combined with an<lb/>
edit in order to signal the viewer<lb/>
that the hero, Boudreaux, will<lb/>
evince little vulnerability and will<lb/>
be more akin to Superman than to<lb/>
any human.<lb/>
Woo places Van Damme in<lb/>
front of a car after he saves Yancy<lb/>
from being robbed. The sunlight,<lb/>
reflecting off the car's windshield,<lb/>
creates a halo effect around the<lb/>
hero. The very next shot is of an<lb/>
American flag in full frame. The<lb/>
overt symbolism is difficult to mis-<lb/>
interpret.<lb/>
The violence in Hard Target<lb/>
occurs often and explicitly. Yet<lb/>
the excessiveness tends to<lb/>
downplay the seriousness. The<lb/>
few deaths in Unforgiven disturb<lb/>
the viewer much more than the<lb/>
multitude of deaths in Hard Tar-<lb/>
get. In Hard Target, the killing oc-<lb/>
lS2l<lb/>
mmm&amp;i im&amp;m fm&amp;@M.<lb/>
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Mon-Fri, 11:30-2:30<lb/>
m<lb/>
"JBLUE PLANET LifeFoods )<lb/>
405 Evans St. Mall<lb/>
758-0850<lb/>
Hours 10-6, M-F; 10-5, Sat<lb/>
83 1 "Are you being served?"<lb/>
J7 Episcopal<lb/>
Student Fellowship<lb/>
Invites You to Join Us Each Week for<lb/>
rtAy r cc miracle - 'p oP ?J4k<lb/>
WEDNESDAY NIGHT SANITY BREAK FROM CAMPUS!<lb/>
? 530 pm Student Eucharist<lb/>
? Supper provided after service<lb/>
?ProgpmConversation after supper<lb/>
? Ada new friends to your life<lb/>
? Bring a friend with you!<lb/>
? Be a pan of a faith community<lb/>
Campus Minister. Marty Gartman<lb/>
home 355-5731 work 752-3482<lb/>
St. Paul's Episcopal Church ? 401 East 5th Street 752-3482<lb/>
Cross 5th street in front of Garrett Hall, walk down Holly Street and you are there!<lb/>
SEPTEMBER 7-8<lb/>
SEPTEMBER 10<lb/>
Actual Tryouts<lb/>
MIMES COLISEUM LOBBY<lb/>
7:00 PM<lb/>
For Information Call: 757-4672<lb/>
curs in comic-book manner, with<lb/>
lots of flash and style, but with<lb/>
little emotion. '<lb/>
Woo evokes comparison to<lb/>
Paul Verhoeven and Sam<lb/>
Peckinpah (whom many critics<lb/>
cite when writing about Woo).<lb/>
Woo, like Verhoeven (Robocop,<lb/>
Total Recall), fills his film with so<lb/>
much violence that the audience<lb/>
comes to expect it as natural,<lb/>
much like an audience expects<lb/>
characters to spontaneously<lb/>
break out in song for no reason<lb/>
in a musical. Woo's artistry<lb/>
sculpts the violence in Hard Tar-<lb/>
get into surrealistic beauty.<lb/>
Films like Hard Target will<lb/>
not appeal to everyone. But any-<lb/>
one who can appreciate style,<lb/>
grace and wit in a film genre so<lb/>
often filled with stagy and dull<lb/>
violence will marvel at Hard Tar-<lb/>
get.<lb/>
On a scale of one to 10, Hard<lb/>
Target rates a seven.<lb/>
Welcome Students<lb/>
CLEAN CLEAN CLEAN<lb/>
"Those Dirty Clothes'<lb/>
Jarvis Student Laundromat<lb/>
Wash .750<lb/>
Dry 250 (for 20 Mln. Smatl Dryers)<lb/>
Hours 7 am -10 pm Every Day<lb/>
Located near college on Jarvis<lb/>
Street, off of 5th Street!<lb/>
Carolina<lb/>
Friends <lb/>
K&amp;L<lb/>
TO<lb/>
<lb/>
fe<lb/>
Interest Meetings:<lb/>
August 30th, 31 st<lb/>
&amp; Sept 1 st<lb/>
BrewsterB305<lb/>
5:00 pm<lb/>
<lb/>
3<lb/>
c<lb/>
-i ?i<lb/>
-T<lb/>
eL&amp;<lb/>
t<lb/>
ft)" &amp;<lb/>
-rw<lb/>
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$PU<lb/>
WEDNESDAY<lb/>
LodiesEree<lb/>
$L50 Highballs<lb/>
FREEADMISSION TIL 10<lb/>
$1.00 Drafts<lb/>
FRI&amp;SAT<lb/>
Best of Dance, Rock &amp; 70's Music<lb/>
BEST REPRESENTED !<lb/>
FRATERNITYORSORORTTY<lb/>
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StartingSept 8lh<lb/>
Bikini Contest $1251st Prize<lb/>
$75 2nd Prize<lb/>
$50 3tdPrize<lb/>
Grand prize Tripjur Two to Cancun!<lb/>
<pb facs="00058419_0009"/><lb/>
? '<lb/>
?-?? ?III<lb/>
August 31, 1993<lb/>
The East Carolinian<lb/>
know your<lb/>
to say, even your<lb/>
states!<lb/>
In fact, not a single TV series<lb/>
on the fall schedule is set in any<lb/>
one of more than half of the United<lb/>
States That means one-third of<lb/>
the population won't have a<lb/>
single home-state TV show to call<lb/>
its own. This, according to a new<lb/>
survey called "Hometowns of<lb/>
Prime-Time TV compiled by the<lb/>
N.W. Aver advertising agencv.<lb/>
Numbers crunchers there<lb/>
concluded that in the fall lineup,<lb/>
urban areas remain vastly over-<lb/>
represented. Only 16 percent of<lb/>
all the nation's residents are city-<lb/>
dwellers, yet cities are the site of<lb/>
44 percent of all regular series,<lb/>
says the report.<lb/>
id dishonest on<lb/>
of site cities<lb/>
S will<lb/>
V ork City<lb/>
irea. Ninearesetin<lb/>
en in Chicago.<lb/>
Meanwhile, much of the na-<lb/>
tion. Including a wide swath of<lb/>
the heartland, will be out of sight<lb/>
and out of mind ? on the net-<lb/>
works, that is.<lb/>
Onlv one series has ventured<lb/>
across the sea: "Cafe Americain"<lb/>
is set in Taris.<lb/>
And'seaQuestDSV" ? well,<lb/>
that show takes place in the sea.<lb/>
In the past, TV shows whose<lb/>
locale didn't matter were set in a<lb/>
generic netherworld in some uni-<lb/>
dentified Midwestern state. And<lb/>
funny how often the town names<lb/>
ended in field ("Leave it to<lb/>
Beaver" took place in "May<lb/>
"Father Knows Best" took place<lb/>
in "Spring)<lb/>
On the other hand,<lb/>
Bostonians were, and probably<lb/>
always will be, proud to claim the<lb/>
highly indigenous "Cheers<lb/>
Change American money?<lb/>
NEW YORK (AP) ? Could<lb/>
you picture Elvis Preslev's famous<lb/>
sideburns on every U.S. quarter?<lb/>
What's that? Not a chance?<lb/>
Critics of the designs on U.S.<lb/>
coins have argued for years that<lb/>
the standard icons ? eagles,<lb/>
former presidents, various monu-<lb/>
ments ? are archaic at best and<lb/>
boring at worst.<lb/>
It's time for a change, says<lb/>
Alan M. Stahl, curator of medi-<lb/>
eval coins and of medals at the<lb/>
American Numismatic Society.<lb/>
"Our coins represent the aes-<lb/>
thetics and ideology of Ameri-<lb/>
cans before World War II he<lb/>
says. "It's time to do something<lb/>
The last time the U.S. Gov-<lb/>
ernment tried to tinker with its<lb/>
currency, in 1979, was an unmiti-<lb/>
gated disaster.<lb/>
Half the 857 million Susan B.<lb/>
Anthony $1 coins that were struck<lb/>
now sit uncirculated in the U.S.<lb/>
Mint and Federal Reserve Banks.<lb/>
"The Susan B. Anthonv fiasco<lb/>
illustrates the problem, not the<lb/>
solution says Stahl, noting that<lb/>
the coins were too close in size<lb/>
and shape to a quarter to be dis-<lb/>
tinguishable. "There's no ques-<lb/>
tion that a SI coin is an absolute<lb/>
necessity<lb/>
Stahl says it doesn't make<lb/>
sense to stick with coin designs<lb/>
that date back to the beginning of<lb/>
the century, when President<lb/>
Theodore Roosevelt successfully<lb/>
pushed for major changes.<lb/>
But there's a major sticking<lb/>
point: what would the new coins<lb/>
look like?<lb/>
"I'm not absolutely sure, if<lb/>
we take off all the dead white<lb/>
males, what we would put on<lb/>
them instead he says.<lb/>
"Native flora and fauna is<lb/>
about the only thing we could<lb/>
agree on<lb/>
Hey Pirates<lb/>
Do you need a little cash?<lb/>
Put your spare time to work!<lb/>
Now interviewing and accepting<lb/>
applications for full and part time<lb/>
positions at the<lb/>
WORLD'S NEWEST MCDONALD'S<lb/>
located at Bell's Fork in Greenville<lb/>
McDonald's<lb/>
Apply at McDonald's by Wal-Mart<lb/>
on Wed &amp; Thurs. between 2-5.<lb/>
See TV page 10<lb/>
Now Open!<lb/>
wm<lb/>
101 IB Charles Blvd.<lb/>
Greenville, NC 27858<lb/>
919 752-0551<lb/>
East Carolina's Trail &amp; Nature Shop<lb/>
"Our Trails Are Also On the Water"<lb/>
Patagonia<lb/>
LA<lb/>
ewiunie<lb/>
fmstian<lb/>
SJr<lb/>
-F<lb/>
Come join us every Thursday night at<lb/>
7:00 in the General Classroom Bldg.<lb/>
Room 1018.<lb/>
Everyone is welcome for fun fellowship<lb/>
and Bible study!<lb/>
For more information contact<lb/>
 Eddie Billiard at 830-6814<lb/>
WELCOME<lb/>
BACK STUDENTS<lb/>
HAMCS<lb/>
Old-fashioned<lb/>
Homemade<lb/>
CREAM<lb/>
7A&amp; Ice Cream,<lb/>
Yogurt &amp;<lb/>
Sorbet<lb/>
Hank's Homemade Ice Cream<lb/>
31G East 10th Street<lb/>
within walking distance from ECU<lb/>
758-0000<lb/>
BUY ONE-GET ONE<lb/>
FREE<lb/>
1 Item Blend-In<lb/>
coupon expires September 10,1993<lb/>
All Lifestyle writers must show up<lb/>
Wednesday at3:30 for the meeting<lb/>
or well file your teeth down.<lb/>
Our Eyeglass Packages<lb/>
Include A Few Things<lb/>
You Cant See.<lb/>
FREE<lb/>
ULTRAVIOLET<lb/>
PROTECTION<lb/>
Sometimes whatyoucantseeCAN<lb/>
hurt you! Research has shown that<lb/>
ultraviolet radiation can cause skin<lb/>
cancer as well as cataracts and other<lb/>
eye disorders. The Doctors at Doc-<lb/>
tors Vision Center believe that ultravio-<lb/>
let protection is no longer an option in<lb/>
a pair of glasses, but necessary for<lb/>
long term vision health. So, with the<lb/>
purchase of any pair of glasses at<lb/>
Doctors Vision Center, you receive<lb/>
bothultravioletprotectionandascratch<lb/>
DodorsV<lb/>
FREE<lb/>
SCRATCH RESISTANT<lb/>
COATING<lb/>
resistant coating at no extra charge. Just<lb/>
part of what we call Total Vision Care.<lb/>
So whether you choose one of our<lb/>
Doctors Value Packages starting at<lb/>
$79.95 or a Christian Diorframe from our<lb/>
fashion collection you receive the same<lb/>
high quality lenses with built in ultraviolet<lb/>
and scratch resistant protection all at<lb/>
prices guaranteed to be the lowest.<lb/>
Doctors Vision CenterWe Put The<lb/>
Doctor in Vision Care.<lb/>
OD<lb/>
PA<lb/>
Drs. HoHis, Watson and Glendenning<lb/>
499 E. Greenville Boulevard<lb/>
756-9404<lb/>
Schoiakmk Available<lb/>
QjARANIEED JOBS<lb/>
ATTENTION:<lb/>
ECU Math Computer Science, Physics, and Nursing Majors. Air Force<lb/>
ROTC has second and third year scholarships available!<lb/>
Requirements<lb/>
At least a 2.65 GPA(full time status).<lb/>
Pass Air Force Officers Qualifying Test, medical exams, and fitness test.<lb/>
Enroll in AFROTC.<lb/>
Scholarship Benefits<lb/>
Pays tuition, most fees, books and $100 per month tax free.<lb/>
After Graduation<lb/>
Receive commission as Second Lieutenant in the Air Force. Starting salary<lb/>
over $25,000, rising to over $41,000 in just four years (does not include tax<lb/>
break worth thousands annually). Free medical and dental benefits.<lb/>
THESE BENEFITS ARE WAITING FOR<lb/>
THOSE WHO QUALIFY!<lb/>
GET ON THE GROUND FLOOR!<lb/>
For more information, contact Captain Steve Cooke<lb/>
307 Wright Annex 757-6597<lb/>
Leadership Excellence Starts Here<lb/>
<pb facs="00058419_0010"/><lb/>
?<lb/>
August 31, 1993<lb/>
IUN<lb/>
(.jjyt:<lb/>
ABUSE<lb/>
tunitv tor busii vemment,<lb/>
education and community leaders<lb/>
to discuss issues and concerns oi<lb/>
eastern North Carolina.<lb/>
Dr. Henry I 'eel, a School ot Edu-<lb/>
cation faculty member, is serving as<lb/>
the forum's director. For more in-<lb/>
formation, call 919-757-6862.<lb/>
. m Cont'd from<lb/>
TV Page9<lb/>
omething<lb/>
 ied by<lb/>
itmares; some<lb/>
. Jo ?hol, drugs,orfood<lb/>
imb their pain.<lb/>
mily relationships typically<lb/>
remain troubled, involving pro-<lb/>
found feelings ol loss and sadness<lb/>
for the happy family and child-<lb/>
hood that they never had. Their<lb/>
continuing wish to change how-<lb/>
things are (and were) may inter-<lb/>
fere with the normal development<lb/>
Continued from page 7<lb/>
of a survivor's identity and inde-<lb/>
pendence during college.<lb/>
If you find yourself reflected<lb/>
in these descriptions and would<lb/>
like to learn more about issues<lb/>
faced bv survivors of childhood<lb/>
sexual abuse, you may want to<lb/>
attend a workshop offered jointly<lb/>
bytheECL'CounsehngCenterand<lb/>
Mental Health Services. For an in-<lb/>
dividual appointment, call either<lb/>
the Counseling Center (757-6661)<lb/>
or Mental Health Services (757-<lb/>
6795).<lb/>
The East Carolinian is now<lb/>
accepting applications for Sports<lb/>
Writers, TEC is located across<lb/>
from Joyner Library in the<lb/>
Student Pubs. Building.<lb/>
Now that it's off prime time, Se-<lb/>
attle residents are surely ready to<lb/>
embrace its new spinoff,<lb/>
"Frasier Never mind that both<lb/>
series claim their real home in a<lb/>
Paramount Pictures soundstage<lb/>
in Hollywood.<lb/>
But then, the state for most<lb/>
series locations is only a state of<lb/>
mind. For instance, of New York<lb/>
City'sbig 13, only one?the gritty<lb/>
"Law &amp; Order" ? is actually<lb/>
filmed on its mean streets.<lb/>
The new "Against theGrain"<lb/>
is set in Sumpter, Texas, and has a<lb/>
sun-kissed, rura 1 look. (It's filmed<lb/>
in L.A.) "Picket Fences" is set in<lb/>
Rome, Wise, and has a warm,<lb/>
homey feel. (It's filmed in L.A.<lb/>
"Murder, She Wrote" is set in<lb/>
Cabot Cove, Maine, and looks so<lb/>
real it makes you hungry for lob<lb/>
ster. (It, too, is filmed in L.A.)<lb/>
Not that cameras never ven<lb/>
ture out of studios in Tinseltown<lb/>
for location shooting. Sparta,<lb/>
Miss comes to life in Covington,<lb/>
Ga where "In the Heat of the<lb/>
Night" is filmed. Willow Springs,<lb/>
Ga which as everybody knows<lb/>
is "Matlock's" hometown, is ac-<lb/>
tually Wilmington, N.C.<lb/>
"Northern Exposure" has<lb/>
been a double feature, bringing<lb/>
almost as much attention to Wash<lb/>
ington State, where that show is<lb/>
filmed, as to Alaska, where it's<lb/>
set.<lb/>
INTERVARSITY<lb/>
CHRISTIAN<lb/>
FELLOWSHIP<lb/>
Every Weanesaay Night<lb/>
at 7:00 pm In G.C. 1032<lb/>
It's a ran thing:<lb/>
with skits, music ana<lb/>
irienas!<lb/>
EVERYONE IS<lb/>
WELCOME<lb/>
SOCIETY<lb/>
FOR ADVANCEMENT<lb/>
OF MANAGEMENT<lb/>
Right now, while you're in college you can<lb/>
? gain management experience<lb/>
? make valuable business contacts<lb/>
? strengthen your resume with a weil respected<lb/>
professional credential<lb/>
? meet with students and professionals who share<lb/>
similar interests<lb/>
It can all happen to you when you join your local<lb/>
camp-s chapter of S A M<lb/>
If you are considering membership in SAM, please attend an informal meet-<lb/>
ing and refreshments on Tuesday, August 31, at 3:30 pm in GCB 1028.<lb/>
SAM is open to all majors interested in management<lb/>
For more information about membership, please contact<lb/>
Paula Cuthrell 355-8023<lb/>
or<lb/>
Dr. Rick Herbert GCB 3108,757-6582<lb/>
Chapter V.P. Membership<lb/>
DISTINGU<lb/>
MEMBER<lb/>
LIVE<lb/>
AND<lb/>
LEARN.<lb/>
We've made it a lot easier.<lb/>
Your biggest concern as a student should be your studies ? not the cost of a checking<lb/>
account. East Carolina Bank has taken care of that expense for you.<lb/>
With our University Club Checking account, any full-time student ts eligible tor a<lb/>
checking account which provides unlimited 24-hour banking at any automatic teller machine at<lb/>
no extra charge, no-fee traveler's checks and a free order of 50 checks.<lb/>
If you maintain a $100 minimum balance in the account, there are no service charges.<lb/>
We also don't limit your checkwriting or ATM withdrawals.<lb/>
Make life easier. Try University Club Checking.<lb/>
'Hie<lb/>
East Carolina Bank<lb/>
Comer of Arlington Boulevard 6 Red Bankb Road<lb/>
(919) 355-8200<lb/>
?Minimum balance required is100 or average balance ofW0 If balance requirement is M .t<lb/>
met, fees assessed are: $5 per month and $.35 per debit.<lb/>
Member FDIC<lb/>
ULTIMATE<lb/>
Eye Exam, Fitting &amp; Contact Lenses<lb/>
Includes a comprehensive eye exam by our family doctor of<lb/>
Optometry. You will be fit with a three month supply of SUREVUE<lb/>
contact lenses or ACUVUE disposable contact lenses (12<lb/>
lenses). As an added value, you receive a three month OPTI-<lb/>
FREE Solution Kit byAlcon.<lb/>
m<lb/>
00<lb/>
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No Other Discounts Apply ? Brand Names You Trust<lb/>
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-???.). H'SH??M'IL?'M?<lb/>
-I ?tJ).vji.iJM?WW" w<lb/>
 . ? i mm<lb/>
?r?"<lb/>
<pb facs="00058419_0011"/><lb/>
The East Carolinian<lb/>
Sports<lb/>
Page 11<lb/>
Offense and defense display consistency<lb/>
MnJI<lb/>
Logan happy with team's progress<lb/>
Photo by Cedric Van Buren<lb/>
Freshman quarterback Marcus Crandell controlled the ba<lb/>
for 205 yards, one touchdown and no interceptions.<lb/>
II well in Saturday's scrimmage. He threw<lb/>
(SID) ? East Carolina's foot-<lb/>
ball squad underwent a 110-play,<lb/>
two-hour scrimmage Saturday af-<lb/>
ternoon in Ficklen Stadium.<lb/>
Pirate coach Steve Logan<lb/>
seemed pleased at the consis-<lb/>
tency of his squad after the work-<lb/>
out, played in mid-90 degree tem-<lb/>
peratures.<lb/>
"I was pleased with our per-<lb/>
formance, especially the consis-<lb/>
tency, on both sides of the foot-<lb/>
ball said Logan. "On offense,<lb/>
we were able to take care of the<lb/>
football, and on defense, we did<lb/>
not give up any big plays<lb/>
Headlining the scrimmage<lb/>
was redshirt freshman quarter-<lb/>
back Marcus Crandell. The<lb/>
Robersonville,N.C, native com-<lb/>
pleted 23 of 38 passes for 205<lb/>
yards with one touchdown and<lb/>
no interceptions. Crandell took<lb/>
most of the sna ps at quarterback,<lb/>
with true freshman Perez<lb/>
Mattison attempting the next<lb/>
most passes with six.<lb/>
Crandell's touchdown was<lb/>
a 4-yard pass to senior Morris<lb/>
Letcher, who caught six passes<lb/>
for 46 yards on the afternoon.<lb/>
Crandell also rushed for a<lb/>
touchdown on a 5-yard run.<lb/>
Junior running back Junior<lb/>
Smith led all rushers with 67<lb/>
yards on 17 carries, including a<lb/>
5-yard touchdown run. Smith<lb/>
also had one fumble, the only<lb/>
turnover in the scrimmage for<lb/>
the Pirate offense.<lb/>
"This scrimmage shows me<lb/>
that we have improved during<lb/>
the last several weeks said<lb/>
Logan. "With the consistency<lb/>
shown in this scrimmage, I feel,<lb/>
with the eight practices we have<lb/>
left, we can increase our level of<lb/>
play even more<lb/>
Junior college transfer Willie<lb/>
Brookins, a defensive end, suf-<lb/>
fered a sprained ankle during<lb/>
the scrimmage, the only major<lb/>
injury during the workout. Jun-<lb/>
ior running back Damon Wilson<lb/>
has been suffering from<lb/>
tendonitis in his knee and sat<lb/>
out of the scrimmage.<lb/>
Sophomore running back<lb/>
JerrisMcPhail had another good<lb/>
afternoon catching the football.<lb/>
TheClinton, N.C native led all<lb/>
receivers with seven catches for<lb/>
44 yards.<lb/>
Freshman Chad Holcomb<lb/>
connected on one of three field<lb/>
goals, one a 37-yarder. Junior<lb/>
college transfer Bill Wilson av-<lb/>
eraged 38.4 yards on five punts.<lb/>
Defensively, Sean Turner<lb/>
recorded two tackles for losses<lb/>
and a pass deflection and Jeff<lb/>
Cooke also had a sack and<lb/>
tackle for loss. Lamont Burns,<lb/>
Brian Williams, Morris Fore-<lb/>
man and Bernard Carter also<lb/>
had tackles behind the line of<lb/>
scrimmage.<lb/>
ECU will work out today,<lb/>
before itsnext major scrimmage<lb/>
on Wednesday night in Ficklen<lb/>
Stadium. It will be the last ma-<lb/>
jor scrimmage before the l'irates<lb/>
open the season Sept. 9 against<lb/>
Syracuse.<lb/>
Student football tickets available<lb/>
(SID) ? The 1993 East Caro-<lb/>
lina football season is right around<lb/>
the comer and many students<lb/>
have questions concerning tick-<lb/>
ets.<lb/>
Each student has the oppor-<lb/>
tunity to get a free student ticket<lb/>
by showing their ECU ID when<lb/>
picking up tickets at Mendenhall<lb/>
Student Center (11 a.m. - 6 p.m.)<lb/>
and Athletic Ticket Office (8 a.m.<lb/>
- 5 p.m.) in Minges Coliseum.<lb/>
Students may present their<lb/>
ID and one other valid ID when<lb/>
picking up student tickets during<lb/>
the designated student pickup<lb/>
days. Student tickets are distrib-<lb/>
uted on a first-come, first-serve<lb/>
basis until student allotments are<lb/>
exhausted.<lb/>
Student guest tickets are avail-<lb/>
able at half-price on a first-come,<lb/>
first-serve limited basis. Once the<lb/>
half-price guest ticket supply is<lb/>
exhausted, all purchased tickets<lb/>
will be available at full price.<lb/>
For the Sept. 9 nationally-tele-<lb/>
vised (ESPN) Syracuse game,<lb/>
regular student pickup dates are<lb/>
Fri Sept.3,Tue Sept. 7and Wed<lb/>
Sept. 8. Group pickup day is Thu<lb/>
Sept. 2.<lb/>
Regular student pickup days<lb/>
for the Central Florida, Memphis<lb/>
State, Louisiana Tech and Tulsa<lb/>
games will be Tuesday through<lb/>
Thursday of game week. Monday<lb/>
will be group pickup day for these<lb/>
games.<lb/>
Any student tickets not<lb/>
picked up during these desig-<lb/>
nated days will be available to be<lb/>
purchased by anyone beginning<lb/>
on the following day.<lb/>
If student allotments are ex-<lb/>
hausted during student pick-up<lb/>
days, students may have the op-<lb/>
portunity to obtain a free ticket<lb/>
with a valid ECU ID on the morn-<lb/>
ing of the gameif any unsold tick-<lb/>
ets remain available.<lb/>
For away games, tickets can<lb/>
also be purchased at the Athletic<lb/>
Ticket Office.<lb/>
All students are reminded<lb/>
that ECU IDs will be checked at<lb/>
the stadium gates as you enter the<lb/>
stadium on game day. Ficklen Sta-<lb/>
dium gates will open two hours<lb/>
prior to the scheduled kickoff.<lb/>
Linebacker quits<lb/>
football team<lb/>
(AP) ? Eric Myers, a senior<lb/>
and projected starteratlinebacker<lb/>
for East Carolina in 1993, left the<lb/>
program last week.<lb/>
No reason was given for<lb/>
Myers' departure.<lb/>
Myers was a starter on the<lb/>
defensive line at the start of the<lb/>
1992 season, but a knee injury in<lb/>
the South Carolina game benched<lb/>
him for the year and earned him<lb/>
an extra year of eligibility.<lb/>
The 6-foot-4, 248-pounder<lb/>
cametoEastCarolinafromGrand<lb/>
Rapids Junior College in Michi-<lb/>
gan prior to the 1991 season. In<lb/>
'he Pirates' 1991 season, he had<lb/>
14 tackles as a linebacker and de-<lb/>
fensive tackle. In his three games<lb/>
last vear, he had 10 tackles.<lb/>
Tarheels stomp USC<lb/>
Eric<lb/>
Myers<lb/>
ANAHEIM, Calif. (AP) ?<lb/>
Southern Cal is seeking a return<lb/>
to the national spotlight. North<lb/>
Carolina's program wants it for<lb/>
the first time.<lb/>
Between them, the two<lb/>
schools have produced the most<lb/>
1,000-yard rushers in college foot-<lb/>
ball history. Butthe biggestnames<lb/>
? O.J. Simpson, Marcus Allen,<lb/>
Charles White, Mike Garrett ?<lb/>
went to Southern Cal.<lb/>
Two North Carolina tailbacks<lb/>
named Johnson ? Leon and<lb/>
Curtis ? are out to change that.<lb/>
They helped No. 20 North Caro-<lb/>
lina to a 31-9 victory over the<lb/>
18th-ranked Trojans in the Pig-<lb/>
skin Classic on Sunday night.<lb/>
"Hopefully, this victory goes<lb/>
a long way in giving us the re-<lb/>
spect that we feel we deserve<lb/>
said Leon Johnson, UNC's lead-<lb/>
ing rusher with 94 yards on 10<lb/>
carries. "We came into Southern<lb/>
Cal's backyard and beat them<lb/>
The Tar Heels spoiled John<lb/>
Robinson's return as USC coach<lb/>
after a 10-year absence.<lb/>
The loss was USC's second<lb/>
straight at Anaheim Stadium.<lb/>
Fresno State defeated the Trojans<lb/>
24-7 in the Freedom Bowl last sea-<lb/>
son, which led to Larry Smith's<lb/>
firing and Robinson's return.<lb/>
"We expect to get back to the<lb/>
top Robinson said. "We obvi-<lb/>
ously have some problems, but I<lb/>
think a lot of these are solvable<lb/>
North Carolina coach Mack<lb/>
Brown wasn't sure who would<lb/>
replace tailback Natrone Means<lb/>
when the 1,000-yard rusher en-<lb/>
tered the NFL draft after his jun-<lb/>
ior year.<lb/>
Curtis Johnson was used spar-<lb/>
ingly last season behind Means.<lb/>
Leon Johnson came to UNC as a<lb/>
quarterback, moving to tailback<lb/>
when Means departed. The<lb/>
Johnsons are not related.<lb/>
"There was a lot of pressure<lb/>
See UNC page 12<lb/>
Baseball swings more than bats this summer<lb/>
(AP) ? Being involved in a<lb/>
basebrawl this season means<lb/>
never having to say you're sorry.<lb/>
Listen to what two of the<lb/>
three managers serving suspen-<lb/>
sions for taking part in separate<lb/>
incidents had to say over the<lb/>
weekend:<lb/>
"It just proves again, turn<lb/>
the other cheek and the other<lb/>
cheek gets slapped Oakland's<lb/>
Tony La Russa said.<lb/>
"I won't let these kids get<lb/>
abused. I won't let them run over<lb/>
these voungkids. The Pittsburgh<lb/>
Pirates Jim Leyland went out<lb/>
of his way to make clear, "will<lb/>
not be intimidated<lb/>
To be completely fair about<lb/>
it, Leyland did allow a moment<lb/>
later that he was "embarrassed"<lb/>
bv the suspension and how, while<lb/>
Never'is a bad word, I doubt it<lb/>
will ever happen again<lb/>
La Russa, for his part, may<lb/>
not have been thinking about re-<lb/>
taliation when he updated the<lb/>
biblical line about turning the<lb/>
other cheek. But it popped up in<lb/>
the middle of a long harangue<lb/>
that started with the inequality<lb/>
of American League justice, and<lb/>
ended with the suggestion that<lb/>
Milwaukee's B.J. Surhoff, who<lb/>
got hammered pretty good in the<lb/>
A's-Brewers confrontation that<lb/>
earned the <lb/>
ballplayers who work for them,<lb/>
has become the rule and not the<lb/>
exception.<lb/>
Beginning with spring train-<lb/>
ing games and stretching into last<lb/>
week, baseball's tight schedule<lb/>
put boxing's heavyweight divi-<lb/>
 sion to<lb/>
u<lb/>
suspensions,<lb/>
got what he<lb/>
deserved.<lb/>
The atti-<lb/>
tude that<lb/>
comes<lb/>
through both<lb/>
conversa-<lb/>
tions ? fight<lb/>
first, let the<lb/>
league offices<lb/>
sort out the<lb/>
casualties ?<lb/>
is the same,<lb/>
and it's the mimmm<lb/>
wrong one, especially from men<lb/>
who are supposed to be cooling<lb/>
things down, not heating them<lb/>
up. The troubling thing is that<lb/>
the attitude espoused by La Russa<lb/>
and Leyland, and most of the<lb/>
J<lb/>
shame.<lb/>
This is the<lb/>
first season<lb/>
anyone can<lb/>
remember<lb/>
where you<lb/>
n e e d e d<lb/>
your fin-<lb/>
gers AND<lb/>
toes to keep<lb/>
count. And<lb/>
file cards to<lb/>
properly<lb/>
document<lb/>
??1?"? the really<lb/>
weird ones And medical charts<lb/>
to keep track of the increasingly<lb/>
destructive ones.<lb/>
There was old Nolan Ryan<lb/>
raining noogies on young Robin<lb/>
 entura's head. There was Kan<lb/>
It just proves<lb/>
again, turn the<lb/>
other cheek and<lb/>
the other cheek<lb/>
gets slapped.<lb/>
Tony La Russa<lb/>
Okland As<lb/>
sas City's Brian McRae, son of<lb/>
Royals manager Hal McRae,<lb/>
breaking from tradition and<lb/>
storming into the Texas dugout<lb/>
to get at opposing manager Kevin<lb/>
Kennedv. There were the two<lb/>
bench-clearing brawls between<lb/>
the Pirates and Phils on the same<lb/>
day, followed bv a Pirates-Cubs<lb/>
extravaganza the very next day.<lb/>
And then there was the distance-<lb/>
going affair between Baltimore<lb/>
and Seattle in which the Mari-<lb/>
ners' Chris Bosio injured his col-<lb/>
larbone and the Orioles' Cal<lb/>
Ripken wrenched a knee badly<lb/>
enough to consider ending his<lb/>
consecutive-game streak.<lb/>
The explanations for this out-<lb/>
break have been almost as var-<lb/>
ied:<lb/>
An increase in the number of<lb/>
batters leaning over the plate-<lb/>
while trving to hit the ball the<lb/>
other way. An increase in the<lb/>
number of pitchers throwing in-<lb/>
side. An increase in the number<lb/>
See A's page 14<lb/>
Smith rushes to<lb/>
meet challenges<lb/>
By Brian Olson<lb/>
Assistant Sports Editor<lb/>
It is not very often that you run<lb/>
across a running back like Junior<lb/>
Smith. He is proof that determina-<lb/>
tion and hard work can pay off if<lb/>
you reallv want it to, no matter how<lb/>
big or small you are. He is a good<lb/>
example for many young people to<lb/>
lcxik up to.<lb/>
Smith stands at only five feet,<lb/>
six inches tall and stands a chance at<lb/>
being an All-American standout in<lb/>
only his junior year. Most players at<lb/>
his position are typically six feet tall,<lb/>
but there are some exceptions like<lb/>
professional Barn Sanders, who<lb/>
Smith admires.<lb/>
Smith makes up for his size<lb/>
with his incredible strength and<lb/>
speed. 1 leonly weighs 174 pounds<lb/>
and can bench press 325 pounds?<lb/>
almost twice his body weight. The<lb/>
average person should be able to<lb/>
bench their own weight. He squats<lb/>
more weight than most lineman<lb/>
can. His 630 pounds is an all-time<lb/>
best forECT. running backs.<lb/>
1 lis physical condition is one<lb/>
reason he gained 1,037 yards rush-<lb/>
ing (5.b v a ids per carry) last season.<lb/>
1 le was (he first Buc to rush for over<lb/>
,(XXl yards in a season since 1W.<lb/>
However, conditioning alone<lb/>
can not litt someone to the level<lb/>
Smith has reached.<lb/>
"1 work hard and pay the price<lb/>
because I know th.it hard w arkpays<lb/>
off Smith said. I always believe<lb/>
that if vou want something you<lb/>
have to be totally dedicated and go<lb/>
after it 100 percent<lb/>
"My father and mother really<lb/>
motivated me a lot when I was<lb/>
younger and told me that if set<lb/>
vour goals early, you can do any-<lb/>
thing you want. Thev kept push-<lb/>
ing me and 1 had Cod in my life<lb/>
Now, Smith derh es motiva-<lb/>
tion from another source<lb/>
"I'm dedicating thisseason to<lb/>
my son Smith said. "He keeps<lb/>
me going. When I talk to him, he<lb/>
makes me want to go out and do<lb/>
the best I can provide tor him. I<lb/>
want to make him proud of me<lb/>
like my father did for me<lb/>
Smith was a standout at 11<lb/>
Smith 1 ughSchooI in Fayette ille,<lb/>
N.C. He lettered three seasons in<lb/>
football and track. 1 le led the state<lb/>
inaLshing.is,wnior,gaining2,454<lb/>
yards and scoring 2M IDs. It was<lb/>
the second highest rushing total in<lb/>
state history.<lb/>
The transition from high<lb/>
school to college seemed ease for<lb/>
Smith.<lb/>
"It was one ol my goals to<lb/>
come in and play as a freshman<lb/>
atul it waon nationally television.<lb/>
It was a great feeling<lb/>
I ast season, Smith said, the<lb/>
Pirateshadproblemswithplayers<lb/>
who werqustconcemed for them-<lb/>
selves and their individual statis-<lb/>
tics. There was not enough coop-<lb/>
eration for ECU to be successful.<lb/>
See JR page 13<lb/>
P<lb/>
<pb facs="00058419_0012"/><lb/>
August 31, 1993<lb/>
Continued from page 11<lb/>
Sports writers meeting today at 3:30 p.m.<lb/>
Be litere or beware.<lb/>
<lb/>
<lb/>
e w?: w ere<lb/>
tryouts<lb/>
 n believed a<lb/>
man, alsovictory1 pro ide a huge<lb/>
caught foui passes for 35. CurtisLxxiM Ui his school's rising pro-<lb/>
Johnson gained 78 yards on 17gram.<lb/>
tad some big plays from<lb/>
our tailbacks, which was a con-<lb/>
cern coming in Brown said.<lb/>
Southern Cal's running game<lb/>
was dealt a major blow when its<lb/>
best rusher, Dwight McFadden,<lb/>
broke his left ankle late in the first<lb/>
quarter. He'll undergo surgery<lb/>
and be out for three months. The<lb/>
sophomore gained 44 yards on<lb/>
seven carries.<lb/>
Losing McFadden puts a snag<lb/>
in Robinson's plan to reinstitute<lb/>
the ground game that helped make<lb/>
the Trojans famous.<lb/>
Scott Fields, Deon Strother<lb/>
and freshman David Dotson were<lb/>
rotated in as replacements. Dotson<lb/>
finished as the Trojans' leading<lb/>
"Hopefully this game will<lb/>
give us national recognition he<lb/>
said. "At North Carolina, people<lb/>
talk about tradition, and we have<lb/>
trouble getting our name men-<lb/>
tioned in that group<lb/>
After Sou thernCal control led<lb/>
the first quarterbehind McFadden,<lb/>
the remainder of the game be-<lb/>
longed to North Carolina. Fields<lb/>
fumbled on a hit by Ray Jacobs,<lb/>
who recovered. Marcus Wall fol-<lb/>
lowed with a 6-yard TD run that<lb/>
gave the Tar Heels a 21-3 lead.<lb/>
Tripp Pignetti kicked a 26-<lb/>
yard field goal on the first play of<lb/>
the fourth quarter and William<lb/>
Henderson scored from 8 yards<lb/>
out as North Carolina took a 31-3<lb/>
lead.<lb/>
Ivlcr Cashman gave South-<lb/>
ern Cal a late TD when he caught<lb/>
a 5-yard pass from Rob lehnson.<lb/>
Cole Ford's point-after was<lb/>
blocked by Troy Barnett.<lb/>
The Johnsons staked the Tar<lb/>
Heels to a 14-3 halftime lead.<lb/>
Leon scored from 19yardsout<lb/>
early in the second quarter for a 7-<lb/>
0 lead.<lb/>
Curtis took a pitchout from<lb/>
lasonStanicek and ran three yards<lb/>
for their second touchdown.<lb/>
A penalty killed the Trojans'<lb/>
chance to tie the game midway<lb/>
through the quarter. Rob<lb/>
Johnson's 16-yard passtojohnnie<lb/>
Morton in the end zone was nulli-<lb/>
fied due to an ineligible receiver<lb/>
downfield.<lb/>
Southern Cal settled lor a 27-<lb/>
vard field goal by Ford.<lb/>
Another Trojan left the game<lb/>
in the first quarter. Safety Mike<lb/>
Salmon, brother of California An-<lb/>
gels outfielder Tim Salmon,<lb/>
bruised his left shoulder and did<lb/>
not return.<lb/>
The loss reminded Robinson<lb/>
of his debut as Southern Cal coach<lb/>
in 1976. Missouri trounced the<lb/>
heavily favored Trojans 46-25, re-<lb/>
sulting in immediate criticism. He<lb/>
eventually had the last word as<lb/>
the Trojans went on to win their 11<lb/>
remaining games and the Rose<lb/>
Bowl.<lb/>
Of his second debut, Robinson<lb/>
said, "It was fun for a while, but it<lb/>
got less fun as it went on<lb/>
FREE PREGNANCY TEST<lb/>
while yen wail<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/>
Greem ille NC 8:30-3:30<lb/>
ATTIC<lb/>
DOGWOOD HOLLOW<lb/>
APARTMENTS<lb/>
1108 E. 10th Street, 2 Blocks from ECU campus. Brand new-<lb/>
completion dale: July 93.<lb/>
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Open 8:30-5:30 M-F<lb/>
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IN THE NEVER ENDING BATTLE.<lb/>
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EVERY Wl !Nt-SOAY<lb/>
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GREENVILLE TIMES READERS' POLL<lb/>
Tuesday, Aueust 31<lb/>
THEATTIC UNPLUGGED<lb/>
$2.00 Admission For Members<lb/>
$1.50 Imports. $1.50 Highballs, $1.50 32oz Draft<lb/>
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?Th<lb/>
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BREAKFAST:<lb/>
Cheese Biscuits<lb/>
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Biscuit and Gravy<lb/>
Breakfast Plates<lb/>
Country Omelets<lb/>
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EVERYDAY ITEMS<lb/>
6 a.m9 p.m.<lb/>
Monday-Saturday<lb/>
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Monday<lb/>
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Wednesday:<lb/>
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Fridays<lb/>
Saturday;<lb/>
Baited Chicken and Rke<lb/>
Beef Tips and Rke<lb/>
Chicken and Pastry<lb/>
BBQ Chicken<lb/>
BBQ Pork Chops<lb/>
Country Style Steak<lb/>
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SAT. SEPTEMBER 4, 1993 IN GREENVILLE. WE RESERVE THE RIGHT TO LIMIT QUANTITIES.<lb/>
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Welcome<lb/>
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L10 YEAR W<lb/>
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1883-1993<lb/>
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<pb facs="00058419_0013"/><lb/>
JR<lb/>
August 31, 1993<lb/>
Continued from page 11<lb/>
Smith said We are starting to get the<lb/>
brotherly feeling around he<lb/>
our team conceptand thatsthf<lb/>
to take us all the way<lb/>
"In the off-season, 1 tried to de-<lb/>
velop into a man and become dedi-<lb/>
cated and try to become a leader on<lb/>
the team. I feel I can be a role model<lb/>
(for)theteamand set good examples<lb/>
Example: on a fourth-and-short<lb/>
yardage play in the team's scrim-<lb/>
mage on Saturday, the offense was<lb/>
pulled off and replaced by the kick-<lb/>
ing team.<lb/>
Smith was agitated and yelled<lb/>
outa "Come on" to the coaches to go<lb/>
for the first down. He did not get<lb/>
what he wanted, but unveiled confi-<lb/>
dence in himself and the offense.<lb/>
"He wants to stay on the field<lb/>
Todd Berry, running back coach, said.<lb/>
"Wecontinually challenge him. He's<lb/>
a good team leader for us. On and off<lb/>
the field<lb/>
Off the field, Smith achieved<lb/>
honor roll status last spring. His aca-<lb/>
demic major is physical education<lb/>
and hopes to pursue a career in fi-<lb/>
nance after his football career has<lb/>
ended.<lb/>
Srnith'spathwaysarenot always<lb/>
easily paved on the field. Much of his<lb/>
due to the other players<lb/>
together.<lb/>
Si rve 1 had a pretty good season<lb/>
iistyear,alotoffcxut-hasbetnonme<lb/>
and some of my offensive lineman<lb/>
and my other teammates have been<lb/>
left out Smith said. "1 want to give<lb/>
them the recognition that they de-<lb/>
serve and not it all be focused on me.<lb/>
All my success has come through<lb/>
them, too<lb/>
Smith imp: ;ved other areas of<lb/>
his game since last season. He im-<lb/>
proved his blocking and passing to<lb/>
form the complete back.<lb/>
Even with a new quarterback<lb/>
thus season, it seems the Pirates will<lb/>
still go with their all-out offensive<lb/>
attack.<lb/>
"We should keep the same of-<lb/>
fense even though Crandell is com-<lb/>
ing in as a freshman Smith said.<lb/>
"The concept for our offense is to<lb/>
score a bt of points and it is just time<lb/>
for him to take over the role<lb/>
Smith seams to be the ultimate<lb/>
weapon for the Pirates from the looks<lb/>
of some pre-season scrimmages. He<lb/>
ran for 130 yards on 31 carries.<lb/>
"This season the team will look<lb/>
to me for some key roles on offense<lb/>
wretherit'sblocking,catdningpasses<lb/>
or running Smithsaid. "Everything<lb/>
I do, I owe it to my teammates. I have<lb/>
to do it for myHeammates because<lb/>
there counting on me<lb/>
Central<lb/>
&amp;News<lb/>
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except magazines &amp; Newspapers<lb/>
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The East Carolinian 13<lb/>
Coleman's childish<lb/>
antics cost him a job<lb/>
NEW YORK (AP) ? The<lb/>
New York Mets wanted fast mo-<lb/>
tion. Instead, all they ever got<lb/>
from Vince Coleman was com-<lb/>
motion.<lb/>
He verbally attacked coach<lb/>
Mike Cubbage on the field in<lb/>
1991. He shoved manager Jeff<lb/>
Torborg and was suspended last<lb/>
year. HehitDwightGooden with<lb/>
a golf club this year.<lb/>
But when Coleman threw a<lb/>
powerful firecracker at fans last<lb/>
month and charged with a felony,<lb/>
the Mets had seen enough. On<lb/>
Thursday, they said Coleman will<lb/>
not return to the troubled team<lb/>
this season, and co-owner Fred<lb/>
Wilpon vowed the 31-year-old<lb/>
outfielder would never play for<lb/>
them again.<lb/>
"We have been plagued by<lb/>
embarrassing problems Wilpon<lb/>
said. "It is ownership's resolve to<lb/>
bring an end to any further non-<lb/>
sense on and off the field<lb/>
The Mets, picked by some to<lb/>
win the NL East, have the worst<lb/>
record in the majors at 44-83.<lb/>
There have been lots of lowlights,<lb/>
including Anthony Young's 27-<lb/>
game losing streak, Torborg's fir-<lb/>
ing and numerous injuries.<lb/>
It's been just as bad in the<lb/>
clubhouse during the worst sea-<lb/>
son in the team's 32-year history.<lb/>
Bret Saberhagen admitted put-<lb/>
ting a firecracker under a table<lb/>
where reporters were interview-<lb/>
ing Young; in a separate incident,<lb/>
Saberhagen ad mitted he sprayed<lb/>
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porter who co-wrote a book on<lb/>
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T<lb/>
<pb facs="00058419_0014"/><lb/>
UI<lb/>
August 31, 1993<lb/>
Continued from page 13<lb/>
ase in tes-<lb/>
tosterone levels. Before a mound<lb/>
got charged in the past, the batter<lb/>
getting plunked had to have some<lb/>
standing or the pitcher doing the<lb/>
plunking some flimsy excuse. No<lb/>
more.<lb/>
Suddenly, thin skin is in and<lb/>
an attitude is as indispensable a<lb/>
part of a player s repertoire as a<lb/>
smooth stroke or a good arm.<lb/>
People with inflated notions<lb/>
of self-worth are imagining too<lb/>
many slights, reading too many<lb/>
meanings into glares, taking um-<lb/>
brage too quickly, and settling<lb/>
too often on frontier-style jus-<lb/>
tice.<lb/>
man contributed to the<lb/>
when he swung a golf<lb/>
club and hitGooden in the shoul-<lb/>
der, knocking him out of a start.<lb/>
His latest antics, however,<lb/>
landed him in court. Prosecutors<lb/>
in Los Angeles said he threw an<lb/>
M-100, which has the equivalent<lb/>
power of a quarter-stick of dyna-<lb/>
mite, from a car as he left the<lb/>
Dodger Stadium parking lot on<lb/>
July 24. A 2-year-old girl was<lb/>
among three people injured.<lb/>
Coleman eventually said he<lb/>
was sorry during a carefully<lb/>
staged press conference with his<lb/>
family, although he never used<lb/>
the word "apologize He has<lb/>
said he will not contest the crimi-<lb/>
nal charge, which carries a pen-<lb/>
alty ranging from probation to<lb/>
three years in prison.<lb/>
"Obviously, Coleman was a<lb/>
big part of the mix with all the<lb/>
problems Mets manager Dal-<lb/>
las Green said. "To put a team<lb/>
together, you have to have 'we'<lb/>
guys. That wasn't Vince's first<lb/>
goal<lb/>
Wilpon said Coleman will re-<lb/>
main on "administrative leave"<lb/>
with pay until his arraignment<lb/>
Oct. 8 in Los Angeles on a felony<lb/>
charge of possession of an explo-<lb/>
sive device. Coleman played<lb/>
three games after the incident,<lb/>
then left the team with permis-<lb/>
sion Aug. 3.<lb/>
Coleman still has one year<lb/>
left on a four-year,11.95 million<lb/>
contract. Wilpon did not say how<lb/>
the Mets will get rid of him after<lb/>
the season, only that Coleman<lb/>
will be gone.<lb/>
"We have the right to act ?<lb/>
release him, trade him or fight<lb/>
him on the contract Wilpon<lb/>
said. "It's in the best interest of<lb/>
the Mets that he never wear a<lb/>
Mets uniform again, even if he is<lb/>
cleared of the criminal offense.<lb/>
He'll not play here again as a<lb/>
Met, with pay or without pay<lb/>
Coleman signed with the<lb/>
Mets as a free agent on Dec. 5,<lb/>
1990, shortly after Darryl Straw-<lb/>
berry left the team for the Los<lb/>
Angeles Dodgers.<lb/>
At the time, the Mets said<lb/>
they wanted to shift their offen-<lb/>
sive emphasis from power to<lb/>
speed.<lb/>
But Coleman, who set NL sto-<lb/>
len base records in St. Louis, was<lb/>
slowed by injuries in his first two<lb/>
years with the Mets, was on the<lb/>
disabled list five times and played<lb/>
a total of only 143 games.<lb/>
The Mets made an attempt to<lb/>
trade Coleman before this season<lb/>
began, but found no takers.<lb/>
Coleman is leading the NL with<lb/>
38 steals this year and is batting<lb/>
.279.<lb/>
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<pb facs="00058419_0017"/><lb/>
Rany fans will only be able to<lb/>
recognize the 1993 Pirate football team be-<lb/>
cause of the uniform. And Head Coach Steve<lb/>
Logan wants it that way.<lb/>
TEAM. me.<lb/>
"Come Thanksgiving, I want to be able<lb/>
to say I had a TEAM Logan said. "You are<lb/>
either a part of the East Carolina football<lb/>
team or you are not<lb/>
Line backer Tony Davis is not.<lb/>
Quarterback Michael Anderson is not.<lb/>
Anderson was said to have left school<lb/>
because of academics. However, he met ECU<lb/>
and MCAA academic standards.<lb/>
Some insiders believe it was because of<lb/>
a conflict with Logan ? possibly over the<lb/>
"TEAM, me philosophy.<lb/>
Anderson's roommate lastyearwas run-<lb/>
ning back Junior Smith.<lb/>
"Last year people were kind a jealous<lb/>
Smith said. "People talk about what they did,<lb/>
even if we lost. Everybody has the same goal<lb/>
now and (won't) get jealous of what someone<lb/>
else does<lb/>
After several off-season<lb/>
losses to graduation and aca-<lb/>
demics, as well as several play-<lb/>
ers changing position, nearly ev-<lb/>
ery slot on offense and defense<lb/>
has a new face. The new-look<lb/>
Bucs, like Ficklen Stadium, are<lb/>
renovated with expansion in<lb/>
mind. The Big East is just around<lb/>
the corner.<lb/>
A winning record this year<lb/>
will add the needed credibility<lb/>
necessary for adoption into such<lb/>
a successful conference if the<lb/>
Big East expands. Being in this<lb/>
conference is the only way ECU<lb/>
will be able to step to the next<lb/>
level.<lb/>
Until then, Morth Carolina<lb/>
State and north Carolina, both<lb/>
ACC teams, will continue to have<lb/>
the upper hand among the state-<lb/>
supported schools.<lb/>
Playing top-notch programs is another<lb/>
key in acceptance to the Big East. ECU takes<lb/>
its first trip to the West Coast against their first<lb/>
PAC-IO opponent, the Washington Huskies.<lb/>
Also on slate, again, are the Syracuse<lb/>
Orangemen. Both teams have received top-<lb/>
ten votes during the preseason. Washington<lb/>
has been ranked 12th, 11th and eighth. Syra-<lb/>
cuse has been voted 10th, fourth and ninth.<lb/>
The season-opener against Syracuse will<lb/>
be the second nationally televised game from<lb/>
Ficklen. Last year Southern Miss beat ECU 38-<lb/>
21 in the first nationally televised game from<lb/>
Ficklen.<lb/>
1993 SEASON PPEVIFW tOBEOSr<lb/>
Booty'93<lb/>
n<lb/>
Williams, a freshman, eases the loss of<lb/>
sure-handed Clayton Driver. Before Williams<lb/>
leaver ECU he may become the best wide<lb/>
receiver to ever play for the Pirates.<lb/>
Letcher runs a 4.48 40-yard dash (fourth<lb/>
on the team). He was 12th in the nation in all-<lb/>
purpose yards and 15th in punt returns.<lb/>
Logan said Letcher was better than former<lb/>
ECU standout Dion Johnson as a junior.<lb/>
Backs Smith and McPhail ? the "J-<lb/>
Crew" ? will be used in a two back set.<lb/>
Smith, a junior, rushed for over 1,000 yards<lb/>
last year and was 24th in the nation in yards<lb/>
per game. He is the first Pirate to gain over<lb/>
1,000 yards in a season since Tony Collins in<lb/>
1979. Smith only needs 845 yards to be<lb/>
ranked in the top ten career list.<lb/>
McPhail, whooriginally signed with Wake<lb/>
Forest, runs a 4.45 40-yard dash (T2nd on the<lb/>
team) according to the 1993 Media Guide. He<lb/>
runs a 4.18 according to some of his team-<lb/>
mates. McPhail will be expected to run, catch<lb/>
and block to fill the void left by Cedric Van<lb/>
TEAM Offense<lb/>
Do not expect the air show from last<lb/>
year. Or the interceptions.<lb/>
The Pirates were picked off 27 times<lb/>
last year ? compared with 10 the year be-<lb/>
fore. ECU turned the ball over a total of 16<lb/>
times, resulting in 55 points, on their way to<lb/>
a Peach Bowl victory, and 37 times last<lb/>
season, resulting in 91 points.<lb/>
Freshman quarter back Marcus<lb/>
Crandell shoulders the weight of pulling ECU<lb/>
out of last year's nose dive. How fast he<lb/>
matures as a player is how much the Pirates<lb/>
will improve. He has the arm to drop bombs<lb/>
- and the receivers - but not the experience.<lb/>
Several targets will be open all season:<lb/>
tight end CariesterCrumpler, flanker Morris<lb/>
Letcher, wide receiver Alien Williams and<lb/>
halfback Jerris McPhail.<lb/>
Each catch Crumpler makes this season<lb/>
will raise his position in the NFL draft. "Crump"<lb/>
has been named the top tight end in the nation<lb/>
n almrwst- ?vprv nrp-seasnn nuhliration.<lb/>
Buren.<lb/>
Because of these speed merchants,<lb/>
Crandell will not be passing into squadrons of<lb/>
defensive backs, like Anderson was made to.<lb/>
Smith and McPhail give the Pirates more<lb/>
options on offense.<lb/>
Speaking of options, Crandell runs well<lb/>
enough to draw comparisons to former Logan<lb/>
prodigy Jeff Blake, now a quarterback with<lb/>
the new York Jets. Crandell will not be chained<lb/>
to the pocket the way Anderson seemed to<lb/>
be, but Logan is hesitant to let a freshman<lb/>
take the battering of running the football too<lb/>
frequently.<lb/>
"We're not going to (run the option)<lb/>
much at all Logan said. If the option is<lb/>
called, it will likely be in goal-line situations.<lb/>
The threat of the Pirates' newly discov-<lb/>
ered ground game will help Crandell ease<lb/>
into his role. Opposing defenses will be forced<lb/>
to watch for the run instead of locking in on<lb/>
the air attack.<lb/>
However, the result of a lessened air<lb/>
attack makes running the ball more difficult.<lb/>
Instead of Smith running through defensive<lb/>
backs looking for a pass, he will deal with<lb/>
linebackers looking for his number.<lb/>
The offensive line's job is, therefore,<lb/>
more crucial than last year. They must give<lb/>
Crandell enough time to throw and make<lb/>
holes for Smith. If they fail, the team fails<lb/>
because Crandell and Smith will not be able<lb/>
to succeed.<lb/>
Only four players return at the same<lb/>
position from last year on offense ? seniors<lb/>
Crumpler and Letcher, senior right guard Ken<lb/>
Crawford and junior center Derrick Leaphart<lb/>
On the offensive line, senior Daryl Tay-<lb/>
lor takes over nick Wilson's position at right<lb/>
tackle after playing defensive tackle last year<lb/>
and former left guard Terry Tilghman, a<lb/>
senior, fills the enormous hole left by Tom<lb/>
Scott at left tackle.<lb/>
Tilghman tore his Anterior Cruciate Liga-<lb/>
ment in April. The recovery time for an ACL<lb/>
tear, after surgery, is usually nine to 12<lb/>
months. He was cleared to play in the middle<lb/>
of August.<lb/>
" (Thilghman's recovery) is nothing short<lb/>
of a miracle Logan said. "And the determi-<lb/>
nation displayed by that young man is ?<lb/>
we've got something special there with that<lb/>
young man<lb/>
Senior Greg Floyd, a two-year starter at<lb/>
cornerback, has been moved back to offense<lb/>
as a halfback. Floyd came to ECU as a running<lb/>
back, so the switch will not be to difficult.<lb/>
Sophomore Derrick Batson moves<lb/>
from halfback to flanker and is listed behind<lb/>
Letcher on the pre-season depth chart. Last<lb/>
season against West Virginia, Batson returned<lb/>
a punt 97 yards for a touchdown,<lb/>
setting a school record.<lb/>
TEAM Defense<lb/>
"Defensively we're on a mis-<lb/>
sion Logan said. "Larry Coyer<lb/>
was my most important recruit<lb/>
Jk Logan describes Coyer, the Bucs<lb/>
? new defense coach, as a born<lb/>
leader. Coyer will also be the brains<lb/>
behind the brawn.<lb/>
Last year's defensive squad<lb/>
often looked confused in their sets<lb/>
and did not work well as a unit, now,<lb/>
because of Coyer, the whole is<lb/>
greater than the sum of its parts.<lb/>
The unit was ranked 105th in the<lb/>
nation in 1992 despite talented play-<lb/>
ers.<lb/>
Junior delensive tackle Walter<lb/>
Scott and senior right cornerback<lb/>
Travis Render are the only players<lb/>
on defense to return to theirstarting<lb/>
roles.<lb/>
Outside linebacker Bernard Carter<lb/>
seems tailor made for his new position. He<lb/>
has the potential to be better than Robert<lb/>
Jones. He is also exceptionally quick and<lb/>
intelligent and capable of being an enforcer.<lb/>
Jones was more of a rock who never missed<lb/>
a tackle. Carter is explosive.<lb/>
Already, Carter holds the ECU career<lb/>
sack record with 20-12 and the single sea-<lb/>
son record of 11, which he set last year at<lb/>
defensive end.<lb/>
Enter freshman Lamont Burns. He<lb/>
moves from OLB to Carter's old position at<lb/>
DE. Burns' name has buzzed around cam-<lb/>
pus all summer as someone with unlimited<lb/>
potential. The six-foot-five-inch, 245-pound<lb/>
19-year-old is probably still growing and will<lb/>
certainly get stronger over the next four<lb/>
years.<lb/>
Morris Foreman, a sophomore, has<lb/>
moved from safety to outside linebacker. At<lb/>
six-feet, 210 pounds he will compensate for<lb/>
his size with excellent speed. Last season, as<lb/>
a true freshman. Foreman was talented<lb/>
enough to take time at safety away from Ail-<lb/>
American candidate Greg Grandison.<lb/>
Garrett Beasely and David Hart will<lb/>
battle for Foreman's old position. Beasely,<lb/>
who shared punting duties with Michael<lb/>
Jacobs in 1992, set a record for defensive<lb/>
backs by benching 375 pounds.<lb/>
Special TEAMs<lb/>
In 1992, ECU advertised in The East<lb/>
Carolinian for help kicking the bail. The Bucs<lb/>
experienced their second worse punting per-<lb/>
formance over the last 20 years and kicked<lb/>
only two field goals. Punter Bill Wilson and<lb/>
kicker Chad Holcomb responded to the ad<lb/>
and will provide immediate relief.<lb/>
A junior college transfer, Wilson aver-<lb/>
aged 43.4 yards per punt with about 4.5<lb/>
second hang time in spring drills. John Jett<lb/>
averaged 42.2 in his best season with ECU<lb/>
and is now punting for the Dallas Cowboys.<lb/>
Last year, ECU'S net average per punt<lb/>
was 32.4 yards, 88th in the nation. Wilson<lb/>
will be a great help to the defense by<lb/>
forcing the opposition into worse field po-<lb/>
sition.<lb/>
Holcomb has good range and took the<lb/>
startingjob from transferee Stephen Padgett<lb/>
in spring drills. Holcomb sends 80 percent<lb/>
of his kickoffs into the end zone and is the<lb/>
first recruited scholarship kicker for ECU<lb/>
since 1989. ECU'S two field goals in 1992<lb/>
were on seven attempts and from inside 31<lb/>
yards.<lb/>
TEAM Summary<lb/>
Logan has addressed the weaknesses<lb/>
of last year's team very well. The defense and<lb/>
special teams are both improved. Opponents<lb/>
averaged 33.4 points per game last season,<lb/>
but this should drop significantly ? mainly<lb/>
because of Coyer.<lb/>
However, the offense will be hard<lb/>
pressed to score as many points as they did<lb/>
a year ago. The Bucs averaged 26.3 points<lb/>
per game, T33rd in the nation and ECU was<lb/>
18th in the nation in total offense with 421.1<lb/>
yards per game. It is doubtful this year's<lb/>
squad will come close to that but with Logan<lb/>
in control of the offense it is still possible.<lb/>
Since Logan was hired as offensive co-<lb/>
ordinator, ECU has averaged almost 400<lb/>
yards and 28.2 points per game.<lb/>
However, the most important factor is<lb/>
turnovers and the ball will be better pro-<lb/>
tected from defenders in 1993. Crandell will<lb/>
not be expected to throw the ball as much as<lb/>
Anderson and this alone will help reduce the<lb/>
interceptions.<lb/>
Anderson was 1 I th in the nation in total<lb/>
yards and it is unfair and unrealistic to expect<lb/>
Crandell to produce those numbers?yet. He<lb/>
is not lacking talent and may develop into<lb/>
one of the best QBs ECU has ever had.<lb/>
Last season, ECU scored an average of<lb/>
32.8 points and allowed 23 points in their<lb/>
five wins. In their six losses, they averaged<lb/>
20.8 and allowed 42.<lb/>
34 points, as Logan said last season<lb/>
after the loss to Bowling Green, should be<lb/>
enough to win a football game. With the<lb/>
Pirates improved defense it will be enough.<lb/>
But, how often will the offense put 34 points<lb/>
on the board?<lb/>
Crandell will take his first college snap<lb/>
on national television against one of the best<lb/>
programs in the country.<lb/>
"He's going to have butterflies Logan<lb/>
said. "If he doesn't, he's probably dead<lb/>
A forgiving second-half schedule (al-<lb/>
though mostly on the road), an improved<lb/>
defense and special teams could translate<lb/>
into seven wins. But there are too many "ifs<lb/>
If Crandell is spectacular.<lb/>
If the offensive line protects him and<lb/>
gives the "J-Crew" holes to run through.<lb/>
If the defense improves.<lb/>
If each key player stays healthy ? (last<lb/>
year the Pirates suffered through a rash of<lb/>
broken thumbs).<lb/>
Seven wins are possible if every "if"<lb/>
turns into "yes<lb/>
In the most likely scenario, expect flir-<lb/>
tation with a winning record again.<lb/>
In the worst case scenario, ECU sal-<lb/>
vages three victories in 1993.<lb/>
Robert S.<lb/>
Todd,<lb/>
Editor<lb/>
<pb facs="00058419_0018"/><lb/>
Central Florida, p. 4  lrst Down  Pirates p.12. Southern Miss p. 13<lb/>
Cincinnati, p. 17Kentucky, p. 161 Syracuse, p. 3<lb/>
Coyer, p. 10 i1 Memphis State, p. 61 Tulsa, p. 15<lb/>
Crandell, p. 18 11 Logan, p. 91 Top 10, p. 20<lb/>
Crumpler, p. 18I Louisiana Tech, p. 8J Virginia Tech, p. 14<lb/>
Eakin, p. 19 jSouth Carolina, p. 7Washington, p. 5<lb/>
Booty 93<lb/>
- Lindsay Fernandez, General Manager ?<lb/>
- Matthew A. Hege, Advertising Director ?<lb/>
Joseph Horst, Managing Editor<lb/>
- Robert S. Todd, Editor. Layout St Design-<lb/>
 Brian Olson, Assistant Editor <lb/>
 Burt Ay cock. Layout Manager<lb/>
2<lb/>
Friday 8.27.93<lb/>
PUNIER<lb/>
14 Bill Wilson<lb/>
10 Michael Jacobs<lb/>
o<lb/>
RUNMNGBACK<lb/>
35 Junior Smith<lb/>
26 Damon Wilson<lb/>
34 Greg Floyd<lb/>
31 Eric Blanton<lb/>
o<lb/>
QUARTERBACK<lb/>
5 Marcus Crandell<lb/>
8 Chris Hester<lb/>
12 Orlando Whitaker<lb/>
o<lb/>
HALFBACK<lb/>
23 Jerris McPhail<lb/>
87 Ronnie Williams<lb/>
37 Carlos Blake<lb/>
o<lb/>
PLACE KICKER<lb/>
24Chadrtolcomb<lb/>
- Stephen Padgett<lb/>
o<lb/>
WIDE RECEIVER<lb/>
85 Allen Williams<lb/>
27 Lamont Edwards<lb/>
o<lb/>
LEFT TACKLE<lb/>
78 Terry Tikpman<lb/>
79 Chad Averette<lb/>
LEFT GUARD<lb/>
74 Tom Coleman<lb/>
71 Reuben Jones<lb/>
73 Jake Gilray<lb/>
CENTER<lb/>
58 Derrick<lb/>
Leaphart<lb/>
63 Kevin Wiggins<lb/>
RIGHT TACKLE<lb/>
52 Ken Crawford<lb/>
69 Greg Smith<lb/>
- Vince Scroggins<lb/>
RIGHT TACKLE<lb/>
55 Daryl Taylor<lb/>
61 RonSuddith<lb/>
77 Mike McCall<lb/>
72 John Schlager<lb/>
o<lb/>
o<lb/>
o<lb/>
TIGHT END<lb/>
88 Cariester Crumpler<lb/>
83 Dwight Linvflle<lb/>
90 Scott Richards<lb/>
86 Sean Richardson<lb/>
FLANKER<lb/>
4 Morris Letcher<lb/>
25 Darrek Batson<lb/>
82 Mitchell Galloway<lb/>
MiHHIII)lllllllllHirHHf??H?MII?<lb/>
o<lb/>
o<lb/>
M 'ii '?i" ?'? WWW<lb/>
X<lb/>
CORNER BACK<lb/>
3 Emmanuel McDaniel<lb/>
17 David Crumbie<lb/>
X<lb/>
X<lb/>
OUTSIDE LINEBACKER<lb/>
80 Bernard Carter<lb/>
91 Willie Brookins<lb/>
TACKLE<lb/>
96 Walter Scott<lb/>
70JeffCooke<lb/>
59 Jamie Gray<lb/>
FREE SAFETY<lb/>
13 Hank Cooper<lb/>
22 David Mart<lb/>
6 E.J. Gubthro<lb/>
pe<lb/>
X<lb/>
X<lb/>
MIDDLE LINEBACKER<lb/>
41 Reggie Robinson<lb/>
84 Leonard Graham<lb/>
NOSEGAURD<lb/>
97 Derek Taylor<lb/>
94 Dealton Cotton<lb/>
95 Sean Turner<lb/>
WILLIE LINEBACKER<lb/>
81 Mark Libiano<lb/>
44 Mike Sweat<lb/>
X<lb/>
TACKLE<lb/>
56 Lamont Bums<lb/>
99 Charles Boothe<lb/>
66 Jeff Griffith<lb/>
STRONG SAFETY<lb/>
20 Qarrett Beasley<lb/>
21 Daren Hart<lb/>
X<lb/>
X<lb/>
OUTSIDE LINEBACKER<lb/>
7 Morris Foreman<lb/>
47 Brian Williams<lb/>
X<lb/>
CORNERBACK<lb/>
9 Travis Render<lb/>
15 Robert Tate<lb/>
IIMIIHIMHIIHUtUIIIIH'lllillHHiillMMnillll UIII?W?<lb/>
i? , <lb/>
<pb facs="00058419_0019"/><lb/>
ATfKjMN 9:01 PA<lb/>
r.<lb/>
ttPACUSt<lb/>
$<lb/>
I he word "Miracle" comes to mind.<lb/>
So does the word "Upset, but Syracuse is one<lb/>
of the best teams in the nation and has won<lb/>
five straight bowl games.<lb/>
The Pirates are no match for the<lb/>
Orangemen and are not likely to catch them<lb/>
off guard as they have done in the past.<lb/>
Quarterback Marvin Graves is a legiti-<lb/>
mate Heisman Trophy candidate and was the<lb/>
second rated passer behind Heisman Tro-<lb/>
phy winner Qino Torretta.<lb/>
Against the Pirates in 1992, Graves<lb/>
threw for 213 yards, completing 11-17 with<lb/>
three touchdowns and no interceptions.<lb/>
The loss of wide receiver Quadry Ismail<lb/>
hasn't hurt a bit.<lb/>
Meet Shelby Mill.<lb/>
After playing in the shadow of "The<lb/>
Missile" and former Orangemen Rob Car-<lb/>
penter, Hill, a senior, is All-American calibre.<lb/>
After contemplating turning profes-<lb/>
sional after last season, he decided to finish<lb/>
his career at Syracuse and is expected to be<lb/>
a first-round draft pick at the end of the 1993<lb/>
season. Hill took three passes for 65 yards<lb/>
last year in Ficklen Stadium.<lb/>
The Orangemen's defense ranked fifth<lb/>
in the nation against the run in 1992 and<lb/>
return six starters.<lb/>
If SU stops run-<lb/>
ning back Junior<lb/>
Smith and his<lb/>
backfield partner<lb/>
Jerri's McPhail,<lb/>
Crandell will be<lb/>
forced to air the ball<lb/>
out frequently in his<lb/>
first collegiate game<lb/>
? which happens to<lb/>
be on national televi-<lb/>
sion.<lb/>
How Crandell<lb/>
handles himself un-<lb/>
der the pressure sets<lb/>
the tone for the re-<lb/>
mainder of the sea-<lb/>
son.<lb/>
SU's core of de-<lb/>
fensive backs are ex-<lb/>
perienced and<lb/>
should rarely give up<lb/>
a long-yardage pass<lb/>
play.<lb/>
At linebacker,<lb/>
Dan Conley will lead<lb/>
the defensive unit. Conley was credited with<lb/>
7 1 tackles last season.<lb/>
Marvin Graves<lb/>
the last 10 years,<lb/>
home favorite, they<lb/>
Defensive<lb/>
end Kevin<lb/>
Mitchell was<lb/>
voted Defensive<lb/>
MVP in the Fi-<lb/>
esta Bowl and is<lb/>
fourth on SU's<lb/>
career sack list.<lb/>
J He will<lb/>
 earn Lombardi<lb/>
?. and Outland<lb/>
Trophy votes in<lb/>
the post-sea-<lb/>
son.<lb/>
This will<lb/>
be, by far, the<lb/>
biggest home<lb/>
game of the<lb/>
year.<lb/>
However,<lb/>
the Bucs may<lb/>
be better off<lb/>
playing this<lb/>
game in the<lb/>
Carrier Dome.<lb/>
As. road<lb/>
favorite over<lb/>
Syracuse is 24-5-2. As<lb/>
are 22-20. Astheunder-<lb/>
Dan Conley<lb/>
dog, ECU has a better record on<lb/>
road than at home<lb/>
? Robert<lb/>
7- f<lb/>
ECU Football Records: The Power (lean<lb/>
the<lb/>
S. Todo,<lb/>
Editor<lb/>
 Greg Smith (left) and Jeff Cooke are the all-time leaders. All active players in bold face<lb/>
LUNCHEON<lb/>
BUFFET<lb/>
MON-SAT<lb/>
11-5<lb/>
$499<lb/>
SUNDAY<lb/>
BUFFET<lb/>
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 Carved Meat<lb/>
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STEAKS, BUFFET &amp;<lb/>
BAKERY<lb/>
ENTREES $2$6"5TEAKS- kafoodxhicken<lb/>
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 Carved Meat Nightly<lb/>
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BREAKFAST<lb/>
$469<lb/>
m 3W ?mmm?(B My&amp;<lb/>
Q<lb/>
<pb facs="00058419_0020"/><lb/>
14<lb/>
Friday 8.27.93<lb/>
fiyit'AiiniJM<lb/>
AT E1CKUN 4:0Cp.m1<lb/>
I ake Centra! Florida very seriously.<lb/>
The last time these teams met was in<lb/>
1991 the year the Pirates won the Peach<lb/>
Bowl. ECU capitalized on seven UCF turnovers<lb/>
and won 47-25. Only four teams (Illinois.<lb/>
Syracuse; Tutane and P1.C. State) scored more<lb/>
points against the Bucs that year. Also, the<lb/>
Knights were able to march up and down the<lb/>
field for 497 net yards that day ? three more<lb/>
than ECU.<lb/>
Again, take this team very seriously.<lb/>
In 1992. Central Florida was the East<lb/>
Carolina of Division l-AA. The Knights man-<lb/>
aged a record of 6-4 by scoring 37.3 points per<lb/>
game, despite 36 turnovers. However, UCF's<lb/>
defense ranked 81st last season. All offense.<lb/>
Mo defense.<lb/>
Quarterback Darin Hinshaw returns al-<lb/>
ter throwing for 2.505 yards and 24 touch-<lb/>
downs. The Knights also welcome back two<lb/>
1,000-yard rushers and their entire offensive<lb/>
line. Running backs Qerod Davis, only a<lb/>
sophomore, and Willie English may be the<lb/>
main source of frustration for ECU.<lb/>
Receiver David Rhodes, who caught 51<lb/>
passes last year for 1,005 yards, flinshaw and<lb/>
English played against Robert Jones and com-<lb/>
pany two seasons ago.<lb/>
Rhodes got his hands on six passes for<lb/>
116 yards. Hinshaw, one of three quarter-<lb/>
backs used, threw for 100 yards on nine of<lb/>
17 passing, with one touchdown<lb/>
interception.<lb/>
and one<lb/>
English rushed for 114 yards on 19<lb/>
carries. He sat out 1992 after blowing-out his<lb/>
knee in the season opener. Davis took over<lb/>
where he left off. Both are back. Both are<lb/>
expected to play. Both will do damage.<lb/>
There is some question in scheduling I<lb/>
AA schools. A win is meaningless in the polls<lb/>
and a loss is devastating. rl.C. State learned<lb/>
this the hard way every year against Marshall<lb/>
(defensive coordinator Larry Coyers alma<lb/>
mater).<lb/>
The Pirates will be forced to prove they<lb/>
are the better team. Also on the Knights' side<lb/>
when they meet: the Pirates have a losing<lb/>
record (8-9-2) as a home favorite over the last<lb/>
10 years.<lb/>
A loss to UCF would devastate the team<lb/>
more if they are coming off a loss to Syracuse<lb/>
in the opener. Little hope for the season would<lb/>
remain if ECU travelled to Washington in week<lb/>
three with losses to, perhaps, the best and<lb/>
worst teams on the schedule.<lb/>
If they do not win against Central Florida,<lb/>
ECU could find themselves 0-4 after the Mem-<lb/>
phis State game, with five of their last seven<lb/>
games on the road.<lb/>
? Robert S. Todd,<lb/>
Editor<lb/>
D<lb/>
Cole (left) is the all-time leader. All active players in bold to<lb/>
IF YOUR ROOM NEEDS<lb/>
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11 Ac?oi5ycr<lb/>
IEUflP.Sj <lb/>
LUMBER CO.<lb/>
<pb facs="00058419_0021"/><lb/>
ATHUSKItSTADlUM3:39PJL.<lb/>
I he Washington Huskies were on<lb/>
the verge of replacing Miami as the elite<lb/>
program for the '90s.<lb/>
Now, Head Coach Don<lb/>
James is gone, along with<lb/>
their image as a model pro-<lb/>
gram because of NCAA sanc-<lb/>
tions.<lb/>
When quarterback Billy<lb/>
Joe Hobert was suspended<lb/>
for excepting illegal loans<lb/>
totaling $50,000. Washing-<lb/>
ton was undefeated and No.<lb/>
1 in the country.<lb/>
The program was<lb/>
shocked and lost two of<lb/>
their last three games ?<lb/>
and their 22-game winning<lb/>
streak. They ended the sea-<lb/>
son with a 38-3! loss to<lb/>
Michigan in the Rose Bowl<lb/>
and a final ranking of 12th in the polls.<lb/>
Despite their trouDles, they will again field<lb/>
one of the best teams in the country. Their<lb/>
offense is still tremendous, but their defense<lb/>
is weakened from last seasons' losses.<lb/>
Kunningbacks Beno Bryant and Napoleon<lb/>
Kaufman may be the best backfield in the<lb/>
nation.<lb/>
3tt&amp;<lb/>
.<lb/>
Napoleon Kaufman<lb/>
Helping them move along is an experi-<lb/>
enced line, although the loss of two-time All-<lb/>
American tackle Lincoln Kennedy (drafted 9th<lb/>
overall by the Atlanta fal-<lb/>
cons) will hurt.<lb/>
As a sophomore,<lb/>
Kaufman rushed for over<lb/>
1,000 yards and averaged<lb/>
6.5 yards per carry. Bryant<lb/>
missed nearly all of 1992<lb/>
afterhelpingthe Huskies to<lb/>
their National Champion-<lb/>
ship in '91 by running for<lb/>
943 on 6 yards per carry.<lb/>
Both will split playing time,<lb/>
but the ground attack will<lb/>
be increased from last sea-<lb/>
son.<lb/>
The Washington QB<lb/>
situation is similar to ECU'S.<lb/>
Inexperience at the posi-<lb/>
tion may hurt them, hut<lb/>
sophomore Damon Huard is being hyped as<lb/>
one of the best talents the Huskies have ever<lb/>
had.<lb/>
Washington's defense returns very few<lb/>
starters but should have little trouble keeping<lb/>
the Bucs in check. Outside linebacker Andy<lb/>
Mason is a Lombardi award candidate who<lb/>
racked up eight sacks and 14.5 tackles for a<lb/>
loss last season. The new UW defensive backs<lb/>
have the biggest shoes to fill, but are talented<lb/>
enough to do so.<lb/>
ECU will have a tough time making this<lb/>
game respectable. But the Pirates have a<lb/>
history of surprising top-ranked teams.<lb/>
From 1980 to 1990, ECU regularly played<lb/>
one of the toughest schedules in the country.<lb/>
The Pirates faced off with Miami eight<lb/>
times, Florida State seven times. Auburn and<lb/>
Penn State twice and Florida and Georgia<lb/>
once.<lb/>
In 1983, the Pirates went 8-3. Their only<lb/>
losses came against FSU by one point, Florida<lb/>
by a touchdown and Miami by five. 13 points<lb/>
separated ECU from an undefeated season<lb/>
and, probably, a national championship.<lb/>
It's 1993 and Miami has been replaced on<lb/>
the schedule by Washington and the Semi-<lb/>
noles by the Orangemen. Thankfully. Florida<lb/>
has been replaced with Central Florida.<lb/>
Washington is 31-5 over the last three<lb/>
years. Do not count on their sixth loss coming<lb/>
at the hands of ECU. However, the Huskies will<lb/>
be ripe forpickingatthe handsofan underdog<lb/>
if they cannot recover from the loss of their<lb/>
coach, James.<lb/>
? Robert S. Tood,<lb/>
Editor<lb/>
ECU loot ha II Records: The Din<lb/>
Booty'93<lb/>
S<lb/>
Quarter-<lb/>
backs<lb/>
45<lb/>
O. Whitaker<lb/>
1993<lb/>
Running<lb/>
Backs<lb/>
71<lb/>
S. Sherman<lb/>
1992<lb/>
Wide<lb/>
Receivers<lb/>
60<lb/>
R. Williams<lb/>
1993<lb/>
Defensive<lb/>
Backs<lb/>
95<lb/>
R. Tate<lb/>
1992<lb/>
Fullbacks<lb/>
52<lb/>
D. Major<lb/>
1992<lb/>
Tight<lb/>
Ends<lb/>
46<lb/>
C. Crumpler, Jr<lb/>
1992<lb/>
Robert Tate (left) is the all-time leader. All active players in bold face.<lb/>
Defensive<lb/>
Line<lb/>
51<lb/>
W. Scott<lb/>
1993<lb/>
Series Record:<lb/>
First Meeting<lb/>
Location:<lb/>
Enrollment:<lb/>
Nickname:<lb/>
Conference:<lb/>
Stadium:<lb/>
Surface<lb/>
1992 record:<lb/>
Primary off:<lb/>
Primary def:<lb/>
Seattle,<lb/>
Washington<lb/>
34,000<lb/>
Huskies<lb/>
PAC-10<lb/>
Huskie<lb/>
Stadium<lb/>
(72,500)<lb/>
Astro Turf<lb/>
9-3 (6-2)<lb/>
One-back<lb/>
3-4<lb/>
Offensive<lb/>
Line<lb/>
37<lb/>
B. Arnold<lb/>
1992<lb/>
Linebackers<lb/>
61<lb/>
R. Robinson<lb/>
1992<lb/>
H<lb/>
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&amp; Spirits<lb/>
2516 E. 10th Street A<lb/>
Greenville, NC ?<lb/>
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THROUGHOUT<lb/>
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Join Us on Our New Outdoor Deck<lb/>
Drink Specials Daily<lb/>
&amp; Outdoor TV's<lb/>
L<lb/>
$100?"<lb/>
One Coupon per. Order oer Person.<lb/>
Any Sandwich or Dmn<lb/>
Indian Trails<lb/>
Golfdr<lb/>
Country Club<lb/>
ITCC invites you to come out a<lb/>
view the fine condition of out<lb/>
greens, trees and fairways.<lb/>
Weekday Rates<lb/>
Monday-Friday Grgfrete $18<lb/>
00<lb/>
imner<lb/>
Expires Sept. 30,1993<lb/>
UHUWWUHhH<lb/>
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Sports Restaurant<lb/>
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Sit E. Mkfc Sm?<lb/>
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Weekend Rates<lb/>
Green Fee<lb/>
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7am Until Dusk<lb/>
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is i  rn (Uutifi: :(,y Discount.<lb/>
<pb facs="00058419_0022"/><lb/>
B<lb/>
5<lb/>
Friday 8.27.93<lb/>
HXUi.WKHM<lb/>
AT flCKUN 12:09 P.M. 1<lb/>
y the time week four of the sea-<lb/>
son rolls around, the Pirates could very<lb/>
likely need a win to reach the .500 mark. It<lb/>
will be no easy task ? the Memphis State<lb/>
Tigers will be visiting Ficklen Stadium look-<lb/>
ing for a repeat of last year's game in<lb/>
Memphis. ECU received a beating in the<lb/>
season finale, 42-7.<lb/>
When you think of the Tigers, the first<lb/>
thing that comes to mind is defense.<lb/>
The MSU defense was the third best in<lb/>
the country last year behind national cham-<lb/>
pion Alabama and Arizona. They were stingy<lb/>
enough to only allow 3.6 yards per play.<lb/>
Many key defensive players were lost, but<lb/>
linebacker Danton Barto will be returning<lb/>
with his team-leading 128 tackles and four<lb/>
interceptions.<lb/>
The offensive line lost four starters<lb/>
and could be weak up front. Senior free<lb/>
safety Jeremy Williams also returns with<lb/>
91 tackles and three interceptions. Barto<lb/>
and Williams are serious All-American<lb/>
candidates.<lb/>
Theoffenseisgeared behind lefty quar-<lb/>
terback Steve Matthews.<lb/>
He was the first player in the school's<lb/>
Quarter-<lb/>
backs<lb/>
Steve Matthews<lb/>
history to throw for over 2,000 yards in a<lb/>
season and was ranked 1 2th nationally in<lb/>
passing efficiency. He completed 61 per-<lb/>
cent of his passes to go along with 18<lb/>
touchdowns.<lb/>
The passing attack is well comple-<lb/>
mented with<lb/>
tailbacks Larry<lb/>
Porter and<lb/>
John Martin, a<lb/>
pair who<lb/>
rushed for a<lb/>
combined<lb/>
1,295 yards<lb/>
and lOTDslast<lb/>
season.<lb/>
Senior<lb/>
wideout Isaac<lb/>
Bruce, 39<lb/>
catches and<lb/>
532 yards,<lb/>
should be a<lb/>
prime target for<lb/>
Matthews. The<lb/>
offensive line<lb/>
will return three<lb/>
starters.<lb/>
The Tigers<lb/>
have another<lb/>
All-American in senior place kicker Joe<lb/>
Allison, nephew of the late NASCAR driver<lb/>
David Allison. He picked up the Lou Qroza<lb/>
Award last season as the nation's top place<lb/>
kicker.<lb/>
The stats speak for themselves, 23-of-<lb/>
25 field-goal attempts and 32-0f-32 point<lb/>
after attempts. The team will try to replace<lb/>
punter Jeff Buffaloe, 44.6 yard average,<lb/>
with sophomore Andy McWilliams.<lb/>
The question marks for Memphis State<lb/>
fall on the defense. It will be very tough to<lb/>
rebuild the defensive line and defensive<lb/>
backfield to be the team they were just a<lb/>
year ago.<lb/>
With such a powerful defense, MSU<lb/>
only finished with a 6-5 record last season.<lb/>
The offense will have to put more points on<lb/>
the board for the Tigers to be successful<lb/>
and it appears they will.<lb/>
Look for the Pirates to try and run the<lb/>
ball against a new defensive line, but stay<lb/>
away from LB Barto.<lb/>
The key for the ECU defense will be to<lb/>
keep QB Matthews from airing out the ball<lb/>
to Bruce and containing running backs Por-<lb/>
ter and Martin.<lb/>
This home game will be critical for the<lb/>
Pirates to keep a decent record before they<lb/>
head to South Carolina the next week.<lb/>
The game will be televised on the Pirate<lb/>
Sports Network.<lb/>
? Brian Olson,<lb/>
Assistant Editor<lb/>
ECU Football Records: The Verticil'lump<lb/>
33.5"<lb/>
M. Crandel<lb/>
1993<lb/>
Running<lb/>
Backs<lb/>
38"<lb/>
J. Smith<lb/>
1992<lb/>
Wide<lb/>
Receivers<lb/>
38"<lb/>
C Blake<lb/>
1992<lb/>
Defensive<lb/>
Backs<lb/>
40"<lb/>
R. Tate<lb/>
1993<lb/>
Fullbacks<lb/>
32.5"<lb/>
D. Major<lb/>
1992<lb/>
Tight<lb/>
1 Ends<lb/>
36"<lb/>
C. Freeman<lb/>
1989<lb/>
Defensive<lb/>
Line<lb/>
34"<lb/>
J. Cooke<lb/>
1993<lb/>
Offensive<lb/>
Line<lb/>
33"<lb/>
B. Maxwell<lb/>
1988<lb/>
Linebackers<lb/>
41"<lb/>
J.Singletarv<lb/>
1989<lb/>
' J. Singletary (left) is the all-time leader. All active players in bold face.<lb/>
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1992. After losing their first five games, the<lb/>
Gamecocks turned things around and closed<lb/>
out the year going 5-1 to firsh 5-6 overall.<lb/>
ECU unleashed running back Junior Smith<lb/>
for the first time against South Carolina last<lb/>
year, arid slipped by with a two point victory,<lb/>
20-18, on a muddy field. The win marked the<lb/>
second in a row for the Pirates against USC<lb/>
after losing the first eight games of the series.<lb/>
South Carolina returns most of their of-<lb/>
fense. Quarterback Steve Taneyhill finished<lb/>
fourth in the Southeastern Conference in pass-<lb/>
ing efficiency as a true freshman. He will<lb/>
choose from wide receivers Toby Cates, Asim<lb/>
Penny and true-freshman Calvin Owens.<lb/>
Cates and Penny averaged 17 yards per<lb/>
catch, but Owens may be the one to watch. He<lb/>
was touted as the best in the state and may<lb/>
make an immediate in.pact.<lb/>
The Gamecocks have two solid running<lb/>
backs in Brandon Bennett and Rob Deboer.<lb/>
Last season, they combined for over 1,000<lb/>
yards, but Bennett will carry the ball more this<lb/>
season and may reach that mark on his own.<lb/>
However, Deboer gained 88 yards on 15 car-<lb/>
ries versus ECU last year. Bennett rushed I 1<lb/>
times for 34 yards in the same game.<lb/>
The defense returns nine starters and<lb/>
held opponents to 14.3 points over the last six<lb/>
games of 1992. Strong safety Tony Watkins<lb/>
leads the re-<lb/>
turning group<lb/>
with 94 tack-<lb/>
les. Free safety<lb/>
Norman Green<lb/>
is second with<lb/>
83. Safeties<lb/>
leading the<lb/>
defense in<lb/>
tackles points<lb/>
to why they al-<lb/>
lowed 188<lb/>
yards rushing<lb/>
per game last<lb/>
year ? they<lb/>
had no defen-<lb/>
sive line. How-<lb/>
ever, the de-<lb/>
fense kept it together enough to finish 34th in<lb/>
the nation against the pass.<lb/>
ECU'S Junior Smith and Jerris McPhail are<lb/>
probably iooking forward to thte game more<lb/>
than quarterback Marcus Crandell. The chick-<lb/>
ens' defensive line and line backers must<lb/>
improve or expect ECU to run them into the<lb/>
ground.<lb/>
The South Carolina series began in 1977<lb/>
with a Buc loss, 19-16. Their next meeting was<lb/>
in 1984 and the<lb/>
Gamecocks<lb/>
routinely<lb/>
thrashed ECU<lb/>
by an average<lb/>
of 29 points per<lb/>
game every<lb/>
year until 1991<lb/>
when Jeff Blake<lb/>
led the Pirates<lb/>
to a 31-20 vic-<lb/>
tory.<lb/>
Last year<lb/>
South Carolina<lb/>
kicker Mart<lb/>
Simpson<lb/>
missed two<lb/>
field goals in<lb/>
the final seconds that would have won the<lb/>
game. One was blocked, from 36 yards out,<lb/>
and recovered. The next, from 37 yards out,<lb/>
was wide right.<lb/>
? Robert S. Todd.<lb/>
Editor<lb/>
Series Record<lb/>
USC leads 3-1<lb/>
Location:<lb/>
Enrollment:<lb/>
nickname:<lb/>
Conference:<lb/>
Stadium:<lb/>
Surface<lb/>
1992 record:<lb/>
HeadCoach:<lb/>
Primary off:<lb/>
Primary def:<lb/>
Columbia,<lb/>
S.C.<lb/>
25,613<lb/>
Gamecocks<lb/>
SEC<lb/>
Williams-<lb/>
Brice<lb/>
(50,000)<lb/>
Grass<lb/>
5-6<lb/>
Sparky<lb/>
Woods<lb/>
Multiple<lb/>
Multiple<lb/>
ECU Football Records: The Incline<lb/>
QuarterbacksRunning BacksWide ReceiversDefensive BacksFullbacksTight EndsDefensive LineOffensive LineLinebackers<lb/>
245 M. Crandel 1993295 D. Wilson 1993260 R. Williams 1992300 G. Grandison 1992315 D. Major 1992255 K. Seekford 1992325 Da Taylor 1993325 Gr. Smith 1991315 R. Robinson 1992<lb/>
Daryl Taylor (left) and Greg Smith are the all-time leaders. All active players in bold face.<lb/>
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<pb facs="00058419_0024"/><lb/>
' I<lb/>
1,<lb/>
8<lb/>
Friday 8.27.93<lb/>
iniiKUNAitru-<lb/>
AT HCKLEN 2:00P.M.<lb/>
'o ECU, Louisiana Tech may seem<lb/>
like a gift. All the Pirates should have to do is<lb/>
unwrap them. You will only find out what's<lb/>
inside after the game, but it feels like a<lb/>
shutout. What a gift that would be! ECU has<lb/>
not shutout an opponent since Oct. 23,1982<lb/>
against Illinois State ? a streak of 115 games<lb/>
(and possibly 120 by the time these two<lb/>
teams meet.)<lb/>
The Bulldog's offense has lost a lot of<lb/>
bite. Tech departed with 18 lettermen from<lb/>
the offense, including offensive lineman Willie<lb/>
Roaf. Me was selected eighth overall by the<lb/>
New Orleans Saints. Tech also lost their offen-<lb/>
sive coordinator Pat Tilley.<lb/>
The quarterback position is up for grabs.<lb/>
Vying for the spot is Aaron Ferguson, Arkan-<lb/>
sas transfer Wade Hill and redshirt-freshman<lb/>
Jason Martin. Ferguson completed 54 per-<lb/>
cent of his passes last year but connected for<lb/>
only one touchdown pass while throwing<lb/>
seven interceptions. Hill may get the starting<lb/>
nod.<lb/>
Runningback Jason Cooper gained 733<lb/>
yards (4.3 yards per carry). He is a capable<lb/>
runner, but the loss of Roaf will hurt his totals<lb/>
unless the offensive line improves.<lb/>
Defensive troubles are everywhere. Eight<lb/>
starters are gone from a defense that held<lb/>
opponents under 17 points nine times. Na-<lb/>
tional Champion Alabama managed only 13<lb/>
points against the Bulldogs.<lb/>
Losing linebacker Myron Baker may have<lb/>
done more damage than the loss of Roaf.<lb/>
Baker totaled 132 tackles in 1992 and the<lb/>
returning leader, linebacker Fred Price, had<lb/>
little more than half that with 74.<lb/>
Opponents averaged only 257 yards of<lb/>
offense last year, but the loss of eight starters<lb/>
on defense will cost them a respectable sea-<lb/>
son.<lb/>
The last time ECU played Louisiana Tech<lb/>
(1990), the Pirates won 27-17. The previous<lb/>
season Tech forced a tie, 29-29, on a field<lb/>
goal with 16 seconds left. Later, the game was<lb/>
forfeited by Louisiana Tech for using an ineli-<lb/>
gible player. Both teams faced off in the 1978<lb/>
Independence Bowl in Shreveport, La. The<lb/>
Bucs won 35-13 and held the Bulldogs to 12<lb/>
yards rushing.<lb/>
? Robert S. Todd,<lb/>
Editor<lb/>
ECU Football Records: The 40-Yard Dash<lb/>
QuarterbacksRunning BacksWide ReceiversDefensive BacksFullbacksTight EndsDefensive LineOffensive LineLinebackers<lb/>
4.51 R. Jones 19864.41 G. Franklin 19864.33 C. Blake 19914.49 E. Dillahunt 19864.60 D. Daniels 19894.71 C. Freeman 19894.70 W. Bryant 19864.66 B. Michel 19874.48 E. Teliafarro 1987<lb/>
h Carlos Blake (left) is the all-time leader. All active players in bold face.<lb/>
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II,<lb/>
ow did the<lb/>
team look after<lb/>
spring practice?<lb/>
Steve Logan,<lb/>
ECU'S head foot-<lb/>
ball coach:<lb/>
Based on what<lb/>
I've seen, I think<lb/>
we have a chance<lb/>
to have a better<lb/>
football team, and<lb/>
by that I mean all<lb/>
three units (of-<lb/>
fense, defense and<lb/>
special teams)<lb/>
complementing<lb/>
each other.<lb/>
Last year, be-<lb/>
cause of some deficiencies we had on the<lb/>
defense and the kicking game, it got to where<lb/>
if we didn 't outscore somebody, we wouldn 't<lb/>
win the football game.<lb/>
We have brought in a new junior college<lb/>
punter by the name of Billy Wilson, who has<lb/>
punted the ball extremely well this spring.<lb/>
I've brought in a new assistant head coach<lb/>
and defensive coordinator. Coach (Larry)<lb/>
Coyer. He's got a personality that has begun to<lb/>
take root on the defensive side of the football.<lb/>
think (this) year we can realistically punt<lb/>
the ball and expect to play some defense.<lb/>
That is a football team, those are three<lb/>
units complementing each other, the offense<lb/>
not turning the ball over, the special teams<lb/>
punting the ball effectively and the defense<lb/>
going down there and putting a stop to 'em so<lb/>
we can get the ball back.<lb/>
From that aspect I think we have a better<lb/>
team.<lb/>
Coach, you mentioned that Coach<lb/>
Coyer's personality has taken over on the<lb/>
defense. How so? Is he more aggressive?<lb/>
Coach Coyer is an experienced and pro-<lb/>
fessional football coach in the sense that he's<lb/>
got 30 years of coaching under his belt.<lb/>
That is exactly the kind of man I wanted to<lb/>
bring in the program.<lb/>
Larry came in here and just over the<lb/>
course of spring ball, there has been a very<lb/>
aggressive attitude injected into the kids, a<lb/>
unity that hasn 't been here in sufficient quan-<lb/>
tities previous to him being here.<lb/>
I think that if we II continue to foster that<lb/>
personality as a group, our defense will be a<lb/>
much improved unit next year.<lb/>
Who has stepped up on defense so far?<lb/>
 think when you look at individuals, and<lb/>
quite honestly we've tried to downplay indi-<lb/>
viduals this year? we had some individualism<lb/>
last year that I think hurt our football team.<lb/>
Everything we've done this year is team,<lb/>
team, team, team, team.<lb/>
That's all we've talked to our kids about.<lb/>
But I know that there are times when you have<lb/>
to look at individuals and as far as the defense<lb/>
goes, I think Bernard Carter has the chance to<lb/>
be a 'bellcow' for us .<lb/>
I think that where Bernard goes, our de-<lb/>
fense may go along with him, so to speak.<lb/>
I think that Morris Foreman also has the<lb/>
chance to improve upon a real solid freshman<lb/>
year. I think those two kids will be good<lb/>
football players.<lb/>
Our talent on the defensive side of the<lb/>
football is sufficient enough for us to be<lb/>
competitive.<lb/>
I believe that and I have always believed<lb/>
that and I expect Coach Coyer to draw that<lb/>
out of us.<lb/>
What did you learn from last season?<lb/>
Well, everything and nothing.<lb/>
I learned that there are a lot of different<lb/>
angles to everything you're doing as a head<lb/>
?VrVVAr!WJVWVVUVVWrtVVV,L<lb/>
coach and yet that all the situations are so<lb/>
much like the situations you dealt with<lb/>
before.<lb/>
It's kind of like what Solomon said,<lb/>
"There's nothing new under the sun. I've<lb/>
become very sensitive to image because,<lb/>
sadly enough, I've found that image is<lb/>
stronger than truth. That's one of the sad<lb/>
things about coaching.<lb/>
What is effective about Steve Logan<lb/>
as a disciplinarian?<lb/>
When I became the head coach, some-<lb/>
one asked me about discipline and I said<lb/>
that my style of discipline concerns natural<lb/>
consequences.<lb/>
The most stern disciplinarian on the<lb/>
earth is natural consequences. If you tell<lb/>
the child not to touch the hot stove, they do<lb/>
and they get burned, they won't touch the<lb/>
hot stove anymore because the natural .<lb/>
consequences are very strict.<lb/>
I have stronger disciplinary measures<lb/>
in place for my football team right now than<lb/>
at any other time that I've been here at ECU.<lb/>
They know that the natural consequences<lb/>
of acting like a fool in an offampus social<lb/>
situation will mean that they won't be part<lb/>
of my football team.<lb/>
They know that the natural conse-<lb/>
quences of not going to class will be that<lb/>
they won r be part of this program I don't<lb/>
take any prisoners concerning discipline. I<lb/>
tell my players it's a privilege to play, and a<lb/>
privilege to be part of my program. It is not<lb/>
their right. If they blow tiiat privilege, they're<lb/>
gone.<lb/>
As a freshman, Marcus Crandell is<lb/>
performing well for the team. . . how<lb/>
would you compare his style Jeff Blake's?<lb/>
Our offensive system is not simplistic<lb/>
at all. It takes a lot of thin king under center.<lb/>
I've always been frightened of having one<lb/>
guy and then that guy gets injured and the<lb/>
other guy comes in without ever taking a<lb/>
snap. That's not smart. I always try to have<lb/>
both guys so I don't have to worry about the<lb/>
disasters.<lb/>
How did it feel to have Jeff Blake<lb/>
coming back to the campus for the<lb/>
spring game this summer?<lb/>
Jeff is a young man who is very dear to<lb/>
my heart. In the course of coaching, there<lb/>
are a few relationships that go beyond<lb/>
player-coach. Jeff Blake became a close,<lb/>
personal friend of mine.<lb/>
I had the opportunity to coach Jeff for<lb/>
three years and watched him grow from a<lb/>
young man to a real man in every sense of<lb/>
the word. 1 watched Jeffsupport a child and<lb/>
a wife. I think Jeff is one of the special<lb/>
things that happen to you every once in a<lb/>
while in college coaching.<lb/>
? Warren Sumner,<lb/>
Staff Writefi<lb/>
<pb facs="00058419_0026"/><lb/>
c<lb/>
0 iiuailui tenr tCHHE<lb/>
haracter is sometimes easy to spot.<lb/>
It kind of jumps out at you and makes an<lb/>
impression. Some of the time you can tell<lb/>
someone has character by the way they walk<lb/>
and talk, by the way they look at you or how they<lb/>
smile or frown. In some, it's the sound of their<lb/>
voice or the way they dress. But you know<lb/>
immediately they have it, and that having it<lb/>
distinguishes them from the crowd.<lb/>
That's the way it is when you first meet<lb/>
Larry Coyer, East Carolina's new defensive coor-<lb/>
dinator. Just by his demeanor, you can immedi-<lb/>
ately tell that this man knows exactly who he is<lb/>
and exactly what he wants to do. Coyer minces<lb/>
no words and says ex-<lb/>
his<lb/>
Lr:<lb/>
actly what is on<lb/>
mind.<lb/>
Mis hoarse voice<lb/>
iscontradicted by eyes<lb/>
which reflect a bright<lb/>
energy and he is armed<lb/>
with his customary<lb/>
pipe dangling from the<lb/>
right side of his mouth.<lb/>
The stark white smoke<lb/>
seeps from the pipe to<lb/>
complement the<lb/>
coach's hair which is<lb/>
bleached white by the<lb/>
rigors of a 29-year ca-<lb/>
reer in coaching.<lb/>
A veteran of the<lb/>
defensive coaching<lb/>
trenches, Coyer has<lb/>
been named by Pirate<lb/>
coach Steve Logan as<lb/>
his "best recruit<lb/>
Coyer, 49, coached<lb/>
Ohio State's defensive backfield for the last two<lb/>
seasons and has professional experience with<lb/>
the former USEL to go along with numerous<lb/>
other universities. Under Coyer, the Buckeyes<lb/>
were rated 13th in the nation in pass efficiency.<lb/>
Coye- has been placed, by Logan, in the<lb/>
unenviable task of turning around the Pirate<lb/>
defense. He must improve upon a dismal '92<lb/>
defensive season that found the Pirate defense<lb/>
105th in the nation. Me must instill a hunger into<lb/>
his defensive unit to prevent the long gains of<lb/>
opposing offenses that was so frequent last<lb/>
year. He must mold a group of inexperienced<lb/>
players with the veterans on the squad to lead<lb/>
them towards team unity. Coyer calls this unity<lb/>
a "Mad Dog Defense<lb/>
"The Mad Dog' philosophy is pretty<lb/>
simple Coyer said. "You're not really afraid<lb/>
whenonedogcomesafteryou.butifyouget 11<lb/>
of em after your butt, you tend to get nervous.<lb/>
We've got to be relentless, coming after you all<lb/>
the time, always playing hard<lb/>
Coyer said he analyzed last year's game<lb/>
films and noticed the Pirates' biggest problem:<lb/>
a lack of consistency.<lb/>
"Last year, the one thing! noticed from the<lb/>
defense was that there was too much 'up and<lb/>
down There were too many games where they<lb/>
just didn't play as hard as they were capable.<lb/>
"I mean no disrespect to any opponent,<lb/>
but you just don't let yourself get blown out by<lb/>
Duke<lb/>
Coyer said that he felt that while the<lb/>
defensive unit was rich with physical talent, the<lb/>
mental capacity of the players would ultimately<lb/>
determine their success.<lb/>
"We may have talent enough to have a<lb/>
great yearbut the one thing that'sgonna deter-<lb/>
mine how your team will be is willpower. That's<lb/>
where the rubber meets the road. We also don't<lb/>
want to let the environment of the game control<lb/>
us. We want to play the same way if we're ahead<lb/>
or behind<lb/>
Coyer said he plans to test that willpower<lb/>
by setting the Pirates into a slightly different<lb/>
defensive structure than that of last year. Coyer<lb/>
&amp;a&amp;<lb/>
said the unit will be "pressure oriented" with the<lb/>
main concentration of the Pirate defensive<lb/>
scheme focused on the opponent's ground<lb/>
attack.<lb/>
He said the unit's goal was to hold oppos-<lb/>
ing offenses to 17 points or less and keep their<lb/>
rushing games below 150 yards.<lb/>
Coyer will have a tough time achieving<lb/>
these goals in the Pirates' opener against Syra-<lb/>
cuse on Sept. 9. The Orangemen are rated as<lb/>
high as fourth in the nation and with quarterback<lb/>
Marvin Graves at the helm, the Syracuse offense<lb/>
will have incredible potential to put big yardage<lb/>
marks in the stat-books and points on the board.<lb/>
Coyer said<lb/>
that he understands<lb/>
the difficulty of start-<lb/>
ing the season off<lb/>
against such a pow-<lb/>
erful opponent but<lb/>
also views it as an<lb/>
opportunity for his<lb/>
defense to gain<lb/>
credibility.<lb/>
"Our defense<lb/>
doesn't have (cred-<lb/>
ibility) yet. You gain<lb/>
credibility in games<lb/>
against good oppo-<lb/>
sition. (Playing Syra-<lb/>
cuse first) would be<lb/>
a tough task for any-<lb/>
body<lb/>
Coyer said<lb/>
that he is happy to<lb/>
have the defensive<lb/>
staff he has under<lb/>
him to help him<lb/>
meet this task and has high praise tor their<lb/>
abilities.<lb/>
"Lord, yeah we have a great defensive<lb/>
staff. (Defensive back coach Chris) Thurmond,<lb/>
(Outside linebacker coach Chuck) Pagano and<lb/>
(Defensive line coach Theo) Lemon have all<lb/>
been coordi nators and (1 nside linebacker coach<lb/>
Bob) Babich has Big 10 experience<lb/>
According to Pirate linebacker Mark<lb/>
Libiano, Coyer's strongest attribute as a coach is<lb/>
his straight-shooting manner of dealing with his<lb/>
players<lb/>
"He's definitely not afraid to tell you what<lb/>
he thinks Libianosaid. "He doesn't yell, but he<lb/>
definitely lets you know how he feels<lb/>
"I think we have to be straight-up with each<lb/>
other Coyer said. "Communication has to go<lb/>
two ways and 1 want my players to feel that they<lb/>
can talk to me about anything<lb/>
Coyer, tanned from the Pirates outside<lb/>
practices, classifies himself as someone who<lb/>
loves the outdoors, but is not an outdoors man.<lb/>
Me said while he enjoys being outside workingin<lb/>
the yard and workingonhisgolf game, adventur-<lb/>
ous wilderness pursuits don't interest him.<lb/>
"My idea of camping is at the Milton he<lb/>
said. One "camping companion" Coyer will bring<lb/>
with him is his pipe.<lb/>
"It's a bad habit Coyer said. "It's just like<lb/>
sucking your thumb. 1 guess it just kind of<lb/>
relaxes me. It's kind of like my Valium<lb/>
"Greenville's a hell of a little town Coyer<lb/>
said. He said he hopes to remain in the Emerald<lb/>
City for a long time. Perhaps given some time.<lb/>
Coyer could begin a new era in Pirate defense.<lb/>
"We think we really have a chance to be a<lb/>
good football team Coyer said. "In the time to<lb/>
come, defense will be very important at East<lb/>
Carolina<lb/>
Customary with Coach Logan'sTEAM phi-<lb/>
losophy this year, Coyerreplied, "Ijusi wantthe<lb/>
Pirate fans to thinkof ECU as a real good football<lb/>
team<lb/>
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AT fICKLtN<lb/>
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t<lb/>
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l evenge will be on the minds of ECU players and fans alike. Last season,<lb/>
Southern Mississippi embarrassed the Pirates on the first nationally televised<lb/>
game from Ficklen Stadium,<lb/>
38-21. Five interceptions and<lb/>
two fumbles helped the lowly<lb/>
USM offense to such a high<lb/>
total.<lb/>
The Golden Eagles are<lb/>
searching for something re-<lb/>
sembling an offense.<lb/>
If they find what they are<lb/>
looking for, you will see them<lb/>
in the top 25. But for now,<lb/>
quarterback Tommy Waters<lb/>
is only decent with nobody to<lb/>
throw to and SMU has no real<lb/>
threat in the backfield since<lb/>
losing tailback Michael Welch.<lb/>
Last year, Welch burnt the<lb/>
Bucs for 169 yards on 27<lb/>
carries.<lb/>
However, USM is not<lb/>
likely to put the offensive<lb/>
Their 7-4 record last season is credit to a Golden Eagle defense<lb/>
returning nine starters. Last season, they were ranked 27h in scoring<lb/>
defense and eighth against the pass.<lb/>
Inside Linebacker Tyrone iix<lb/>
1137 tackles) will lead the unit,<lb/>
whose only weakness is against the<lb/>
run.<lb/>
Hello, Junior Smith.<lb/>
Smith rushed for 150 yards<lb/>
against USM a year ago. That game<lb/>
also saw Charles Smith run for 112<lb/>
yards on 10 carries.<lb/>
Defensive backs Terry timer<lb/>
and Perry Carter combined for 11<lb/>
interceptions on the season and will<lb/>
give fits to quarterback Marcus<lb/>
Crandell. Linebacker Bobby<lb/>
Hamilton recorded six sacks last<lb/>
season and will be watched closely<lb/>
by ECU'S offensive line.<lb/>
Good defense always beats<lb/>
good offense. How Bernard Carter<lb/>
and the rest of the Purple People<lb/>
Series Record<lb/>
USM leads 14 4<lb/>
Bobby Hamilton<lb/>
pieces together well enough to make the most of their rock solid defense. Eaters play will determine the outcome<lb/>
The Eagles finished 93rd in the nation on offense. Not only was the offense<lb/>
bad, but USM's punt returners finished last (107th) in the country.<lb/>
? Robert S. Todd,<lb/>
Editor<lb/>
Location:<lb/>
Enrollment:<lb/>
Nickname:<lb/>
Conference:<lb/>
Stadium:<lb/>
Surface<lb/>
1992 record:<lb/>
HeadCoach:<lb/>
Primary off:<lb/>
Primary def:<lb/>
Hattiesburg,<lb/>
Miss.<lb/>
13,00<lb/>
Golden<lb/>
Eagles<lb/>
Ind. (1FA)<lb/>
M.M. Roberts<lb/>
Stadium<lb/>
(33,000)<lb/>
Grass<lb/>
7-4<lb/>
Jeff Bower<lb/>
Pro-1<lb/>
4-3<lb/>
ECU Football Records: The Mile<lb/>
4QuarterbacksRunning BacksWide ReceiversDefensive BacksFullbacksTight EndsDefensive LineOffensive LineLinebackers<lb/>
5:28 M. Anderson 19925:21 S. Sherman 19925:08 P. Zophy 19915:13 R. Tate 19925:57 K. Smith 19895:18 L. Fisher 19915:49 J. Holmes. Z. CunmuUaj 1989, 19925:50 B. Maxwell 19845:23 R. Snow 1992<lb/>
Peter Zophy (left) is the all-timeleader. All actii?e players in bold face.<lb/>
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<pb facs="00058419_0030"/><lb/>
V<lb/>
"11 rrt<lb/>
Friday 8.27.93<lb/>
VlUCINiA TCCU<lb/>
AT LANf STADIUM loo pa<lb/>
a Tech. had a lot ot -ear<lb/>
held fourth quarter leads<lb/>
n seven of I 1 ga ? et ion on<lb/>
ieason. VT also<lb/>
:losing minutes of their game and finished the<lb/>
.  12-8-1.<lb/>
u're fired was heard ? .era times<lb/>
rom Head Coach FranK Beamer ana nc<lb/>
ias a new cast of assistant coaches. And new<lb/>
iefensive schemes.<lb/>
Kies have converted to a standard<lb/>
i ? ise from their wide tackle-six forma-<lb/>
jrcingoutside linebackers Kevin Brown<lb/>
tnd P.J. Preston to new positions.<lb/>
iwn, who recorded 82 tackles 5 for<lb/>
3sses moves to inside linebacker. Preston,<lb/>
he team s returning leader in tackles with 89<lb/>
5 foi iossesi, will be tried at defensive end.<lb/>
TheTechmen were particularly pooragainst<lb/>
he pass last season and do not seem to have<lb/>
mprcved much. They allowed opponents to<lb/>
.omplete 57 percent of their passes and aver-<lb/>
ige 229 yards per game through the air in<lb/>
;992.<lb/>
Speaking of air, quarterback Maurice<lb/>
ieShazo will not worry when he takes snaps<lb/>
rom his center. Jim Pyne has played 1,879<lb/>
naps w ithout allow ing a sack and earned All-<lb/>
nerican honors last season. Me is looking for<lb/>
itland Trophy this year.<lb/>
? iiokie offensive line returns all five<lb/>
rt( rs and will accommodate DeShazo by<lb/>
ig him all the time he needs to continue<lb/>
ing.<lb/>
"Maurice got better every game he played<lb/>
st season Beamer said. "With experience,<lb/>
e better decisions and called audibles<lb/>
lat put us in positions for big gains<lb/>
How true.<lb/>
The Hokies averaged A65 yards of offense<lb/>
over their last four games. They will be very<lb/>
potent again this year despite losing tailback<lb/>
Von Hebron, who rushed for 128 yards against<lb/>
ECU in 1992.<lb/>
However, no one has stepped up as an<lb/>
adequate replacement, so the ground game<lb/>
may suffer a bit.<lb/>
Through the air, DeShazo found wide re-<lb/>
ceiver Antonio Freeman 32 times last year for<lb/>
an average of 22 yard per catch. Freeman is a<lb/>
deep threat the Pirates will have to play close<lb/>
attention to.<lb/>
VT was better than 2-8-1 and will prove it in<lb/>
1993. They scored an av erage of only one point<lb/>
less than their opponents last season and will<lb/>
be looking for redemption when ECU arrives in<lb/>
ECU Football Records: The Sit I<lb/>
Series Record<lb/>
SU leads 3-1<lb/>
Dwayne Thomas<lb/>
Blacksburg.<lb/>
ECU beat the Hokies, 30-27, with 42 sec-<lb/>
onds to piayon a Michael Anderson-to-Carlester<lb/>
Crumpler touchdown pass last year in Ficklen<lb/>
Stadium.<lb/>
The hard luck Hokies of 1992 will be<lb/>
replaced by an angry team dishing out hard<lb/>
knocks and the Pirates must be prepared.<lb/>
? Robert S. Todd,<lb/>
Editor<lb/>
Location:<lb/>
Enrollment:<lb/>
nickname:<lb/>
Conference:<lb/>
Stadium:<lb/>
Surface<lb/>
1992 record:<lb/>
HeadCoach:<lb/>
Primary off:<lb/>
Primary def:<lb/>
Blacksburg,<lb/>
Va.<lb/>
23,000<lb/>
Hokies<lb/>
Big East<lb/>
Lane Field<lb/>
(51,000)<lb/>
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2-8-1<lb/>
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Running<lb/>
Backs<lb/>
Wide<lb/>
Receivers<lb/>
S. Sherman<lb/>
P. Zi.phv<lb/>
Defensive<lb/>
Backs<lb/>
110<lb/>
R. Tate<lb/>
1493<lb/>
Fullbacks<lb/>
D. Major<lb/>
1W2<lb/>
Tight<lb/>
Ends<lb/>
101<lb/>
K.Seekford<lb/>
10Q2<lb/>
Defensive<lb/>
Line<lb/>
92<lb/>
C. Boothe<lb/>
1993<lb/>
Offensive<lb/>
Line<lb/>
N.Wilson<lb/>
1992<lb/>
Linebackers<lb/>
P. Hurley<lb/>
143<lb/>
i Sherman (left is the all-time leader. All active players in bold face.<lb/>
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AT flCKLEN uopa<lb/>
T,<lb/>
tots<lb/>
Booty'93<lb/>
ts<lb/>
he illustrious memories of both<lb/>
Cast Carolina and Tulsa are one full season<lb/>
in the past.<lb/>
The Golden Hurricanes came out of<lb/>
the 1991 season finishing 21st and the<lb/>
Bucs came away with the ninth spot.<lb/>
Both teams are taking their first steps<lb/>
on that long ladder to get back on top.<lb/>
Tulsa and East Carolina could consider<lb/>
last season a rebuilding year. The Hurri-<lb/>
canes finished with a dismal 4-7 record.<lb/>
Losing to Hawaii, 38-9, was their most embar-<lb/>
rassing defeat of the season ? and it came in<lb/>
the last game of 1992.<lb/>
1993 looks to be another full year of<lb/>
rebuilding for the Canes. The Tulsa ath-<lb/>
letic program is coming off a year in which<lb/>
the NCAA banned the school from<lb/>
postseason play.<lb/>
The Pirate defense must stay alert to<lb/>
handle Tulsa's no huddle offense.<lb/>
Head Coach Dave Rader goes with a<lb/>
pro-set, no huddle attack and expects his<lb/>
quarterback, Qus Frerotte, to throw at least<lb/>
30 times a game.<lb/>
Frerotte will return at the helm for the<lb/>
Hurricanes after starting most of last sea-<lb/>
son. He did not handle the hurry up offense<lb/>
too well last year (47 percent passing, six<lb/>
TD's, and 1 1 intsi and five of his passes<lb/>
were returned for touchdowns.<lb/>
Frerotte's targets will be flanker Gary<lb/>
Brown and split end Chris Penn. Penn missed<lb/>
last season because of academic reasons,<lb/>
but will return with his enormous speed and<lb/>
ability to make the big play.<lb/>
Lamont Headd will return as the start-<lb/>
ing tailback coming off a solid year (827<lb/>
yards rushing and 4.8 avg.l.<lb/>
The offensive line returns only two start-<lb/>
ers and could very well benefit the aggres-<lb/>
sive defensive style of new ECU defensive<lb/>
coordinator, Larry Coyer.<lb/>
Tulsa and ECU shared one thing in<lb/>
common last year: the inability to stop the<lb/>
run.<lb/>
The Hurricane defense yielded five yards<lb/>
per rush last season. This year's defense<lb/>
does not look much better with the loss of<lb/>
seven starters which included the top six<lb/>
tacklers.<lb/>
The team will miss linebackers Barry<lb/>
Minter and Chris Bratcher which combined<lb/>
for 253 tackles. Tackle Cory Lax is the big<lb/>
body up front applying pressure to the QB.<lb/>
Defensive end Sedric Clark will line up<lb/>
along the line with his added 15 pounds of<lb/>
muscle during the off season. Free safety<lb/>
Dennis Hickey will team up with three-year<lb/>
starter James Blake to make a solid safety<lb/>
duo.<lb/>
The Pirates' special team focus might<lb/>
be on kick returnerwide receiver, Penn. He<lb/>
looks to improve on a 22.9 kick return<lb/>
average of two years past. Punter Mark<lb/>
DeLozier was very effective last year and ex-<lb/>
pect nothing less this time around.<lb/>
Freshmen Solomon White is trying to pry<lb/>
into position at tailback. His Spring workouts<lb/>
were impressive.<lb/>
By the time the Hurricanes blow into<lb/>
Greenville in week nine, rookie QB Marcus<lb/>
Crandell should have a good amount of<lb/>
experience under his belt and be able to<lb/>
pick up the win.<lb/>
The Pirates defense must handle the<lb/>
hurry up offense, stay alert in the secondary<lb/>
and not give up the big play.<lb/>
Look for RB Junior Smith to have a big<lb/>
game against a weak Tulsa defense. This<lb/>
contest should prove one of the easier<lb/>
games for the Pirates. .<lb/>
? Brian Olson,<lb/>
Assistant Editor<lb/>
Chris Penn<lb/>
ECU Football Records: The Bench Press<lb/>
Quarter-<lb/>
backs<lb/>
C. Libretto<lb/>
1989<lb/>
Running<lb/>
Backs<lb/>
415<lb/>
VV. Lewis<lb/>
1989<lb/>
Wide<lb/>
Receivers<lb/>
345<lb/>
D. Batson<lb/>
1992<lb/>
Defensive<lb/>
Backs<lb/>
G. Franklin<lb/>
G. Beaslev<lb/>
I486. 1993<lb/>
Fullbacks<lb/>
4S5<lb/>
D. Daniels<lb/>
1990<lb/>
Tight<lb/>
Ends<lb/>
405<lb/>
G. Willis<lb/>
1985<lb/>
Defensive<lb/>
Line<lb/>
480<lb/>
.Pegues<lb/>
1983<lb/>
' Terry Lorig (left) is the all-time leader. All active plavers in bold face.<lb/>
Offensive<lb/>
Line<lb/>
550<lb/>
T. Long<lb/>
1983<lb/>
Linebackers<lb/>
465<lb/>
M.Washington<lb/>
1990<lb/>
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<pb facs="00058419_0032"/><lb/>
16<lb/>
Friday 8.27.93<lb/>
mmxr<lb/>
K<lb/>
entuckv is a bad team. If ECU wins only<lb/>
ie game all season, this should be the one.<lb/>
The Wildcats have only one starter re-<lb/>
irning to the offensive line. Unfortunately<lb/>
r UK, it does not really matter ? they have<lb/>
d running backs and no receivers. Only<lb/>
jpes.<lb/>
They hope wide receivers Tim Calvert<lb/>
id Alfonzo Browning have hands of glue,<lb/>
istyear, they both averaged 20.6 yards per<lb/>
ception. But they only caught the ball a total<lb/>
' 28 times all year and averaged only 52<lb/>
irds per game combined. They are medio-<lb/>
e at best.<lb/>
"The only bright spots for the Wildcats on<lb/>
Tense are quarterback Pookie Jones and<lb/>
ansfer Randy Wyatt.<lb/>
Jones set a school record with 1,729<lb/>
irds per game in total offense in 1992.<lb/>
jwever, he threw eight interceptions and<lb/>
ily five touchdown passes.<lb/>
Wyatt, who came to UK from rival Louis-<lb/>
lie, will be used like ECU'S Jerris McPhail. He<lb/>
II be expected to run the ball, catch passes,<lb/>
turn kickoffs and block. Wyatt is quite<lb/>
ipable.<lb/>
Back Matt Riazzi averaged 8.1 yards per<lb/>
irry, but only gained a total of 243 in 1992.<lb/>
s average is iikeiy an aberration. He could<lb/>
t manage the same average if he ran the<lb/>
ill more often.<lb/>
Kentucky's defense has switched to a 4-<lb/>
from a multiple front, riew defensive coor-<lb/>
jo2for Mike Archer has put his hopes in<lb/>
c<lb/>
ir PHJ<lb/>
r tujtijA FlHyH<lb/>
BW"?3?&amp;M<lb/>
?BjL - 3WiHUI<lb/>
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Ik<lb/>
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rfeflra'JMmWJi<lb/>
AT COMMONWtAlTW STADIUM 1:00 P JL<lb/>
Series Record<lb/>
First Meeting<lb/>
Marty Moore<lb/>
inside linebacker Marty More.<lb/>
Moore has led the SEC in tackles the last<lb/>
two seasons. He racked up 148 tackles in<lb/>
1992, in part because no other Wildcat could<lb/>
get their hands on the person with the ball.<lb/>
The defense will also feature redshirt fresh-<lb/>
men Chris Ward and Eric Wright. They both<lb/>
have talent, but are inexperienced and will<lb/>
need time to mature.<lb/>
ECU should have little trouble running or<lb/>
passing in Lexington and could win big.<lb/>
? Robert S. Todd,<lb/>
Editor<lb/>
99t<lb/>
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12 PRICE APPETIZERS<lb/>
Sun -Wed 9:00pm- 12:30am<lb/>
Welcomes New &amp; Returning Students<lb/>
1. Group Sealing at Pirate Football &amp; Baske&amp;all games.<lb/>
2. Priority in purchasing Bowl tickets.<lb/>
3. Full membership in the Plate Club at the.Q?wLad ooly h?tf the coat<lb/>
4. Tne "Purple Report monthly ntwlener.<lb/>
5. Bumper sticker, window decai, rrtmbership certificate, nwfcership card, and key chain.<lb/>
6. Imitations to Pirate Club social events.<lb/>
7. Priority points that accumulate over tune.<lb/>
8. Special Student Pirate Club activites (Pre-game socials, cookous, meet the coaches socials, plus many other<lb/>
exciting events).<lb/>
9. Special discounts from local businesses supporting the Student Pirate Club.<lb/>
Join the<lb/>
Today!<lb/>
??'<lb/>
i<lb/>
<pb facs="00058419_0033"/><lb/>
AT NIPP02T<lb/>
?ijuimi<lb/>
Booty'93<lb/>
i,<lb/>
42<lb/>
he Bearcats had their claws in the Pirates<lb/>
and let them slip away last year. Sooner or later they will<lb/>
break their 0-7 drought against ECU.<lb/>
To do that, quarterback Lance Harp needs to im-<lb/>
prove. He had more than twice as many interceptions 116<lb/>
than touchdown passes (7) last year and completed just<lb/>
over 50 percent of his passes<lb/>
Cincinnati does have other options.<lb/>
Running back David Small gained 104 yards on 26<lb/>
carries in f icklen last year and rushed for a team leading<lb/>
780 yards 13.7 yards per carry). Also "turning are several<lb/>
subs for Small: Craedel Kimbrough. Mike Britford and<lb/>
Darrell Harding, none reached the 400-yard mark, but<lb/>
combined they bettered Small's performance: 814 yards<lb/>
on 147 carries for a 5.5 average.<lb/>
Wide receiver Marlon Pearce caught 56 passes for<lb/>
891 yards. If Harp avoids interceptions, Pearce could<lb/>
have another big game against ECU. Last year, he soared<lb/>
for 148 yards on 10 receptions.<lb/>
Cincinnati Head Coach Tim Murphy turned the of-<lb/>
fensive reins over to Harry Hienstand, but Murphy may not<lb/>
be able to resist from calling a few of his favorite plays.<lb/>
Last year Hienstand was the offensive line coach.<lb/>
Murphy is also starting new with Tom Roggleman as<lb/>
defensive coordinator. Last season, opponents averaged<lb/>
25.1 points pergame and gained 362 total yards. ECU has<lb/>
averaged 40.9 points per game with a 19.9 average<lb/>
margin of victory in their seven contests against the<lb/>
Bearcats. The worsi beating Cincinnati received was 56-<lb/>
28 in 1987. The Pirates won 56-32 in 1990.<lb/>
The defense returns its starting defensive backs<lb/>
along with linebackers flate Dingle and Jason Coppess.<lb/>
Dingle recorded six sacks and 54 tackles (five for<lb/>
losses). He is a powerful linebacker and his numbers are<lb/>
expected to improve after a season of strength training.<lb/>
He had less than half the tackles of Coppess, but nad<lb/>
twice the sacks with six. This linebacker duo is dynamic.<lb/>
They will take every opportunity to disrupt ECU quarter-<lb/>
Series Record<lb/>
ECU leads 7-0<lb/>
Lance Harp<lb/>
back Marcus Crandell's train of thought.<lb/>
Coppess recorded 112 tackles. 8 for losses, with<lb/>
three sacks. He is a linebacker in the same mold as Robert<lb/>
Jones. He is not as good but, his style of play is similar ?<lb/>
he rarely misses a tackle.<lb/>
Coppess' sure hands are important in the Bearcats'<lb/>
Multiple-50 defense which relies on linebackers to do<lb/>
most of the work.<lb/>
Free safety Alan Fletcher is a hard hitter who racked<lb/>
up 72 tackles and picked off four passes. Comerback<lb/>
Jocelyn Borgella is the returning team interception leader<lb/>
with five. Expect them to play well and cause havoc with<lb/>
ECU'S offensive schemes.<lb/>
The Pirates are not likely to put 42 points on the<lb/>
board with an improved Bearcat defense and a weaker<lb/>
ECU offense. Cincinnati is in the same boat. Their offense<lb/>
does not seem to have improved much, while the Buc<lb/>
defense is looking stronger.<lb/>
? Robert S. Todd,<lb/>
Editor<lb/>
Location:Cincinnati,<lb/>
Ohio<lb/>
Athletics<lb/>
Director:Rick<lb/>
Taylor<lb/>
Enrollment:36,000<lb/>
nickname:Bearcats<lb/>
Conference:Ind. (IFA)<lb/>
Stadium:Nippert<lb/>
(35,000)<lb/>
SurfaceAstro Turf<lb/>
1992 record:3-8<lb/>
HeadCoach:Tim<lb/>
Murphy<lb/>
Primary off:Multiple<lb/>
Primary def:Multiple<lb/>
50<lb/>
Colors:Red and<lb/>
Black<lb/>
Quolity e Competitive Prices ? Service<lb/>
Get Ready for Pirate Tailgating!<lb/>
Try our fountain products to go!<lb/>
Chicken Salad,<lb/>
Pimenta Cheese,<lb/>
&amp; Grilled Cheese<lb/>
.99<lb/>
HOTDOGS<lb/>
2S1.25<lb/>
Ham &amp; Cheese<lb/>
$1.25<lb/>
Fountain Drinks<lb/>
2 Liter PepsiCoke<lb/>
Frito Lay Chips!<lb/>
5r<lb/>
We Offer a Wide Variety of Services:<lb/>
Free Expanded Delivery Service. (Now with two Delivery men)<lb/>
?Charge Account W approved credit<lb/>
?Computer profile history for Insurance information<lb/>
?Drive in window (4 only)<lb/>
?Blood pressure check (1 &amp; 4)<lb/>
?(3 &amp; 4)<lb/>
we also accept prescription drug cards<lb/>
YOUR LOCALLY OWNED &amp;<lb/>
OPERATED HOMETOWN DRUG STORE- FOUR LOCATIONS<lb/>
TO SERVE YOU:<lb/>
1. 911 Dickinson Ave. 2, 6th &amp; Memorial Dr.<lb/>
752-7105 758-4104<lb/>
M-Sat 8-7:30 Sun 1-7:30 M-St 8-10.Sun 1-10<lb/>
3. Parkview Commons<lb/>
(Across from Doctors park)<lb/>
757-1076 M-F9-6<lb/>
4. 1631 SE Greenville Blvd.<lb/>
752-0030<lb/>
M-Sat.9-9 Sun A -7:30<lb/>
9 6.98<lb/>
USED CDs<lb/>
or (ess NEW CDs<lb/>
JOIN OUR DISC-COUNT CLUB<lb/>
BUT 10-GETONE FREE!<lb/>
MON-SAT 10am-9pm<lb/>
SUNDAY 1-7<lb/>
FIFTH ST. DOWNTOWN<lb/>
758-4298<lb/>
<pb facs="00058419_0034"/><lb/>
18 tfPOtlLE:<lb/>
VAiKMK<lb/>
?lJi?!I<lb/>
L ife as an East Carolina football<lb/>
Iayer is rarely easy. You are forced to<lb/>
:ontend with the pressure of high expecta-<lb/>
ions on the field and in the classroom.<lb/>
iome make it, some don't. A simple look at<lb/>
XU's football roster will prove that.<lb/>
When a player is successful in his ath-<lb/>
etic and academic endeavors one would<lb/>
hink that the pressures would alleviate,<lb/>
)ut that is not the case. Often success<lb/>
rings more responsibility coupled with<lb/>
jreater taxations. Improve-<lb/>
nent is not just expected,<lb/>
t is demanded.<lb/>
Crumpler knows these<lb/>
ressures well.<lb/>
fie has been named as<lb/>
he nation's best tight-end<lb/>
n nearly every national<lb/>
ootball publication and<lb/>
,aid that he isn't greatly<lb/>
othered by these circum-<lb/>
.tances.<lb/>
"I don't see it as pres-<lb/>
.ure, 1 see it more as a<lb/>
:hal1enge" Crumpler said.<lb/>
You can't worry about what newspapers<lb/>
ind magazines might say Crumpler said<lb/>
le had always received support from his<lb/>
lad. "He doesn't ever put pressure on me<lb/>
. . he's already been through it<lb/>
Crumpler is deserving of that support,<lb/>
iccording to his father, because of the fact<lb/>
hat he has accomplished what few student-<lb/>
ithletes are able to, a four-year degree in<lb/>
usiness.<lb/>
"As a parent, I'm extremely proud of<lb/>
lim Crumpler Sr. said. "On the field you<lb/>
lave 10 to 12 coaches to push you, but the<lb/>
:7assroom is often a different story. I think<lb/>
hat the fact that Carlester already has his<lb/>
degree is remarkable considering the cur-<lb/>
rent trend (a five-year degree) in athletics<lb/>
The most prominent of the on-field<lb/>
"pushers" is Head Coach Steve Logan, who<lb/>
has many words of praise for Crumpler's<lb/>
work habits both on and off the field.<lb/>
"Carlester is a class act both on and off<lb/>
the field Logan said. "He is an excellent<lb/>
student and is working extremely hard to<lb/>
prepare for the season<lb/>
Crumpler said that his off-the-field ex-<lb/>
periences have taught him that as a general<lb/>
rule athletes such as him-<lb/>
self are badly stereotyped<lb/>
about their classroom hab-<lb/>
its and intellectual devel-<lb/>
opment. Crumpler said<lb/>
these stereotypes are a<lb/>
cause of distress for him.<lb/>
"Some of the guys I've<lb/>
met on the team are some<lb/>
of the brightest people I've<lb/>
ever known Crumpler<lb/>
said. "Some people think<lb/>
athletes are not willing to<lb/>
work in the classroom and<lb/>
that s wrong. By graduat-<lb/>
ing, I feel like I've accomplished some-<lb/>
thing. It is very much a sense of pride for<lb/>
me<lb/>
Crumpler said he dreams of a profes-<lb/>
sional football career, but is making prepa-<lb/>
rations to enter the professional world by<lb/>
working on his MBA.<lb/>
Crumpler said that he would be satis-<lb/>
fied with whatever road he takes after com-<lb/>
pleting his education.<lb/>
"Hopefully I'll be a success at whatever<lb/>
I do he said.<lb/>
? Warren Sumner,<lb/>
Staff Writer<lb/>
w,<lb/>
hen the Pirate football team<lb/>
marches into Ficklen Stadium in Septem-<lb/>
ber to face the Syracuse Orangemen, there<lb/>
will be many questions facing the team<lb/>
about the game and the season.<lb/>
Will there be an early defensive break-<lb/>
down like there was in last year's opening<lb/>
game against Syracuse?<lb/>
Will some of the inexperienced players<lb/>
at the wide receiver spot be able to handle<lb/>
the offensive load created by ECU'S pos-<lb/>
session route oriented of-<lb/>
fense?<lb/>
Despite the many ques-<lb/>
tions floating around be-<lb/>
fore game time, the spot-<lb/>
light will inevitably be fo-<lb/>
cused on one player.<lb/>
That one player win be-<lb/>
Marcus Crandell.<lb/>
Crandell was officially<lb/>
handed the reins of the<lb/>
ECU offense after last<lb/>
year's quarterback,<lb/>
Michael Anderson, left<lb/>
school for undisclosed aca-<lb/>
demic reasons. Crandell, a redshirt fresh-<lb/>
man, spent last season leading the scout<lb/>
team in simulated game situations in order<lb/>
to better prepare the ECU defense for the<lb/>
next week's opponent. This year, it will be<lb/>
the real thing.<lb/>
To most, it might seem as if ECU'S high<lb/>
tech offense would be a burden to a young<lb/>
quarterback. However, Crandell said that<lb/>
the big time passing attack was one of the<lb/>
things that first attracted him to ECU when<lb/>
he was being recruited at Robersonville<lb/>
High School.<lb/>
"One of the things that I really liked<lb/>
about the ECU program was the offense<lb/>
ECU PIRATES ? ECU PIRATES ? ECU PIRATES<lb/>
Central Book &amp; News<lb/>
?Hardback and Paperback Books<lb/>
?3500 Magazine Tides (updated daily)<lb/>
?Bargain Book Collection from2.98 up<lb/>
?Local and Out of State Newspapers<lb/>
(LA Times, Boston Globe, New York Times, Australia, Alaska)<lb/>
?Large Selection of Trading Cards<lb/>
?Greeting Cards<lb/>
?1993-94 Calendars<lb/>
?Gift Certificates<lb/>
rio<lb/>
OFF ;<lb/>
I everything except v<lb/>
j newspapers and magazines I<lb/>
Mon-Fri 8:30-9:30pm<lb/>
Sat &amp; Sun 9:00-9:30<lb/>
Greenville Square Shopping Center next to<lb/>
Kmart<lb/>
756-7177<lb/>
ECU PIRATES ? ECU PIRATES ? ECU PIRATES<lb/>
Crandell said. "Other schools weren't<lb/>
recruiting me as a quarterback. ECU gave<lb/>
me an opportunity to play QB in an of-<lb/>
fense with a lot of passing. In high school,<lb/>
the offense was a lot different because I<lb/>
didn't get to pass as much as I will here.<lb/>
The offense is pretty complicated, but<lb/>
I'm getting use to it<lb/>
Crandell will probably be passing a<lb/>
lot when he makes his debut in front of<lb/>
the home crowd at ficklen, as well as the<lb/>
national ESPN audience.<lb/>
Crandell says that he is not trying to<lb/>
concentrate on all the<lb/>
added pressures. He is<lb/>
only focusing on going<lb/>
out and doing his job.<lb/>
"1 feel that if I go out<lb/>
there and take it one<lb/>
game at a time, 1 can put<lb/>
some doubts to rest<lb/>
Crandell said. "I look at<lb/>
the idea of coming in im-<lb/>
mediately as an opportu-<lb/>
nity more than anything.<lb/>
I just need to go out there<lb/>
and prove myself<lb/>
Crandell's style of<lb/>
play should prove to be exciting for Pi-<lb/>
rate faithful. Some might find his style of<lb/>
play and physical abilities to besimilarto<lb/>
that of former ECU quarterback Jeff Biake.<lb/>
Crandell said that he could see where<lb/>
some people might make comparisons,<lb/>
but that in the long run there were many<lb/>
differences.<lb/>
"I'm the type of quarterback who is<lb/>
more comfortable scrambling he said.<lb/>
"1 (would) rather do that than stand in the<lb/>
pocket. On the field, I don't talk very<lb/>
much. I just try and lead by example, and<lb/>
Continued on page 21, see Crandell<lb/>
PeppVs Pizza Den<lb/>
Welcome ECU Students!<lb/>
BUY Op?i?JJK SPECIAL<lb/>
kwJB?H<lb/>
v<lb/>
Join us at Peppi's Pizza Den.<lb/>
421 Greenville Blvd.<lb/>
756-0825<lb/>
<pb facs="00058419_0035"/><lb/>
K?ffi?M<lb/>
1UIWUU<lb/>
i??;iuu<lb/>
L ife as an East Carolina football<lb/>
)layer is rarely easy. You are forced to<lb/>
:oritend with the pressure of high expecta-<lb/>
ions on the field and in the classroom,<lb/>
iome make it, some don't. A simple look at<lb/>
XL's football roster will prove that.<lb/>
When a player is successful in his ath-<lb/>
etic and academic endeavors one would<lb/>
hink that the pressures would alleviate,<lb/>
tut that is not the case. Often success<lb/>
jrings more responsibility coupled with<lb/>
ireater taxations. Improve-<lb/>
nent is not just expected,<lb/>
t is demanded.<lb/>
Crumpler knows these<lb/>
ressures well.<lb/>
Me has been named as<lb/>
he nation s best tight-end<lb/>
n nearly every national<lb/>
ootball publication and<lb/>
.aid that he isn't greatly<lb/>
mothered by these circum-<lb/>
.tances.<lb/>
"1 don't see it as pres-<lb/>
,ure, 1 see it more as a<lb/>
ihallenge Crumpler said.<lb/>
You can't worry about what newspapers<lb/>
md magazines might sav Crumpler said<lb/>
le had always received support from his<lb/>
lad. "He doesn't ever put pressure on me<lb/>
. . he's already been through it<lb/>
Crumpler is deserving of that support,<lb/>
lecording to his father, because of the fact<lb/>
hat he has accomplished what few student-<lb/>
ithletes are able to, a four-year degree in<lb/>
usiness.<lb/>
"As a parent, I'm extremely proud of<lb/>
lim Crumpler Sr. said. "On the field you<lb/>
lave 10 to 12 coaches to push you, but the<lb/>
:Tassroom is often a different story. I think<lb/>
hat the fact that Carlester already has his<lb/>
degree is remarkable considering the cur-<lb/>
rent trend (a five-year degree) in athletics<lb/>
The most prominent of the on-field<lb/>
"pushers" is Mead Coach Steve Logan, who<lb/>
has many words of praise for Crumpler's<lb/>
work habits both on and off the field.<lb/>
"Carlester is a class act both on and off<lb/>
the field Logan said. "He is an excellent<lb/>
student and is working extremely hard to<lb/>
prepare for the season<lb/>
Crumpler said that his off-the-field ex-<lb/>
periences have taught him that as a general <lb/>
rule athletes such as him- :<lb/>
self are badly stereotyped<lb/>
about their classroom hab-<lb/>
is and intellectual devel- j<lb/>
opment. Crumpler said j<lb/>
these stereotypes are a j<lb/>
cause of distress for him.<lb/>
"Some of the guys I've j<lb/>
met on the team are some<lb/>
of the brightest people I've<lb/>
ever known Crumpler<lb/>
said. "Some people think<lb/>
athletes are not willing to<lb/>
work in the classroom and<lb/>
that's wrong. By graduat-<lb/>
ing, I feel like I've accomplished some-<lb/>
thing. It is very much a sense of pride for<lb/>
me<lb/>
Crumpler said he dreams of a profes-<lb/>
sional football career, but is making prepa-<lb/>
rations to enter the professional world by<lb/>
working on his MBA.<lb/>
Crumpler said that he would be satis-<lb/>
fies with whatever road he takes after com-<lb/>
pleting his education.<lb/>
"Hopefully I'll be a success at whatever<lb/>
I do he said.<lb/>
? Warren Sumner,<lb/>
Staff Writer<lb/>
w,<lb/>
hen the Pirate football team<lb/>
marches into Ficklen Stadium in Septem-<lb/>
ber to face the Syracuse Orangemen, there<lb/>
will be many questions facing the team<lb/>
about the game and the season.<lb/>
Will there be an early defensive break-<lb/>
down like there was in last year's opening<lb/>
game against Syracuse?<lb/>
Will some of the inexperienced players<lb/>
at the wide receiver spot be able to handle<lb/>
the offensive load created by ECU'S pos-<lb/>
session route oriented of-<lb/>
fense?<lb/>
Despite the many ques-<lb/>
tions floating around be-<lb/>
fore game time, the spot-<lb/>
light will inevitably be fo-<lb/>
cused on one player.<lb/>
That one player will be-<lb/>
Marcus Crandell.<lb/>
Crandell was officially-<lb/>
handed the reins of the<lb/>
i ECU offense after last<lb/>
! year's quarterback,<lb/>
, Michael Anderson, left<lb/>
school for undisclosed aca-<lb/>
i demic reasons. Crandell, a redshirt fresh-<lb/>
 man, spent last season leading the scout<lb/>
I team in simulated game situations in order<lb/>
to better prepare the ECU defense for the<lb/>
next week's opponent. This year, it will be<lb/>
the real thing.<lb/>
To most, it might seem as if ECU'S high<lb/>
tech offense would be a burden to a young<lb/>
quarterback. However, Crandell said that<lb/>
the big time passing attack was one of the<lb/>
things that first attracted him to ECU when<lb/>
he was being recruited at Robersonville<lb/>
High School.<lb/>
"One of the things that I really liked<lb/>
about the ECU program was the offense<lb/>
ECU PIRATES ? ECU PIRATES ? ECU PIRATES<lb/>
Central Book &amp; News<lb/>
?Hardback and Paperback Books<lb/>
?3500 Magazine Tides ("Plated daily)<lb/>
?Bargain Book Collection from2.98 up<lb/>
?Local and Out of State Newspapers<lb/>
(LA Times, Boston Globe, New York Times, Australia, Alaska)<lb/>
?Large Selection of Trading Cards<lb/>
?Greeting Cards<lb/>
?1993-91 Calendars<lb/>
?Gift Certificates<lb/>
rio<lb/>
1 OFF<lb/>
 everything except I<lb/>
? newspapers and magazines I<lb/>
Mon-Fri 8:30-9:30pm<lb/>
Sat &amp; Sun 9:00-9:30<lb/>
Greenville Square Shopping Center next to<lb/>
Kmart<lb/>
756-7177<lb/>
ECU PIRATES ? ECU PIRATES ? ECU PIRATES<lb/>
Crandell said. "Other schools weren't<lb/>
recruiting me as a quarterback. ECU gave<lb/>
me an opportunity to play QB in an of-<lb/>
fense with a lot of passing. In high school,<lb/>
the offense was a lot different because 1<lb/>
didn't get to pass as much as I will here.<lb/>
The offense is pretty complicated, but<lb/>
I'm getting use to it<lb/>
Crandell ill probably be passing a<lb/>
lot when he makes his debut in front of<lb/>
the home crowd at Ficklen, as well as the<lb/>
national ESPN audience.<lb/>
Crandell says that he is not trying to<lb/>
concentrate on all the<lb/>
added pressures. He is<lb/>
only focusing on going<lb/>
out and doing his job.<lb/>
"I feei that if I go out<lb/>
there and take it one<lb/>
game at a time, 1 can put<lb/>
some doubts to rest<lb/>
Crandell said. "I look at<lb/>
the idea of coming in im-<lb/>
mediately as an opportu-<lb/>
nity more than anything.<lb/>
I just need to go out there<lb/>
and prove myself<lb/>
Crandell's style of<lb/>
play should prove to be exciting for Pi-<lb/>
rate faithful. Some might find his style of<lb/>
play and physical abilities to be similar to<lb/>
that of former ECU quarterback Jeff Blake.<lb/>
Crandell said that he could see where<lb/>
jome people might make comparisons,<lb/>
but that in the long run there were many<lb/>
differences.<lb/>
"I'm the type of quarterback who is<lb/>
more comfortable scrambling he said.<lb/>
"1 (would) rather do that than stand in the<lb/>
pocket. On the field, I don't talk very<lb/>
much. I just try and lead by example, and<lb/>
Continued on page 21. see Crandell<lb/>
PeppVs Pizza Den<lb/>
Welcome ECU Students!<lb/>
BUY ONE mMm SPECIAL<lb/>
Join us at Peppi's Pizza Den.<lb/>
421 Greenville Blvd.<lb/>
756-0825<lb/>
<pb facs="00058419_0036"/><lb/>
Vt-t If"rrJaC-<lb/>
Rainbow Trout<lb/>
Recreation Center<lb/>
-MINIATURE GOLF<lb/>
-FISHING<lb/>
-POOL TABLE t ?-<lb/>
PARTIES (BIRTHDAY, COMPANY FUNCllONS)<lb/>
TUESDAY NIGHT COLLEGE NIGHT<lb/>
Tuesday Night College Night<lb/>
S2 K-r gaH Miniature (rtlt plus Disk unit ftnvngft K<lb/>
Sl.UH old fcinl vvr, liii-sdav)<lb/>
Wednesday &amp; Friday Nights<lb/>
Catch Your Own Rsh! We'll provide trench hies, cole slaw, Si combread. -<lb/>
Hours WIST264 Alternate&amp;Hwy 13<lb/>
8am-2amMon-Sun 756-3995<lb/>
fir<lb/>
Serving East Carolina for over 35 years.<lb/>
MORGAN<lb/>
PRINTERS; Inc.<lb/>
3001 S. Evans St. Greenville, NC 27834<lb/>
355-5588 Fax 756-2559 Toll Free 1-800-962-1972<lb/>
"rate fans around the nation<lb/>
received very good news on June 5 when<lb/>
Richard Eakin, the Chancellor of East Caro-<lb/>
lina University, was named chairperson of<lb/>
the College Football Association. Eakin was<lb/>
promoted to the post after<lb/>
a two-year term serving on<lb/>
the board of directors.<lb/>
The CFA, comprised of<lb/>
67 member institutions, has<lb/>
banded to represent most<lb/>
major Division 1 football pro-<lb/>
grams around the country,<lb/>
with the exception of foot-<lb/>
ball programs affiliated with<lb/>
the Pacific Athletic confer-<lb/>
ence and the Big Ten con-<lb/>
ference.<lb/>
The Association repre-<lb/>
sents those member institu-<lb/>
tions in their efforts to de-<lb/>
velop television contracts<lb/>
with major networks for the<lb/>
purpose of airing college<lb/>
football games.<lb/>
The airing of ECU'S Sept. 9 game with<lb/>
Syracuse is a direct result of work done by<lb/>
the CFA to bring the Pirates and the<lb/>
Orangemen together.<lb/>
The chairperson position was formerly<lb/>
held by Dr. E. Roger Sayers, the president of<lb/>
the University of Alabama, who held the<lb/>
position for the previous two years.<lb/>
Every year, the need to elect a new chair<lb/>
is analyzed, therefore, Eakin will serve a<lb/>
one-year term, with an opportunity to be re-<lb/>
elected next year.<lb/>
"The CFA would be interested to look<lb/>
into the future of college football as it relates<lb/>
to other intercollegiate sports Eakin said.<lb/>
"We will also be handling issues of equal<lb/>
opportunity and fundingof collegiate athlet-<lb/>
ics<lb/>
Eakin's policy on his CFA position will<lb/>
be one that shows no favoritism.<lb/>
"It definitely doesn't hurt ECU that I<lb/>
have this position, and I<lb/>
think ECU should be rec-<lb/>
ognized, but 1 do not<lb/>
intend to use that posi-<lb/>
tion to get an advantage<lb/>
for our program.<lb/>
"My job as chairman<lb/>
of the board is to repre-<lb/>
sent all the member in-<lb/>
stitutions<lb/>
One issue that Eakin<lb/>
and the CFA will have to<lb/>
deal with in the future is<lb/>
the current system for<lb/>
college post-season play.<lb/>
With much of the national<lb/>
bowl picture mandated<lb/>
in the preseason, many<lb/>
independent schools,<lb/>
such as East Carolina, are<lb/>
hurt by the non-availability of bowls. Eakin<lb/>
said that he does not foresee the situation<lb/>
with post-season bowls changing any time<lb/>
soon.<lb/>
"I don't anticipate any changes to the<lb/>
current bowl system Eakin said. "When<lb/>
the idea of a national championship was<lb/>
introduced to Dick Shultz, who heads the<lb/>
NCAA, he reacted favorably, but quite frankly<lb/>
there is little grass-roots support for such a<lb/>
tournament. This emphasizes the impor-<lb/>
tance of ECU aligning themselves with a<lb/>
conference<lb/>
Richard Eakin<lb/>
? Warren Sumner.<lb/>
Staff Wbitef<lb/>
Armani Shoe Store<lb/>
Locatkd At:<lb/>
Grelnviu.f Squari Shopping Gf.ntir<lb/>
(next to K-Mart)<lb/>
(919)756-8182<lb/>
We Offer A Large Selection of<lb/>
Ladies Name Brand<lb/>
Shoes &amp; Accessories.<lb/>
Also The Areas Largest Selection of<lb/>
Metallic &amp; Frogskin Handbags.<lb/>
Present This Coupon And Receive<lb/>
An Additional DISCOUNT!<lb/>
A<lb/>
T U R<lb/>
AT THE<lb/>
I N<lb/>
25 OFF<lb/>
Your Purchase<lb/>
valid until SEPTEMBER 11,1993<lb/>
I<lb/>
I<lb/>
I<lb/>
?<lb/>
I<lb/>
I<lb/>
I<lb/>
I<lb/>
I<lb/>
TUESDAY<lb/>
Reive!<lb/>
0 DRAFT ALL NIGHT!<lb/>
WEDNESDAY<lb/>
CLASSICS NIGHT<lb/>
with the best in Classic Rock &amp; Dance Music<lb/>
&amp; 0 DRAFT EVERY WEDNESDAY NIGHT!<lb/>
THURSDAY<lb/>
AWW!iveR8Anv mnm come join us every Thursday as we count<lb/>
DOWN TO OUR 25TH YEAR SERVING ECU? EVERY THURSDAY IS NEW YEAR'S EVE<lb/>
WITH CHAMPAGNE COCKTAILS &amp; MORE BAR SPECIALS EACH WEEK!<lb/>
FRIDAY<lb/>
RUSH HOUR<lb/>
FREE Admission for Members &amp;Greek IDs<lb/>
Reduced guest Admission 7-9. $50 Prize to the Fraternity &amp; Sorority with Ac Best<lb/>
Attendance Before 9.<lb/>
i AM Nile Every Friday,<lb/>
st piv-m.mii auipo<lb/>
nv oi pin<lb/>
chase Not alid uitliam other offer.<lb/>
SATURDAY<lb/>
rtfii<lb/>
lCrkrfc?r?l?w??nri w?h Qm Liflht!<lb/>
Come tarty<lb/>
Bar Specials Al NHe Every Friday.<lb/>
rr"<lb/>
liUiiiiuiiUiAAlHAiiiikUUukmUukuiiUUitk<lb/>
<pb facs="00058419_0037"/><lb/>
2Q TOP ITCT<lb/>
?i,i?f.iw?i.<lb/>
zuutriM<lb/>
'?"?????-<lb/>
Att.<lb/>
36,500<lb/>
36,000<lb/>
35,121<lb/>
35,100<lb/>
35,047<lb/>
3-1,511<lb/>
34,126<lb/>
8. 33,857<lb/>
9. 33,810<lb/>
10. 33,786<lb/>
N'ote: Ficklen<lb/>
1.<lb/>
2.<lb/>
3.<lb/>
4.<lb/>
5.<lb/>
6.<lb/>
7.<lb/>
Opp.<lb/>
Syracuse<lb/>
Pittsburgh<lb/>
Virginia Tech<lb/>
Virginia Tech<lb/>
Date<lb/>
Sept. 5,1992<lb/>
Oct. 26,1991<lb/>
Sept. 12,1992<lb/>
Oct. 22,1989<lb/>
South Carolina Oct. 26,1985<lb/>
Miami, Fla. Oct. 5,1985<lb/>
Cincinnati Oct. 17,1992<lb/>
West Virginia Sept. 13,1986<lb/>
Virginia Tech Sept. 15,1990<lb/>
West Virginia Oct.8,1988<lb/>
Score<lb/>
21-42 L<lb/>
24-23 W<lb/>
30-27 W<lb/>
14-10 W<lb/>
10-52 L<lb/>
15-27 L<lb/>
42-21 W<lb/>
21-24 L<lb/>
23-24L<lb/>
10-30L<lb/>
Record<lb/>
5-6<lb/>
11-1<lb/>
5-6<lb/>
6-5<lb/>
2-9<lb/>
2-9<lb/>
5-6<lb/>
3-8<lb/>
5-6<lb/>
3-8<lb/>
Stadium was filled to 93.7 percent capacity during last season's home games.<lb/>
Riverside Steakbar<lb/>
SteakBar<lb/>
'XkeawWe's Most Utwpe SteakHouse"<lb/>
Cook Your uwn steak Over Live Charcoal<lb/>
-Or Well Cook For You<lb/>
NIGHTLY BAR &amp; RESTAURANT SPECIALS<lb/>
? Extensive Salad Bar<lb/>
? All ABC Permits<lb/>
"Across from the hospital"<lb/>
315 Stantonsburg Road<lb/>
752-5001<lb/>
758-6600<lb/>
Call Papa<lb/>
BEST PIZZA! BEST PRICE:<lb/>
YOl DEiERtEIT!<lb/>
316 C<lb/>
E.I Oth Street<lb/>
Take Papa Tailgating!<lb/>
RAISE YOUR SPIRIT WTTH A<lb/>
BUCKET 0' WINGS FROM PAPA OLIVER'S<lb/>
r<lb/>
2 SIZES<lb/>
aOPnnimWngs $1135<lb/>
MPwiimVfags $J5?5<lb/>
2 STYLES<lb/>
Mild or Gringo Huanuchi<lb/>
Waning: BYOB Id endue this experience<lb/>
?<lb/>
Go Pirates!<lb/>
HOLLYRIPGE<lb/>
Home &amp; Gardenjowce<lb/>
Come see our wide variety of<lb/>
flowers, plants &amp; trees.<lb/>
Straight out 10th St. East 5 miles past Hastings Ford on<lb/>
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10 Discount w Game Stubs on<lb/>
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Mon-Sat 8:30-6:00<lb/>
Sun 1:00-6:00<lb/>
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AQUA GOLF CENTER<lb/>
, Located on NE Greenville Blvd. Beside Hard Times<lb/>
758-1341<lb/>
? Practice Sand Bunker ? Putting Green<lb/>
? Chipping Range<lb/>
Chip from<lb/>
10 - 60 yards<lb/>
? Driving Range<lb/>
Grass Tees<lb/>
Matt Tees<lb/>
v<lb/>
mmfmm<lb/>
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UNIVERSITY<lb/>
Frame Shop<lb/>
and<lb/>
Art Gallery<lb/>
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oJI Complete Frame Orders wCoupon I<lb/>
0 expires 9-18-93 ? ??, .J<lb/>
?Posters?Prints?Photo Albums?Ready Made Frames?Creative Mats<lb/>
 All At Affordable Prices<lb/>
752-4620<lb/>
520 S. Cotanche St.<lb/>
"LOCATED ABOVE UBE &amp; ART &amp; GRAPHICS<lb/>
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Mon-t-n y-6<lb/>
&amp; Sat 10-5<lb/>
??<lb/>
i iti<lb/>
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"The Students Flower Shop'<lb/>
We Offer the Best Prices on Your Flowers Everyday!<lb/>
University Flowers<lb/>
Plaza Mall<lb/>
756-8460<lb/>
r Fr"fl"6wers<lb/>
ECU STUDENTS <lb/>
COUPON !<lb/>
Present this couponj<lb/>
for a free flower<lb/>
Expires 8-31-93<lb/>
Present your Student ID<lb/>
For a 10 Additional Discount<lb/>
?i:i:ii!ii<lb/>
21<lb/>
get the job done<lb/>
As Crandell attempts to get the job<lb/>
done on the field, he will have many vet-<lb/>
eran ECU players at his side helping him<lb/>
along the way. One of those players, senior<lb/>
tight-end Carlester Crumpler, said one of<lb/>
the main things young players like Crandell<lb/>
need is encouragement.<lb/>
"You just have to go with you're God-<lb/>
given abilities Crumpler said. "Michael<lb/>
was the type of player who could stand in<lb/>
the pocket and see everything. Marcus,<lb/>
because of his height, is going to be a<lb/>
better player when he's moving around<lb/>
and scrambling out of the pocket<lb/>
Coach Steve Logan believes that a first<lb/>
year quarter back must be given some<lb/>
guidance as well as encouragement. Logan<lb/>
remembers the trials of young players sue<lb/>
as Jeff Blake and Michael Anderson in th<lb/>
ECU offensive system were not always s<lb/>
easy.<lb/>
"If there are some ways that I can kee<lb/>
Marcus out of some difficult situation<lb/>
concerning interception potential, then<lb/>
will Logan said. "(An interception! mor<lb/>
than anything can devastate a young quai<lb/>
terback<lb/>
for now, Crandell says that he is nc<lb/>
really worried about where he or the ECl<lb/>
program will be in four years. His onl<lb/>
concern for now is preparing himself fo<lb/>
the first game of the season so that h<lb/>
will finally have the opportunity to prov<lb/>
himself under the lights of ficklen Sta<lb/>
d i u m.<lb/>
OPEN 24 HOURS<lb/>
316 E. 10th St. 752-7671<lb/>
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Sun. Masses x130am &amp; 830pm<lb/>
(at the center)  <lb/>
Fr. Paul Vaeth Chaplain &amp;<lb/>
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(919)830-1779<lb/>
AUTOMOTIVE<lb/>
Foreign A Domitic<lb/>
PARTS A SERVICE<lb/>
510 N. Greene St. Greenville, NC<lb/>
WE DO<lb/>
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V-<lb/>
Our Service Personnel and Technicians Have a<lb/>
Combined Total of Over 120 Years Experience.<lb/>
Appointments are Welcome, but not Necessary.<lb/>
FILIBUSTERS<lb/>
mm FILIBUSTER'S. SOON ID BE THE PEOPLES FHVORITE RESTAURANT RID BRR li GREENVILLE WHETHER WRE R<lb/>
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THIS OFFER IS NOT 0000 WITH fiNY OTHER OISCOUNT ? OFFER EXPIRES 103193<lb/>
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THIS OFFER IS NOT G000 WITH RNY OTHER OISCOUNT ? OFFER EXPIRES 103193<lb/>
MDT BOOD FO<lb/>
DOWN TOWN GBEENVILLE AT114 EAS1 FIFTH STREET ? 758-4888<lb/>
? UK'H 0 I N N E A ? L R T E N I G H T ?<lb/>
l<lb/>
<pb facs="00058419_0039"/><lb/>
PIRATES!<lb/>
'OOOOOOooo<lb/>
rOO OO Ooo o o<lb/>
ome For All Your Pirate Needs and Football Souvern<lb/>
T-SHIRTS ? SWEATSHIRTS ? SEAT CUSHIONS<lb/>
POM-POMS ? HATS ? SABORS ? FOOTBALLS<lb/>
CAR FLAGS PENNANTS ?CHILDREN'S APPAREL<lb/>
Located inWright Building ? 757-6731 ? Owned and Operated by East Carolina University<lb/>
ECU Student Stores: More than just books?your dollars support student scholars<lb/>
One Stop S4ofifUK$ at tie 'Tfamt o? gamfuti<lb/>
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<pb facs="00058419_0040"/>
</div></body></text></TEI>