<?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="00058437_0001"/>
 4lt?i<lb/>
? ?aw?<lb/>
Awareness<lb/>
j Jimmy "12-Gear" B.<lb/>
st soul in<lb/>
? What<lb/>
Joes jj7<lb/>
See Chapter 10 on page 2.<lb/>
Sports<lb/>
King of the Road<lb/>
Richard Petty will be<lb/>
appearing at half time of the<lb/>
last home game of the<lb/>
season against Tulsa this<lb/>
Saturday at Flcklen Stadium.<lb/>
Story page 11.<lb/>
The East Carolinian<lb/>
Vol. 68 No. 64 rimi-ofi? nnnn " ????<lb/>
Circulation 12,000<lb/>
Greenville, North Carolina<lb/>
University bond passes<lb/>
Photo by Cedric Van Buren<lb/>
Regardless of the low-voter turnout, the University Bond passed. Here<lb/>
K. Michelle Johnson (ECU graduate student) prepares to vote.<lb/>
By Jason Williams<lb/>
Staff Writer<lb/>
No more warehouse. No<lb/>
more sitting in the halls. No more<lb/>
talk of losing accreditation. And<lb/>
no more begging the General As-<lb/>
sembly to renovate Joyner Li-<lb/>
brary. North Carolina voters ap-<lb/>
proved a $310 million bond ref-<lb/>
erendum Tuesday to finance<lb/>
capital improvements at state<lb/>
universities, including ECU.<lb/>
ECU will receive about 10<lb/>
percent of the referendum's $310<lb/>
million, to be divided among two<lb/>
campus projects. $29.5 million<lb/>
will go toward the construction<lb/>
of a new addition to Joyner Li-<lb/>
brary while $5 million will be<lb/>
spent to acquire the former J. H.<lb/>
Rose High School property.<lb/>
The vote on the university<lb/>
bonds was closer than many ex-<lb/>
pected on a day in which turn-<lb/>
out was low. Early returns to-<lb/>
taled 413,477, or 53 percent for<lb/>
the bonds and 369,684, or 47 per-<lb/>
cent against them.<lb/>
ECU should receive its por-<lb/>
tion of the money in the near<lb/>
future. UNC President C. D.<lb/>
Spangler said that the state trea-<lb/>
surer will sell the bonds imme-<lb/>
diately, and within six months<lb/>
almost all projects statewide<lb/>
should be underway.<lb/>
"We are looking to begin<lb/>
construction in early spring<lb/>
Chancellor Richard Eakin said<lb/>
Tuesday night after an unoffi-<lb/>
:ial ground-breaking ceremony<lb/>
for the Joyner additions. "The<lb/>
project should be completed in<lb/>
two or two and a half years. This<lb/>
is a tremendous investment in<lb/>
the future. It is a way to provide<lb/>
for our children and our grand-<lb/>
children<lb/>
The university bonds got a<lb/>
boost from the relatively large<lb/>
voter turnout in communities as-<lb/>
sociated with the university sys-<lb/>
tem. More than 16,000 people,<lb/>
or 31 percent of registered vot-<lb/>
ers cast ballots in Pitt County.<lb/>
Board of Elections Supervisor<lb/>
Margaret Hardee said that was a<lb/>
good turnout considering the<lb/>
lack of nationwide or statewide<lb/>
races on the ballot.<lb/>
Many ECU students helped<lb/>
campaign for the bond issue. The<lb/>
SGA produced "Let's Bond" and<lb/>
"Vote Yes" T-shirts along with<lb/>
"Vote for Your New Library"<lb/>
buttons. Students also distrib-<lb/>
uted banners and yard signs<lb/>
throughout the community.<lb/>
In addition to the univer-<lb/>
sity bonds, voters approved<lb/>
three other bond projects as well.<lb/>
The $250 million Community<lb/>
College bond package passed<lb/>
with 56 percent, the $145 million<lb/>
Water and Sewer bond garnered<lb/>
59 percent and the $35 million<lb/>
State Parks bond received 56<lb/>
percent.<lb/>
Pitt Community College,<lb/>
See BOND page 4<lb/>
 ??; 6 ? "? unom- see BUND pe<lb/>
Kash of attacks prompt Safety Act<lb/>
By Maureen Rich Safety Act. The recommend. surh a r,rr?w k?1 " .<lb/>
By Maureen Rich<lb/>
Assistant News Editor<lb/>
ECU's Student Govern-<lb/>
ment Association (SGA) refuses<lb/>
to sit idly by and watch campus<lb/>
crime increasingly threaten and<lb/>
frighten students, faculty, staff<lb/>
and visitors.<lb/>
With the support of Chan-<lb/>
cellor Richard R. Eakin, Dean of<lb/>
Students Ronald Speier and<lb/>
ECU Lt. Keith Knox, the SGA<lb/>
recently proposed a Campus<lb/>
Safety Act. The recommend<lb/>
tion was authored and spon-<lb/>
sored by SGA Speaker Brynn<lb/>
Thomas.<lb/>
"Practicing responsible be-<lb/>
havior that promotes personal<lb/>
safety is the key aspect to re-<lb/>
ducing the robberies on our<lb/>
campus Thomas said in the<lb/>
proposal's cover letter.<lb/>
Recent on-campus assaults<lb/>
and robberies prompted the<lb/>
SGA to step up their efforts to<lb/>
pass this act, but initiative for<lb/>
such a project began over the<lb/>
summer.<lb/>
"The Student Government<lb/>
Association wants the students<lb/>
of ECU to know that we are<lb/>
responding to their needs the<lb/>
letter reads. "We also want to<lb/>
send a message to the people<lb/>
responsible for these robberies<lb/>
that we will not tolerate their<lb/>
actions on our campus, and that<lb/>
we will do whatever it takes to<lb/>
maintain ECU's reputation for<lb/>
having a safe campus<lb/>
The Campus Safety Act<lb/>
consists of five phases, and<lb/>
while phase one is already in<lb/>
progress, phases two through<lb/>
four are planned for the near<lb/>
future.<lb/>
Phase one, which was cre-<lb/>
ated and approved by the SGA<lb/>
Executive Council during the<lb/>
Summer Legislature, provided<lb/>
two bicycles for Public Safety.<lb/>
They will be used to patrol cam-<lb/>
See SGA page 4<lb/>
Finance club visits NYSE<lb/>
The ECU Financial Management Club traveled to New York City last<lb/>
month and got a rare view of the Stock Exchange floor.<lb/>
BysonWilliams<lb/>
Staff Writer7<lb/>
It's one of the most hectic<lb/>
places in America. Harried trad-<lb/>
ers scurry from telephone to<lb/>
computer terminal, buying and<lb/>
selling millions of dollars worth<lb/>
of stock each day. The place is<lb/>
the New York Stock Exchange<lb/>
and a lucky group of ECU stu-<lb/>
dents got to walk on floor dur-<lb/>
ing business hours.<lb/>
The ECU Financial Man-<lb/>
agement Club traveled last<lb/>
month to New York City to get<lb/>
a glimpse of Wall Street. Thirty-<lb/>
six students and 10 faculty<lb/>
members drove up to New York<lb/>
on Oct. 21. The group stayed<lb/>
in downtown Manhattan.<lb/>
The following day, the<lb/>
group met at the VIP lounge at<lb/>
the Stock Exchange for a lec-<lb/>
ture on trading and commodi-<lb/>
ties exchange and then went<lb/>
to the Federal Reserve Bank in<lb/>
New York. Afterwards, stu-<lb/>
dents chose to go to either the<lb/>
Futures Exchange or the Cot-<lb/>
ton Exchange and the Merrill<lb/>
Lynch and Lehman Brothers<lb/>
Brokerage Houses.<lb/>
Later that day, the group<lb/>
reconvened at the stock ex-<lb/>
change to visit the floor. The<lb/>
See STOCK page 2<lb/>
Foreign policy specialist to provide a recap of Watereate<lb/>
By Stephanie Lassiter ? .  &amp;<lb/>
By Stephanie Lassiter<lb/>
Staff Writer<lb/>
ECU will revisit Watergate<lb/>
tonight d uring a guest lecture given<lb/>
by Joan Hoff, a specialist in 20th<lb/>
century foreign policy and poli-<lb/>
tics.<lb/>
"She is an outstanding histo-<lb/>
rian of foreign policy and women's<lb/>
history said Mary Jo Bratton, act-<lb/>
ing chair of the history department.<lb/>
The lecture, which is the 12th<lb/>
annual Lawrence Brewster Lecture<lb/>
in History, will begin a 18:15 in the<lb/>
Francis Speight Auditorium. It is<lb/>
free and open to the public.<lb/>
Hoff, who is former execu-<lb/>
tive secretary of the Organization<lb/>
of American Historians and au-<lb/>
thor of the forthcoming book Nixon<lb/>
Without Watergate: A Presidency<lb/>
Reconsidered, received her PhD<lb/>
degree at the University of Califor-<lb/>
nia, Berkeley.<lb/>
She is currently a member of<lb/>
the Indiana University faculty. Pre-<lb/>
viously, she taught at California<lb/>
State University-Sacramento, Ari-<lb/>
zona State University, Dartmouth<lb/>
College and the University of Vir-<lb/>
ginia.<lb/>
"She is an outstanding and<lb/>
stimulatingspeaker Brattonsaid.<lb/>
Hoff received a Guggenheim<lb/>
Fellowship and Fulbright awards<lb/>
for teaching and lecturing in Aus-<lb/>
tralia and Ireland. Also, she has<lb/>
received awards for studies at<lb/>
Harvard Law School, Radcliffe<lb/>
Institute and the Brookings Insti-<lb/>
tution.<lb/>
She wrote Law, Gender and<lb/>
Injustice: A Legal History of U.S.<lb/>
Women, published in 1991 and ed-<lb/>
ited the 1986 book The Rights of<lb/>
Passage: The Past, Present, and Fu-<lb/>
ture of the Equal Rights Amendment.<lb/>
Other books Hoff has writ-<lb/>
ten are a revisionist biography,<lb/>
Herbert Hoover: Forgotten Progres-<lb/>
sive (1975) and Sexism and the Law:<lb/>
Male Beliefs and Legal Bias in Britain<lb/>
and the U.S. (1978), co-authored by<lb/>
Albie Sachs.<lb/>
"We would be happy to ha ve<lb/>
students and faculty attend this<lb/>
controversial lecture, years after<lb/>
Watergate Bratton said.<lb/>
Black Panther<lb/>
dispels myths<lb/>
By Stephanie Lassiter<lb/>
Staff Writer<lb/>
Irememberbeingatsum-<lb/>
mer camp when I was 12 and<lb/>
being told if I didn't go to sleep<lb/>
the Black Panthers would come<lb/>
through the corn field and kill<lb/>
me. This is yet another fabrica-<lb/>
tion created by American soci-<lb/>
ety.<lb/>
David Hilliard, former<lb/>
chief of staff of the Black Pan-<lb/>
ther Party, discussed both the<lb/>
myths and the truths of the<lb/>
party to a group of nearly 200<lb/>
in Mendenhall Tuesday night.<lb/>
According to Hilliard, the<lb/>
Black Panther Party was "born<lb/>
out ot the stresses of Hie Civil<lb/>
Rights Movement<lb/>
Contrary to popular be-<lb/>
lief, the party did not promote<lb/>
violence, but did believe in self-<lb/>
defense. Hilliard said that the<lb/>
media played on the party's<lb/>
possession of weaponry and<lb/>
its protests against gun laws.<lb/>
Because of the media, people<lb/>
developed negative images of<lb/>
the Black Panther Party.<lb/>
"You saw Bobby Seale<lb/>
going into the state capital with<lb/>
a delegation of Panther Party<lb/>
members protesting gun laws<lb/>
in the State of California<lb/>
Hilliard said.<lb/>
Rather than killing inno-<lb/>
cent campers in corn fields, the<lb/>
party dealt with the basic needs<lb/>
of blacks. Programs such as free<lb/>
breakfast for school children<lb/>
were begun by the Black Pan-<lb/>
ther Party.<lb/>
"We recognized that<lb/>
nourishmentwas synonymous<lb/>
with education he said.<lb/>
Many of the facets of the<lb/>
party's 10-point program are<lb/>
now, 20 years later, being rec-<lb/>
ognized. Decent housing, full-<lb/>
time employment and a free<lb/>
health care system are a few of<lb/>
the points that Hilliard and his<lb/>
cohorts struggled for in the late<lb/>
60s and early 70s. Today, as a<lb/>
nation, all ethnic groups face<lb/>
these problems.<lb/>
The Black Panther<lb/>
Party was started in 1966 at a<lb/>
junior college in Oakland by<lb/>
Bobby Seale and Huey New-<lb/>
ton. Originally, there were<lb/>
two Black Panther groups.<lb/>
One dealt with self-defense,<lb/>
and the other dealt with po-<lb/>
litical issues. The Black Pan-<lb/>
ther Party for self-defense<lb/>
carried exposed weapons<lb/>
and patrolled policemen to<lb/>
be certain that blacks, or oth-<lb/>
ers, were not being treated<lb/>
unjustly.<lb/>
Although the party<lb/>
members carried guns, they<lb/>
were not breaking any laws.<lb/>
Hilliard said Huey Newton,<lb/>
also a law student, carried a<lb/>
shotgun under one arm and<lb/>
a law book under the other.<lb/>
"When we went out on<lb/>
those patrols, Huey was al-<lb/>
ways there to tell the police<lb/>
that we were not in violation<lb/>
of the law, that we were<lb/>
merely there to observe them<lb/>
carrying out their duties<lb/>
Hilliard said.<lb/>
Eventually, Hilliard<lb/>
and other party members<lb/>
weie involved in a 90-minute<lb/>
shoot-out with the Oakland<lb/>
Police where a party mem-<lb/>
ber was killed. Hilliard, as a<lb/>
result of the shoot-out, re-<lb/>
ceived a four-year prison sen-<lb/>
tence.<lb/>
By the 1970s, the Black<lb/>
Panthers were providing free<lb/>
breakfast for schoolchildren,<lb/>
a senior transport service for<lb/>
the elderly receiving senior<lb/>
citizen's checks and free<lb/>
medical and legal services for<lb/>
the poor.<lb/>
"We were very effec-<lb/>
tive in terms of our commu-<lb/>
nity organizing programs<lb/>
See PANTHER page 3<lb/>
r?, ? . ? . c  . , Photo by Harold Wise<lb/>
Uavid Hilliard, former chief of staff oi the Black Panther Party<lb/>
spoke on campus Tuesday, in an attempt to dispel long held myths.<lb/>
<pb facs="00058437_0002"/><lb/>
November 4, 993<lb/>
yses<lb/>
ECU chair wins award<lb/>
?sJk<lb/>
has nearh ,1c<lb/>
m from their<lb/>
home w .is the most horrih ing<lb/>
my life She later leai<lb/>
? destroyed theii old apartment But her father ma<lb/>
i o lucky. "1 haven't heard n in a yeai and<lb/>
lid "1 have no idea where he is, or if he's alive<lb/>
Practice Zen for your tests<lb/>
eat this phrase several times: 'Grades do not mattei<lb/>
Grades do nol matter So uh.it it midterms are coming up and<lb/>
? majoi papersdue Keep repeating, "Grades do not<lb/>
?rtsj I.Gibbs a professor of criminology at Indiana<lb/>
ennsylvania (libbs, author of Dancing With You<lb/>
suggests th.it students practice<lb/>
nd thezone to leam how to score high grades. He<lb/>
etips to get in the on mode: Clear our mind through<lb/>
meditation and deep breathing. I et go ol other tasks, times and<lb/>
places and make a commitment to study for a set amount of time<lb/>
Settle into studying and absorb the material. I dismiss thoughts<lb/>
thal ! ing from the task. Study as if it's the onl) reasonyou<lb/>
were put on this earth.<lb/>
Dartmouth explores alcohol programs<lb/>
 recent independent study has shown th.it Dartmouth<lb/>
College undergraduates who drink consume almosl twice .is<lb/>
much alcohol per week as students at other colleges and univer-<lb/>
sities. Asa result t that study, the college is stepping up efforts<lb/>
at alcohol education to complement enforcement of the college's<lb/>
policy on alcohol. I hose who drink consume an average ot nine<lb/>
dnnks per u eek. 1 he national average, based on a studyof 56,000<lb/>
students at 78 colleges an.I universities, is 5.1 drinks week!)<lb/>
rhose numbers combined with a major increase in the number of<lb/>
alcohol-related disciplinary actions, have Dartmouth officials<lb/>
working to improve the situation.<lb/>
Compiled by Maureen Rich. Taken from CPS<lb/>
and other campus newspapers.<lb/>
in.l being a ti e on several . om<lb/>
mitt<lb/>
At the state level. Wood re<lb/>
??" ond ceived the c association s dis<lb/>
t of I lealth tinguished member .m ard in 1985<lb/>
nt in the when she served as its vice-presi-<lb/>
S ien.es. dent and president<lb/>
lushed Wood is a current member<lb/>
' ard by the American ol the national house ot delegates<lb/>
: m Management for the association,<lb/>
its annual commit- t"he $5,000 member associa-<lb/>
v- ? Georgia. tion does not elect a recipient oi<lb/>
iciation presents the the award yearly.<lb/>
hed Member Award to "Since 1960, only about 15<lb/>
ivho has shown in- people have earned it Wood<lb/>
thi ,iss(H i.ition at said,<lb/>
both the state and national level Being acknowledged as <lb/>
elieveitWood distinguished member grants<lb/>
sa'o  leel proud and Wood automatic lifetime member-<lb/>
humble at the same time ship in the association<lb/>
wood served as the national "It made me realize that<lb/>
president from 1985 to 1986, as people do recognize your efforts<lb/>
well as holding ,i membership and appreciate you doing things<lb/>
position ol the bo,nd ol directors for them Wood said.<lb/>
Drugs suspect in actor's death<lb/>
STOCK<lb/>
Continued from page 1<lb/>
I OS , , 5 lAp, Xn<lb/>
autops on River Phoenix was m-<lb/>
coik lusive ,uk nut sfigators are<lb/>
awaiting test result u rtether<lb/>
drugs played a role in the death of<lb/>
the rising I toll w ot star, the<lb/>
coroner's office s.ns.<lb/>
Coroner's spokesman Scot!<lb/>
I artier s.iuf the toxicology results<lb/>
won't be available for weeks.<lb/>
But the 1V news magazine<lb/>
I lank op i iting an anonymous<lb/>
hospital source, said thatblood tests<lb/>
at (, edars Sinai Medical c enter,<lb/>
where the 2 I year old actoi died<lb/>
early Sunday, found cocaine and<lb/>
V,ilium<lb/>
Paramedics were told the ac-<lb/>
tor had been taking drugs, county<lb/>
me (.apt Ray Ribarsaid,<lb/>
It was the i iassic cocaine<lb/>
overre.n tion it just nails some<lb/>
'people' ond stops the heart he<lb/>
s.lld.<lb/>
Phoenix, who played a tough<lb/>
kid who stands up to bullies in the<lb/>
1986 movie Stand by Me and won<lb/>
an Oscar nomination tor the 1988<lb/>
Runningon Empty, collapsed out-<lb/>
side the Viper Room nightclub<lb/>
He was writhing on the side-<lb/>
walk ? flopping around like "a<lb/>
fish out of water one witness<lb/>
s.iid - as his brother screamed<lb/>
into the phone: "He's dying<lb/>
"You must get here, please,<lb/>
you must get here, please<lb/>
foaquin I eaf" Phoenix, 19, told a<lb/>
911 dispatcher. "I'm thinking he<lb/>
had Valium or something<lb/>
Phoenix s other movies in-<lb/>
cluded The Mosquito Coast, My<lb/>
c hen Private Idaho and Indiana Jones<lb/>
and the Last Crusade.<lb/>
I larrison Ford, who played<lb/>
Phoenix's father in The Mosquito<lb/>
Coast, said "He played my son<lb/>
once and I came to love him like a<lb/>
son, and was proud to watch him<lb/>
grow into a man of such talent and<lb/>
integrity and compassion. We will<lb/>
all miss him<lb/>
Funeral arrangements were<lb/>
incomplete.<lb/>
EAST<lb/>
I<lb/>
Chapter 10<lb/>
I he trucker and I s.it down in<lb/>
? me of Hurt's dimly lit booths for a<lb/>
more private conversation I lifted<lb/>
m hand tor Hurt to brm; over a<lb/>
coupleof beers, though I really didn't<lb/>
wantanothei one after the kid. Some<lb/>
how I thought I would need one<lb/>
though - this trucker showing up<lb/>
was ust too convenient<lb/>
As the trucker took a long swal-<lb/>
low ol his beer, I studied him a little<lb/>
morei losely. I lehad thislookabout<lb/>
him, see ? like he could knock the<lb/>
helloutofan) cuiveliferrtightthrow<lb/>
at him. With his faded denim shirt<lb/>
and his casual attitude, I knew that<lb/>
tins guy had never had a serious<lb/>
problem in his life. I hat's why the<lb/>
first words out of his mouth threw<lb/>
me so badly.<lb/>
'Buddy, I need some help find-<lb/>
ing this guy named Cohol I almost<lb/>
choked on my own beer, but he<lb/>
didn't seem to notice Asl w ipedmy<lb/>
mouth with the back of m hand, he<lb/>
went on. "See, I been on this long<lb/>
haul ten stops so tar, two to go<lb/>
but I can'l seem to find my wav to<lb/>
the next one. l map ain't helping<lb/>
none, either "<lb/>
He pulled out a rolled-uppiece<lb/>
i hmentandflattened itouton<lb/>
n front ol me. As 1 leaned<lb/>
o er the table and looked at the map<lb/>
w ith him, he continued.<lb/>
"See, this is where I started I le<lb/>
pointed to the left side of the map,<lb/>
vesting his finger on i dot in the<lb/>
middle. "We'll just call it step 1 for<lb/>
now Here 1 admit that I have a prob-<lb/>
lem with Cohol thataffects my whole<lb/>
life As he went on, his ringer tra ed<lb/>
along the map.<lb/>
Step 2 is where I come to re.il-<lb/>
ize that I need some help getting<lb/>
ei im problem. Steplets rne<lb/>
ept tl it 1 need something other<lb/>
than myself to provide direction.<lb/>
Step 4 makes me take a look at the<lb/>
negath ethingswheri I'm witht ohol<lb/>
and the positive things when I'm<lb/>
not. Sort : ti is and i ons thing<lb/>
the true! er stopped tor a minuu to<lb/>
(<lb/>
J<lb/>
' a<lb/>
Cv<lb/>
<lb/>
EAST<lb/>
CAROLINIAN<lb/>
The Bretvery.<lb/>
 place where dreams are made and unmade . , i ; an turned upside<lb/>
down and a drink is a drink. A place where you kepi one hand on your wallet<lb/>
and one eye on the guy aero the street. Basically, a place<lb/>
 V aiiere a man can forget his troubles and drown his<lb/>
? J" , ?- ' ,rv ? sorrows for awhile.<lb/>
"Y'f -A  " Mick Hammered had sioorn never to set foot<lb/>
 ; - yL0 'J?  s,w BreioerV aSain Setting out to find his old<lb/>
l T 3 friend Al Cohol, Mick finds himself up to his neck<lb/>
in the seedy and fermenh d world if the Brewery<lb/>
! very Thursdayin Tltel , irolinian Ait A<lb/>
will meetacltaracterwhozvilli xpose Uinaioholcnezvlivht. When it - finally<lb/>
over and done with Mick?and the reader - willbefacedwithoneofthemosl<lb/>
important questions either has evei fat ed.<lb/>
What place does Al t 'ohol hare in my  I<lb/>
<lb/>
?ym<lb/>
5 uncorks that bottle ot<lb/>
guilt and frustration, letting all m<lb/>
I isi .at into theopen 6 and<lb/>
ne awareof m old behav<lb/>
lets me know that I i an<lb/>
The Case of the Ten Beers<lb/>
"Gritty, realistic. Hammered is the ultimate in tough, comparable to<lb/>
Spillane's Hummer ami Hammett's Spade<lb/>
loel Keggsy The Beersborough Gazette<lb/>
change it I want to I stopped him<lb/>
by raising my hand.<lb/>
I fold on a second, Mac. What<lb/>
does this do for you? What s the<lb/>
point I w.is still reeling from this<lb/>
guy looking for Al, too. He even<lb/>
had. .i in.ii tor Chrissakes Where<lb/>
had he gotten it? More importantly,<lb/>
who had given it to him?<lb/>
"Heats me. buddy. All 1 know<lb/>
is that before I started on it, the only<lb/>
direction I was going was down-<lb/>
hill I nodded mv head in agree<lb/>
ment, remembering the main times<lb/>
I had felt the same w ay ike going<lb/>
60-miles-an-hour, putting your foot<lb/>
on the brake, and having it go all the<lb/>
way down to the floor Not good.<lb/>
"Steps 8 and l' trs to make<lb/>
amends to anyone or anything I<lb/>
may have hurt when I was with this<lb/>
guv. I'm not looking lor forgive-<lb/>
ness, mind you, I just want to bal-<lb/>
ance the scales it I can I le looked<lb/>
at me tor understanding until nod-<lb/>
ded my head for him to continue.<lb/>
"steps Id, and 1 help pro-<lb/>
mote mv new behav ioi and encour-<lb/>
ages me to help others th ough m<lb/>
own past. I he thing is I'm not too<lb/>
sure where to go next. Guess I'll<lb/>
find out when I get there, huh1<lb/>
I he trucker stood up and stuck<lb/>
his hand out Before I even knew it,<lb/>
he was pumping my hand like a<lb/>
pistonin.inn ingcarengine 'Jimmy<lb/>
Bs the name, buddy, and thanks<lb/>
forthehelp keep the map. you look<lb/>
like you need it more than me ' I le<lb/>
turned and walked out the door<lb/>
'Help ' What are you ?" I<lb/>
grabbed the map and ran after him.<lb/>
No wa was he lea mg without an<lb/>
explanation. Hut as! burst outol the<lb/>
door, the trucker's rig was gone<lb/>
Vanished like it wasnevei there<lb/>
s I stood on the dustv street<lb/>
the ? mpty, dustv street this<lb/>
voice i a me oul of nowhere. "You<lb/>
are now entering a dimension nol<lb/>
only ot barlev and hops, hut of<lb/>
wheat A world ol liquoi and spir-<lb/>
its, ol firewater and booze 1 felt a<lb/>
w hirring sensation in my gut I ike a<lb/>
w hirlpool had settled there and w s<lb/>
dragging me doi n u ith it.<lb/>
"A signpost up ahead, ou'll<lb/>
now listen to rales from the Drunk<lb/>
Side<lb/>
HI PS<lb/>
204 1 Mil M<lb/>
") () J<lb/>
students were di ided into were al M ui, u, p s<lb/>
groups ol three oi foui and .is- usualh on I rid<lb/>
signed to a trader I he trade. I illianW ilsl ident<lb/>
walked the students through of the Financial Managemenl<lb/>
then trans.u tionsand gave them lub<lb/>
Pointers in finance the trip cost about $100<lb/>
Students usualh aren'tal per person, rheclub was able<lb/>
lowed on the floor Di Stan to raise money through a raffl.<lb/>
! akins professorol financesaid held earlier in th- semester<lb/>
"I think the traders were tickled .he) were able to get on<lb/>
about the students being out the floor through personal con<lb/>
there w ith them. no, tions.<lb/>
"It looked like chaos at "One of the students has<lb/>
lust, but when we met with the a cousin who has been a trader<lb/>
specialists on the floor, they for years Eakinssaid<lb/>
from School?<lb/>
We Specialize in Student Travel!<lb/>
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BEAVIS &amp; BUHHEAD<lb/>
758-4251<lb/>
1109 CHARLES BlVD<lb/>
OPEN EVERY NJGHT UNTIL MIDNtGHT<lb/>
<pb facs="00058437_0003"/><lb/>
November 4, 1993<lb/>
The East Carolinian 3<lb/>
PANTHER<lb/>
Continued from page 1<lb/>
. itn ivi-<lb/>
onal sales near<lb/>
Isocamefrom<lb/>
munit) fund-<lb/>
tiling homemade<lb/>
I lilliard told the CBS news team<lb/>
that the party "did not ask for<lb/>
violence One commentator im-<lb/>
plied that a party newspaper slo-<lb/>
gan was 'Kill the Pigs Milliard<lb/>
remarked that the partv only ad-<lb/>
vocated killing those who killed<lb/>
them.<lb/>
The hosts asked how long<lb/>
the Black Panthers intended to con-<lb/>
tinue righting for its cause.<lb/>
Hilliard replied, "There is no<lb/>
blueprint for the revolution. We<lb/>
are prepared to struggle 40 or 50<lb/>
years, however long it takes<lb/>
Hilliard spoke, both on the<lb/>
video and during lis lecture, on<lb/>
the FBI's infiltration of the party.<lb/>
Apparently, the FBI and other gov-<lb/>
ernment organizations used<lb/>
sneaky tactics to lead to the party's<lb/>
descent in 1974.<lb/>
After the video presentation,<lb/>
Hilliard opened a questionan-<lb/>
swer session. He told the audi-<lb/>
ence that much of the funding for<lb/>
i i no<lb/>
government erant<lb/>
get tied into<lb/>
he said.<lb/>
"he 90s' struggle for blacks<lb/>
was also addressed, but Hilliard<lb/>
said the people of today face<lb/>
struggles tar more difficult than<lb/>
civil rights. He mentioned AIDS,<lb/>
environmental issues, unemploy-<lb/>
ment and a faltering educational<lb/>
system. He said he was glad to be<lb/>
on his side of the generation gap.<lb/>
Hilliard said the primarv<lb/>
problem for American blacks is<lb/>
fratricide, the violence against each<lb/>
other.<lb/>
"In 1969, you could walk the<lb/>
street at three in the morning and<lb/>
not worry about being shot he<lb/>
said. "There was respect for the<lb/>
race<lb/>
Students questioned the<lb/>
roles that current rappers plav in<lb/>
society. Hilliard said rappers like<lb/>
Ice-T, who performs "Cop Killer<lb/>
are irresponsible.<lb/>
"We the Partv were not in-<lb/>
discriminately killing cops he<lb/>
said. "It is irresponsible for Ice-T<lb/>
to tell our youth to go out and do<lb/>
that<lb/>
He compared Ice-T to him-<lb/>
sel t a 124 years of age when he was<lb/>
going around cursing preachers.<lb/>
Huev Newton told Hilliard that<lb/>
the party was not about that.<lb/>
"They rappers are making<lb/>
money at the expense of other gen-<lb/>
erations being warped Hilliard<lb/>
said.<lb/>
Hilliard said that Reginald<lb/>
I Jenny, who was pulled out of his<lb/>
truck and beaten during the L.A.<lb/>
riots, "emerged as a premiere hu-<lb/>
man-being for being able to for-<lb/>
give<lb/>
According to Hilliard, black<lb/>
women played key roles in the<lb/>
Black Panther Party. Frances<lb/>
Carter Hilliard (his sister-in-law)<lb/>
pioneered the Bridgeport and New<lb/>
Haven, Connecticut, chapters.<lb/>
Elaine Brown, author of A Taste of<lb/>
Power, was a leader in the party.<lb/>
He compared these women to<lb/>
Harriet Tubrr.an, "conductor" of<lb/>
the Underground Railroad.<lb/>
Hilliard's autobiography,<lb/>
This Side of Glory, regresses from<lb/>
the murder of his long-time friend,<lb/>
also party co-founder, Huev New-<lb/>
ton, to the party's formation in<lb/>
1966.<lb/>
Today, Hilliard lives in Ber-<lb/>
kelev and continues to speak on<lb/>
the racial divisions in America.<lb/>
He will marry in December.<lb/>
The lecture was sponsored<lb/>
by the Student UnionMinority<lb/>
Arts Committee.<lb/>
"We felt that a lot of people<lb/>
had misconceptions about the<lb/>
party and we wanted to correct<lb/>
these myths said Rhonda<lb/>
Cummings, member of the com-<lb/>
mittee.<lb/>
"The Student Union Minor-<lb/>
ity Arts Committee is attempting<lb/>
to bring a more diversified pro-<lb/>
gram to ECU said Susan Stewart,<lb/>
chairperson of the committee.<lb/>
"Look out for us in the spring<lb/>
WILSON ACRES<lb/>
2 &amp; 3 BEDROOM<lb/>
ENERGY EFFICIENT APARTMENTS<lb/>
Rent includes<lb/>
?Water "Sewer -Cable ?Draperies<lb/>
?Self-cleaning Oven ?Frost-free Refrigerator<lb/>
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?Patio with Fence 'Living Room Ceiling Fan<lb/>
?Deadbolt Locks ?Walk-in Closets<lb/>
featuring<lb/>
?Swimming Pool ?Basketball Court<lb/>
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located<lb/>
4 Blocks From East Carolina with Bus Service<lb/>
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I GREENVILLE'S FINEST APARTMENT COMMUNITY WITHIN<lb/>
FIVE MINUTES WALKING DISTANCE FROM CAMPUS<lb/>
752-0277<lb/>
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Join PUSH &amp; The East Carolinian Staff<lb/>
Sunday Nov. 7th at 7:00 pin at Minges lor the Wlicvkli,<lb/>
Basketball game. Door Prizes will given avu<lb/>
Jury selection to begin in sexual trial<lb/>
WORCESTER, Mass. (AP)?<lb/>
Attorneys for a Duke University<lb/>
professor sought Tuesday toblock<lb/>
a jury from hearing recordings of<lb/>
telephone conversations he had<lb/>
with a graduate student who has<lb/>
accused him of sexual assault.<lb/>
C. Eric Lincoln ? a Method-<lb/>
ist minister, author and nationally<lb/>
recognized scholar on the black<lb/>
church ? faces charges of assault<lb/>
with intent to rape, indecent as-<lb/>
sault and battery, and assault and<lb/>
battery.<lb/>
The charges stem from an<lb/>
April 21 incident in Worcester,<lb/>
where Lincoln, 69, was a visiting<lb/>
professor at Clark University.<lb/>
The conversations appar-<lb/>
ently were recorded by the gradu-<lb/>
ate student within a week of the<lb/>
alleged attack, which she said oc-<lb/>
curred at Lincoln's apartment in<lb/>
Worcester.<lb/>
On Tuesday, defense attor-<lb/>
neys told Worcester County Su-<lb/>
perior Court Judge Charles Helly<lb/>
the telephone calls were recorded<lb/>
without Lincoln's knowledge or<lb/>
consent, The News &amp; Observer of<lb/>
Raleigh (N.C.) reported.<lb/>
"He wasn't aware he was<lb/>
being recorded attorney Marga-<lb/>
ret Burnum said.<lb/>
Prosecutors countered that<lb/>
the recordings were legal, regard-<lb/>
less of any knowledge by Lincoln<lb/>
that they could be used as evi-<lb/>
dence.<lb/>
Helly reserved judgment on<lb/>
suppressing the evidence, saying<lb/>
he would wait until learning more<lb/>
about the tapes and seeing how<lb/>
they might be used in the trial. The<lb/>
judge said, however, that he would<lb/>
not readily ban any evidence from<lb/>
the trial.<lb/>
Jury selection in Lincoln's<lb/>
trial was to begin today.<lb/>
His accuser, a minister and<lb/>
graduate student at a Massachu-<lb/>
setts university, claims Lincoln<lb/>
assaulted her during a visit to his<lb/>
apartment.<lb/>
F E A T U R I N<lb/>
AT THE<lb/>
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TUESDAY<lb/>
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0 DRAFT ALL NIGHT!<lb/>
WEDNESDAY<lb/>
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&amp; 0 DRAFT EVERY WEDNESDAY NIGHT!<lb/>
THURSDAY<lb/>
Come join us every Thursday as we count down to our 25th year<lb/>
serving ECU! Every Thursday is NEW YR'S EVE with $1.00<lb/>
Champagne Cocktails, $1.00 Domestics A 1.00 House Highballs<lb/>
FRIDAY<lb/>
RUSH HOUR<lb/>
FREE Admission for Members &amp; Greek ID's.<lb/>
Reduced guest Admission 7-9. $50 Prize to the Frater-<lb/>
nity &amp; Sorority with the Best Attendance Before 9<lb/>
Bar Specials All Nite Every Friday.<lb/>
SATURDAY<lb/>
aturdag!<lb/>
Kick off football season with Coors Lite! $1.50 Zimas, $1.50<lb/>
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Come Early I<lb/>
Bar Specials All Nite Every Friday.<lb/>
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Heat pump system<lb/>
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Special financing available to<lb/>
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50 miles from Greenville; payments<lb/>
like rent but with tax benefits!<lb/>
Marketed Exclusively By:<lb/>
couxueu.<lb/>
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ECU Student Union<lb/>
STUDENT UNIONS<lb/>
is "just a<lb/>
really happenin'<lb/>
thang<lb/>
- Jennifer Anderson<lb/>
REACHING OUT TO SERVE YOU !<lb/>
W THAN BAREFOOT<lb/>
'S ATTENDANCE<lb/>
AS OF<lb/>
103193 7,558<lb/>
Special Notice:<lb/>
Madrigal Tickets on Sale NOW<lb/>
at Central Ticket Office.<lb/>
All films start at 8:00 and are FREE with<lb/>
valid ECU I.D. for students, staff, and faculty<lb/>
"DAMAGE" R "UNTAMED HEART"<lb/>
WEDNESDAY, NOVEMBER 3 PG 13<lb/>
&amp; SUNDAY, NOVEMBER 7 THURSDAY, FRIDAY,<lb/>
&amp; SATURDAY,<lb/>
NOVEMBER 4-6<lb/>
FOR MORE<lb/>
INFORMATION,<lb/>
CALL THE<lb/>
STUDENT UNION<lb/>
HOTLINE AT<lb/>
757-6004.<lb/>
???"<lb/>
<pb facs="00058437_0004"/><lb/>
? <lb/>
- - ?? ? !??,??- ?? ? ?<lb/>
November 4, 1993<lb/>
OAD<lb/>
Continued from page 1<lb/>
ret( ount and IKiinnu'tK-<lb/>
i m Onslow County.<lb/>
Greenville voters also gave<lb/>
fenkins and theen-<lb/>
un il another term in<lb/>
'? uesday. "he incumbent, Ms.<lb/>
defeated hei opponent<lb/>
k Autry ith 5,470 votes to<lb/>
s. enkins will return for<lb/>
her third term.<lb/>
Familiar faces will greet her<lb/>
ontheCity Council as well. Incum-<lb/>
bents Mildred Council from Dis-<lb/>
SGA<lb/>
trict . "hie, Rufus Huggins from Dis-<lb/>
trict Two, Inez Fridley from Dis-<lb/>
trict Three, Bob Ramey from Dis-<lb/>
trict Four, Blanche Forbes from<lb/>
District Fiveandat-large represen-<lb/>
tative Jack Wall won reelection.<lb/>
The only close race was in<lb/>
District Four, where Ramey nar-<lb/>
rowly defeated Mayo Allen 1,360<lb/>
to 1,288. Forbes and Wall both ran<lb/>
unopposed.<lb/>
Continued from page 1<lb/>
pus am ' escort students at night.<lb/>
The l 'cycles will dissuade<lb/>
students who are only looking<lb/>
for a free ride home or shelter<lb/>
from poor weather, Thomas<lb/>
said. Several students have<lb/>
abused Public Safety's services<lb/>
in the past for those reasons.<lb/>
SGA funded these purchases.<lb/>
The SGA will recommend<lb/>
phase two to the ECU Transit<lb/>
Board soon. This phase focuses<lb/>
on Pirate Ride, a bus service that<lb/>
currently runs until 12:00 a.m.<lb/>
The SGA proposes lengthening<lb/>
hours to 2:30 a.m. Thursday<lb/>
through Saturday nights.<lb/>
Phase two also suggests<lb/>
marking the Pirate Ride route<lb/>
with signs at each designated<lb/>
sSpp.<lb/>
The third aspect of phase<lb/>
two proposes having a student<lb/>
patrol member ride the Pirate<lb/>
Ride bus during extended hours<lb/>
to assure the safety of the driver,<lb/>
to check student IDs and to pre-<lb/>
vent property damage. All three<lb/>
steps of phase two will be<lb/>
funded by the SGA.<lb/>
Phase three is called "Pi-<lb/>
ra te Watch This will provide a<lb/>
nighttime escort service from<lb/>
10:00 p.m. until 3:00 a.m. each<lb/>
night. Pirate Watch members<lb/>
will work in teams to escort stu-<lb/>
dents walking alone or in small<lb/>
groups across campus. These in-<lb/>
dividuals will receive training<lb/>
from Public Safety, and will<lb/>
possibly be available to work<lb/>
for special campus events, such<lb/>
as during Halloween or at foot-<lb/>
ball games.<lb/>
Phase four will provide<lb/>
students, primarily those resid-<lb/>
ing on campus, with a brochure<lb/>
covering all aspects of campus<lb/>
safety. This is being devised by<lb/>
Public Safety. It will include: A<lb/>
map of blue light phones and<lb/>
Pirate Ride stops, campus safety<lb/>
tips, programs offered by Pub-<lb/>
lic Safety and phone numbers<lb/>
for student organizations to call<lb/>
to schedule those programs,<lb/>
emergency phone number0 and<lb/>
other important campus safety<lb/>
information.<lb/>
The proposal's final phase,<lb/>
phase five, will provide two<lb/>
more bicycles for Public Safety's<lb/>
use to patrol campus and pro-<lb/>
vide escorts.<lb/>
"We're not Public Safety<lb/>
Thomas said. "We're just trying<lb/>
to do our part<lb/>
Thomas said funding for<lb/>
the project will come mostly<lb/>
from the SG A's Executive Coun-<lb/>
cil budget.<lb/>
Yesterday, Chancellor<lb/>
Eakin donated $5,500 for the "Pi-<lb/>
rate Watch" escort facilities pro-<lb/>
vided in phase three.<lb/>
"We appreciate the<lb/>
Chancellor's cooperation with<lb/>
our effort to make this a safer<lb/>
campus Thomas said. "He was<lb/>
verv receptive to the entire Cam-<lb/>
pus Safety Act<lb/>
Thomas said it will cost an<lb/>
estimated SI ,600 to continue this<lb/>
project for the remainder of the<lb/>
semester. Local business spon-<lb/>
sorship is a possibility for the<lb/>
future, Thomas said. The entire<lb/>
project must be passed by SGA<lb/>
legislature.<lb/>
"This campus crime is<lb/>
happening right here Thomas<lb/>
said. "Students need to be aware<lb/>
of that<lb/>
"Students have that men-<lb/>
tality that 'Oh, nothing is going<lb/>
to happen to me but when<lb/>
you've had as many attacks as<lb/>
we've had in the past few weeks,<lb/>
your chances of being robbed<lb/>
are much greater said SGA<lb/>
President Keith Dyer.<lb/>
"We don't want to have to<lb/>
wait for a student to be killed<lb/>
before students take this seri-<lb/>
ouslv Thomas said.<lb/>
ELTORO<lb/>
men's hair styling shoppo<lb/>
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Park behind Globe Hardware, If you are selling you must be 18<lb/>
use our new rear entrance with a picture ID.(NCDL, ECU)<lb/>
Harris teeter<lb/>
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light<lb/>
<pb facs="00058437_0005"/><lb/>
, <lb/>
 T-imriiw ?<lb/>
The East Carolinian<lb/>
November , 1993<lb/>
Opinion<lb/>
Page 5<lb/>
The East Carolinian<lb/>
Printed on<lb/>
Lindsay Fernandez, G<lb/>
Gregory Dickens, Mono<lb/>
Matthew A. Hege, Adve<lb/>
Deborah Daniel, v. n it.<lb/>
Karen Hasseil, ,v,?? i Editor<lb/>
Maureen Rich, fast. 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/>
?rat Manager<lb/>
ng Editor<lb/>
sing Director<lb/>
Wes Tinkham. Account Executive<lb/>
Kelly ktllis Account Executive<lb/>
Shelley Furlough, Account Executive<lb/>
Tonya Heath, Account Executive<lb/>
Brandon Perry, Account Executive<lb/>
Joe Horst, MacGwer<lb/>
100 recycled paper<lb/>
Tony Dunn, Business Manager<lb/>
Margie O'Shea, Circulation Manager<lb/>
Burt Aycock, Layout Manager<lb/>
Franco Sacchi, Asst Layout Manager<lb/>
Mike Ashley, Creative Director<lb/>
Elain Calmon, Asst. Creative Director<lb/>
Cedric Van Buren, Photo Editor<lb/>
Chris Kemple, Staff Illustrator<lb/>
Matt MacDonald, Systems Manager<lb/>
Serving the ECU community since 1925, The East Carolinian publishes 12.000 copies every Tuesday and Thursday. The masthead<lb/>
editonal in each edition is the opinion of the Editorial Board. The East Carolinian welcomes letters, limited to 250 words, which may be edited<lb/>
for decency or brevity. 77k- East Carolinian reserves the right to edit or reject letters for publication. Letters should be addressed to: Opinion<lb/>
Editor. Vie East Carolinian. Publications Bldg ECU, Greenville, N.C 27858-4353. For more information, call (919) 757-6366.<lb/>
Yahoo! Bond referendum '93 passes <lb/>
This is absolutely amazing.<lb/>
When put to the test, area voters, ECU<lb/>
students and voters across the state passed<lb/>
an incredibly important bond referendum<lb/>
at a time when the situation looked nothing<lb/>
but bleak. Well, it passed with 53 percent of<lb/>
the vote, but hey, you can't complain. For<lb/>
now, a very bright future (with a price tag<lb/>
that totals $310 million) lies ahead for the<lb/>
academic tradition that is ECU.<lb/>
Mostly that means an improved Joyner<lb/>
Library. H case you haven't stepped foot<lb/>
inside Joyner recently (and who can blame<lb/>
you), you've missed the display concerning<lb/>
expansion and improvement plans, with<lb/>
pictures galore! There, one will find archi-<lb/>
tectural plans, a scale model and informa-<lb/>
tion on the refurbishment proposals.<lb/>
And you know what? The plans for the<lb/>
improved library look great. In an age of too<lb/>
many architectural nighmares, this layout<lb/>
and design is an aesthetically-pleasing<lb/>
structure and a practical one, too. Kudos to<lb/>
the architectural firm, Walter Robbs<lb/>
Callahan &amp; Pierce for their innovative de-<lb/>
sign. Joyner will soon look better than ever.<lb/>
You see, ECU outgrew its library many<lb/>
years ago. It was built in 1954 and an annex<lb/>
was added in 1975. Since then, enrollment<lb/>
has risen 40 percent. Joyner suffers from a<lb/>
scarcity of shelf space and a severe shortage<lb/>
of seating. The expanded Joyner will have<lb/>
shelving space to hold more than 1.5 mil-<lb/>
lion volumes.<lb/>
This is welcome news to those of us<lb/>
that wandered the stacks looking for a book<lb/>
that was holed away in one of two ware-<lb/>
houses. Does anyone else who's been in the<lb/>
stacks feel like a rat looking for cheese?<lb/>
Well, the stacks won't be eliminated,<lb/>
but maybe you'll be lucky enough to spend<lb/>
most of your time in another section of the<lb/>
library.<lb/>
This may be possible through plans for<lb/>
the library addition. They include a state-of-<lb/>
the-art electronics center that will enable com-<lb/>
munication with such outside agencies as the<lb/>
Library of Congress. Joyner could then trans-<lb/>
mit material obtained from other libraries to<lb/>
libraries throughout the region. In essence a<lb/>
computer link-up with all of North Carolina<lb/>
and across the nation.<lb/>
This computer network will permit stu-<lb/>
dents and the public to have access to data,<lb/>
images, voice and video resources located<lb/>
around the world ? certainly a far cry from<lb/>
the Joyner we know (uh, and love).<lb/>
Chancellor Eakin has stated, "We see<lb/>
the future of our library as being of central<lb/>
importance to other libraries in eastern North<lb/>
Carolina, and, in fact, to the citizens of east-<lb/>
ern North Carolina. They will be able to use<lb/>
us as a hub"? to access our holdings, as well<lb/>
as those at other major libraries throughout<lb/>
the country and throughout the world<lb/>
Eakin was so pleased with the passage<lb/>
of the referendum that an unofficial<lb/>
groundbreaking ceremony took place Tues-<lb/>
day night after most of the polls closed. "We<lb/>
are looking to begin construction in early<lb/>
spring. The project should be completed in<lb/>
two or two and a half years he said.<lb/>
A long time to wait, but certainly some-<lb/>
thing to look forward to for future students<lb/>
of ECU. For those who voted, give yourself a<lb/>
pat on the back and know that you had a<lb/>
hand in upholding ECU's outstanding aca-<lb/>
demic tradition.<lb/>
By Brian Hall<lb/>
War on drugs threatens personal freedom<lb/>
This past weekend the<lb/>
actor River Phoenix suddenly<lb/>
died outside a Hollywood<lb/>
nightclub. As of this writing,<lb/>
the coroner had not deter-<lb/>
mined the cause of death,<lb/>
though eyewitness accounts<lb/>
and his brother's call to 911<lb/>
suggest that drugs may have<lb/>
been involved. If true, this will<lb/>
undoubtedly cause many to<lb/>
call for even stricter measures<lb/>
in the war against drugs. The<lb/>
only mea-<lb/>
sure that<lb/>
has any<lb/>
chance of<lb/>
really af-<lb/>
fecting the<lb/>
use of<lb/>
drugs in<lb/>
our society<lb/>
would be<lb/>
decrimi-<lb/>
nalization.<lb/>
His-<lb/>
torian Barbara Tuchman has<lb/>
written that a policy qualifies<lb/>
as a folly when it is not only a<lb/>
failure, but also is plainly<lb/>
against the interests of those in<lb/>
whose name it is being con-<lb/>
ducted. No other present<lb/>
policy so fits this description<lb/>
as our "war on drugs<lb/>
This war has been a com-<lb/>
plete and utter failure. We<lb/>
need to realize that only by<lb/>
treating drugs as a health prob-<lb/>
lem can we hope to reduce their<lb/>
use. Those who are on drugs<lb/>
need help to overcome their<lb/>
weakness, not imprisonment.<lb/>
The law enforcement agencies<lb/>
of this country waste over $10<lb/>
billion every year in a vain at-<lb/>
tempt to control drugs. This<lb/>
law enforcement<lb/>
agencies of this<lb/>
country waste over<lb/>
$10 billion every<lb/>
year in a vain at-<lb/>
tempt to control<lb/>
drugs.<lb/>
money would be better spent<lb/>
going after violent criminals<lb/>
who are the real threat to our<lb/>
society and treatment for those<lb/>
who need help.<lb/>
Legalization would also<lb/>
greatly reduce violent crime.<lb/>
Most street violence is commit-<lb/>
ted by either rival drug gangs,<lb/>
fighting over turf, or by addicts,<lb/>
forced to rob to pay prices in-<lb/>
flated by prohibition. Legaliza-<lb/>
tion would end the black mar-<lb/>
ket for drugs,<lb/>
sharply reduc-<lb/>
ing the price of<lb/>
drugs and de-<lb/>
priving orga-<lb/>
nized crime of<lb/>
approximately<lb/>
one half of its<lb/>
income, about<lb/>
$50 billion a<lb/>
year. Fewer<lb/>
addicts would<lb/>
need to rob to<lb/>
support their habit.<lb/>
Our current prohibition is<lb/>
also hypocritical. The drug<lb/>
which causes the greatest vio-<lb/>
lence in our country is alcohol.<lb/>
A Justice Department study has<lb/>
shown that 54 percent of violent<lb/>
acts occur just after drinking.<lb/>
Alcohol and tobacco kill more<lb/>
than 100 times as many every<lb/>
year as all illicit drugs.<lb/>
We would not only save<lb/>
billions on law enforcement, we<lb/>
would also reap billions in new<lb/>
taxes. It is estimated that taxing<lb/>
marijuana at its current rate of<lb/>
consumption would bring in<lb/>
over $20 billion. This money<lb/>
could then be used for educa-<lb/>
tion and treatment. Using these<lb/>
methods, we have steadily re-<lb/>
duced smoking, something as<lb/>
addictive as heroin. Treating<lb/>
drugs in a similar manner would<lb/>
likewise greatly facilitate its re-<lb/>
duction.<lb/>
Prohibition has only exac-<lb/>
erbated the problem. Many ad-<lb/>
dicts are artificially created by<lb/>
dealers, who also have no com-<lb/>
punction about selling to chil-<lb/>
dren. And some of the more<lb/>
troublesome drugs are a direct<lb/>
result of prohibition; crack was<lb/>
specifically invented as a cheap<lb/>
alternative to cocaine.<lb/>
Most importantly, we<lb/>
should seriously consider<lb/>
whether the state has a right to<lb/>
regulate individual morality.<lb/>
One of the basic underlying<lb/>
principles of a free society, best<lb/>
expressed in the writing of John<lb/>
Stuart Mill, is that an individual<lb/>
who is harming no one else<lb/>
should be left alone, especially<lb/>
by the state.<lb/>
The whole point of a<lb/>
democratic government is that<lb/>
the individual can best decide<lb/>
for himself what is wrong or<lb/>
right. The greatest threat to our<lb/>
individual freedoms at present<lb/>
is the war on drugs. Our basic<lb/>
civil liberties are being steadily<lb/>
undermined in the effort to save<lb/>
us from the scourge of drugs.<lb/>
The only way that we could<lb/>
eradicate drugs would be to re-<lb/>
peal the Bill of Rights and give<lb/>
the police unlimited power.<lb/>
Drugs are a plague which<lb/>
cause many, including some<lb/>
close friends of mine, terrible<lb/>
pain. But our rights as indi-<lb/>
viduals mean nothing unless we<lb/>
are given the free choice to make<lb/>
wrong decisions as well as right.<lb/>
WAS THE TAR-6E7<lb/>
VloLVCE<lb/>
AI0VM, IN JS ITS<lb/>
By Laura Wright<lb/>
Recent cartoons confused with reality<lb/>
I wonder how many people<lb/>
went downtown on Saturday<lb/>
night dressed like Beavis and<lb/>
Butthead. I wonder how many<lb/>
of those Beavises and Buttheads<lb/>
actually needed costumes<lb/>
Okay, enough B and B<lb/>
bashing. I guess that I have to<lb/>
admit, as much as I don't want<lb/>
to, that there is something pretty<lb/>
funny about those two. I don't<lb/>
think that they possess any en-<lb/>
dearing qualities and dressing<lb/>
up like them probably wasn't a<lb/>
good way to pick up women,<lb/>
but Halloween is about more<lb/>
than getting dates. It's about<lb/>
being someone other than who<lb/>
you are and it's about being<lb/>
scared by things that you can<lb/>
control.<lb/>
I think that it's really inter-<lb/>
esting that Americans can be-<lb/>
come so obsessed with cartoon<lb/>
characters. Television may be<lb/>
dangerously influential at times<lb/>
because depictions of TV vio-<lb/>
lence can be very realistic, but<lb/>
cartoon characters obviously ex-<lb/>
ist outside the realm of reality. I<lb/>
can see how Dan Quayle might<lb/>
have thought that Murphy<lb/>
Brown is a real person?since<lb/>
this character is played by<lb/>
Candice Bergen who, I think, is<lb/>
a real person?but cartoon char-<lb/>
acters are drawings.<lb/>
Furthermore, they are<lb/>
drawings of imaginary people.<lb/>
Just to clear up any misunder-<lb/>
standing, the houses that Beavis<lb/>
and Butthead set on fire are also<lb/>
drawings. So are the donuts that<lb/>
Homer Simpson eats and the<lb/>
hairballs that Stimpy expels.<lb/>
It seems that as soon as the<lb/>
controversy over one cartoon<lb/>
dies down, another more con-<lb/>
troversial cartoon pops up. Take<lb/>
"The Simpsons for example. I<lb/>
do believe that Bart Simpson has<lb/>
had his day as America's most<lb/>
dangerous animated juvenile<lb/>
delinquent. "The Simpsons" is<lb/>
threatening because it satirizes<lb/>
every facet of American life and<lb/>
it's scary in its accuracy.<lb/>
Remember "Ren and<lb/>
Stimpy the cat and dog duo<lb/>
that was so offensive to Nickel-<lb/>
odeon that the network fired the<lb/>
series' creator? I guess that these<lb/>
two were problematic because<lb/>
they were incredibly disgusting,<lb/>
but they were harmless and even<lb/>
loved each other in a dysfunc-<lb/>
tional kind of way. I speak of<lb/>
them in the past tense even<lb/>
though they are still around on<lb/>
Nick, but the controversy<lb/>
around them has died down<lb/>
since Beavis and Butthead ap-<lb/>
peared on the scene.<lb/>
I still think that cutting TV<lb/>
watching to the bare minimum<lb/>
is the best way to get a grip on<lb/>
what's real and what isn't. It's<lb/>
understandable that reality<lb/>
checks might be necessary if<lb/>
TV is your only link to the<lb/>
world around you. But chances<lb/>
are, unless you are Dan Quayle,<lb/>
you'll figure out that sitcoms,<lb/>
with live or anima ted casts, aim<lb/>
to amuse, not to confuse.<lb/>
I have to admit, though,<lb/>
that I sat through two straight<lb/>
hours of Simpsons Halloween<lb/>
specials on Sunday night. I<lb/>
laughed at the show and got<lb/>
annoyed at the commercials.<lb/>
The worst one was for Crest<lb/>
toothpaste. A child gets a cav-<lb/>
ity because she didn' t use Crest<lb/>
and her mother says, "I have<lb/>
to act like a mom and think<lb/>
like a dentist I got the im-<lb/>
pression that being maternal<lb/>
and thinking just don't mix.<lb/>
But, I digress.<lb/>
Right now I am experi-<lb/>
encing post-Halloween de-<lb/>
pression. Halloween has al-<lb/>
ways been my favorite holi-<lb/>
day because I like being some-<lb/>
one other than myself for a<lb/>
night?this is easy to do when<lb/>
you have no idea who you are<lb/>
on days other than Halloween.<lb/>
I like graveyards, black cats<lb/>
and magic. I dressed up as the<lb/>
Disney version of Peter Pan,<lb/>
my favorite cartoon character<lb/>
of all time and even when I<lb/>
was in costume, I was aware of<lb/>
the fact that I couldn't really<lb/>
fly-<lb/>
Letters to the Editor<lb/>
To the Editor:<lb/>
Is $1,250 worth the risk of losing the trust of the<lb/>
students' at East Carolina University? That is the<lb/>
primary question in this controversy over the recent<lb/>
Student Government Secretary Election.<lb/>
As member of the SGA Legislature, I am<lb/>
troubled by the Election Review Boards lack of con-<lb/>
cern of the actual intent behind the election rules.<lb/>
Article VI. Section 7 Part B states that in the event that<lb/>
a winning candidate is disqualified, a new election is<lb/>
to be held. Article VI. Section 7 Part B. was expressly<lb/>
put into the election rules to prevent a person from<lb/>
winning an election to Student Government by de-<lb/>
fault. The rationale for such a provision was that the<lb/>
cost of a new election pales in comparison to the cost<lb/>
of the students losing faith in how their leaders are<lb/>
elected.<lb/>
Does not the opinion of the 672 students who<lb/>
came out to vote on September 29 matter? If the<lb/>
Election Review Board is so convinced that their<lb/>
actions were justified why was their October 7<lb/>
hearing not opened to the campus mediaFurther-<lb/>
more, why was not the content of that hearing not<lb/>
revealed to the campus media until October 18?<lb/>
Democracy is a fragile and precious thing. It<lb/>
is essential in a democracy that the people have<lb/>
faith in how their leaders are chosen. To maintain<lb/>
the East Carolina University's Students' trust the<lb/>
Student Government Association has no alterna-<lb/>
tive but hold a new election for Student Govern-<lb/>
ment Secretary as proscribed by Article VI. Section<lb/>
7 Part B on the Election Rules of the Student<lb/>
Government Association of East Carolina Univer-<lb/>
sity.<lb/>
In Humble Service to the Student Body of<lb/>
East Carolina University,<lb/>
Michael D. Hadley<lb/>
Graduate<lb/>
President Student Government Association<lb/>
To the Editor:<lb/>
I could not believe wha 11 read in the letter form<lb/>
Ms. Susan Luddeke. Evidently, if men don't treat the<lb/>
Anita Hill issue with "understanding and compas-<lb/>
sion we will be to blame for whatever the ultra-<lb/>
feminists decide to do afterward. It boggles my mind<lb/>
that some people still think Anita Hill was the victim<lb/>
of that whole circus.<lb/>
Clarence Thomas is the one we should feel<lb/>
sorry for because, in his own words he was the victim<lb/>
of a "high-tech lynching There was no evidence to<lb/>
support Ms. Hill's claims, and phone records indi-<lb/>
cated she called him frequently, as well as followed<lb/>
him from job to job. Is that the behavior a woman<lb/>
demonstrates toward a man who sexually harasses<lb/>
her? I seriously doubt it. The only reason Anita Hill<lb/>
was brought forward with her allegations is that<lb/>
Clarence Thomas is a black conservative republi-<lb/>
can. Period. He is the biggest threat to guilty white<lb/>
liberals, and other liberals as well, and they tried to<lb/>
extinguish that threat with baseless charges. Thank-<lb/>
fully, common sense prevailed and Ms. Hill was<lb/>
sent away to make all sorts of money off of her<lb/>
story while Mr. Thomas was rightfully confirmed.<lb/>
Anita Hill was not the victim, Clarence Tho-<lb/>
mas was. The sooner the feminists realize this, the<lb/>
sooner they'll get some small amount of credibility<lb/>
back.<lb/>
Derek McCreight<lb/>
Sophomore<lb/>
Criminal Justice<lb/>
mill! uiimijiijM<lb/>
<pb facs="00058437_0006"/><lb/>
M?- -<lb/>
'v-mtmmmtB&amp;" -? ? iim0 .iw<lb/>
Page 6<lb/>
?77?? Zsasf Carolinian<lb/>
Classifieds<lb/>
November 4, 1993<lb/>
For Rent<lb/>
Help Wanted I H Help Wanted<lb/>
Ringgold Towers<lb/>
UnitSOl .2Bdrm<lb/>
New Capet Frra?Y Painted Water a Sewer<lb/>
Induded 2 Student Limit<lb/>
S240month<lb/>
I CONTCT MR JffiNIGAN AT C9T3J 323-M15<lb/>
ROOMMATE NEEDED for 2nd se-<lb/>
mester. Rent $19750 plus 1 2 utilities.<lb/>
Brand-new apartment within walking<lb/>
distanceof ECL" campus. Call 752-9834,<lb/>
please leave a message.<lb/>
3-BEDROOM 2-bath house. 209 Lewis<lb/>
Street. MonthlvrentS675.00. Nowavail-<lb/>
able, NO PETS. Call 756-0151.<lb/>
NONSMOKING FEMALE to share<lb/>
2BR, 1 1 2 bath townhouse near ECU.<lb/>
Rent $140mo. (includes water, sewer,<lb/>
cable). Pay 13 utilities. Callleave<lb/>
message. 321-4931.<lb/>
ROOM AVAILABLE after Oct. 30 in<lb/>
3-bedroomtownhouseat Sheraton Vil-<lb/>
lage. It'sa MUST SEE! FNSonly. S230<lb/>
 13 of bills. For information call 756-<lb/>
8459.<lb/>
MALE OR FEMALE to share<lb/>
Pinebrook Apt. $175 rentdeposit1<lb/>
2 utilities Non-smokers onl v! Must like<lb/>
cats. Available Dec. 1. Call Susan 752-<lb/>
6528.<lb/>
ATTENTION STUDENTS: 3-bed-<lb/>
room house in University Area. Call<lb/>
757-3191.<lb/>
QUIET, VERY QUIET furnished bed-<lb/>
room and bath for rent in top Greenville<lb/>
neighborhood. Laundry and kitchen<lb/>
privileges. AC,alluri Li ties, $195month.<lb/>
Non-smokers, cat-tolerant, graduate<lb/>
studentsprofessionals. Available now<lb/>
or Jan 1. "One of Greenville's best rental<lb/>
situations said last tenant. 756-2027.<lb/>
ROOMMATE NEEDED ASAP! 3-<lb/>
bedroom apt. Wilson Acres. Private<lb/>
room 5 blocks from campus. $195.00<lb/>
mo. 1 3 utilities. Please contact Cari or<lb/>
Amy at 757-2891.<lb/>
MALE ROOMMATE NEEDED: Seri-<lb/>
ous non-smoker Fullv furnished ex-<lb/>
cept personal room. 3-bedroom 2 12<lb/>
bath townhouse, pets allowed. S225<lb/>
month, includes utilities. 321-0695.<lb/>
MALE OR FEMALE ROOMMATE<lb/>
WANTED: to share 2-story house, 2<lb/>
blocks from campus. Private room,<lb/>
fenced in backyard, pets accepted, 1 -car<lb/>
garage. $200 per month and 1 3 utili-<lb/>
ties. Call 758-9967. Available Nov. 1.<lb/>
lEASfPPARKINCAYAIlAHfl !<lb/>
$15PERMONTH.<lb/>
! OCATION: BEHIND CLEMENT<lb/>
DORM. THE CORNER OF READE<lb/>
DICKINSON<lb/>
CALL 752-8585 TODAY!<lb/>
S3 Help Wanted<lb/>
CHILD CARE Immediate need for<lb/>
part-time child care within the<lb/>
He City limits. Hours would<lb/>
pm Monday through<lb/>
Friday, vi ith needed availability some<lb/>
h eekends as well. Looking for a ma-<lb/>
ture person to care for two girls (ages<lb/>
3 and 8) inside the home. Previous<lb/>
child care experience with references,<lb/>
and reliable transportation is a must!<lb/>
Please call 752-2111 ext. 252 if you<lb/>
would like more details on how to<lb/>
apply.<lb/>
TRAVEL FREE! SPRING BREAK!<lb/>
Sell quality vacations! The hottest des-<lb/>
tinations! JAMAICA, CANCUN, BA-<lb/>
HAM AS, SOUTH PADRE, FLORIDA.<lb/>
"Professional" Tour Company, easi-<lb/>
est way towards free trip! Best com-<lb/>
missions! Sun Splash Tours 1 -800-426-<lb/>
7710.<lb/>
 FREE TRIPS &amp;CASH "Callus<lb/>
and find out how hundreds of stu-<lb/>
dents arealready earning FREE TRIPS<lb/>
and LOTS OF CASH with America's<lb/>
1 Spring Break company! Choose<lb/>
Cancun, Bahamas, Jamaica, Panama,<lb/>
Daytona or Padre! Call now! TAKE A<lb/>
BREAK STUDENT TRAVEL (800) 328-<lb/>
SAVE or (617)424-8222.<lb/>
ATTENTION LADIES: Earn $90 to<lb/>
S125 phr. escorting in the Greenville<lb/>
area. You must be 18 yrs. old, have<lb/>
own phone and transportation. Es-<lb/>
corts and exotic dancers needed. For<lb/>
more information call Diamond Es-<lb/>
corts at 758-0896.<lb/>
ATTENTION STUDENTS: Earn ex-<lb/>
tra cash stuffing envelopes at home.<lb/>
All materials provided. Send SASE to<lb/>
Midwest Mailers PO Box 395, Olathe,<lb/>
K) 66051. Immediate Response.<lb/>
AA CRUISE &amp; TRAVEL JOPS: Earn<lb/>
$2500mo Travel the World Free!<lb/>
(Caribbean, Europe, Hawaii, Asia!)<lb/>
Cruise Lines now hiring for busy holi-<lb/>
day- Spring and Summer seasons.<lb/>
Guaranteed employment! Call (919)<lb/>
929-4398 ext. 11.<lb/>
GREENVILLE RECREATION AND<lb/>
PARKS DEPARTMENT: Youth Bas-<lb/>
ketball coaches. The Greenville Recre-<lb/>
ation and Parks Department is recruit-<lb/>
ing for 12 to 16 part-time youth basket-<lb/>
ball coaches for the winter youth bas-<lb/>
ketball program. Applicantsmust pos-<lb/>
sess some knowledge of the basket-<lb/>
ball skills and have the ability and<lb/>
patience to work with youth. Appli-<lb/>
cants must be able to coach young<lb/>
people, ages 9-18, in basketba 11 funda-<lb/>
mentals. Hours are from 3:00pm until<lb/>
7:00 pm with some night and week-<lb/>
end coaching. This program will run<lb/>
from the end of November to mid-<lb/>
February. Salary rates start at $4.25<lb/>
per hour. For more information, please<lb/>
call Ben James or Michael Daly at 830-<lb/>
4550 or 830-4567.<lb/>
THE PLAYGROUND OF<lb/>
GO LDSBORO is looking for enthusi-<lb/>
astic entertainers. Excellent hours, easy<lb/>
$$ and carpools available. Ask for Erin<lb/>
at 355-4792 or (919) 734-3777.<lb/>
BREAKERS! BOOK EARLY AND<lb/>
SAVE! Panama Citv from $99, Ja-<lb/>
maica Cancun from S439, Padre $239,<lb/>
Daytona $79. Sell trips, earn cash, party<lb/>
free. Call EST 1-800-234-7007.<lb/>
CAMPUS ENTREPRENEUR<lb/>
WANTED. Sell Personal Safety Alarm<lb/>
onoff campus. Write or call for free<lb/>
details. 3806 Wingate Drive, Raleigh,<lb/>
NC 27609.919-876-7005.<lb/>
GREEKS AND CLUBS: Raise up to<lb/>
$1,000 in JUST ONE WEEK! for your<lb/>
fraternity, sorority and club. Plus<lb/>
$1,000 for yourself And a FREE T-<lb/>
shirt just for calling. 1-800-932-0528<lb/>
ext 75.<lb/>
EARN UP TO $559.89 per week as-<lb/>
sembling ourproducts at home! Amaz-<lb/>
ing 24-hour recorded message reveals<lb/>
details! Call today! 1-919-243-1835.<lb/>
Leave your telephone number.<lb/>
PROFESSOR O'COOLS Restaurant<lb/>
is now accepting applications for wait<lb/>
staff positions. Apply in person only,<lb/>
2-4 pm daily. No phone calls please.<lb/>
605-A Greenville Blvd. behind<lb/>
Quincy's Steak House.<lb/>
HELP WANTED: Yard work, win-<lb/>
dow washing, painting. Well above<lb/>
min. wage. 756-2027.<lb/>
PIRATE PAINTBALL IS EXPAND-<lb/>
ING TO NEW MARKET AREAS IN<lb/>
EASTERN, NC . We need super-ener-<lb/>
getic people for our Marketing Team.<lb/>
This is a great opportunity for anyone<lb/>
in the School of Business or Leisure<lb/>
Systems Studies to sink your teeth<lb/>
into a growing company. Your salary<lb/>
will be based on a direct profit-shar-<lb/>
ing basis. If you know anything about<lb/>
Guerrilla Marketingor if you are smart<lb/>
and super-energetic, CALL 752-8380.<lb/>
NOW EARN up to $339.84 per week<lb/>
assembling our products at home. In-<lb/>
quire with Business Ventures, Box 861,<lb/>
Agana, Guam 96910<lb/>
TRAVEL ABROAD AND WORK.<lb/>
Make up to $2,000- $4,000mo.<lb/>
Teaching basic conversational English<lb/>
abroad. Japan, Taiwan, and S. Korea.<lb/>
Many employers provide room and<lb/>
board and other benefits. No teaching<lb/>
background or Asian languages re-<lb/>
quired. Formore information call: (206)<lb/>
632-1146. ext. J5362.<lb/>
THE EAST CAROLINIAN is looking<lb/>
for a typesetter. It you have some<lb/>
Macintosh experience and can type,<lb/>
please come to the Pubs Building, sec-<lb/>
ond floor and fill out an application.<lb/>
WE NEED YOU!<lb/>
For Sale<lb/>
SPRING BREAK ? Plan early, save<lb/>
$50 and get best rooms! Prices in-<lb/>
crease 1115! Bahamas Cruise 6days<lb/>
includes 12meals,$279! PanamaCity<lb/>
room wkitchen, $119! Cancun from<lb/>
Raleigh, $339; Jamaica from Raleigh,<lb/>
$429; Key West, $249; Daytona Room<lb/>
wkitchen, $149! 1-800-678-6386.<lb/>
MEMBERSHIP to Club For Women<lb/>
For Sale<lb/>
Only. Low monthly payments! Call<lb/>
Angie 931-9768.<lb/>
MEN'S BICYCLE Hampton 5 speed<lb/>
cruiser, great for campus. $50. Call<lb/>
757-3895 evenings.<lb/>
78 CIVIC wagon runs good, must<lb/>
drive. $1,000. BIEFE KB 8 Classic<lb/>
motorcycle helmet. Grey. $185 value,<lb/>
$85. Call 758-1031.<lb/>
CHRISTMAS WREATHS FOR<lb/>
SALE. Three sizes: 8' for $10,12' for<lb/>
$12 and 16' for $18. Plus a Christmas<lb/>
tree discount. Call 931-8324 or 321-<lb/>
2577 for more information.<lb/>
FOR SALE: Cerwin Vega D-l home<lb/>
speakers. 8" woofer. Great booksehlf<lb/>
speakers! Call 931-8958.<lb/>
29 GALLON saltwater fish tank.<lb/>
Complete set-up stand, coral, fish<lb/>
and filters $200.<lb/>
6' 4" POWER tool surfboard, exc.<lb/>
condition $175 OBO. Call 752-6833.<lb/>
MUST SELL Women's Huffy<lb/>
Multi-terrain 10-speed bike. Only<lb/>
been ridden twice! Asking $70.2 Roll-<lb/>
up blind s to fit window 4748" wide,<lb/>
$10. Call 830-0807.<lb/>
AMP- 70 Watt Crate. Brand new con-<lb/>
dition. Chorus, reverb, distortion,<lb/>
Celestion Speakers, etc Must sell<lb/>
fast. WAY underpriced at only<lb/>
$225.00 Call 758-2119.<lb/>
SPEAKERS FOR SALE: 2-Kicker 10-<lb/>
inch subwoofers, $80. 2-kicker, 15<lb/>
inch subwoofers, $150 Prices nego-<lb/>
tiable. Call Randy or Jeremy 931-<lb/>
8901.<lb/>
ONE-WAY AIRLINE TICKET, Ra-<lb/>
leighDetroitSan Francisco, $200.<lb/>
Valid until Dec. 15. Call 830-9125.<lb/>
DON'T WASTE YOUR TIME!<lb/>
working out without proper supple-<lb/>
ments, your body needs them to<lb/>
GROW. Amino acids, protein pow-<lb/>
ders, vanadyl sulfate, wt. gain, tri-<lb/>
chromelene, hotstuff, gainers fuel,<lb/>
cybergenics and many more! Call<lb/>
Charles today for tremendous dis-<lb/>
count prices at 321-2158.<lb/>
1Q Services Offered<lb/>
. nents' flag station. As you near<lb/>
their outer defenses, shots are<lb/>
fired at you. As you stand to<lb/>
return fire, your adventure be-<lb/>
gins. Will you survive to cap-<lb/>
ture the flag and win the game?<lb/>
Will you be the last one left to<lb/>
defend the "Alamo?" Will you<lb/>
and the rest of your Special<lb/>
Forces Team be able to take out<lb/>
the "Predator" before it takes<lb/>
you out? Come and see how much<lb/>
fun you can have in a 3 12 hour<lb/>
session. We are open Monday-<lb/>
thru Friday for groups of 8 or<lb/>
more, and Saturdays for indi-<lb/>
viduals or groups from 1-40.<lb/>
Call 752-8380 for Info, and res-<lb/>
ervations. WE BREED EXCITE-<lb/>
MENT<lb/>
SSI Personals<lb/>
A MEMBER OF NIGHTFALL'S en-<lb/>
tourage would like to make the ac-<lb/>
quaintance of Markus Anton Keinliege.<lb/>
Please call 757-0991,10:00am- 1:30pm.<lb/>
WRITERMUSICIAN andpoeticsoul<lb/>
seeks like minded lady for frienship<lb/>
and fun. Send photos and correspon-<lb/>
dence to : KANE, PO Box 8663,<lb/>
Greenville, NC 27835<lb/>
SCOTT HALL would like to congratu-<lb/>
late Randy Jensen forbeingScott Hall's<lb/>
Hall Council Member of the Month.<lb/>
Way to go Randy!<lb/>
ALPHA DELTA PI supports PIRATE<lb/>
football! Let'smake this lasthome game<lb/>
our Best one ? GO PIRATES!<lb/>
THANK YOU SIGMA PI! We had a<lb/>
great time Thursday night. Let's do it<lb/>
again soon. Love, ALPHA DELTA PI.<lb/>
CONGRATULATIONS FROM PHI<lb/>
SIGMA PI to Lindsay Fernandez, Kelly<lb/>
Kellis and Dr. Jack Thornton for being<lb/>
tapped into ODK.A MEMBER OF<lb/>
NIGHTFALL'S entourage would like<lb/>
to make the aquaintance of Markus<lb/>
Anton Keinliege.<lb/>
IQ<lb/>
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IQ<lb/>
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lap Umy of Mvmtton in U S.<lb/>
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Order Catalog Today with Visa MC or COO<lb/>
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Or. rush $2.00 to: RcsMrch Information<lb/>
11322 Idaho Aw 206-A. Los Angeles. CA 90025<lb/>
ALPHA XI DELTA: The brothers of<lb/>
Delta Sigma Pi are looking forward<lb/>
to our pre-downtown tonight. It's<lb/>
been too long since we've been to-<lb/>
gether. Let's make it a night we won't<lb/>
forget. Love, Delta Sigma Phi.<lb/>
CONGRATULATIONS to the Xi<lb/>
Pledge class of "Big" Scott Lloyd,<lb/>
Ethan "Big Red" Hazelrigs and<lb/>
Joel "Troy" Plavec. Good luck,<lb/>
Sigma Nu.<lb/>
GAMMA GAMMA SIGMA<lb/>
SIGMA, beat me beat me, whip<lb/>
me whip me. The sisters were loose<lb/>
on the caboose, the hot tub was<lb/>
filled rr ost of the night, the apples<lb/>
had a bite that was dyn-o-mite, the<lb/>
sisters came in incognito 70s jam.<lb/>
The gig was a blast, so we're look-<lb/>
ing for another installment of the<lb/>
"Good Times" with your a? Sin-<lb/>
cerely, Sigma Nu.<lb/>
PHI SIGMA PI PLEDGES ?<lb/>
Good iuck with SFK and the re-<lb/>
mainder of your pledge period.<lb/>
Love, the Brothers.<lb/>
THANKS SIGMA PI ? for the<lb/>
great social Friday. Love, Chi<lb/>
Omega.<lb/>
ATTENTION all Chi Omegas and<lb/>
dates, get ready for formal ? it<lb/>
will definitely be a weekend to<lb/>
remember.<lb/>
PI DELTA'S: We had a great time<lb/>
at the bonfire social on Thursday<lb/>
night. Hope to see you again soon.<lb/>
Love, the KAPPA DELTA RHO<lb/>
gentlemen.<lb/>
ALPHA PHI AND STRANGER<lb/>
DATES: Strangers came from all<lb/>
different places. We couldn't even<lb/>
recognize some of thei r faces. Some<lb/>
of the costumes were really cool.<lb/>
From the Brady Bunch to a harem<lb/>
to a hippie who was no fool. We<lb/>
may have created quite a mess,<lb/>
but all and all it was a total suc-<lb/>
cess.<lb/>
GOOD LUCK PIRATES! BEAT<lb/>
TULSA! Love, Alpha Phi.<lb/>
PI KAPPA PHI: Hoe down a<lb/>
hooker road was quite a sight. We<lb/>
were already to play with a huge<lb/>
hay fight. Thanks guys, lets do it<lb/>
again. Love, Alpha Phi<lb/>
PIKES: Good Luck to all our<lb/>
Pledges. Keep it up. Pi Kappa Al-<lb/>
pha.<lb/>
PI KAPPA ALPHA: Hopes every-<lb/>
one had a fun Halloween.<lb/>
PIKE: Mark, we wish you a fast<lb/>
recovery, hang in there. The broth-<lb/>
ers and pledges of Pi Kappa Al-<lb/>
pha.<lb/>
flllllllttlllllinillllllllligilBliiin<lb/>
PIRATE PAINTBALL: We are<lb/>
service-oriented and dedicated<lb/>
to ensure you and your friends<lb/>
a heart-pounding, adrenaline-<lb/>
rushing good time. Come join us<lb/>
at Pirate Paintball for a 3 12<lb/>
hour session you'll never for-<lb/>
get. Sneak through the cool,<lb/>
clean, crisp, forest air as you<lb/>
make your way to your oppo-<lb/>
Professional<lb/>
Typing and Word Processing<lb/>
Includes:<lb/>
? Proofreading -Spelling<lb/>
? Grammar cotrectioas<lb/>
1.50 Per Page Call: 355-3611 anytime<lb/>
niHiinmiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiinn?<lb/>
Announcements<lb/>
ECU NATIVE<lb/>
AMERICAN ORGANIZA-<lb/>
TION<lb/>
The next meeting of the ECU<lb/>
Native American Organiza-<lb/>
tion will be on November 8<lb/>
at 7 p.m. It will be held at<lb/>
Kim Sampson's house. If you<lb/>
need directions or have any<lb/>
questions, please call Kim at<lb/>
752-5294. All members are<lb/>
encouraged to attend.<lb/>
SOPHOMORES<lb/>
JUNIORS AND<lb/>
SENIORS!<lb/>
Limited copies of ECU's first<lb/>
video yearbook are still<lb/>
available. Come by the Me-<lb/>
dia Board Office, Student<lb/>
Publications Building, sec-<lb/>
ond floor, 8-5 daily. Build-<lb/>
ing is located across from<lb/>
Joyner Library.<lb/>
NURSING<lb/>
rhe School of Nursing will<lb/>
hold departmental meetings<lb/>
as follows: NOV. 8: Declared<lb/>
majors (NU on grade sheet<lb/>
with nursing faculty as ad-<lb/>
visor) who have not begun<lb/>
clinical major. 5:00 p.m. ?<lb/>
Last names A-L; 6:00 p.m. ?<lb/>
Last name M-Z. NOV 9-5:<lb/>
Students enrolling in sopho-<lb/>
more level nursing couses<lb/>
in January. 6:00 Students<lb/>
enrolling junior level nurs-<lb/>
ing courses. NOV 10: 5:00<lb/>
? students enrolling in se-<lb/>
nior nursing courses. 6:00<lb/>
? general college with in-<lb/>
tended major in nursing.<lb/>
ECU ECONOMICS<lb/>
SOCIETY<lb/>
Tuesday, November 9th, the<lb/>
Economics Society of ECU<lb/>
will present Jim Wood from<lb/>
IBM. This meeting is open to<lb/>
all persons interested in eco-<lb/>
nomics. Please bring your<lb/>
related questions. A busi-<lb/>
ness meeting will follow.<lb/>
ATTENTION<lb/>
PRE-PHYSICAL<lb/>
THERAPY STUDENTS<lb/>
Registration advising for<lb/>
Spring semester, 1994, will<lb/>
be held on November 8th,<lb/>
9th, and 10th evenings from<lb/>
7:00 to 9:00 p.m. in the<lb/>
Physical Therapy Lab of the<lb/>
Carol Belk Building. Please<lb/>
enter by way of the front<lb/>
door of the Belk Building<lb/>
and follow signs. All pre-<lb/>
physical therapy general<lb/>
college students MUST at-<lb/>
tend one of these sessions to<lb/>
have Spring semester sched-<lb/>
ules approved and signed<lb/>
by a physical therapy fac-<lb/>
ulty advisor.<lb/>
LATINO FIESTA<lb/>
Sponsored by the Interna-<lb/>
tional Student Association<lb/>
Saturday, Nov. 13, in the<lb/>
Mendenhall Student Center<lb/>
Multi-Purpose Room. Ad-<lb/>
mission: $4:00 (Students)-<lb/>
$5:00 (General Public) For<lb/>
further information contact:<lb/>
Partricia Steffen 931-9809<lb/>
orCentral Ticket Office: 757-<lb/>
4788.<lb/>
UNIVERSIIYSTUDENT<lb/>
MARSHALS<lb/>
Any student interested in<lb/>
serving as a university mar-<lb/>
shal for the 1993 fall com-<lb/>
mencement may obtain an<lb/>
application from A-12<lb/>
Minges. Students must be<lb/>
classified as a junior by the<lb/>
end of spring semester '93<lb/>
and have a 3.0 academic<lb/>
average to be eligible. Re-<lb/>
turn completed application<lb/>
to A-12 Minges by Nov. 8,<lb/>
1993.<lb/>
FANTASY<lb/>
A special sign language and<lb/>
voice performing group will<lb/>
be hosting a unique presen-<lb/>
tation, "The Silent Beauty<lb/>
and the Talking Beast to<lb/>
the public on Nov. 6, 1993<lb/>
at 8:00 p.m. in Wright Audi-<lb/>
torium. It is based on the<lb/>
adaption of a Walt Disney<lb/>
Classic. Don't miss this para-<lb/>
dox of cultures with excit-<lb/>
ing music and acting. Ad-<lb/>
mission $4 for adults and<lb/>
$2 for children under 12.<lb/>
REGISTRATION FOR<lb/>
GENERAL COLLEGE<lb/>
STUDENTS<lb/>
General College Students<lb/>
should contact their advis-<lb/>
ers the week of Nov. 8-12 to<lb/>
make arrangements for aca-<lb/>
demic advising for Spring<lb/>
Semester 1994. Early regis-<lb/>
tration will begin Nov.<lb/>
15 and end Nov. 19.<lb/>
PRE-OCCUPATIONAL<lb/>
THERAPY STUDENTS<lb/>
Early registration for<lb/>
spring sessions will be-<lb/>
gin Nov. 15th. There will<lb/>
be an advising session<lb/>
Wednesday night, Nov.<lb/>
10th from 5:30-7:30 in<lb/>
room 203 of the Belk<lb/>
Building. If you are un-<lb/>
able to attend this meet-<lb/>
ing please call the OT<lb/>
office for other advising<lb/>
hours.<lb/>
EAST<lb/>
CAROLINIAN<lb/>
Classifieds<lb/>
25 words or less:<lb/>
Students $2.00<lb/>
Non-Students $3.00<lb/>
Each additional word $0.05<lb/>
?All ads must be pre-paid<lb/>
Announcements<lb/>
Any organization may use the Announce-<lb/>
ments Section of The East Carolinian to list<lb/>
activities and events open to the public two<lb/>
times freeof charge. Duetothelimitedamount<lb/>
of space, The East Carolinian cannot guaran-<lb/>
tee the publication of announcements.<lb/>
Deadline<lb/>
Friday at 4 pm for<lb/>
Tuesdays edition<lb/>
Tuesday at 4 pm for<lb/>
Thursday's edition<lb/>
Displayed<lb/>
$5.50 per inch:<lb/>
Displayed advertisements may be<lb/>
cancelled before 10a.m. thedaypriorto<lb/>
publication; however, no refunds will<lb/>
be given.<lb/>
For more<lb/>
information call<lb/>
757-6366.<lb/>
.iuujij.iiijJU i.ii.iij<lb/>
<pb facs="00058437_0007"/><lb/>
The East Carolinian<lb/>
November 4, 1993<lb/>
Lifestyle<lb/>
Page 7<lb/>
King's novel leaves you sweating<lb/>
By Joe Horst<lb/>
Photo courtesy of Viking Penguin Publishers<lb/>
Nightmares &amp; Dreamscapes, Stephen King's latest novel compiles short<lb/>
stories into one frightening book. The hard-cover is priced at $27.50.<lb/>
Staff Writer<lb/>
You wake up in the middle of<lb/>
the night, sweat streaming down<lb/>
from your forehead. You could<lb/>
have sworn you heard yourself<lb/>
scream, but now you're not so sure.<lb/>
As you lay your head back down<lb/>
on the pillow, your heart gradually<lb/>
resumes its double-thump, as op-<lb/>
posed to the triple-thump you<lb/>
awoke with. Falling back into that<lb/>
gentle slumber, you wonder ex-<lb/>
actly what it was that scared you so<lb/>
badly.<lb/>
This is what Stephen King has<lb/>
tried to do with his latest anthol-<lb/>
ogy of stories, Nightmares and<lb/>
Dreamscapes. Luckily for his fans,<lb/>
King has once again demonstrated<lb/>
his uncanny ability to take the or-<lb/>
dinary and mundane and twist it<lb/>
into something that, as kids, we<lb/>
feared lived under our bed.<lb/>
For those who were a waiting a<lb/>
return of Night Shift or Skeleton<lb/>
Crew, be forewarned: King has be-<lb/>
come more subtle in his old age.<lb/>
The hardcover iook tota! 816<lb/>
pages, making the reader hard-<lb/>
pressed to remember the stories in<lb/>
the beginning of the book. How-<lb/>
ever, a look at the table of contents<lb/>
after I finished the book brought<lb/>
back some delicious feelings of fear<lb/>
and dread.<lb/>
"Suffer the Little Children" is<lb/>
a prime example of King's ability<lb/>
to punch the reader in the gut,<lb/>
leaving him breathless, when he<lb/>
least expects it. From his first line<lb/>
("Miss Sidley was her name, and<lb/>
teaching was her game) to his last<lb/>
("In the end, he was hardly able to<lb/>
take his eyes off them), King<lb/>
weaves a story that leaves the<lb/>
reader looking over his shoulder.<lb/>
Never again will 1 be able to look at<lb/>
a playground full of screaming<lb/>
children the same. Brrrrrrrrrr.<lb/>
King has never been that well-<lb/>
known for his screenplays. Bombs<lb/>
ike Maximum Overdrive and Golden<lb/>
Years were never quite overshad-<lb/>
owed by hits like Silver Bullet. How-<lb/>
ever, the screenplay that he in-<lb/>
cludes in this book, "Sorry, Right<lb/>
Number proves the cliche that<lb/>
practice makes perfect. Televised<lb/>
as an episode for "Tales from the<lb/>
Darkside King writes a story that<lb/>
would have made even Rod Serling<lb/>
proud.<lb/>
Possibly the best story that<lb/>
King has written in this anthology<lb/>
is his sole non-fiction piece, Head<lb/>
Down. A chronicle of the events<lb/>
leading up to his son's Little League<lb/>
baseball team going to tne state<lb/>
championships, King effortlessly<lb/>
captures the heart of baseball at its<lb/>
finest. Baseball fans all over the<lb/>
country will love this story of the<lb/>
quintessential underdogs rising up<lb/>
to capture the hearts of their home-<lb/>
See KING page 9<lb/>
'Nightmare Before Christmas' fails early<lb/>
By Ike Shibley<lb/>
Staff Writer<lb/>
TimBurtonhasalwaysmanaged<lb/>
to produce visually stunning films<lb/>
that delight the eye. His sets and<lb/>
characters live in a world unlike anv<lb/>
other. Burton's magic lies in his cre-<lb/>
ative imagination, which he now<lb/>
unleashes in his newest creation, Tim<lb/>
Burton's TJie Nightmare Before Christ-<lb/>
mas.<lb/>
The effects in Tlw Nightmare Be-<lb/>
fore Christmas are considered anima-<lb/>
tion but not of the same type seen in<lb/>
Aladdin. Burton's film contains char-<lb/>
acters that look like high-tech ver-<lb/>
sions of the Rankin-Bass television<lb/>
specials, like "Rudolph" and "Santa<lb/>
Claus is Coming to Town thatwere<lb/>
The nightmare that Tim Burton hoped to create falls short.<lb/>
made many years ago.<lb/>
One striking difference between<lb/>
Nightmare and the aforementioned<lb/>
TV specials is that Burton's film con-<lb/>
tains a mischievous spark. Nightmare<lb/>
plays much more like a Halloween<lb/>
film than a Christmas film.<lb/>
Tim Burtonhas been thecreative<lb/>
force behind several extraordinary<lb/>
films. He began with Pee Wee's Big<lb/>
Adventure, a wonderful story of a<lb/>
misfit that appealed to both parents<lb/>
and children. Any doubters of<lb/>
Burton'sability should watch BigTop<lb/>
Pee Wee to appreciate the delicate bal-<lb/>
ance that Burton achieved in the first<lb/>
Pee Wee Herman film.<lb/>
Burton's next film, Beetleju ice,<lb/>
See NIGHTMARE page 9<lb/>
Photo courtesy of Touchstone Pictures<lb/>
In the Real World, where holidays are celebrated, a young boy looks on<lb/>
in disbelief as one of Jack's "gifts" swallows the family tree.<lb/>
Keynote address by chemist on tap for National Chemistry Week<lb/>
Staff Reports<lb/>
The East Carolinian<lb/>
A Nobel laureate in chemistry<lb/>
will give the keynote address at an<lb/>
East Carolina University program<lb/>
on Nov. 12 for chemistry students,<lb/>
teachers and professional chemists.<lb/>
Dr. Herbert C. Brown, the 1979<lb/>
Nobel Laureate and professor at<lb/>
Purdue University in Indiana, will<lb/>
speak at the ECU Chemistry<lb/>
Department's "Student Meeting in<lb/>
Miniature His presentation is at 8<lb/>
p.m. in Mendenhall Student Cen-<lb/>
ter. The public is invited to attend.<lb/>
The "Student Meeting in Min-<lb/>
iature" coincides with National<lb/>
Chemistry Week, Nov. 7-13.<lb/>
The day-long Friday program<lb/>
will include presentations on chem-<lb/>
istry researchby undergraduate and<lb/>
graduate students. Sessions begin<lb/>
at 8 a.m. in the Flanagan Building.<lb/>
The meeting is co-sponsored<lb/>
by the Eastern North Carolina Sec-<lb/>
tion of the American Chemical So-<lb/>
ciety (ACS), the East Carolina ACS<lb/>
Student Affiliate and the ECU<lb/>
Chemistry Alumni Professional<lb/>
Society.<lb/>
Dr. Art Rodriguez, the program<lb/>
chairperson, said the "meeting is<lb/>
designed to provide undergradu-<lb/>
ate and graduate students from all<lb/>
fields of chemistry and chemical<lb/>
engineering with an opportunity to<lb/>
present their research projects to<lb/>
colleagues in a professional atmo-<lb/>
sphere<lb/>
The conference will conclude<lb/>
with a banquet and the presenta-<lb/>
tion of research awards Friday<lb/>
evening.<lb/>
Brown, the keynote speaker, is<lb/>
best known for his research on the<lb/>
role of boron in organic chemistry.<lb/>
His research has brought him<lb/>
numerous honors.<lb/>
In addition to the Nobel Prize,<lb/>
he received the 1981 Priestley Medal,<lb/>
the 1982 Perkin medal and the 1985<lb/>
A.I.C. istry. Chemical Sciences for<lb/>
1987.<lb/>
Texas 2-Step a<lb/>
step up from rest<lb/>
By Stephanie Tullo<lb/>
Staff Writer<lb/>
Texas 2-Step is a classy style<lb/>
club is winning crowds of all ages<lb/>
from all over the area.<lb/>
This 25,000 square footclubcom-<lb/>
bines the rock n'rollers, poolsharks<lb/>
and Country music fans into a spec-<lb/>
tacular clubexperience. Itis the "New-<lb/>
est image of nightclubing, two clubs<lb/>
inone saysowner, Brenda Malaputi.<lb/>
There are a variety of activ ities<lb/>
for all ages with game rooms, both<lb/>
bigand small and thedivisionof rock<lb/>
n' roll on one half of the building and<lb/>
Country on the other.<lb/>
This place has a classy european<lb/>
touch, with sunken bars, a fire place<lb/>
and elegant furnishings. There are<lb/>
three huge bars throughout the club.<lb/>
The idea of this club is to appeal to<lb/>
people of all ages. The club is in two<lb/>
buildings with a connection. The<lb/>
club is filled with everything, it is<lb/>
justlikeamaze?don'tgetlost. The<lb/>
Texas 2-Step is located just over the<lb/>
bridge on the left at 507 and 509<lb/>
Green St.<lb/>
The club opened on Oct. 20th<lb/>
and has remained low-key. They<lb/>
are open from Tuesday to Sunday.<lb/>
Doors open at 8:00pm except the<lb/>
sports bar which is open from<lb/>
5:00pm -9:00pm. The Rock N' Roll<lb/>
side opens a little Lier at uupm.<lb/>
Ladies are free Tuesday to Thurs-<lb/>
day, with a membership. Member-<lb/>
ships are $5.00 each and the club is<lb/>
open for ages 18 and older.<lb/>
They offer a free shuttle bus<lb/>
ride to and from the club to assist<lb/>
responsible drinking views. The<lb/>
shuttle will stop at the comer of<lb/>
See TEXAS page 9<lb/>
Rapper arrested ; NYC<lb/>
NEWYORK(AP)?FlavorFlav<lb/>
of the rap group Public Enemy was<lb/>
arrested and charged with attempted<lb/>
murder after he allegedly fired a gun<lb/>
athisnext-doorneighboroutsidetheir<lb/>
Bronx apartment building.<lb/>
ThearrestMondaycamejustone<lb/>
day after another nationally known<lb/>
rapper, Tupac Shakur, was charged<lb/>
with shooting two off-duty officers in<lb/>
Atlanta.<lb/>
HavorFlav,34, whose real name<lb/>
is William Drayton, may have been<lb/>
arguing with his neighbor over<lb/>
Drayton's girlfriend when he fired<lb/>
his gun, said Sgt. Michael McGrath<lb/>
said.Theneighbor,a54-year-oldman<lb/>
whose name was not released, was<lb/>
not injured.<lb/>
McGrath said he and another<lb/>
officer went to Drayton's apartment<lb/>
building in the Bronx borough after<lb/>
hearing shots.<lb/>
The apartment's doorman told<lb/>
police r -ayton fired at another resi-<lb/>
dent outside the building. Drayton<lb/>
sunTenderedtorx)liceinthebuilding's<lb/>
lobby and took the officers to his<lb/>
23rd-floor apartment, where<lb/>
McGrath said they found an unli-<lb/>
censed .380-caliber semiautomatic<lb/>
pistol with one bullet missing from<lb/>
its clip.<lb/>
In Atlanta, Shakur, 22, a popu-<lb/>
lar rapperwhoco-starred with Janet<lb/>
Jackson in the movie "Poetic Jus-<lb/>
tice was charged Sunday with two<lb/>
counts of aggravated assault fol-<lb/>
lowing a traffic dispute with two<lb/>
officers.<lb/>
Police said the shootings oc-<lb/>
curred after the two officers, broth-<lb/>
ers who work as deputies in the<lb/>
Atlanta suburbs, were nearly hit by<lb/>
two cars as they crossed a street<lb/>
with their wives.<lb/>
An argument ensued, one of<lb/>
meofficerspulledagunandShakur<lb/>
opened fire, wounding one officer<lb/>
in the buttocks and the other in the<lb/>
abdomen, police said. It was not<lb/>
immediately clear if the two identi-<lb/>
fied themselves as police officers.<lb/>
His attorney, Kenneth Ellis,<lb/>
saidShakurhasdeniedhehurt any-<lb/>
one.<lb/>
Marcovicci makes broadway<lb/>
NEW YORK (AP) ? There are<lb/>
important milestones in a career,<lb/>
Andrea Marcovicci says, and she's<lb/>
reaching two of them this fall.<lb/>
"Getting on Broadway means<lb/>
the same thing it meant 80 or 100<lb/>
years ago the singer-actress says.<lb/>
"So does getting to Carnegie Hall. I<lb/>
worked and worked, and now I get<lb/>
both. It's a lifetime of wishes<lb/>
New Yorkers may think of<lb/>
Marcovicci as a cabaret singer. She.<lb/>
appeared for 16 weeks straight at<lb/>
the Oak Room of the Algonquin<lb/>
Hotel in the winter of 1992-93.<lb/>
But she thinks of herself as an<lb/>
actress who sings. Currently, she's<lb/>
an actress who doesn't sing very<lb/>
much, playing Carmen in "Any<lb/>
Given Day newly arrived at<lb/>
Broadway's Longacre Theater.<lb/>
In the nine-character drama,<lb/>
which Frank D. Gilroy set in the<lb/>
1940s, "Carmen wanted to be an<lb/>
opera star, so there's a moment of<lb/>
singing Marcovicci says.<lb/>
"I don't have the voice for<lb/>
opera. One of the tricks for me is to<lb/>
sound just enough like I could<lb/>
have done opera if I'd continued<lb/>
my studies and not, beca use of the<lb/>
Depression, been forced into an-<lb/>
other kind of life<lb/>
Doing a play set in the '40s<lb/>
isn't a problem for Marcovicci.<lb/>
The songs she likes best were writ-<lb/>
See PLAY page 9<lb/>
CD Reviews<lb/>
CD Reviews<lb/>
CD Reviews<lb/>
CD Reviews<lb/>
q<lb/>
Shootyz Groove<lb/>
Shootyz Groove<lb/>
?<lb/>
Do we have enough bands out<lb/>
there doing a raprock crossover<lb/>
gig yet? I mean, sure it's an interest-<lb/>
ing combination of sounds. Every<lb/>
once in a while we even get some-<lb/>
thing electrifying out of it, like the<lb/>
angry socio-political rantings of<lb/>
Rage Against the Machine. But we<lb/>
also get groups like Johnny Quest, a<lb/>
local favorite, who seem most at<lb/>
home in a beer-addled haze of test-<lb/>
osterone-charged frat boy wet<lb/>
dreams. And then, somewhere in<lb/>
between, lies a band called Shootyz<lb/>
Groove.<lb/>
Shootyz is a pretty decent ex-<lb/>
ample of "Raprock They carry a<lb/>
good beat, feature explosive guitar<lb/>
work, and have a juicy bass line.<lb/>
Whil they lack the sheer power and<lb/>
intelligence of the aforementioned<lb/>
Rage, they have a nice, friendly in-<lb/>
tensity all their own. And they gen-<lb/>
erally steer clear of lowbrow fluff,<lb/>
despite the fact that "Shootyz<lb/>
Groove" sounds like a particularly<lb/>
nasty slan term for female genita-<lb/>
lia.<lb/>
The five songs collected on Re-<lb/>
spect, the band's debut EP, are all<lb/>
about peace and love and revolu-<lb/>
tion and smoking pot. Okay, so<lb/>
that's nothing very new in this field.<lb/>
But Shootyz Groove sounds some-<lb/>
what sincere, and they've got a<lb/>
couple of really hot rappers up front.<lb/>
The songs have titles like "The<lb/>
Craze" and "Buddahful Day. "Make<lb/>
of this what you will, but I think it<lb/>
means that the band's schizoid ten-<lb/>
dencies are showing.<lb/>
On the one hand, they're into<lb/>
peaceful brotherhood among all<lb/>
mankind as well as a variety of<lb/>
Eastern philosophical concepts. On<lb/>
the other, they're a bunch of Nean-<lb/>
derthals, rooting around for some<lb/>
kind of crotch-and-gut satisfaction.<lb/>
This need to slake their baser thirsts<lb/>
sometimes gets the better of them;<lb/>
certain material demands a softer<lb/>
touch. But at least the grunt and<lb/>
thrust stuff is sort of subversive.<lb/>
Shootyz Groove is not a get drunk<lb/>
and screw band.<lb/>
In the overflowing ocean of<lb/>
raprock, Respect will probal ly be<lb/>
quickly swallowed up. They're nei-<lb/>
ther good enough nor bad enough<lb/>
to make many waves. If you're into<lb/>
this kind of stuff, 1 suppose you'll<lb/>
like it. If not, I'd give it a miss. In the<lb/>
end, though, I must say that I like<lb/>
their basic message: question au-<lb/>
thority and have fun doing it. There<lb/>
are worse ways to live your life.<lb/>
? Mark<lb/>
Brett<lb/>
j Don't buy jj Take Your Chances<lb/>
JJJ worth a Try ))) Definite Purchase<lb/>
Chainsaw Kittens<lb/>
Ansel on the Range<lb/>
<lb/>
Usually an EP is made up of<lb/>
four or five songs from a band that<lb/>
wishes to tease their audience while<lb/>
waiting for the full-length album to<lb/>
come out. But that is not the case<lb/>
with Chainsaw Kittens' newest re-<lb/>
lease.<lb/>
Angel on the Range is their new-<lb/>
est creation and it contains seven<lb/>
songs that won't<lb/>
appear on any<lb/>
other album.<lb/>
They do have an<lb/>
upcoming full<lb/>
length album?<lb/>
Pop Heiress?and<lb/>
you won't find<lb/>
these songs on<lb/>
that or even on<lb/>
their two albums<lb/>
prior to this re-<lb/>
lease. The point<lb/>
is that Angei on the Range contains<lb/>
some tunes that will satisfy your<lb/>
craving for some new stuff (pro-<lb/>
vided you like their stuff to begin<lb/>
with) until their new record hits the<lb/>
stores in a month or so.<lb/>
The Kittens have been com-<lb/>
pared to many bands ranging from<lb/>
the Buzzcocks to the New York<lb/>
Dolls, but they deny all these com-<lb/>
parisons. All four members agree<lb/>
on their one most important influ-<lb/>
ence, that won-<lb/>
derful quartet of<lb/>
the late 70's,<lb/>
Cheap Trick.<lb/>
"Yes, definately<lb/>
the influence we<lb/>
all share is<lb/>
Cheap Trick<lb/>
says Tyson. And<lb/>
band mate Trent<lb/>
said, "If there<lb/>
was any band<lb/>
we could be<lb/>
compared to, Cheap Trick would<lb/>
make the most sense.<lb/>
These guys are hard to<lb/>
catagorize. You have to fuse a little<lb/>
alternative or grunge with that<lb/>
Cheap Trick sound to grasp any<lb/>
real comparison.<lb/>
Their lyrics come from some<lb/>
bizzare alternate universe with<lb/>
songs like: "John Wayne's Dream"<lb/>
(a song inspired by a conversation<lb/>
about heroin), "Kick Kid" and<lb/>
"Sgt. Whore<lb/>
Head Kitten, Tyson Meade,<lb/>
says he draws most from bad TV.<lb/>
The endless parade of worthless-<lb/>
ness that appears on talk shows<lb/>
and other American social pillars<lb/>
that we draw our entertainment<lb/>
from are the source of the band's<lb/>
songs. They also draw from per-<lb/>
sonal experience, but the TV is<lb/>
their staple muse.<lb/>
They say that their music isn't<lb/>
serious and shouldn't be taken<lb/>
that way, and I for one am glad of<lb/>
that If you're into this sound, this<lb/>
thing called the Kittens, check out<lb/>
this little EP; there is a small chance<lb/>
you may like it.<lb/>
Kris<lb/>
Hoffier<lb/>
Nu!iuiuiwa<lb/>
"?S?<lb/>
????<lb/>
<pb facs="00058437_0008"/><lb/>
November 4, 1993<lb/>
NIGHTMARE<lb/>
Continued from page 7<lb/>
surface as The<lb/>
enh r its<lb/>
I'onta<lb/>
with<lb/>
films.<lb/>
? i<lb/>
n Burton<lb/>
nghas<lb/>
iKt it- Both man Returns<lb/>
la wealthofeye-p ppingsights<lb/>
ittJe story behind them. Tlie<lb/>
marvelous ability to weave a capti-<lb/>
vating tale was last exhibited bv Bur-<lb/>
ton in Edward Scissorhands and has<lb/>
not been seen since.<lb/>
Tin- Nightmare Before Christmas<lb/>
hasanother misfit hero in the person<lb/>
of jack Skellington (voice by Chris<lb/>
Sarandon, singing voice by Danny<lb/>
Elfman). Jack lives in Halloween Land<lb/>
where every day is spent planning<lb/>
forOctober31st jack longs for some-<lb/>
thingdifferent. He roams around and<lb/>
discovers Christmas Land where ev-<lb/>
erything seems bright and happy.<lb/>
Jackderides to kidnapSantaand make<lb/>
Christmas better than before in an<lb/>
effort to bring some spark into his life.<lb/>
While Jack Ls interesting, henever<lb/>
really develops as a character. Sally<lb/>
(Catherine O'Hara), the heroine of<lb/>
the tale, likewise never develops.<lb/>
Jack's thirst for friendship never gets<lb/>
expressed although hints of an even-<lb/>
tual bond between Jack and bally<lb/>
exist. Jack's reasons for seeking a dif-<lb/>
ferent world never getarticulated thus<lb/>
muting the hero's desires.<lb/>
Sally is the creation of a mad<lb/>
scientist (given wonderful life by<lb/>
William Hickey) who longs for a bet-<lb/>
tercompanioaSallyconstantlywants<lb/>
to roam and the scientist wants some-<lb/>
onetostayathome with. Throughout<lb/>
the him, the scientist struggles to per-<lb/>
fect his creation. It is to the film's<lb/>
discredit that the minor role of the<lb/>
scientist provides most of the laughs<lb/>
and enjoyment.<lb/>
Plenty of visual effects fill the<lb/>
screen?enough to keep any viewer<lb/>
awake?but the oddities only hold<lb/>
the viewer's attention for so long.<lb/>
Without any story behind the effer ?<lb/>
the whole film feels hollow. A feelir<lb/>
I tonny Elfman wrote the music<lb/>
ricsfo! the film, hough he<lb/>
? i ? ?? isations with his<lb/>
music, as tie did in Batman, his songs<lb/>
in TheNigfttmareBejbreChristmas lack<lb/>
the necessary punch to capture the<lb/>
viewer's attention. Though ' do not<lb/>
advocate that all animated films be<lb/>
like Disney cartoons, Elfman could<lb/>
certimly leam somemmg from Btttiih<lb/>
ami the Beast and Aladdin.<lb/>
Much has been made of The<lb/>
Nightmare Before Christmas and its<lb/>
appeal to children. Though several<lb/>
scenes do appear grotesque, most<lb/>
children will have no trouble differ-<lb/>
entiating the grossness from reality.<lb/>
This film should appeal to most chil-<lb/>
dren, although they, like the adults,<lb/>
could start squirming out of<lb/>
boredom.Hopefully Tim Burton'scin-<lb/>
ematicmagic will return. In TlieNight-<lb/>
mare Before Christmas the storytelling<lb/>
skills have been subverted for the<lb/>
sake of visual impact. In a film this<lb/>
unique and this short (80 minutes), it<lb/>
is tragic that it is so dull.<lb/>
Onascaleof one to 10, TlieNight-<lb/>
mare Before Christmas rates a five.<lb/>
Who's There?<lb/>
ATTIC<lb/>
Thursday Dave Matthews<lb/>
Friday Cold Sweat<lb/>
Saturday Alma &amp; Dahli Llama<lb/>
TEXAS 2-STEP<lb/>
Thursday Midnight Express<lb/>
Friday Amsterdam<lb/>
Saturday Midnight Express<lb/>
PEASANT'S CAFE<lb/>
Thursday Mainstream<lb/>
EAST CAROLINA UNIVERSITY PERFORMING ARTS SERIES PRESENTS<lb/>
THE<lb/>
fartg Uti<lb/>
Save Mother<lb/>
Earth?<lb/>
Recycle<lb/>
!S2A<lb/>
Thursday- $1.50 nachos<lb/>
 $Z.SO pitchers<lb/>
Friday-12 price appetizers<lb/>
Saturday-LIVE ENTERTAINMENT after game<lb/>
"Wyatt Stanton"(Beach Music)<lb/>
Sunday- AM You Can Eat Popcorn Shrimp $5.95<lb/>
Monday- $2.50 pitchers $2.50 wings<lb/>
Tuesday- $1.00 domestics<lb/>
Wednesday- 3201 draft $2.00<lb/>
hex<lb/>
758-3188<lb/>
M-W n-tii<lb/>
Thurs, Fri, Sat 11-2<lb/>
Sunday 11-8<lb/>
706 South Evans<lb/>
Greenville WC<lb/>
ECU I<lb/>
CAMPUS I<lb/>
3<lb/>
?thStj"<lb/>
5th St<lb/>
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 Trie, ' Undefeated. Undisputed!<lb/>
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? ONE The "Best Place To Hear Live Music"<lb/>
. 1987196819891990199119921993<lb/>
every Wednesday GREENVILLETIMES READERS' POLL<lb/>
rhur Nov 4<lb/>
The<lb/>
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HORDE Festival<lb/>
99? Highballs ? 99a MEMBERSHIPS ? 99? 32oz DRAFT<lb/>
?<lb/>
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Fri Nov 5<lb/>
COID SWEAT<lb/>
Rockin' Rytfim and Blues<lb/>
$2.00 32oz DRAFT<lb/>
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?<lb/>
ALMA!<lb/>
Sat Nov 6<lb/>
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$2.00 32oz DRAFT<lb/>
Dahli<lb/>
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Starting Wednesday Nov 10<lb/>
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Al' IIL Doors open at 9pm o<lb/>
COMedY Comedy starts at 10pm ?p<lb/>
jryuC' Contest starts at 11:30 T? register call:<lb/>
?.<lb/>
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I<lb/>
$1.50 Highballs ? $1.50 Tallboys<lb/>
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SATURDAY,<lb/>
NOVEMBER 13, 1993<lb/>
8:00 P.M.<lb/>
Try Gumby's<lb/>
Buffalo Wings ?<lb/>
Pohey Stichs<lb/>
Pick-Up In Only 10 Min.<lb/>
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Call 1-800-ECU-ARTS for more information<lb/>
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11:00 AM-2:00 AM<lb/>
FRI-SAT:<lb/>
11:0O AM-3:00 AM<lb/>
SUN:<lb/>
11:00 AM- 1:00AM<lb/>
Tulsa Terminator<lb/>
LARGE<lb/>
2 Item Pizza &amp;<lb/>
2 Sodas<lb/>
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Gumby Destroyer<lb/>
2 LARGE<lb/>
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PERSONAL CHECKS<lb/>
m<lb/>
Above Prices DO NOT Include Tax. Offer May Expire Without Notice.<lb/>
$5.00 Minimum Order For Delivery.<lb/>
FAST, FREE DELIVERY<lb/>
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everything you<lb/>
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STOP SHOP features one of Greenville's<lb/>
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setups: Ice, cups &amp; munchies, too!<lb/>
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HHMMHMHHflHMMKN -<lb/>
;<lb/>
<pb facs="00058437_0009"/><lb/>
November 4, 1993<lb/>
The East Carolinian 9<lb/>
Continued from page 7<lb/>
; ingsimilartoKing'snoveI,77i(D?ril<lb/>
 ? ; Potential and budding authors<lb/>
1 it .Hid beware<lb/>
thebad<lb/>
ts and the<lb/>
i after<lb/>
im Raymond<lb/>
ii C onan Doyle<lb/>
tCasi and ' fhe<lb/>
? pet ti civ. Both<lb/>
istic e to that genre oi<lb/>
" i mne) 'si astCase"<lb/>
ting an unusual tvvist to writ-<lb/>
TEXAS<lb/>
a  reamscapcspre-<lb/>
sents King - unusual isionand tal-<lb/>
enl in a light that hasn't been seen<lb/>
tor seven years. Ignore the stab at<lb/>
poetry and morality attheend of the<lb/>
book ("Brooklyn August" and" The<lb/>
Beggar and the Diamond")and you<lb/>
will find yourself riveted once again<lb/>
to the fears that you thought were<lb/>
safely rucked away underthepileof<lb/>
dirty clothesatthebackof the closet.<lb/>
?s King says, "All you have to<lb/>
do is hold on tight and believe<lb/>
Continued from page 7<lb/>
Reed Milano's. Ihey vviderangeofbandsthatwillbethere.<lb/>
ssionstand for Even national bands will be sched-<lb/>
?. designated uled<lb/>
drivers for the evening. Oh the Country half there i a<lb/>
rhere will be man) ditterent fabulous Beer Express to get the beer<lb/>
bands featured slk !i as Midnight Ex- out with speed<lb/>
pressand Silver Wings. A new Country and Western<lb/>
RockiV Roll side will feature Store will be opening in the next 30<lb/>
?the Tree Hugers and days, which will sell miscellanious<lb/>
rhesearejustatasteofthe iternssuchasboots,hatsandlingerie.<lb/>
PLAY<lb/>
ntFt" u,<lb/>
W<lb/>
Cfiammount (ffhrk&amp;<lb/>
The I exas2-Stepafeooffersclance<lb/>
lessons like Ballrtxim Dance on Sun-<lb/>
day from 7pm-Spm.<lb/>
This week from Wednesday to<lb/>
Saturday, Midnight Express will be<lb/>
playing and Friday night will have<lb/>
Amsterdam. For a gtxxi time with a<lb/>
variety in music, not tomention "new"<lb/>
poohables,gototheTexas2-Stepand<lb/>
live it up.<lb/>
Cont'd<lb/>
from pg. 7<lb/>
ten between I927and 1943. "Ilivein<lb/>
the past anyway she says.<lb/>
I armen, she says, "is tempes-<lb/>
tuous, strong-willed and extremely<lb/>
intense and emotional. She has had<lb/>
to deal with great disappointment<lb/>
in her life, which makes her almost<lb/>
bitter as well. She's fascinating. It'sa<lb/>
very rich play<lb/>
When Marcovicd got the part,<lb/>
she prepared to move from Los<lb/>
Angeles for some months. "If the<lb/>
play runs, I'll be here till mid-June<lb/>
shesavs. "Igobacktotlie Algonquin<lb/>
again next spring, for 10 weeks<lb/>
Marcovicd gets the night off<lb/>
from the play the night before<lb/>
Thanksgiving. That's when she<lb/>
makes her Carnegie Hall concert<lb/>
debut.<lb/>
"Ca rnegie Ha 11 is every singer's<lb/>
goal and dream she says. "I al-<lb/>
ways dreamed about it  I didn't<lb/>
really dare to make it a reality until<lb/>
Isold out 16 weeks at the Algonquin.<lb/>
I don't think I felt completely wor-<lb/>
thy until then<lb/>
Ill riot linifbed ut your priifcer im<lb/>
m&amp;<lb/>
1<lb/>
If<lb/>
VISA<lb/>
Si<lb/>
With Vtea you'll be accepted at more than 10 mHlion<lb/>
places, nearly three times more than American Expres;<lb/>
And that's not a misprint.<lb/>
Visa. It's Everywhere You Want To Be?<lb/>
??iis? ? nesJ<lb/>
ALFREDO'S 752 0022<lb/>
FREE DELIVERY<lb/>
One Large<lb/>
One Topping Pizza<lb/>
$6.25<lb/>
Good 'til Midnight- Free<lb/>
Delivery<lb/>
Pick up Special<lb/>
One Large One Topping<lb/>
$4.59<lb/>
Alfredo's Beer<lb/>
'til 10pm Doily<lb/>
T<lb/>
Two Large<lb/>
Sunday pitcher $2.00 One Topping Pizzas<lb/>
Monday pitcher $1.50 ?? q?<lb/>
Tuesday pitcher $1.00 ?? i?fcD<lb/>
Wednesday 32oz 99 Good 'til Midnight free<lb/>
.  Dehveru<lb/>
 mm mm mam sn mtm mmm mmm vwb ? h mm w?m m am mmm mm<lb/>
J<lb/>
Lunch &amp; Dinner Specials<lb/>
from 1 lam 'til 8pm<lb/>
Daily Or<lb/>
2 Slices 2 Toppings<lb/>
One Drink $1.99<lb/>
? mm ? dm mm<lb/>
One large<lb/>
One Topping Pizza<lb/>
Si pitcher of Seer or Soft<lb/>
Drink<lb/>
$6.99 (eat in only)<lb/>
'til 10pm Doily<lb/>
(A TRADITION SINCE LATE SEPTEMBER)<lb/>
752-5855 HOE. 4th St Downtown<lb/>
Thursday<lb/>
MAMKTRCAM<lb/>
(FEATURING NED HOLDER &amp;<lb/>
SOME REALLY COOL JAZZ CATS)<lb/>
CHICKEN POT PIE ?t? kbllt smith<lb/>
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Saturday<lb/>
HO TOWN with BITTER SONS<lb/>
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Sundav<lb/>
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ALL-CAMPUS TOURNAMENT<lb/>
Saturday, November 13<lb/>
Sunday, November 14<lb/>
Mendenhall Student Center<lb/>
Pick up a College Bowl Information and<lb/>
Registration Packet from the Information<lb/>
Desk, Mendenhall Student Center.<lb/>
Sponsored by the ECU Student Union Special Events Committee<lb/>
First place team member: will receive $25.00 each and a College Bowl t-shirt.<lb/>
Second place team members wiil receive a College Bowl insulated mug.<lb/>
For more information, contact the Student Activities Office.<lb/>
210 Mendenhall. 757-47664711.<lb/>
<pb facs="00058437_0010"/><lb/>
Adventures Of Kemple Boy<lb/>
com?ics (kom' iks) ? noun plural in form, used with a singular verb. Juxtaposed pictorial and<lb/>
other images in deliberate sequence, intended to convey information andor to produce<lb/>
aesthetic response in the viewer, ?from Understanding Comics by Scott Mccloud<lb/>
By Kemple WANG TV<lb/>
6C-LTS' KUL Hin' PUHP<lb/>
H r Full of- WCifS' S4N<lb/>
TO KiUTWf IN HIS FlMTftAlLJ<lb/>
Phoebe<lb/>
by Stephanie Smith<lb/>
q<lb/>
IT IS ALWMS<lb/>
1 such a -e to see<lb/>
fc DOLING PERSON<lb/>
WILLING TO TOIU<lb/>
FOR MIS WONM.W<lb/>
w COUNTRY WEHAD<lb/>
0 CHO?CE 6UT TO <lb/>
HAND OOR CHECKS<lb/>
TO Ou PARENTS ! <lb/>
BUT VOU- LET ME j<lb/>
SHOW NCJ WHAT fl<lb/>
y EXPECT FROM NOO<lb/>
I DO MOT TOL-<lb/>
ERATE Childish<lb/>
SEhavior.kids<lb/>
TOOAN (p)CAN<lb/>
5E SPOILEP 6RATS<lb/>
I WAS NEVE<lb/>
I BEGAN MV NCvJ<lb/>
LlPe WITH A<lb/>
CANDLf AND A<lb/>
ORE AM. NOW<lb/>
AFTER EARS<lb/>
OP DILIGENT<lb/>
tAS0R,X HAVE<lb/>
AU. TMI4 ,<lb/>
Fred's Corner<lb/>
by Parnell<lb/>
Hou to TdE. Game. sWw t?.<lb/>
out Go 7<lb/>
CWiOl. UiPlfcoN ?VStC L)V<lb/>
J G?TThc wrt. k vcwr?<lb/>
Xt STATtcTi ce-r<lb/>
The. Ptouxcx. ciwre<lb/>
,oTV tujPiV?<lb/>
<lb/>
t-sujcwv:<lb/>
Spare Time<lb/>
by A. Farkas<lb/>
Now, BACK To<lb/>
Zoo LIFE ! ToOKi<lb/>
THE NoNKty<lb/>
CA&amp;E.<lb/>
V<lb/>
MVE WE Don't REALLyl<lb/>
DO THOSE THINGS IN<lb/>
Public?<lb/>
 'V-<lb/>
<lb/>
yvvCvpn &amp; Manning<lb/>
WANG TV<lb/>
By Manning &amp; Ferguson<lb/>
Omega Quest<lb/>
by Childers<lb/>
ROME,ITALY i<lb/>
IS<lb/>
WELCOME<lb/>
MY SON.<lb/>
I KNOW<lb/>
MV SON,THE<lb/>
CHOSEN ONE<lb/>
WILL ARRIVE SOON<lb/>
VOU MlKT PREPARE<lb/>
fOfl THE C0MIN6<lb/>
fxnu or<lb/>
tflDCALYFSF<lb/>
Seigfreid and Barth<lb/>
by Murphy and Davis<lb/>
Demonseed<lb/>
<pb facs="00058437_0011"/><lb/>
The East Carolinian<lb/>
November 4, 1993<lb/>
Sports<lb/>
Page 11<lb/>
What's On Tap?<lb/>
Thursday, Nov. 4<lb/>
Soccer, away<lb/>
at CAA Tournament, Richmond,<lb/>
Va through Sunday, TBA<lb/>
M. Tennis, away<lb/>
at Rolex Regional Indoor<lb/>
Tourn Chapel Hill, NC,<lb/>
through Sunday, TBA<lb/>
Friday, Nov. 5<lb/>
Volleyball, away<lb/>
at Navy Forestall Classic,<lb/>
Annapolis, Md through<lb/>
Sunday, TBA<lb/>
Saturday, Nov. 6<lb/>
Football, home<lb/>
Tulsa 1:30 p.m.<lb/>
Sunday, Nov. 7<lb/>
W. Soccer, home<lb/>
Raleigh Club, 11 a.m.<lb/>
The 411<lb/>
Saturday, Oct. 30<lb/>
Lacrosse, home<lb/>
beat NC State 10-7, beat NC<lb/>
Wesleyan 13-5<lb/>
Tuesday, Nov. 2<lb/>
Volleyball, away<lb/>
lost to UNC-W, (1-3), 9-15,11-<lb/>
15,16-14,12-15<lb/>
Please . . . No Wagering<lb/>
Robert Todd, 43 points<lb/>
TEC Sports Editor<lb/>
Tulsa 10, 30-20<lb/>
"The Hurricanes have too<lb/>
many weapons. Unfortunately,<lb/>
mis might be ECU's last chance<lb/>
for a win this season<lb/>
.Brian Olson, 46 points<lb/>
TEC Assistant Sports<lb/>
Editor<lb/>
Tulsa 6,23-17<lb/>
"ECU's offense can't seem<lb/>
to put it together and Richard<lb/>
Perry's presence can't help the<lb/>
Pirates pull it out<lb/>
Kevin Halt, 40 points<lb/>
WZMB Sports Director<lb/>
Tulsa9,30-21<lb/>
"The Pirate seniors deserve<lb/>
a good showing from both the<lb/>
teamand the fans. Unfortunately,<lb/>
I don't think they'll get either<lb/>
Brian Bailey, 38 points<lb/>
WNCT-TV Sports Director<lb/>
ECU6,27-21<lb/>
"We break the third quarter<lb/>
jinx and the defense scores the<lb/>
game winner<lb/>
Brad Zaruba, 38 points<lb/>
WITN-TV Sports Director<lb/>
ECU10,24-14<lb/>
"Offense, defense, and kick-<lb/>
ing game show up on the same<lb/>
day<lb/>
Chris Justice, 49 points<lb/>
WCTI-TV Sports Director<lb/>
ECU -?,?-?<lb/>
Not available for comment<lb/>
Demetrius Carter, 25 points<lb/>
ABLE President<lb/>
ECU-?,?-?<lb/>
Not available for comment<lb/>
Mo' Rich, suest picker<lb/>
Assistant New Editor<lb/>
Tulsa 18,58-40<lb/>
"The Pirates will do much<lb/>
better if students tailgate respon-<lb/>
sibly<lb/>
Five points are awarded for<lb/>
choosing the winner and an<lb/>
additional three points are<lb/>
given to the person closest to<lb/>
the spread (the person clos-<lb/>
est to the combined score of<lb/>
both teams settles ties).<lb/>
Compiled by B. Olson<lb/>
Beating Tulsa crucial to save season<lb/>
Photo courtesy of Tulsa SID<lb/>
Tulsa's Chris Penn is a dangerous weapon. The Golden Hurricanes will try to exploit ECU's secondary and<lb/>
hit Penn deep as often as possible.<lb/>
ByBrianOlson<lb/>
Assistant Sports Editor<lb/>
The Pirates are inching more<lb/>
and more towards the end of the<lb/>
plank and might just jump ship if<lb/>
they do not win this Saturday<lb/>
against Tulsa. This will be the<lb/>
final home game for this dismal<lb/>
'93 season and it will be time to<lb/>
bid farewell to some outstanding<lb/>
seniors.<lb/>
ECU returns to Ficklen after<lb/>
two weeks on the road. They<lb/>
dropped games to Southern Miss<lb/>
and Virginia Tech. In what is usu-<lb/>
ally a close game between the<lb/>
Hokies, VT was too much for the<lb/>
Bucs last Saturday in Blacksburg,<lb/>
31-12.<lb/>
The Pirates stayed close at<lb/>
14-12 in the third quarter, but the<lb/>
third quarter plague took the<lb/>
wind out the Pirates sails. ECU<lb/>
has been outscored 66-7 in the<lb/>
third quarter this year.<lb/>
The independent Tulsa<lb/>
Golden Hurricanes will storm<lb/>
Hart nominated<lb/>
for NCAA council<lb/>
Greenville, NC (SID) ? Dave<lb/>
Hart, Jr director of athletics at<lb/>
EastCarolina University,hasbeen<lb/>
recommended by the NCAA<lb/>
Nominating Committee to serve<lb/>
as a Division I-At Large confer-<lb/>
ence representative on the NCAA<lb/>
Council.<lb/>
The 46-member Council es-<lb/>
tablishes and directs general<lb/>
NCAA policy between annual<lb/>
NCAAConventions. TheCouncil<lb/>
serves, in effect, as the board of<lb/>
directors of the NCAA. It is re-<lb/>
sponsible for making interpreta-<lb/>
tion of the constitution and by-<lb/>
laws in the interim.<lb/>
"Being nominated toserveon<lb/>
the NCAA Council is, indeed, an<lb/>
honor and privilege said Hart.<lb/>
"The Council is a very prestigious<lb/>
body within the framework of the<lb/>
NCAA. Its task, as well as its re-<lb/>
sponsibility, magnifies in light of<lb/>
the current issues facing intercol-<lb/>
legiate athletics in this decade. I<lb/>
would hope to do whatever I could<lb/>
to make a contribution to the col-<lb/>
lective effort to meet those chal-<lb/>
lenges which confront'all of us<lb/>
The NCAA membership wil<lb/>
vote on this recommendation at<lb/>
the NCAA Convention in Janu-<lb/>
ary. Hart's term of office would<lb/>
begin at the conclusion of the Con-<lb/>
vention and would end at the con-<lb/>
clusion of the January 1996 Con-<lb/>
vention.<lb/>
Rader heading Tulsa<lb/>
By Warren Sumner<lb/>
Staff Writer<lb/>
Dave Rader, the head coach of<lb/>
the Tulsa Golden Hurricanes, has<lb/>
brought many things to the Tulsa<lb/>
program. He had led the program<lb/>
to two bowl appearances, in 1989's<lb/>
Independence Bowl and 1991 's<lb/>
Freedom Bowl. In 1991, Rader was<lb/>
one of five finalists for the National<lb/>
Coach of the Year award.<lb/>
A formerquarterbackatTulsa,<lb/>
Rader was drafted after his colle-<lb/>
giate career by the NFL, where he<lb/>
played for one season under the<lb/>
New York Giants' Ray Perkins.<lb/>
Rader joined Perkins the following<lb/>
year at the University of Alabama<lb/>
as a quarterbacks and receivers<lb/>
coach. After a short term as an as-<lb/>
sistant at Mississippi State, Rader<lb/>
returned to Tulsa in 1986, where he<lb/>
served as an assistant head coach<lb/>
underGeorge Hensha w. Rader was<lb/>
named head coach of the Golden<lb/>
Hurricanes on March 8,1988.<lb/>
Coach, your situation with your<lb/>
Tulsa team is similar to that of the<lb/>
Pirates. You have come off a seiisa-<lb/>
tionall991campaignand gone through<lb/>
two struggling seasons. How do you<lb/>
keep focused for the remainder of the<lb/>
season when your ballclub is strug-<lb/>
gling?<lb/>
"I think the most important<lb/>
things we have at Tulsa are good<lb/>
people. Asa coach, I am surrounded<lb/>
by excellent leadership. I think our<lb/>
players are determined and refuse<lb/>
to give up. Three of our losses have<lb/>
all come in the'last minute which I<lb/>
think proves thatourguysare fight-<lb/>
ing hard<lb/>
As a former Tulsa quarterback,<lb/>
what experiences did you gain that<lb/>
See RADER page 13<lb/>
Swimmers make big splash<lb/>
By Brad Oldham<lb/>
Staff Writer<lb/>
The ECU swim teams got off to<lb/>
a great start for the 1993-94 season<lb/>
with a victory over the Hokies of<lb/>
Virginia Tech last Saturday.<lb/>
"Weswamverywellforsoearly<lb/>
in the season said Rick Kobe, head<lb/>
coach of ECU swimming. "It was a<lb/>
great team effort. They showed a lot<lb/>
of poiseand spirit. Virginia Tech was<lb/>
probably one of our toughest open-<lb/>
ing opponents ever. Going into this<lb/>
meetitlooked like things weregoing<lb/>
to be tight, but we just came in and<lb/>
took the meet over<lb/>
The men's and women's teams<lb/>
dominated the pool, with the ECU<lb/>
men winning, 138-106, and the<lb/>
women coasting to a 136-95 victory.<lb/>
Senior Brian Soltz led the way for the<lb/>
men's team, which won eight of 13<lb/>
events, while the women, who were<lb/>
led by sophomore Beth Humphrey,<lb/>
won nine of 13.<lb/>
Forthemen,Soltzhad threewins<lb/>
inthe50and lOOfreeand the 400 free<lb/>
relay with sophomore McGee<lb/>
Moody, Pat Cassidy and John<lb/>
Donovan (3:15.12). Cassidy, a junior<lb/>
from Miami, Fla also helped the Pi-<lb/>
rates win the 400 medley relay, along<lb/>
with Chris Bembenek, Lance Tate<lb/>
and sophomore David Benson.<lb/>
Bembenek swam extremely well,<lb/>
winning the 200 backstroke with a<lb/>
time of 156.12, while senior Carlos<lb/>
Ochoa won in the 200 free (1:4724).<lb/>
For the women, Leslie Hawley<lb/>
broke a varsity record in the 200 yard<lb/>
backstroke, which is very unusual<lb/>
considering that it was the first meet<lb/>
of the season and swimmers usually<lb/>
aren'tintheirbestshapecomparedto<lb/>
the later meets.<lb/>
In the diving competition, the<lb/>
men were led by freshman Billy<lb/>
Galleher, who totaled 508.12 points<lb/>
in his victories in the one and three<lb/>
meter boards. For the women, fresh-<lb/>
manBeth Hanna getting the win with<lb/>
a scoreof 238 pointson theonemeter,<lb/>
and 231 points on the three meter.<lb/>
ThePiratesnextmeetisonSatur-<lb/>
day, Nov. 13 against Old Dominion<lb/>
andGeorgiaSouthematMinges,start-<lb/>
ingat2 p.m.<lb/>
into Greenville wi th a 3-4 record<lb/>
while ECU stands at 2-6. Tulsa<lb/>
is coming off a victory over<lb/>
Middle Tennessee, 38-17. The<lb/>
Hurricanes have won both<lb/>
meetings between the teams<lb/>
with the last win in 1985,21-20.<lb/>
This game could easily go<lb/>
either way. One teamboth have<lb/>
played this year is Memphis<lb/>
State.<lb/>
Tulsa has already beaten<lb/>
MSU this season, 23-19, and the<lb/>
Pirates were blown away at<lb/>
home by the Tigers, 34-7.<lb/>
The Hurricanes will bring a<lb/>
different style of offense with<lb/>
them. They will sometimes go<lb/>
to a no huddle offense and will<lb/>
likely try and confuse a young<lb/>
and inexperienced defense.<lb/>
The attack is led by quar-<lb/>
terback Gus Frerotte. He is com-<lb/>
ing off his best game this sea-<lb/>
son, 21 of 33, with a career best<lb/>
354 yards and three TDs. He<lb/>
See TULSA page 13<lb/>
Pirates earn CAA honors<lb/>
RICHMOND, Va. (SID) - The<lb/>
East Carolina soccer team has<lb/>
placed two players on the 1993<lb/>
Colonial Athletic Association All-<lb/>
Conference squads. The all-con-<lb/>
ference teams will be formally<lb/>
announced at the CAA Soccer<lb/>
Banquet Wednesday night in<lb/>
Richmond on the eve of the CAA<lb/>
Tournament.<lb/>
Pirate back Drew Racine,<lb/>
from Raleigh, NC, received All-<lb/>
CAA First Team honors for the<lb/>
second year in a row.<lb/>
Last year, Racine was the<lb/>
only freshman to be named to the<lb/>
first team and he was East<lb/>
Carolina's first player to eVer be<lb/>
selected to the All-CAA First<lb/>
Team.<lb/>
ECU senior midfielder Jus-<lb/>
tin Finck of Manassas, Va. was<lb/>
named to the All-CAA Second<lb/>
Team. Recently Finck wasnamed<lb/>
CAA Player of the Week after<lb/>
scoring the game-winning goal<lb/>
to lift ECU to a 2-1 upset over<lb/>
American University.<lb/>
Racine came to ECU from<lb/>
Raleigh's Sanderson High School<lb/>
and had an immediate impact.<lb/>
Racine, a sophomore, has started<lb/>
every game do far in his colle-<lb/>
giate career.<lb/>
As a freshman he started all<lb/>
16 games for the Pirates. This<lb/>
season he has started in all 18<lb/>
games.<lb/>
Recently Racine was named<lb/>
an CAA Scholar Athlete and is<lb/>
planning to major in occupational<lb/>
therapy.<lb/>
Finck has seen success while<lb/>
playing soccer at East Carolina.<lb/>
He was the leading scorer for the<lb/>
Pirates in 1991 and was named<lb/>
the 1992 ECU Most Valuable<lb/>
Player.<lb/>
Finck has developed into an<lb/>
important team leader and was<lb/>
1992 co-Captain.<lb/>
Finck is majoring in biology<lb/>
and wants to coach Division I<lb/>
soccer after graduation. His ca-<lb/>
reer stats follow.<lb/>
Year Goals Assists Points<lb/>
1991 5 1 11<lb/>
1992 0 1 1<lb/>
122230 6<lb/>
8 :<lb/>
(stats provided by SID)<lb/>
18<lb/>
The CAA Soccer Champion-<lb/>
ships are held Nov. 4-7 at the<lb/>
University of Richmond.<lb/>
East Carolina is the eighth<lb/>
seed and will face top-seeded<lb/>
James Madison Thursday, Nov.<lb/>
4at5 p.m.<lb/>
Justin Fink<lb/>
Harts seeing playing time with Bucs<lb/>
By Brian Cunninsham<lb/>
Staff Writer<lb/>
Everwondered whatitmightbe<lb/>
like to look at someone who is a<lb/>
virtual carbon copy of yourself in<lb/>
basically every facet of life?<lb/>
For David and Daren Hart,<lb/>
redshirt freshmen twin brothers on<lb/>
the ECU football team, the similari-<lb/>
ties are unbelievably unique. Both<lb/>
play in the secondary on<lb/>
the Pirate defense, let-<lb/>
tered in football, baseball<lb/>
and basketball in high<lb/>
school, are 5'9" and run<lb/>
the 40-yard dash in 4.85<lb/>
seconds, were bom on<lb/>
Dec. 16, 1973, were<lb/>
named to Who's Who<lb/>
Among American High<lb/>
School Students and, last<lb/>
but not least, chose ECU<lb/>
over Virginia,Westem Carolina and<lb/>
Norm Carolina A&amp;T.<lb/>
"Oneofuscanbewalkingdown<lb/>
thestreetsometimeand peoplemight<lb/>
say 'Hi, Daren' when it was really<lb/>
me David said shaking his head.<lb/>
"Later on they might ask, 'Was that<lb/>
you I saw today?'Sometimes I might<lb/>
give them a hard time about it<lb/>
David and Daren Hart grew up<lb/>
in Winston-Salem,N.C, where they<lb/>
were both introduced to football at<lb/>
an early age.<lb/>
'Inourreighborhood wealways<lb/>
played with the older guys and that<lb/>
helped us really get good Daren<lb/>
said. "We started at die age of eight<lb/>
and were just constantly involved in<lb/>
a football atmosphere<lb/>
Football was not the only sport<lb/>
David Hart<lb/>
the brothers excelled at.<lb/>
Baseball and basketball also en-<lb/>
tered the picture and at Carver High<lb/>
School in Winston-Salem, Daren and<lb/>
David helped lead the their team to<lb/>
theconferaxBchampionship inbase-<lb/>
ballinl98990and'91,andinbasket-<lb/>
ballin'91aswell.<lb/>
In the long run, though, football<lb/>
was their main sport.<lb/>
"My goal for a long time was to<lb/>
play Division I foot-<lb/>
ball Daren said.<lb/>
"Football was defi-<lb/>
nitely my main sport<lb/>
David added. "Theex-<lb/>
citement,speed,hitting<lb/>
and being in the spot-<lb/>
light were all appeal-<lb/>
ing to me<lb/>
As previously<lb/>
mentioned,bothDavid<lb/>
and Daren chose ECU<lb/>
over some very good schools, most<lb/>
notably the University of Virginia.<lb/>
"UVa kept debating about us at<lb/>
first because they were<lb/>
skeptical aboutourheight<lb/>
and were going to see if<lb/>
they'd be able to recruit<lb/>
any tallerplayers Daren<lb/>
said. "ECU didn't worry<lb/>
about our height. They<lb/>
just took us in immedi-<lb/>
ately. David and I just<lb/>
wanted to play and that<lb/>
was all we were con-<lb/>
cerned about<lb/>
Though many this season have<lb/>
complemented the improved Tirate<lb/>
defense, David and Daren are still<lb/>
not satisfied with their performances.<lb/>
Both brothers say that instead of<lb/>
giving up so many points, they<lb/>
would prefershuttingdown teams,<lb/>
and defensive coordinator Larry<lb/>
Coyer has challenged them to do<lb/>
just that.<lb/>
"That's what we want to start<lb/>
doing'DarensaidThe fans might<lb/>
be happy, but we aren't<lb/>
With such a strong nucleus of<lb/>
freshmen and sophomores on this<lb/>
year's squad, there's good reason<lb/>
to mink that the team will only get<lb/>
better in the seasons to come and<lb/>
the brothers are certainly optimis-<lb/>
tic about the future.<lb/>
"I feel we can be one of the top<lb/>
teams in thecountry nextyear if we<lb/>
stay healthy and keep our focus in<lb/>
the classroom David said.<lb/>
Oh the field, the brothers de-<lb/>
pend a lot on the other and have a<lb/>
strongamount of confidence in each<lb/>
other.<lb/>
"If he's behind me, I expect<lb/>
him to make the play if I don't<lb/>
Daren said, referring to his faith in<lb/>
David. "We've been<lb/>
playing with each<lb/>
other for so long that<lb/>
we have developed<lb/>
an innertrustineach<lb/>
other and we are<lb/>
awfully hard on one<lb/>
another i f ei ther of us<lb/>
is not putting forth<lb/>
onehundred percent<lb/>
on every play<lb/>
Whilemanycol-<lb/>
lege students in today's world are<lb/>
not set to make something guxi<lb/>
happen in their lives, Daren and<lb/>
See TWINS page 12<lb/>
Daren Hart<lb/>
? ??<lb/>
<lb/>
<pb facs="00058437_0012"/><lb/>
November 4. 1993<lb/>
quits basketball team<lb/>
willcomptete<lb/>
and then<lb/>
arolina Com-<lb/>
lege in Jacksonville<lb/>
forward from Dixon<lb/>
five newcomers to thisyear'sLady<lb/>
Pirate squad. The loss cuts ECU's<lb/>
rosier to 11 which included nine<lb/>
sophomores and freshman.<lb/>
ECU began practice for the<lb/>
upcoming season on Oct. 30 and<lb/>
will open the season on Nov. 30 at<lb/>
Schixtl, Collins was one of Campbell University<lb/>
Wheelchairs rolling into Minges<lb/>
iembers of the<lb/>
?nd women's bas-<lb/>
teamswill participate in"<lb/>
i hair basketball game<lb/>
inday, N hen they<lb/>
a the Rehab Rascals.<lb/>
e game is being hosted by<lb/>
U chap ter of TUSH (People<lb/>
United to Support the Handi-<lb/>
and Cisponired bv<lb/>
DAWN (Disability Awareness<lb/>
Network) and the Spinal Cord<lb/>
Injured Association oi Pitt<lb/>
County.<lb/>
Halftime activities will in-<lb/>
cluded a wheelchair free throw-<lb/>
contest and door prizes.<lb/>
Tip-off is 6 p.m. in Minges<lb/>
Coliseum and admission is $4 for<lb/>
adults and $2 for children 5 years<lb/>
of age and older. Children under<lb/>
five will be admitted free.<lb/>
PUSH is a university-spon-<lb/>
sored organization of students,<lb/>
faculty and staff who strive to gen-<lb/>
erate disabilitv awareness in the<lb/>
campus community.<lb/>
Wilson resigns as Duke head coach<lb/>
DURHAM, N.C. (AP) ? Duke<lb/>
football coach Barn- Wilson an-<lb/>
nounced vesterday that he will re-<lb/>
t the end of the season, saying<lb/>
hi. had not been able to put together<lb/>
the numbers where they count.<lb/>
Hie bottom line is the win and<lb/>
!? isso lumn; 1 have not been able to<lb/>
getthcjohdone'arired-lookingand<lb/>
. hatefnotionalWilsonsaidata<lb/>
?ilerence.<lb/>
Wilson hasa 12-29-1 record dur-<lb/>
ing his four seasons with the Blue<lb/>
I  including a 2-7 season so far<lb/>
ir.Dukelostl7straightAtlan-<lb/>
t ic G ast Conference games unti 1 de-<lb/>
fea ting Wake Forest on Oct. 23.<lb/>
I leave this position with good<lb/>
a Hinience. I leave it with no gripes<lb/>
toward anyone said Wilson, who<lb/>
satbesideDukeathleticdirectorTom<lb/>
Butters during the news conference.<lb/>
Wilson said hedid not want the<lb/>
next three weeks to be a circus about<lb/>
whether he would remain as head<lb/>
civich.<lb/>
Wilson joined Duke as recruit-<lb/>
ing cuirdinatorand tight ends coadl<lb/>
for tlie 1987 and L988 seasons under<lb/>
headcoachSteveSpurrier. In 1989,he<lb/>
added dutiesasassistant head coach<lb/>
to his job description.<lb/>
Spurrier resigned from Duke,<lb/>
and Wilson took over for hi m in 1990.<lb/>
Wilson played col lege ba 11 a t the<lb/>
University of Georgia, switchingfrom<lb/>
quarterback to end at the start of his<lb/>
freshman vear in 1961.<lb/>
Prior to the sta rt of the 1965 sea-<lb/>
son, Wilson joined the Bulldogs'<lb/>
coaching staff and worked with the<lb/>
freshman team for two years before<lb/>
beginning a two-vear stint in the U.S.<lb/>
Armv. He returned to A thensas fresh-<lb/>
man etweh in 1969, then was named<lb/>
an assistant varsity a wh in 1970 with<lb/>
responsibilitiesforthelinebackersancl<lb/>
defensive ends.<lb/>
Wilson remained on Vince<lb/>
Daley's staff through the 1973 sea-<lb/>
son. He then became linebackers<lb/>
coachat Mississippi, where hestayed<lb/>
for threeyears. He then di rected Geor-<lb/>
gia Tech's linebackers for six seasons.<lb/>
In 1983, Wilson joined Spurrier<lb/>
at the Tampa Bay Bandits of the<lb/>
United States Football League.<lb/>
Volleyball team finishes CAA regular season<lb/>
(SID) ? East Carolina's vol-<lb/>
leyball team went down a bumpy<lb/>
road this year. The team moved<lb/>
its overall record to 10-20 and<lb/>
finished regular season Colonial<lb/>
Athletic Association play with a<lb/>
Olson's Trivial Quiz<lb/>
Q: Lester Lyons<lb/>
was named pre-<lb/>
season MVP for<lb/>
the CAA<lb/>
Basketball<lb/>
Conference. Can<lb/>
you name where<lb/>
he ranks on the<lb/>
ECU list of total<lb/>
points scored?<lb/>
'??9l s,U9ssnI ftuuos<lb/>
pmpq S3 3- sjujod ?S?'l<lb/>
tfjtai pjttfi syuvu dy :y<lb/>
9-15, 11-15, 16-14, 12-15 loss to<lb/>
UNC Wilmington on Tuesday.<lb/>
ECU'S CAA record is 1-4.<lb/>
ECU plays in the Navy For-<lb/>
estal Classic on Nov. 5-6. On Nov.<lb/>
5 ECU is scheduled to take on<lb/>
Navy at 4 p.m. and LeHigh at 8<lb/>
p.m. After day one of play, the<lb/>
teams will be seeded and at 10<lb/>
a.m.on Nov. 6,Seed 1 vs. Seed 6,<lb/>
Seed 2 vs. Seed 5 and Seed 3 vs.<lb/>
Seed 4.<lb/>
Maritime Studies Association Presents<lb/>
USCG Captain's License Prep Course<lb/>
DBPARTMIHT OF TKANSCORTIT 1V <lb/>
m)<lb/>
This course will prepare you to take tha USCG Captain's<lb/>
Test - Learn the Coast Guard way of thinking<lb/>
Nov. 13 and 14, 1993 8am to 4:30pm<lb/>
Maritime History Bldg. Corner of 9th and Cotanche St.<lb/>
Cost: $200, $50 deposit (tax deductible)<lb/>
Limited space - 1 st come, 1 st served basis<lb/>
Reply to MSA co ECU Maritime History Dept.<lb/>
The course is taught by Capt. Rick Jones - USCG Licensed<lb/>
to 1 BOO tons, 20 years experience<lb/>
For Information, call 757-0630 (evenings<lb/>
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TWINS<lb/>
Continued<lb/>
from pg. 11<lb/>
Da id are an extremeexoeprion. Both<lb/>
hnve established a goal setof morals<lb/>
and give all their glory to God.<lb/>
During high school, both were<lb/>
membersoftheSpiritof Lite group in<lb/>
YVinston-Salem where they traveled<lb/>
toother parteof the country and sang<lb/>
for God.<lb/>
"A lot of people are into rap or<lb/>
maybe slow songs with R&amp;D or<lb/>
country, but not us David said.<lb/>
"We sing for the Lord and hope to<lb/>
spread His word .I'm not shv about<lb/>
it either. It's something I love to do<lb/>
and 1 geta lot of my strength through<lb/>
Him<lb/>
Onecannothelpbutenvy Daren<lb/>
and David Hart.<lb/>
They haveevervthinggoing for<lb/>
them and both seem to want to ac-<lb/>
complish thesa me goalsinlifewhich<lb/>
is to graduate on time and be suc-<lb/>
cessful in their respective field of<lb/>
study.<lb/>
NBA sta rCharles Barkley sta ted<lb/>
on a TV commercial a few months<lb/>
back that it was not the professional<lb/>
athlete's job to be a role model, but<lb/>
rattier the parents<lb/>
With David and Daren Hart's<lb/>
attitude on life, Allen and Rose Hart<lb/>
are nodoubt most proud ot their two<lb/>
boys and they a re the type of people<lb/>
Barkley was trying to tell the public<lb/>
about.<lb/>
Indeed, two Hartsare better than<lb/>
one.<lb/>
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have some experience with Macintosh computers ? must be able<lb/>
to meet deadlines ? answer phones ? pay attention to detail<lb/>
Drop off your application at The East Carolinian office located<lb/>
across from the Joyner Library in the Student Publication<lb/>
Building on the 2nd floor.<lb/>
3615 South Memorial Drive<lb/>
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Need money? We have your Cash LynkGet fast cash<lb/>
in our store using your ATM card. 316 e. 10th st 752-<lb/>
<pb facs="00058437_0013"/><lb/>
November 4, 1993<lb/>
The East Carolinian 113<lb/>
V Warn s ?<lb/>
Continued from page 11<lb/>
m<lb/>
t catches per game<lb/>
and 124.6 y. rds per game. This<lb/>
will surely will bea tough test for<lb/>
the ECU secondary.<lb/>
Running back Lamont Headd<lb/>
will be used to balance the pass-<lb/>
ing attack. He has compiled 633<lb/>
yards this season and is averag-<lb/>
ing 97.3 yards a game on the<lb/>
ground. ECU has improved this<lb/>
year at stopping the run, but this<lb/>
week they must improve against<lb/>
the pass.<lb/>
Injuries ha ve hurt the Pirates<lb/>
li ke a saber through the heart this<lb/>
year. One more injury was added<lb/>
to the long list this past Saturday.<lb/>
Sophomore linebacker Morris<lb/>
Foreman went down with an in-<lb/>
RADER<lb/>
requiresur-<lb/>
 ill Ix- lost for the<lb/>
? m. Through<lb/>
: was second in<lb/>
a ith five tackles for<lb/>
l;)bseb. Hi- also had two intercep-<lb/>
and fumble recoveries. He<lb/>
was a big play maker for the Pi-<lb/>
rates and will be missed tremen-<lb/>
dously.<lb/>
The lulsa defense has been<lb/>
more effective at stopping the<lb/>
pass than the run this year. Their<lb/>
only allowingan average of 189.6<lb/>
through the air and are giving up<lb/>
141.6 on the ground.<lb/>
Freshman Perez Mattison<lb/>
will be at the helm of ihe Pirate<lb/>
offense again this week and is<lb/>
still gaining needed experience<lb/>
with every outing. The Pirates<lb/>
have struggled through the air<lb/>
and this might me more chances<lb/>
for running back Junior Smith.<lb/>
The Pirates should have more<lb/>
success on the ground this week<lb/>
Continued from page 11<lb/>
and short passes to ha Ifback Jerris<lb/>
McPhail should prove effective.<lb/>
This is McPhail's first sea-<lb/>
son with the Pirates since trans-<lb/>
ferring from Wake Forest and he<lb/>
is providing a spark to the of-<lb/>
fense.<lb/>
This game will mean some-<lb/>
thing special to ECU head coach,<lb/>
Steve Logan. He is a former high<lb/>
school coach in Tulsa, Okla and<lb/>
eventually became offensive co-<lb/>
ordinator at Tulsa in 1983-84.<lb/>
Loganalsograduated fromTulsa<lb/>
in 1975.<lb/>
There are also three other<lb/>
ECU coaches tha t grad uated from<lb/>
Tulsa: offensivecoordina tor Todd<lb/>
Berry (Class of '83), inside line-<lb/>
backer coach Bob Babich (Class<lb/>
of '84) and defensive secondary<lb/>
coach Chris Thurmond (Class of<lb/>
'75).<lb/>
This is not an ordinary year<lb/>
for ECU football. Fansare used to<lb/>
seeing a high-powered offense,<lb/>
but this year, because of injuries<lb/>
at quarterback, theoffense has not<lb/>
been able to get going. A high<lb/>
note for the Pirates is thedefense.<lb/>
Under new defensive coordina-<lb/>
tor, Larry Coyer, ECU has estab-<lb/>
lished an aggressive style of play.<lb/>
The future appears bright with a<lb/>
young team.<lb/>
16Pirateplayers will be play-<lb/>
ing in their last home game: Ber-<lb/>
nard Carter, Tom Coleman, Jeff<lb/>
Cooke, Dealton Cotton, Ken<lb/>
Crawford, Carlester Crumpler,<lb/>
Greg Floyd, Morris Letcher,<lb/>
Travis Render, Reggie Robinson,<lb/>
Schizo Sherman, Greg Smith,<lb/>
Robert Tate, Daryl Taylor, Derek<lb/>
Taylor and Ronnie Williams.<lb/>
If you did not get any treats<lb/>
last weekend during Halloween,<lb/>
make sure you stick around for<lb/>
halftime. ECU will honor<lb/>
NASCAR legend Richard Petty<lb/>
for his 200 victories and for his<lb/>
great career.<lb/>
Central Book &amp;<lb/>
756-7177<lb/>
Mon-Fri 8:30-9:30 Sat &amp; Sun 9:00-9:30<lb/>
Greenville Square shopping Center (next to Kmart)<lb/>
have possibly helped you prepare to<lb/>
coach at your alma mater?<lb/>
"Well, I think maybe the play-<lb/>
ers understand that I have been<lb/>
where they are right now and I have'<lb/>
a good idea what they are going<lb/>
through. I understand whatitislike<lb/>
to play at their level and am aware<lb/>
of the frustrations and joys they<lb/>
experience through their athletics<lb/>
and academics. I also think know-<lb/>
ingTulsa and itspeoplehavehelped<lb/>
mea greatdeal in my time of coach-<lb/>
ing here<lb/>
Your senior quarterback, Gus<lb/>
Frerotte, seems to be performing well<lb/>
this year. His interception rate is<lb/>
fairly low, much like yours was in<lb/>
your playing days. How did your<lb/>
playing experience help you to pre-<lb/>
pare him?<lb/>
"I think it is probably more that<lb/>
I've been around a nu mber of great<lb/>
coaches in my career. This sport is a<lb/>
continuing learning process and I<lb/>
think that the fact that I've learned<lb/>
from a number of top quality<lb/>
coaches has also helped Gus this<lb/>
year<lb/>
Speaking of great coaches, you had<lb/>
the opportunity to learn as a player<lb/>
from one of the best, John Cooper.<lb/>
Coach logon is also a former student of<lb/>
Coojeras anassistant coach. What did<lb/>
being around this great coach teach<lb/>
you?<lb/>
"One of the things about him<lb/>
that is a little like I have here in<lb/>
Tulsa is that he surrounded him-<lb/>
self with grea t people. I think that's<lb/>
an important lesson. I guess he<lb/>
also taught me to try to be orga-<lb/>
nized<lb/>
The college football profession<lb/>
seems to havepressures that are differ-<lb/>
entfrom any other occupation. How<lb/>
do you Ixmdle the day-to-day stress<lb/>
associated with leading a college foot-<lb/>
ball program?<lb/>
"We just try to have some fun.<lb/>
It's like anything else you do in life<lb/>
you have to be able to enjoy it.<lb/>
"You have to have the proper<lb/>
focus<lb/>
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