<?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="00058438_0001"/>
??- M<lb/>
Sports<lb/>
s attack U.S. luge team<lb/>
A hate group attacks<lb/>
members of the U.S. luge<lb/>
team in a bar in what once<lb/>
was East Germany. See<lb/>
story on page 8.<lb/>
Li lestvie<lb/>
EH<lb/>
Slaves &amp; Masters of Sleep<lb/>
L. Ron Hubbard's new<lb/>
book will delight SF<lb/>
fans who await tales of<lb/>
swords-and-sorcery.<lb/>
See review on page 6.<lb/>
The East Carolinian<lb/>
Vol. 68 No. 65<lb/>
Circulation 12,000<lb/>
Attackers captured<lb/>
Greenville, North Carolina<lb/>
Tuesday, November 9,1993<lb/>
10 Pases<lb/>
By Laura Allard<lb/>
Staff Writer<lb/>
ECU Public Safety and the<lb/>
Ayden Police Department have ar-<lb/>
rested four men for the recent rob-<lb/>
beries on the ECU campus.<lb/>
The men were caught after<lb/>
Crime Stoppers identified the men<lb/>
from a video taken by an automatic<lb/>
teller machine during one of the<lb/>
robberies.<lb/>
All of those in custody are<lb/>
black males from Ayden. Twenty-<lb/>
three year old DemetricFenner and<lb/>
James Howell have been charged<lb/>
with three counts of robbery with a<lb/>
firearm and have other charges<lb/>
pending.<lb/>
Curtis Jones, 17, has been<lb/>
charged with one count of robbery<lb/>
withafirearmandchargesarepend-<lb/>
ingagainst24 year old Darrell Jones,<lb/>
for alleged use of a credit card<lb/>
Access<lb/>
money for<lb/>
college<lb/>
By Laura Allard<lb/>
stolen at the robbery in front of the<lb/>
ATM machine.<lb/>
The four men have confessed<lb/>
to several crimes relating to the first<lb/>
three campus robberies but no one<lb/>
has been charged for the fourth,<lb/>
which was the only attack on a<lb/>
female victim.<lb/>
ECU Public Safety officer, Lt.<lb/>
Keith Knox feels that the fourth<lb/>
incident is probably not related to<lb/>
the first three. Therefore, "students<lb/>
should still be careful on campus<lb/>
and use the Pirate Ride, escort ser-<lb/>
vices and theSGA Student Patrol<lb/>
TheStudentGovernmenthas<lb/>
been working on a Campus Safety<lb/>
Act, intended to prevent such<lb/>
crimes, since last summer.<lb/>
Phase I of the plan was to<lb/>
purchase two bikes for ECU Public<lb/>
Safety to use in order to patrol the<lb/>
campus and provide escorts.<lb/>
Sgt. James Austin displayed<lb/>
one of the bikes during last night's<lb/>
SGA meeting and stated that dur-<lb/>
ing the two days that the bikes have<lb/>
been in use, he has provided sev-<lb/>
eral escorts and chased down one<lb/>
car with a citation.<lb/>
He contends that the bikes<lb/>
are a quiet, discrete way to catch<lb/>
criminals in the act, and are easier<lb/>
to maneuver through campus. The<lb/>
bikes are also a less expensive mode<lb/>
of transportation as they cost only<lb/>
$1,200 for five years of use, as op-<lb/>
posed to the patrol cars which cost<lb/>
$3,000 annually, just to lease.<lb/>
Phase II of the plan, which<lb/>
includes placing 14 signs marking<lb/>
stops for the Pirate Ride Shuttle,<lb/>
continuing the Pirate Ride from 12<lb/>
a.m. to 2:30 AM on Thursday, Fri-<lb/>
day and Saturday nights, and a<lb/>
student patrol member to ride the<lb/>
bus and check student ID cards will<lb/>
cost the SGA $1401.<lb/>
Staff Writer<lb/>
Over $45 billion in scholar-<lb/>
ship and financial aid money is<lb/>
available for college students<lb/>
through the Compu Access Net-<lb/>
work.<lb/>
Billions of dollars go un-<lb/>
claimed every year because stu-<lb/>
dents don't know how to access<lb/>
the money.<lb/>
Compu Access Network<lb/>
matches students with specific<lb/>
grades, career goals, religions and<lb/>
ethnic backgrounds with schol-<lb/>
arships, loans, grants, fellowships<lb/>
and co-ops.<lb/>
The $50 application fee con-<lb/>
nects students to sources appro-<lb/>
priate to their needs and abilities.<lb/>
Within 72 hours of return-<lb/>
ing the 26-question application,<lb/>
students "receive a 30-page cus-<lb/>
tomized report of sources, infor-<lb/>
mation of their school's financial<lb/>
aid program, and an array of dif-<lb/>
ferentinformation" says treasurer<lb/>
Deb McCrae.<lb/>
"According to The National<lb/>
Commission on Student Finan-<lb/>
cial Assistance and the House<lb/>
Sub-Committee on Post Second-<lb/>
ary Education, $6.6 billion of fi-<lb/>
nancial aid from the private sec-<lb/>
tor went unclaimed in 1990" said<lb/>
Claudia Woods, President of<lb/>
Compus Access Network.<lb/>
The Compu Access Net-<lb/>
work has the largest computer<lb/>
database of information in the U.S.<lb/>
The company is connected to a<lb/>
databank in Washington, D.C.<lb/>
and is updated daily.<lb/>
Campus leaders<lb/>
respond to students<lb/>
By Jason Williams<lb/>
Staff Writer<lb/>
The recreation center is<lb/>
more important to ECU than a<lb/>
parking deck. The university is<lb/>
waiting for an elderly woman to<lb/>
die in order to buy her property.<lb/>
Officers investigating a break-in<lb/>
at a dorm room found a note that<lb/>
said "Marsha and I are gone. If<lb/>
you need to get in, the key is over<lb/>
the door These are just a few of<lb/>
the startling pieces of informa-<lb/>
tion from Dean of Students<lb/>
Ronald Speier and Police Chief<lb/>
Ron A very in remarks they made<lb/>
to the Council of Student Organi-<lb/>
zation Leaders on Thursday.<lb/>
In the wake of several armed<lb/>
robberies on campus, Avery<lb/>
spoke to the group first on the<lb/>
topicof safety andsecurity. "The<lb/>
robberies don't appear to be<lb/>
planned; they are simply crimes<lb/>
of opportunity. This means that if<lb/>
you make yourself available, you<lb/>
could make yourself a victim.<lb/>
"Walk in groups of three or<lb/>
more. Walk in lighted areas. I can't<lb/>
think of any logical reason to be<lb/>
out walking at 3 a.m. I mean, the<lb/>
bars even close at two Avery<lb/>
said.<lb/>
Avery said if students have<lb/>
to be out late they should use<lb/>
Pirate Ride or call Public Safety<lb/>
for an escort. "We're not a taxi<lb/>
service, but we're there to escort<lb/>
you for security purposes. We will<lb/>
usually send one of our students<lb/>
out to walk with you<lb/>
Avery also encouraged stu-<lb/>
dents to take steps to protect their<lb/>
personal property. "The most sto-<lb/>
len article on campus is a bicycle.<lb/>
People treat their stereo like a prize<lb/>
possession but treat their bike like<lb/>
it's a toy.<lb/>
"Lock your dorm rooms<lb/>
when you leave. Don't think of<lb/>
your dorm room as your home.<lb/>
Lock up even if you're going to<lb/>
the bathroom Avery said.<lb/>
Don't do what Marsha and<lb/>
her roommate did either. Avery<lb/>
said that episode happened a few<lb/>
years ago, and he still keeps in his<lb/>
office a photograph of the note<lb/>
stuck on the open dorm room<lb/>
door.<lb/>
Avery also warned about the<lb/>
threat of robberies and attacks that<lb/>
have been occurring on campus.<lb/>
"If you are doing something<lb/>
that makes you stand out, you<lb/>
may be asked to produce an I.D<lb/>
especially if you are a young black<lb/>
male Avery said. He said that<lb/>
nobody has complained about this<lb/>
policy, however, and the student<lb/>
body has been "very cooperative<lb/>
and very understanding<lb/>
Dean Speier addressed the<lb/>
group next on critical issues fac-<lb/>
ing ECU students. He planned to<lb/>
speak on issues such as the uncer-<lb/>
tain economy, substance abuse,<lb/>
sexually transmitted diseases and<lb/>
violence, but was quickly diverted<lb/>
from these topics by questions<lb/>
from the audience.<lb/>
Speier responded to several<lb/>
inquiries about parking by saying<lb/>
he empathized with students, but<lb/>
noted that it has always been a<lb/>
problem. He said that the univer-<lb/>
sity has created more than 300<lb/>
new parking spaces to replace<lb/>
those that will be lost when the<lb/>
SeeCOSOL page 3<lb/>
Photo by Harold Wtao<lb/>
People United to Support the Handicapped helped to sponsor a wheelchair basketball game on<lb/>
Sunday, Nov. 7. The event raised over $100 to support Disability Awareness Week.<lb/>
PUSH sponsors b-ball<lb/>
By Jennifer Jenkins<lb/>
Staff Writer<lb/>
The Rehab Rascals took on<lb/>
the ECU Pirate and Lady Pirate<lb/>
basketball teams in an exciting<lb/>
game of wheelchair basketball<lb/>
on Sunday evening in Minges.<lb/>
Although ECU won, Susan<lb/>
Pogemiller, PUSH coordinator,<lb/>
believes "everyone had a great<lb/>
time and it helped show that<lb/>
people in wheelchairs can play<lb/>
sports and do as they like<lb/>
The game was supported<lb/>
bv People United to Support<lb/>
the Handicapped PUSH, Dis-<lb/>
abled Awareness Network<lb/>
DAWN, Eastern Carolina Spi-<lb/>
nal Cord Injury Association, and<lb/>
Recreational Therapy and Pitt<lb/>
County Memorial Hospital. The<lb/>
Lady Pirates played for the first<lb/>
and third quarters, and the men<lb/>
played the second and fourth<lb/>
quarters.<lb/>
During halftime, there<lb/>
were door prizes awarded to in-<lb/>
dividuals attending the game to<lb/>
help support the Rehab Rascals.<lb/>
University Book Exchange and<lb/>
Student Store gave out<lb/>
sweatshirts, and Darryl's and<lb/>
Ragazzi's gave out certificates for<lb/>
dinner for two at their res-<lb/>
taurants. Quicksilver gave<lb/>
out a gift certificate, and<lb/>
George's Hair Designs gave<lb/>
out a free haircut. Also, dur-<lb/>
ing the halftime there was a<lb/>
basketball freethrow contest.<lb/>
There was over $100<lb/>
dollars raised to help support<lb/>
Disability Awareness Week in<lb/>
April, and other future activi-<lb/>
ties. There is another event to<lb/>
be scheduled that is similar to<lb/>
wheelchair basketball to con-<lb/>
centrate on the abilities of the<lb/>
handicapped instead of the<lb/>
disabilities.<lb/>
New director focuses on Shared Visions<lb/>
By Stephanie Lassiter<lb/>
Staff Writer<lb/>
Robert S. Bragg, a profes-<lb/>
sional fund-raiser, has joined<lb/>
the ECU staff as director of the<lb/>
Annual Fund.<lb/>
Bragg, who came to ECU<lb/>
from Florida State University,<lb/>
will be directing ECU's<lb/>
telemarketing and direct mail<lb/>
fund-raising activities.<lb/>
"I solicit the alumni as a<lb/>
whole through the mail and<lb/>
telemarketing Bragg said.<lb/>
While at FSU, Bragg in-<lb/>
creased telemarketing and di-<lb/>
rect mail contributions by 53<lb/>
percent, and he raised donor<lb/>
participation by 45 percent.<lb/>
Bragg's main emphasis at<lb/>
ECU will be on the Shared Vi-<lb/>
sions campaign, which began<lb/>
last year and has a goal of $50<lb/>
million by 1995.<lb/>
"We are very much on<lb/>
track with Shared Visions he<lb/>
said.<lb/>
Bragg is also excited about<lb/>
the use of student solicitors for<lb/>
the telemarketing campaign.<lb/>
The actual calling will begin in<lb/>
January and applications will<lb/>
be available in December. Bragg<lb/>
said he plans to contact The East<lb/>
Carolinian about future adver-<lb/>
tisements.<lb/>
"This will provide em-<lb/>
ployment for some ECU stu-<lb/>
dents Bragg said. "I encour-<lb/>
age any student to apply. These<lb/>
are good flexible hours with<lb/>
good pay<lb/>
A new computer-assisted<lb/>
telephone system, once in-<lb/>
stalled, will allow solicitors to<lb/>
Yellow ribbons mark POW<lb/>
MIA awareness week<lb/>
By Tammy Zion<lb/>
Staff Writer<lb/>
Haveyouseentheyellowrib-<lb/>
bons tied around campus? They<lb/>
mark the beginning of POWMIA<lb/>
awareness week.<lb/>
"WhenVietnamoccurred,we<lb/>
wereyoung and havenotbeen well<lb/>
informed through the years. When<lb/>
we put up the ribbons, people ask<lb/>
us what it's about and, hopefully,<lb/>
will want to get involved said<lb/>
Johnnie Journigan, a project coor-<lb/>
dinator.<lb/>
As was done last year, a bam-<lb/>
boo cage will be set up in front of<lb/>
the Student Stores.<lb/>
A cadet will be imprisoned<lb/>
initfor 24 hours beginning at4 p.m.<lb/>
Monday afternoon. He will be set<lb/>
free in front of Minges Coliseum at<lb/>
4p.m. on Tuesday. Air Force ROTC<lb/>
willbeginaflagretreatceremonyat<lb/>
4:15 p.m. Tuesday, to honor Prison-<lb/>
ers Of War and those Missing In<lb/>
Action.<lb/>
A fly-by of four F-15 fighter<lb/>
jets from Seymore Johnson Air Force<lb/>
Base will introduce the evening's<lb/>
See ROTC page 2<lb/>
Ifs<lb/>
paper<lb/>
time<lb/>
The rush is on to<lb/>
get those papers<lb/>
done. With<lb/>
resources still<lb/>
scarce at the<lb/>
library, students<lb/>
should start early.<lb/>
(Yea, right. But, it's<lb/>
a good idea.)<lb/>
Photo by<lb/>
Cedric<lb/>
Van Buren<lb/>
update alumni records and<lb/>
provide information about<lb/>
campus events and activities.<lb/>
"We will be able to do a<lb/>
much better job of communi-<lb/>
cating with alumni he said.<lb/>
"Using the computer system,<lb/>
our phone solicitors will be<lb/>
available to answer most<lb/>
questions about ECU sports<lb/>
events, alumni activities and<lb/>
academic programs<lb/>
The Annual Fund is an<lb/>
effort to raise participation<lb/>
among alumni and to attract<lb/>
gifts to help with the opera-<lb/>
tions of the university. Text-<lb/>
books and computers are<lb/>
bought with these funds.<lb/>
In the past, student am-<lb/>
bassadors worked as volun-<lb/>
See BRAGG page 3<lb/>
brates it's 20th anniversary<lb/>
The Theta Alpha Chapter of Alpha Kappa Sorority, Inc.<lb/>
was founded at ECU on Nov. 11,1973. (The sorority was founded<lb/>
onjan. 15,1908atHoward University.) Tocelebrate this moment<lb/>
of history, the Theta Alpha Chapter has planned the following<lb/>
events:<lb/>
Monday, Nov. 8 "Cupcake Sale" lla.mlp.m.<lb/>
Location: Outside the ECU Student Stores<lb/>
(Proceeds go to OPERATION SUNSHINE)<lb/>
Tuesday, Nov. 9 "Penny Drive" 8a.m2p.m.<lb/>
Location: Outside the ECU Student Stores<lb/>
(Proceeds go to PICASO AIDS Foundation)<lb/>
Wednesday, Nov. 10 "Forum: The Successful Black<lb/>
Woman"<lb/>
LocationTime: 7 p.m. in MSC room 221<lb/>
Thursday, Nov. 11 "Anniversary Celebration"<lb/>
Loration:TBA<lb/>
(celebration begins at noon)<lb/>
<lb/>
<pb facs="00058438_0002"/><lb/>
tlinian<lb/>
November 9, 1993<lb/>
Babies abandoned<lb/>
Study finds thousands<lb/>
Library sex offenses increase<lb/>
And we though1 our library had problems. The University of<lb/>
Arizona's mam library is experiencing human relations prob-<lb/>
lems. In a recent two-week period, six sex offenses were reported<lb/>
in the library, leaving police baffled, psychologists trying to<lb/>
provide explanations and library officials saying they were un-<lb/>
aware of the incidents. Nineteen sexual offenses were reported on<lb/>
campus in 1992, including indecent exposure and voyeurism,<lb/>
police said, while nine have been reported so far in 1993. A<lb/>
humorous editorial in the Daily Wildcat suggested that the in-<lb/>
crease of such acts was only a side issue. "The real question is,<lb/>
what's so exciting about the library?" the editorial asked, going on<lb/>
to suggest that the library could be divided into "Masturbation"<lb/>
and "No Masturbation" sections.<lb/>
Survey reveals athletes' bad habits<lb/>
A survey on college athletes' drug use and understanding of<lb/>
the AIDS virus has found that steroid use has decreased and that<lb/>
half of the athletes were unclear about how AIDS is transmitted.<lb/>
The number of steroid users in colleges has dropped to 2 percent,<lb/>
the Michigan State University survey said. In 1985, when the<lb/>
survey was first conducted, 4 percent of athletes said they had<lb/>
used anabolic steroids. This number increased to 5 percent in 1989<lb/>
and dropped to 2 percent this academic year. Athletes were also<lb/>
surveyed on their opinions and knowledge of the AIDS virus.<lb/>
Many athletes felt strongly about AIDS testing, but were confused<lb/>
about how HIV is transmitted. More than half of the student<lb/>
athletes felt that any athlete testing positive for the HIV should not<lb/>
be allowed to compete in sports, and a majority said there should<lb/>
be mandatory HIV testing before an athlete is allowed to compete.<lb/>
Christian music controversy at NMU<lb/>
Student funding will continue to back a Christian rock<lb/>
program on North Michigan University's student station, WUPX-<lb/>
FM in Marquette, Mich. The radio show, which is funded with<lb/>
student activity money, was in conflict with a university policy<lb/>
prohibiting student activity money from being used to fund<lb/>
religious activities, detractors said. Station manager Kale Seagraves<lb/>
defended the programming and said the show is not a religious<lb/>
activity and does not promote a specific religion. Seagraves said<lb/>
the show is aired on Sunday from 5 p.m. to 8 p.m. because the disc<lb/>
jockey was available during that time, and not for religious<lb/>
reasons.<lb/>
Compiled by Maureen Rich. Taken from CPS<lb/>
and other campus newspapers.<lb/>
WASHINGTON (AP) ?<lb/>
Four babies in the nursery at<lb/>
Howard University Hospital<lb/>
have never been outdoors, never<lb/>
felt the sun on their silky skin.<lb/>
They get their bottles, their baths<lb/>
and their snuggles from strang-<lb/>
ers.<lb/>
They have spent their first<lb/>
months of life in a room on the<lb/>
hospital's pediatric ward, in le-<lb/>
gal limbo while their mothers or<lb/>
social workers struggle to find<lb/>
them a home or a family.<lb/>
According to a new report<lb/>
obtained by The Associated<lb/>
Press, they are among thousands<lb/>
of newborn babies abandoned<lb/>
by their parents or boarded in<lb/>
hospitals because they have no-<lb/>
where else to go.<lb/>
Researchers counted<lb/>
22,000 abandoned infants and<lb/>
boarder babies in the nation's<lb/>
hospitals in 1991, according to a<lb/>
draft report from the Depart-<lb/>
ment of Health and Human Ser-<lb/>
vices.<lb/>
It is the first national sur-<lb/>
vey on boarder babies and the<lb/>
researchers said their numbers<lb/>
probably underestimate the<lb/>
problem.<lb/>
They are the tiniest victims<lb/>
of crack-cocaine, poverty,<lb/>
homelessness and AIDS, and<lb/>
one of the reasons the number<lb/>
of children in foster care is inch-<lb/>
ing toward half a million.<lb/>
Volunteers rock and feed<lb/>
and bathe the babies; nurses<lb/>
bring them clothes and toys. But<lb/>
as long as the babies are in a<lb/>
legal limbo, they can't leave the<lb/>
hospital. They spend their first<lb/>
months of life indoors.<lb/>
"These are the everyday<lb/>
things we take for granted, the<lb/>
very simple things, that they've<lb/>
never experienced said Joyce<lb/>
Mason, a supervisory social<lb/>
worker at Howard. "It has to<lb/>
have some effect on these chil-<lb/>
dren<lb/>
BOWL<lb/>
WANTS<lb/>
TO PICK<lb/>
YOUR<lb/>
BRAIN.<lb/>
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 plac learn members will receive $25.00 each and a College Bowl t-shlrt<lb/>
Second place team members will receive a College Bowl insulated mug.<lb/>
For more Information, contact the Student Activities Office,<lb/>
210 Mendenhall, 757-47664711.<lb/>
Researchers found hospi-<lb/>
talized babies who ranged from<lb/>
basically healthy to medically<lb/>
fragile: children with heart de-<lb/>
fects and respiratory disorders,<lb/>
hepatitis and congenital syphi-<lb/>
lis, Down's syndrome, cleft pal-<lb/>
ates and symptoms of drug<lb/>
withdrawal. Some were prema-<lb/>
ture, and many were born<lb/>
weighing less than 5.5 pounds.<lb/>
The study defines boarder<lb/>
babies as infants, under the age<lb/>
of 12 months, who remain in the<lb/>
hospital beyond the time when<lb/>
they are medically ready to be<lb/>
discharged.<lb/>
Abandoned infants are ba-<lb/>
bies, also under the age of 12<lb/>
months, who are unlikely to<lb/>
leave the hospital in the cus-<lb/>
tody of their biological parents<lb/>
once discharged.<lb/>
Sen. Christopher J. Dodd,<lb/>
D-Conn and chairman of a Sen-<lb/>
ate subcommittee on children<lb/>
and families, said the report il-<lb/>
lustrates the desperate need for<lb/>
substance abuse treatment pro-<lb/>
grams for pregnant women.<lb/>
Dodd said it also suggests<lb/>
that the child welfare system<lb/>
isn't moving fast enough or ag-<lb/>
gressively enough to find homes<lb/>
for the boarder babies, espe-<lb/>
cially the medically fragile.<lb/>
Eventually, the report<lb/>
found, 30 percent of the boarder<lb/>
babies will go home with their<lb/>
biological parents. The rest are<lb/>
placed in alternative homes be-<lb/>
cause their parents are either<lb/>
unfit, unable or unwilling to take<lb/>
their child.<lb/>
But authorities sought al-<lb/>
ternative homes for 59 percent<lb/>
of the abandoned infants be-<lb/>
cause child welfare agencies<lb/>
didn't believe the baby would<lb/>
be safe with its biological par-<lb/>
ents.<lb/>
Ann Rosewater, a deputy<lb/>
assistant secretary at HHS, said<lb/>
the number of abandoned and<lb/>
boarder babies is a signal that<lb/>
"we need to redouble our ef-<lb/>
forts" to address the issues of<lb/>
poverty, drug addiction and<lb/>
troubled families.<lb/>
ROTC<lb/>
Continued from page 1<lb/>
guest speaker, retired Col. Dennis<lb/>
Biggs.<lb/>
Veterans' groups from across<lb/>
the area have all been invited to join<lb/>
in the remembrance.<lb/>
"Wedo thistoprovideaware-<lb/>
ness. We want the public to know<lb/>
that there are still people unac-<lb/>
counted for, not only in Vietnam<lb/>
but in Korea and other areas said<lb/>
Kevin McLaughlin, project coordi-<lb/>
nator.<lb/>
Thursday evening, the Arnold<lb/>
Air Society (sponsor of the aware-<lb/>
ness week) will be conducting a<lb/>
candlelight vigil beginning at 8:30<lb/>
p.m in front of the Air Force<lb/>
ROTC detachment (beside thestu-<lb/>
dent stores).<lb/>
Throughout the week, the<lb/>
Arnold Air Society will be selling<lb/>
POW MIA bracelets, t-shirts and<lb/>
lithographs infrontof the Air Force<lb/>
ROTCbuilding from 10am unul2<lb/>
pm.<lb/>
This is a non-profit venture<lb/>
with all proceeds going to the Viet-<lb/>
nam Vets of America in order to<lb/>
refurbish the cage they have fre-<lb/>
quently donated.<lb/>
golden<lb/>
corral<lb/>
STEAKS, BUFFET &amp; BAKERY<lb/>
504 SW Greenville Blvd ? Greenville, NC 27834<lb/>
Phone: (919) 756-4412<lb/>
GOLDEN CHOICE BUFFET<lb/>
INCLUDES:<lb/>
? Salad Makings ? Hot Vegetables<lb/>
?Prepared Salads ? Specialty Items<lb/>
?Potato Bar ? Fresh Fruit<lb/>
?Hot Meats ? Dessert Bar<lb/>
? Bakery ? Carved Meats<lb/>
Nightly<lb/>
Steaks, Seafood &amp; Chicken Entrees$2.99 - 6.99<lb/>
Golden Choice BuffetLunch $4.99Dinner $5.29<lb/>
rgfifiL<lb/>
corral<lb/>
Any Durchas of an entree<lb/>
buffet and a beverage<lb/>
$1.00 OFF<lb/>
:goid?n<lb/>
' corral i<lb/>
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<pb facs="00058438_0003"/><lb/>
November 9, 1993<lb/>
The East Carolinian 3<lb/>
tudy may offer to<lb/>
diagnose Alzheimer's<lb/>
im Sunday<lb/>
sponsored by the federal National<lb/>
Institute on Aging, a series of new<lb/>
studies showed that one torm of a<lb/>
gene called apolipoprotein-E, or<lb/>
apoE, may protect some people<lb/>
from developing Alzheimer's dis-<lb/>
ease, while a flawed form of the<lb/>
same gene substantially increases<lb/>
the risk.<lb/>
The research, originated by<lb/>
a Duke University team led by Dr.<lb/>
Allen Roses, showed that a rare<lb/>
form of the gene, called apoE2,<lb/>
appears to protect people from<lb/>
deyeloping Alzheimer's disease,<lb/>
but another form of the gene,<lb/>
apoE4, results in a substantially<lb/>
greater risk of developing the dis-<lb/>
ease.<lb/>
"This is a major discovery<lb/>
that moves Alzheimer's research<lb/>
to a new and higher level said<lb/>
Stuart Roth of the Alzheimer's<lb/>
Association. "It offers real hope<lb/>
for the management of<lb/>
Alzheimer's disease<lb/>
"There is almost universal<lb/>
agreement now about the impor-<lb/>
tance of apoE in Alzheimer's said<lb/>
Dr. Robert Katzman of the Uni-<lb/>
versity of California, San Diego.<lb/>
He said the discovery, for the first<lb/>
time, offers the possibility of de-<lb/>
veloping a drug that would copy<lb/>
the natural protective action<lb/>
against Alzheimer's that may be<lb/>
provided by the apoE2 gene.<lb/>
"Thiscould havea very, very<lb/>
major impact said Katzman.<lb/>
A statement from the Na-<lb/>
tional Institute on Aging called<lb/>
the apoE gene discovery "a break-<lb/>
through in Alzheimer's research,<lb/>
a disease that has baffled research-<lb/>
ers for over 20 years<lb/>
ATTENTION NEWS<lb/>
WRITERS!<lb/>
THE WEEKLY STAFF<lb/>
WRITERS MEETING<lb/>
WILL BE HELD ON<lb/>
WEDNESDAY AND<lb/>
NOT THURSDAY.<lb/>
PLEASE COME IN<lb/>
SOMETIME BETWEEN<lb/>
THE HOURS OF 1:30<lb/>
AND 5:00 AND PICK<lb/>
UP A STORY. THERE<lb/>
WILL BE A FREE PIECE<lb/>
OF PAPER FOR EACH<lb/>
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ATTENDS.<lb/>
BOOKTRADER<lb/>
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NOW! USED CD'S<lb/>
innouncedearliei this<lb/>
i and his group had<lb/>
tatpi ople with the apoE4<lb/>
tad an increased risk of de-<lb/>
 ling Alzheimer's.<lb/>
In the body, each cell has<lb/>
two copies of theapoE gene, which<lb/>
is on chromosome 19. About 79<lb/>
percent of the population has at<lb/>
least one copy of an apoE variant<lb/>
called E3. There are about 14 per-<lb/>
cent with at least one copy of E4,<lb/>
and only about 7 percent with cop-<lb/>
ies of a third variant called E2.<lb/>
The apoE research, which<lb/>
was supported by other research-<lb/>
ers reporting at Sunday's sympo-<lb/>
sium, showed that people with<lb/>
two copies of the E4 gene had 11 to<lb/>
17 times greater risk of develop-<lb/>
ing Alzheimer's. Even with only<lb/>
one E4 gene, the risk was about<lb/>
five times greater than among<lb/>
people with no E4 genes.<lb/>
Roses said 90 percent of<lb/>
people with two E4 genes will have<lb/>
Alzheimer's bv age 80. People with<lb/>
that gene structure also are apt to<lb/>
have the disease at a younger age.<lb/>
Roses said apoE4 did not<lb/>
cause Alzheimer's. Instead, he<lb/>
theorized itis the absenceofapoE3<lb/>
or apoE2 that makes it more likely<lb/>
for the disease to develop and for<lb/>
it to happen at an earlier age.<lb/>
The researcher said both E3<lb/>
and E2 have some protective ef-<lb/>
fects, but this is particularly strong<lb/>
for the rare people who have two<lb/>
E2 gene variants.<lb/>
Because of this new under-<lb/>
standing, Roses and others said a<lb/>
test for the apoE4 gene may help<lb/>
in the diagnosis of Alzheimer's.<lb/>
The disease now can only be defi-<lb/>
nitely diagnosed at autopsy.<lb/>
Additionally, because it is<lb/>
now known tha t the E2 gene codes<lb/>
for some protein that apparently<lb/>
protects against Alzheimer's, it<lb/>
becomes increasingly possible that<lb/>
scientists can find some drug that<lb/>
will prevent the disorder.<lb/>
NC preacher nabbed in Bronx<lb/>
NEW YORK (AT)?A North<lb/>
Carolina minister who allegedly<lb/>
tried to con police into thinking he<lb/>
was a robbery victim was arrested<lb/>
on drugchargesearly today in the<lb/>
Bronx.<lb/>
Michael Garrett, 43, of<lb/>
Greenville, N.C told Officers<lb/>
Arlene Rogers and Edwin Quino-<lb/>
nes that he was robbed at 1:25 a.m.<lb/>
today on Coster Street, said police<lb/>
spokeswoman Sgt. Tina<lb/>
Mohrmann.<lb/>
Garrett said he was attacked<lb/>
by two men, the tires on his 1990<lb/>
Miata convertible were slashed<lb/>
and his attackers were trying to<lb/>
steal his car, Mohrmann said.<lb/>
The robbers had disabled<lb/>
Garrett's car to prevent him from<lb/>
getting help, but "apparently they<lb/>
forgot they slashed his tires" and<lb/>
tried to take the car themselves,<lb/>
Mohrmann said.<lb/>
Rogers arrested David<lb/>
Rodriguez, 25, and Felix Cordero,<lb/>
COSOL<lb/>
26, both of the Bronx, on robbery<lb/>
and weapons charges, at Garrett's<lb/>
car.<lb/>
Meanwhile, the officers were<lb/>
trying to get the tires repaired for<lb/>
Garrett, who told the officers he is<lb/>
a minister in Greenville.<lb/>
' The cops were really trying<lb/>
to be helpful, trying to get him<lb/>
back on the road, trying not to<lb/>
give him a bad impression of the<lb/>
city Mohrmann said.<lb/>
The officers opened the trunk<lb/>
of Garrett's Miata in hopes of find-<lb/>
ing a jack and spotted 1,000 packs<lb/>
of heroin, according to the ser-<lb/>
geant.<lb/>
"What first appeared to be a<lb/>
random robber' of the man, now<lb/>
seems that the people who were<lb/>
robbing him knew of his drug ac-<lb/>
tivities<lb/>
Mohrmann said Garrett al-<lb/>
legedly bought the drugs for<lb/>
$10,000, and was planning to re-<lb/>
sell them in his hometown.<lb/>
Continued from page 1<lb/>
BRAGG<lb/>
Continued from page 1<lb/>
teers tocall alumni,but the mini-<lb/>
mal number of students hin-<lb/>
dered the number of alumni who<lb/>
were called.<lb/>
"By using paid students all<lb/>
year around, we should be able<lb/>
to talk'to all alumni Bragg said.<lb/>
"This is a good way to build a<lb/>
bridge to alumni<lb/>
Prior to his work at FSU,<lb/>
Bragg was the director of An-<lb/>
nual Giving at the University of<lb/>
Georgia in 1990 and the man-<lb/>
ager of Annual Giving at Vir-<lb/>
ginia Tech from 1988 to 1990.<lb/>
Also, he managed political<lb/>
campaigns for a Virginia con-<lb/>
gressional cand idate and for a<lb/>
delegate to the Virginia Gen-<lb/>
eral Assembly.<lb/>
Bragg, who graduated<lb/>
from Virginia Tech in 1980,<lb/>
holds graduate degrees in fi-<lb/>
nance and in government from<lb/>
the College of William and<lb/>
Marv.<lb/>
Debuting Nov. 18, 1993, is The East Carolinian<lb/>
Navigator, your guide to ECU sports. This new<lb/>
publication will cover the ECU Pirate Basketball<lb/>
season and will preview the pre-season exhibition<lb/>
games this month. The deadline for Advertising<lb/>
space is Friday Nov. 12th at 4pm. For more infor-<lb/>
mation, call The East Carolinian Advertising<lb/>
department today at 757-6366 !<lb/>
recreation center and library ad-<lb/>
dition are built.<lb/>
"We are moving toward a<lb/>
non-vehicular, walking campus.<lb/>
We will see more people park-<lb/>
ing in the lots farther away and<lb/>
using the shuttle services<lb/>
Speier said.<lb/>
Speier said the Parking<lb/>
Committee will consider an in-<lb/>
crease in the fee for parking stick-<lb/>
ers for Fall 1994.<lb/>
The Committee is debating<lb/>
a tiered system in which stickers<lb/>
for the Mendenhall and Library<lb/>
lots would cost more than all<lb/>
other stickers.<lb/>
"We can't afford a parking<lb/>
deck. The state doesn't fund<lb/>
parking decks. We don't have<lb/>
enough money for additional<lb/>
parking spaces Speier said.<lb/>
The university is waiting<lb/>
to buy a piece of property just<lb/>
off 10th Street to use for park-<lb/>
ing. Currently an elderly woman<lb/>
FREE PREGNANCY TEST<lb/>
while you wait<lb/>
Free &amp; Confidential<lb/>
Services &amp; Counseling<lb/>
Carolina Pregnancy Center<lb/>
111 E. 3rd Street Hours:<lb/>
The Lee Building 757-0003 Monday - Friday<lb/>
Greenville NC 8:30-3:30<lb/>
-&amp;<lb/>
ALLIED HEALTH<lb/>
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?<lb/>
Plan a future that soars.<lb/>
Take your science-related degree<lb/>
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cated professionals in a quality envi-<lb/>
ronment where your contributions<lb/>
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and the Air Force. Launch now-call<lb/>
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? tanning<lb/>
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STANTON SQUARE<lb/>
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Mon-Fri 10am-8pm<lb/>
Saturday 9am-6pm<lb/>
757-0076<lb/>
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Mon-Fri 9am-8pm<lb/>
Sat 9am-6pm<lb/>
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i<lb/>
 i<lb/>
 Perms, Highlights, or Tanning Package<lb/>
lives there and doesn't want to<lb/>
sell.<lb/>
Speier said rather than force<lb/>
the woman out by claiming im-<lb/>
minent domain, the university<lb/>
will wait until she dies and bid<lb/>
for the property then.<lb/>
The money for the Recre-<lb/>
ation Center, Speier said, will<lb/>
come from an increase of $75-<lb/>
$100 per semester for the next 30<lb/>
years.<lb/>
"I think a rec center is far<lb/>
more important than a parking<lb/>
deck Speier said.<lb/>
He pointed out that stu-<lb/>
dents had voiced their support<lb/>
for the Recreation Center in two<lb/>
campus-wide referendums and<lb/>
through the SGA.<lb/>
When asked if students<lb/>
supported a rec center over a<lb/>
parking deck, Speier said, "No-<lb/>
body presented any other op-<lb/>
tions. A parking deck was never<lb/>
an option<lb/>
Peking Palace<lb/>
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LUNCH SPECIALS $4.25!<lb/>
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Bring this ad in for other specials<lb/>
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STARTING 2ND WEEK<lb/>
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MUSICIANS WILL BE<lb/>
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Special Notice:<lb/>
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PONT MISS BILL DERMODY S<lb/>
ART EXHIBIT &amp; POSTERS (GREAT )<lb/>
MENDENHALL ART GALLERY;<lb/>
NOVEMBER 14 - 24,<lb/>
RECEPTION: NOVEMBER 17, 7:00 P.M.<lb/>
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"S ATTENDANCE<lb/>
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PICK UP INFO FROM MENDENHALL<lb/>
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FOR MORE<lb/>
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CALL THE STUDENT<lb/>
UNION HOTLINE AT<lb/>
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All films start at 8:00 and are FREE with<lb/>
valid ECU I.D. for students, staff, and faculty<lb/>
"SPLITTING HEIRSPG 13<lb/>
WEDNESDAY, &amp; SUNDAY,<lb/>
NOVEMBER 10 &amp;14TH<lb/>
"INDENCENT PROPOSALR<lb/>
THURSDAY, FRIDAY, &amp; SATURDAY,<lb/>
NOVEMBER 11 -13TH <lb/>
REACHING OUT TO SERVE YOU !<lb/>
I<lb/>
.L,<lb/>
expires Dec. 15, 1993<lb/>
I<lb/>
J<lb/>
ECU Student Union is "the funkyest,<lb/>
coolest, groovest thing on this side<lb/>
Of the eqUatOr - Melinda Small<lb/>
<pb facs="00058438_0004"/><lb/>
? ??<lb/>
?Mr-<lb/>
The East Carolinian<lb/>
Page 4<lb/>
Opinion<lb/>
November 9, 1993<lb/>
The East Carolinian<lb/>
l.indsa Fernandez, General Manager<lb/>
Gregory Dickens, Managing Editor<lb/>
Matthew A. Hege, Advertising Director<lb/>
Printed on<lb/>
Karen Hassell, News Editor<lb/>
Maureen Rich, Assi. ? i Editor<lb/>
Julie Totten, Lifestyle Editor<lb/>
Laura Wright, Assi. Lifestyle Editor<lb/>
Robert S. Todd, Sports Editor<lb/>
Brian Olson. Assi. Sports Editor .<lb/>
Amy E. WirtZ, Opinion Page Editor<lb/>
Amelia Yongue, Copy Editor<lb/>
Jessica Stanley. Copy Editor<lb/>
Wes Tinkham, Account Executive<lb/>
Kelly Kellis, Account Executive<lb/>
Shelley Furlough, Account Executive<lb/>
Tonya Heath, Account Executive<lb/>
Brandon Perry, Account Executive<lb/>
Deborah Daniel, Secretary<lb/>
A A<lb/>
100 recycled paper<lb/>
Tony Dunn, Business Manager<lb/>
Margie O'Shea, Circulation Manager<lb/>
Burt Aycock, Layout Manager<lb/>
Franco Sacchi, Assi. 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/>
editorial 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. The East Carolinian reserves the right to edit or reject letters for publication. Letters should be addressed to: Opinion<lb/>
Editor. The East Carolinian, Publications Bldg ECU, Greenville, N.C 27858-4353. For more information, call (919) 757-6366.<lb/>
It's sinking: NAFTA needs a raft-a I<lb/>
The countdown begins. In eight days the<lb/>
troubled NAFTA heads to the House to be<lb/>
4 scrutinized, mollified and inspectified. It will<lb/>
emerge, no doubt, like a meek kitten ?<lb/>
mewling and puking and stumbling towards<lb/>
various committees just to begin the cycle<lb/>
again.<lb/>
Sad, ain't it?<lb/>
Add to this special Washington-dance-<lb/>
party-push, Ross Perot's paranoia towards<lb/>
supposed death threats, and we have quite a<lb/>
carnival. Perot has said that he is a target<lb/>
because a "Mafialike" organized crime group<lb/>
wants to be able to smuggle drugs into the<lb/>
United States in shipments of Mexican pro-<lb/>
duce. This man is truly dancing in his own<lb/>
ballroom, folks. He's alone and doing the two-<lb/>
step.<lb/>
(Just a little side-note: In addition to this,<lb/>
during the '92 presidential campaign, Perot<lb/>
said that in 1970 his private security guards<lb/>
foiled an attempt by the Vietnamese to assas-<lb/>
 sinate him. He also said the Black Panthers<lb/>
?$nd Texas drug dealers had conspired to as-<lb/>
 sassinate him. Frankly, the man's a little daft.<lb/>
Now, honestly, can that many people want<lb/>
him dead? Or is this just his paranoia acting<lb/>
up again?)<lb/>
Perot has taken up an opposition to the<lb/>
sinking NAFTA in a way only Perot can. The<lb/>
American people love this man. The dedi-<lb/>
cated believe everything that flows from his<lb/>
mouth and follow him like dogs, mainly due<lb/>
 Jo his style of campaigning. By striking at not<lb/>
only the heartstrings, but also the pursestrings,<lb/>
of the common worker, he makes a pretty<lb/>
good little argument for himself. Perot believes<lb/>
that NAFTA would export thousands of U.S.<lb/>
jobs to Mexico, and would condemn Mexicans<lb/>
to lives of poverty.<lb/>
This coming from a man that has billions.<lb/>
Seems like he's really looking out for himself<lb/>
and his stash before the future of American<lb/>
workers. Please, Mr. Perot, we've heard this<lb/>
ballyhoo before and only 19 percent of us be-<lb/>
lieved you. Enough is enough.<lb/>
Clinton replied to this onslaught by ap-<lb/>
pearing on NBC's "Meet the Press" with a list of<lb/>
complaints about all sides of the debate. In the<lb/>
hour-long session, he denounced Perot's one-<lb/>
liners and emotional retorts citing them as non-<lb/>
factual accounts.<lb/>
Clinton said the White House is not a full<lb/>
30 votes short of the 218 votes needed for House<lb/>
passage. He hopes to chip away at the deficit in<lb/>
private meetings and the usual fancy-shmancy<lb/>
dinners (also known as suck-up meals) in an<lb/>
effort to pass this new baby in his presidental<lb/>
career. Determined and fueled with the possi-<lb/>
bility of enacting a continent-wide reform of<lb/>
sorts, Clinton lashed out at unions and attrib-<lb/>
uted much of his problems to labor opposition.<lb/>
Unions are threatening remaining undecided<lb/>
Democratic members of Congress or pleading<lb/>
with them to vote against NAFTA. Everyone's<lb/>
playing dirty now.<lb/>
So now we have what looks to be quite an<lb/>
interesting debate scheduled tonight at 9 p.m.<lb/>
on "Larry King Live" on CNN?Perot and Vice<lb/>
President Al Gore will face off in a verbal battle<lb/>
over NAFTA.<lb/>
Cover yourselves, this might get messy.<lb/>
By Alex Ferguson<lb/>
Paltry PC proves Pandora's box of peril<lb/>
When reading the paper,<lb/>
what's the first thing you turn<lb/>
to? For some, nothing could be<lb/>
finer than tackling the front<lb/>
pkge and plowing through like<lb/>
a newsprint junkie. For the<lb/>
hard-core footbasketbase-<lb/>
ball fan, it's the sports page,<lb/>
while the accountants put their<lb/>
money on the business section.<lb/>
Then, there are people<lb/>
like myself. No dabbling in the<lb/>
stock section or pilfering<lb/>
through <lb/>
h e ?????i<lb/>
lifestyles<lb/>
for me. No,<lb/>
sir. I start<lb/>
my day<lb/>
right, with<lb/>
a well- bal-<lb/>
anced diet<lb/>
of comics.<lb/>
Always go<lb/>
for the des-<lb/>
sert first.<lb/>
the sarcastic<lb/>
pushing for politi-<lb/>
cal correctness can<lb/>
in some ways be a<lb/>
very acceptable and<lb/>
dandied-up version<lb/>
of censorship.<lb/>
say I read comics for research,<lb/>
but that would only be a half-<lb/>
truth. To be honest, I get a kick<lb/>
out of them.<lb/>
In fact, I can't imagine<lb/>
someone who doesn't laugh at<lb/>
the comics. Mind you, we're not<lb/>
talking about the "steroid" typi-<lb/>
cal tnuy macho! hero(ine) in the<lb/>
shoot-em-up comics. I'm refer-<lb/>
ring to the Charlie Brown-<lb/>
Garfield genre. Whether it be<lb/>
wit of Bloom<lb/>
County and<lb/>
Doonsbury or<lb/>
the whimsical<lb/>
humor of the<lb/>
Far Side, every-<lb/>
one has shared<lb/>
a chuckle with<lb/>
these classic<lb/>
comics.<lb/>
What<lb/>
makes them so<lb/>
endearing is<lb/>
their ability to<lb/>
Now, before you label me<lb/>
as an ignorant savage, too in-<lb/>
ept to comprehend the com-<lb/>
plexities of the world, let me<lb/>
say that I've made valiant ef-<lb/>
forts to stay abreast with cur-<lb/>
rent events. I'm certainly not<lb/>
one of those nuts who tears<lb/>
through the paper, frantic for<lb/>
instant gratification via the<lb/>
qomics page. Heavens, no.<lb/>
ghat's why I always start off<lb/>
ijv-ith the editorial cartoons.<lb/>
We're talking high-grade co-<lb/>
medic information here.<lb/>
And if its a USA Today,<lb/>
(they don't run comics, the<lb/>
bums), I'll settle for their multi-<lb/>
chromatic kaleidoscope more<lb/>
commonly known as the<lb/>
weather map.<lb/>
I could say my reasoning<lb/>
for reading the comics first<lb/>
stem from my creative duty to<lb/>
inspect the quality of today's<lb/>
illustrative humor. Yes, I could<lb/>
make us laugh at events that<lb/>
otherwise might be sad, frus-<lb/>
trating or downright impossible.<lb/>
But who has the time to<lb/>
read comics or laugh for that<lb/>
matter, what with all the PC flak<lb/>
flying around as America at-<lb/>
tempts to keep from alienating<lb/>
everybody. I understand it's im-<lb/>
portance, but I find that push-<lb/>
ing for political correctness can<lb/>
in some ways be a very accept-<lb/>
able and dandied-up version of<lb/>
censorship.<lb/>
I don't condemn censor-<lb/>
ship in some instances; there are<lb/>
things out there worthy of eradi-<lb/>
cating. But now, the one area I<lb/>
assumed was safe ground, com-<lb/>
ics, has become the newest vic-<lb/>
tim of a PC-punchy society.<lb/>
Recently, there has been<lb/>
some grumbling about the con-<lb/>
tent of comic pages. It seems<lb/>
that some characters display<lb/>
properties some might find of-<lb/>
fensive. There is talk of sexist<lb/>
portrayal of female anatomy, il-<lb/>
lustrative racial slurs and un-<lb/>
fair representation of ethnic in-<lb/>
dividuals. In fact, one can prob-<lb/>
ably say that just about every<lb/>
character could offend some-<lb/>
body, somehow, someplace.<lb/>
I'm sure there are a good<lb/>
two to three hundred bald kids<lb/>
and thousands of wishy-washy<lb/>
losers out there mad as hell at<lb/>
Charles Schultz and his little<lb/>
Charlie Brown monster. Doesn't<lb/>
it bother the secretaries that Ms.<lb/>
Buxley from Beetle Bailey makes<lb/>
them look like Grade A bimbo<lb/>
material? After reading the strip<lb/>
Blondie concerning Dagwood's<lb/>
lackadaisical attitude towards<lb/>
work, how can anyone look at a<lb/>
businessman with a straight<lb/>
face?<lb/>
It must be sheer torture for<lb/>
the pragmatics, reading about<lb/>
cats and snakes talking and<lb/>
prancing around like they were<lb/>
human beings. We are talking<lb/>
social-visualistic discrepancies<lb/>
of biblical proportions here!<lb/>
I'm not saying that this is a<lb/>
Code Red emergency here, with<lb/>
the very fabric of society on the<lb/>
line. The world certainly doesn't<lb/>
revolve around the funnies. But<lb/>
the idea of placing disclaimers on<lb/>
them (or taking other such mea-<lb/>
sures), to placate all of those<lb/>
people who may be angered by<lb/>
the lack of Comical Correctness,<lb/>
sounds like counting your chick-<lb/>
ens before they've hatched.<lb/>
Come on people, we may<lb/>
just be starting to clutch at<lb/>
straws here. Let's not pick on<lb/>
the minuscule minutia. Taking<lb/>
potshots at the cartoonists cer-<lb/>
tainly won't help reign in<lb/>
America's woes.<lb/>
If there's a bone to pick,<lb/>
make sure it's got some meat on<lb/>
it.<lb/>
THZte TH1$ C((LTD O N<lb/>
?H0ULCKT oFP?aC rV?y-<lb/>
0N&amp;- it HAS oN-y VIAWW<lb/>
(w it- pu??iy CltT'T'OUSy'<lb/>
?<lb/>
<lb/>
1<lb/>
, "wHAT MAit-nWS NO look<lb/>
UK?XMS! THIS AH OuTdACg!<lb/>
I causH planet ewHi steal<lb/>
its womeatw?aj w? setz<lb/>
,UO LAU6H fT<lb/>
XAL-rofc's<lb/>
ch(l K?tfFL?ylZ<lb/>
By John Adams<lb/>
Voluntary euthanasia misunderstood<lb/>
"I stay away from death<lb/>
By turning toward her face<lb/>
wrote the great American poet<lb/>
Theodore Roethke.<lb/>
Possibly what Roethke<lb/>
(who coincidently committed<lb/>
suicide) meant by those lines is<lb/>
that some people's very exist-<lb/>
ence is so utterly torturous that<lb/>
merely existing is a form of death<lb/>
which can be escaped only by<lb/>
embracing the latter.<lb/>
Last week, Dr. Jack<lb/>
Kevorkian was placed in jail for<lb/>
breaking the new Michigan law<lb/>
which prohibits physician-as-<lb/>
sisted suicide. His bail was set<lb/>
at a measly $20,000. Kevorkian,<lb/>
however, refused to pay his bail<lb/>
or to allow anyone else to pay it.<lb/>
Instead, he choose to stay<lb/>
in jail and begin a hunger strike<lb/>
in order to promote awareness<lb/>
of the hundreds of terminally ill<lb/>
people who wish to end their<lb/>
lives, but do not have the ability<lb/>
to do so.<lb/>
Physician-assisted suicide<lb/>
is a fairly recent moral dilemma<lb/>
which stems out of the incred-<lb/>
ible advances in medicine over<lb/>
the past 35 years. In Nobody's<lb/>
Business, Alida Brill asks the<lb/>
quintessential question, "Has<lb/>
technologically advanced<lb/>
medicineprimarily raised the<lb/>
spectre of a feared dread exist-<lb/>
ence sustained at half-life?" Un-<lb/>
fortunately for many terminally<lb/>
ill patients, the answer to Brill's<lb/>
question is "yes<lb/>
In 1976, the first right-to-<lb/>
die case was heard. In this case,<lb/>
(named the Quinlan case) the<lb/>
judge ruled that voluntary eu-<lb/>
thanasia may be administered<lb/>
with the consent of the patient<lb/>
or the family of the patient.<lb/>
A 1990 Gallup poll shows<lb/>
the 69 percent of Americans<lb/>
agree with this ruling as long as<lb/>
the patient is terminally ill and<lb/>
has suffered a demonstrable loss<lb/>
in quality of life. So, why is there<lb/>
so much controversy over<lb/>
physican-assisted suicide?<lb/>
Along with Living Wills,<lb/>
voluntary euthanasia has al-<lb/>
lowed many to exercise their<lb/>
right to die. In the process of<lb/>
voluntary euthanasia, the doc-<lb/>
tor "pulls the plug so to speak.<lb/>
That is, the patient is taken off<lb/>
any life-sustaining measures.<lb/>
Hence, the patient is allowed to<lb/>
die. It could take five minutes or<lb/>
five days for the patient to die.<lb/>
Physician-assisted suicide<lb/>
is quick and painless. Can the<lb/>
same be said for voluntary eu-<lb/>
thanasia? Sometimes yes, some-<lb/>
times no. How can voluntary<lb/>
euthanasia thus be considered<lb/>
morally acceptable, while phy-<lb/>
sician-assisted suicide is against<lb/>
the law in most states?<lb/>
There are three stumbling<lb/>
blocks for the legalization of<lb/>
physician-assisted suicide. First,<lb/>
most major religions strictly pro-<lb/>
hibit suicide of any kind. If you<lb/>
kill yourself, you will go to hell.<lb/>
For many terminally ill paitents,<lb/>
though, the suffering which they<lb/>
are experiencing may lead them<lb/>
to the conclusion that they are<lb/>
already residing in hell.<lb/>
Second, all doctors must<lb/>
take the Hippocratic oath, which<lb/>
most interpret to mean that they<lb/>
must do everything within their<lb/>
power to sustain life. Slowly,<lb/>
however, many doctors are prac-<lb/>
ticing medicine with the primary<lb/>
intention of easing suffering and<lb/>
maintaining quality of life. In<lb/>
1986, the AMA approved vol-<lb/>
untary euthanasia as a legiti-<lb/>
mate medical procedure.<lb/>
Finally, of course, there<lb/>
is the overall stigma associated<lb/>
with suicide in our society. The<lb/>
basic line of reasoning is that<lb/>
anyone who wants to kill him<lb/>
or herself is obviously not in<lb/>
complete control of hisher<lb/>
mental facilities. The implica-<lb/>
tion being that this individual<lb/>
is not capable of making a life<lb/>
or death decision.<lb/>
I would argue, however,<lb/>
that anyone who wishes to sus-<lb/>
tain the life of someone who is<lb/>
obviously suffering is not of<lb/>
sound mind themselves.<lb/>
When confronted with<lb/>
death, all any of us want is a<lb/>
quick and painless demise.<lb/>
Why then do we not permit<lb/>
those who are terminally ill<lb/>
what we ourselves would de-<lb/>
sire?<lb/>
Terminal cases are not go-<lb/>
ing to diminish. If anything,<lb/>
there will probably be a dra-<lb/>
matic increase with the on-<lb/>
slaught of AIDS. If physician-<lb/>
assisted suicide is not legalized,<lb/>
the result will be much undue<lb/>
suffering for many patients.<lb/>
Many will possibly attempt to<lb/>
take their own life with failed<lb/>
results leading to more<lb/>
unecessary suffering.<lb/>
Derek Humpry, presi-<lb/>
dent of the Hemlock Society,<lb/>
believes that the only way to<lb/>
be reasonably sure of a decent<lb/>
death is to plan it. For those<lb/>
who no longer have anything<lb/>
to live for due to a substantial<lb/>
loss in the quality of life, we<lb/>
have a duty to provide them<lb/>
with a dignified death.<lb/>
Letters to the Editor<lb/>
To the Editor:<lb/>
Derek McCreight, do you even know what an<lb/>
"ultra-feminist" is? Have you ever had a relationship<lb/>
with a feminist or have you been to a feminist meet-<lb/>
ing or function? Let me help you understand what<lb/>
feminism is actually about since you seem to think<lb/>
we're a bunch of "discredited white liberals<lb/>
A feminist gets sick every time she reads in the<lb/>
paper about a woman who has been raped and left to<lb/>
die in her own bedroom. A feminist can't stand to see<lb/>
her sisters scramble to figure out away to feed their<lb/>
babies because of their low economic status. A femi-<lb/>
nist notices on TV the latest molestation of a child. A<lb/>
feminist hates to know the numbers of lives lost<lb/>
fighting meaningless wars. Watching families hide<lb/>
in the shadows while bullets rip past areas where<lb/>
their children had once played. A feminist is very<lb/>
aware of women in the past, hung as witches in the<lb/>
name of religion because these women spoke their<lb/>
minds and refused to lay low in society. A feminist<lb/>
gets pretty tired of reading verbal attacks in the<lb/>
campus newspaper directed at them, knowing that<lb/>
if the faculty or the students attacked any other<lb/>
minority group, the college administration in the<lb/>
Spilman Bldg. wouldn't tolerate it. And, yes, Derek<lb/>
a feminist has just about had it with women who<lb/>
are trying to hold down jobs while their male<lb/>
counterparts are trying to fondle them.<lb/>
Derek, a feminist is for equality no matter<lb/>
what gender, religion, race or physique. WE SEE<lb/>
NO COLOR I strongly encourage you, Professor<lb/>
Malmrose, and anyone else who "thinks" that they<lb/>
understand feminism, to attend a Woman's Stud-<lb/>
ies meeting. They're held every Thursday after-<lb/>
noon at 4:00 in GCB 2014. Please, let us help you<lb/>
with your ignorance of our meaning.<lb/>
Dana Thielen<lb/>
Sophomore<lb/>
Merchandising<lb/>
letters to the editor must be signed and accompanied with a<lb/>
working phone number, class rank and major, address all letters<lb/>
to: the east Carolinian, attn opinion editor, student pubs, build-<lb/>
ina. second floor, ecu, areenville, nc 27858.<lb/>
minjiiiniw?m<lb/>
. ? . ? ?????<lb/>
??nHHHHHHHHI<lb/>
?<lb/>
<pb facs="00058438_0005"/><lb/>
?? . ??.<lb/>
The East Carolinian<lb/>
November 9, 1993<lb/>
Classifieds<lb/>
Page 5<lb/>
For Rent<lb/>
For Rent<lb/>
Ringgold Towers<lb/>
Unt60Ubkm<lb/>
Mew Cvpet frawy natti. Vma &amp; Sewer<lb/>
mcfadaUStueeotUti.<lb/>
$24Qmonth<lb/>
leOWTttTMlJBWBMI?SmB3-M15<lb/>
ATTENTION STUDENTS: 3-bed-<lb/>
room house in University Area. Call<lb/>
757-3191.<lb/>
MALE OR FEMALE ROOM-<lb/>
MATE WANTED to share 2-story<lb/>
house, 2 blocks from campus. Pri-<lb/>
vate room, fenced in backyard, pets<lb/>
accepted, 1-car garage. $200 per<lb/>
month and 13 utilities. Call 758-<lb/>
9967. Available Nov. 1.<lb/>
FEMALE ROOMMATES: needed<lb/>
for spring semester! Furnished, 2<lb/>
bedroom, 2 12 bath, townhouse,<lb/>
central air, bus service, pool. $195<lb/>
monthplus 1 futilities. CallTrari<lb/>
Trisha 830-4972.<lb/>
SUBLEASE from Jan. to July. 3 BR,<lb/>
212 bath townhouse. 11 2 blocks<lb/>
from campus, $600month. Call<lb/>
758-0721.<lb/>
FEMALE ROOMMATE NEEDED<lb/>
for second semester (Dec. 14) Brand<lb/>
new 2 bedroom apartment within<lb/>
walking distance to campus. Rent<lb/>
$197.5012 utilities. Call 752-9854.<lb/>
ROOMMATE NEEDED FOR<lb/>
SPRING SEMESTER to share 2<lb/>
bedroom, 2 12 bath, Fully fur-<lb/>
nished townhouse at Kingston<lb/>
Place. $195Mo. 1 futilities. Non-<lb/>
smokers only. Call Lynn at 830-<lb/>
1172.<lb/>
APARTMENT FOR RENT: 2 Bed,<lb/>
1 bath, new carpet, paint, wallpa-<lb/>
per; all new kitchen appliances; very<lb/>
roomy! Kings Row Apts. 752-6881.<lb/>
Avail. Dec. 15.<lb/>
ROOMMATE NEEDED IMME-<lb/>
DIATELY! Univ. Staff member<lb/>
seeks mature non-smoker to share<lb/>
2 BDR apt. $200 plus half utilities.<lb/>
Call 756-9858 or 757-4536.<lb/>
El Help Wanted<lb/>
 FREE TRIPS &amp; CASH ??? Call<lb/>
us and find out how hundreds of<lb/>
students are already earning free<lb/>
trips and LOTS OF CASH with<lb/>
America'sl Spring Breakcompany!<lb/>
Choose Cancun, Bahamas, Jamaica,<lb/>
Panama, Daytona or Padre! Call<lb/>
now! TAKE A BREAK STUDENT<lb/>
TRAVEL (800) 328-SAVE or<lb/>
(617)424-8222.<lb/>
ATTENTION LADIES: Earn $90 to<lb/>
$125phr. escorting in theGreenville<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 758-08.<lb/>
ATTENTION STUDENTS: Earn<lb/>
extra cash stuffing envelopes at<lb/>
home. All materials provided. Send<lb/>
SASE to Midwest Mailers PO Box<lb/>
395, Olathe, K) 66051. Immediate<lb/>
Response.<lb/>
AACRUISE&amp;TRAVELJOB&amp;Eam<lb/>
$2500mo Travel the World Free!<lb/>
(Caribbean, Europe, Hawaii, Asia!)<lb/>
Cruise Lines now hiring for busy<lb/>
holiday,SpringandSummer seasons.<lb/>
Guaranteed employment! Call (919)<lb/>
929-4398 ext 11.<lb/>
THE PLAYGROUND OF<lb/>
GOLDSBORO is looking for enthu-<lb/>
siastic entertainers. Excellent hours,<lb/>
easy $$ and carpools available. Ask<lb/>
for Erin at3554792or (919) 734-3777.<lb/>
BREAKERS! BOOK EARLY AND<lb/>
SAVE! Panama City from $99Ja-<lb/>
maicaCancun from $439, Padre<lb/>
$239, Daytona $79. $ell trips, earn<lb/>
cash, party free. Call EST1-800-234-<lb/>
7007.<lb/>
CAMPUS ENTREPRENEUR<lb/>
WANTED. Sell Personal Safety<lb/>
Alarm onoff campus. Write or call<lb/>
for free details. 3806 Wingate Drive,<lb/>
Raleigh, NC 27609.919-876-7005.<lb/>
GREEKS AND CLUBS: Raise up to<lb/>
$1,000 in JUST ONE WEEK! foryour<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/>
PROFESSOR O'COOLS Restau-<lb/>
rant is now accepting applications<lb/>
for wait staff positions. Apply in<lb/>
person only, 2-4 pm daily. No phone<lb/>
calls please. 605-A Greenville Blvd.<lb/>
behind Quincy's Steak House.<lb/>
PIRATE PATNTBALL is expand-<lb/>
ing to new market areas in eastern<lb/>
N.C We need super-energetic<lb/>
people for our Marketing Team. This<lb/>
is a great opportunity for anyone in<lb/>
the School of Business or Leisure<lb/>
Systems Studies to sink your teeth<lb/>
into a growing company. Your sal-<lb/>
ary will be based on a direct profit-<lb/>
sharing basis. If you know anything<lb/>
about Guerrilla Marketing or if you<lb/>
are smart and super-energetic, call<lb/>
752-8380.<lb/>
TRAVEL ABROAD AND WORK<lb/>
Make up to $2,000- $4,000Mo<lb/>
teaching basic conversational En-<lb/>
glish abroad. Japan, Taiwan, and S.<lb/>
Korea. Many employers provide<lb/>
room and board and other benefits.<lb/>
No teaching background or Asian<lb/>
languages required. For more infor-<lb/>
mationcall: (206) 632-1146. ext. J5362<lb/>
MATERIAL SERVICES : Pitt<lb/>
County Memorial Hospital has full-<lb/>
time, temporary positions available<lb/>
in or Material Services Dept This<lb/>
pilotprogram,lastinguptooneyear,<lb/>
will institute a patient-focused sup-<lb/>
ply delivery system. Responsibili-<lb/>
ties include filling and delivering<lb/>
supply orders to the hospital de-<lb/>
partments, replenishing supply carts<lb/>
and assisting clinical staff with sup-<lb/>
ply needs. Data entry skill will be<lb/>
helpful. 12-hourshiftsarefrom7pm-<lb/>
7am or 7am-7pm and every other<lb/>
weekend. For consideration, apply<lb/>
Monday-Wednesday, 9am-4pm at:<lb/>
BB&amp;TBuilding,2000VentureTower<lb/>
Drive, Greenville, NC.<lb/>
"PARTY IN THE SUN Spring<lb/>
Break, Jamaica, Cancun, Bahamas,<lb/>
S. Padre, Honda including the Ulti-<lb/>
mate Party Package! Organize small<lb/>
group and travel free! lowest prices<lb/>
guaranteed! Call Sun Splash Tours<lb/>
Today 1-800-426-7710.<lb/>
AA CRUISE &amp; TRAVEL JOBS.<lb/>
Earn $2500Mo. Travel the world<lb/>
free! (Caribbean, Europe, Hawaii,<lb/>
Asia!) Cruise lines now hiring for<lb/>
busy holiday, spring and summer<lb/>
seasons. Guaranteed employment!<lb/>
Call (919) 929-098 ext. 11.<lb/>
BEACH Spring Break Promoter.<lb/>
Small or larger groups. Yours FREE,<lb/>
discounted or CASH. Call CMI 1-<lb/>
800423-5264.<lb/>
EASY WORK! EXCELLENT PAY!<lb/>
Assemble products at home. Call<lb/>
Toll-Free<lb/>
1-800467-5566. EXT. 5920.<lb/>
LADIES NEEDED IMMEDI-<lb/>
ATELY: earn $500 to $800 a week<lb/>
full time, part time anytime. Pay out<lb/>
daily. Playmates Adult Relaxation.<lb/>
Hwy 58 &amp; 13 Snow hill. Call 747-<lb/>
7686.<lb/>
For Sale<lb/>
SPRING BREAK ? Plan early,<lb/>
save $50 and get best rooms! Prices<lb/>
increase 1115! Bahamas Cruise 6<lb/>
days includes 12 meals, $279!<lb/>
Panama City room w kitchen, $119!<lb/>
Cancun fromRaleigh,$399;Jamaica<lb/>
Announcements<lb/>
FREE PIZZA<lb/>
All Student Pirate Club<lb/>
Members and those stu-<lb/>
dents interested in join-<lb/>
ing ECU's fastest growing<lb/>
organization are cordially<lb/>
invited to attend a group<lb/>
social at Boli's downtown<lb/>
for FREE PIZZA, while it<lb/>
lasts, on Wednesday, No-<lb/>
vember 10th at 7:30 pm.<lb/>
Afterwards, please join us<lb/>
for Student Pirate Club<lb/>
Night at the Attic Comedy<lb/>
Zone. There will be a $2.00<lb/>
admission charge with<lb/>
your Student Pirate Club<lb/>
Membership Card. For<lb/>
more information, please<lb/>
call the Pirate Club Office<lb/>
at (919) 757-4540.<lb/>
STUDENT SURVEY<lb/>
During the week of No.<lb/>
29-Dec 3, a survey of stu-<lb/>
dent opinion of instruc-<lb/>
tion will be conducted at<lb/>
ECU. Questionnaires will<lb/>
be distributed in classes<lb/>
with enrollments greater<lb/>
than five. All students will<lb/>
have the opportunity to<lb/>
express opinions on the<lb/>
teaching effectiveness of<lb/>
their instructors. The sur-<lb/>
vey will be conducted dur-<lb/>
ing class time and will take<lb/>
approximately 15 minutes<lb/>
to complete. Student par-<lb/>
ticipation is voluntary and<lb/>
no identities are re-<lb/>
quested. Instructors have<lb/>
been requested to leave<lb/>
the classroom while the<lb/>
questionnaires are being<lb/>
completed. Results of the<lb/>
survey will be distributed<lb/>
to instructors after final<lb/>
grades have been posted.<lb/>
The teaching effective-<lb/>
ness questionnaire was<lb/>
created by the Faculty<lb/>
Senate Committee for<lb/>
Teaching Effectiveness<lb/>
and the Office of Planning<lb/>
and Institutional Re-<lb/>
search. The results of this<lb/>
survey are used by in-<lb/>
structors for improving<lb/>
their teaching skills and<lb/>
in course development,<lb/>
and by administrators in<lb/>
decisions of tenure, pro-<lb/>
motion and merit.<lb/>
EAST CAROLINA<lb/>
UNIVERSITY CAMPUS<lb/>
CITATION<lb/>
Any student or faculty<lb/>
member interested in<lb/>
making a difference in<lb/>
your community, helping<lb/>
others, and making life-<lb/>
long friends is invited to<lb/>
attend our first meeting<lb/>
on Wednesday, Nov. 10th<lb/>
at 5:00 in the Fleming Hall<lb/>
Basement. Bring a friend.<lb/>
ECU INVESTMENT CLUB<lb/>
The ECU investments club<lb/>
will be holding a meeting<lb/>
on Thursday, Nov. 11th at<lb/>
5:00 pm in GCB 3007. All<lb/>
majors are encouraged to<lb/>
attend. Come join us, you<lb/>
may learn something<lb/>
AMERICAN RED CROSS<lb/>
&amp; NATIONAL MARROW<lb/>
An estimated sixteen thou-<lb/>
sand American children<lb/>
and adults are stricken<lb/>
each year with leukemia<lb/>
or one of thirty other fa-<lb/>
tal blood diseases. For<lb/>
many, the only hope for<lb/>
survival is a marrow<lb/>
transplant. Because a do-<lb/>
nor and patient must<lb/>
match very closely, the<lb/>
chances that a patient in<lb/>
need will find a matching<lb/>
donor can be as high as<lb/>
one in a million. Volun-<lb/>
teers are desperately<lb/>
needed. To find out if you<lb/>
could be a patient's one in<lb/>
a million chance, get<lb/>
tested at ECU on Nov. 16th,<lb/>
Between 11:00 am and 4:30<lb/>
pm.<lb/>
NATIONAL STUDENT<lb/>
EXCHANGE<lb/>
Having trouble getting<lb/>
classes? If you can't fine<lb/>
it at ECU, try going on ex-<lb/>
change to one of over 110<lb/>
universities in the U.S.<lb/>
and take your classes in a<lb/>
different environment.<lb/>
Pay ECU tuition and study<lb/>
in another part of the<lb/>
country. There is time to<lb/>
apply for next fall and<lb/>
spring semesters. Contact<lb/>
Stephanie Evancho in In-<lb/>
ternational Programs or<lb/>
call 757-6769 for further<lb/>
information.<lb/>
COMMUNICATING TO<lb/>
ASSERT YOURSELF"<lb/>
The Counseling Center is<lb/>
offering a two-session<lb/>
workshop for students de-<lb/>
signed to identify effec-<lb/>
tive communication tech-<lb/>
niques for achieving<lb/>
assertiveness in your life.<lb/>
Emphasis will be placed on<lb/>
the relationship between<lb/>
self-esteem and<lb/>
assertiveness behavior.<lb/>
Members are expected to<lb/>
attend both meetings. The<lb/>
meetings will be Monday,<lb/>
Nov. 15 and Wednesday<lb/>
Nov. 17 from 1-2 pm. Call<lb/>
757-6661 to sign up.<lb/>
THE FOUNDATION FOR<lb/>
THE FUTURE<lb/>
The Foundation for the Fu-<lb/>
ture is in need of student<lb/>
volunteers to assist el-<lb/>
ementaryhigh school<lb/>
graders with homework<lb/>
on weekdays. Please con-<lb/>
tact Sandra Jones, Direc-<lb/>
tor at 830-1221.<lb/>
INTERVIEW SKILLS<lb/>
WORKSHOP<lb/>
Seniors and Graduate stu-<lb/>
dents completing their de-<lb/>
gree in Dec. 1993 or May<lb/>
Summer 1994 who have<lb/>
not yet attended an inter-<lb/>
view skills workshop are<lb/>
invited to attend one on<lb/>
Thur. Nov. 11. Sponsored<lb/>
by Career Services, the<lb/>
workshop will be held in<lb/>
the Bloxton House at<lb/>
4:00pm. It is also open to<lb/>
students seeking intern-<lb/>
ships and co-op experi-<lb/>
ences.<lb/>
RECYCLING<lb/>
NATIONALISM IN<lb/>
POST-COMMUNIST<lb/>
ROMANIA<lb/>
Professor Nicolae &amp; Doina<lb/>
Harsanyi, University of<lb/>
Timisoara, Romania.<lb/>
Wednesday, Nov. 10 3:30pm<lb/>
GCB 1012. For additional<lb/>
information contact Dr.<lb/>
Cirkesena, 757-4284.<lb/>
LATINO FIESTA<lb/>
Latin American food, Live<lb/>
DJ, and Dancing. Spon-<lb/>
sored by the International<lb/>
Student Association. Satur-<lb/>
day, Nov. 13, 1993 6:30-<lb/>
11:00pm. Mendenhall Stu-<lb/>
dent Center Multi-Purpose<lb/>
Room. Admission: $4.00<lb/>
Students, $5.00 General<lb/>
Public. For further infor-<lb/>
mation Contact: Patricia<lb/>
Steffen: 931-9809 or Cen-<lb/>
tral Ticket Office:757-4788<lb/>
For Sale<lb/>
from Raleigh, $429; Key West, $249;<lb/>
Daytona Room wkitchen, $149! 1-<lb/>
800-678-6386.<lb/>
MEMBERSHIP to Club For<lb/>
Women Only. Low monthly pay-<lb/>
ments! Call Angie 931-9768.<lb/>
ONE-WAY AIRLINETICKEXRa-<lb/>
leighDetroitSan Francisco, $200.<lb/>
Valid until Dec. 15. Call 830-9125.<lb/>
SPRING BREAK BAHAMAS<lb/>
CRUISE $279! 6 Days! Includes 12<lb/>
meals and all taxes! This is a HUGE<lb/>
party! Great Beaches and Night life!<lb/>
Hurry Prices Increase 1210!<lb/>
1-800-678-6386.<lb/>
MOPED Tomos, 2 speed automatic<lb/>
only 500 miles. No license or regis-<lb/>
tration required. $475.00. Call 756-<lb/>
9133.<lb/>
ED Services Offered<lb/>
E<lb/>
i i:i<lb/>
Personals<lb/>
OVER Sljm IN CASH AND PRIZES!<lb/>
LORI'SATTIC lingerie contest<lb/>
every Wednesday after Comedy<lb/>
Zone. Register 756-6846.<lb/>
ELEGANT, REFINED MODELING.<lb/>
LIVE PSYCHIC READER<lb/>
Get answers to your ques-<lb/>
tions ROMANCE, MONEY,<lb/>
HEALTH. 1-900-990-9721 EXT.<lb/>
182. $2.98min 18 24hrs.<lb/>
FOR MEN ONLY:<lb/>
LORI'S INTIMATE AFFAIR-<lb/>
Annual Christmas Lingerie Fashion<lb/>
Show! Ramada Inn Ballroom,<lb/>
Thursday, Nov. 18. ALL LINGERIE!<lb/>
Tickets 756-6846.<lb/>
HEY BATTI or should I say Jes-<lb/>
sica? Our Halloween Haunt wss<lb/>
fun so how Tjout giving a "real"<lb/>
girl a call.<lb/>
THANKS toeveryone who sup-<lb/>
ported Greek God! Love Alpha<lb/>
Xi Delta.<lb/>
ENJOY SINGING? UNIVER-<lb/>
SITY CHORALE. MUSC 1635<lb/>
12:00 MWF. School of Music. No<lb/>
audition required.<lb/>
DO YOUWANTTOGET PUB-<lb/>
LISHED? If you write poetry,<lb/>
prose, or have some interesting<lb/>
doodles or drawings (including<lb/>
cartoons), send them co Scratch<lb/>
Yourself, 132 Longmeadow Rd<lb/>
Greenville, NC, 27858.<lb/>
BE Greek<lb/>
TO SIGMA LAMBDA MEM-<lb/>
BERS AND PLEDGESI want<lb/>
to thank all of you who at-<lb/>
tended my Halloween party. I<lb/>
loved all the costumes! The cute<lb/>
mouse, the cow with 4 utters-<lb/>
or was that 5, Tom? The cat, the<lb/>
gypsy, the belly dancer, Grim<lb/>
Reaper and of course, our Pres.<lb/>
with the "bad hair day and<lb/>
all the rest of the outfits I loved!<lb/>
One more weekend folks! Si-<lb/>
lent Retreat! Can't wait! Your<lb/>
one and only Member at<lb/>
Large?Mo.<lb/>
MATT HEDRICK Your class<lb/>
showed through at GreekGod!<lb/>
You did a super job. Thanks a<lb/>
bunch. Love, Alpha Phi.<lb/>
iJrgHt Ufannr rf MpPMiM in U.S.<lb/>
ii.mnmcs-dtuuKTs '<lb/>
Otdw Caaog Tatoy with Visa MC or COO<lb/>
1N-351122?<lb/>
Or, rush $2.00 to,<lb/>
11322 kMwAvB J20S-A, Los AngsMs CA 90025<lb/>
Lost &amp; Found<lb/>
LOST: Neutered male or-<lb/>
ange tabby: answers to<lb/>
EMO. Likes to ride. Call 752-<lb/>
0226<lb/>
ECU ECONOMICS<lb/>
SOCIETY<lb/>
Tuesday, Nov. 9th, the<lb/>
Economics Society of ECU<lb/>
will present Jim Wood from<lb/>
IBM. This meeting is open<lb/>
to all persons interested in<lb/>
economics. Please bring<lb/>
your related questions. A<lb/>
business meeting will fol-<lb/>
low.<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<lb/>
academic advising for<lb/>
Spring Semester 1994.<lb/>
Early registration will be-<lb/>
gin Nov. 15 and end Nov.<lb/>
19.<lb/>
GRADUATE BUSINESS<lb/>
ASSOCIATION<lb/>
Meeting 5:15pm-6:15 pm;<lb/>
Tues Nov 9; GC 1023 Dis-<lb/>
tinguished Speaker: Joe<lb/>
Gantz, President Empire<lb/>
Brush Corporation; Ace<lb/>
members are encouraged<lb/>
to attend.<lb/>
LSS MAJORSMINORS<lb/>
T-Shirt contest prize is a<lb/>
dinner for 2 at<lb/>
Staccoto's. For more inf.<lb/>
call Marcy at 752-9298<lb/>
(Anyone can submit a<lb/>
design!) LSS Society:<lb/>
meets every Tuesday at:<lb/>
Minges 142,4:30. Anyone'<lb/>
interested is welcome<lb/>
THEORY COLLOQUIUM<lb/>
LECTURE SERIES ,<lb/>
Son Bialostiesky (Penn.<lb/>
State University)'<lb/>
"Bakhtinian Speech'<lb/>
Genres in Life and Lit<lb/>
erature: On Poems as<lb/>
Greeting, Warnings<lb/>
Complaints, Excuses,<lb/>
Toasts, Boasts, and Burial<lb/>
Instructions" Friday, 12 ,<lb/>
Nov. 2:00pm. GCB 2018. ,<lb/>
PEACEKEEPING A<lb/>
DANGEROUS GAME ;<lb/>
The League of Women .<lb/>
Voters of Pitt County,<lb/>
presents: Peacekeep<lb/>
ing- A Dangerous Game, -<lb/>
The United Nations In a-<lb/>
Changing World. <lb/>
Speaker is Dr. Nancy,<lb/>
Spalding, Assistant Pro- <lb/>
fessor of Political Sci<lb/>
ence, ECU. Tuesday, Nov.<lb/>
16, ECU. Greenville Rec-<lb/>
reation and Parks Bldg<lb/>
Cedar Ln Greenville. For ,<lb/>
more information call ?<lb/>
756-5352.<lb/>
i<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/>
timesfreeof 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/>
Tuesday's 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/>
I?W?I<lb/>
.<lb/>
Ml MMI H.IE llll<lb/>
<pb facs="00058438_0006"/><lb/>
??-? ?? mr-<lb/>
The East Carolinian<lb/>
Page 6<lb/>
Lifestyle<lb/>
November 9. 1993<lb/>
Primus rocks Raleigh's newest music hall<lb/>
By Julie Totten<lb/>
Burt Aycock<lb/>
Photo courtesy of Interscope Records<lb/>
Pictured above from left to right are: Tim Alexander, Les Claypool and Larry Lalonde of Primus. Thursday<lb/>
night's show at the Ritz in Raleigh gave fans a heathly helping of funkadellic bluegrass house metal.<lb/>
Christian group runs strong<lb/>
By Sarah Wahlert<lb/>
Lifestyle Editor<lb/>
Last Thursday night at the Ritz,<lb/>
Primus took control of the stage<lb/>
and gave N.C. fans a show that<lb/>
would keep bass lines in their heads<lb/>
for days to come.<lb/>
Unfortunatly, we missed the<lb/>
opening act, The Melvins, but ru-<lb/>
mor spread that they too had a<lb/>
spendid performance. About 9:00<lb/>
Primus opened their set with<lb/>
"Damn Blue Collar Tweekers a<lb/>
tune that echoes bassist Les<lb/>
Claypool's background as a car-<lb/>
penter in the San Francisco Bay<lb/>
area. The audience immediately<lb/>
warmed up to the band, as they<lb/>
quickly fed into the second song,<lb/>
"My Name is Mud All those who<lb/>
were stationary during song num-<lb/>
ber one broke loose into a world of<lb/>
their own.<lb/>
Primus left fans no time to<lb/>
think about what they were hear-<lb/>
ing or even time to lean over and<lb/>
comment to a fellow " Primushead"<lb/>
and smile. Each song in the first set<lb/>
Staff Writer<lb/>
fed into another, with no petty in-<lb/>
termissions on the part of theband.<lb/>
They were there to play. Period.<lb/>
Even two separate technical<lb/>
malfunctions that would have had<lb/>
the average band taking a repair<lb/>
break couldn't make this<lb/>
funkadelic thrash trio put their in-<lb/>
struments down. I'm sure Les, Ler<lb/>
and Herb didn't mind breaking<lb/>
into an instrumental jam session<lb/>
while the equipment guy switched<lb/>
a good microphone for a dead one.<lb/>
The boys even had to change their<lb/>
song list around so Les' stand-up<lb/>
bass could be grounded properly.<lb/>
(He got shocked the first time he<lb/>
stepped up to it.)<lb/>
All the electrical mayhem<lb/>
brought back to mind his words at<lb/>
the Raleigh Lolaplloza show when<lb/>
his remote bass quit in the middle<lb/>
of "My Name is Mud "Not only<lb/>
does Primus suck but our equip-<lb/>
ment sucks too<lb/>
Bodies pogo-ed and sweatwas<lb/>
Staff Writer<lb/>
Editors note: The following is a<lb/>
personal record of the writer's<lb/>
attendance at an IVCF meeting.<lb/>
Sshhh There's a rumor going<lb/>
around that Christ is on this cam-<lb/>
pit in the hearts, minds and souls<lb/>
of any ECU students. I will prove<lb/>
this rumor true by saying that I<lb/>
have recently joined the growing<lb/>
number of students touched by<lb/>
Jesus. Don't get squeamish now;<lb/>
please read on.<lb/>
After many discussions about<lb/>
God with this "bom again" guy, he<lb/>
asked me to try going to a meeting<lb/>
of the Intervarsity Christian Fellow-<lb/>
ship. I admit I was nervous and<lb/>
hesitant at first but I figured it<lb/>
couldn't hurt me to go.<lb/>
The meetings take place in the<lb/>
General Classroom Building, room<lb/>
1032, each Wednesday evening<lb/>
from 7 p.m. to around 9 p.m. We<lb/>
were slightly late, but before the<lb/>
meeting starts, someoneoutside the<lb/>
door makes name tags for every-<lb/>
one.<lb/>
Newcomers instantly feel wel-<lb/>
come. I could hear clapping when I<lb/>
entered the building, and this in-<lb/>
timidated me at first. But entering<lb/>
that lecture room was amazing. So<lb/>
many students were singing and<lb/>
praising God. I felt strangely com-<lb/>
fortable despite my awe.<lb/>
A typical meeting starts with a<lb/>
few songs, some skits, more songs<lb/>
and then a special addition called<lb/>
"Word from the Herd This is when<lb/>
someone from the group comes<lb/>
forth and speaks about how the<lb/>
Lord has affected his or her life. I<lb/>
found it very touching. Then a<lb/>
speaker talks about a specific prob-<lb/>
lem that college students may face<lb/>
and relates it to the Bible. Last<lb/>
Wednesday's speaker talked about<lb/>
self-image and related it to Moses.<lb/>
The meeting finishes off with more<lb/>
See CHRISTIAN page 7<lb/>
flung about to the mid-set funk of<lb/>
"Tommy the Cat the aquatic<lb/>
psychedelia of "Diamondback<lb/>
Sturgeon" and the nursery rhyme<lb/>
indictment of consumerism in<lb/>
"Pudding Time<lb/>
The beer was flowing very<lb/>
freely by this point and drunk,<lb/>
dripping people continually<lb/>
bumped and pushed their way to<lb/>
various destination points. It was<lb/>
quite unnerving to be in the cen-<lb/>
ter of hundreds of intoxicated,<lb/>
pushy fans that cared just as much<lb/>
about maintaining a buzz than<lb/>
they did about Primus. And not<lb/>
to mention the fact that a security<lb/>
guard snatched our freshly lit<lb/>
cigarettes out of our hands and<lb/>
smashed it under his black boot.<lb/>
Another annoying "club policy"<lb/>
was the fact that you had to finish<lb/>
your can of beer (whatever was<lb/>
left over after the bartender<lb/>
poured it into a cup) before you<lb/>
could step away from the bar.<lb/>
Ever heard of draft beer, ritzy<lb/>
See PRIMUS page 7<lb/>
Novel explores two worlds<lb/>
Carowinds searching for talent<lb/>
By Tricia McCrory<lb/>
Staff Writer<lb/>
"What did you do last sum-<lb/>
mer?" asksParamount'sCarowinds.<lb/>
If you didn't spend last summer per-<lb/>
formingforthousandsofpeopleand<lb/>
having loads of fun, you missed out.<lb/>
Luckily you have another chance.<lb/>
Paramount's Carowinds, a di-<lb/>
vision of Paramount Communica-<lb/>
tions, Inc is offering an alternative<lb/>
to the usual boring summer job. The<lb/>
company's 1994 auditions are open<lb/>
for singers, dancers, actors, instru-<lb/>
mentalists and technicians. Thereare<lb/>
even positions available for the<lb/>
Hanna Barbera and Richard Scarry<lb/>
costumed character program.<lb/>
Auditions will beheld in Green-<lb/>
ville onTuesday, Nov. 16 inHetcher<lb/>
Music Building. They will be look-<lb/>
ing for five to six singers and techni-<lb/>
cians, six dancers and five to seven<lb/>
actors or specialty acts.<lb/>
Auditioners must be at least 16<lb/>
years old and must appear in person<lb/>
with a recent photo and current<lb/>
resume. There is a two minute limit<lb/>
onauditions whichareheld ona first<lb/>
come, first serve basis.<lb/>
Paramountadvisesparticipants<lb/>
to be prepared for the audition. In-<lb/>
strumentalists should bring two<lb/>
pieces to perform: one in a jazz or<lb/>
rock style, and another in a ballad<lb/>
style. Musicians will also be asked to<lb/>
sight-read.<lb/>
Dancers will be taught a dance<lb/>
combination and should wear ap-<lb/>
propriateattireandshoes. They may<lb/>
also be asked to sing.<lb/>
Singers should bring a variety<lb/>
of tunes, from upbeat to ballads.<lb/>
They should also bring their sheet<lb/>
music. Singers may be asked to learn<lb/>
a dance combination.<lb/>
So if you've got the moves, the<lb/>
voice, or any talent at all, give it a<lb/>
shot. There could be worse things<lb/>
than parading around as Fred<lb/>
Flintstone at Carowinds for a sum-<lb/>
mer. For further information and<lb/>
audition dates,contactParamount's<lb/>
Carowinds Entertainment offices at<lb/>
(704)-587-9020. Itmay beyour coolest<lb/>
summer yet.<lb/>
By Joe Horst<lb/>
Staff Writer<lb/>
Ever wanted to be in two<lb/>
places at once? Ever felt like there<lb/>
was another you lurking just un-<lb/>
derneath the surface of your ev-<lb/>
eryday self, someone who had<lb/>
adventures unknown in your life-<lb/>
time? L. Ron Hubbard's Slaves of<lb/>
Sleep and The Masters of Sleep<lb/>
draws the reader into two worlds<lb/>
? one of everyday mundane life<lb/>
here on Earth and one where hu-<lb/>
mans are slaves in the Land of<lb/>
Sleep.<lb/>
Slaves of Sleep introduces the<lb/>
main character ? or characters,<lb/>
as the case may be ? of both<lb/>
novels. Millionaire Jan Palmer is<lb/>
a man who is content to let his life<lb/>
be run by people who say they<lb/>
have his best interests at heart.<lb/>
When he is cursed with "Eternal<lb/>
Wakefulness" by a vengeful Jinn,<lb/>
he is transported into the body of<lb/>
Tiger, a swashbuckler<lb/>
extraordinaire whose life revolves<lb/>
around the antithesis of Palmer's<lb/>
? excitement and adventure.<lb/>
As Palmer continues through<lb/>
the story, the combination of his<lb/>
personality and Tiger's develops<lb/>
until the climax where both use<lb/>
their special abilities ? Palmer's<lb/>
intellect and Tiger's brawn ? to<lb/>
save themselves in both worlds.<lb/>
The Masters of Sleep follows in<lb/>
the same vein as Slaves of Sleep.<lb/>
Palmer has lost his sense of Tiger's<lb/>
virility and is again faced with a<lb/>
situation where both lives are in<lb/>
L. Ron Hubbard's<lb/>
novel, Slaves of<lb/>
Sleep &amp; The<lb/>
Masters of Sleep,<lb/>
is available in<lb/>
bookstores now.<lb/>
The hardcover is<lb/>
priced at $19.95<lb/>
and is sure to<lb/>
delight fantasy<lb/>
lovers.<lb/>
jeopardy. As he struggles to real-<lb/>
ize that part of him he has lost,<lb/>
Palmer and Tiger are once again<lb/>
immersed in a tale of swords and<lb/>
sorcery.<lb/>
Hubbard has once again<lb/>
crafted two tales of fantasysci-<lb/>
ence fiction guaranteed to delight<lb/>
fans worldwide. With Slaves be-<lb/>
ing first printed in 1939 and Mas-<lb/>
ters in 1950, this hardcover pub-<lb/>
lishes both stories for long hours<lb/>
of action-packed excitement. Each<lb/>
story in itself is worthy on its own<lb/>
Cover photo<lb/>
courtesy of<lb/>
Bridge<lb/>
Publications<lb/>
merits; both together only add a<lb/>
sense of continuity and purpose<lb/>
that enhances the theme.<lb/>
Hubbard weaves a tale that<lb/>
the average reader can relate to,<lb/>
combining fantasy and reality<lb/>
with a touch that few have mas-<lb/>
tered. Palmer is seen as an ordi-<lb/>
nary person thrust into extraor-<lb/>
dinary circumstances, striving<lb/>
to succeed to the best of his abil-<lb/>
ity. When the reader enters into<lb/>
See HUBBARD page 7<lb/>
CD Reviews<lb/>
CD Reviews<lb/>
B<lb/>
i<lb/>
Don't buy<lb/>
JJTake Your Chances JJJ<lb/>
Worth a Try AVO Definite Purchase<lb/>
Lowen and Navarro<lb/>
Broken Moon<lb/>
0 0 0<lb/>
Picture a flying hero who<lb/>
lands upon a lame lion. The hero,<lb/>
ever so valiant, pulls a thorn from<lb/>
the lion's paw only to be eaten by<lb/>
the lion. No, this isn't an excerpt<lb/>
from one of Aesop's fables. These<lb/>
are some of the lyrics from Lowen<lb/>
and Navarro's, "Dreams I Left Be-<lb/>
hind<lb/>
Eric Lowen and Dan Navarro<lb/>
have been writing songs for over<lb/>
a decade. In 1990, their debut al-<lb/>
bum, Walking On A Wire, received<lb/>
great reviews, and they hope their<lb/>
newest effort, Broken Moon, will<lb/>
also.<lb/>
"The first record's full of un-<lb/>
abashed optimism, while this new<lb/>
one has a lot of dark sides<lb/>
Navarro said.<lb/>
Although Lowen and<lb/>
Navarro aren't household names<lb/>
yet, they have written songs for<lb/>
the Bangles, David Lee Roth, the<lb/>
Temptations, Dave Edmunds and<lb/>
the Four Tops. Their first success<lb/>
as a songwriting team was the<lb/>
song, "We Belong for Pat<lb/>
Benetar.<lb/>
Their poetic, heartfelt lyrics<lb/>
are backed up by a folk-rock,<lb/>
acoustic melody. Some of the<lb/>
tracks on this CD include "All is<lb/>
Quiet "Maybe Later" and the<lb/>
title track, "Broken Moon<lb/>
Susannah Hoffs of the Bangles is<lb/>
featured on the tune "I'll Set You<lb/>
Free<lb/>
This CD's soothing, almost<lb/>
melancholy quality captures true<lb/>
to life experiences to which we all<lb/>
can relate.<lb/>
? Trish<lb/>
McCrory<lb/>
Swervedriver<lb/>
Mezcal Head<lb/>
<lb/>
With such influences as Sonic<lb/>
Youth, Butthole Surfers and Dino-<lb/>
saur Jr you'd think Swervedriver<lb/>
would sound better than they do on<lb/>
their new album, Mezcal Head.<lb/>
Swervedriver was first signed<lb/>
in 1990 by England's Creation<lb/>
Records. The band consists of<lb/>
founders Adam Franklin and Jimmy<lb/>
Hartridge, as well as their new base<lb/>
player Steven George and their new<lb/>
drummer Jez. Swervedriver's first<lb/>
album, Raise, was called, "a dizzying<lb/>
debutofserrated guitars andmelodic<lb/>
chaos" by Rolling Stone . The band<lb/>
alsocreatjedrhehirs'SonofMustang<lb/>
Ford" and "Rave Down So far, the<lb/>
only song released from Mezcal Head<lb/>
is "Duel<lb/>
"Duel" sounds alright, but<lb/>
"Blowin' Cool" and "A Change is<lb/>
Gonna Come" stand out as better<lb/>
songs?maybe even the only good<lb/>
songs on the entire album.<lb/>
A Change is Gonna Come' has<lb/>
almost a seventies' kind of feel to it?<lb/>
a bit of a swagger, you know Adam<lb/>
Franklin says.<lb/>
The opening song, "For Seeking<lb/>
Heatmighthavesomesubstanceas ?<lb/>
well. Franklin refers to this opening<lb/>
song as "a driving number indeed<lb/>
Listening toMezcalHeadwas tor-<lb/>
ture forme.Mostof the album sounds<lb/>
very much the same. Because of the<lb/>
waythesongsrunintoeachother,the<lb/>
album seems to go on forever.<lb/>
Unfortunately, the singer's voice<lb/>
doesn't have much variation either.<lb/>
The only parts of the album I really<lb/>
liked were the song quotes in the CD<lb/>
booklet.<lb/>
If you already have<lb/>
Swervedriver'sfirstalbum and enjoy<lb/>
it, then maybe Mezcal Head is for you.<lb/>
Thenagain,ifyoudon'thavethetime<lb/>
to spare, or if you get bored easily,<lb/>
don't even bother listening to one<lb/>
song.<lb/>
Byrheway,ifanyonewouldlike<lb/>
this new album, I'm giving it away<lb/>
for free. Sorry, Swervedriver, better<lb/>
luck next time.<lb/>
- Sarah<lb/>
Wahlert<lb/>
IPSJI<lb/>
W 1 11<lb/>
U  afiSafelJlii8M.Jto L.? Mm ?. ? is m m jlB<lb/>
Dahli Llama<lb/>
Quarter 'Til Euphoria<lb/>
)))<lb/>
Dahli Llama has had success<lb/>
since day one after getting their<lb/>
band together back in March of<lb/>
1991. They have only been to-<lb/>
gether for two years and have<lb/>
just put out a major CD called<lb/>
Quarter 'til Euphoria. Dahli<lb/>
Llama was voted best new band<lb/>
in Charlotte for 1991 and was<lb/>
also voted as having the sec-<lb/>
ond-best locally released rock<lb/>
CD in Charlotte next to<lb/>
Firehouse.<lb/>
Now they have a 12-song<lb/>
CD that should bring the band<lb/>
even more success for the fu-<lb/>
ture. The band has a really<lb/>
mixed sound of heavy metal<lb/>
and psychedelic tunes on the<lb/>
CD.<lb/>
The vocalist Tara Busch<lb/>
adds the psychedelic element<lb/>
to the band with a strong soul-<lb/>
ful melody in her voice. The<lb/>
heavy grunge sound is made<lb/>
by the guitarist Bill Kirch and it<lb/>
is something the band can do<lb/>
without. Some of the songs<lb/>
display a little too much metal<lb/>
sound which covers up the<lb/>
good soul of the band.<lb/>
The first track on the CD,<lb/>
"How Do You Sleep was defi-<lb/>
nitely the best because the band<lb/>
See Dahli page 8<lb/>
.<lb/>
<pb facs="00058438_0007"/><lb/>
November 9, 1993<lb/>
The East Carolinian 7<lb/>
TIAN<lb/>
Continued from page 6<lb/>
yare.A<lb/>
because<lb/>
ill<lb/>
- .in op-<lb/>
HUBBARD<lb/>
Continued from page 6<lb/>
;aid Jeff<lb/>
ainhour, presideni EVCF<lb/>
executive council gaveme<lb/>
some basic information on the<lb/>
group. "Intervarsiry,OTW'for short,<lb/>
Ls totally run by students. There are<lb/>
Hvestudentson thee ?,ecu the coun-<lb/>
cil and small group leaders of Bible<lb/>
studies in various locations on cam-<lb/>
pus, including one off campus<lb/>
group. Every once in a while, a<lb/>
weekend activity will be scheduled.<lb/>
Anyone is welcome anytime with<lb/>
no need to register. Intervarsitv is<lb/>
also nondenominational. Some-<lb/>
times retreats are scheduled, and<lb/>
most recently, some of the group<lb/>
spent a weekend in Ocean Isle fur-<lb/>
ther exploring their faith<lb/>
Spainhour said.<lb/>
The atmosphere also seems to<lb/>
be an important part of IV.<lb/>
Spainhour agreed by saying, "I feel<lb/>
a warm atmosphere here. Every-<lb/>
Cont'd<lb/>
from<lb/>
pg.6<lb/>
rsit) provides<lb/>
toleamabout<lb/>
me instobe<lb/>
inan th i lim. "his is a<lb/>
; students to come and<lb/>
 their questions about spiri-<lb/>
tual things, feel welcomed, accepted<lb/>
and loved said Todd (ones, VCF<lb/>
staff worker. "We want to help<lb/>
people to see that being Christian<lb/>
doesn t necessarily mean being re-<lb/>
ligious, but having a relationship<lb/>
with Christ. It can be tun, exciting<lb/>
and invigorating<lb/>
Junior transfer student Philip<lb/>
Chase says, "IV is a great place to<lb/>
come to learn more about our God<lb/>
and to feel good about yourself<lb/>
Personally, I am very glad I<lb/>
found out about Intervarsitv Chris-<lb/>
tian Fellowship. I encourage all stu-<lb/>
dents?especially freshmen?to at<lb/>
least come and observe. If anything,<lb/>
it will help your life. I am already<lb/>
making new friends and learning to<lb/>
accept my imperfections. Please join<lb/>
us Wednesday night. Even if you<lb/>
come alone, I guarantee it will be<lb/>
worth your time.<lb/>
the Land ofSleep, he is transported final scenes are gtossi d o<lb/>
into a realm where Earth's myths an attempt to finish the si<lb/>
and supersti- ? ,<lb/>
? it<lb/>
f ion<lb/>
: a v e<lb/>
DAHLI<lb/>
Continued from page 6<lb/>
v. ome ali e,<lb/>
where magic<lb/>
reigns and ge-<lb/>
nies (or Jinn)<lb/>
are masters of<lb/>
their domain.<lb/>
The only<lb/>
drawback in<lb/>
either novel is<lb/>
the climax.<lb/>
Hubbard spends a great deal of<lb/>
time detailing the initial and<lb/>
middle situations (which, in itself,<lb/>
is not a bad thing), but then fails to<lb/>
provide that same style to the end-<lb/>
ing. Battles seem rushed, crucial<lb/>
Earth's myths ami<lb/>
superstition have come<lb/>
alive, where magic<lb/>
reigns andgenies (or<lb/>
Jhm) are masters of<lb/>
their domain.<lb/>
u n d e t e r -<lb/>
m i ii e d<lb/>
minibei of<lb/>
pages<lb/>
If<lb/>
reader is<lb/>
looking for<lb/>
an exciting<lb/>
 swords-<lb/>
' sorcery<lb/>
tale ot adventure, then Slaves oj<lb/>
Sleep and The Masters of Sleep is<lb/>
the book to buy. lut d n't ana<lb/>
lyze the book too much because<lb/>
continuity of plot essentials is<lb/>
not stressed here.<lb/>
O.K. folks, you better show up for<lb/>
the weekly staff writers meeting<lb/>
Wed. at 3:30. Dinner Thursday<lb/>
 night?<lb/>
lets rara Busch's melodic voice<lb/>
take over. Another attention<lb/>
bei on the CD is a song called<lb/>
! ittle Fish which had a little<lb/>
bit of every sound.<lb/>
In an interview in the Char-<lb/>
lotte Observer, keyboardist Ann<lb/>
ohnson said, "The band enjoys<lb/>
playing in the dark, we'll burn<lb/>
incense, turn on the strobes and<lb/>
get psychedelic I could really<lb/>
see them playing some of their<lb/>
music in this unique fashion. The<lb/>
last song, "Free is a slow tune<lb/>
v hk h constantly reminds listen-<lb/>
ers of Dahli Llama's blooming<lb/>
talent.<lb/>
The group is young and has<lb/>
already had tremendous success,<lb/>
but they have room for improve-<lb/>
ment.<lb/>
The songs previosuly men-<lb/>
tioned on the new CD contain<lb/>
some of the best local work I<lb/>
have ever heard, but some of the<lb/>
other songs a re so different from<lb/>
I )ahli I lama's pychedelic image<lb/>
because the heavy metal sound<lb/>
takes over.<lb/>
This band will work hard<lb/>
to become one of the best alter-<lb/>
native bands around because<lb/>
of their love for music. The band<lb/>
members say, "We are five mu-<lb/>
sicians who love music and the<lb/>
musicwecreate. Allwedoand<lb/>
all we want to do is write, record<lb/>
and perform our music<lb/>
With this kind of determi-<lb/>
nation, Dahli Llama is bound to<lb/>
becoi.ie a huge success in the<lb/>
music business.<lb/>
The band's new CD, Quar-<lb/>
ter 'til Euphoria, is an exciting<lb/>
CD vvi th some great psychedelic<lb/>
songs.<lb/>
There may be a few songs<lb/>
that you find yourself skipping<lb/>
over because of the grunge<lb/>
sound that is misplaced in Dahli<lb/>
Llama's style.<lb/>
- Steve<lb/>
Griffin<lb/>
PRIMUS<lb/>
owners<lb/>
Other than these two rules,<lb/>
the club proved itself to be one of<lb/>
the best sounding music halls in<lb/>
our area. Since it was opening night,<lb/>
the atmosphere was uptight and<lb/>
that should loosen up with some<lb/>
time.<lb/>
Primus' two encore numbers<lb/>
could not have been any more ap-<lb/>
propriate. Les finger-plucked his<lb/>
stand-up bass and Ler traded his<lb/>
guitar for a banjo in the middle of<lb/>
"The Air is Getting Slippery a<lb/>
bouncy polka ditty with a refrain<lb/>
of "It'sincrediblyhotinhere The<lb/>
fellas came back out on stage a final<lb/>
time to crank out "Jerry Was a<lb/>
Racecar Driver the song that put<lb/>
this brilliant oddball trio on the<lb/>
college charts.<lb/>
1011 Vcharles Blvd.<lb/>
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TUESDAYS<lb/>
Silver Bullet's Female "Exotic" Dancers<lb/>
WEDNESDAYS<lb/>
Amateur Night for Female Dancers 11pm-1am<lb/>
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$2.00 OFF Admission Any Night with this coupon<lb/>
Doors Open 7:30pm Stage Time 9:00pm<lb/>
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Valid N.C. I.D. Required<lb/>
ADVERTISED ITEM POLICY:Each of these advertised items is<lb/>
required to be readily available for sale in each Kroger Store, except<lb/>
as specifically noted in this ad. If we do run out of an advertised<lb/>
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able, reflecting the savings or a raincheck which will entitle you to<lb/>
purchase the advertised item at the advertised price within 30 days.<lb/>
Only one vendor coupon will be accepted per item purchased.<lb/>
COPYRIGHT 1993-THE KROGER CO. ITEMSAND<lb/>
PRICES GOOD SUN. NOVEMBER 7 THROUGH<lb/>
SAT. NOVEMBER 13, 1993 IN GREENVILLE. WE<lb/>
RESERVE THE RIGHT TO LIMIT QUANTITIES.<lb/>
NONE SOLD TO DEALERS.<lb/>
THE SAVINGS<lb/>
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100 llMIT ?E COUPON PER CUSTOMER. COUPON GOOD THRU NOV 13. 1993<lb/>
LOW PRICES AND MORE!<lb/>
<pb facs="00058438_0008"/><lb/>
- ?<lb/>
The East Carolinian<lb/>
What's OiFTap?<lb/>
Wednesday, Nov. 10<lb/>
Volleyball, away<lb/>
at Campbell, Buies Creek, N.C.<lb/>
7 p.m.<lb/>
The 411<lb/>
Thursday, Nov. 4<lb/>
M. Soccer, away<lb/>
lost to James Madison, 3-0, at<lb/>
CAA Tournament<lb/>
Saturday, Nov. 5<lb/>
Football, home<lb/>
lost to Tulsa, 52-26<lb/>
Volleyball, away<lb/>
lost to Navy, 9-15,15-0,8-15,<lb/>
15-12,9-15. beat LeHigh, 2-15,<lb/>
15-7,15-9,15-7<lb/>
Sunday, Nov. 7<lb/>
Volleyball, awav<lb/>
lost to Army, 10-15,15-12,10-<lb/>
15,14-16<lb/>
W. Soccer, home<lb/>
tie, 2-2<lb/>
i<lb/>
Al Football Top 25<lb/>
I.Florida St. (62)<lb/>
2. Notre Dame<lb/>
3. Miami<lb/>
4. Nebraska<lb/>
5. Ohio St.<lb/>
6. Tennessee<lb/>
7. Auburn<lb/>
8. Florida<lb/>
9. West Virginia<lb/>
10. UCLA<lb/>
11. Texas A&amp;M<lb/>
12. Alabama<lb/>
13. Arizona<lb/>
14. Wisconsin<lb/>
15. North Carolina<lb/>
16. Penn St<lb/>
17. Oklahoma<lb/>
18. Virginia<lb/>
19. Indiana<lb/>
20. Louisville<lb/>
21. Colorado<lb/>
22. Boston College<lb/>
23. Wyoming<lb/>
24. Kansas St.<lb/>
25. Washington<lb/>
Sports<lb/>
November 9, 1993<lb/>
Tulsa destroys Pirates in spite of rain<lb/>
S Carolina offense has been ab-<lb/>
PhotO by Harold Wise<lb/>
Richard Petty was presented with an official ECU Pirate jersey at half time of Saturday's game. The day<lb/>
was officially made Richard Petty Day in the city of Greenville by Mayor Nancy Jenkins.<lb/>
Sledders beaten by racists<lb/>
By Brian Olson<lb/>
Assistant Sports Editor<lb/>
The cold, rainy, windy<lb/>
weather was nothing compared<lb/>
to the Golden Hurricane that the<lb/>
helpless Pirates faced Saturday<lb/>
afternoon. This was the last home<lb/>
game of the season for ECU and<lb/>
it was not the best of ways to go<lb/>
outifyouwerea senior. The Tulsa<lb/>
offense stormed in to Ficklen Sta-<lb/>
dium and out with a 52-26 vic-<lb/>
tory.<lb/>
ECU, 2-7, has dropped three<lb/>
in a row and the remaining two<lb/>
games will be on the road at Ken-<lb/>
tucky and Cincinnati.<lb/>
"The nature of football coach-<lb/>
ing is that you don't ever make<lb/>
excuses Head Coach Steve<lb/>
Logan said after the less to his<lb/>
alma-mater. "I'm not making ex-<lb/>
cuses; I'm sicker than anyone else<lb/>
is about the turn of events but<lb/>
when you get this deep into the<lb/>
forest, it's incredibly hard to see<lb/>
the trees<lb/>
The traditionally potent East<lb/>
Carolina offense has been ab-<lb/>
sent this season because of ma-<lb/>
jor injuries at quarterback. The<lb/>
normally high powered pass-<lb/>
ing attack has struggled this<lb/>
year. The Bucs totaled 38 yards<lb/>
through the air on Saturday.<lb/>
"We have bottomed out as<lb/>
far as our ability to throw and<lb/>
catch the football Logan said.<lb/>
"Our inability to catch the foot-<lb/>
ball is just victimizing and rip-<lb/>
plingall over the program right<lb/>
now. It hurtsour special teams,<lb/>
it hurts our defense. There were<lb/>
14 points for the University of<lb/>
Tulsa attributed, once again, to<lb/>
our offense<lb/>
The Pirates were making<lb/>
everything click early on. On<lb/>
ECU'S first possession, running<lb/>
back Junior Smith scampered<lb/>
50 yards on a fake reverse to<lb/>
give the Pirates an early lead, 6-<lb/>
0. The extra point failed on a<lb/>
troubled hold by Michael<lb/>
Jacobs.<lb/>
See TULSA page 10<lb/>
(AP)?The US. Olympic luge<lb/>
team didn't travel a few thousand<lb/>
miles to find a crusade. Even so, it<lb/>
found them.<lb/>
Last week, a half-dozen of the<lb/>
sledders had gone to have a few<lb/>
beersata bar in the town of Oberhof,<lb/>
where they were training, in what<lb/>
used to be East Germany. Before<lb/>
the night was through, a gang of<lb/>
neo-Nazi skinheads that eventu-<lb/>
ally numbered 15 would intimi-<lb/>
date team member Gordy Sheer,<lb/>
who is Jewish, repeatedly insult<lb/>
team member Robert Pipkins, who<lb/>
is black, and punch and stomp<lb/>
Duncan Kennedy, a two-time<lb/>
Olympian who tried to distract<lb/>
them long enough to let Pipkins get<lb/>
out the door.<lb/>
"Surprised?" Pipkins saiddur-<lb/>
ing a telephone interview Tuesday<lb/>
from the team's hotel in Austria.<lb/>
"Totally.<lb/>
"I've been coming here for four<lb/>
years now, and Duncan has been<lb/>
coming over since the early 1980s.<lb/>
We never encountered anything<lb/>
like this.<lb/>
"Now I'm not naive said<lb/>
Pipkins, the 1992 junior world<lb/>
champion. "I know racism isa prob-<lb/>
lem in the States, too. But person-<lb/>
ally, the worst thing that ever hap-<lb/>
pened to me at home was some-<lb/>
body driving by in a car, rolling<lb/>
down the window and yelling,<lb/>
Trigger and then driving on.<lb/>
'This he paused, "was worse.<lb/>
Much, much worse<lb/>
Police arrived an hour later,<lb/>
arrested five of the skinheads, ai .d<lb/>
told the Americans to lock them-<lb/>
selves in their roomsand takedown<lb/>
any signs identifying them as U.S.<lb/>
lugers. Sheer stacked the furniture<lb/>
inhisroomagainstthedoor.Pipkins<lb/>
barely slept.<lb/>
"We feel more secure now that<lb/>
we're in Austria he said, "and<lb/>
we're all a little more aware, that's<lb/>
for sure. The more we talked about<lb/>
it among ourselves, the more we<lb/>
felt like it was important to make a<lb/>
statement. We're public figures, in<lb/>
a sense, and that gave us a unique<lb/>
opportunity.<lb/>
"Like everybody else, we'd<lb/>
heard about the violence in Ger-<lb/>
many, about things like this, and<lb/>
never thougl it tha t anything needed<lb/>
to be done. Sometimes Pipkins<lb/>
said, "it takes something like this to<lb/>
drive a point home<lb/>
As events would have it, there<lb/>
were any number of ways for the<lb/>
lugers to accomplish that. The at-<lb/>
tack on Kennedy made the front<lb/>
pagesofmostGerman newspapers.<lb/>
"A Shameful Act one daily la-<lb/>
beled the attack.<lb/>
Apologies from top German<lb/>
sporting officials, politicians across<lb/>
the region and the townspeople<lb/>
poured into the US. lugeassociation,<lb/>
and alongside them, promises of<lb/>
tighter security.<lb/>
The mayor of Oberhof, a townof<lb/>
3,000 once used by the East German<lb/>
Olympic team as a winter training<lb/>
site, took the US. lugers to breakfast<lb/>
on Saturday and pleaded with them<lb/>
not to boycott the World Cup meet<lb/>
scheduled therefor January .Though<lb/>
US. luge officials were prepared to<lb/>
do just that if the athletes had con-<lb/>
cerns for their own safety, whatmayor<lb/>
Hartmut Goebel could not have<lb/>
known at the time was how eagerly<lb/>
the Americans werealreadyplotting<lb/>
their return to Oberhof. On Monday,<lb/>
every one of the sledders went back<lb/>
en the hill, including Kennedy, and<lb/>
punched the time clock during their<lb/>
runs within one one-hundredth of<lb/>
each other.<lb/>
Paraglider tries to<lb/>
land in boxing ring<lb/>
Newman charges 'attempted murder'<lb/>
Volleyball team finishes 1-2 in tourney<lb/>
Annapolis, MD (SID) ?On<lb/>
Saturday, the ECU volleyball team<lb/>
started play in the Navy Forrestal<lb/>
Classic, finishing the tournament<lb/>
with a 1-2 record. Overall, the Pi-<lb/>
rates stand at 11-22 and in the Co-<lb/>
lonial Athletic Association the Pi-<lb/>
rates finished the regular season<lb/>
on Nov. 2 at 1-4. In the first match,<lb/>
ECU met up with host team Navy<lb/>
and lost in five, 9-15,15-0,8-15,15-<lb/>
12,9-15.<lb/>
"I thought we played well<lb/>
enough to win. In game five we<lb/>
stayed at status quo and Navy<lb/>
punched it up a notch or two said<lb/>
ECUhead coach Martha McCaskill.<lb/>
Carrie Bme led the Pirate of-<lb/>
fense with 17kills. Melanie Richards<lb/>
had 15, and Staci Winters had 14.<lb/>
Setter Sarah Laurent had 53 assists<lb/>
for the match. Both Tara Venn and<lb/>
Wintershelped thedefensiveeffort<lb/>
with three solo blocks apiece.<lb/>
In their second match of the<lb/>
day ECU took on LeHigh and came<lb/>
away with their first win of the<lb/>
tournament in four games, 2-15,15-<lb/>
7,15-9,15-7. "We started out abso-<lb/>
lutely non-existentand got killed in<lb/>
(AP)?Perhaps the only thing<lb/>
more frightening than a paraglider<lb/>
dropping unannounced into the<lb/>
middleofSaturdaynighfstitlefight<lb/>
would have been if the paraglider<lb/>
turned out to be Don King.<lb/>
We can ? for a moment ai.y-<lb/>
way ? make light of what hap-<lb/>
pened because no one was seri-<lb/>
ously injured. This time.<lb/>
Evander Hobfield, the former<lb/>
andonce-againheavyweightcham-<lb/>
pion, saw the invader before his<lb/>
opponent did, little more than a<lb/>
minute into the seventh round. And<lb/>
even as Holyfield backed up, as-<lb/>
tonished yet trying to avoid getting<lb/>
hit by Riddick Bowe, visionsof what<lb/>
happened toMonica Seles last April<lb/>
popped into his head.<lb/>
"I didn't know what was hap-<lb/>
pening and I was trying to get<lb/>
away he recalled. "I did mink<lb/>
about that tennis lady being<lb/>
stabbed, and I didn't know who<lb/>
was he coming a fter, me or Bowe<lb/>
No motive for the drop-in is<lb/>
known yet, butit'snogood to laugh<lb/>
and say it's just boxing or a harm-<lb/>
less publicity stunt.<lb/>
Three people were carried<lb/>
away on stretchers from the park-<lb/>
ing lot-tumed-fight arena in the<lb/>
evening chill of the Vegas desert,<lb/>
but all were out of the hospital by<lb/>
early Sunday. It could have been<lb/>
worse.<lb/>
Two of mem ? Bowe's preg-<lb/>
nant wife Judith and his trainer, 82-<lb/>
year-oklEddieFutch?fainted mo-<lb/>
mentarily, overcome by the be-<lb/>
wildering turn of events. The<lb/>
third, paraglider James Miller,<lb/>
suffered minor injuries after be-<lb/>
ing dragged into the crowd and<lb/>
catching several hard shots from<lb/>
someone wieldingawalkie-talkie.<lb/>
Miller was charged initially<lb/>
with "dangerous flying a mis-<lb/>
demeanor,and released after post-<lb/>
ing $200 bail. There was specula-<lb/>
tion felony charges of public en-<lb/>
dangerment might follow, but a<lb/>
police department spokesman<lb/>
said Sunday any further charges<lb/>
would haveto come from thedis-<lb/>
trict attorney's office.<lb/>
Naturally, Rock Newman,<lb/>
Bowe's manager, favored some-<lb/>
thingquicker?and stronger. Af-<lb/>
ter wading into the crowdadmin-<lb/>
istering frontier justice to Miller,<lb/>
he had this advice for prosecu-<lb/>
tors thinkhe should becharged<lb/>
with attempted murder<lb/>
If large chunks of this story<lb/>
sound familiar, they should.<lb/>
In the first inning of Game 6<lb/>
of the 1986 World Series, soap<lb/>
opera actor Michael Sergio para-<lb/>
chuted onto the field between the<lb/>
mound and first base atShea Sta-<lb/>
dium carrying a banner that read<lb/>
"Let'sGoMets'Though a few of<lb/>
the ballplayers were amused, a<lb/>
NewYorkdistrictattotneynamed<lb/>
John Santucci was not.<lb/>
Sergio was charged with<lb/>
See FIGHT page 9<lb/>
Women tie Raleigh dub<lb/>
The Pirates' record moved to 11<lb/>
the Navy Forrestal Classic. The<lb/>
game one but men we came back<lb/>
and played, probably three of the<lb/>
best games we've played this year<lb/>
said McCaskill.<lb/>
Bme led the offense with 14<lb/>
kills, Gwynn Baber had 12 of her<lb/>
own and Richards had 10. On de-<lb/>
fense, Winters had one solo block<lb/>
and four block assists.<lb/>
Fit Photo<lb/>
-22 for the season after playing in<lb/>
Bucs are 1-4 in the CAA.<lb/>
On Sunday, the Pirates met up<lb/>
with Army and lost in four games,<lb/>
10-15,15-12,10-15,14-16.<lb/>
ECU plays Campbell on Nov.<lb/>
10inBuiesCreek,SC.TheCampbeU<lb/>
match is the Pirates last regular<lb/>
season match. The CAA tourna-<lb/>
ment is scheduled forNov.20-21 in<lb/>
WilliamsburgVa.<lb/>
Kosar will sit for Philcox against Seattle<lb/>
Belichick not bashing Bernie<lb/>
(AP) ? When Vinny<lb/>
Testaverde separated a shoulder<lb/>
last month, Bemie Kosar returned<lb/>
to the starting lineup but Bill<lb/>
Belichick still wasn't happy with<lb/>
him, saying it was apparent that<lb/>
Kosar's physical skills had di-<lb/>
minished over the years.<lb/>
"We've all seen him play<lb/>
the coach said. "I'm not going to<lb/>
bad-mouth and bash Bernie.<lb/>
We'll sign another quarterback.<lb/>
Todd (Philcox) will start against<lb/>
Seattle. He's the quarterback<lb/>
Kosar completed 79 of 138<lb/>
passes for 807 yards with five<lb/>
touchdowns and three intercep-<lb/>
tions this year.<lb/>
He started the Browns' first<lb/>
five games, but was relieved by<lb/>
Testaverde in the second half of<lb/>
three of those. Testaverde then<lb/>
became the starter for two games<lb/>
before separating his shoulder<lb/>
on Oct. 24 against Pittsburgh.<lb/>
Kosar came back as the<lb/>
Browns' starter Sunday in a 29-14<lb/>
loss to Denver. He completed 16<lb/>
of 30 passes including as pair of<lb/>
touchdowns to Michael Jackson.<lb/>
By Chip Hudson<lb/>
Staff Writer<lb/>
TheEastCarounawomen'ssoc-<lb/>
cer club went to Raleigh this past<lb/>
weekendtotakeontheRaleighdub<lb/>
team. Raleigh has dominated the<lb/>
Norm Carolina Women's Soccer<lb/>
League foryearsand ECU was look-<lb/>
ing to pull off a major upset and<lb/>
nearly did, tying them 2-2.<lb/>
Raleigh is comprised mostly<lb/>
of former varsity soccer players at<lb/>
such national powerhouses as N.C.<lb/>
State and UNC-Chapel Hill. They<lb/>
have won the league champion-<lb/>
ship in each of the past five years<lb/>
and ECU finished runner-up to<lb/>
them last season, falling in the fi-<lb/>
nal game, 2-0. In the regular sea-<lb/>
son meeting last year, ECU was<lb/>
the only team to score on Raleigh<lb/>
in a 4-2 loss. The Pirates had been<lb/>
waiting for the opportunity to<lb/>
avenge these losses, and the play<lb/>
in this game was inspired.<lb/>
East Carolina started a little<lb/>
slowly partially due to the wet<lb/>
field conditions and the nervous<lb/>
energy that had been building up<lb/>
for months. Raleigh took advan-<lb/>
tage of this and pressured the Pi-<lb/>
rate goal early in the match, but<lb/>
goalkeeper Jaime Pierce turned the<lb/>
chances away. At the 10 minute<lb/>
mark, a Raleigh forward broke<lb/>
through the Pirate defense, and<lb/>
although Pierce was able to get a<lb/>
hand on the shot, it slid past her<lb/>
and into the net for a 1-0 Raleigh<lb/>
lead. Two minutes later, a scary<lb/>
situation developed. ECU stop-<lb/>
per Stephanie Aicher went up<lb/>
for a head ball, and was hit in the<lb/>
back of the neck by a Raleigh<lb/>
attacker. She fell to the ground<lb/>
and temporarily lost conscious-<lb/>
ness. The game was delayed for<lb/>
almost 30 minutes while an am-<lb/>
bulance was called and she was<lb/>
taken to the hospital. Fortunately,<lb/>
she suffered only a mild concus-<lb/>
sion, and she was not kept over-<lb/>
night.<lb/>
After the restart, ECU did an<lb/>
excellent job of concentrating<lb/>
their energies on the game and at<lb/>
the 25 minute mark in the game,<lb/>
halfback Jennie Haines sent a<lb/>
cross from the right side of the<lb/>
field all the way to the left wing<lb/>
where Kellie Troy fired a shot at<lb/>
the goal. Raleigh goalie Kathy<lb/>
Koss stopped the shot, but fresh-<lb/>
man halfback Mandy Caster put<lb/>
the rebound in to tie the game at<lb/>
See SOCCER page 10<lb/>
???? tmmmmmm<lb/>
??.p. maimip'<lb/>
"<lb/>
<pb facs="00058438_0009"/><lb/>
November 9, 1993<lb/>
The East Carolinian 9<lb/>
Ruggers lose to Richmond Spiders<lb/>
Staff Writer<lb/>
The East Carolina rugby team<lb/>
fa iled toobta in a seed in the regiona Is<lb/>
for the second straight year. The Pi-<lb/>
rate ruggers fell to the University of<lb/>
Richmond, 23-6.<lb/>
The game site was sltifted to a<lb/>
narrow field due to rain, which<lb/>
plagued the match. Richmond broke<lb/>
the game open with two trick plays<lb/>
for trys. When the Pirates tried to<lb/>
come back, they generated a lot of<lb/>
offense and dominated the opposi-<lb/>
ti( n for iong periods. However, they<lb/>
could not get the ball into In goal.<lb/>
Pirate scoring was limited to two<lb/>
penalty' goals by Richard Moss.<lb/>
"We were competitive, but we<lb/>
didn't have the finish? that killer<lb/>
instinct to get the jobdone said lock<lb/>
Jay Keller. Teamcaptain Jason Webb<lb/>
mirrored these feelings, saying that<lb/>
"We've got to take our game more<lb/>
seriously if we want to play in the<lb/>
post-season. We keep getting<lb/>
matches that count, we just seem to<lb/>
come up short<lb/>
"We may have expected too<lb/>
much this season said coach Larry<lb/>
Babits. "Only three players have<lb/>
morethanayear'sexperienceattheir<lb/>
position and over two-thirds of the<lb/>
team are underclassmen. We've been<lb/>
playing older, more experienced<lb/>
sides for the last five weeks and it<lb/>
shows<lb/>
Four of the Richmond game<lb/>
starters are freshmen. The fluid na-<lb/>
ture of a rugby match dictates that<lb/>
playersinitiateand react toplay with-<lb/>
out having a chance to huddle and<lb/>
discussoptions.Atthe higher levels,<lb/>
the speed of play is such that sec-<lb/>
ondscountdramaticallyandexperi-<lb/>
ence is essential. The Pirates simply<lb/>
did not have enough experience,<lb/>
much less high-level competition to<lb/>
enable them to withstand the Rich-<lb/>
mond onslaught.<lb/>
When the Pirates stepped up to<lb/>
big-time competition, they were de-<lb/>
feated four times. Since these losses<lb/>
came against teams going to regional<lb/>
tournaments, the scores must be in-<lb/>
dicative of where the young Pirates<lb/>
stand. The B Team Pirates play at<lb/>
home Saturday in their season fi-<lb/>
nale.<lb/>
Several marks set in loss to Hurricanes<lb/>
FIGHT<lb/>
continued from page 8<lb/>
felony reckless endangerment and<lb/>
criminal trespass, and soon after<lb/>
other charges were added. "We're<lb/>
not laughing at all Santucci said.<lb/>
"Shea Stadium is not the new sky-<lb/>
diving center of the universe<lb/>
That was October. By Decem-<lb/>
ber of the same year, either moved<lb/>
by the Mets' series win or the spirit<lb/>
of the season, Sergio plead guilty<lb/>
to criminal trespassing and pros-<lb/>
ecutors dropped the remaining<lb/>
charges.<lb/>
Queens Criminal Court Jus-<lb/>
tice Phyllis Flug took it a step fur-<lb/>
ther. Before sentencing Santucci to<lb/>
MX) hours of community service<lb/>
and fining him $500, she read her<lb/>
take-off on the poem, "A Visit from<lb/>
St. Nicholas<lb/>
It concluded: "But jail's not<lb/>
the answer in a case of this sort.<lb/>
To balance the equities is the job<lb/>
of this court<lb/>
Bad enough. But we would<lb/>
do well to remember a Germar<lb/>
court did even worse sentenc-<lb/>
ing the man who stabbed Seles<lb/>
in Hamburg. Judge Elke Bosse<lb/>
found GuntherParcheguilty of<lb/>
the a Hack, but also found he had<lb/>
a "highly abnormal personal-<lb/>
ity" and su spended his sentence.<lb/>
Athletes are scared ? with<lb/>
justification. The reason they<lb/>
perform so flawlessly in front of<lb/>
so many is because it was once<lb/>
an article of faith that the many<lb/>
watching would just sit and<lb/>
scream.<lb/>
(SID)?1. EastCarolina'sJun-<lb/>
ior Smith (Jr RB) set a school and<lb/>
Ficklen Stadium record with 282<lb/>
rushing yards on 31 carries and<lb/>
three touchdowns (8, 65 and 50<lb/>
yards), in the Pirates' 52-26 loss to<lb/>
Tulsa on Saturday in Ficklen Sta-<lb/>
dium. The old ECU mark was245<lb/>
yards set by Billy Wightman<lb/>
against Davidson on Nov. 8,1969.<lb/>
Smith now has two of the three<lb/>
top rushing games at East Caro-<lb/>
lina. Last year, against Arkansas<lb/>
State, Smith rushed for 232 yards<lb/>
on 31 carries, which is now third<lb/>
in school history.<lb/>
2. Smith now has 1,137 rushing<lb/>
yards this season on 223 carries,<lb/>
an average of 5.09 yards per carry.<lb/>
Smith has averaged 1263 yards<lb/>
per game this season. Smith now<lb/>
ranks second in school history for<lb/>
single-season rushing yards. The<lb/>
list is below:<lb/>
1. CarlesterCrumpler(1972)<lb/>
1309 yards<lb/>
2. JUNIOR SMITH (1993)<lb/>
1,137 yards<lb/>
3. Butch Colson (1967)<lb/>
1,135 yards<lb/>
Smith needs to average 86<lb/>
yards per game for the remaining<lb/>
games to pass Crumpler's season<lb/>
mark. The Pirates finish the sea-<lb/>
son at Kentucky and at Cincin-<lb/>
nati.<lb/>
3. Smith now has 2326 career<lb/>
rushing yards, which is fifth in<lb/>
school history. He is 187 yards<lb/>
behind fourth-place Butch Colson<lb/>
(1967-69), who had 2312 yards.<lb/>
Here is a look at the list:<lb/>
1. CarlesterCrumpler (1971-73)<lb/>
2,889 yards<lb/>
2. Tony Baker (1982-85)<lb/>
2,825 yards<lb/>
3. Theodore Sutton (1977-80)<lb/>
2,730 yards<lb/>
4. Butch Colson (1967-69)<lb/>
2312 yards<lb/>
5. JUNIOR SMITH (1991-)<lb/>
2326 yards<lb/>
4. Tulsa's Chris Penn set an ECU<lb/>
opponent and Ficklen Stadium<lb/>
record with 16catchesan259yards<lb/>
receiving.<lb/>
The old mark belonged to<lb/>
Tulane's Wilbert Ursin, who had<lb/>
15 catches for 206 yards, in 1991.<lb/>
5. Carlester Crumpler failed to<lb/>
catch a pass for the first time since<lb/>
the Peach Bowl (Jan. 1, 1992)<lb/>
against N.C. State.<lb/>
The senior All-America candi-<lb/>
date from Greenville, N.C, had<lb/>
caughtat least two passes in each of<lb/>
the last 12 games and 18 of the last<lb/>
19 games.<lb/>
For the season, Crumpler still<lb/>
has 26 catches for 283 yards and a<lb/>
touchdown.<lb/>
6. East Carolina finishes its 1993<lb/>
home season witha 2-3 mark. ECU<lb/>
drew 134,482 fans in 1993 for five<lb/>
home dates, an average of 26,896<lb/>
per game.<lb/>
Little insulation left on Logan's nerves after Saturday<lb/>
GREENVILLE, N.C. (AP) ?<lb/>
East Carolina has reached the point<lb/>
in the season that it simply looks<lb/>
ahead to the next opponent.<lb/>
"Winning or losing, it's that<lb/>
time of the year Pirate coach<lb/>
Steve Logan said at his weekly<lb/>
news conference Monday.<lb/>
"There's not much insulation left<lb/>
on the nerve endings<lb/>
Logan's nerves were a little<lb/>
more frayed after a 52-26 loss last<lb/>
weekend to Tulsa. All the Pirates<lb/>
can do now is get ready for Ken-<lb/>
tucky, the second Southeastern<lb/>
Conference team East Carolina has<lb/>
faced mis season.<lb/>
South Carolina downed the<lb/>
Pirates 27-3.<lb/>
"We went out and had a spir-<lb/>
ited, peppy workout Sunday<lb/>
Logan said. "Ihaveacoreof players<lb/>
thatl work with and I have talked to<lb/>
several of them in my office about<lb/>
where they are mentally, physically<lb/>
and spiritually. And it seems that<lb/>
they are doing fine<lb/>
That's more than Logan can<lb/>
say for his special teams. Although<lb/>
they didn't matter, East Carolina<lb/>
missed its first two point-after at-<lb/>
tempts Saturday.<lb/>
"I had a freshman holder who<lb/>
was unaware it was raining Satur-<lb/>
day Logan said. "Mistakes like<lb/>
we made are inexcusable<lb/>
Smith ranked fourth in nation<lb/>
VI<lb/>
Greenville, N.C. (SID)?Junior<lb/>
Smith, who set an ECU and Ficklen<lb/>
Stadium record with 282yardson31<lb/>
carries against Tulsa on Saturday, is<lb/>
currently ranked fourth in the na-<lb/>
tion in the latest NCAA football sta-<lb/>
tistics.<lb/>
Sniith,ajuniorrunningbackfrom<lb/>
Fayetteville,N.Chasrushedforl,137<lb/>
yardson 223 carries, foranaverage of<lb/>
5.1 yards per carry. Smith has also<lb/>
averaged 1263 yards per game this<lb/>
season.<lb/>
The leading rusher in the nation<lb/>
isNorthern Illinois'LeShon Johnson,<lb/>
who is averaging 191.7 yards per<lb/>
game on the ground. Byron Morris<lb/>
fromTexasTechtssecond,averaging<lb/>
145.22 yards per game and<lb/>
Wisconsin's Brent Moss is third, av-<lb/>
eraging 13422 yards per game.<lb/>
Smith isalso 19th in the nation in<lb/>
all purpose rushing, averaging 136.4<lb/>
yards per game.<lb/>
The Pirates travel to Lexington,<lb/>
Ky. this weekend to face the Ken-<lb/>
tucky Wildcats in a 1 p jn. kkkoff on<lb/>
Saturday.<lb/>
I3IBII111111111111111111<lb/>
Professional<lb/>
Typing and Word Processing<lb/>
Includes:<lb/>
? Proofreading ? Spelling<lb/>
? Grammjtr corrections<lb/>
1.50 Per Page Call: 355-3611 anytime<lb/>
imiiiumiiai<lb/>
y<lb/>
iv<lb/>
THE ECU HONORS PROGRAM<lb/>
OFFERINGS FOR SPRING SEMESTER 1994 INCLUDE<lb/>
Encountering Folk Arts and Artists" "Managerial Accounting"<lb/>
"Horror Literature"<lb/>
"CSXewis"<lb/>
"Chemistry and the Environment"<lb/>
"Electronic Information Processing"<lb/>
"Research Process in Biology"<lb/>
"Human Genetics"<lb/>
"Rocks, Landscapes, and National Parks" "Statistics for Business"<lb/>
"History and Philosophy of Technology" "Spanish American Literature (in trans.)<lb/>
as well as ANrH 1000; ASES 2001; EDUC 3200, ENGL 1200,1250,2000.3420;<lb/>
FORL2221; INTL 1000: HLTH 1000.4501; HIST 1551.1553; MATH 2172; PHIL<lb/>
1110,1696; PSYC 1060; SOC1 2110: SPAN 1004; SPED 2000; WOST 2000 &amp; 2400.<lb/>
ALL ECU STUDENTS WITH 3.4 GPA OR BETTER QUALIFY TO TAKE<lb/>
HONOR COURSES. REGISTER FOR THEM IN REGULAR REGISTRA-<lb/>
TION. THEN, BRING YOUR COMPLETED REGISTRATION FORMS TO<lb/>
THE HONORS OFFICE CALL DR.DAVID SANDERS (757-6373) IN GCB<lb/>
2026 FOR MORE INFORMATION.<lb/>
Central Book &amp;<lb/>
Night<lb/>
EverTuesday<lb/>
?All well drinks and domestic beets are only<lb/>
$1 all night long<lb/>
?Anyone who comes in the door between<lb/>
9 and 10:30 wins afreet-shirt<lb/>
?This ad gets you in free between 9 and 10:30<lb/>
or $1 off the cover after 10:30.<lb/>
Don't miss $1 night this Tuesday at the Greenville Hilton Inn.<lb/>
Jeans and T-smrts allowed.<lb/>
Greenville<lb/>
inn<lb/>
756-7177<lb/>
Mon-Fri 8:30-9:30 Sat &amp; Sun 9:00-9:30<lb/>
C ireenville Square shopping Center (next to Kmart)<lb/>
Remember, Thursday November 11, 1993 is the<lb/>
deadline to register for the New York trip over the<lb/>
Thanksgiving Holiday -just a friendly reminder<lb/>
from The East Carolinian<lb/>
Vt? "TV-H- ? ?'?? ? n ?.? ?t ? fl ?? I -t T? ?.T?1.t1W V t ? T "WV 1?t???.<lb/>
W: '<lb/>
Sssh!<lb/>
It's A Weil-Kept Secret<lb/>
We can't say what garment labels have been<lb/>
cut . come by and you'll recognize them.<lb/>
You'll love our prices!<lb/>
TGIF<lb/>
Division of U.B.E.<lb/>
210 E. 5th St.<lb/>
OUTLET M-S 10-6<lb/>
mffimsmmmm<lb/>
ALFREDO'S isf<lb/>
ECU'S Favorite Pizza Place<lb/>
FREE DELIVERY<lb/>
Large Pizza with Topping<lb/>
9 EAST CAROLINA UNIVERSITY PERFORMING ARTS SERIES PRESENTS.<lb/>
THE<lb/>
WRIGHT AUDITORIUM<lb/>
Call 1 -800-ECU-ARTS for more information.<lb/>
(NOT RECOMENDED FOR YOUNG CHILDREN)<lb/>
Breakfast<lb/>
-Astepabove the rest.<lb/>
207 SW Greenville Blvd ? 355-5000<lb/>
? You must register for Success at Sunrise.<lb/>
Call SLDP'at 757-47 no later than 4:00 pm, Friday,<lb/>
to hear David Bailev's leadership and success secrets.<lb/>
Receive wake-up calf, teal ride to MSC, and breakfast!<lb/>
Free for<lb/>
students!<lb/>
David Bailey<lb/>
Pm Pm United Way<lb/>
Hum<lb/>
Sponsored by Student LeadersKl<lb/>
ograms<lb/>
<pb facs="00058438_0010"/><lb/>
November 9. 1993<lb/>
The East Carolinian 9<lb/>
Ruggers lose to Richmond Spiders<lb/>
Staff Writer<lb/>
TtV a rugby team<lb/>
failed toobtnna seed intheregjonals<lb/>
forth traight year. The Pi-<lb/>
rate ruggers fell to the University of<lb/>
Richmond, 23-6.<lb/>
The game site was shifted to a<lb/>
narrow field due to rain, which<lb/>
plagued the ma tch. Richmond broke<lb/>
the game open with two trick plays<lb/>
for trys. When the Pirates tried to<lb/>
come back, they generated a lot of<lb/>
offense and dominated the opposi-<lb/>
ig periods. However, they<lb/>
not get the ball into In goal.<lb/>
Pirate scoring was limited to two<lb/>
 enalry goals by Richard Moss.<lb/>
"We were competitive, but we<lb/>
didn't have the finish? that killer<lb/>
instinct to get the job done said lock<lb/>
Jay Keller. Teamcaptain Jason Webb<lb/>
mirrored these feelings, saying that<lb/>
"We've got to take our game more<lb/>
seriously if we want to play in the<lb/>
post-season. We keep getting<lb/>
matches that count, we just seem to<lb/>
come up short<lb/>
"We may have expected too<lb/>
much this season said coach Larry<lb/>
Babits. "Only three players have<lb/>
rrKirethanayear'sexperienceattheir<lb/>
position and over two-thirds of the<lb/>
team are underclassmen. We've been<lb/>
playing older, more experienced<lb/>
sides for the last five weeks and it<lb/>
shows<lb/>
Four of the Richmond game<lb/>
starters are freshmen. The fluid na-<lb/>
ture of a rugby match dictates that<lb/>
players ini tia te and react to play with-<lb/>
out having a chance to huddle and<lb/>
discussoptions. At the higher levels,<lb/>
the speed of play is such that sec-<lb/>
ondscount dramatically and experi-<lb/>
ence is essential. The Pirates simply<lb/>
did not have enough experience,<lb/>
much less high-level competition to<lb/>
enable them to withstand the Rich-<lb/>
mond onslaught.<lb/>
When the Pirates stepped up to<lb/>
big-time competition, they were de-<lb/>
feated four times. Since these losses<lb/>
cameagainstteams going toregional<lb/>
tournaments, the scores must be in-<lb/>
dicative of where the young Pirates<lb/>
stand. Tne B Team Pirates play at<lb/>
home Saturday in their season fi-<lb/>
nale.<lb/>
Several marks set in loss to Hurricanes<lb/>
FIGHT<lb/>
continued from page 8<lb/>
felony reckless endanger tent and<lb/>
criminal trespass, and r after<lb/>
other charges were added. "We're<lb/>
not iaughing at all Sanrucci said.<lb/>
"Shea Stadium is not the new sky-<lb/>
diving center of the universe<lb/>
That was October. By Decem-<lb/>
ber of the same year, either moved<lb/>
by the Mets'series win or the spirit<lb/>
of the season, Sergio plead guilty<lb/>
to criminal trespassing and pros-<lb/>
ecutors dropped the remaining<lb/>
charges.<lb/>
Queens Criminal Court Jus-<lb/>
tice Phyllis Flug took it a step fur-<lb/>
ther. Before sentencing Santucci to<lb/>
1IX) hours of community service<lb/>
and fining him $500, she read her<lb/>
take-off on the poem, "A Visit from<lb/>
St. Nicholas<lb/>
It concluded: "But jail's not<lb/>
the answer in a case of this sort.<lb/>
To balance the equities is the job<lb/>
of this court<lb/>
Bad enough. But we would<lb/>
do well to remember a German<lb/>
court did even worse sentenc-<lb/>
ing the man who stabbed Seles<lb/>
in Hamburg. Judge Elke Bosse<lb/>
found Gunther Parche guilty of<lb/>
theattack,butalso found he had<lb/>
a "highly abnormal personal-<lb/>
ity" and suspended his sentence.<lb/>
Athletes are scared ? with<lb/>
justification. The reason they<lb/>
perform so flawlessly in front of<lb/>
so many is because it was once<lb/>
an article of faith that the many<lb/>
watching would just sit and<lb/>
scream.<lb/>
(SID)?1. EastCarolina'sJun-<lb/>
ior Smith (Jr RB) set a school and<lb/>
Ficklen Stadium record with 282<lb/>
rushing yards on 31 carries and<lb/>
three touchdowns (8, 65 and 50<lb/>
yards), in the Pirates' 52-26 loss to<lb/>
Tulsa on Saturday in Ficklen Sta-<lb/>
dium. The old ECU mark was 245<lb/>
yards set by Billy Wightman<lb/>
against Davidson on Nov. 8,1969.<lb/>
Smith now has two of the three<lb/>
top rushing games at East Caro-<lb/>
lina. Last year, against Arkansas<lb/>
State, Smith rushed for 232 yards<lb/>
on 31 carries, which is now third<lb/>
in school history.<lb/>
2. Smith now has 1,137 rushing<lb/>
yards this season on 223 carries,<lb/>
an average of 5.09 ya rds per carry.<lb/>
Smith has averaged 1263 yards<lb/>
per game this season. Smith now<lb/>
ranks second in school history for<lb/>
single-season rushing yards. The<lb/>
list is below:<lb/>
1. CarlesterCrumpler(1972)<lb/>
1,309 yards<lb/>
2. JUNIOR SMITH (1993)<lb/>
1,137 yards<lb/>
3. Butch Colson (1967)<lb/>
1,135 yards<lb/>
Smith needs to average 86<lb/>
yards per game for the remaining<lb/>
games to pass Crumpler's season<lb/>
mark. The Pirates finish the sea-<lb/>
son at Kentucky and at Cincin-<lb/>
nati.<lb/>
3. Smith now has 2326 career<lb/>
rushing yards, which is fifth in<lb/>
school history. He is 187 yards<lb/>
behind fourth-placeButchColson<lb/>
(1967-69), who had 2312 yards.<lb/>
Here is a look at the list:<lb/>
1. CarlesterCrumpler (1971-73)<lb/>
2,889 yards<lb/>
2. Tony Baker (1982-85)<lb/>
2,825 yards<lb/>
3. Theodore Sutton (1977-80)<lb/>
2,730 yards<lb/>
4. Butch Colson (1967-69)<lb/>
2312 yards<lb/>
5. JUNIOR SMITH (1991-)<lb/>
2326 yards<lb/>
4. Tulsa's Chris Penn set an ECU<lb/>
opponent and Ficklen Stadium<lb/>
record wi th 16catchesan 259 yards<lb/>
receiving.<lb/>
The old mark belonged to<lb/>
Tulane's Wilbert Ursin, who had<lb/>
15 catches for 206 yards, in 1991.<lb/>
5. Carlester Crumpler failed to<lb/>
catch a pass for the first time since<lb/>
the Peach Bowl (Jan. 1, 1992)<lb/>
against N.C. State.<lb/>
The senior All-America candi-<lb/>
date from Greenville, N.C, had<lb/>
caught at least two passes in each of<lb/>
the last 12 games and 18 of the last<lb/>
19 games.<lb/>
For the season, Crumpler still<lb/>
has 26 catches for 283 yards and a<lb/>
touchdown.<lb/>
6. East Carolina finishes its 1993<lb/>
home season with a 2-3 mark. ECU<lb/>
drew 134,482 fans in 1993 for five<lb/>
home dates, an average of 26,896<lb/>
per game.<lb/>
Remember, Thursday November 11, 1993 is the<lb/>
deadline to register for the New York trip over the<lb/>
Thanksgiving Holiday -just a friendly reminder<lb/>
from The East Carolinian<lb/>
Sssht<lb/>
It's A Weil-Kept Secret. . .<lb/>
We can't say what garment labels have been<lb/>
cut . come by and you'll recognize them.<lb/>
You'll love our prices!<lb/>
TGIF<lb/>
Division of U.B.E.<lb/>
210 E. 5th St.<lb/>
Little insulation left on Logan's nerves after Saturday<lb/>
OUTLET M-S 10-6<lb/>
i m<lb/>
wmmmmimmm<lb/>
GREENVILLE, N.C. (AP) ?<lb/>
East Carolina has reached the point<lb/>
in the season that it simply looks<lb/>
ahead to the next opponent.<lb/>
"Winning or losing, it's that<lb/>
time of the year Pirate coach<lb/>
Steve Logan said at his weekly<lb/>
news conference Monday.<lb/>
"There's not much insulation left<lb/>
on the nerve endings<lb/>
Logan's nerves were a little<lb/>
more frayed after a 52-26 loss last<lb/>
weekend to Tulsa. All the Pirates<lb/>
can do now is get ready for Ken-<lb/>
tucky, the second Southeastern<lb/>
Conference team East Carolina has<lb/>
faced this season.<lb/>
South Carolina downed the<lb/>
Pirates 27-3.<lb/>
"We went out and had a spir-<lb/>
ited, peppy workout Sunday<lb/>
Logansaid. "Ihaveacoreof players<lb/>
that I work with and I have talked to<lb/>
several of them in my office about<lb/>
where they are mentally, physically<lb/>
and spiritually. And it seems that<lb/>
they are doing fine<lb/>
That's more than Logan can<lb/>
say for his special teams. Although<lb/>
they didn't matter, East Carolina<lb/>
missed its first two point-after at-<lb/>
tempts Saturday.<lb/>
"I had a freshman holder who<lb/>
was unaware it was raining Satur-<lb/>
day Logan said. "Mistakes like<lb/>
we made are inexcusable<lb/>
We deliver to Dorms<lb/>
ALFREDO'S fai<lb/>
ECU'S Favorite Pizza Place<lb/>
Smith ranked fourth in nation<lb/>
mm mm iimmiiiiiiimimmiiim<lb/>
Greenville, N.C (SID)?Junior<lb/>
Smith, who set an ECU and Ficklen<lb/>
Stadiumrecord with282yardson31<lb/>
carries against Tulsa on Saturday, is<lb/>
currently ranked fourth in the na-<lb/>
tion in the latest NCAA football sta-<lb/>
tistics.<lb/>
Smith,ajunkxrunningbackfrorn<lb/>
FayetteviIle,N.Chasrushed for 1,137<lb/>
yardson 223 carries, foranaverage of<lb/>
5.1 yards per carry. Smith has also<lb/>
averaged 1263 yards per game this<lb/>
season.<lb/>
The leading rusher in the nation<lb/>
isNorthem Illinois'LeShon Johnson,<lb/>
who is averaging 191.7 yards per<lb/>
game on the ground. Byron Morris<lb/>
fromTexasTechissecond,averaging<lb/>
145.22 yards per game and<lb/>
Wisconsin's Brent Moss is third, av-<lb/>
eraging 13422 yards per game.<lb/>
Smith isalso 19th in the nation in<lb/>
all purpose rushing, averaging 136.4<lb/>
yards per game.<lb/>
The Pirates travel to Lexington,<lb/>
Ky. this weekend to face the Ken-<lb/>
tucky Wildcats in a 1 port, kickoff on<lb/>
Saturday.<lb/>
5<lb/>
Professional<lb/>
Typing and Word Processing<lb/>
Includes:<lb/>
? Proofreading ? Spelling<lb/>
? Grammar corrections<lb/>
1.50 Per Page Call: 355-3611 anytime<lb/>
IIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIHIIIIIIIIIIIIUIIII<lb/>
THE ECU HONORS PROGRAM<lb/>
OFFERINGS FOR SPRING SEMESTER 1994 INCLUDE<lb/>
Encountering Folk Arts and Artists"<lb/>
"Horror Literature"<lb/>
"CSXewis"<lb/>
"Chemistry and the Environment"<lb/>
"Managerial Accounting"<lb/>
" Electronic Information Processing"<lb/>
" Research Process in Biology "<lb/>
" Human Genetics "<lb/>
"Rocks Landscapes, and National Parks" "Statistics for Business"<lb/>
"Hist ryand Philosophy of Technology "Spanish American Literature (in trans.)<lb/>
as well as ANTH 1000; ASES 2001; EDUC 3200; ENGL 1200.1250.2000,3420;<lb/>
FORL2221; INTL 1000; HLTH 1000.4501; HIST 1551,1553; MATH 2172; PHIL<lb/>
1110.1696; PSYC 1060; SOCI 2110; SPAN 1004; SPED 2000; WOST 2000 &amp; 2400.<lb/>
ALL ECU STUDENTS WITH 3.4 GPA OR BETTER QUALIFY TO TAKE<lb/>
HONORS COURSES. REGISTER FOR THEM IN REGULAR REGISTRA-<lb/>
TION. THEN, BRING YOUR COMPLETED REGISTRATION FORMS TO<lb/>
THE HONORS OFFICE. CALL DK.DAVID SANDERS (757-6373) IN GCB<lb/>
2026 FOR MORE INFORMATION.<lb/>
Central Book &amp;<lb/>
Night<lb/>
twtyTuesday<lb/>
AtHiefc?<lb/>
?All well drinks and domestic beers are only<lb/>
$1 all night long<lb/>
?Anyone who comes in the door between<lb/>
9 and 10:30 wins afreet-shirt<lb/>
?This ad gets you in free between 9 and 10: JO<lb/>
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<pb facs="00058438_0011"/><lb/>
November 9, 1993<lb/>
TULSA<lb/>
continued from page 8<lb/>
theBuc:<lb/>
iint<lb/>
However, the rain could not<lb/>
slow down a highly-talented<lb/>
Tulsa offense. Quarterback Gus<lb/>
Frerotte and receiver Chris Perm<lb/>
abused the ECU aecondary. Perm<lb/>
caught the ball 16 times for 259<lb/>
yards to set a Ficklen record. He<lb/>
also celebrated four touchdown<lb/>
receptions.<lb/>
"We saw a Sunday afternoon<lb/>
wide receiver that's a good foot-<lb/>
ball player Logan said about<lb/>
Perm. "He overcame the elements<lb/>
like a true football player should<lb/>
and could,and I give Tulsa all the<lb/>
credit offensively<lb/>
The Pirates used man-to-man<lb/>
coverage all game and did not<lb/>
make the necessary adjustments<lb/>
to stop the passing onslaught.<lb/>
"Today I got beat by the num-<lb/>
ber-two receiver in the nation ?<lb/>
got beat three times by the num-<lb/>
;ber-two receiver in the nation'<lb/>
.senior comerbackTravis Render<lb/>
!said. "It was my job to cover the<lb/>
"man, and I didn't cover him so 1<lb/>
accept responsibility for that<lb/>
The Pirates watched their 12-<lb/>
0 lead start to unravel. Tulsa<lb/>
kicker Brandon Brister connected<lb/>
on a 22-yard field goal to make it<lb/>
12-3 in the first quarter.<lb/>
The second quarter was all<lb/>
Tulsa. Perm scored his firstTDon<lb/>
a five yard-pass from Frerotte to<lb/>
bring it to 12-10. Then two ECU<lb/>
penalties on the next possession<lb/>
set up Perm's second TD with<lb/>
13:32 left in the second quarter<lb/>
and the score at half-time was 17-<lb/>
12.<lb/>
Then came the tough third<lb/>
or the Pirates. Tulsa<lb/>
would march 71 yards in four<lb/>
plays, marked by Penn's third<lb/>
uchdown catch to move the<lb/>
re to 24-12. Then Garrick<lb/>
Jackson's interception return for<lb/>
a TD made the score 31-12.<lb/>
However, Smith would slash<lb/>
through a Tulsa defense over and<lb/>
over to gain an ECU record 282<lb/>
yards rushing. He was able to<lb/>
break the l,000yard mark for the<lb/>
season and now has 1,137 yards<lb/>
rushing on 223 carries. Smith is<lb/>
averaging 126.3 yards per game<lb/>
and 5.09 avg. per carry, good for<lb/>
fourth in the nation.<lb/>
"Junior is just a blessing to<lb/>
me personally and to this football<lb/>
program and to the University<lb/>
Logan said. "Nothing he ever<lb/>
does surprises me. If he runs for<lb/>
500 or he runs for five, he goes<lb/>
out and plays lights-out. My hat<lb/>
is off to him<lb/>
Smith now stands fifth in<lb/>
ECU career rushing yards with<lb/>
2,326. Smith only needs 172 yards<lb/>
in the final two games to break<lb/>
the single-season rushing record<lb/>
set by Carlester Crumpler, Sr.<lb/>
"I wanted to go in and give<lb/>
110 percent for the seniors, for<lb/>
myself and for my family, "Smith<lb/>
said. "We worked hard all week<lb/>
in practice on the set goals for this<lb/>
week and just try to have a good<lb/>
consistent game. Unfortunately,<lb/>
we didn't get the win but I feel<lb/>
that I gave 100 percent and that's<lb/>
all I can ask of myself<lb/>
As a team, the Pirates ran for<lb/>
377 yards on a wet and sloppy I<lb/>
field. The offensive line played<lb/>
exceptionally well against Tulsa's<lb/>
large defensive line.<lb/>
Quarterback Perez Mattison<lb/>
is still enduring a tough learning<lb/>
process as a starting quarterback.<lb/>
The rainy weather did not help<lb/>
his stats: 4-19 passing for 38 yards<lb/>
and two interceptions.<lb/>
Ail-American candidate,<lb/>
tightendCarlesterCrumpler,did<lb/>
not catch a pass in his final home<lb/>
game and marked the first time<lb/>
he went a game without a catch<lb/>
since the Peach Bowigamenearly<lb/>
two years ago.<lb/>
The Pirates got on the board<lb/>
again in the third quarter. Smith<lb/>
broke a 65-yard run and<lb/>
Mattison's rush for the two-point<lb/>
conversion made the score31-20.<lb/>
However, Tulsa tight end Phil<lb/>
Nitowski caught a one-yard pass<lb/>
with 24 seconds remaining in the<lb/>
third to up the score to 38-20.<lb/>
Frerotte hooked up with Penn<lb/>
on a 14-yard pass for another TD<lb/>
to bring the score to 45-20.<lb/>
Then the Pirates put their fi-<lb/>
nal points on the board when<lb/>
Smith rushed for an eight-yard<lb/>
TD. The failed conversion pitted<lb/>
the score, 45-26.<lb/>
The final score came on an-<lb/>
other Frerotte TD pass and<lb/>
Brister's kick made the final 52-<lb/>
26.<lb/>
NASCAR legend Richard<lb/>
Petty was honored at half-time.<lb/>
Greenvile gave the living legend<lb/>
a key to the city for his accom-<lb/>
plishments. The small Ficklen<lb/>
crowd seemed toclearoutassoon<lb/>
"The King" left.<lb/>
SOCCER<lb/>
1.Raleigh consistentlytried to build<lb/>
attacks through their star forward,<lb/>
but ECU midfielder Maureen<lb/>
Corcoran did an excellent job of<lb/>
shadow-marking her throughout<lb/>
the game, and she was unable to<lb/>
get on track.<lb/>
In the second half, the game<lb/>
flowed from end to end with nei-<lb/>
ther team able to gain an advan-<lb/>
tage. Fifteen minutes into the half,<lb/>
Toni DeRose beat a defender and<lb/>
had a one-on-one with the Raleigh<lb/>
keeper. The keeper grabbed<lb/>
DeRose's legs and a penalty kick<lb/>
was awarded to East Carolina.<lb/>
DeRose's pena 1 ty shot was headed<lb/>
for the right side of the goal, but the<lb/>
Look for<lb/>
The Namgator<lb/>
Nov. 18. It is<lb/>
your guide<lb/>
for Pirate<lb/>
basketball.<lb/>
Ad space still<lb/>
available<lb/>
GET APPLICATIONS<lb/>
NOW<lb/>
ONE AND TWO BEDROOM APARTMENTS<lb/>
AVAILABLE NOW. NEW COST EFFICIENT AND<lb/>
CLOSE TO CAMPUS! FREE WATERSEWER<lb/>
LAUNDRY FACILITY &amp; ECU BUS SERVICE<lb/>
REASONABLE RENT.<lb/>
CALL 752-8320 FROM 9:00AM TO 5 00PM<lb/>
NOV. GBA MEETING<lb/>
(Graduate Business Association)<lb/>
Distinguished Speaker:<lb/>
Joe Gantz<lb/>
President<lb/>
Empire Brush Corporation<lb/>
5:75PM - 6:15PM<lb/>
TODAY, Tues, Nov. 9<lb/>
GC1023<lb/>
r<lb/>
Interested in a<lb/>
Career<lb/>
as a Paralegal?<lb/>
Legal Assistants Program<lb/>
? A certificate program open to qualified women who have a<lb/>
baccalaureate degree<lb/>
? Approved by the American Bar Association<lb/>
? Intensive full-time summer schedule May-August. Part-time<lb/>
evening schedules beginning August or January<lb/>
? Placement service for graduates is without fee to employer or<lb/>
graduate<lb/>
Applications deadline for the 1994 Summer Program: February 1 1994 For<lb/>
r- ?C?? Ugi" Assistams Pr?8ra Continuing Education, I teredith<lb/>
College, 3800 Hillsborough St Raleigh, NC 27607-5298, (919) 829-8353<lb/>
MERfDITH<lb/>
Meredith College admits women students without regard to race, creed, national<lb/>
or ethnic origin, age or handicap.<lb/>
Maritime Studies Association Presents<lb/>
USCG Captain's License Prep Course<lb/>
? or Tii.?cmTI<lb/>
JTlU! i?<lb/>
This course will prepare you to take the 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 - 1st come, 1st served basis<lb/>
Reply to MSA co ECU Maritime History Dept.<lb/>
The course is taught by Capt. Rick Jones - USCG Licensed<lb/>
to 1600 tons, 20 years experience<lb/>
For Information, call 757-0630 (evenings)<lb/>
Madrigal 'Dinners<lb/>
iDecemSer2,3, 4 - 7:00 p.m.<lb/>
tDecem6er 5 ? 5:00 p.m.<lb/>
MttuknhaRStudent Center<lb/>
East Carolina Zlniversity<lb/>
The Lorde andLadye of the. Manor,<lb/>
James andfranceine fyes,<lb/>
invite you to join them for this wonderful<lb/>
evening of music, dance, andfeUowship<lb/>
reminiscent of the TJbzabethan Teriod.<lb/>
Menu includes:<lb/>
?WaldorfSalad<lb/>
Prime Kj6 au Jus<lb/>
or<lb/>
pastedCfticksn 'Breast with<lb/>
fruited !Rjce Stuffing<lb/>
Qreen (Beans Mnondine<lb/>
Kpus and'Butter<lb/>
?BaksdAlaskQ<lb/>
Wassail, Icedlea, and Coffee<lb/>
?PrtmiumScatiiuj ? f2S tgu!wStating - $20<lb/>
Cfdtdnn (12 and under) $15.<lb/>
Ca?Cl-800ECU-JUySfJr more information<lb/>
continued from page 8<lb/>
goalkeeper made a fantastic save<lb/>
to deny the Pirates a golden oppor-<lb/>
tunity. Six minutes later, the left<lb/>
wing for Raleigh sent a corner kick<lb/>
in frontof the Pirategoal, and after<lb/>
the cross, another Raleigh player<lb/>
rifled a half volley into the net to<lb/>
put Raleigh up 2-1. With 15 min-<lb/>
utes left in the game, ECU had a<lb/>
free kick from the left side of the<lb/>
penalty area from 25 yards out.<lb/>
Fullback Missy Cone pounded a<lb/>
shot into the crossbar and once<lb/>
again Gaster was there to follow it<lb/>
up.<lb/>
The game ended in a 2-2 tie,<lb/>
but it was a moral victory for the<lb/>
Pirates as Raleigh had beaten them<lb/>
in their previous seven meetings.<lb/>
Following the game ECU coach<lb/>
Doug Silver said, "I think that we<lb/>
have finally removed the aura of<lb/>
invincibility from this Raleigh<lb/>
team. Wehadchancestoboth win<lb/>
this game and let it slip away.<lb/>
Hopefully we will build on this<lb/>
experience and beat this team<lb/>
when we play in the Spring sea-<lb/>
son.<lb/>
The women's soccer club is<lb/>
going to Boone, N.C. this week-<lb/>
end to compete in a tournament.<lb/>
They will face teams from Ten-<lb/>
nessee,Clemson,Tennessee-Chat-<lb/>
tanooga, Appalachian State,<lb/>
UNC-G and South Carolina.<lb/>
IOC Buffalo Wings<lb/>
TUesday Night from 4-Close<lb/>
Premium Draft Beer<lb/>
AD Day - Everyday<lb/>
990<lb/>
12 Price Appetizers<lb/>
in the lounge<lb/>
Mon-Frifrom4-7 pm only<lb/>
752-1907 ? 800 East 10th Street<lb/>
Eat In Or Take Out<lb/>
7 Days A Week<lb/>
Monday - Thursday 11 -11<lb/>
Friday &amp; Saturday 11 - Midnite<lb/>
Sunday 11-10<lb/>
A M41E BURLESQUE<lb/>
;NMOcrii w?i<lb/>
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Jeffreys Beer &amp; Wine will buy back<lb/>
EMPTY A-B KEGS<lb/>
Please return them to:<lb/>
Jeffreys Beer &amp; Wine, N. Greene St.<lb/>
Greenville, NC, 758-1515.<lb/>
Closed from 12-lpm<lb/>
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ynAeuAefrMte&amp;Jb<lb/>
? ONE OF THE ANHEUSER BUSCH COMPANIES<lb/>
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<pb facs="00058438_0012"/>
</div></body></text></TEI>