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<pb facs="00058444_0001"/>
Lifestyle<lb/>
e Tunes!<lb/>
and<lb/>
ocence<lb/>
eive<lb/>
See CD<lb/>
Sports<lb/>
To The Hoop With Ya!<lb/>
The ECU men's team<lb/>
moved to 2-2 fast night<lb/>
by defeating Campbell,<lb/>
73-55. See page 12 for<lb/>
coverage of Saturday's<lb/>
a m e vs. Mount St.<lb/>
a ry ' s. <lb/>
ft<lb/>
Tomorrow<lb/>
The East Carolinian<lb/>
Vol. 68 No. 71<lb/>
Circulation 12.000<lb/>
Greenville, North Carolina<lb/>
Tuesday, December 7,1993<lb/>
16 Pages<lb/>
Non-student not privy to patron parking<lb/>
Photo by Cedric Van Buren<lb/>
This note was found on Ginny Bostrom's car that states "I have a medical excuse to park here. Am getting<lb/>
special sticker from Traffic Services?they said I could pick it up after lunch today (Wed)<lb/>
ECU to graduate 2,100 Sat.<lb/>
By Lisa Dawson<lb/>
Staff Writer<lb/>
ECU will graduate around<lb/>
2,100 students during commence-<lb/>
ment exercises this Saturday. The<lb/>
program, sched uled to begin at 10<lb/>
a.m will be a marked event in<lb/>
many lives to celebrate the transi-<lb/>
tion from "the university life" to<lb/>
life in the "real world The band<lb/>
will begin playing at 9:15 a.m<lb/>
followed soon afterwards by the<lb/>
gradua tes marching in at 9:45 a.m.<lb/>
New rules will be in place<lb/>
during this December's gradua-<lb/>
tion, according to C.C. Rowe, chair<lb/>
of the Commencement Commit-<lb/>
tee. Graduates should arrive at<lb/>
gate five by 9:30 a.m. carrying<lb/>
their gown and cap in hand. At<lb/>
this time, University personnel<lb/>
will assist each graduate in find-<lb/>
ing their academic unit and place<lb/>
in the procession. No family or<lb/>
friends will be allowed to enter<lb/>
the gate or the area that the pro-<lb/>
cessional will be formed in.<lb/>
Graduates that appear to<lb/>
be impaired or are wearing in-<lb/>
appropriate clothing will not be<lb/>
allowed to enter the gate or<lb/>
Minges Coliseum. In the case of<lb/>
bad weather, the commencement<lb/>
will be moved to Minges Coli-<lb/>
seum. If this movement of the<lb/>
ceremony occurs, the informa-<lb/>
tion will be announced on<lb/>
WRAL, WCTI, WITN, WNCT,<lb/>
local radio stations and on the<lb/>
commencement hotline.<lb/>
"ECU will not receive no<lb/>
complaints from me said Eliza-<lb/>
beth Ward, a December gradu-<lb/>
ate. "I have enjoyed every minute<lb/>
that I have attended, and feel<lb/>
that ECU has helped me a lot<lb/>
Speaker for the commence-<lb/>
ment will be Dr. Thomas G. Irons,<lb/>
a professor of medicine a t ECU. A<lb/>
native of Greenville, Irons com-<lb/>
pleted his medical degree at UNC-<lb/>
Chapel Hill. He is known for his<lb/>
leadership roles in addressing<lb/>
various social issues such as child<lb/>
abuse, adolescent medicine and<lb/>
autism, and performs duties as an<lb/>
instructor and director of the Gen-<lb/>
eral Physician Program as well.<lb/>
An honorary doctorate de-<lb/>
gree will be awarded to Gertrude<lb/>
B. Elion of the Research Triangle<lb/>
Park in Raleigh. Elion is a scientist<lb/>
with Bin roughs WellcomeCo. and<lb/>
was the 1988 recipient of the Nobel<lb/>
Prize for Physiology of Medicine.<lb/>
A total of three doctoral de-<lb/>
grees will be granted at the com-<lb/>
mencement services on Saturday.<lb/>
Two will go to graduates in sci-<lb/>
See ECU page 5<lb/>
VC appointed to Regional Dev.<lb/>
By Stephanie Lassiter<lb/>
Staff Writer<lb/>
Albert A. Delia, an economic<lb/>
development specialist has been<lb/>
appointed associate vice chancel-<lb/>
lor of Regional Development.<lb/>
Delia's duties will include<lb/>
overseeing the East Carolina Re-<lb/>
gional Development Institute and<lb/>
administering for the Small Busi-<lb/>
ness and Technology (SBTDC) and<lb/>
the Center for Applied Technol-<lb/>
ogy-<lb/>
The appointment was made<lb/>
by James L. Lanier, vice chancellor<lb/>
for Institutional Advancement.<lb/>
Delia was selected out of a nation-<lb/>
wide search for the position previ-<lb/>
ously held by Janice Faulkner, who<lb/>
left ECU to work under Governor<lb/>
Hunt.<lb/>
Before coming to ECU, Delia<lb/>
was the associate state director of<lb/>
the N.C. SBTDC in Chapel Hill.<lb/>
Under his new appointment,<lb/>
Delia hopes to involve the students<lb/>
as well as the faculty.<lb/>
"One of my top priorities is<lb/>
to work much closer with students<lb/>
and faculty he said. "Without<lb/>
one or the other, the university<lb/>
would not exist<lb/>
Delia will be working to bring<lb/>
Albert A. Delia was<lb/>
appointed to the<lb/>
position of associate<lb/>
vice chancellor of<lb/>
Regional<lb/>
Development. Delia<lb/>
is an economic<lb/>
development<lb/>
specialist.<lb/>
Photo by Cedric Van<lb/>
Buren<lb/>
the facets of the Regional Develop-<lb/>
ment together so individual prob-<lb/>
lems can be solved through coop-<lb/>
eration of each group.<lb/>
"I will work with those units<lb/>
to help them achieve individual<lb/>
goals while creating a unified set<lb/>
of objectives and delivery sys-<lb/>
tems he said.<lb/>
Delia mentioned that when<lb/>
examining business and industry,<lb/>
many angles must be considered.<lb/>
See CHANCELLOR page 5<lb/>
By Maureen Rich<lb/>
Assistant News Editor<lb/>
Amid rumors of illegal habi-<lb/>
tation and administrative favors,<lb/>
an ECU campus resident who at-<lb/>
tends Pitt Community College<lb/>
learned one valuable lesson:<lb/>
Daddy's money cannot buy that<lb/>
convenient parking space.<lb/>
Last week, a resident of<lb/>
Jarvis Hall approached The East<lb/>
Carolinian (TEC) with complaints<lb/>
that a Pitt Community College<lb/>
student was living in Jarvis Hall,<lb/>
and had received that privilege<lb/>
through ECU Chancellor Richard<lb/>
Eakin.<lb/>
It appeared that Ginny<lb/>
Bostrom, an art student at PCC,<lb/>
had her own single room, a meal<lb/>
plan and a special permit parking<lb/>
sticker for her car ? per favor of<lb/>
ECU administrators. The only dis-<lb/>
crepancy, however, is her park-<lb/>
ing sticker. Dr. Al Matthews, vice<lb/>
chancellor for Student Life, said<lb/>
Eakin was unaware of Bostrom's<lb/>
existence until TEC contacted him<lb/>
about the rumors.<lb/>
Bostrom's living conditions,<lb/>
regardless of questions or chal-<lb/>
lenges by registered ECU stu-<lb/>
dents, are legitimate.<lb/>
"We do have a standing<lb/>
agreement with Pitt Community<lb/>
College said Manny Amaro,<lb/>
director of Housing. Amaro ex-<lb/>
plained that if a student is "tenta-<lb/>
tively admitted to ECU and the<lb/>
conditions under which the stu-<lb/>
dent is admitted are not met by<lb/>
the next semester, that student<lb/>
has the option of attending Pitt<lb/>
Community College and residing<lb/>
on the ECU campus for up to one<lb/>
year, at which time the individual<lb/>
agrees to enroll full-time at ECU.<lb/>
Amaro said there are cur-<lb/>
rently five residents at ECU who<lb/>
have such status. "This has been<lb/>
going on for several years, as far<lb/>
as I know Amaro said.<lb/>
Amaro verified that Bostrom<lb/>
has paid for her single room, dis-<lb/>
pelling rumors that the room was<lb/>
actually a favor from administra-<lb/>
tors after Bostrom's father, owner<lb/>
of the Bostrom Ford dealership in<lb/>
Raleigh, contributed money to<lb/>
ECU.<lb/>
"They didn't get anything<lb/>
here Amaro said in response<lb/>
to the alleged administrative<lb/>
favors. Amaro verified that<lb/>
Bostrom's meal plan and resi-<lb/>
dency are legitimate, but ques-<lb/>
tioned the special permit<lb/>
sticker.<lb/>
"I don't even get a staff<lb/>
sticker ? heck, I'm hunting<lb/>
for a space daily Amaro said.<lb/>
"Bostrom's father is a<lb/>
patron of the University<lb/>
Matthews said. He explained<lb/>
that pa trons often receive "spe-<lb/>
cial permit" or "patron" stick-<lb/>
ers.<lb/>
"Those stickers are never<lb/>
intended to be used by family<lb/>
members Matthews said.<lb/>
"They are to be used for busi-<lb/>
ness purposes only<lb/>
Last Wednesday<lb/>
Matthews said that the sticker<lb/>
problem had been clarified,<lb/>
and Bostrom was currently<lb/>
parking elsewhere. However,<lb/>
TEC took pictures that morn-<lb/>
ing of Bostrom's car parked<lb/>
immediately outside Jarvis<lb/>
See DADDY page 5<lb/>
Gift wrap not recyclable<lb/>
By Jason Williams<lb/>
Staff Writer<lb/>
If you're not recycling this<lb/>
Christmas, you're throwing it all<lb/>
away. And a lot of people will be<lb/>
doing just that?Pitt County citi-<lb/>
zens will generate approximately<lb/>
320 tons of waste on Dec. 25 and<lb/>
every other day this year. Fortu-<lb/>
nately, Pitt County Recycling of-<lb/>
fers an alternative to landfills and<lb/>
incineration.<lb/>
Joy Hudson, Coordinator of<lb/>
Pitt County Clean Sweep, in-<lb/>
cluded a list of suggestions for<lb/>
reducing waste and recycling for<lb/>
Christmas in Clean Sweepin the<lb/>
bimonthly newsletter of the Clean<lb/>
Sweep program.<lb/>
In the kitchen, Hudson rec-<lb/>
ommends making only as much<lb/>
food as you need, freezing left-<lb/>
overs in reusable, washable con-<lb/>
tainers, using excess food in cas-<lb/>
seroles and stews and starting a<lb/>
compost pile for leftover veg-<lb/>
etables, egg shells, tea and coffee<lb/>
grounds, etc.<lb/>
To avoid contributing to the<lb/>
landfill problem avoid paper and<lb/>
plastic plates and cups, purchase<lb/>
recyclable and recycled contain-<lb/>
ers and recycle your cans, bottles<lb/>
Photo by Cedric Van Buren<lb/>
Being environmentally correct is possible even during the giving<lb/>
season. Remember, wrapping paper is NOT recyclable in Pitt County.<lb/>
and jars.<lb/>
When shopping, Hudson<lb/>
recommends buying recycled gift<lb/>
wrap, boxes, bags and cards, buy-<lb/>
ing rechargeable batteries for toys<lb/>
and buying products packaged<lb/>
in recycled materials. Instead of<lb/>
cutting down a live tree, buy a<lb/>
Christmas tree that you can plant<lb/>
after the holidays.<lb/>
In addition Hudson sug-<lb/>
gests shopping at thrift stores,<lb/>
garage sales and yard sales and<lb/>
taking your own tote bag to<lb/>
sidestep the paper versus plas-<lb/>
tic choice completely.<lb/>
With all the wrapping<lb/>
paper, boxes, bows and ribbons<lb/>
associated with presents, gift<lb/>
giving is one area that people<lb/>
See PRESENTS page 5<lb/>
Fraternity collects food donations<lb/>
By Tammy Zion<lb/>
Staff Writer<lb/>
The spirit of Christmas is<lb/>
one of giving, sharing and help-<lb/>
ing those who are less fortu-<lb/>
nate. With the Christmas holi-<lb/>
days being right around the cor-<lb/>
ner, one campus fraternity rec-<lb/>
ognized the need to give assis-<lb/>
tance to people who are less for-<lb/>
tunate.<lb/>
The brothers of the Kappa<lb/>
Sigma fraternity, working along<lb/>
with the First Born Community<lb/>
Development Center (FBCDC),<lb/>
sponsored a food drive during<lb/>
the week of Nov. 28-Dec. 5.<lb/>
One-fourth of the rural<lb/>
population in eastern North<lb/>
Carolina live below the federal<lb/>
poverty level. The FBCDC, a cen-<lb/>
ter in Pitt County, serves one<lb/>
thousand of these individuals<lb/>
each month. The center pur-<lb/>
chases food from the Food Bank<lb/>
of North Carolina and distrib-<lb/>
utes it to families in the Pitt<lb/>
County area who are in need of<lb/>
food assistance.<lb/>
Members of the Kappa<lb/>
Sigma fraternity divided Green-<lb/>
ville into subdivi-sions. Groups<lb/>
of five were then assigned to<lb/>
different divisions where they<lb/>
went from door to door seeking<lb/>
donations.<lb/>
"We had a very good re-<lb/>
sponse Preston Alridge, a<lb/>
member of the Kappa Sigmas,<lb/>
said. "People were very gener-<lb/>
ous<lb/>
The food drive collected<lb/>
300 to 400 pounds of food for the<lb/>
FBCDC.<lb/>
"Everybody enjoyed par-<lb/>
ticipating in the food drive. We<lb/>
really felt good about doing it<lb/>
Alridge said.<lb/>
Phone home <lb/>
for free<lb/>
By Shannon Cooper<lb/>
Staff Writer<lb/>
Have you ever said noth-<lb/>
ing in life is free? 1-800-Collect<lb/>
may have you eating those<lb/>
words. The new 1-800 service<lb/>
visited ECU on Monday, Dec<lb/>
6, and gave away thousands of<lb/>
certificates which allow stu-<lb/>
dents nine minutes of free<lb/>
phone time for the holidays.<lb/>
ARA dining services<lb/>
teamed up with 1-800-Collect<lb/>
to not only give away thou-<lb/>
sands of dollars in calling cer-<lb/>
tificates, butalso free tee shirts<lb/>
to students who found hidden<lb/>
stickers in the dining hall area.<lb/>
"1-800-Collect isabrand<lb/>
newser ice that a lot of people<lb/>
See PHONE page 4<lb/>
<pb facs="00058444_0002"/><lb/>
December 7, 1993<lb/>
unrf OtheiCajnp<lb/>
L<lb/>
Nazi trial continues<lb/>
nti-Bigotrv conference held<lb/>
 from the Ivy 1 eague schools gath-<lb/>
il v llegeinMassachusettsforaconfer-<lb/>
ence on how to aMe iate bigotry on college campuses. "We're<lb/>
looking for a ripple effect said George Demko, director of<lb/>
Dartmouth's Nelson A. Rockefeller Center for Social Sciences,<lb/>
which is hosting the meeting. About 50 students, staff and faculty<lb/>
representatives from various Ivy League schools attended. The<lb/>
conference focused on the roots of bigotry and plans for combating<lb/>
it on campus.<lb/>
Planning aids college career<lb/>
How you prepare for college before strolling through the ivy-<lb/>
covered gates and during the first year is as important to your<lb/>
future success as the academic work you do, an administrator says.<lb/>
"We have found that high school students who make informed<lb/>
decisions when they choose a college major are more likely to<lb/>
persist, succeed and graduate from college said James Levin, co-<lb/>
author of a stud v about how high school and college counselors can<lb/>
best advise students in career planning. The same holds true for<lb/>
first-year college students who have undeclared majors or may be<lb/>
thinking of switching to a different field of study. Levin, an assis-<lb/>
tant professor of education, also helps coordinate the Division of<lb/>
Undergraduate Studies at Perm State University.<lb/>
How to avoid holiday blues<lb/>
The holidays can be a time to relax and be with friends and<lb/>
family, or those days of merriment can actually be an extremely<lb/>
stressful period, a psychology professor at Hood College says. ECU<lb/>
students may not be able to relate to this sentiment, but then again,<lb/>
how could they possibly not? Think about it. Downtown Green-<lb/>
ville can only get so festive, the bars can only hang so many<lb/>
wreaths, and have only so many drink specials that might warrant<lb/>
some true holiday cheer. In light of this, here are a few tips to keep<lb/>
your chin up and your eyes zeroed in on that mistletoe.<lb/>
? Start new traditions. Instead of stringing popcorn, use those<lb/>
bottle tabs you never recycled.<lb/>
? Buy new ornaments. Again, use those tabs!<lb/>
? Let someone else in the family host the holiday dinner,<lb/>
especially if you're that college student with stock in<lb/>
McDonald's.<lb/>
? Look ahead to New Year's Eve. Maybe you won't be alone<lb/>
this year<lb/>
Compiled by Maureen Rich. Taken from CPS<lb/>
and other campus newspapers.<lb/>
SCHLESWIG, Germany<lb/>
(AP) ? The German government<lb/>
was forced to come to grips with a<lb/>
wave of anti-foreigner violence<lb/>
when two Turkish girls and a rela-<lb/>
tive who tried to save them were<lb/>
killed in a firebombing.<lb/>
Now the trial of the two neo-<lb/>
Nazis charged in last year's attack<lb/>
in Moelln, a town in north Ger-<lb/>
many, is being seen as a test of the<lb/>
German justice system.<lb/>
A verdict had been expected<lb/>
today. Instead, thecase, underway<lb/>
since May in Schleswig-Holstein<lb/>
state supreme court, was thrown<lb/>
into turmoil this morning when<lb/>
defense lawyers produced a new<lb/>
suspect.<lb/>
Authorities have been criti-<lb/>
cized in past cases for handing<lb/>
light sentences to teen-age neo-<lb/>
Nazis, or botching investigations<lb/>
so badly that mild sentences or<lb/>
acquittals were inevitable.<lb/>
In another ruling expected<lb/>
today, a court may be forced for<lb/>
lack of evidence to free three<lb/>
youths held for a May 29<lb/>
firebombing inSolingen that killed<lb/>
five Turks.<lb/>
Twenty-six people have<lb/>
been killed and hundreds<lb/>
wounded in attacks on foreigners<lb/>
since Germany's reunification<lb/>
three years ago.<lb/>
At the time, the Moelln at-<lb/>
tack was the worst, occurring Nov.<lb/>
23,1992 ? nearly six months be-<lb/>
fore Solingen. The slayings<lb/>
shamed many Germans, who held<lb/>
candlelight marches nationwide<lb/>
as pictures of the charred house in<lb/>
Moelln and of grieving relatives<lb/>
were shown around the world.<lb/>
The two suspects, Michael<lb/>
Peters, 26, and Lars Christiansen,<lb/>
20, pleaded innocent after recant-<lb/>
ing confessions to police they said<lb/>
were made under duress.<lb/>
Christiansen claims he was hit by<lb/>
a police officer.<lb/>
The stiffest sentence pros-<lb/>
ecutors were able to seek for<lb/>
ENTIRE STOCK 20 OFF<lb/>
 does not apply to textbooks, reference books, sale items, or other discounts<lb/>
UNIVERSITY<lb/>
Frame Shop<lb/>
and<lb/>
Art Gallery<lb/>
EXAM WEEK CHRISTMAS SALE - DEC. 80EC.15<lb/>
EXTENDED HOURS ON DEC. 8,8,13,14 from 8am to 8pm<lb/>
Regular Hours :MON. - FRI<lb/>
SAT. 10-6<lb/>
IN DEC. 8, 3,1<lb/>
.9-6 <lb/>
516S.COTANCHEST.<lb/>
758-2616<lb/>
Christiansen is 10 years because<lb/>
he was 19 at the time of the attack<lb/>
and was tried as a juvenile.<lb/>
Prosecutors have demanded<lb/>
life for Peters for the Moelln attack<lb/>
and for firebombing two asylum<lb/>
shelters in September 1992. Peters<lb/>
admitted involvement in those<lb/>
two crimes, which caused no inj li-<lb/>
nes.<lb/>
Peters has never held a<lb/>
steady job and says he first be-<lb/>
friended neo-Nazis because they<lb/>
gave him free beer. Christiansen<lb/>
was a supermarket store clerk be-<lb/>
fore his arrest and wrote songs<lb/>
against foreigners.<lb/>
A defense lawyer, Wolfgang<lb/>
Ohnesorge, presented a new sus-<lb/>
pect today.<lb/>
Heiko Meinke, 25, was ar-<lb/>
rested Saturday after speeding off<lb/>
when Brandenburg state police<lb/>
stopped his car to give him a blood-<lb/>
alcohol test.<lb/>
Caught after a chase, Meinke<lb/>
told officers he was involved in<lb/>
the firebombing. But in court to-<lb/>
day, he said he invented the story<lb/>
because he was drunk and angry.<lb/>
Christiansen claims he was<lb/>
at his Moelln home sleeping dur-<lb/>
ing the firebombing. Peters'<lb/>
mother claims her son was play-<lb/>
ing chess with her at her home in<lb/>
Gudow, south of Moelln, which is<lb/>
30 miles east of Hamburg.<lb/>
According to prosecutors,<lb/>
Peters and Christiansen first set<lb/>
fire to a different apartment house<lb/>
for Turks and then firebombed<lb/>
the Arslan home.<lb/>
Between the attacks, accord-<lb/>
ing to prosecutors, Peters called<lb/>
police and said "a house is burn-<lb/>
ing on Ratzeburger Strasse. Heil<lb/>
Hitler<lb/>
Slain were 10-year-old Yeliz<lb/>
Arslan, 14-year-old Ayse Yilmaz,<lb/>
and 51-year-old Bahide Arslan,<lb/>
who was Yeliz' grandmother and<lb/>
Ayse's aunt. Bahide Arslan rushed<lb/>
into a room to rescue the little girls<lb/>
but never came out alive.<lb/>
To at t news writers<lb/>
Thanks for everything this semes-<lb/>
ter. You've alt been great, I can't<lb/>
thank you enoucftu Good tuck in<lb/>
your tife. Atways, Karen.<lb/>
golden<lb/>
corral<lb/>
STEAKS, BUFFET &amp; BAKERY<lb/>
504 SW Greenville Blvd<lb/>
Greenville, NC 27834<lb/>
Phone:(919)756-4412<lb/>
GOLDEN CHOICE BUFFET<lb/>
INCLUDES:<lb/>
?Salad Makings<lb/>
?Prepared Salads<lb/>
?Potato Bar<lb/>
?Hot Meats<lb/>
?Bakery<lb/>
?Hot Vegetables<lb/>
?Specialty Items<lb/>
?Fresh Fruit<lb/>
?Dessert Bar<lb/>
?Carved Meats<lb/>
Nightly<lb/>
Steaks, Seafood &amp; Chicken Entrees$2.99 - 6.99'<lb/>
rolden Choice BuffetLunch $4.99Dinner $5.29<lb/>
 -B ??? h warn m lb wmm ?? mb warn I<lb/>
i<lb/>
I Sirloin Tip Celebration!<lb/>
Siriion Tips Dinner with choke of Mushroom<lb/>
or Grilled Onions and Peppers<lb/>
i-Any purchase of an entree.<lb/>
I I buffer and a beverage <lb/>
$W Gritted Onions and Peppers <lb/>
3.89 i!$i.ooo<lb/>
Please present coupon when<lb/>
ordering.<lb/>
Offer good at participating. Golden<lb/>
Corral restaurants only.<lb/>
?alia in combination with<lb/>
Not vol<lb/>
Offer good<lb/>
combina1<lb/>
Hher offei<lb/>
through I<lb/>
1993.<lb/>
any<lb/>
December 16,<lb/>
I Please pre sent coupon when<lb/>
I Offer good at participating Golden I<lb/>
sj? KP1 ??qw.?w ?i ?<lb/>
I Not valid tn combination with any ?<lb/>
roti?J?Slteu.u I<lb/>
II<lb/>
n combination <lb/>
Offer good through December 16,<lb/>
1993.<lb/>
b<lb/>
Valid Only at Golden Corral of Greenville<lb/>
JU<lb/>
VaM Only at Ooidsn Corral of Onwnria<lb/>
Scholarships<lb/>
Available<lb/>
Looking for a scholarship? Air<lb/>
Force ROTC has two-through four-<lb/>
year scholarships that can cover<lb/>
your tuition and other expenses, plus<lb/>
$100 per academic month, tax free.<lb/>
Find out if you qualify.<lb/>
Talk to :<lb/>
Captain Steve Cooke<lb/>
307 Wright Annex<lb/>
757-6597<lb/>
Leadership Exceuence Starts Here<lb/>
BEMBWWJSMST<lb/>
<pb facs="00058444_0003"/><lb/>
?<lb/>
December 7, 1993<lb/>
The East Carolinian 3<lb/>
Frank Zappa composer<lb/>
musician, dead at 52<lb/>
Family said he "left for his final tour"<lb/>
?<lb/>
tioi<lb/>
mu-<lb/>
speech, has died ol prostate can-<lb/>
cer. 1 le was 52.<lb/>
Zappa died Saturday<lb/>
evening, and was buried Sun-<lb/>
da in a private ceremony in<lb/>
Los Angeles, said family friend<lb/>
Jim Nagle.<lb/>
"Composer Frank Zappa<lb/>
left for his final tour jut before<lb/>
6p.m. Saturday the family said<lb/>
in a statement released Sunday<lb/>
night.<lb/>
Zappa's wife, Gail, and<lb/>
four children, Moon Unit, 26,<lb/>
Dweezil, 24, Ahmet, 19, and<lb/>
Diva, 14, were with him when<lb/>
he died at his Los Angeles home.<lb/>
Zappa's long illness rarely<lb/>
stopped him from composing,<lb/>
recording and performing, or<lb/>
trying to defend lyrics against<lb/>
censors.<lb/>
"As a musician, as a com-<lb/>
poser he was absolutely driven,<lb/>
relentlessly driven. The man<lb/>
lived to create art said jour-<lb/>
nalist and longtime friend Rip<lb/>
Rense.<lb/>
"If he loved anything bet-<lb/>
ter than art, it was his life, it was<lb/>
his family Rense said.<lb/>
Zappa made his name in<lb/>
the late 1960s when he led his<lb/>
band the Mothers of Invention<lb/>
in what he called "sonic mutila-<lb/>
tions With the band or as a<lb/>
solo artist, he released about 50<lb/>
albums, including "Freak Out<lb/>
"Hot Rats and "Sheik<lb/>
Yerbouti<lb/>
Zappa released "Yellow<lb/>
Shark" in 1992, but his illness<lb/>
forced him to cut short a related<lb/>
tour. Before his death he com-<lb/>
pleted another album, "Civili-<lb/>
zation: Phaze III which is<lb/>
scheduled for release in the<lb/>
spring, said Nagle.<lb/>
He often joked about how<lb/>
music industry officials told him<lb/>
his songs had "no commercial<lb/>
potential and he ripped group-<lb/>
ies who cared only about bands<lb/>
with "a thing in the charts<lb/>
But he did have several<lb/>
hits, including "Dancin' Fool<lb/>
which lampooned the disco<lb/>
craze, and "Valley Girl fea-<lb/>
turing his daughter, Moon Unit.<lb/>
She spoke-sang the lingo of sub-<lb/>
urban California shopping-mall<lb/>
teens, like, "Gag me with a<lb/>
spoon<lb/>
Zappa also won a Grammy<lb/>
in 1988 for his album "Jazz From<lb/>
Hell" for best rock instrumental<lb/>
performance. Zappa beat out his<lb/>
son, Dweezil, also a performer,<lb/>
for the honor.<lb/>
"I think that Frank went<lb/>
about as far as it went (musi-<lb/>
cally) said former Mothers of<lb/>
Invention member Elliott<lb/>
Ingber.<lb/>
"When you do something<lb/>
good, it takes two to tango. He<lb/>
did his part by putting his mu-<lb/>
sic out there. Now it's up to<lb/>
people to listen to it he said.<lb/>
While Zappa was a rock<lb/>
guitar virtuoso and a singer, he<lb/>
often picked up a baton to con-<lb/>
duct his bands through classical<lb/>
compositions, which also have<lb/>
been performed by major or-<lb/>
chestras and dance ensembles.<lb/>
Conductor Zubin Mehta once<lb/>
called Zappa "one of the few<lb/>
rock musicians who knows my<lb/>
language<lb/>
Zappa was a production<lb/>
wizard, making many of his re-<lb/>
cordings in his state-of-the-art<lb/>
home studio. And he headed his<lb/>
own record labels and video pro-<lb/>
duction and merchandising<lb/>
companies, giving him nearly<lb/>
complete control over his work.<lb/>
Francis Vincent Zappa Jr<lb/>
son of Sicilian immigrants, was<lb/>
born in Baltimore on Dec. 21,<lb/>
1940.<lb/>
He began playing drums<lb/>
at age 12, taught himself how to<lb/>
compose at 14, then switched to<lb/>
guitar. He scored the film "Run<lb/>
Home Slow" in 1964, then set<lb/>
up a small recording studio in<lb/>
Cucamonga, Calif.<lb/>
"Freak Out in 1966, was<lb/>
rock's first double album. Filled<lb/>
with parodies, social commen-<lb/>
tary and early rock-opera<lb/>
touches, it also was arguably<lb/>
s firs<lb/>
ng<lb/>
ncept album, pre-<lb/>
the Beatles' "Sgt.<lb/>
i oni l Hearts Club<lb/>
re Only In It for the<lb/>
Monej in loT, a takeoff of<lb/>
"Sgt. Pepper lampooned hip-<lb/>
pie culture even as it shared<lb/>
some of its svmpathies.<lb/>
Epic battle of Pearl Harbor remembered 52 years later<lb/>
PEARL HARBOR. Hawaii<lb/>
i AP) ? Grady Lee Nelson Jr. was<lb/>
setting up chairs for a Sunday re-<lb/>
ligious service on the USS Ari-<lb/>
zona when the Japanese dropped<lb/>
their bombs. He escaped death a<lb/>
few minutes later by diving over-<lb/>
board as the ship sank.<lb/>
Fifty-two years after his es-<lb/>
cape, Nelson will be returned to<lb/>
the ship Tuesday ? to be buried<lb/>
beside his Arizona shipmates who<lb/>
died in the attack on Pearl Harbor.<lb/>
Nelson's wife, Loralee, of<lb/>
Houston, will hando er his ashes<lb/>
to a National Park Service diver,<lb/>
who will place them inside the<lb/>
rusted hulk that remains on the<lb/>
harbor floor beneath the USS Ari-<lb/>
zona Memorial.<lb/>
Nelson, who was 18 at the<lb/>
time of the attack, w en t on to spend<lb/>
the next 30 years in the Navy. He<lb/>
died June 14 at the age of 69.<lb/>
Nelson will be the ninth Ari-<lb/>
zona survivor to be buried with<lb/>
his shipmates, who remain en-<lb/>
tombed in the battleship.<lb/>
One of the 1,177 shipmates<lb/>
was Grady's uncle, Jack Nelson,<lb/>
who died when the Arizona was<lb/>
hit with a 1,760-pound bomb on<lb/>
the morning of Dec. 7,1941.<lb/>
The public ceremony, "Re-<lb/>
member World War II will in-<lb/>
clude Hawaii National Guard<lb/>
planes flying over in the "missing<lb/>
man" formation. The guest<lb/>
speaker will be Richard Best, a<lb/>
Navy captain who was a pilot<lb/>
aboard the aircraft carrier Enter-<lb/>
prise the day of the attack.<lb/>
The Navy will conduct a pri-<lb/>
vate service aboard the memorial.<lb/>
It will include prayers, wreath<lb/>
presentations, a 21-gun salute and<lb/>
the playing of taps.<lb/>
MAKE<lb/>
TOUR<lb/>
BOCKS<lb/>
We Buy More Used BooksThan<lb/>
Anyone Mown. Period<lb/>
c<lb/>
&amp;??<lb/>
516 S. Cotanche Street, 758-2616<lb/>
Opentil8 PMDec. 8,9,13&amp;14 Opentil6 PMDec. 11<lb/>
<pb facs="00058444_0004"/><lb/>
<lb/>
December 7, 1993<lb/>
walk in space Town mourns for Polly<lb/>
a thin<lb/>
ing<lb/>
as space shuttl ? backed<lb/>
awav Sunlight glinted off tl<lb/>
golden surface of the panel as it<lb/>
floated like a lost kite, dramatic<lb/>
with the blue ball ol Earth in the<lb/>
background.<lb/>
"It look- like a bird<lb/>
Thornton s.iid as the shuttle moved<lb/>
farther and farther away.<lb/>
Installing new electricity-<lb/>
generating solar panels was the<lb/>
purpose of today's spacewalk, the<lb/>
second of five to correct Hubble's<lb/>
bad vision, jitters and other prob-<lb/>
lems. The $1.6 billion telescope got<lb/>
two new pairs of gyroscopes and<lb/>
new fuses during Sunday's<lb/>
spacewalk by twoother Endeavour<lb/>
astronauts.<lb/>
Both excursions required ex-<lb/>
tra, unexpected work: tossing the<lb/>
solar panel today and fussing over<lb/>
a misaligned telescope door on<lb/>
Sunday.<lb/>
The discarded panel joined<lb/>
6,700 other pieces of space junk<lb/>
being tracked by the LJ.S. Space<lb/>
Command and was expected to<lb/>
Stay in orbit for a year before fall-<lb/>
ing through the atmosphere and<lb/>
burning up.<lb/>
Hubble's old solar wings<lb/>
shook every time the telescope<lb/>
moved in and out of daylight. The<lb/>
line that was scrapped was badly<lb/>
twisted and could not be rolled up<lb/>
for transport home. It retracted<lb/>
about a third of its 40-foot length<lb/>
and then stopped.<lb/>
While Thornton and Akers<lb/>
were detaching thedeformed panel<lb/>
late Sunday, the panel flexed with<lb/>
: id flapped<lb/>
. -line on a<lb/>
ipaci genes<lb/>
11 id new panels.<lb/>
 grave and ietf<lb/>
eight hours<lb/>
Sunday,held<lb/>
gned door to the<lb/>
i compartment. When<lb/>
ere through, the Hubble had<lb/>
irking gyroscopes again to<lb/>
guide it. three electronics units to<lb/>
run the g rosand a new set of eight<lb/>
fuses.<lb/>
And early this morning, it<lb/>
also riad the new solar wings. They<lb/>
will not be unfurled until Friday.<lb/>
The astronauts "have defi-<lb/>
nitelv earned their Dr. Good wrench<lb/>
certificate, and service station<lb/>
Endeavourhasqualified fbra triple<lb/>
A rating said David Leckrone,<lb/>
I kibble's senior project scientist.<lb/>
 1 usgrave and Hoffman were<lb/>
to replace Hubble's wide field-<lb/>
planetary camera and magnetom-<lb/>
eters during spacewalk No. 3, be-<lb/>
ginning late tonight. The new cam-<lb/>
era contains corrective mirrors to<lb/>
compensate for the error in<lb/>
Hubble's primary mirror.<lb/>
The fact that the mirror had<lb/>
been ground wrong was discov-<lb/>
ered only after Hubble was<lb/>
launched in 1990. Theeffect was to<lb/>
blur the telescope's view of ex-<lb/>
tremely remote objects in the uni-<lb/>
verse.<lb/>
Thornton and Akers are to<lb/>
install a new telescope computer<lb/>
and corrective lenses for three other<lb/>
instruments on Wednesday.<lb/>
Musgrave and Hoffman axe to<lb/>
make the last planned spacewalk<lb/>
o the mission Thursday, to install<lb/>
new solar panel drive electronics<lb/>
and an ultraviolet-light detector<lb/>
switch.<lb/>
The repairs are the most ex-<lb/>
tensive, and expensive, in space<lb/>
flight history. NASA estimates<lb/>
Endeavour's 11 -day flight cost $629<lb/>
million, $251 million of that for<lb/>
new Hubble parts and related ac-<lb/>
tivity.<lb/>
PETA1 IMA Calif. (AP) ?<lb/>
l ;ioom tell o er this quiet farming<lb/>
town when the news hit: Polly<lb/>
Klaas was dead.<lb/>
The body of the 12-year-old<lb/>
was found in a roadside thicket,<lb/>
two months atter a knife-wielding<lb/>
stranger snatched her from her bed-<lb/>
room during a slumber party.<lb/>
townsfolk walked around<lb/>
Sunday with reddened eyes and<lb/>
sober faces, their hopes crushed.<lb/>
Churchgoers hugged and cried on<lb/>
street corners. Doens of candles<lb/>
flickered in a chill wind outside the<lb/>
headquarters volunteers had es-<lb/>
tablished to help in the search.<lb/>
"We did everything that was<lb/>
possible to humanly do to find our<lb/>
little Pollv said resident Dalton<lb/>
Sellinger, his eyes bleary<lb/>
Prime suspect Richard Allen<lb/>
Davis, 39, was held without bail in<lb/>
the Sonoma County Jail after being<lb/>
booked Sunday for investigation<lb/>
of kidnapping and murder. An ar-<lb/>
raignment was scheduled for Tues-<lb/>
day morning.<lb/>
"There are a lot of broken<lb/>
hearts here said Gary Judd, one<lb/>
of the people who helped organize<lb/>
the volunteer search and distrib-<lb/>
ute handbills that showed the pho-<lb/>
tograph of a fragile girl with a<lb/>
dimpled smile.<lb/>
FBI agents searched the area<lb/>
30 miles north of town where<lb/>
Polly's bodv was found late Satur-<lb/>
day. Thev looked for clues to how-<lb/>
she was killed, who did it, and<lb/>
whether she was still alive when<lb/>
Davis was briefly confronted by-<lb/>
deputies about an hour after her<lb/>
abduction.<lb/>
Polly's body was removed<lb/>
from the scene Sunday afternoon<lb/>
and taken to the Sonoma County<lb/>
coroner's office for an autopsy, po-<lb/>
lice said<lb/>
A palm print found in Polly's<lb/>
room that matched Davis' print<lb/>
apparently persuaded him to help<lb/>
authorities locate the body, FBI<lb/>
agent Rick Smith said. He would<lb/>
not prov ide any other details.<lb/>
"That was a very significant<lb/>
clue that led us to investigate fur-<lb/>
ther he said at the search site<lb/>
Sunday.<lb/>
Davis, a convicted kidnap-<lb/>
per, was arrested Tuesday for vio-<lb/>
lating parole. He was serving a 30-<lb/>
day sentence for drunken driving<lb/>
before being booked Sunday.<lb/>
Davis was confronted by<lb/>
Sonoma County Sheriff's deputies<lb/>
about 90 minutes after the kidnap-<lb/>
ping on Oct. 1.<lb/>
A woman had reported him<lb/>
trespassing on her property just<lb/>
east of Santa Rosa, about 20 miles<lb/>
north of Petaluma.<lb/>
Deputies responded and con-<lb/>
fronted Davis, whose car was stuck<lb/>
in a ditch. They searched his car<lb/>
and checked to see if he was<lb/>
wanted. Finding nothing, they let<lb/>
him go minutes later.<lb/>
The deputies did not know<lb/>
that an abduction had taken place<lb/>
because they were listening to a<lb/>
different radio channel. Davis was<lb/>
stopped for drunk driving on Oct.<lb/>
19 in Mendocino County to the<lb/>
north, but was released.<lb/>
The break in the case came<lb/>
Nov. 28, when the woman who<lb/>
repoited Davis as trespassing<lb/>
called deputies about evidence on<lb/>
her property linked to the kidnap-<lb/>
ping.<lb/>
A check was run on Davis'<lb/>
criminal record, which turned out<lb/>
to be extensive and the evidence<lb/>
was sent to an FBI lab. Davis was<lb/>
arrested at a house just north of<lb/>
L'kiah, about 70 miles north of<lb/>
Petaluma.<lb/>
The arrest had cheered vol-<lb/>
unteers, who thought that they<lb/>
might be closer to getting Polly-<lb/>
back.<lb/>
But Saturday night, the tragic<lb/>
news flashed around town.<lb/>
Defense attorney questions<lb/>
detective in Seagroves trial<lb/>
DURHAM (A P) -A defense<lb/>
attorney continued his attack to-<lb/>
day on police methods in the in-<lb/>
vestigation of Michael Seagroves,<lb/>
a homeowner charged with killing<lb/>
an intruder who broke into his<lb/>
house m March.<lb/>
Seagroves is charged with<lb/>
manslaughter and assault in the<lb/>
death of Jamal Elliott and the<lb/>
wounding of Clifton Taft Hester<lb/>
on March IS. I hey were among<lb/>
tour teenagers Seagroves caught<lb/>
trying to steal a motorcycle in his<lb/>
garage. Defense lawyer William<lb/>
Thomas started last week picking<lb/>
apart the testimony ot Durham de-<lb/>
tective D.L. Dowdy, who investi-<lb/>
gated the case.<lb/>
At issue is whetherSeagroves<lb/>
used too much force when he fired<lb/>
his .22 caliber rifle at the teenagers.<lb/>
The prosecution has presented evi-<lb/>
dence showing the youths were<lb/>
running away when he fired.<lb/>
The defense contends<lb/>
Seagroves felt threatened when<lb/>
two of them ran toward him and<lb/>
that he was justified in shooting.<lb/>
Dowdy testified today that a<lb/>
word was left out of the transcript<lb/>
of Seagroves' statement to police.<lb/>
Thetranscript reads 1 was<lb/>
inside my garage <lb/>
Thomas asked Dowdy to play<lb/>
the tape for the jury. The tape has<lb/>
Seagroves saving 1 wasalways<lb/>
inside my garage<lb/>
Police statements introduced<lb/>
as evidence have Seagroves tell-<lb/>
ing police that he fired a burst<lb/>
inside his garage, and then went<lb/>
to the door and tired outside at the<lb/>
fleeing teens.<lb/>
"There was a word left out<lb/>
of the transcription; the word 'al-<lb/>
ways " Thomas said<lb/>
 The tape speaks for itself<lb/>
 there's an additional word<lb/>
Dowdv replied.<lb/>
Thomas also said Seagroves<lb/>
told Dowdy in his taped state-<lb/>
i .lent that two of the teens  were<lb/>
coming right towards him and he<lb/>
panicked and he tired  he was so<lb/>
scared and confused. He told you<lb/>
he really felt threatened when they<lb/>
changed directions It did ap-<lb/>
pear they were running toward<lb/>
him .<lb/>
Thomas asked Dowdy if he<lb/>
tried to get Seagroves to explain<lb/>
anv contradictions in his state-<lb/>
ments. Dowdv said he did not.<lb/>
Thomas' cross-examination<lb/>
of Dowdv lasted about 90 minutes<lb/>
and included detailed questions<lb/>
about inconsistencies between the<lb/>
scene at Seagroves' house and<lb/>
police reports and recollections.<lb/>
Before finishing, Thomas<lb/>
accused Dowdy of trying to trick<lb/>
Seagroves into making an incrimi-<lb/>
nating statement.<lb/>
Texas-2-Step The Club<lb/>
507 N. Greene Street, Greenville, NC<lb/>
presents the<lb/>
NW<lb/>
Northwest Airlines is cutting<lb/>
regular domestic fares for the holi-<lb/>
day period by up to 30 percent start-<lb/>
ing today.<lb/>
The sale fares, good for travel<lb/>
within thecontinental United States<lb/>
from Dec. 13 to fan. 5, must be pur-<lb/>
chased at least seven davs in ad-<lb/>
vance of travel and no later than<lb/>
PHONE<lb/>
Dec. 10. The special fares are non-<lb/>
refundable and other restrictions<lb/>
apply. The discounts are not avail-<lb/>
able for travel Dec. 23-24 and Jan. 2,<lb/>
Northwest said Sunday.<lb/>
Samplesale fares include$219<lb/>
each way between Boston and Los<lb/>
Angeles and $99 ea h way between<lb/>
Memphis and Chic ago.<lb/>
Continued from page 1<lb/>
may not have tried and, because its<lb/>
free, there are no strings attached<lb/>
said Chip Underhill from 1-800-<lb/>
Collect.<lb/>
So how do these certificates<lb/>
work? You make a phone call<lb/>
through 1 -800-Collect, to whomever<lb/>
you wish. Then, send the person<lb/>
you called your certificate. When<lb/>
thev receive the bill, the certificate is<lb/>
to be mailed in as payment for the<lb/>
phone call.<lb/>
"Everyone is looking forward<lb/>
to seeing family and friends during<lb/>
vacation said Patricia Proferesof<lb/>
1-800-Collect. "With 1-800-CoUect,<lb/>
they can make arrangements?for<lb/>
free?to get together<lb/>
Fifty other schools across the<lb/>
nation are participating in this pro-<lb/>
motion. Only three schools in N.C<lb/>
are receiving the promotion, ECU,<lb/>
UNC Greensboro and UNC Char-<lb/>
lotte.<lb/>
The Honors Program congratulates<lb/>
the Graduating Seniors of Fall 1993<lb/>
who are Graduates<lb/>
of the Honors Program<lb/>
Dawn Marie Clough<lb/>
Daniel Scott Colter<lb/>
Elizabeth Walker Freeman<lb/>
(grad Spring 1993)<lb/>
Amy Jean Listeman<lb/>
Ethan Hess Skemp<lb/>
John William VanAlst<lb/>
Graduation from the Honors Program requires 24<lb/>
hours in honors courses with a 3.4 GPA.<lb/>
December 9th - 8 pm to 10 pm Rock Sidt<lb/>
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BUYERS MARKET'MEMORIAL DRIVE 055-<lb/>
<pb facs="00058444_0005"/><lb/>
-<lb/>
December 7, 1993<lb/>
The East Carolinian 5<lb/>
DADDY<lb/>
Continued from page 1<lb/>
CHANCELLOR<lb/>
Continued from page 1<lb/>
irtth<lb/>
I ha use to<lb/>
park note read. Am<lb/>
getting a special sticker from Traf-<lb/>
fic Services ? they said 1 could<lb/>
pick it up today (Wed.)<lb/>
"That's abuse Matthews<lb/>
said after learning that the car was<lb/>
stil on campus. He said he<lb/>
planned to speak to Bostrom per-<lb/>
sonally.<lb/>
In a telephone interview last<lb/>
Wednesday, Bostrom said she was<lb/>
previously unaware thatshecould<lb/>
not use the special permit sticker<lb/>
on her own car. "I realize I'm not<lb/>
alumni or staff she said.<lb/>
"My father is real active in<lb/>
the alumni Bostrom said. "My<lb/>
father said, T give enough money<lb/>
to ECU, if I'm not going to use it,<lb/>
you should be able to use it<lb/>
Bostrom told TEC that she<lb/>
recently discovered a medical con-<lb/>
dition that would require her to<lb/>
park as close to her residence as<lb/>
possible. She said at the time that<lb/>
ECU Parking Services was send-<lb/>
ing her a sticker.<lb/>
"She may have a legitimate<lb/>
medical excuse Matthews said,<lb/>
"but I told her she shouldn't be<lb/>
parked on campus until this is<lb/>
taken care of<lb/>
This is not the first time<lb/>
Bostrom has had parking prob-<lb/>
lems.<lb/>
"She's got two tickets under<lb/>
appeal from Aug. 18 said Nancy<lb/>
Roberson, appeals coordinator at<lb/>
Traffic Services. "These haven't<lb/>
been heard yet because it took us<lb/>
a month to figure out who she<lb/>
was, since she isn't a registered<lb/>
student<lb/>
Roberson said Bostrom cur-<lb/>
rently has a freshman decal, and a<lb/>
violation from Dec. 1 which has<lb/>
not been appealed or paid.<lb/>
Roberson said she is unaware of a<lb/>
request for a medical sticker.<lb/>
"We only issue medical<lb/>
passes to students with decals<lb/>
Roberson said, and added that the<lb/>
student must produce a note ei-<lb/>
ther from Health Services or an<lb/>
outside doctor explaining the rea-<lb/>
son for the medical pass.<lb/>
Roberson said Traffic Services<lb/>
usually only sends medical passes<lb/>
through the mail during early regis-<lb/>
tration. In the firstphone interview,<lb/>
Bostrom said that Traffic Services<lb/>
was sending her a medical pass. In<lb/>
a second phone interview she said<lb/>
"Imightbe when asked if she was<lb/>
pursuing a medical sticker.<lb/>
Special permit stickers are dis-<lb/>
tributed through several offices. Mr.<lb/>
Bostrom received his through Insti-<lb/>
tutional Advancement.<lb/>
"We probably have 30-35<lb/>
people who have these patron<lb/>
stickers through our office said<lb/>
Jim Lanier, vice chancellor for Insti-<lb/>
tutiona Advancement. "They go to<lb/>
major donors, people who contrib-<lb/>
ute $100,000 or more, and to the<lb/>
chairman and the executive com-<lb/>
mittee of the ECU Foundation he<lb/>
said.<lb/>
The Board of Directors of the<lb/>
Alumni Associationand the invest-<lb/>
ment committee of the ECU Foun-<lb/>
dation also receive patron stickers,<lb/>
Lanier said.<lb/>
"These are all volunteers he<lb/>
said. "This is our way of saying<lb/>
'thanks but we clearly state in the<lb/>
presentation of the stickers that the<lb/>
stickers can only be used on indi-<lb/>
viduals'cars. Mr. Bostrom 'sdaugh-<lb/>
ter was clearly in violation, and <lb/>
we called him and reminded him<lb/>
of the limitations<lb/>
Lanier said the people issued<lb/>
stickers are very rarely on<lb/>
and that besides extend-<lb/>
ing thanks for their time and dona-<lb/>
tions, "We like the idea of having<lb/>
very successful people riding<lb/>
aroui id with an ECU sticker on their<lb/>
persona cars<lb/>
S. ime individuals, wishing to<lb/>
remain anonvmous, question the<lb/>
validity of anyone receiving such a<lb/>
sticker. The com p laint a rose tha t if a<lb/>
person is of such prestige, any park-<lb/>
ing violation will be taken care of<lb/>
anyway.<lb/>
"This method simply seems a<lb/>
cleaner way of doing it, than fixing<lb/>
a parking ticket Lanier said. "It<lb/>
seems much more appropriate<lb/>
Lanier said, to the best of his<lb/>
knowledge, this incident is the first<lb/>
time in eight or nine years that a<lb/>
problem of abuse has occurred.<lb/>
"We clearly go through the<lb/>
rules  patrons are allowed to<lb/>
park in student or faculty parking<lb/>
spacesonly Laniersaid. "Whether<lb/>
Mr. Bostrom gives $1,000 or $1<lb/>
million ? that doesn't give him the<lb/>
right to transfer the sticker to some-<lb/>
one else's car<lb/>
A day after the first interview,<lb/>
Bostrom requested that her com-<lb/>
ments regarding her father be re-<lb/>
tracted. She said her father felt his<lb/>
relationship with individuals at the<lb/>
Alumni house would be jeopar-<lb/>
dized, and Bostrom voiced concerns<lb/>
about jeopardizing their father-<lb/>
daughter relationship.<lb/>
TEC explained that off-the-<lb/>
record comments need to be clari-<lb/>
fied a t the time of the interview, and<lb/>
TEC maintains off-the-record agree-<lb/>
ments with public officials only.<lb/>
Private citizens are subject to be<lb/>
quoted at any time. Bostrom was<lb/>
aware that she was speaking to a<lb/>
reporter, and she did not use discre-<lb/>
tion with her comments.<lb/>
While the situation regarding<lb/>
the parking sticker has been clari-<lb/>
fied, some questions remain con"<lb/>
cerning non-ECU students living<lb/>
on campus.<lb/>
Amaro said that these PCC<lb/>
students do not receive priority over<lb/>
ECU students. "I think we're trying<lb/>
to be as fair as possible he said.<lb/>
"These students, after acceptance<lb/>
conditions are met, cannot go<lb/>
through return housing, they're<lb/>
given the same priority as fresh-<lb/>
men<lb/>
Jarvis is one of the more com-<lb/>
petitive residence halls to get into<lb/>
for students, and this "no-retum-<lb/>
housing" policy means these PCC<lb/>
students have as great a chance of<lb/>
getting a Jarvis room as anyone in<lb/>
the incoming freshman class.<lb/>
In Bostrom's case, Amaro said<lb/>
she was in the right place a t the right<lb/>
time.<lb/>
" A space was opened, we had<lb/>
no one waiting, and we had a bunch<lb/>
of cancellations Amaro said. "The<lb/>
space was offered to her<lb/>
"We assign them last Dr.<lb/>
Matthews said. "We don't bump<lb/>
anyone<lb/>
1011 FCharles Blvd.<lb/>
Our Trail's Arc Also On The Water<lb/>
G?T<lb/>
GIFTS<lb/>
6trT K???$<lb/>
Alt ft$?s<lb/>
patagonla' WG3<lb/>
For instance, when examining the<lb/>
redevelopment of the downtown<lb/>
area, the needs of the community<lb/>
must be surveyed, as well as help-<lb/>
ing the small businesses get started.<lb/>
The groups included in the<lb/>
process are the SBTDC, the Re-<lb/>
gional Development Institute, the<lb/>
Center for Applied Technology and<lb/>
the Survey Research Laboratory.<lb/>
"I want all of these units to<lb/>
work together to solve the whole<lb/>
problem by solving each individual<lb/>
PRESENTS<lb/>
problem Delia said.<lb/>
These centers are important<lb/>
in ECU's efforts to provide out-<lb/>
reach services to the region and<lb/>
also to promote economic devel-<lb/>
opment.<lb/>
"We are at the heart of the<lb/>
public service outreach programs<lb/>
of East Carolina University he<lb/>
said.<lb/>
Delia graduated with a de-<lb/>
gree in political science from<lb/>
Drew University in Madison, N .J.<lb/>
Continued from page 1<lb/>
He has spent much of his life trav-<lb/>
eling. After being born in Tripoli,<lb/>
Libya, Delia spent 11 years on the<lb/>
go with his parents in North Af-<lb/>
rica, Italy and through Libya. He<lb/>
attended high school in Rome,<lb/>
and later lived in Chew Chase,<lb/>
Md.<lb/>
Delia is not new to ECU. He<lb/>
was the director of the SBTDC<lb/>
regional center at ECU from 1986-<lb/>
1990. From 1982-1986, he directed<lb/>
development and marketing for<lb/>
the Greater Camden Develop-<lb/>
ment Corporation in<lb/>
Blackwood, N.J.<lb/>
Currently, Delia is the<lb/>
president of the Entrepreneur-<lb/>
ial Development Council of<lb/>
Eastern North Carolina and an<lb/>
ex-officio member of the board<lb/>
of directories of the N .C. Down-<lb/>
town Redevelopment Associa-<lb/>
tion. He is also a member of the<lb/>
Health Care Coalition with the<lb/>
Pitt County Medical Society.<lb/>
can reduce and recycle. In addi-<lb/>
tion to avoiding extra boxes and<lb/>
paper, Hudson offers several al-<lb/>
ternatives to traditional wrapping<lb/>
paper.<lb/>
Giving presents in reusable<lb/>
containers, wrapping presents in<lb/>
newspaper or brown paper bags<lb/>
and using recycled and recyclable<lb/>
paper are all more environmen-<lb/>
tally friendly than new, heavy<lb/>
wrapping paper.<lb/>
Unfortunately, Pitt County<lb/>
does not recycle wrapping paper.<lb/>
"It's hard to find any markets for<lb/>
the mixed paper. Paper can only<lb/>
be recycled two or three times and<lb/>
some of the wrapping paper is<lb/>
made from recycled paper al-<lb/>
ready Hudson said.<lb/>
Hudson also suggests a re-<lb/>
cycling bin or container, a reus-<lb/>
able cloth lunch or tote bag or a<lb/>
coffee mug or thermos as unusual<lb/>
presents to give this Christmas.<lb/>
As usual, live trees will be<lb/>
recycled in various locations<lb/>
around Greenville this year. The<lb/>
trees are used on the coast to pro-<lb/>
tect against erosion. Hudson asks<lb/>
that people recycling trees be care-<lb/>
ful to remove all the decora"ions.<lb/>
"We can't remove the plas-<lb/>
tic icicles and they get caught up<lb/>
in the shredder Hudson said A<lb/>
lot of people think they are made<lb/>
out of metal, but they are really<lb/>
made out of plastic<lb/>
SKI TRIP<lb/>
FEBRUARY F<lb/>
??J3cii" actt6c??ozej<lb/>
$12()I:()RSTl'l)I-TS SI30I;0R FAULTY. STAI:l- MU'KSTS KEi9<lb/>
ECU<lb/>
x n<lb/>
Cont'd<lb/>
from pg.1<lb/>
ence and one will go to a graduate<lb/>
in education.<lb/>
Various job search services<lb/>
will be provided to graduates now<lb/>
and for months afterward,<lb/>
through Career Services.<lb/>
"If the December graduates<lb/>
have still not registered, they can<lb/>
still attend workshops and use the<lb/>
SIGI computer (by appointment)<lb/>
until Aug. 30 without a fee said<lb/>
Dr. James Westmoreland, Direc-<lb/>
tor of Career Services.<lb/>
Graduates are encouraged to<lb/>
take advantage of this opportu-<lb/>
nity, for according to<lb/>
Westmoreland, the best opportu-<lb/>
nities are for those students that<lb/>
take part in the workshops early,<lb/>
and are prepared with all neces-<lb/>
sary data when employers call tor<lb/>
references from the career services<lb/>
offices for potential employee can-<lb/>
didates.<lb/>
Even if you have attended or<lb/>
visited the career service office<lb/>
with ENGL 3880, with another<lb/>
class or department, a fraternity<lb/>
or sorority, or a dorm or hall<lb/>
group, graduates still need to<lb/>
come by and register as soon as<lb/>
possible.<lb/>
"There is a lot of work to be<lb/>
done in many settings, so it is my<lb/>
belief that there can be a lot of jobs<lb/>
to carry out the work that needs to<lb/>
be done Westmoreland said.<lb/>
BOOKTRADER<lb/>
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FAST, FREE DELIVERY<lb/>
Looks like a<lb/>
yivarin night.<lb/>
It's 10 PM. You've crammed for finals<lb/>
all week. Took two today. And<lb/>
now you've got to pack an entire<lb/>
semester's worth of Philosophy into<lb/>
one take-home exam, in one night.<lb/>
But how do you stay awake when<lb/>
you're totally wiped? Revive<lb/>
with Vivarin. Safe as coffee,<lb/>
Vivarin helps keep you awake<lb/>
and mentally alert for hours.<lb/>
So when you have pen in<lb/>
hand, but sleep on the brain,<lb/>
make it a Vivarin night!<lb/>
? only n directed Contains caffeine equivalent to 2 cup ot code<lb/>
( 1993 SmtthKlln? Beecham<lb/>
mmmt ????. ?<lb/>
?? .  lfWC <lb/>
? ?<lb/>
<pb facs="00058444_0006"/><lb/>
? The East Carolinian ?<lb/>
Opinion<lb/>
December 7. 1993<lb/>
The East Carolinian<lb/>
Lindsay Fernandez<lb/>
Gregon Dickens I<lb/>
Matthew A. Hcli<lb/>
Printed on<lb/>
Karen Hasseil<lb/>
Maureen Rich<lb/>
Julie Totten ) IW es Tinkham. ,oma I at utivt<lb/>
Laura Wright litorKell Kellis: t  utive<lb/>
Robert S. Todd SpotSllev Furlough. 4HMf ?vecutive<lb/>
Brian Olson ATonva Heath . unt - u'l utive<lb/>
Ami E. Virtz, Opinion Pagt Editor Amelia Yongue. Copy EditorBrandon Perr t,count E.ti hum<lb/>
Phebe Toler Copy Editor<lb/>
100 recycled paper<lb/>
Tony Dunn, Business Marnier<lb/>
Margie O'Shea, Circulation Manager<lb/>
Burt Aycock, Liyout Manager<lb/>
Franco Sacchi Asst. Layout Manager<lb/>
Mike Ashley, Creative Director<lb/>
Elain Calmon, Aot Creative Director<lb/>
Cedric Van Buren, Photo Editor<lb/>
Chris Kemple, Staff Illustrator<lb/>
Matt MacDonaid, Systems Manager<lb/>
Deborah Daniel, Secretarx<lb/>
Serving the ECl commumt nee 1925, 77e Eos Cmtoimian publishes 12.000 copies ever Tuesday and Thursday. The masthead<lb/>
editona! in each edition is the opinion at the Editorial Board. The East Carolouan welcomes letters, limited to 250 wools, which may be edited<lb/>
for decencv or brevity. The East Carolinian reserves the right to edit or reject letters for publication Letters should be addressed to Opinion<lb/>
Editor. 77ie East Carolinian. Publications Bldg ECU. Greenville. N.C 27SS8353. For more information, call 1919) 7S7-666<lb/>
Star date 93l2.07:TeC ssmastcrr rnds<lb/>
At times, we at The East Carolinian work<lb/>
better as a unit than the crew of the Enterprise.<lb/>
Some of us even like to pretend that we are mem-<lb/>
bers of NCC1701-D. So hold tight to your phasers<lb/>
and set on stun. This is where the fun begins<lb/>
Welcome to TEC Trek.<lb/>
"Journalism. The final frontier. These are the<lb/>
voyages of Tlte East Carolinian. It's continuing<lb/>
mission: to explore strange new stories, to seek out<lb/>
new leads and award-winning computer layouts,<lb/>
to boldly go where no journalist has gone before<lb/>
(This is the point in the opening where our Man-<lb/>
aging Editor, Gregory Dickens (O'Brien to us)<lb/>
peels out at warp speed in Vie East Carolinian's<lb/>
shuttlecraft on his way to pick up pictures at Deep<lb/>
Space Nine: The Daily Reflector. That is, when it is in<lb/>
working condition. The van, not The Reflector.)<lb/>
Chief Medical Officer's Log: Dr. Beverly<lb/>
Crusher here. (You know, the redhead with the<lb/>
band-aids and hypospray) Stardate 9312.07. I<lb/>
must bid a fond farewell to various members of<lb/>
the ship. Though we hate to see them go, they will<lb/>
depart for greater challenges and adventures that<lb/>
even those of us stationed aboard the TEC Enter-<lb/>
prise will miss out on. Someday, we too will<lb/>
venture out on an away-mission into that un-<lb/>
marked territory, but not quite yet.<lb/>
I hope they will fondly think back to those<lb/>
numerous caffeine-enhanced nights spent<lb/>
huddled around the printers, praying for them to<lb/>
work and the stimulating conversation that went<lb/>
along with the wait. Yes, those are fond memories,<lb/>
indeed. Oh, joy! Oh, rapture!<lb/>
Luckily, those of us who are continuing our<lb/>
tour (including yours, truly) will be subject to<lb/>
continuing Unity printer fits (Cmdr. Data reports<lb/>
that "the deuterium content of the hyper-quan-<lb/>
tum chamber must have an intermix that is di-<lb/>
rectly proportional to thepre-dysfunctioning warp<lb/>
coil inhibiting kilo-frequencies So that's what it<lb/>
is Hopefully Cmdr. Geordi La Forge is working<lb/>
on that problem, as we speak, in Engineering.)<lb/>
Tfie East Carolinian is saluting the outstand-<lb/>
ing service, dedication andfunness of those leav-<lb/>
ing:<lb/>
?Counsellor Karen Hasseil Rank: News<lb/>
Editor. Species: Wild EeepBetazed. Karen's<lb/>
work on TEC was not only professional, but her<lb/>
fascination with the sound "eeep" marks her as<lb/>
:one of a kind. Winner of Mentos?The<lb/>
Freshmaker Award (a lifetime supply of<lb/>
Mentos). Her future plans are to move to Califor-<lb/>
nia, attend law school and sue the pants off some<lb/>
low-life scum. Awards include: The Model Mast-<lb/>
head Contributor Award 1993; Benefactor to the<lb/>
successful program: The M. Rich? Computer<lb/>
Layout In A Hash. Deanna Troi at heart.<lb/>
?Lt Cmdr. Alex Ferguson Rank: Cartoon-<lb/>
ist?Wang TV, Editorial Columnist. Species: An-<lb/>
droid. Alex's fascination with alliteration aided in<lb/>
various headline contributions, not to mention<lb/>
being fired several times by Cmdr. Joe Horst<lb/>
during thesummer interim monthsofstardate 93.<lb/>
Recipient of The Disappearing Hair Award, fur-<lb/>
nished by the revered TEC Stat J chine. Home<lb/>
Planet: SCAD.<lb/>
?Lt Cmdr. Eric Manning Rank: Cartoon-<lb/>
ist?Wang TV. Species: Bajoran. Eric worked as<lb/>
a cartoonist on Pirate Comics for four and a half<lb/>
years. Credits include: pioneering the study of<lb/>
Jenkins Positronic Stat Machine with Lt. Geordi<lb/>
La Forge. Sometimes mistaken for Lieutenant<lb/>
Reginald Barclay. Faithful companion: Ensign<lb/>
Laveme.<lb/>
?Lt Julie Totten Rank: Lifestyle Editor.<lb/>
Species: Rubicun. Julie's work on TEC strength-<lb/>
ened and broadened the Lifestyle Page by intro-<lb/>
ducing CD Review and Poetry Corner, with em-<lb/>
phasis on local talent. KnowTt as "Doolie" by close<lb/>
friends onboard TEC. Her next mission is one of<lb/>
goodwill: her ship will be the U.S.S Disney.<lb/>
?Chief of Security Rob Todd RankSports<lb/>
Editor. Species: Klingon. Rob's most noteworthy<lb/>
accomplishment while onboard TEC was the no-<lb/>
toriously censored Booty tabloid. His patience and<lb/>
adeptness when dealing with the Unity printer is<lb/>
unsurpassed and for this he will be duly noted.<lb/>
Redesigned Sports layout for future generations.<lb/>
Colorful quotes. (His orders were caught in a worrn-<lb/>
hole during a recent warp malfunction and will he<lb/>
stationed aboard TEC until further instructwns from<lb/>
Starfleet arrive.)<lb/>
?Bridge Command Specialist Matt<lb/>
MacDonaid Rank: Systems Manager Species:<lb/>
Biomorph. Matt is that proverbial glue that<lb/>
keeps TEC computers stuck together.<lb/>
?Commodore Joe Horst Rank: Macgyver.<lb/>
Species: unknown. Joe, not unlike Guinan, has<lb/>
been in the star system for an unknown period of<lb/>
time. It is even possible than they are from the<lb/>
same planet. Commanded U.S.S. Al Cohol. His<lb/>
faithful, dedicated service to TEC is a continuing<lb/>
tradition. Recent orders from Starfleet read: Commo-<lb/>
dore Horst, you 're fired<lb/>
Good luck, TECs. You will be sorely missed.<lb/>
Crusher out.<lb/>
By Alex Ferguson<lb/>
Fracas finalized as Ferguson freaks, flees<lb/>
Hey! Did you know that this is<lb/>
the last East Carolinian you'll set eyes<lb/>
on for the rest of this year? Amazed?<lb/>
Dazed? Crazed? Barely phased? Ch-<lb/>
are we too busy reading all those<lb/>
chapters on entomology we so<lb/>
nonchalantly waltzedby this semes-<lb/>
ter until now, frantically trying to<lb/>
memorize the entire digestive tract<lb/>
of ants and the complex (yet heart-<lb/>
warming) courtship between dung<lb/>
beetles?<lb/>
And being the last paper of the<lb/>
year?sniff?we'veonlyafew para-<lb/>
graphs left between us before you<lb/>
kids are off and running, like so<lb/>
many bad TV Christmas specials<lb/>
staring Loni Anderson and jimmy<lb/>
Stewart as the crotchety but lovable<lb/>
Mr. Whimbly. So I'd better make<lb/>
good with the time and space I've<lb/>
left, and bring up some sort of poi-<lb/>
gnant thought that sticks to you like<lb/>
bad fruitcake.<lb/>
I'm sure you're waiting anx-<lb/>
iously for the long winded spiel about<lb/>
this being the Season of Giving and<lb/>
all that tear-wrenching gobbledy-<lb/>
gook. And you probably expect me<lb/>
to rerninisceoverthewonderful years<lb/>
I've had, spending Christmas with<lb/>
my family. Then there's that big<lb/>
speech about how there's more to<lb/>
Christmas than presents, Santa and<lb/>
sugar-plum powderpuff what-nots<lb/>
with crinkley bows on top that the<lb/>
cat steals and, upon retiring to safety<lb/>
underneath theparents' bed,chokes<lb/>
on as it attempts to scarf it down.<lb/>
Well,forgetit There'ssomuch<lb/>
Happy Holiday message gibberish<lb/>
floating around it looks like a ticker<lb/>
tapeparadeforthelong-awaited can-<lb/>
cellation of Rosanne. You read it ev-<lb/>
erywhere, here it everywhere and<lb/>
frankly, witness so much good will<lb/>
towards fellow people that we're<lb/>
ha ving to resort to handguns to keep<lb/>
those do-gooders at bay. Come to<lb/>
think about it, we use handguns for<lb/>
just about everything except chang-<lb/>
ing channels on TV, and even then,<lb/>
Elvis gave that a go. (And speaking<lb/>
of TV, if I see that Playboy commer-<lb/>
cial with "It's good to be the Santa"<lb/>
Santa ogling over anorexic models<lb/>
conviricing our loved onesnothing's<lb/>
better for die children and middle-<lb/>
aged husbands than the gift of soft<lb/>
pommagsfortheholidaysonemore<lb/>
time, I might exercise my own gun<lb/>
rights on the Zenith)<lb/>
Face it, most of Christmas can<lb/>
seemlikeadrag. Laura Wright,bless<lb/>
her Peter Pan soul, hit the nail on the<lb/>
head last Thursday when she claimed<lb/>
Thanksgiving was getting old and<lb/>
monotonous. Ditto for the X-mas<lb/>
thing. I'm still trying to convince<lb/>
myself thatthereeven was aThanks-<lb/>
giving this year, so blinded was I by<lb/>
Christmas commercialism that<lb/>
started somewhere back in mid-Au-<lb/>
gust. I fear Christmas may be head-<lb/>
ing in the same direction as Turkey<lb/>
Day, with more gold gilded crap<lb/>
being thrust in our laps and faces.<lb/>
But don't let the hype get to<lb/>
you, people. Lookpastthegiftwrap,<lb/>
drunk Santas and Barney hype and<lb/>
focus your attention on the simple<lb/>
things that keep the holidays from<lb/>
going to Hell in a cinnamon-<lb/>
scented hand basket with a fine<lb/>
assortmentof Holly Farm cheeses.<lb/>
You've got parents, who've had<lb/>
enough time away from you that<lb/>
they'll actually be glad to see you.<lb/>
Real food for a change (Imagine,<lb/>
Kraft macaroni and cheese with<lb/>
ham!). Cheek-pinching relatives.<lb/>
Younger brothers and sisters just<lb/>
itching for your abuse. And don't<lb/>
forget the Christmas classics, like<lb/>
theGrinch and Rudolph, although<lb/>
my advice is get the videos. The<lb/>
networks are too busy with the<lb/>
lovable Mr. Whimbly to show the<lb/>
good stuff.<lb/>
So, finishupthosefinalsand<lb/>
go home. Annoy a perky sales rep<lb/>
anxious to help you find that per-<lb/>
fect gift, break one of those Christ-<lb/>
mas carol playing teddy bears (Sa-<lb/>
tanendorsesthem,Ihear)and while<lb/>
you're lovingly beating the<lb/>
beejeezus out of your kid brother,<lb/>
wish Greenville a White Christ-<lb/>
mas (huh yeah). Boo the Grinch<lb/>
for his sudden change of heart and<lb/>
toast the melting of Frosty in the<lb/>
greenhouse. Dare to enjoy the sim-<lb/>
plicities of life. Laugh at tacky<lb/>
Christmas yards. Drink fermented<lb/>
egg nog.<lb/>
Most of all, be safe, be happy<lb/>
and Merry Christmas (and all PC-<lb/>
related holidays for all races and<lb/>
religions) to you all, especially the<lb/>
family, loved ones and friends at<lb/>
the EC. This is Alex Ferguson, king<lb/>
of long-winded sentences, signing<lb/>
off.<lb/>
By John P. Adams<lb/>
AIDS: a preventable behavioral problem<lb/>
World AIDS day was last<lb/>
Wednesday. On that day, I saw or<lb/>
read over a dozen stories on AIDS<lb/>
and noticed there were a few things<lb/>
the media left out.<lb/>
Over 90 of all cases of AIDS<lb/>
could have been prevented. One of<lb/>
the things the media never seems to<lb/>
mention is the simple fact that the<lb/>
predominantnumberofAIDScases<lb/>
are behavioral. That is to say, if you<lb/>
do not participate in promiscuous<lb/>
sexual activitiesor inject drugs intra-<lb/>
venously you greatly reduce your<lb/>
chances of contracting AIDS.<lb/>
On CBS, Dr. Bob Arnot<lb/>
scorned the American people for lag-<lb/>
ging behind the Europeans in AIDS<lb/>
prevention. Arnot was referring to<lb/>
the fact that in Europe condoms are<lb/>
made readily available to everyone<lb/>
and free needles are provided for IV<lb/>
drug users. I guess if Amot had his<lb/>
way we would provide our junkies<lb/>
with free smack too.<lb/>
Bashing the Reagan and Bush<lb/>
adrrtinistrations on their slow reac-<lb/>
tion to the AIDS crisis has become<lb/>
very fashionable. However, during<lb/>
the four years of the Bush aefminis-<lb/>
tration, more money was spent on<lb/>
AIDS research and treatment then<lb/>
on cancer research and treatment.<lb/>
This is astonishing when you con-<lb/>
sider that during that four-year pe-<lb/>
riod, twice as many women died of<lb/>
breast cancer alone than the total<lb/>
number of AIDS-related deaths.<lb/>
The media has not been ex-<lb/>
actly accurate on the total number of<lb/>
new AIDS cases between January<lb/>
1993 and September 1993, as com-<lb/>
pared with the same time period in<lb/>
199Z During this nine-month time<lb/>
period in 1992, the Center for Dis-<lb/>
ease Control reported a little over<lb/>
60,000 new AIDS cases in the U.S.<lb/>
During the same nine-month time<lb/>
period in 1993, the CDC reported a<lb/>
little over 85,000 new AIDS cases in<lb/>
the U.S. This is a seemingly drastic<lb/>
increase of over 25 percent. How-<lb/>
ever, between 1992 and 1993 the<lb/>
CDC changed their definition of<lb/>
what constitutes AIDS. If they had<lb/>
been using the same definition in<lb/>
1993 which they used in 1992, there<lb/>
would actually have been 20,000<lb/>
fewer new AIDS cases.<lb/>
I do believe I hear the ch-ching<lb/>
of money in the CDC's new defini-<lb/>
tion of what constitutes AIDS. Do<lb/>
you think PresidentClintonwillheed<lb/>
their call? If President Clinton has<lb/>
his way in 1994, total federal spend-<lb/>
ing for AIDS research will increase<lb/>
21 percent to 1.3 billion dollars and<lb/>
total federal spending on AIDS pa-<lb/>
tients will increase 66 percent to 5.8<lb/>
million dollars.<lb/>
According to Mchigan State<lb/>
physiologistRobert Root-Bernstein's<lb/>
new book, Rethinking Aids, in 1994<lb/>
total federal spending on AIDS will<lb/>
be 20 times greater than total federal<lb/>
spending on cancer. I think the fed-<lb/>
eral government's message is clear;<lb/>
spending taxpayersdollars on sexual<lb/>
deviants and IV drug users is pre-<lb/>
ferred to spending taxpayers dollars<lb/>
on people who are not nearly as in<lb/>
control of what afflicts them.<lb/>
It is time for the media to<lb/>
cease their martyrdom of the ho-<lb/>
mosexual community. I am really<lb/>
tired of seeing gays portrayed as<lb/>
brave warriors in the face of the<lb/>
grave inequity of AIDS. Just once,<lb/>
I would like to see a gay man or IV<lb/>
drug user come clean and say, "I<lb/>
would not have AIDS today if I<lb/>
had not chosen this lifestyle<lb/>
lean hear those liberal voices<lb/>
chiding me right now. They are<lb/>
saying that I am just stereotyping<lb/>
AIDS as a disease of gay men and<lb/>
IV drug users. I am well aware that<lb/>
people outside the realm of homo-<lb/>
sexuality and IV drug use contract<lb/>
AIDS. However, these two groups<lb/>
have been and remain the over-<lb/>
whelming majority of those af-<lb/>
flicted with AIDS.<lb/>
In the late 80s the media and<lb/>
theCDC warned the heterosexual<lb/>
community that it was just a mat-<lb/>
ter of time before AIDS became<lb/>
rampant among them. This has<lb/>
not come to pass. AIDS cases<lb/>
among heterosexuals in the U.S. is<lb/>
well under 5 percent and not<lb/>
spreading at an alarming rate. It is<lb/>
time for the truth to be told. It is<lb/>
time for individuals to stop point-<lb/>
ing fingers and to start talcing re-<lb/>
sponsibility for their own actions.<lb/>
As I said before, 90 percent of all<lb/>
AIDS cases could have been pre-<lb/>
vented?if individuals would have<lb/>
made the right choices.<lb/>
??? ' .JIIH1U1.<lb/>
<pb facs="00058444_0007"/><lb/>
-iff<lb/>
The East Carolinian<lb/>
December 7, J993<lb/>
Classifieds<lb/>
Page 7<lb/>
For Rent<lb/>
Ringgold Towers<lb/>
IMtftfiOUBdrm .<lb/>
New Capet, hsMy naM! WMir S Smer<lb/>
S24Qmontfi<lb/>
I BWWnWLJBWWHWmM 323-8415<lb/>
FEMALE ROOMMATE<lb/>
WANTED to sublease 3 br 1<lb/>
bath house, 1 blk from cam-<lb/>
pus. $233month. Call 752-<lb/>
3472<lb/>
FEMALE ROOMMATE<lb/>
NEEDED for spring semester,<lb/>
to share a bedroom in a new<lb/>
duplex on Wyndham circle.<lb/>
Only blocks from campus.<lb/>
Mostly furnished, a must see!<lb/>
$175 a month plus 1 3 utilities.<lb/>
Call 758-1753<lb/>
WILDWOOD VILLAS- 2 bed-<lb/>
room, 1 12 bath townhouse<lb/>
with unfinished basement,<lb/>
available Jan. 1. $525 per month,<lb/>
call Chip Little 756-1234<lb/>
KINGSTON PLACE- 2 bed-<lb/>
room, 2 bath furnished<lb/>
townhouse available for spring<lb/>
semester. Short term lease<lb/>
available. $600 per month. Call<lb/>
Chip Little 756-1234<lb/>
WILDWOOD VILLAS- 2 bed-<lb/>
room, 2 12 bath townhouse<lb/>
with finished basement avail-<lb/>
able, Jan. 1. $600 per month,<lb/>
call Chip Little 756-1234<lb/>
HOUSE FOR RENT, 4th St. 3<lb/>
bedroom2 bath, sunroom,<lb/>
central air heat, enclosed back-<lb/>
yard, all yard maint. included.<lb/>
Available end Dec.Jan. 1. 758-<lb/>
6130<lb/>
SUBLEASE: 2 bedroom, 1 12<lb/>
bath ,112 blocks from cam-<lb/>
pus, $450. 752-1835<lb/>
FEMALE ROOMMATE<lb/>
NEEDED for apt. 12 block<lb/>
from campus, 3 blocks from<lb/>
downtown, 2 blocks from su-<lb/>
permarket. Rent includes<lb/>
phone, utilities, cable. Call<lb/>
757-1947<lb/>
FEMALE ROOMMATE<lb/>
NEEDED for nice 2 bedroom<lb/>
apartment. Neat, non-smoker<lb/>
preferred. Call 752-4869.<lb/>
FEMALE ROOMMATE<lb/>
NEEDED to share 4 bedroom<lb/>
apartment in Tar River for<lb/>
Spring Semester. Rent $162.50<lb/>
 14 utilities. Available after<lb/>
1220. Call 758-4332.<lb/>
ROOMMATE NEEDED to<lb/>
share2bed2bathcondo. Pool,<lb/>
tennis ct fireplace, dishwasher.<lb/>
Rent $265 cable, washdryer<lb/>
included. I am a 22 year old<lb/>
female Literature major,<lb/>
smoker. 321-1170<lb/>
NONSMOKING graduate<lb/>
mature student wanted to share<lb/>
three bedroom 112 bath<lb/>
house, furnished with storage.<lb/>
Ten minutes from ECU. $237<lb/>
month12 utilities. 830-9118<lb/>
SPACIOUS 2 bedroom apt. 2<lb/>
blocks from campus. Water,<lb/>
sewer, heat, air, and basic cable<lb/>
included. Available for Dec.<lb/>
Call 752-8900<lb/>
APARTMENT FOR RENT: 2<lb/>
bed, 1 bath new carpet, paint,<lb/>
wallpaper; all new kitchen ap-<lb/>
pliances; very roomy! Kings<lb/>
Row Apts. 752-6881 Avail. Dec.<lb/>
15 $380<lb/>
ROOMMATE WANTED to<lb/>
share a 2 bedroom apt. at Wil-<lb/>
son Acres. Fully furnished apt.<lb/>
 bedroom, washer dryer in-<lb/>
cluded. Call Dan at 758-8192<lb/>
For Rent<lb/>
CLEAN, attractive, furnished<lb/>
rooms available for female,<lb/>
non-smoking upperclassmen<lb/>
and graduate students. Shared<lb/>
kitchen, laundry and bath. For<lb/>
more info, call the Methodist<lb/>
Student Center at 758-2030 or<lb/>
830-9527<lb/>
CHEAP- share apt. with 2 oth-<lb/>
ers, share bedroom for $120<lb/>
month, 13 untilities at Village<lb/>
Green Apts. 758-5809<lb/>
ROOMMATE WANTED to<lb/>
share large house, 1 block from<lb/>
campus. Male or female,<lb/>
washer and dryer. Easy to get<lb/>
along with, Please call 757-0896<lb/>
ask for Rich or Heath.<lb/>
WESLEY VILLAGE- 2 room-<lb/>
mates male or female wanted<lb/>
for Spring semester; 3 bedroom<lb/>
duplex 4 blocks from ECU,<lb/>
washerdryer, fireplace; large<lb/>
room is $225 13 utilities mo<lb/>
smaller room is $210 13 utili-<lb/>
ties mo. Call Dave: 830-4030<lb/>
ROOM AVAILABLE-Jan. 1st<lb/>
in 3 bedroom apartment. Great<lb/>
location, downtown above<lb/>
Filibuster's. $193 a month 1<lb/>
4 utilities. Must see- for more<lb/>
info, call 830-1019.<lb/>
HOUSE FOR RENT. Holly<lb/>
street betweenFourth and Fifth<lb/>
streets. One or two persons.<lb/>
One block from downtown.<lb/>
Available immediately. $280 a<lb/>
month- 758-7872<lb/>
APARTMENT FOR RENT: 1<lb/>
bedroom, 1 bath, great location<lb/>
near campus. Call 758-8328<lb/>
leave message. Available Dec.<lb/>
15<lb/>
SUBLEASE- now available for<lb/>
1 bedroom apt. at Kings Arms.<lb/>
Lease now fhru July anyone<lb/>
interested please call 752-7973.<lb/>
Dec. rent already paid.<lb/>
SUBLEASE: for spring '94.<lb/>
Pinebrook Apartments. 2 bed-<lb/>
room, 1 12 bath with basic<lb/>
cable, water and sewer. Laun-<lb/>
dry room swimming pool.<lb/>
$350 month. Call 757-2707-<lb/>
leave message.<lb/>
SHPOCK LOOKY POOK 2<lb/>
bedroom 112 bath Oakmont<lb/>
Square apartment. $410<lb/>
month includes cable, water<lb/>
and sewage. Call 355-3454 be-<lb/>
fore Dec. 16 or (704) 845-8262<lb/>
after.<lb/>
FEMALE ROMMATE wanted<lb/>
non smoker, mature, preferably<lb/>
graduate student to share a two<lb/>
bedroom apartment (fur-<lb/>
nished) on 10th Sttwo blocks<lb/>
from campus.l 2 rent and 1 2<lb/>
utilities (water, cable).<lb/>
Laundryroom available. Call<lb/>
Tiffany 830-1286<lb/>
El Help Wanted<lb/>
 ? FREE TRIPS &amp; CASH ?<lb/>
Call us and find out how<lb/>
hundreds of students are al-<lb/>
ready earning free trips and<lb/>
lots of cash with America's 1<lb/>
Spring Break company!<lb/>
Choose Cancun, Bahamas, Ja-<lb/>
maica, Panama, Daytona or<lb/>
Padre! Call now! TAKE A<lb/>
BREAK STUDENT TRAVEL<lb/>
(800) 328-SAVE or (617)424-<lb/>
8222.<lb/>
THE PLAYGROUND OF<lb/>
GOLDSBORO is looking for<lb/>
enthusiastic entertainers. Ex-<lb/>
cellent hours, easy $$ and<lb/>
carpools available. Ask for Erin<lb/>
at 355-4792 or (919) 734-3777.<lb/>
El Help Wanted<lb/>
BREAKERS! BOOK EARLY<lb/>
AND SAVE! Panama City<lb/>
from $99, JamaicaCancun<lb/>
from $439, Padre $239,<lb/>
Daytona $79. Sell trips, earn<lb/>
cash, party free. Call EST 1-<lb/>
800-234-7007.<lb/>
PARTY IN THE SUN???<lb/>
Spring Break, Jamaica,<lb/>
Cancun, Bahamas, S. Padre,<lb/>
Florida including the Ultimate<lb/>
Party Package! Organize small<lb/>
group and travel free! Lowest<lb/>
prices guaranteed! Call Sun<lb/>
Splash Tours Today 1-800-426-<lb/>
7710.<lb/>
LADIES NEEDED IMMEDI-<lb/>
ATELY: earn $500 to $800 a<lb/>
week full time, part time any-<lb/>
time. Pay out daily. Playmates<lb/>
Adult Relaxation. Hwy. 58 &amp;<lb/>
13 Snow hill. Call 747-7686.<lb/>
CRUISE SHIPS NOW HIR-<lb/>
ING- Earn up to $2000 <lb/>
month working on cruise ships<lb/>
or land-tour companies.<lb/>
World Travel (Hawaii, Mexico,<lb/>
the Caribbean, etc.) Summer<lb/>
and full-time employment<lb/>
available. No experience nec-<lb/>
essary. For more info, call 1-<lb/>
206-634-0468 ext c5362<lb/>
$10-$400UP WEEKLY. Mail-<lb/>
ing brochures! Sparefull<lb/>
time. Set own hours! Rush<lb/>
Stamped envelope: Publishers<lb/>
(GI) 1821 Hillandale Rd. 1B-<lb/>
295 Durham NC 27705<lb/>
BEACH Spring break pro-<lb/>
moter. Small or large groups.<lb/>
Free trips and Cash. Call CMI<lb/>
1-800-423-5264<lb/>
STUDENT to work in local<lb/>
law office approximately 20<lb/>
hours a week doing clerical<lb/>
and general secretarial work.<lb/>
Familiarity with computers<lb/>
and word perfect required. An<lb/>
interest in going to law school<lb/>
beneficial. Send resume to Post<lb/>
Office Drawer 5026,<lb/>
Greenville, NC or call 355-0300<lb/>
PART-TIME COURIER to<lb/>
work 9am to 1pm, daily. Must<lb/>
have own transportation and<lb/>
good driving record. Duties<lb/>
include: running errands, sort-<lb/>
ing mail, and filing. Starting<lb/>
hourly wage of $4.50. If inter-<lb/>
ested, send resume or complete<lb/>
application at: Pitt Surgical,<lb/>
P.A. 905 Johns Hopkins Drive,<lb/>
Greenville.<lb/>
CP For Sale<lb/>
SPRING BREAK?Plan early,<lb/>
save $50 and get best rooms!<lb/>
Prices increase 1215! Bahamas<lb/>
Cruise 6 days includes 12 meals,<lb/>
$279! Panama City room w<lb/>
kitchen, $119! Cancun from Ra-<lb/>
leigh, $399; Jamaica from Ra-<lb/>
leigh, $429; Key West, $249;<lb/>
Daytona Room wkitchen,<lb/>
$149! 1-800-678-6386.<lb/>
MEMBERSHIP to Club For<lb/>
Women Only. Low monthly<lb/>
payments! Call Angie 931-9768.<lb/>
SPRING BREAK BAHAMAS<lb/>
CRUISE $279! 6 Days! Includes<lb/>
12 meals and all taxes! This is a<lb/>
HUGE party! Great Beaches and<lb/>
Nightlife! Hurry Prices Increase<lb/>
1210!<lb/>
1-800-678-6386.<lb/>
MOPED, Tomos, like new, only<lb/>
500 miles, up to 30 mph and 100<lb/>
mpg, excellent condition,<lb/>
$425.00 call 756-9133<lb/>
ALASKA SUMMER EM-<lb/>
PLOYMENT-fisheries. Many<lb/>
earn $2000mo. in canneries<lb/>
For Sale !? Services Offered! ggg Personals<lb/>
or $3000-$6000 mo. on fish-<lb/>
ing vessels. Many employers<lb/>
provide room, board and trans-<lb/>
portation. Over 8000 openings.<lb/>
No experience necessary! Male<lb/>
or Female. Get the necessary<lb/>
head start on next summer. For<lb/>
more info, call: 1-206-545-4155<lb/>
ext. A5362<lb/>
IGUANA: male, 1ft. long from<lb/>
head to base of tail. Of breeding<lb/>
age. Heat rocks, vitamins,<lb/>
leash included. A better deal<lb/>
than in stores. Call Doug at 758-<lb/>
3931msg.<lb/>
1986 VW QUANTUM, auto,<lb/>
cruise, power windows, air con-<lb/>
ditioning, all options, new sterio<lb/>
cass. Maintenance records.<lb/>
84,000 miles $1800. Neg. Call<lb/>
752-5811<lb/>
FOR SALE: queen size<lb/>
waterbed, sofa bed, dresser, old<lb/>
Tv. Graduating must sell. Price<lb/>
neg! Call 830-1683 leave mes-<lb/>
sage<lb/>
FOR SALE: GE washing ma-<lb/>
chine. Full size. Good condi-<lb/>
tion. $100.00 neg. Call Julie at<lb/>
758-4332. Leave message.<lb/>
YARD SALE 403 Biltmore St.<lb/>
Sat. 9-12. Everything must go.<lb/>
Cheap, Cheap, Cheap. The Zoo.<lb/>
MEMBERSHIP FOR SALE:<lb/>
The club for women only- take<lb/>
over payments, no enrollment<lb/>
fee- 16 months left on contract.<lb/>
Call Ann 8-5 at 752-5101 after<lb/>
6pm and weekends 747-5088<lb/>
FOR SALE: Computer $900;<lb/>
Concertmate musical keyboard<lb/>
$85;Vitamasterstairclimber$80;<lb/>
Exercise bike $25. All prices<lb/>
neg. Call 752-0820- leave mes-<lb/>
sage.<lb/>
1977 CHEV. MONTE CARLO.<lb/>
158K miles. Kenwood stereo,<lb/>
305 engine. Reliable (never left<lb/>
me stranded) Good condition.<lb/>
$500. Call 757-2919.<lb/>
BIKE FOR SALE- GT Talera, 4<lb/>
months old, barends, toe clips,<lb/>
u-lockmore. $340 call Paul at<lb/>
931-8666<lb/>
NEED A COUCH FOR NEXT<lb/>
SEMESTER? Comfortable, pull<lb/>
out. Must sell! Call 752-1360.<lb/>
Ask for Kelli<lb/>
SOFA BED: In good condition.<lb/>
Must sell. Asking $175, price<lb/>
neg. Call 758-8328, leave mes-<lb/>
sage.<lb/>
BUICK LASABRE WAGON,<lb/>
1983,756-9869<lb/>
COACH leather handbag;<lb/>
Mikasa wall clock; ladies<lb/>
Rpcksport Dirty Buck shoes, size<lb/>
10 m, $40; blue sofa $175; JVC<lb/>
stereo cabinet $60; girls Stride<lb/>
Rite navy shoes size 7,2E width<lb/>
$16; boys Osh Kosh denim<lb/>
sneakers size 7, $10; miscella-<lb/>
neous Christmas items. Call 752-<lb/>
9243 between 8am- 8pm.<lb/>
ONE WAY TO BOSTON<lb/>
AREA: Drive my car to Boston<lb/>
area or Southern Maine for the<lb/>
holidays. No charge: you pay<lb/>
gas only. 758-8227.<lb/>
DO YOU NEED A SCHOLAR-<lb/>
SHIP? Send a stamped self ad-<lb/>
dressed envelope to: Jordan Edu-<lb/>
cational Services, PO Box 4134<lb/>
Greenville, NC, 27836-2134<lb/>
BELLY DANCING LESSONS-<lb/>
from women, 8 to 80. A unique<lb/>
Xmasgift! Starts Jan. Great exer-<lb/>
cise. Call 355-5150.<lb/>
calibration. Please report to<lb/>
sickbay. Dr. Crusher.<lb/>
HEY, BEV Geordi and I be-<lb/>
lieve that if the recalibration<lb/>
doesn't work, a well-aimed<lb/>
phaser blast ought to do it.<lb/>
Empathicallyours, Deanna<lb/>
jjjj Greek<lb/>
?TEE<lb/>
Personals<lb/>
WRITERMUSICIAN and po-<lb/>
etic soul seeks like minded lady<lb/>
for friendship and fun. Send<lb/>
photos and correspondence to :<lb/>
Kane, PO box 8663, Greenville,<lb/>
NC 27835<lb/>
LAURA- it breaks my heart I<lb/>
will be so far away from you<lb/>
over the holidays. Love, Tho-<lb/>
mas.<lb/>
JENNIFER, I wish you all the<lb/>
bestinyourlifeinva. Youwillbe<lb/>
missed and never forgotten.<lb/>
Keep in touch and have a great<lb/>
Christmas. Love, Lindsay<lb/>
THE EASTCAROLINIAN<lb/>
EMPLOYEES, I wish you all the<lb/>
best over the holidays and to<lb/>
those graduating, "may God be<lb/>
with you Thank you for all<lb/>
your hard work this semester<lb/>
and I hope to see all of you back<lb/>
next semester. Lindsay<lb/>
SPOCK, I'm tired of playing<lb/>
games and pretending in front<lb/>
of theothers. Marry me, you cold-<lb/>
blooded elf. Love and hypos,<lb/>
McCoy.<lb/>
KIM, Mel, Sparkey, Kevin,<lb/>
Moose, Daniel,Matt, Pattie,<lb/>
Tammy, Hal, Steve, Brad,<lb/>
Sonya,Billy, Steve, Bru,Rob,<lb/>
Chewy, R2D2, Burt, Laura, my<lb/>
man and whoever I'm forget-<lb/>
ting?Think of me when you're<lb/>
walking to class in the frigid rain.<lb/>
I love ya'll, julieT.<lb/>
CONGRATULATIONS to Rob<lb/>
ongettingadoperide.He'sso fly.<lb/>
LT. CMDR. DATA: My<lb/>
tricorder indicates that your<lb/>
positronic brain may need re-<lb/>
CONGRATULATIONS to<lb/>
all graduating seniors: Jill<lb/>
Auerbach, Lynn Caldwell,<lb/>
Aleta Dunbar, Johnna<lb/>
Fussell, Nikki Trent, Lori<lb/>
Oates, Sarah Spurgeon,<lb/>
Elizabeth Stevens, Jennifer<lb/>
Sydorick. We will all miss<lb/>
you! Love, your Alpha Phi<lb/>
sisters.<lb/>
CONGRATULATIONS To<lb/>
Pi Lamda Phi for coming in<lb/>
first place in Operation Santa<lb/>
Claus. Thanks to everyone's<lb/>
support! The sisters of AOPi.<lb/>
CONGRATULATION<lb/>
Robbyn Shulman, Brad's<lb/>
lavalier looks great around<lb/>
your neck and Brad we hope<lb/>
your brothers didn't get you<lb/>
too bad. Love Chi Omega.<lb/>
SIG EP: We really enjoyed<lb/>
Thurs. night. Thanks, Love<lb/>
Chi Omega.<lb/>
CONGRATULATIONS<lb/>
Lucy Goodwin on your new<lb/>
treasurer position on<lb/>
Panhellenic. Love Chi<lb/>
Omega<lb/>
DELTA CHI: We started on<lb/>
the bus with beers for all of<lb/>
us. We traveled to and fro<lb/>
around the world we did go.<lb/>
The shots were far from mild<lb/>
and made all of us to wild.<lb/>
Thanks for all the fun. Our<lb/>
socials with you have only<lb/>
just begun. Love Chi Omega<lb/>
CONGRATULATIONS<lb/>
and best wishes to Jennifer<lb/>
Gabbard and Lindsay<lb/>
Fernandez on their Dec.<lb/>
graduations. Love the broth-<lb/>
ers of Phi Sigma Pi.<lb/>
TO ALL THE BROTHERS<lb/>
OF PHI SIGMA PI. I wish<lb/>
you the best over the holi-<lb/>
days. May God be with you<lb/>
and I hope to see you all<lb/>
back in Jan. Peace! Lindsay<lb/>
Put AT&amp;T on your resume<lb/>
before you graduate<lb/>
Marketing Opportunities Available<lb/>
AT&amp;T is seeking ambitious, sales-oriented students<lb/>
to participate in our 5-day on-campus marketing<lb/>
program selling AT&amp;T products &amp; services.<lb/>
Hours are flexible with top compensation &amp; bonuses.<lb/>
AT&amp;T STUDENT CAMPUS MANAGER<lb/>
To be responsible for overall event implementation, daily<lb/>
management &amp; training of student group. Requires strong<lb/>
leadership ability. Prior managementsales-related<lb/>
experience a plus.<lb/>
To find out more about these great opportunities, call<lb/>
1-800-592-2121, ext. 132, or send resume to CDI, AT&amp;T<lb/>
Recruitment, 1500 Walnut St 19th flPhiladelphia, PA 19102.<lb/>
Equal Opportunity Employer<lb/>
EAST<lb/>
CAROLINIAN<lb/>
Classifieds<lb/>
25 words or less:<lb/>
Students $2.00<lb/>
$3.00<lb/>
$0.05<lb/>
Non-Students<lb/>
Each additional word<lb/>
?All ads must be pre-<lb/>
paid<lb/>
Announcements<lb/>
Any organization may use the Announce-<lb/>
ments Section of The East Carolinian to list<lb/>
activities and events open to the public two<lb/>
times free of charge. Duetothelimitedamount<lb/>
of space, The East Carolinian cannot guaran-<lb/>
tee the publication of announcements.<lb/>
Deadline<lb/>
Friday at 4 p.pi. for<lb/>
Tuesday's edition<lb/>
Tuesday at 4 p.m. for<lb/>
Thursday's edition<lb/>
Displayed<lb/>
$5.50 oer inch:<lb/>
Displayed advertisements may<lb/>
be cancelled before 10 a.m. the<lb/>
day prior to publication<lb/>
however, no refunds will be<lb/>
given.<lb/>
For more<lb/>
information<lb/>
call 757-6366.<lb/>
Note: This is the last paper of the<lb/>
semester. The next paper is scheduled for<lb/>
print on Jan. 11 tl, 1994<lb/>
mmmvrirmmmmim<lb/>
<pb facs="00058444_0008"/><lb/>
The East Carolinian<lb/>
Lifestyle<lb/>
December 7. 1993<lb/>
New Year opens with style<lb/>
Photo Courtesy of<lb/>
Theatre Works USA<lb/>
Uncle Archibald Craven (right) introduces Mary Lennox (left) to life at<lb/>
Misslethwaite Manor as the housekeeper Mrs. Mediock looks on.<lb/>
By Jimmy Rostar<lb/>
Staff Writer<lb/>
After you've begun to expe-<lb/>
rience the post-holiday blues, you<lb/>
won't have to travel any farther<lb/>
than ECU's Wright Auditorium<lb/>
to experience an uplifting event.<lb/>
January 8, 1994 is the date<lb/>
that you can enter the world of<lb/>
"The Secret Garden<lb/>
TheatreworksUSA will present<lb/>
a stage adaptation of this Frances<lb/>
Hodgson Burnett literarv classic<lb/>
of the same name, which has also<lb/>
been the source for a recent movie<lb/>
and a Broadway production.<lb/>
The performance will serve<lb/>
as an installment in ECU's Uni-<lb/>
versity Unio is Young Audiences<lb/>
Performinr rts Series.<lb/>
The TheatreworksUSA ad-<lb/>
aptation opened to audiences<lb/>
three years before Broadway be-<lb/>
gan hosting its version, and re-<lb/>
views have been favorable. New<lb/>
York Daily News critic Howard<lb/>
Kissell called the show "enchant-<lb/>
ing with "remarkable songs"<lb/>
having "lyrics of sophistication<lb/>
and skill<lb/>
Lynn Jobes of the University<lb/>
Unions Marketing Office said that<lb/>
the show opened "to better re-<lb/>
views" than its Broadway coun-<lb/>
terpart.<lb/>
"The Secret Garden" is the<lb/>
story of Mary Lennox, a young<lb/>
English girl who, after becoming<lb/>
orphaned, is sent to live with her<lb/>
uncle in Yorkshire, England. Af-<lb/>
ter arriving at her uncle's melan-<lb/>
cholic mansion, Mary finds her<lb/>
way into a long-hidden garden,<lb/>
and truly magical things ensue.<lb/>
TheatreworksUSA's pre-<lb/>
sentation is based on an adapta-<lb/>
tion written by Linda Kline and<lb/>
Robert Jess Roth. The songs were<lb/>
penned by Kim Oler and Alison<lb/>
Hubbard.<lb/>
With youngsters and fami-<lb/>
lies as its main target audiences,<lb/>
TheatreworksUSA has become<lb/>
the largest touring company of<lb/>
its type in the United States. Based<lb/>
in New York, the outf't has in-<lb/>
creased its repertory to nearly 70<lb/>
plays and musicals over the past<lb/>
32 years. It has put on over 27,000<lb/>
shows in 49 states, and it is esti-<lb/>
mated that over 22 million people<lb/>
have attended these perfor-<lb/>
mances.<lb/>
Some of today's well-known<lb/>
actors and directors got their<lb/>
starts via this company, includ-<lb/>
See SECRET page 10<lb/>
IFC looks toward bright New Year<lb/>
By Laura Jackman<lb/>
Staff Writer<lb/>
December isn't just about fi-<lb/>
nals and holidays; it's also about<lb/>
change. Last week the Inter-<lb/>
Faternity Council (IFC) held elec-<lb/>
tions for it's new executive board<lb/>
and started looking ahead to a<lb/>
strong, positive year.<lb/>
Ian Eastman, the current IFC<lb/>
president, wrapped up the past<lb/>
year by saying that the success of<lb/>
IFC was built around John Ezzell<lb/>
(treasurer), Nolan Mattocks (ex-<lb/>
ecutive vice-president) and him-<lb/>
self being good leaders and sacri-<lb/>
ficing their time and efforts to<lb/>
achieve the goals they set at the<lb/>
beginning of the term.<lb/>
Picture-books<lb/>
broaden views<lb/>
of the masses<lb/>
EDITOR'S NOTE ? David<lb/>
Macaulay's books about various<lb/>
things, such fl,? mills, pyramids, ca-<lb/>
thedrals, castles and ancient ships,<lb/>
are intended to stimulate his read-<lb/>
ers' curiosity about the ivorld around<lb/>
them. Macaulay, who recently won a<lb/>
prestigious award for his contribu-<lb/>
tions to the appreciation of science,<lb/>
says his books are fiction but are<lb/>
bated on "real stuff<lb/>
NEW YORK (AP) ? Illustra-<lb/>
tor-author David Macaulay has a<lb/>
passion for explaining how things<lb/>
work through words and draw-<lb/>
ings.<lb/>
In fact, his 1988 book?one of<lb/>
13so far?was titled just that: The<lb/>
Way Things Work.<lb/>
"I think the books encourage<lb/>
curiosity by showing it is pos-<lb/>
sible to understand how things<lb/>
work if you take time to look at<lb/>
them and think about them<lb/>
Macaulay says. "I believe we need<lb/>
to know what's going on around<lb/>
us, to be more interested in build-<lb/>
ings and how the water system<lb/>
and transportation system<lb/>
works<lb/>
Macaulay's books, relished<lb/>
by both children and adults, tell<lb/>
about the building and use of such<lb/>
thing as mills, pyramids, cathe-<lb/>
drals and castles.<lb/>
The books are fiction,<lb/>
Macaulay says, but, "They're all<lb/>
based on real stuff.<lb/>
"Fiction allows me to avoid<lb/>
becoming bogged down in foot-<lb/>
notes and how you spell a name.<lb/>
If I make up a name, I don't have<lb/>
that problem. The information is<lb/>
as reliable as it can be<lb/>
Macaulay, 46, is head of the<lb/>
See BOOKS page 10<lb/>
They reachedheir major goal<lb/>
of raising the number of men who<lb/>
participated in both spring and<lb/>
fall rush. Srping attendance almost<lb/>
doubled from 97 to 178 associate<lb/>
members. Fall rush increased their<lb/>
numbers from 132 members last<lb/>
year to 223 for this semester.<lb/>
New president John Ezzell,<lb/>
along with new executive vice-<lb/>
president Matt Hedrick, are an-<lb/>
ticipating an even better year than<lb/>
this past one. They plan on in-<lb/>
creasing the spring associate mem-<lb/>
bers even more, as well as concen-<lb/>
trating on improving grades. They<lb/>
also hope to clean up any bad<lb/>
relations that some fraternities<lb/>
might have and to establish a close<lb/>
unity among various fraternities,<lb/>
By Laura Burch<lb/>
Special to TEC<lb/>
What's cooking at tanning sa-<lb/>
lons? You are! They promise a fast<lb/>
and safe tan, but there's no such<lb/>
thing. A healthy tan just doesn't<lb/>
exist.<lb/>
Americans are paying over<lb/>
$300 million every year for a "fake<lb/>
bake Increasing numbers of<lb/>
people are paying from $6 to more<lb/>
than $30 an hour for a year-round<lb/>
tan.<lb/>
Although there are more than<lb/>
500,000 cases of skin cancer in the<lb/>
United States each year, one ou t of<lb/>
every three Americans continue<lb/>
to tan. 1 arming booths and sun<lb/>
lamps are used by 3.8 million<lb/>
American adults and more than<lb/>
500,000 teenagers.<lb/>
"Indoor tanning is more harm-<lb/>
ful than natural tanning said Rex<lb/>
Amonette, M.D a clinical profes-<lb/>
sor of dermatology at the Univer-<lb/>
sity of Tennessee. "You may get<lb/>
skin cancer faster from a tanning<lb/>
bed than from natural sunlight.<lb/>
Four to 10 times the emission of<lb/>
harmful ultraviolet rays comes<lb/>
from the sun, so cancer develops<lb/>
faster<lb/>
Natural sunlight activates the<lb/>
melanin in your skin. Tanning<lb/>
beds attack the blood vessels<lb/>
deeper in the skin, making them<lb/>
change color, instead of the skin's<lb/>
pigment cells.<lb/>
"It's a deeper damage that, in<lb/>
the end, may prove more harmful<lb/>
than the sun's rays said<lb/>
Amonette.<lb/>
Most tanning salon operators<lb/>
are not aware of the effects of the<lb/>
beds, so it's no surprise that the<lb/>
consumers don't know about them<lb/>
either. In a survey of 31 tanning<lb/>
salon operators in Lansing, Michi-<lb/>
gan, only two operators were<lb/>
aware of the connection between<lb/>
in and outside of the council.<lb/>
When the new council goes<lb/>
into effect in January, the execu-<lb/>
tive board will concentrate<lb/>
heavily on leadership skills, time-<lb/>
management workshops and<lb/>
risk-management. Both Ezzell<lb/>
and Hedrick also plan on getting<lb/>
the IFC more involved with the<lb/>
community outside of school.<lb/>
One idea is to divide the city into<lb/>
sections and then to delegate a<lb/>
different fraternity to each. The<lb/>
job of the fraternity will be to<lb/>
hold a can drive to help out that<lb/>
section of town.<lb/>
Looking back one more time,<lb/>
Eastman sees a year of success.<lb/>
"The performance of all the IFC<lb/>
members was excellent he said.<lb/>
Now it's up to Ezzell and his<lb/>
new board to build on that suc-<lb/>
cess. "During this year, with new<lb/>
rush improvements and a push<lb/>
for more campus involvement, I<lb/>
would like to see a more positive<lb/>
IFC image said Hedrick.<lb/>
"With the implementation of<lb/>
our new programs, I hope to see a<lb/>
new emphasis in Greek involve-<lb/>
ment. I would like to see more<lb/>
Greek exposure to the campus<lb/>
and community and a greater pro-<lb/>
motion of Greek unity and priae<lb/>
said Ezzell.<lb/>
According to current execu-<lb/>
tive vice-president Nolan Mat-<lb/>
tocks, "John Ezzell is the most<lb/>
qualified person on IFC to be<lb/>
president<lb/>
tanning<lb/>
tanning and skin cancer.<lb/>
Most tanning beds emit ultra-<lb/>
violet-A (U V-A) rather than ultra-<lb/>
violet-B (UV-B) radiation. Manu-<lb/>
facturers developed the new<lb/>
lamps after learning that the UV-<lb/>
A bulbs tan more and burn less<lb/>
than the UV-B bulbs. Unfortu-<lb/>
nately, the UV-A rays require<lb/>
higher doses for lasting results.<lb/>
Researchers found that UV-A<lb/>
radiation not only damages the<lb/>
skin, but penetrates deeper than<lb/>
the UV-B rays, damaging collagen,<lb/>
blood vessels and elastic tissues.<lb/>
"Once the body is exposed to UV-<lb/>
A rays, it is more susceptible to the<lb/>
aging and carcinogenic effects of<lb/>
UV-B radiation said dermatolo-<lb/>
gist Issac Willis of the Morehouse<lb/>
School of Medicine in Atlanta.<lb/>
Willis adds that both kinds of<lb/>
radiation cause skin cancer, skin<lb/>
and eye burns, cataracts, immune<lb/>
system damage and premature<lb/>
skin aging. "Sometimes it can take<lb/>
up to 20 years for the damage to<lb/>
even show up he said.<lb/>
That's bad news for the tan-<lb/>
ning industry, which now has<lb/>
more than 20,000 salons nation-<lb/>
wide.<lb/>
Many people think that the<lb/>
salons are safer than tanning out-<lb/>
doors because that is what they<lb/>
have been told.<lb/>
"I've been going to tanning<lb/>
beds for 12 years, and I always<lb/>
thought that they were better for<lb/>
you than the sun said Debbie<lb/>
Grantham, an ECU student.<lb/>
Debbie also said that the local<lb/>
tanning salon where she currently<lb/>
has a membership does not sup-<lb/>
ply eye goggles. However, the<lb/>
FDA requires all tanning salons<lb/>
provide protective goggles. "The<lb/>
manager said that a state law was<lb/>
passed stating that they couldn't<lb/>
supply goggles anymore to pre-<lb/>
vent eye infections, so now I don't<lb/>
wear them said Debbie. "It<lb/>
sounded crazy to me, but I didn't<lb/>
think they would lie to me<lb/>
In 1986, the FDA improved<lb/>
the Radiation Control for Health<lb/>
and Safety Act to insure that the<lb/>
consumers would be better in-<lb/>
formed. The FDA required all tan-<lb/>
ning machines to have more vis-<lb/>
ible labels warning about the dan-<lb/>
gers of exposure to ultraviolet rays.<lb/>
Manufacturers must provide a rec-<lb/>
ommended exposure schedule<lb/>
and timers that shut off the lamps<lb/>
automatically.<lb/>
Recent inspections have re-<lb/>
vealed several violations of the<lb/>
FDA regulations, including a lack<lb/>
of safety goggles and directions<lb/>
for use and the rewiring of units to<lb/>
bypass automatic timers.<lb/>
Sunsational Tanning, in<lb/>
Greenville, N.C has had inspec-<lb/>
tors come in before. They had to<lb/>
do away with their automated tim-<lb/>
ing system to meet the FDA's regu-<lb/>
lations.<lb/>
Most people don't think about<lb/>
the long-term effects of tanning.<lb/>
They believe the seven deadly<lb/>
myths:<lb/>
1) Tanning indoors is safer<lb/>
than tanning outdoors.<lb/>
2) Going to a salon will pro-<lb/>
vide a "base" tan that will prevent<lb/>
you from burning in the sun.<lb/>
3) Visiting a salon guarantees<lb/>
that you will get a tan.<lb/>
4)Using tanning machines<lb/>
provides an even tan.<lb/>
5) Going to a salon will make<lb/>
a tan last longer.<lb/>
6) Salons provide a safe tan.<lb/>
7)It is impossible to suffer in-<lb/>
juries form a tanning salon.<lb/>
Tanning beds are just as dan-<lb/>
gerous as the sun, and limiting<lb/>
exposure to ultraviolet rays is nec-<lb/>
essary to prevent cancer. Tanning<lb/>
machines aren't safer than natural<lb/>
sunlight?they're just different.<lb/>
Student artistic<lb/>
creativity rewarded<lb/>
By Daniel Willis<lb/>
Staff Writer<lb/>
Ten students are receiving<lb/>
scholarships through the Theatre<lb/>
Arts department.<lb/>
Julie Bell of Raleigh and<lb/>
Felecia Harrelson of Greensboro<lb/>
are recipients of the Nell Draper<lb/>
Burnette Acting Scholarship.<lb/>
They will be awarded $500 each.<lb/>
The award, given on the ba-<lb/>
sis of talent and achievement in<lb/>
acting, was established by Archie<lb/>
Burnette in honor of his mother,<lb/>
an ECU alumna.<lb/>
Jennifer ??????<lb/>
Christine<lb/>
M c C o r d<lb/>
from<lb/>
Fayetteville<lb/>
received the<lb/>
Olin and<lb/>
Angela<lb/>
Vincent Me-<lb/>
m o r i a 1<lb/>
Scholarship.<lb/>
The scholar-<lb/>
ship was<lb/>
started by<lb/>
Dr. Pauline<lb/>
Vincent, a ??bmhdb<lb/>
professor in the ECU school of<lb/>
nursing, in honor of her parents,<lb/>
who were lifelong supporters of<lb/>
the performing arts. The award is<lb/>
granted to people who exhibit<lb/>
academic merit, a commitment<lb/>
to a career in Theatre Arts and<lb/>
theatrical talent.<lb/>
Wendy Carter of Wilson re-<lb/>
ceived the Peggy and William<lb/>
Corbitt scholarship. The Scholar-<lb/>
ship was started in honor of a<lb/>
Greenville couple by their chil-<lb/>
dren.<lb/>
Recipients are awarded on<lb/>
the basis of commitment to the<lb/>
study and profession of theatre<lb/>
arts and academic merit. Both<lb/>
Car ter an McCord were granted<lb/>
$600 scholarships.<lb/>
Robin Christine of Raleigh<lb/>
received the Mavis Ray Dance<lb/>
Scholarship. The Ray scholar-<lb/>
ship was started in honor of<lb/>
Mavis Ray, the founder of<lb/>
ECU's dance department.<lb/>
Christine received $500.<lb/>
Anne Hamilton<lb/>
Hawthorne of Raleigh and<lb/>
The award is<lb/>
granted to people<lb/>
who exhibit<lb/>
academic merit, a<lb/>
commitment to a<lb/>
career in Theatre<lb/>
Arts and theatrical<lb/>
talent.<lb/>
Wilmington<lb/>
will receive<lb/>
$400 for be-<lb/>
ing awarded<lb/>
the Marie<lb/>
Wallace<lb/>
Dance Schol-<lb/>
ar s h i p ,<lb/>
which was<lb/>
established<lb/>
by a former<lb/>
dance<lb/>
teacher in<lb/>
Greenville.<lb/>
Fourstu-<lb/>
ai dents are re-<lb/>
cipients of the John Decatur<lb/>
Messick Scholarship. The re-<lb/>
cipients are Heather Lynn<lb/>
Jernigan of Snow Hill, Aleece<lb/>
Mosier of Raleigh, Joan Lewis<lb/>
of New Bern and Hope Maria<lb/>
Spencer of Wilmington.<lb/>
The Messick scholarship<lb/>
was started by friends of John<lb/>
D. Messick, ECU's president<lb/>
from 1947 to 1960. The scholar-<lb/>
ship is given out on the basis of<lb/>
outstanding theatrical talent.<lb/>
0 k<lb/>
3F<lb/>
Vll m'<lb/>
?J<lb/>
J Don't Buy V Take Your Chances<lb/>
fWorth a Try jjjDefinitePurchase<lb/>
Blake Babies<lb/>
Innocence and<lb/>
Experience<lb/>
? m 0 d<lb/>
If you are truly into the alterna-<lb/>
tive music scene, then you already<lb/>
know that Juliana Hatfield was the<lb/>
lead singer of a group called the Blake<lb/>
Babies prior to her solo career. Par-<lb/>
rMynamedforthepoetWilliamBlake,<lb/>
the Blake Babies recently released a<lb/>
compilation album called Innocence<lb/>
and Experience. Besides Hatfield, the<lb/>
band consists of John Strohm on<lb/>
guitar, Freda Boner on drums and<lb/>
variousguestplayersalongtheway.<lb/>
The band sounds like a cross be-<lb/>
tween Hatfield's solo stuff and the<lb/>
group, Belly. But no matter what<lb/>
your tastes are, check it out<lb/>
One or two songs from each<lb/>
Blake Babies album, along with two<lb/>
demos,oneofwhichisentifJed"Star<lb/>
aremdudedonlnnocenceandExperi-<lb/>
ence. In "Star a song about becom-<lb/>
ing famous, Juliana Hatfield sings,<lb/>
"Justthinkofwhatlcouldbeandnot<lb/>
whatlam theenvyofevery woman<lb/>
the dream of every man<lb/>
During the break-up of the<lb/>
Lemonheads in 1988, Evan Dando<lb/>
played bass for six songs with the<lb/>
Blake Babies. One of those songs<lb/>
called "Lament" is included on this<lb/>
compilahoa Guitarist John Strohm<lb/>
sings a strange song called "Girl in a<lb/>
See BLAKE page 10<lb/>
Frank Sinatra<lb/>
Duets<lb/>
m m m "m<lb/>
The best song off Duets, the first<lb/>
new album from Frank Sinatra in<lb/>
nearly 10 years, features the album's<lb/>
most unexpected guest?BonoofUZ<lb/>
Gliding through Cole Porter's "I've<lb/>
Got You Under My Skin the un-<lb/>
likely pair bounce through Porter's<lb/>
subtle lyrics in different veins. Is it<lb/>
simply a cool jazz-pop tune or a haunt-<lb/>
ing confessional of obsession?<lb/>
Who knows? Who cares? This<lb/>
couldhavebeendownrightembar-<lb/>
rassingif Bonohadattempted "Un-<lb/>
der My Skin" during his over-<lb/>
wrought significant-rcck-and-soul<lb/>
stage ("Angels of Harlem" springs<lb/>
to mind), but the recent Achtung,<lb/>
Baby and Zooropa guarantee rheper-<lb/>
formancewillbeoriginal.It'sablast<lb/>
tryingtodecideifBonoisswitching<lb/>
back and forth from gravel-whis-<lb/>
per to lilting falsetto to match<lb/>
Sinatra's style or to make fun at the<lb/>
lounge-lizard smaltz this album<lb/>
could very easily have drowned in.<lb/>
Not that any effort boasting so<lb/>
much talent could ever really fall to<lb/>
kitsch Ducts is a solid showcase of<lb/>
40 years worth of vocal performers<lb/>
trying their hands at standards<lb/>
made popular by the Chairman of<lb/>
the Board, while singing with the<lb/>
man himself.<lb/>
Some of the guests come as no<lb/>
See SINATRA page 10<lb/>
pi rrr- ? WJmwVJU !JMW1<lb/>
mm ??ym<lb/>
<pb facs="00058444_0009"/><lb/>
December 7, 1993<lb/>
The East Carolinian 9<lb/>
Camera enthusiasts focus on technique<lb/>
v tht<lb/>
true when it<lb/>
nd lenses<lb/>
5 in the<lb/>
field.<lb/>
However, Sigma, .i relative<lb/>
newcomer to the high-end 35mm<lb/>
AF SLR market, is trying to make<lb/>
photography more affordable bv<lb/>
offering a high-tech, full-featured<lb/>
AF SLR camera body and 30<lb/>
autofocus lenses.<lb/>
The camera is called the SA-<lb/>
300. It offers manv of the features<lb/>
found on top-of-the-line Nikon and<lb/>
ta cameras ? but at about<lb/>
half the price.<lb/>
lor example, the suggested list<lb/>
priceoftheSA-300is$547, while the<lb/>
Nikon N8008s has a list price of<lb/>
SM15, and the Minolta Maxxum 7xi's<lb/>
list price is $987.<lb/>
Features on the new SA-300<lb/>
include automatic bracketing (not<lb/>
offered on the Nikon and Minolta<lb/>
cameras), which is useful when<lb/>
shooting slide film; a triple-mode<lb/>
.AF system, which provides sharp<lb/>
pictures of even fast-moving sub-<lb/>
jects; a top shutter speed of l-4000th<lb/>
second, which is fsst enough to<lb/>
"freeze" most action, and a three-<lb/>
way light meter, which delivers<lb/>
good exposures even in challeng-<lb/>
ing lighting situations.<lb/>
For the new Sigma SA-300 cam-<lb/>
era, which is available in a titanium<lb/>
black or chrome finish, thecompanv<lb/>
offers 30 autofocus lenses, from<lb/>
14mm to 1000mm. There is even a<lb/>
300mm telephoto that is the lightest<lb/>
300mm f-2.8 leas available. Again,<lb/>
these lenses are more affordable than<lb/>
those offered by the traditional lead-<lb/>
ers in the field.<lb/>
If you are interested in a new AF<lb/>
SLR camera andor accessory lenses,<lb/>
it is a good idea to spend a good deal<lb/>
of time at your local camera store<lb/>
asking the sales person to discuss all<lb/>
the advantages and disadvantages<lb/>
? to you ? of the different SLR<lb/>
systems that are available. As you'll<lb/>
find out, there are approximately 40<lb/>
different AF SLRs from which to<lb/>
choose?and dozens and dozens of<lb/>
lenses.<lb/>
Good advice is to start with a<lb/>
basic system, perhaps a camera<lb/>
bodv and one zoom lens s . in the<lb/>
28-70mm range. First, learn how to<lb/>
picture your world with this basic<lb/>
system. Then, add a telephoto lens<lb/>
or telephoto zoom for wildlife or<lb/>
sports photography. And if land-<lb/>
scapes are your fancy, add a 24mm<lb/>
lens.<lb/>
When choosing a system, try<lb/>
not to get overwhelmed with<lb/>
equipment and technology, which<lb/>
is easy to do these days. Rather,<lb/>
concentrate on the process of pic-<lb/>
ture taking.<lb/>
Enjoy taking pictures and en-<lb/>
joy your results.<lb/>
Remember, it's not great<lb/>
equipment that takes great photo-<lb/>
graphs, it's great photographers.<lb/>
Viewers pick their favorite shows; programmers disagree<lb/>
Later,<lb/>
Speaky<lb/>
Well, folks,<lb/>
say your<lb/>
good-byes.<lb/>
Sparky is<lb/>
giving it all up<lb/>
? the dorms,<lb/>
babushkas,<lb/>
beer,books<lb/>
and<lb/>
barbituates?<lb/>
and heading<lb/>
down to<lb/>
Florida. Wish<lb/>
Sparky well!<lb/>
File Photo<lb/>
NEW YORK (AP)?The No-<lb/>
vember sweeps have come and<lb/>
gone. You, the viewer, have em-<lb/>
ployed Nielsen diaries and people<lb/>
meters to exalt some new shows<lb/>
and ignore others.<lb/>
Yet there a re three Fox Brv d-<lb/>
casting Co. shows at the bottom<lb/>
of the ratings that you've<lb/>
"undersampled as the pro-<lb/>
grammers say, which deserve<lb/>
your time and attention.<lb/>
Let's start at the very bottom:<lb/>
"Bakersfield, P.D on Tuesdavs.<lb/>
It is the lowest-rated series<lb/>
on TV, and yet it's a subtle, styl-<lb/>
ish, inventive half-hour that<lb/>
might just be the cleverest com-<lb/>
edy of alienation since "The<lb/>
Simpsons<lb/>
Obie-winner Giancarlo<lb/>
Esposito stars as a Paul Gigante,<lb/>
a yuppified, half-black, half-Ital-<lb/>
ian police detective who moves<lb/>
his wife and son to the title's arid<lb/>
Southern California city and joins<lb/>
its all-white force.<lb/>
Gigante's semicompetent co-<lb/>
workers include his dim, puppy-<lb/>
sweet partner, (Ron Eldard) and<lb/>
a superb mix of third bananas,<lb/>
including a big, dim tough cop<lb/>
(Chris Mulkey), an acerbic ser-<lb/>
geant (Brian Doyle-Murray) and<lb/>
a dithery captain (Jack Hallett).<lb/>
Most important, though,<lb/>
"Bakersfield P.D is hilarious.<lb/>
It's about men, their relationships,<lb/>
lives and life-works. Its comedy<lb/>
emerges from slow-burn silences;<lb/>
from switchback expectations vs.<lb/>
results; and?watch for it!?<lb/>
irony.<lb/>
Sadly, "Bakersfield" is dy-<lb/>
ing because of its atrocious Tues-<lb/>
day night slot, up against an infe-<lb/>
rior ABC comedy, "The<lb/>
Phenom How can we save it?<lb/>
Write to Fox Broadcasting<lb/>
Co urging them to make it a one-<lb/>
hour show.<lb/>
All they need do is slap two<lb/>
episodes together and move the<lb/>
whole thing to Wednesday night<lb/>
at 10?right after "Melrose<lb/>
Place Bingo. A hit.<lb/>
Then there's "The Adven-<lb/>
tures of Brisco County, Jr which<lb/>
airs Friday on Fox and is also a<lb/>
bottom-dweller.<lb/>
It is the drollest, fastest one-<lb/>
hour Western since "The Wild,<lb/>
Wild West and has better pro-<lb/>
duction values.<lb/>
Handsome, manic Bruce<lb/>
Campbell ("Army of Darkness")<lb/>
plays a bounty hunter who's<lb/>
avenging his father's murder and<lb/>
ridding the 1890s West of bad<lb/>
guys while impatiently awaiting<lb/>
"the coming thing" of the 20th<lb/>
century.<lb/>
There are occasional appear-<lb/>
ances by a mysterious golden orb<lb/>
that conveys strange powers to<lb/>
humans, and by Billy Drago as<lb/>
psychotic archvillain John Bly and<lb/>
by Kelly Rutherford as the velvet<lb/>
vamp, Dixie Cousins.<lb/>
"The X-Files" follows "Brisco<lb/>
County" on Fox's Friday and<lb/>
somehow gets slightly lower rat-<lb/>
ings. At the same time, executive<lb/>
producer Chris Carter has con-<lb/>
cocted an engrossing mix of mys-<lb/>
tery, suspense, action and the<lb/>
paranormpl.<lb/>
David Duchovny ("The Rap-<lb/>
ture") and Gillian Henderson play<lb/>
a team of FBI agents.<lb/>
He's agent Fox Mulder, a bril-<lb/>
liant misfit who is exiled to the<lb/>
bureau's unsolved, unexplained<lb/>
cases and who finds paranormal<lb/>
explanations for them.<lb/>
She's the forensic pathologist<lb/>
who is assigned to watch him and,<lb/>
if possible, debunk his theories.<lb/>
The agents deal with UFO ab-<lb/>
ductions, a serial killer who strikes<lb/>
every 30 years, deadly cometary<lb/>
viruses and alien conspiracies, but<lb/>
the writing and acting are so<lb/>
deadpan, matter-of-fact that the<lb/>
shows poleax your disbelief.<lb/>
Duchovny's muted, ground-<lb/>
zero delivery is simply compel-<lb/>
ling. Henderson's strong, com-<lb/>
petent character never goes to<lb/>
pieces or stumbles when fleeing<lb/>
bad guys.<lb/>
So, what's killing "Brisco<lb/>
County" and "X-Files"? Why<lb/>
aren't they breakaway hits in-<lb/>
stead of little-watched provid-<lb/>
ers of "young adult" audiences?<lb/>
It's that accursed Friday<lb/>
night time slot, when the much-<lb/>
needed household, teen and<lb/>
adult audiences are out fooling<lb/>
around.<lb/>
Want to save Brisco and the<lb/>
X-Filers? Write to Fox and tell<lb/>
them how much you love these<lb/>
shows.<lb/>
Tell Fox to swap them with<lb/>
Fox's lackluster Monday movie<lb/>
showcase, giving viewers an al-<lb/>
ternative to football and CBS'<lb/>
sagging Monday night comedies.<lb/>
Bingo. You've just made<lb/>
three hits.<lb/>
The East Carolinian<lb/>
would like to thank<lb/>
our advertisers for<lb/>
their continued<lb/>
dedication. Please<lb/>
?<lb/>
support them with<lb/>
your business.<lb/>
P B a 0 BBBBBBDD B<lb/>
GIRLS<lb/>
Winter<lb/>
Shipments<lb/>
0Have<lb/>
Arrived!<lb/>
it<lb/>
r<lb/>
-? Usg&amp;Siter4<lb/>
OUTLET<lb/>
210 E. 5th St.<lb/>
MS 10-6<lb/>
OF<lb/>
IGREENVIUE'<lb/>
1994 Calendar deButs , ,<lb/>
&amp; is for sate at the Attic on "Ihursday nightL<lb/>
9:30pm followedBy Cold Sweat.<lb/>
Meet the Calendar girts in-person &amp;<lb/>
Have them sign your calendar!<lb/>
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<pb facs="00058444_0010"/><lb/>
-<lb/>
December 7, 1993<lb/>
BOOKS<lb/>
Continued from page 8<lb/>
iton s Museum ot<lb/>
; i to people who ha e<lb/>
contributed to public understand-<lb/>
ing and appreciation of science.<lb/>
Macaulay's new book, Ship,<lb/>
is in two parts. First, maritime<lb/>
archaeologists investigate the<lb/>
wreck of a 16th-century small<lb/>
wooden boat called a caravel.<lb/>
Drawings are in black and white<lb/>
on grav-blue. In a second-half<lb/>
flashback, in color, with much<lb/>
brown wood, the caravel is being<lb/>
built in Seville in 1504.<lb/>
Macaulay says his three years<lb/>
working on Ship were his most<lb/>
interesting.<lb/>
"In Mexico, a team of Texas<lb/>
marine archaeologists taught me<lb/>
to dive. I'd never even snorkled. I<lb/>
floated over them while they were<lb/>
working on the bottom and made<lb/>
little drawings on plastic drafting<lb/>
film. I would have felt like a fraud<lb/>
using a diving picture from Na-<lb/>
tional Geographic. I got an appre-<lb/>
ciation of the craft and discipline<lb/>
of archaeology<lb/>
Then Macaulay went to Bra-<lb/>
zil, where a replica of the Christo-<lb/>
pher Columbus ship Nina, a<lb/>
caravel, was being built, based on<lb/>
information from archives and<lb/>
from wrecks of Spanish explor-<lb/>
ing vessels, for the Columbus<lb/>
Foundation in St. Thomas.<lb/>
"Some of the old shipbuild-<lb/>
ing traditions still survive in Bra-<lb/>
zil Macaulay says. "They<lb/>
shaped planks with an adz. It was<lb/>
wonderful to see kids wrapping<lb/>
hemp around the heads of nails<lb/>
so when you drove the nail in it<lb/>
would be sealed<lb/>
Macaulay's fascination with<lb/>
how things are built began at an<lb/>
early age.<lb/>
"We lived in a small house in<lb/>
the north of England for my first<lb/>
11 years he says. "It had no<lb/>
isement, no garage.<lb/>
M ei made toys and<lb/>
ts out of wood, on the<lb/>
dining-room table. I<lb/>
was alwaysaware of things being<lb/>
made. 1 think I absorbed a curios-<lb/>
ity and respect for the process of<lb/>
making things. 1 made working<lb/>
models, for instance of buildings<lb/>
with elevators, not from kits but<lb/>
from paper and cardboard.<lb/>
"My grandfather was a sur-<lb/>
veyor. He had tools and equip-<lb/>
ment around the house. That led<lb/>
me into architecture. By the fourth<lb/>
year, I decided I didn't want to be<lb/>
an architect. There are so many<lb/>
compromises; you have to satisfy<lb/>
client, zoning board, contractors.<lb/>
"My motivation was eventu-<lb/>
ally to be able to make picture<lb/>
books. It looked like the people<lb/>
making them were having fun. It<lb/>
was their product, and they con-<lb/>
trolled it from beginning to end.<lb/>
That appealed to me<lb/>
Macaulay's first book, Cathe-<lb/>
dral, evolved from a children's<lb/>
fantasy picture book about a gar-<lb/>
goyle beauty pageant.<lb/>
"I set my story in a Gothic<lb/>
cathedral he recalls. "My editor<lb/>
at Houghton Mifflin, Walter<lb/>
Lorraine, said, 'It looks like what<lb/>
you want to do is draw this cathe-<lb/>
dral. Why don't you just tell us<lb/>
about the cathedral?<lb/>
' I didn't realize there was a<lb/>
story just in the construction of<lb/>
the building. Once I started to<lb/>
think about trying to explain it to<lb/>
everybody, it became an intricate<lb/>
visual problem. It resulted in a<lb/>
book which seemed new to the<lb/>
book field<lb/>
Macaulay quickly wrote City,<lb/>
Pyramid and Underground. Then:<lb/>
burnout.<lb/>
"I could barely get through<lb/>
Castle he says. "I was plugging<lb/>
new information into a formula<lb/>
I'd established for myself.<lb/>
"I haven't really followed a<lb/>
formula since. Even though Mill<lb/>
and Unbuilding look similar, both<lb/>
are more ambitious than the first<lb/>
five. I needed to push harder to be<lb/>
satisfied<lb/>
Macaulay had three collabo-<lb/>
rators on the huge The Way Things<lb/>
Work. One of three additional<lb/>
books, for which Macaulay has<lb/>
done drawings only, is Robert<lb/>
Ornstein's The Amazing Brain.<lb/>
Macaulay designs each page,<lb/>
text, drawing and layout. "I do<lb/>
sketches while I'm writing the<lb/>
text, seeing the relationship be-<lb/>
tween the two from the very be-<lb/>
ginning he says. "A beautiful<lb/>
illustration can be killed by the<lb/>
way the type is plunked down. At<lb/>
times it is more effective to say<lb/>
something with words than to<lb/>
draw it.<lb/>
"The goal is to tell the story<lb/>
Black tie doesn't mean formal<lb/>
SINATRA<lb/>
AP-When the invitation reads<lb/>
"black tie most men, with robotic<lb/>
precision, reach for a tuxedo, white<lb/>
formal shirt and black cummerbund<lb/>
and tie.<lb/>
In recent seasons, though, de-<lb/>
signers have been trying to steer<lb/>
men from dreary conformity to<lb/>
dashing creativity. The transforma-<lb/>
tion can begin with a single item ?<lb/>
a beaded vest, a tartan jacket, a<lb/>
printed silk smoking jacket.<lb/>
Creativeblack tie can also mean<lb/>
all black and no tie, a la Donna<lb/>
Karan and DKNY.<lb/>
A band collar shirt is one of the<lb/>
simplest and most fashionable for-<lb/>
mal wear looks, says Rick Pallack,<lb/>
whose Sherman Oaks, Calif empo-<lb/>
rium caters to the likes of Tom<lb/>
Continued from page 8<lb/>
Cruise, Sylvester Stallone, Michael<lb/>
. Fox and Tom Selleck.<lb/>
"Menswear is so classic that it's<lb/>
not often real trends come along<lb/>
he says 'but this is the hottest thing<lb/>
The shirt is available in white or<lb/>
black, silk or cotton, pique or stripes.<lb/>
Prices range from $80 to $120.<lb/>
At Donna Karan and DKNY,<lb/>
black is in, particularly a black cot-<lb/>
ton pleated bib shirt with wing col-<lb/>
lar worn open, according to Larry<lb/>
Hotz, "to show a little chest and<lb/>
your black leather corded necklace.<lb/>
In fact, says Hotz, public rela-<lb/>
tions coordinator at Donna Karan,<lb/>
"Everything you used to wear<lb/>
buttoned-up is open. Cuffs are<lb/>
unbuttoned and hang down, your<lb/>
double-breasted tuxedo jacket is<lb/>
worn open. The mood is a little<lb/>
less stuffed shirt<lb/>
DKNY's black bib shirt re-<lb/>
tails for about $165. Then there's<lb/>
DKNY's formal black wool mili-<lb/>
tary jacket done up with four flap<lb/>
pockets, metal buttons and epau-<lb/>
lets, $485.<lb/>
"It acts like a tuxedo but has<lb/>
that style novelty, that military<lb/>
spit-and-polishbent Hotz says.<lb/>
We deliver to Dorms<lb/>
ALFREDO'S 'm&amp;<lb/>
surprise. Liza Minnelli grins her way<lb/>
through "I've Got the World On A<lb/>
String Julio Iglesias is his debonair<lb/>
self in "Summer Wind" and Tony<lb/>
Bennett holds his own in "New York,<lb/>
New York"?nomeanfeatforjoining<lb/>
Ol' Blue Eyes in his bombastic show-<lb/>
closer. BarbraStreisandis"likebutta"<lb/>
in the album's perfect fireside love<lb/>
song, "I've Got A Crush On You<lb/>
And Natalie Cole continues to mine<lb/>
gold from the past in "They Can't<lb/>
Take That Away From Me<lb/>
But the unexpected performers<lb/>
on Duets impress for taking on a style<lb/>
of music they aren't famous for.<lb/>
Granted, Luther Vandross ("The Lady<lb/>
Is A Tramp") could sing with<lb/>
Soundgarden and sound great, but<lb/>
he's smooth as silk here. Aretha<lb/>
Franklin, the Lady of Soul, scats on<lb/>
"What Now My Love" and Anita<lb/>
Baker and Carly Simon purr through<lb/>
"Witchcraft" and "Guess 111 Hang<lb/>
My Tears Out To Dry respectively.<lb/>
But the best surprise is Gloria Estef an<lb/>
showing her adaptability and skill on<lb/>
"Come Rain or Come Shine As evi-<lb/>
dent with her recent albums, not only<lb/>
can Estef an samba through Top 40<lb/>
pop, she can soar through more de-<lb/>
manding numbers as well and she's<lb/>
in prime form.<lb/>
And Ol' Blue Eyes, himself? The<lb/>
age shows through, as is to be ex-<lb/>
pected with a performer with such a<lb/>
long-lived career. But, the cracks in<lb/>
his voice only prove that Sinatra isn't<lb/>
out to cruise through his repertoire;<lb/>
he's here to sing. He can still tear up a<lb/>
show tune ("New York, New York")<lb/>
or break your heart with classic blue-<lb/>
eyed soul ("One For My Baby(And ?<lb/>
One For The Road)").<lb/>
The only drawback to Duets is<lb/>
theusualplaylist. Itsuggests Sinatra's<lb/>
dependence on the old standby's.<lb/>
While theother performers must con-<lb/>
form to Sinatra's style and range,heis<lb/>
"safe" in his own style. A true treat<lb/>
would've been if both parties had<lb/>
taken on lesser known pieces instead<lb/>
of relying on proven crowd-pleasers.<lb/>
However, familiarity doesn't<lb/>
equal predictability. Dut'fsprovidesa<lb/>
spotlightforavariety ofpopular sing-<lb/>
ers while allowingSinatratoprovehe<lb/>
hasn'tyet given up the office of Chair-<lb/>
man of the Board. And as always, he<lb/>
does it his way.<lb/>
? Gregory<lb/>
Dickens<lb/>
ECU'S Favorite Pizza Placi<lb/>
FREE DELIVERY<lb/>
large Pizza with Topping<lb/>
BLAKE<lb/>
Central<lb/>
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15 off Everything<lb/>
except Newspapers and Magazines<lb/>
with this ad and ECU ID<lb/>
Expires 12-31-93<lb/>
Box Strohm initially wrote the song<lb/>
for the Lemonheads, but liked it so<lb/>
much he kept it for the Blake Babies. I<lb/>
found thesongfunnyina twisted way,<lb/>
butfeministsdefinitelywouldn'tthink<lb/>
it amusing.<lb/>
However, Juliana Hatfield<lb/>
makes up for that song with strong<lb/>
messagesofher own in other songs. In<lb/>
"You Don't Give Up she sings, "You<lb/>
don'treallycaredon'ttiytotellmeyou<lb/>
do saveyourspitforwhenyoushine<lb/>
my shoes In "Sanctify Hatfield<lb/>
Cont'd<lb/>
from<lb/>
 P9-8<lb/>
ing Henry "Fonzie" Winkler,<lb/>
Tony Award-winner Jerry Zaks<lb/>
and Academy Award recipient F.<lb/>
Murray Abraham.<lb/>
Entry into the Jan. 8 perfor-<lb/>
mance of " The Secret Garden " is<lb/>
available either by season ticket<lb/>
or single ticket admission. Group<lb/>
discounts are available, while<lb/>
advance single tickets are $8 for<lb/>
the general public, $6 for ECU<lb/>
faculty and staff and $5 for stu-<lb/>
dents and youth. Tickets will be<lb/>
sold at the door for $8 each.<lb/>
You can purchase tickets and<lb/>
get more information at the<lb/>
Mendenhall Student Central<lb/>
Ticket Office or by calling 757-<lb/>
4788.<lb/>
urges listeners to, "Make a fire in a<lb/>
quiet sky kick a boy and teach him<lb/>
how to cry And finally my personal<lb/>
favorite is from a song entitled 'Tm<lb/>
Not Your Mother Hatfield belts out,<lb/>
"You'rea weakling you'reasuckling<lb/>
lamb you'renotso tough you'rejust<lb/>
Continued from page 8<lb/>
amanThe 14thandfinalsongonthe<lb/>
album isaliveremakeofNeilYoung's<lb/>
"Over and Over<lb/>
? Sarah<lb/>
Wahlert<lb/>
756-7177<lb/>
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ty jf Center<lb/>
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We now Offer<lb/>
Limousine<lb/>
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TUESDAYS<lb/>
Silver Bullet's Female "Exotic" Dancers<lb/>
WEDNESDAYS<lb/>
Amateur Night for Female Dancers 11pm-1am<lb/>
CASH PRIZE 7$ZtZe<lb/>
'Contestants need to call &amp; register in advance. Must arrive by SO0. faCtTC-CrtCP<lb/>
Silver Bullet Bartender<lb/>
THURSDAYS - SATURDAYS<lb/>
Silver Bullet's Female "Exotic" Dancers<lb/>
-<lb/>
Dancers wanted<lb/>
We do Birthdays, Bachelor Parties, Bridal Showers,<lb/>
Corporate Parties &amp; Divorces<lb/>
ECU STUDENT SPECIAL<lb/>
WERE<lb/>
KIHHIIM.<lb/>
I<lb/>
$2.00 OFF Admission Any Night with this coupon<lb/>
Doors Open 7:30pm Stage Time 9:00pm<lb/>
; Eggs Call 756-6278<lb/>
I EP 5 miies west of Greenville on 264 Alt<lb/>
 v Dlcklneon Av?.<lb/>
 (behind John's Convenient Mart)<lb/>
Valid N.C. I.D. Required<lb/>
I to II<lb/>
? ?<lb/>
. jmni<lb/>
The East Carolinian would like to bid farewell to the<lb/>
following valuable and dedicated employees upon<lb/>
their departures this semester:<lb/>
News Editor<lb/>
Lifestyle Editor<lb/>
Systems Manager<lb/>
Wang TV<lb/>
Karen Hassell<lb/>
Julie Totten<lb/>
Matt MacDonald<lb/>
Eric Manning<lb/>
Try Captain D's Broiled Dinners.<lb/>
Chicken<lb/>
Fish<lb/>
Shrimp<lb/>
Choose from broiled<lb/>
chicken, fish or shrimp.<lb/>
All dinners include rice,<lb/>
green beans, salad and<lb/>
breadstick.<lb/>
Alex Ferguson<lb/>
Joe Horst<lb/>
Wang TV<lb/>
MacGyver<lb/>
The East Carolinian would also like to wish everyone a<lb/>
very Merry Christmas and Happy New Year We hope to<lb/>
see all of you back here next semester Watch for our<lb/>
first issue on January 11th. <lb/>
<pb facs="00058444_0011"/><lb/>
?II I<lb/>
At Greenville Athletic Club<lb/>
i c h<lb/>
!r<lb/>
O 1 7 <lb/>
 tor<lb/>
re<lb/>
AthleticI Oiib<lb/>
?<lb/>
st:u Srs<lb/>
<pb facs="00058444_0012"/><lb/>
<lb/>
The East Carolinian<lb/>
Paeje 12<lb/>
What's On Tap?<lb/>
Thursday, Dec. 16<lb/>
M. Basketball, home<lb/>
vs. Furman at 7 p.m.<lb/>
Friday, Dec. 17<lb/>
W. Basketball, away<lb/>
at Furman, Greenville, S.C at<lb/>
5 p.m.<lb/>
Saturday, Dec. 18<lb/>
M. Basketball<lb/>
at Campbell, Fayettville, N.C at<lb/>
2 p.m.<lb/>
The 411<lb/>
Friday, Dec. 3<lb/>
M. Basketball, away<lb/>
beat Columbia, 78-51<lb/>
Saturday, Dec. 4<lb/>
M. Basketball, away<lb/>
lost to Mount St. Mary's, 70-75<lb/>
Swimming<lb/>
men beat American, 127-116<lb/>
women beat American, 132-111<lb/>
Women's CAA Leaders<lb/>
STANDINGS<lb/>
Team Conference GB Overall<lb/>
JMU 0-0 000 ? 3-1.750<lb/>
W&amp;M 0-0 .000 ? 3-1.750<lb/>
ODU 0-0 .000 ? 1-2.333<lb/>
UR 0-0 000 ? 1-2.333<lb/>
GMU 0-0 .000 ? 1-4.200<lb/>
ECU 0-0 .000 ? 0-1.000<lb/>
AU 0-0 .000 ? 0-4.000<lb/>
INDIVIDUAL LEADERS<lb/>
Scoring Avg<lb/>
Celeste Hill, ODU24.5<lb/>
Denise Winn, UR18.0<lb/>
Marcell Harrison, GMU16.8<lb/>
Laura Barnes, UR16.7<lb/>
Marilyn Gayton, W&amp;M16.3<lb/>
Rebounding Avg<lb/>
Ashleigh Akens, JMU10.8<lb/>
Nickie Hilton, GMU10.4<lb/>
Celeste Hill, ODU9.0<lb/>
Ina Nicosia, UR9.0<lb/>
Heidi Babb, UR8.0<lb/>
Assist Avg<lb/>
Tara Roberson, W&amp;M5.5<lb/>
Marcell Harrison, GMU5.4<lb/>
Christina tee, JMU4.8<lb/>
Celeste Hill, ODU4.0<lb/>
Angel Stanton, W&amp;M3.8<lb/>
Field Goal <lb/>
Marilyn Gayton, W&amp;M.750<lb/>
Tomekia Blackmon, ECU.667<lb/>
Celeste Hill, ODU.621<lb/>
Tiffany Stacey, UNCW.600<lb/>
Kirsten Keller, AU.583<lb/>
Free Throw <lb/>
Tracey Kelley, ECU1.00<lb/>
Tomekia Blackmon, ECU1.00<lb/>
Amber Blank, UNCW.909<lb/>
Joanna Chandler, UNCW.846<lb/>
Gail Wilkins, AU840<lb/>
3-pt Field Goal <lb/>
Justine Allpress, ECU.500<lb/>
Michaela Wallestrom, ECU.500<lb/>
Belinda Cagle, ECU.500<lb/>
Laura Barnes, UR462<lb/>
Gail Wilkins, AU.444<lb/>
TEAM LEADERS<lb/>
Scoring Margin<lb/>
William &amp; Mary19.8<lb/>
James Madison11.8<lb/>
George Mason1.2<lb/>
Old Dominion-0.3<lb/>
UNC Wilmington-11.3<lb/>
Richmond-14.0<lb/>
East Carolina-19.0<lb/>
American-24.5<lb/>
Rebounding Margin<lb/>
James Madison7.8<lb/>
William &amp; Mary4.8<lb/>
UNC Wilmington4.7<lb/>
Old Dominion2.0<lb/>
East Carolina?1.0<lb/>
George Mason-2.4<lb/>
American-2.8<lb/>
Richmond-4.0<lb/>
Field Goal <lb/>
Old Dominion45.6<lb/>
William &amp; Mary44.6<lb/>
George Mason43.9<lb/>
Richmond40.9<lb/>
East Carolina40.6<lb/>
James Madison39.4<lb/>
UNC Wilmington36.5<lb/>
American36.4<lb/>
Def. Field Goal <lb/>
James Madison35.7<lb/>
William &amp; Mary37.2<lb/>
George Mason39.5<lb/>
Old Dominion42.2<lb/>
Richmond46.2<lb/>
UNC Wilmington46.5<lb/>
American47.5<lb/>
East Carolina49.3<lb/>
Sports<lb/>
December 7, 1993<lb/>
Bucs lose tough one<lb/>
File photo<lb/>
Anton Gill replaces Ike Copehnd at center for the Pirates this<lb/>
season and needs to rebound well for the Bucs to be a succes.<lb/>
EMMTTSBURG,Md.(AP)?Chris<lb/>
McGuthrie scored 39 points to lead<lb/>
MountSt.Mary'stoa75-70 victory over<lb/>
East Carolina Saturday night in the<lb/>
championship game of the Mount St.<lb/>
Mary's Tip-Off Classic.<lb/>
McGuthrie had 30 of the team's<lb/>
first 39 points, and all but one of its field<lb/>
goals over the first 28 minutes of play.<lb/>
Despite the effort, East Carolina<lb/>
enjoyed a 32-17 halftime lead. Lester<lb/>
Lyons, who finished with 21 points to<lb/>
lead the Pirates, had nine in the first<lb/>
half, while Wilbert Hunter and Curley<lb/>
Young each had seven.<lb/>
The Mount tied it on a free throw<lb/>
by Matt Meakin at 6:48, which made it<lb/>
52-52. Itwas tied fourmoretimesbefore<lb/>
JeffBalistrere's3-pointerputtheMount<lb/>
in front 64-61 with 2:51 to play.<lb/>
Balistrere's 3-pointer came in a 10-<lb/>
0 run Mountie run that gave the home<lb/>
duba69-611eadwithlessthanarninute<lb/>
left. Balistrere added five free throws in<lb/>
the final 19 seconds to put the game<lb/>
away.<lb/>
McGuthrie finished the game 15-<lb/>
for-30 from the field, while the rest of<lb/>
the team was 9-for-35. Balistrere fin-<lb/>
ished with 14<lb/>
Young finished with 15 points,<lb/>
Hunter 10 and Anton Gill 14 for the<lb/>
Pirates, who slipped to 1-2 for the sea-<lb/>
son.<lb/>
ECU swimmers<lb/>
drown Birds<lb/>
By Brad Oldham<lb/>
Staff Writer<lb/>
The East Carolina swim team<lb/>
defeated the Eagles of American<lb/>
University on Saturday in an ex-<lb/>
citing meet that came down to<lb/>
the last event of the day ? The final<lb/>
scores against their CAA rivals<lb/>
were the men winning 127-116,<lb/>
and the women scoring a 132-111<lb/>
victory. The team won its sev-<lb/>
enth straight meet of the year,<lb/>
and its third straight conference<lb/>
win in an undefeated season.<lb/>
The meet came down to the<lb/>
400 free relay team of Brian Soltz,<lb/>
McGee Moody, Pat Cassidy and<lb/>
John Donovan. The four swim-<lb/>
mers got the win with a time of<lb/>
3:10.66. The 400 medley relay<lb/>
team of Moody, Lance Tate,<lb/>
David Benson and Chris<lb/>
Bembenek got the Pirates off on<lb/>
the right foot with a winning time<lb/>
of 3:32.96. Both Bembenek and<lb/>
Benson had solid performances<lb/>
on the day with Bembenek get-<lb/>
ting a win in the 200 backstroke<lb/>
with a time of 1:55.37, and Benson<lb/>
getting a win in the 100 freestyle<lb/>
with a time of 47.98 seconds.<lb/>
Soltz continued his excellent<lb/>
performance in the 50-yard<lb/>
freestyle, swimming to a win<lb/>
with a time of 21.80.<lb/>
For the women, one of the<lb/>
most exciting meets of the day<lb/>
was sophomore Jackie<lb/>
Schmieder's come from behind<lb/>
victory in the 200IM. Schmieder<lb/>
also continued her tear in the<lb/>
1000 freestyle with a time of<lb/>
10:38.17.Inthe200breaststroke,<lb/>
Elizabeth Browne placed first<lb/>
with a winning time of 2:30.21.<lb/>
The 400 free relay team of<lb/>
Rachel Atkinson, Annemarie<lb/>
Vogt, Jacqueline Silber and<lb/>
Christy Winn got the win.<lb/>
In diving, freshman Beth<lb/>
Hanrta got the win in the three<lb/>
meter board with a score of<lb/>
243.9 points.<lb/>
The Pirates will be training<lb/>
in North Palm Beach, Florida<lb/>
where they will train over the<lb/>
break before swimming against<lb/>
Northeast Missouri State on Jan.<lb/>
3,1994.<lb/>
Gordon honored<lb/>
NEW YORK (AP) ? Jeff Gor-<lb/>
don met the expectations of every-<lb/>
one but himself.<lb/>
The quiet 22-year-old was the<lb/>
consensus 1993 Rookie of the Year<lb/>
in N ASC AR's Winston Cup season<lb/>
after coming up with seven top-<lb/>
five finishes and 11 top 10 results.<lb/>
He started the year by winning<lb/>
one of the 125-mile qualifying races<lb/>
at Daytona and added a pair of<lb/>
second-place finishes during the<lb/>
season.<lb/>
"I looked at this year as a learn-<lb/>
ing experience and as a chance to<lb/>
do some pretty good things said<lb/>
Gordon, who was in New York to<lb/>
collect a $25,000 check f orhis rookie<lb/>
prize at Friday night's black tie<lb/>
NASCAR awards banquet. "We<lb/>
had a good year, I learned a lot and<lb/>
I had the opportunity to race with<lb/>
the best drivers in the world<lb/>
But pressed a bit, Gordon ad-<lb/>
mits he is disappointed his team,<lb/>
one of three fielded by Rick<lb/>
Hendrick, did not win a race and<lb/>
fell out of the top 10 in the points<lb/>
late in the season.<lb/>
"Well, I feltlike we were awful<lb/>
close to a win a few times the<lb/>
youngster said. "Ijustthoughtwe'd<lb/>
win a race and one of our goals was<lb/>
to finish in the top 10 in the points.<lb/>
You like to reach your goals<lb/>
One other goal he and crew<lb/>
chief Ray Evernham did reach was<lb/>
winninga pole position, a feat which<lb/>
put them in the Busch Clash in<lb/>
February at Daytona.<lb/>
"That pole (inOctober at Char-<lb/>
lotte Motor Speedway) was a big<lb/>
thing for our team Gordon said.<lb/>
"It made us all feel like we were on<lb/>
the right track, going in the right<lb/>
direction. I just wish wecould have<lb/>
won a race, too<lb/>
Gordon's talent has been com-<lb/>
pared to that of Dale Earnhardt,<lb/>
who won the rookie title in 1979<lb/>
and has gone on to win six Winston<lb/>
Cup titles, including,the 1993 cham-<lb/>
pionship, and Davey Allison, who<lb/>
was the top rookie in 1987 and went<lb/>
on to become a Daytona 500 win-<lb/>
ner.<lb/>
"His age doesn't really have<lb/>
anything to do with it. That Gordon<lb/>
boy is a very good driver<lb/>
Earnhardt said. "I have no problem<lb/>
racing with him anywhere on any<lb/>
track. He's probably going to win a<lb/>
lot of races and some champion-<lb/>
ships<lb/>
The first thing Gordon did in<lb/>
Winston Cup racing was turn what<lb/>
was expected to be a great rookie<lb/>
battle with Bobby Labonte and<lb/>
Kenny Wallace into a virtual one-<lb/>
man show, starting with a fifth-<lb/>
place finish in the Daytona 500 and<lb/>
easily leading the rookie standings<lb/>
the entire season.<lb/>
"Winning Rookie of the Year<lb/>
was a goal we had all season long<lb/>
and we're happy about winning<lb/>
he said. "But there was some really<lb/>
great competition from Bobby and<lb/>
Kenny, and they had pretty good<lb/>
years themselves. I'd like to think<lb/>
all three of us have a pretty good<lb/>
future in Winston Cup racing<lb/>
See ROOKIE page 15<lb/>
Football must look to future<lb/>
Germany brings the<lb/>
Davis Cup back home<lb/>
Stich still rolling<lb/>
By Robert S. Todd<lb/>
Sports Editor<lb/>
Watching ECU play football this year<lb/>
was like watching a high school all-star<lb/>
game; although, waiting for those play-<lb/>
ers to mature has been tough.<lb/>
However, Logan has lost the sup-<lb/>
port of many ECU students (see Mike<lb/>
Ashley's letter to the editor in the 122<lb/>
93 edition of TEC).<lb/>
One very legitimate excuse for such<lb/>
a poor 1993 campaign was the loss of<lb/>
Marcus Crandell in the second game of<lb/>
the season.<lb/>
Logan had no experienced back-up<lb/>
at the position. He would have, though,<lb/>
if he had not asked Michael Anderson to<lb/>
leave last December at the end of a 5-6<lb/>
season.<lb/>
Logan did not want Anderson<lb/>
around and admitted so after CrandeU's<lb/>
debutagainstSyracuse.Mostof the work-<lb/>
ing media were willing to overlook<lb/>
Logan's decision because Crandell re-<lb/>
minded most of a young Jeff Blake.<lb/>
Crandell's unfortunate injury pulled<lb/>
Anderson's skeleton out of the closet<lb/>
and the air needs to be cleared of the<lb/>
subject. He did not leave because he<lb/>
wasn't making his grades. He did not<lb/>
leave on his own accord. He was told to<lb/>
leave.<lb/>
As a sophomore, Anderson com-<lb/>
pleted over 55 percent of his passes, threw<lb/>
for 2,400 yards and had more touch-<lb/>
down passes than interceptions. He<lb/>
broke or tied 12 ECU passing records<lb/>
and appeared to have a bright future.<lb/>
There was some grumbling about<lb/>
Anderson not being a leader or a student<lb/>
as well as complaints that he threw too<lb/>
many interceptions.<lb/>
The interceptions were as much a<lb/>
result of Logan's play-calling as<lb/>
Anderson's inexperience. Anderson<lb/>
threw five interceptions against South-<lb/>
ern Miss in 1992. Logan was calling the<lb/>
plays and consistently had Anderson<lb/>
throwing into five and six defensive<lb/>
backs. Logan admitted in the preseason<lb/>
File photo<lb/>
The Pirate football team has been down and out the past two<lb/>
seasons, but the future looks bright with young talent.<lb/>
Compiled by Brad Oldham<lb/>
DUESSELDORF, Germany<lb/>
(AP) ? Michael Stich, still play-<lb/>
ing his best tennis of the year,<lb/>
gave Germany its third Davis Cup<lb/>
title with a decisive victory over<lb/>
Richard Fromberg of Sweden.<lb/>
Two weeks after winning the<lb/>
ATP Tour World Championship<lb/>
in Frankfurt, Stich achieved one<lb/>
of the main goals of his career and<lb/>
matched one more standard set<lb/>
by Boris Becker.<lb/>
Becker, who led Germany to<lb/>
its previous two Davis Cup titles<lb/>
in 1988 and 1989, refused to play<lb/>
this year.<lb/>
"This was our Christmas<lb/>
present to Germany Stich said<lb/>
after his team's 4-1 victory.<lb/>
Stich, 25, who began the year<lb/>
as No. 15 and climbed to No. 2,<lb/>
won six tournaments this year on<lb/>
all four surfaces.<lb/>
Germany picked red clay for<lb/>
the surface against Australia, and<lb/>
the choice proved correct against<lb/>
a team that prefers faster courts.<lb/>
Stich won both his singles<lb/>
matches and played a major role<lb/>
in Germany's important doubles<lb/>
victory.<lb/>
His 6-4, 6-2, 6-2 victory over<lb/>
Fromberg gave Germany the vi-<lb/>
tal third point in the best-of-five<lb/>
series.<lb/>
"It couldn't have gone bet-<lb/>
ter Stich said, of the year and of<lb/>
the Davis Cup. "It was fantastic<lb/>
"It has been a very long, but a<lb/>
very successful year Stich said.<lb/>
"I was tired, but the team spirit<lb/>
gave me the power to fight here<lb/>
that he may have pushed<lb/>
Anderson too hard and decided<lb/>
he would not put Crandell or<lb/>
Mattison under the same pres-<lb/>
sure in his passing attack.<lb/>
Academically, Anderson<lb/>
met NCAA and ECU academic<lb/>
requirements and he was leader<lb/>
enough to help his team score<lb/>
26 points per game. Anderson<lb/>
held up his end of the bargain.<lb/>
It is hard to sympathize for<lb/>
Logan when he asked a poten-<lb/>
tially Liilliant quarterback to<lb/>
leave, putting him in the posi-<lb/>
tion of having no backup for<lb/>
Crandell. He was unprepaired<lb/>
in 1992, also. He failed to recruit<lb/>
a punter, and to help solve the<lb/>
problem, the football team<lb/>
placed an ad in The East Caro-<lb/>
linian hoping to find someone<lb/>
with a strong leg.<lb/>
However, hindsight is 20-<lb/>
20 and there is nothing that<lb/>
can be done now about all the<lb/>
problems over the past two<lb/>
seasons.<lb/>
Ahealthy Crandell in 1994<lb/>
? Logan's third year ?<lb/>
should put a little luster on a<lb/>
program that has faded from<lb/>
the national scene like a $10<lb/>
dollar T-shirt after three<lb/>
washes.<lb/>
The third time is a charm<lb/>
See LOGAN page 15<lb/>
No. 1 could be a cloudy picture<lb/>
NEW YORK (AP) ? For the<lb/>
third time in four years, college<lb/>
football could be heading for a split<lb/>
national championship.<lb/>
The winner of the Florida State-<lb/>
Nebraska showdown in the Orange<lb/>
Bowl figures to capture The Associ-<lb/>
ated Press media title. But West<lb/>
Virginia could win the USA Today-<lb/>
CNN coaches' championship with<lb/>
a victory over Horida in the Sugar<lb/>
Bowl and a Nebraska loss.<lb/>
"I'd like to have any part of it 1<lb/>
can get said Florida State coach<lb/>
Bobby Bowden, who has neverwon<lb/>
a national championship despite<lb/>
six shaight finishes in the top four.<lb/>
Nebraska coach Tom Osbome<lb/>
also is seeking his first national title.<lb/>
"A piece of one is certainly bet-<lb/>
ter than nothing at all he said.<lb/>
Florida State (11-1) is No. 1 and<lb/>
Nebraska (11-0) is No. 2 in the AP<lb/>
poll, so the Orange Bowl winner<lb/>
probably will win the media ver-<lb/>
sion of the championship. But West<lb/>
Virginia (11-0) is No. 2 in the<lb/>
coaches' poll ? trailing Nebraska<lb/>
but ahead of No. 3 Florida State ?<lb/>
and could finish first if it beats No.<lb/>
SHorida (10-2) and the Comhuskers<lb/>
lose.<lb/>
"If we win, then we'd be 12-0<lb/>
and I'd feel strongly that we would<lb/>
earn a part of the national champi-<lb/>
onship said West Virginia coach<lb/>
Don Nehlen.<lb/>
After weeks of speculation<lb/>
and controversy, the final pieces<lb/>
of the bowl puzzle fell into place<lb/>
Sunday when the Orange, Sugar<lb/>
and Cotton matchups were an-<lb/>
nounced following release of the<lb/>
final regular-season polls.<lb/>
West Virginia turned down a<lb/>
Cotton Bowl invitation to play for<lb/>
more money in New Orleans, a<lb/>
move that sent No. 4 Notre Dame<lb/>
(10-1) to the Cotton against No. 7<lb/>
Texas A&amp;M(10-l).TheSugarpays<lb/>
each team $4.15 million, com-<lb/>
pared to$3 million for theCotton.<lb/>
See ROUNDUP page 15<lb/>
r.?-?W!W)7t<lb/>
?<lb/>
<pb facs="00058444_0013"/><lb/>
December 7, 1993<lb/>
itive Lett gets support<lb/>
Kids send helpful letters<lb/>
 E urntu<lb/>
for the Dallas<lb/>
iw boys ??? teen) , weeny,<lb/>
tie, bitt) mistake Chelsea<lb/>
Krueger told the defensive line-<lb/>
man.<lb/>
Krueger, a fifth-grader at<lb/>
John L. Hanby school in a Dallas<lb/>
suburb, sent one of several hun-<lb/>
dred supportive letters from el-<lb/>
ementary students Lett has re-<lb/>
ceived since his Thanksgiving<lb/>
Day honor.<lb/>
"Dear Mr. Lett, I watched the<lb/>
game the other day and I under-<lb/>
stand that you made a teeny,<lb/>
weeny, little, bitty mistake. Well,<lb/>
you know what  WE ALL<lb/>
DO Krueger wrote.<lb/>
The Cowboys were leading<lb/>
the Miami Dolphins 14-13<lb/>
Thanksgiving Day when in the<lb/>
closing seconds of the game, the<lb/>
Dolphins attempted a game-win-<lb/>
ning field goal. The kick was<lb/>
blocked and the ball was about to<lb/>
roll dead inside the'Dallas 10,<lb/>
where the Cowboys would be<lb/>
able to run out the remaining sec-<lb/>
onds.<lb/>
Instead, Lett tried to fall on<lb/>
the ball. He slid on the snow-<lb/>
covered field and touched the<lb/>
ball, allowing the Dolphins to<lb/>
recover it on the Dallas one with<lb/>
three seconds remaining in the<lb/>
gome.<lb/>
Miami's Pete Stoyanovich<lb/>
was good on his second-chance<lb/>
field goal for a 16-14 victory,<lb/>
making Lett a goat for the second<lb/>
time this year. Lett's premature<lb/>
celebration after a fumble recov-<lb/>
ery in the Super Bowl in January<lb/>
cost him a sure touchdown and<lb/>
the Cowboys a Super Bowl scor-<lb/>
ing record.<lb/>
After his Super Bowl blun-<lb/>
der, in which Don Beebe caught<lb/>
him from behind and knocked<lb/>
the ball away, Lett received a lot<lb/>
of hate mail.<lb/>
Lett's latest gaffe has been<lb/>
the talk of the town since Thanks-<lb/>
giving, and the children at Hanby<lb/>
wanted him to know they are on<lb/>
his side.<lb/>
Cathy Rideout, Hanby prin-<lb/>
cipal, said the letter-writing idea<lb/>
came from a student who told his<lb/>
teacher that it was wrong for<lb/>
people to criticize Lett. The stu-<lb/>
dent was told to send a note of<lb/>
encouragement to the defensive<lb/>
lineman.<lb/>
The effort soon snowballed<lb/>
into the letter-writing campaign<lb/>
involving all Hanby students.<lb/>
"It's exactly what we need to<lb/>
do with our kids Rideout said.<lb/>
"We're teaching them writing<lb/>
skills, and we're also teaching<lb/>
them that it's OK to make mis-<lb/>
takes and that you can learn from<lb/>
your mistakes<lb/>
In all, 886 letters of support<lb/>
to Lett went out from Hanby stu-<lb/>
dents on Wednesday.<lb/>
"I told him what our teachers<lb/>
tell us, that tomorrow's a new<lb/>
beginning fifth-grader K.C.<lb/>
Ramsey said.<lb/>
The outside of each card<lb/>
reads: "Dear Mr. Lett, Everybody<lb/>
makes mistakes that's why pen-<lb/>
cils have erasers! We believe in<lb/>
ourselves We want you to be-<lb/>
lieve in yourself, too<lb/>
The kids wrote personal mes-<lb/>
sages on the inside.<lb/>
Cowboys spokesman Rich<lb/>
Dalrymple said Lett received the<lb/>
letters, but still was not talking<lb/>
about the blunder Thursday, one<lb/>
week after the episode.<lb/>
Second-grader Casey<lb/>
Millsaps included a photograph<lb/>
of herself with her note.<lb/>
"I told him, I have made so<lb/>
many mistakes that I can't re-<lb/>
member half of them Casey<lb/>
said. "I'm still your fan. By the<lb/>
way, Miami stinks<lb/>
Laura Beddow, another sec-<lb/>
ond-grader, wrote: "Everybody<lb/>
doesn't have to be mean to him<lb/>
because it was just a mistake<lb/>
Uninterested<lb/>
it quits from<lb/>
CHARLOTTE, N.C. (AP) ?<lb/>
North Carolina State senior Migjen<lb/>
Bakalli. saying he did not feel part<lb/>
of the team, has decided to leave the<lb/>
Wolfpack basketball program to<lb/>
focus on academics.<lb/>
Bakalli, a 6-foot-6 forward from<lb/>
Belmont,told TfieOiarhtteObserver<lb/>
in a phone interview Wednesday<lb/>
night that he was quitting because<lb/>
"my heart wasn't in it and I was<lb/>
goingoutthere half-heartedly. And<lb/>
plus I feel like the program is going<lb/>
in the wrong direction<lb/>
As a Wolfpack freshman,<lb/>
BakaH broke the school record for<lb/>
consecutive 3-pointfield goals with<lb/>
eight. He also tied the school record<lb/>
of most 3-point baskets in a game<lb/>
with nine.<lb/>
Bakalli ranks fourth on the N.C.<lb/>
State all-time list with 100 career 3-<lb/>
pointers.<lb/>
The school's written statement<lb/>
said Bakalli, a team captain, was<lb/>
leaving for "personal reasons in-<lb/>
cluding a need to devote more time<lb/>
The East Carolinian 13<lb/>
Bakalli calls<lb/>
Wolfpack<lb/>
to his studies.<lb/>
"Grades aren't a problem<lb/>
Bakalli told Vie Observer.<lb/>
Fejz Bakalli, his father, said<lb/>
Wednesday night that his son has a<lb/>
2.8 grade-point average.<lb/>
Coach Les Robinson said in a<lb/>
statement thathe supports Bakalli's<lb/>
decision to spend more time study<lb/>
ing.<lb/>
Bakalli, the last player signed<lb/>
bylateWolfpackcoachJimValvano,<lb/>
has seen his playing time diminish.<lb/>
Bakalli was seldom used in the re-<lb/>
cent Great Alaska Shootout. N.C.<lb/>
State (1-2) has played three games,<lb/>
and Bakalli scored a total of eight<lb/>
points.<lb/>
"I regret that Migjen has de-<lb/>
cided to forego his senior year of<lb/>
eligibility, but I do support his deci-<lb/>
sion to devote more time to his<lb/>
studies in order to complete his<lb/>
degree requirements this spring<lb/>
Robinson said. "That was the pri-<lb/>
mary reason he decided to attend<lb/>
N.C. State<lb/>
Virginia holds<lb/>
off Princeton<lb/>
in semi-finals<lb/>
DAVIDSON, N.C. (AP) ?<lb/>
Junior forward Nate Friends<lb/>
scored three first half goals Fri-<lb/>
day, as third-ranked Virginia<lb/>
held off Princeton for a 3-1 vic-<lb/>
tory in the NCAA soccer semifi-<lb/>
nals.<lb/>
The 21-3-0 Cavaliers ad-<lb/>
vanced within one victory of be-<lb/>
coming the first in men's soccer<lb/>
history to capture three consecu-<lb/>
tive NCAA titles.<lb/>
Pressing forward from the<lb/>
outset, Virginia fired three shots<lb/>
and a corner kick in the match's<lb/>
first minute. The relentless at-<lb/>
tack produced the first goal three<lb/>
minutes, 14 seconds into the<lb/>
match, when AJ. Wood slipped<lb/>
a pass through the box, and<lb/>
Friends put away a chip over<lb/>
Tiger goalkeeper Rob Pawloski.<lb/>
See SOCCER page 14<lb/>
UNC-W slips by Florida Int.<lb/>
The next issue<lb/>
of The East<lb/>
Carolinian is<lb/>
scheduled to<lb/>
print Jan. 11,<lb/>
1994.<lb/>
MIAMI (AP)?Corey Stewart<lb/>
tallied 14 points and North Caro-<lb/>
lina-Wilmington held off a last<lb/>
minute rally to defeat Horida In-<lb/>
ternational 46-44 Saturday in the<lb/>
championship game of the Golden<lb/>
Panthers Invitational.<lb/>
The teams struggled back and<lb/>
forth and went into halfume dead-<lb/>
locked at 16. Florida International<lb/>
(1-2) took a 21-18 lead with 15:18<lb/>
left in the game before the<lb/>
Seahawks (2-2) surged ahead.<lb/>
North Carolina-Wilmington<lb/>
led for the rest of the game, taking<lb/>
a 44-35 lead with 49 seconds left.<lb/>
James Mazyck's 3-pointer cut it to<lb/>
six with 40 seconds left.<lb/>
John Spann's shot upped the<lb/>
margin to eight before Mazyck ad-<lb/>
dressed the call again with a layup<lb/>
and free throw to cut it to five<lb/>
points. Eric Lawson then hit a 3-<lb/>
pointer to cut it to 46-44 with six<lb/>
seconds left, but North Carolina-<lb/>
Wilmington held on to the ball as<lb/>
time expired.<lb/>
Backing up Stewart's 14 points<lb/>
was Chris Meighen with 11 points<lb/>
and Spann's 10. Mazyck led Horida<lb/>
International with a game-high 21<lb/>
points.<lb/>
ESP plus<lb/>
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T<lb/>
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THE ORDINARY, THE EXTRAORDINARY,<lb/>
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CAN YOU DRAW?<lb/>
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THE POSITION OF CARTOONIST<lb/>
The cortoonist creates cartoons for the weekly comics page ft must<lb/>
produce quality, tasteful work for publication in the newspaper. A<lb/>
cartoonist must be enrolled as o student ot East Carolina University<lb/>
ft maintain a minimum of 2.0 GPA while employed at Th? East<lb/>
Carolinian. Must also be able to handle responsibility ft meet<lb/>
deadlines.<lb/>
Applications are now being accepted<lb/>
ot the Student Publications Bldg.<lb/>
Unlike War and Peace,<lb/>
this revolution will fit in your pocket<lb/>
The Revolutionary Newton MessagePad.<lb/>
The Apple? Newton? MessagePad? communications<lb/>
assistant weighs less than a pound, yet it can turn<lb/>
the chaos and confusion of almost anyone's<lb/>
life?especially a college student's-into<lb/>
order and reason. And between that fifteen-<lb/>
hundred-page book on the Russian revolution<lb/>
you have to finish by Friday, the lab report that's<lb/>
due first thing in the morning, and the statistics<lb/>
model that's already late, you could probably use a<lb/>
little order and reason.<lb/>
For starters, every Newton MessagePad has a<lb/>
built-in address book, a to-do list, and a calendar-all of<lb/>
which work together to make sure you're in the right<lb/>
place at the right time. It even has an alarm that will remind<lb/>
you to do things like call your mom on her birthday.<lb/>
The Newton MessagePad lets you send a fax or receive a<lb/>
page You can also subscribe to NewtonMail? and exchange<lb/>
electronic mail with other NewtonMail subscribers, as well as<lb/>
with users of popular electronic services, such as the Internet<lb/>
and CompuServe.<lb/>
Write on the Newton screen and you'll witness something<lb/>
else that's amazing. Not only will it recognize your handwriting<lb/>
and turn it into polished text, but it will also recognize<lb/>
shapes and turn loose sketches into razor-sharp drawings.<lb/>
This makes it perfect for saving all the brainstorm ideas<lb/>
you come up with each day. Better still, with the Newton<lb/>
Connection Kit you can transfer information stored on<lb/>
your Newton to a PC running Microsoft Windows or a<lb/>
Macintosh? computer.<lb/>
In addition, there are a host of applications<lb/>
available for the Newton that will help you tackle<lb/>
everything from complex math formulas to slide<lb/>
presentations. There are also a variety of<lb/>
entertainment programs that will help you<lb/>
spend all of the time you'll be saving by<lb/>
using your Newton.<lb/>
So visit your campus reseller and see<lb/>
what the Newton MessagePad can do for.<lb/>
you. And don't worry, it won't take s <lb/>
you fifteen hundred pages to discover "Xp"<lb/>
Student Stores<lb/>
Wright Building ? 757<lb/>
Hours: M-Th 8-8, Fri 8-5,<lb/>
what this revolution's all about.<lb/>
Newton<lb/>
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 Optional accessories and services required. ? Newton Connection Kit and additional<lb/>
rosoft Corporation. Windows is a trademark of Microsoft Corporation. December. 1993.<lb/>
?nipmjj.mn.nu<lb/>
<pb facs="00058444_0014"/><lb/>
December 7, 1993<lb/>
N.C. announces 1993 all high school football standouts<lb/>
dous nen. Shrine B w!<lb/>
(lion.<lb/>
TRAVIS LOOKABDLL, Anson<lb/>
H tSR6-0,250?Benchpresses<lb/>
350 and squats 5CX3 pounds. Qxxi at<lb/>
both pass blocking and rush blocking.<lb/>
Best quality is stentgh and overall<lb/>
knowledge of the game. Drawing of-<lb/>
fers from Virginia, Duke and I-AA<lb/>
schools.<lb/>
MATTBLJTLERSouthPointOL,<lb/>
SR 64,260?Shrine Bowl pick, lead-<lb/>
ing blocker on team that rushed for<lb/>
310 yards per game and won share of<lb/>
Southwestern 3-A championship.<lb/>
Coach PhilTatecalls him bestlineman<lb/>
the school has ever had.<lb/>
DAMON COLLINS, W. Char-<lb/>
lotte, SR OL, 6-4 265 ? Collins is a<lb/>
Shrine Bowl pick who helped lead the<lb/>
wayforaLionsoffensethatscored411<lb/>
poin ts in the regular season, most in 4-<lb/>
A, and averaged more than 400 yards<lb/>
per game. Oneof thereasons the Lions<lb/>
always runleft is becauseCollinsplavs<lb/>
on that side.<lb/>
SCOTT BREECE, W. Charlotte,<lb/>
SR,C,(5-3,260?Another inalongline<lb/>
oftop Lions linemen, Breece anchored<lb/>
what many coaches considered to be<lb/>
Charlotte'stopoffensiveline.Thenum-<lb/>
bersdon'targue:VVestChariottescored<lb/>
more than 40 points a game and ran<lb/>
many long pass routes.<lb/>
JEFFFLOWECharlotteIndepen-<lb/>
dence,SR,OL,6-6,310?Teams used<lb/>
two and sometimes three blockers to<lb/>
stop this all-conference performer.<lb/>
Howe was a preseason national All-<lb/>
America and is being recruited by all<lb/>
- rooOege.<lb/>
WHITE, Durham<lb/>
1 illside,SrQL?6-0,330? A pound-<lb/>
ing blocker with go 341eft tackle all<lb/>
sear. 1. ed 'ouble-teamsondefense,<lb/>
still had 39 sol?all-conference, high-<lb/>
est rated lineman on a primarily rush-<lb/>
ing football team.<lb/>
BILLYVVOOD,N.Davidson,OL,<lb/>
SR, 6-3,275 ? all-conference, leader<lb/>
of line thathelpedbackSmyle Wagner<lb/>
toaschool career rushingreaird.Shrine<lb/>
Bowl selection.<lb/>
TREY PITTMAN, Greene Cen-<lb/>
tral, OL, SR, 6-2,240 ? Height only<lb/>
dra wbackf or Division I head coaches,<lb/>
although ECU still interesteddid not<lb/>
allow a sack, despite blocking for two<lb/>
quarterbacks who plaved each game<lb/>
onrotatingbasisaveragedfieknock-<lb/>
down blocks per gamegraded high-<lb/>
est of any Greene Central lineman in<lb/>
recent years for the season, including<lb/>
five games to end career above his<lb/>
eventual season-ending<lb/>
averagelong-snapper for punts.<lb/>
JASON FLYNT, High Point<lb/>
Andrews, OL, SR, 64,260 ? Three-<lb/>
 ear starter.<lb/>
ROBERT SAUNDERS, W.<lb/>
Alamance, OL-DL, SR, 6-0, 231 ?<lb/>
Graded out 88 percent after switching<lb/>
from tackle to guard. Two-time all-<lb/>
conference plaver.<lb/>
SPECIAL TEAMS<lb/>
SENECA GORHAM, Farmville<lb/>
Central?Seeplayeroftheyear nomi-<lb/>
nations.<lb/>
GARY CROUGH, S. Caldwell,<lb/>
JR 5-10,155 ? Returned three kick-<lb/>
offs for TDS (93,90 and 84 yards).<lb/>
DECARLOS WEST, W. Forsyth,<lb/>
SR . 5-7,145 ? Returned 1 kickoffs<lb/>
for 23.3 vard average, including one<lb/>
TD.<lb/>
ANWAR WYATT, Lincolnton,<lb/>
SOPH 5-7 155 ? One of the most<lb/>
dangerous return men in the state.<lb/>
Returned one punt for score.<lb/>
PLACE-KICKERS<lb/>
JAMIE PEELE, N. Davidson, PK,<lb/>
SR5-10,160?KICKOFFS?21 of 40<lb/>
for touchbacks. FIELD GOALS ?12<lb/>
of 16 (inside the 201-1, from 20 to 305-<lb/>
5, from 30 to 40 5-7,40 plus 1-3). PATs<lb/>
15-of-16. Led team with 51 points.<lb/>
Shrine Bowl kicker.<lb/>
ETT SPEAKMAN, Charlotte<lb/>
Christian, SR, PK, 5-10, 160 ?<lb/>
Speakman hit six of nine field goals?<lb/>
and his three misses came from 50,51<lb/>
and 52-yards out; the 52-yarder was<lb/>
tipped and fell two yards in frontof die<lb/>
cross-bar. Speakman kicked a long of<lb/>
46, and he hit 22 of 24 extra point<lb/>
attempts and regularly kicked off into<lb/>
the back of the end zone.<lb/>
NELSON GARNER, Burlington<lb/>
Williams, PK, SR, 5-11,160 ? Had<lb/>
four field goals and 29 extra points.<lb/>
DEFENSIVE LINE<lb/>
RUSSELL DAVIS, Fayetteville<lb/>
Smith, DL, SR, 6-5, 255 ? Tremen-<lb/>
dous physical specimen. Already<lb/>
qualified on the SAT and is a hot<lb/>
college prospect Shrine Bowl selec-<lb/>
tion.<lb/>
KELVIN SHACKLEFORD,<lb/>
Farmville Central, DL, JR, 60,265?<lb/>
Recorded 55 tackles, including 16 for<lb/>
loss. He caused two fumbles and had<lb/>
eight quarterback hurries.<lb/>
JONATHAN ANDERSON,<lb/>
D.H. Conley, DL, JR, 5-5,150?De-<lb/>
spite his size, Anderson was an all-<lb/>
CoastalConferenceselectionatdefen-<lb/>
siveline. He blocked four kicks, recov-<lb/>
ered five fumbles, had five sacks and<lb/>
12 tackles for loss. Had 78 total tackles<lb/>
for the season.<lb/>
SHUG DANIELS, W. Charlotte,<lb/>
SR, DL, 5-8,160 ? Don't let the size<lb/>
fool you. Daniels is a three-time all-<lb/>
conference performer. He was named<lb/>
Southwestern 4-Adefensiveplayerof<lb/>
the year after getting 115 tackles this<lb/>
season. In the Lions' 53-0 win over<lb/>
Hunter Huss in the playoffs' first<lb/>
round, Daniels, in two quarters, had<lb/>
three sacks, five tackles ? three for<lb/>
losses?three assists and a puntblock.<lb/>
TORREY HAILEY, Charlotte<lb/>
Proidence,SR,DL,64,300?Named<lb/>
to all-conference offensive and defen-<lb/>
sive teams, Hailey may be best line-<lb/>
man inCharlotte. Hailey alwaysdrew<lb/>
double- and triple-teams.<lb/>
JERMADME BETHEL, E. Wake,<lb/>
DL, SR, 6-2,242?Cat-like quickness<lb/>
helped Bethel set the East Wake sack<lb/>
record. Three-year starter forthe War-<lb/>
riors. Played his best in the biggest<lb/>
games. Almost always double<lb/>
teammed.<lb/>
TONYDINGLE,SouthView,DL,<lb/>
SR, 64,267 ? Incredibly quick and<lb/>
agile. Academics are the only reason<lb/>
he'snotrxdngrecruitedbyeverybody.<lb/>
Anchored a defense that was deci-<lb/>
mated by graduation, yet still man-<lb/>
aged to help South View share the<lb/>
Mid-Soutli4-AChampionship. Shrine<lb/>
Bowl pick.<lb/>
DAVID FLEISCHAUER, W.<lb/>
Forsyth, DL, JR 6-5,238?82 tackles,<lb/>
6 sacks, batted down two passes,<lb/>
caused five fumbles, recovered, three<lb/>
fumbles,andblockedoneextra points.<lb/>
FORREST SULLIVAN, W-S<lb/>
Carver, DL, SR, 6-2,235?8 sacks, 63<lb/>
tackles, 33 unassisted, 5 fumble recov-<lb/>
eries, 1 interception, a lot of schoolsare<lb/>
looking at him playing linebacker,<lb/>
being recruited by Appalachian, East<lb/>
Carolina, NCA&amp;T.<lb/>
ANDRONE HATCHETT, W-S<lb/>
Parkland, DL,SR,6-3,250?44 solos,<lb/>
36 assists, 1 fumble recovery; drawing<lb/>
Div. I interest coach said; all-confer-<lb/>
ence.<lb/>
VALDEZFEARS,N.Forsyth,DL,<lb/>
SR, 6-1, 270 ? 4.9 40, Coach Drew<lb/>
Buiesaid thatFearsdidn'thavea lot of<lb/>
tackles because of double-team, 33<lb/>
first-hits, had 4 sacks. 2 fumble recov-<lb/>
eries.<lb/>
MARCUS DOW, Thomasville,<lb/>
DL, SR, 6-2,240?Shrine Bowl selec-<lb/>
tion. Extremely quick off the balL A<lb/>
dominating defensive player. Has<lb/>
leadership skills.<lb/>
RONALD WILSON, Reidsville,<lb/>
DL,SR,6-2,285?All-statechoicelast<lb/>
year and repeated that kind of perf or-<lb/>
mance.Despiteconstantdouble-team-<lb/>
ing, made 69 tackles. Was Triad 3-A<lb/>
defensive player of the year second<lb/>
straight time. A dominant force on a<lb/>
defense that had 7 shutouts and gave<lb/>
up just 41 total points.<lb/>
DEMOND FARRISH, E.<lb/>
Alamance,DL,SR,5-ll,230?48solo<lb/>
tackles, 24 more tackles for losses, 35<lb/>
assists, 15 sacks, 5 caused fumbles, 1<lb/>
fumble recovery.<lb/>
SHERROD PEACE, Northern<lb/>
Durham, DL,Sr64,228?40 tackles,<lb/>
3 forced fumbles, 1 punt block, 21<lb/>
pressures, 6 sacks.<lb/>
STEVE CARSON, Northern<lb/>
Durham,DL,Sr6-l,201?37tackles,<lb/>
1 fumble recovery, 1 punt block, 19<lb/>
pressures, 1 PAT block, 8 sacks.<lb/>
BOBBY JONES, Northern<lb/>
Durham, DL, Sr 5-10,227?55 tack-<lb/>
les,onefumblerecovery,17pressures,<lb/>
5 sacks.<lb/>
BRIANROSEBOROHighPoint<lb/>
Andrews, DL, SR, 64,265 ? Aver-<lb/>
aged about six tackles per game for a<lb/>
team that allows only 70 yards rush-<lb/>
ing per game.<lb/>
PROCTOR BARBER SHOP<lb/>
Men's Hairstyling<lb/>
222-D Cotanche St.<lb/>
758-3802<lb/>
Clipper &amp; Scissor<lb/>
Cuts $7.00<lb/>
i? fci fei , Comer of 3rd &amp;<lb/>
-iLsJaj. Cotanche<lb/>
Ron Nichols<lb/>
FREE PREGNANCY TEST<lb/>
while you wait<lb/>
Free &amp; Confidential<lb/>
Services &amp; Counseling<lb/>
Carolina Pregnancy Center<lb/>
111 E. 3rd Street<lb/>
The Lee Building<lb/>
Greenville NC<lb/>
757-0003<lb/>
Hours:<lb/>
Monday - Friday<lb/>
8:30-3:30<lb/>
The East Carolinian is currently<lb/>
accepting applications for<lb/>
SYSTEMS MANAGER<lb/>
The candidate's responsibilities and<lb/>
qualifications would include:<lb/>
?Ensuring that computer hardware<lb/>
 and software are working correctly,<lb/>
being responsible for troubleshooting minor software<lb/>
problems, or resolve problems by calling the appropriate<lb/>
service personnel<lb/>
?Managing The East Carolinian's network server<lb/>
?Developing training and orientation sessions about<lb/>
computer software for new staff members<lb/>
?Be enrolled as a student at East Carolina University<lb/>
?Have and maintain a minimum of a 2.0 grade point average<lb/>
while employed at The East Carolinian<lb/>
?Be able to determine the newspaper's production needs and<lb/>
keep an up-to-date inventory of<lb/>
equipment, parts, and supplies<lb/>
?Have extensive knowledge of<lb/>
Apple Macintosh hardware (CPUs, P<lb/>
LaserWriters, modems, scanners, ?<lb/>
monitors, wiring, etc.) and software (networking, desktop<lb/>
publishing &amp; word processing applications, graphic &amp;<lb/>
telecommunications software)<lb/>
Applications are available at The East Carolinian office<lb/>
located on the second floor of the Students Pubs building<lb/>
So,youte in desperate need of a computer<lb/>
butyou're totally broke until after the newyear.<lb/>
Happy Holidays.<lb/>
Introducing the new Apple Computer Loan.<lb/>
Now qualified applicants can get any select Macintosh<lb/>
. or PowerBook with no payments for 90 days.<lb/>
Introducing The New Apple Computer Loan<lb/>
Now, you can take home some of our most popular Macintosh and time, seven incredibly useful software programs will be included all for<lb/>
PowerBook" models with no money down and no payments for 90 days, one low price. So, celebrate this season with a brand-new Macintosh or<lb/>
(You could qualify with a phone call, but must apply by January 28, PowerBook computer. It does more. It costs less. It's that simple. ?<lb/>
1994.) It's all part of the new Apple Computer Loan. And, for a limited <lb/>
Visit your Apple Campus Reseller for more information.<lb/>
Student Stores<lb/>
Wright Building ? 757-6731<lb/>
Hours: M-Th 8-8, Fri 8-5, Sat 11-5<lb/>
? 1993,vph'UimfmiiT hit tllngtt rnnmt Afiie theyplela HMMM mdltotrBookmrtgBtendtrakMirktfilfikComputer, lm<lb/>
?<lb/>
<pb facs="00058444_0015"/><lb/>
December 7, 1993<lb/>
The East Carolinian 15<lb/>
Continued from page 12<lb/>
LOGAN<lb/>
Continued from page 12<lb/>
ROUNDUP<lb/>
Continued from page 12<lb/>
AC<lb/>
i and<lb/>
Me OI<lb/>
es<lb/>
mpared to<lb/>
Richard P on.It's<lb/>
? ? guys He's<lb/>
trying to be as humble as he can.<lb/>
He'll tell you he doesn't have an<lb/>
God-given talent He'U tell you he's<lb/>
just driven race cars all his lite<lb/>
Gordon began driving open-<lb/>
wheel cars in his teens, winning the<lb/>
U.S. Auto Club quarter-midg? t<lb/>
championships in 1979 and 1981<lb/>
won a record 11 pol<lb/>
i the series in 1992<lb/>
g Li p ti i Winsti n Cup.<lb/>
! knew there w ould be a lot to<lb/>
.?.lien 1 got to Winston Cup<lb/>
( krdon said, "but the competition<lb/>
realh is incredible. 1 ou can doev-<lb/>
erything right and still wind up<lb/>
fifth or six or 1 2 th because that mam-<lb/>
other guys are having a great race<lb/>
' But we do have a great owner<lb/>
and a great race team and our goals<lb/>
are to be competitive, win some<lb/>
race- next season and evenruallv<lb/>
win the championship Gordon<lb/>
added. '1 can't wait tor next season<lb/>
to get started<lb/>
Photo by SID<lb/>
Rl(n TIMF' With all the talk of ECU quarterbacks91<lb/>
DlVJ I lVC. grajuate Jeff Biae ;s sf j a N Y. jet.<lb/>
and I ogan has been gearing up tor<lb/>
this season since he took over the<lb/>
Bucs.<lb/>
For the past two years, Logan<lb/>
has sacrificed many talented se-<lb/>
niors for freshmen and sophomores<lb/>
that will help him down the road.<lb/>
Mack Brown, the head coach at<lb/>
North Carolina,did the same thing<lb/>
when he arrived in Chapel Hill<lb/>
and he suffered back-to-back 1-10<lb/>
seasons. This season will mark<lb/>
UNC's second straight bowl ap-<lb/>
pearance.<lb/>
The difference here is that<lb/>
Brown had back-to-back recruit-<lb/>
ing classes that were among the<lb/>
nation s best. He sacrificed medio-<lb/>
cre seniors tor very talented un-<lb/>
derclassmen. Logan satdownGreg<lb/>
Grandison, 1992's leading candi-<lb/>
date for the Jim Thorpe Award, for<lb/>
then-freshman Morris Foreman.<lb/>
Foreman gained valuable ex-<lb/>
perience at safety and Grandison<lb/>
vanished. However, last season,<lb/>
Foreman moved to linebacker and<lb/>
plaved well. So, in effect,<lb/>
Grandison'scareer went down the<lb/>
pipes for nothing.<lb/>
ECU could have won more<lb/>
games over the past two years if<lb/>
the best players played each game.<lb/>
However, Logan wanted divi-<lb/>
dends down the road. And his<lb/>
moves might pay off.<lb/>
Greg Floyd was one of the sac-<lb/>
rificial lambs in 1993. He started at<lb/>
cornerback  i sophomore in 1991<lb/>
and again in 1992. Last season,<lb/>
Have a Merry<lb/>
X-Mas, and the<lb/>
TEC will be<lb/>
accepting<lb/>
applications for<lb/>
sports writers in<lb/>
the Spring.<lb/>
All! I<lb/>
752-7303 1 209 ?<lb/>
yV Creei<lb/>
5th St.<lb/>
Greenville, NC<lb/>
i ATiTIC<lb/>
;<lb/>
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CoTVTedY<lb/>
? ZONE<lb/>
EVERY WEDNESDAY<lb/>
Undefeated, Undisputed!<lb/>
Thanks For Voting Us<lb/>
The "Best Place To Hear Live Music"<lb/>
1987198819891990199119921993<lb/>
GREENVILLETIMES READERS' POLL<lb/>
Wed Dec 8<lb/>
Sth.UAL J-p- Cunningham<lb/>
WRQR <lb/>
or<lb/>
Darryl Rhodes<lb/>
ATTIC<lb/>
CoMedY<lb/>
CHRISTMAS PARTY<lb/>
Sou SiUt Silk LfyiU<lb/>
X<lb/>
4<lb/>
4<lb/>
j<lb/>
$1.50 Highballs ? $1.50 Tallboys<lb/>
Thur Dec 9<lb/>
i Calendar Girls of Greenville meet &amp; greet!<lb/>
4<lb/>
4<lb/>
4<lb/>
4<lb/>
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4<lb/>
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99c Highballs ? 99c MEMBERSHIPS ? 99c 32oz DRAFT<lb/>
Fri Dec 10<lb/>
of the<lb/>
Beach Music's 1 show<lb/>
1st 100 people<lb/>
cieve a FREE cas:<lb/>
le<lb/>
recieve a FREE cassette<lb/>
"Christmas time is here"<lb/>
$2.00 32oz DRAFT<lb/>
Sat Dec 11<lb/>
PURPLE SCHOOL BUS<lb/>
WlltNMIIUS STOPS, CYttYONi; KB Off.<lb/>
$2.00 32oz DRAFT<lb/>
Logan felt Flovd would better serve<lb/>
the team as third string halfback.<lb/>
Floyd spent most of his senior sea-<lb/>
son on the sidelines, contributing<lb/>
very little.<lb/>
Even though Flovd was a very<lb/>
good cornerback, the move was<lb/>
mad e to give experience to a voung<lb/>
group of defensive backs, which<lb/>
also resulted in seldom-used se-<lb/>
nior safety Garrett Beasly quitting<lb/>
the team. Pass coverage was the<lb/>
Pirates' biggest weakness on de-<lb/>
fense last season, and Flovd would<lb/>
have provided considerable help.<lb/>
However, the defensive pay-<lb/>
off in 1994 should be the experi-<lb/>
enced and improved Daren and<lb/>
David Hart, Emmanuel McDaniel<lb/>
and Hank Cooper.<lb/>
Coming off ECU s worst record<lb/>
since Art Baker's 2-9 season in 1985,<lb/>
Logan should have all the tools he<lb/>
will need to give ECU a winning<lb/>
record. Crandell will have two ex-<lb/>
perienced back-ups in Perez<lb/>
Mattison and Chris Hester and the<lb/>
defense should continue to improve<lb/>
despite the loss of Bernard Carter.<lb/>
So, with all the sacrifice made,<lb/>
Logan's banking on youth should<lb/>
have accumulated some interest in<lb/>
1994.<lb/>
The mood around campus is<lb/>
one of utter displeasure with<lb/>
Logan. He will have at least one<lb/>
more chance to prove a growing<lb/>
portion of the student body wrong.<lb/>
Next season's theme will be:<lb/>
No Excuses.<lb/>
SOCCER<lb/>
"The Sugar Bowl pays out SI<lb/>
million more than the Cotton said<lb/>
West Virginia athletic director Ed<lb/>
Pastilong. "That's important in ath-<lb/>
letics as it is in anv business<lb/>
The Orange and Cotton will<lb/>
feature rematches of last vear's<lb/>
games.<lb/>
Florida State beat Nebraska 27-<lb/>
14 in the 1993 Orange, the Semi-<lb/>
noles' eighth straight bowl victory<lb/>
and theComhuskers' sixth consecu-<lb/>
tive postseason loss.<lb/>
Texas A&amp;M will try to avenge<lb/>
last season's28-3 loss to Notre Dame<lb/>
in the Cotton. Aggies coach R.C.<lb/>
Siocum said a victory over the Irish<lb/>
would beeven more rewarding than<lb/>
a win over undefeated West Vir-<lb/>
ginia.<lb/>
Rick Baker, the Cotton Bowl's<lb/>
general manager and chairman of<lb/>
the bowl coalition, was not upset<lb/>
that West Virginia turned down a<lb/>
bid to his game in Dallas.<lb/>
"We felt we were in a no-lose<lb/>
situation Baker said. "We were<lb/>
going to get either undefeated West<lb/>
Virginia or 10-1 Notre Dame<lb/>
Horida earned its Sugar Bowl<lb/>
berth by beating Alabama 28-13<lb/>
Saturday in the Southeastern Con-<lb/>
ference championship game. The<lb/>
Gators are now in an awkward po-<lb/>
sition that could help arch-rival<lb/>
Florida State. If Florida beats West<lb/>
Virginia and Florida State defeats<lb/>
Nebraska, the Seminoles would<lb/>
probably win both polls.<lb/>
"We reallv don't need to think<lb/>
about that Gators coach Steve<lb/>
Spurrier said. "Our school has<lb/>
never wontheSugai Bowl. We've<lb/>
got a lot of firsts out there that we<lb/>
can try to accomplish and really<lb/>
not worry about what's happen-<lb/>
ing at the Orange Bowl "<lb/>
The Rose Bowl matchup was<lb/>
set early Sunday morning when<lb/>
Wisconsin beat Michigan State 41 -<lb/>
20 at Tokyo. The No. 9 Badgers (9-<lb/>
1-1) will face No 14 UCLA (8-3) in<lb/>
Pasadena.<lb/>
In other Jan. 1 bowls,itisMichi-<lb/>
gan (7-4) vs. North Carolina State<lb/>
(7-4) in the Hall of Fame; Penn<lb/>
State (9-2) vs. Tennessee (9-1-1) in<lb/>
theCitrus; Miami (9-2) vs. Arizona<lb/>
(9-2) in the Fiesta; and Boston Col-<lb/>
lege (8-3) vs. Virginia (7-4) in the<lb/>
Carquest.<lb/>
Other postseason matchups:<lb/>
Ball State (8-2-1) vs. Utah State (6-<lb/>
5) in the Las Vegas; Texas Tech (6-<lb/>
5) vs. Oklahoma (8-3) in the<lb/>
Hancock; Fresno State (8-3) vs.<lb/>
Colorado (7-3-1) in the Aloha;<lb/>
Michigan State (6-5) vs. Louisville<lb/>
(8-3) in the Liberty; Wyoming (8-3)<lb/>
vs. Kansas State (8-2-1) in the Cop-<lb/>
per; Brigham Young (6-5) vs. Ohio<lb/>
State (9-1-1) in the Hobday; South-<lb/>
em Cal (7-5) vs. Utah (7-5) in the<lb/>
Freedom; Virginia Tech (8-3) vs.<lb/>
Indiana (8-3) in the Independence;<lb/>
Clemson (8-3) vs. Kentucky (6-5)<lb/>
in the Peach; Alabama (8-3-1) vs.<lb/>
North Carolina (10-2) in the Gator;<lb/>
and Iowa (6-5) vs. California (8-4)<lb/>
in the Alamo.<lb/>
Continued from page 13<lb/>
The two connected again at the<lb/>
34:11 mark. After midfielder Mike<lb/>
Fisher's pass was deflected, Wood's<lb/>
shot attempt rebounded off<lb/>
Pawloski's outstretched hands be-<lb/>
fore Friends converted the second<lb/>
goal.<lb/>
Soccer's equivalent of a hattrick<lb/>
came 41 minutes, 17 seconds into<lb/>
play, after Friends secured a loose<lb/>
ball and beat Pawloski to his left at<lb/>
the near post. Damian Silvera and<lb/>
Sean Feary registered assists on the<lb/>
play.<lb/>
Trailing 3-0 at intermission,<lb/>
Princeton (13-5-0) turned up its in-<lb/>
tensity to forge a rally.<lb/>
Midfielder Joe Thieman set the<lb/>
tone four minutes after the second<lb/>
half began, when his breakaway<lb/>
rolled just left of the post. The lone<lb/>
Princeton goal came eleven min-<lb/>
utes, 22 seconds into the half, when<lb/>
Mike Busch crossed a pass from<lb/>
the left side and sophomore for-<lb/>
ward Jacob Dowden headed a<lb/>
winner over Cavalier keeper Jeff<lb/>
Causey.<lb/>
Forced to scramble often,<lb/>
Cavalierdefendersprotected Cau-<lb/>
sey aggressively, limiting the<lb/>
pressing Tigers to three shots on<lb/>
goal in the second 45 minutes.<lb/>
"IN THE DAIRY CASETCHILLED KROGER<lb/>
APPLE JUICE OR<lb/>
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</div></body></text></TEI>