<?xml version="1.0"?><TEI xmlns="http://www.tei-c.org/ns/1.0" xmlns:xsi="http://www.w3.org/2001/XMLSchema-instance" xsi:schemaLocation="http://www.tei-c.org/ns/1.0 http://digital.lib.ecu.edu/tei/xsd/tei_P5.xsd"><teiHeader><fileDesc><titleStmt><title></title><author></author><respStmt><resp>Text encoded by</resp><name>Digital Collections</name></respStmt></titleStmt><publicationStmt><distributor>East Carolina University. J. Y. Joyner Library</distributor><address><addrLine>Digital Collections</addrLine><addrLine>Joyner Library, East Carolina University</addrLine><addrLine>East Fifth Street, Greenville NC 27858-4353 USA</addrLine></address><date>2012</date></publicationStmt><sourceDesc><bibl></bibl></sourceDesc></fileDesc><encodingDesc><samplingDecl><p>All quotation marks retained as data.</p><p>All end-of-line hyphens have been removed, and the trailing part of a word has been joined to the preceding line.</p><p>All smart quotes have been converted into straight quotes.</p></samplingDecl><classDecl><taxonomy xml:id="LCSH"><bibl>Library of Congress Subject Headings</bibl></taxonomy></classDecl></encodingDesc><profileDesc><creation><date></date></creation><langUsage xml:lang="en-US"><language ident="en-US" usage="100">English</language></langUsage><textClass><keywords scheme="#LCSH"><list><item></item></list></keywords></textClass></profileDesc></teiHeader><text><body><div type="other">
<p rend="align(centerbold)">[This text is machine generated and may contain errors.]</p>
<pb facs="00058446_0001"/>
I MBMMMBI<lb/>
mmmmmmmmmHmmmammmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmm<lb/>
?port?<lb/>
FBI probes Kerrigan case<lb/>
Allegations in the battery case of<lb/>
figure skater Nancy Kerrigan are<lb/>
underway. Officials suspect a<lb/>
connection to competitor Tonya<lb/>
Harding. Story page 11.<lb/>
????M<lb/>
Cinematic Perfection<lb/>
Think no really good movies<lb/>
come to Greenville? Well for<lb/>
'Remains of the Day' and<lb/>
'Schindler's List' you're right.<lb/>
They're in Raleigh. Reviews<lb/>
on page 8.<lb/>
Today<lb/>
oramMiM<lb/>
Tom orro w<lb/>
The East Carolinian<lb/>
Vol. 69 No. 2<lb/>
Circulation 12,000<lb/>
Greenville, North Carolina<lb/>
Thursday, January 13,1994<lb/>
14 Pages<lb/>
Library<lb/>
While parkins will continue to diminish, research options will multiply<lb/>
By Jason Williams<lb/>
Photo by Cadrtc Van Buren<lb/>
Soon the monstrous renovations preying on our parking lots will attack staff spaces. Perhaps the hidden<lb/>
agenda is to increase campus fitness, for everyone will be in top shape after 15-minute treks from their cars.<lb/>
Assistant News Editor<lb/>
Members of the graduat-<lb/>
ing class of 1994 will not get to<lb/>
use the new, expanded Joyner<lb/>
Library during their college ca-<lb/>
reers. Students graduating in<lb/>
1995 or 1996 will have to work<lb/>
around construction and rubble<lb/>
while the new portion of the<lb/>
library is being built. By 1997,<lb/>
students may begin to see the<lb/>
fruits of the recent bond refer-<lb/>
endum that allotted $29.5 mil-<lb/>
lion for the renovation of Joyner.<lb/>
1998 graduates will be the first<lb/>
class that won't be ashamed of<lb/>
their library.<lb/>
Joyner Library Director<lb/>
Dr. Kenneth Marks estimates<lb/>
the time for the construction of<lb/>
the new wing of the library and<lb/>
the complete renovation of the<lb/>
existing space to be 43 months.<lb/>
"Approximately in early to<lb/>
mid-April construction will be-<lb/>
gin Marks said. "The way in<lb/>
which the project is projected,<lb/>
there will be three distinct<lb/>
phases. The first phase will be<lb/>
the construction of the new<lb/>
space which will be on the back<lb/>
or south side of this building.<lb/>
That construction is supposed<lb/>
to take about 19 months.<lb/>
"The second phase, which<lb/>
will last probably 10 or 11<lb/>
months, will be the renovation<lb/>
of the East Wing and the cre-<lb/>
ation of the pedestrian corridor<lb/>
that will run from the columns<lb/>
he said. "The last phase will<lb/>
take six to eight months<lb/>
Following each phase,<lb/>
there will be a three month<lb/>
"move-in" period during which<lb/>
some library facilities will be-<lb/>
gin to transfer existing services<lb/>
to newly-completed portions of<lb/>
the building.<lb/>
Because of the amount of<lb/>
construction and renovation<lb/>
that is to take piace, and the fact<lb/>
that the construction and reno-<lb/>
vation can not take place simul-<lb/>
Week-long plans<lb/>
for M.L. King, Jr.<lb/>
By Tammy Carter<lb/>
Staff Writer<lb/>
Monday, Jan. 17 is a holi-<lb/>
day. There are no classes, and<lb/>
many businesses will close in ob-<lb/>
servance of this holiday. How-<lb/>
ever, instead of celebrating a<lb/>
break from school, why not cel-<lb/>
ebrate it for what it is: a celebra-<lb/>
tion of the life of Dr. Martin<lb/>
Luther King, Jr. and the role he<lb/>
played in advocating human<lb/>
rights and world peace.<lb/>
Many events are scheduled<lb/>
on ECU's campus to honor King<lb/>
and the ideals he promoted.<lb/>
"The events are open to the<lb/>
public said Dr. Brian Haynes of<lb/>
Minority Affairs. "We encour-<lb/>
age students to come out and<lb/>
learn more about Dr. King<lb/>
The celebration begins on<lb/>
Monday evening, Jan. 17, at 7:00,<lb/>
with a candlelight march from<lb/>
Christenbury Gymnasium to<lb/>
Mendenhall Student Center.<lb/>
Upon arrival at<lb/>
Mendenhall, Dorothy Cotton,<lb/>
director of Student Activities at<lb/>
Cornell Universitywill give the<lb/>
Martin Luther King, Jr. address.<lb/>
Cotton was director of education<lb/>
for the Southern Christian Lead-<lb/>
ership Conference from 1960 to<lb/>
1972. She worked with King on<lb/>
his executive staff and was the<lb/>
only female member.<lb/>
ECU's Alpha Phi Alpha fra-<lb/>
ternity is co-sponsoring both the<lb/>
march and Cotton's address. Ev-<lb/>
eryone is encouraged and wel-<lb/>
come to attend both events,<lb/>
Haynes said.<lb/>
Other events are planned<lb/>
for the week. A "Wish Board for<lb/>
World Peace" will be at different<lb/>
locations on Tuesday, Wednes-<lb/>
day and Thursday from 10:00a.m.<lb/>
to 2:00 p.m. on each day. Stu-<lb/>
dents are invited to use the board<lb/>
to make their wishes for world<lb/>
See MLK page 4<lb/>
Anyone got an extra $14<lb/>
million? ECU could use it<lb/>
By Tammy Zion<lb/>
Staff Writer<lb/>
ECU has a good reason to<lb/>
celebrate the beginning of 1994.<lb/>
As o( Dec. 31, ECU's Shared Vi-<lb/>
sions campaign has obtained $36<lb/>
million in private funds, and<lb/>
hopes to reach a goal of $50 mil-<lb/>
lion by next December ? one<lb/>
year ahead of schedule.<lb/>
This fund-raiser is the larg-<lb/>
est ever for ECU, involving 700<lb/>
volunteers ind several faculty<lb/>
members.<lb/>
"What this project is seek-<lb/>
ing is to allow the University to<lb/>
do many things tat we would<lb/>
otherwise not be able to do de-<lb/>
pending on state dollars and stu-<lb/>
dent tuition said ECU Chan-<lb/>
cellor Richard Eakin. "This is<lb/>
going to be the frosting on the<lb/>
cake<lb/>
Many donations to date<lb/>
have been in excess of $1 mil-<lb/>
lion. One anonymous family<lb/>
donated over $4 million to ECU's<lb/>
School of Medicine. The Walter<lb/>
Williams family of Greenville<lb/>
donated $1.4 million to the Ath-<lb/>
letic Department, the largest ever<lb/>
for ECU athletics.<lb/>
Massive regional cam-<lb/>
paigns, which reach across the<lb/>
state and into Virginia, will be<lb/>
launched between February and<lb/>
April, focusing primarily on<lb/>
alumni and previous donors.<lb/>
Why do these people give<lb/>
so generously?<lb/>
"Because they believe in<lb/>
what ECU is trying to achieve<lb/>
Eakin said. "Many of them have<lb/>
a had a long and very heart-felt<lb/>
relationship with ECU. They be-<lb/>
lieve it provides an opportunity<lb/>
not only for the students of EC U,<lb/>
but also as an important part of<lb/>
our state's heritage<lb/>
See MONEY page 4<lb/>
Music students travel to Miss.<lb/>
By Tammy Carter<lb/>
Staff Writer<lb/>
For many ECU students,<lb/>
Christmas was a chance to relax<lb/>
and ignore academic responsi-<lb/>
bilities. Music students Roger<lb/>
Dale McVey and Kenneth Meyer,<lb/>
however, had other plans. They<lb/>
spent their holiday practicing six<lb/>
to seven hours per day for re-<lb/>
gional competitions coming up<lb/>
during January.<lb/>
McVey, a senior, is a pianist<lb/>
and Meyer, a graduate student,<lb/>
studies guitar. Both won first<lb/>
place in the Music Teachers As-<lb/>
sociation auditions in Winston-<lb/>
Salem during the fall. This suc-<lb/>
cess sends them to Hattiesburg,<lb/>
Mississippi, Jan. 21-24, where<lb/>
they will play in the MTA divi-<lb/>
sional auditions.<lb/>
Both students will perform<lb/>
a solo Concerto, which lasts about<lb/>
20 minutes, and another 30-<lb/>
minute solo for the competition.<lb/>
If McVey andor Meyer win the<lb/>
Mississippi competition, they<lb/>
will compete in the national au-<lb/>
ditions in Washington, D.C in<lb/>
late March. Winners of the na-<lb/>
tional competition receive con-<lb/>
cert appointments to perform in<lb/>
front of audiences rather than<lb/>
judges.<lb/>
McVey says that he is not<lb/>
really nervous about the compe-<lb/>
tition, but he recognizes the im-<lb/>
portance of being able to com-<lb/>
pete in such an event. He is study-<lb/>
ing at ECU on the Henry Wooten<lb/>
scholarship, which is funded by<lb/>
the Wooten family. It is one of<lb/>
the biggest scholarships for mu-<lb/>
sic students. McVey will gradu-<lb/>
ate in May, 1994, and plans to go<lb/>
on to graduate school for more<lb/>
experience.<lb/>
"I like playing solo more<lb/>
than anything McVey said. "1<lb/>
hope to go into concert perfor-<lb/>
See MUSIC page 4<lb/>
Opening<lb/>
soon!<lb/>
ECU students<lb/>
and faculty will<lb/>
soon find some<lb/>
consolation in<lb/>
the fact that the<lb/>
new Todd<lb/>
Dining Hall will<lb/>
adequately fuel<lb/>
those lengthy<lb/>
hikes to those<lb/>
far-off parking<lb/>
spaces.<lb/>
Photo by<lb/>
Cedrlc Van Buren<lb/>
taneously because the library<lb/>
must remain open, makes this<lb/>
a longer-range project than<lb/>
usual, Marks said.<lb/>
During the first phase,<lb/>
library operations should not<lb/>
be affected by the construc-<lb/>
tion. "We have collections and<lb/>
study space, and staff and fac-<lb/>
ulty offices in the space along<lb/>
the back wall, so there will be<lb/>
some adjustment. We will try<lb/>
to keep changes to a mini-<lb/>
mum he said.<lb/>
During the second<lb/>
phase, Marks hopes to begin<lb/>
moving many services into<lb/>
the new part of the building.<lb/>
"Our goal is to move people<lb/>
only once during this process<lb/>
and give people as much fore-<lb/>
warning as possible<lb/>
When completed, the<lb/>
additions to joyner will effec-<lb/>
tively double the size of the<lb/>
library. "The new space will<lb/>
See LIBRARY page 4<lb/>
"Student of the Month" recognized nationally<lb/>
RHA student works for better residence halls resionally and nation-wide<lb/>
By Tammy Carter<lb/>
Staff Writer<lb/>
James "Jamie" Moretz, an<lb/>
ECU junior education major, re-<lb/>
ceived the "Student of the<lb/>
Month" award for June 1993<lb/>
from the National Association<lb/>
of College and University Resi-<lb/>
dence Halls.<lb/>
Linda Sessoms, Residence<lb/>
Halls Association (RHA) advi-<lb/>
sor, said that Moretz has taken<lb/>
the lead in many RHA events.<lb/>
He has acted as treasurer for<lb/>
RHA at ECU and has been very<lb/>
active in the regional division of<lb/>
RHA on behalf of ECU. When<lb/>
ECU hosted the RHA state con-<lb/>
ference, Moretz was instrumen-<lb/>
tal in helping out with the event.<lb/>
"During June he was the<lb/>
only active RHA member on<lb/>
campus Sessoms said. "And<lb/>
he basically kept RHA running<lb/>
during that month while others<lb/>
were gone during the first ses-<lb/>
sion of summer school<lb/>
He said that it was pretty<lb/>
exciting because he was chosen<lb/>
out of 10 people in the United<lb/>
States, Canada, and Australia.<lb/>
He also said that receiving such<lb/>
an award can help further his<lb/>
career goals for working in resi-<lb/>
dent life.<lb/>
Not only does Moretz work<lb/>
with RHA, but he is currently<lb/>
working in the Resident Depart-<lb/>
ment of Education. He also<lb/>
serves as the Associate Director<lb/>
for the North Carolina Associa-<lb/>
tion for Resident Halls and as<lb/>
Assistant to the Associate Direc-<lb/>
tor for the South Atlantic Affili-<lb/>
ate for Colleges and University<lb/>
Resident Halls.<lb/>
Moretz has the opportunity<lb/>
to work in the regional organi-<lb/>
zation next year.<lb/>
"I haven't decided what<lb/>
I'm going to do yet Moretz said.<lb/>
See AWARD page 3<lb/>
It's all in<lb/>
your head<lb/>
 or is it?<lb/>
By Tammy Zion<lb/>
Staff Writer<lb/>
You feel sick, so<lb/>
you visit a physician,<lb/>
right? But what if your<lb/>
problems stem from psy-<lb/>
chological stressors? Or<lb/>
what if you visit a psy-<lb/>
chiatrist, but you need<lb/>
to see a physician? Will<lb/>
your doctor be able to<lb/>
recognize such a condi-<lb/>
tion, or will you go with-<lb/>
out proper treatment?<lb/>
The Association of<lb/>
Medicine and Psychia-<lb/>
try, a group of physicians<lb/>
who have interests in<lb/>
both medical and psychi-<lb/>
atric patients, recently<lb/>
elected ECU's Dr. James<lb/>
G. Peden as its president.<lb/>
"One of the prob-<lb/>
lems with specialization<lb/>
is that you tend to not<lb/>
recognize things that<lb/>
aren't in your area of ex-<lb/>
pertise said Peden, a<lb/>
psychiatrist and associ-<lb/>
ate professor of internal<lb/>
medicine.<lb/>
"There are lots of<lb/>
studies which indicate<lb/>
that psychiatrists fre-<lb/>
quently overlook medi-<lb/>
cal problems in their pa-<lb/>
tients. It also goes in the<lb/>
other direction ? as<lb/>
many as 50 percent of<lb/>
patients who show up in<lb/>
a doctor's office have<lb/>
problems that aren't<lb/>
clearly related to bodily<lb/>
problems ? they may<lb/>
have symptoms arising<lb/>
from depression, anxiety<lb/>
or even substance abuse.<lb/>
These often go under-<lb/>
diagnosed and under-<lb/>
treated Peden said.<lb/>
The Association of<lb/>
Medicine and Psychia-<lb/>
try, an international or-<lb/>
ganization, is based in<lb/>
Kansas and has around<lb/>
200 members.<lb/>
See PROF page 3<lb/>
<pb facs="00058446_0002"/><lb/>
ummsauamsmam<lb/>
2 The East Carolinian<lb/>
January 13. 1994<lb/>
11313<lb/>
December 2<lb/>
12:45 a.m.<lb/>
An unknown person threw a can of tuna<lb/>
through a window at 183 Aycock Residence Hall.<lb/>
December 3<lb/>
An unknown person scraped a parking sticker<lb/>
off a vehicle parked in the freshman lot on Third and<lb/>
Reade Streets.<lb/>
An unknown person walked on a student's car<lb/>
denting the rear bumper and the top of the car, and<lb/>
causing $200 damage to the vehicle. The car was<lb/>
parked in the freshman lot on Third and Reade.<lb/>
December 9<lb/>
Recreation Services reported the theft of a f risbee<lb/>
golf goal valued at $450. The goal was described as<lb/>
a pole with plastic chains around it.<lb/>
December 10<lb/>
9:15 a.m.<lb/>
A female reported receiving harassing phone<lb/>
calls from a male in Jones Hall. The male asked to<lb/>
speak with the victim and said "You know who this<lb/>
is<lb/>
January 2<lb/>
5:15 a.m.<lb/>
A non-student was caught with a weapon at<lb/>
the gazebo near the Biology building. The weapons<lb/>
were two nine inch butterfly knives.<lb/>
January 7<lb/>
8:13 p.m.<lb/>
An unknown person stole a blue nylon wallet<lb/>
from the basketball courts at Belk Dorm. The wallet<lb/>
and its contents were valued at $15.<lb/>
Compiled by Jason Williams. Taken from ECU police<lb/>
reports.<lb/>
Bobbitfs preferences questioned<lb/>
MANASSAb, Va. (AP) ?<lb/>
John Bobbitt liked rough sex and<lb/>
slapped his wife around in front<lb/>
of others, witnesses said at<lb/>
Lorena Bobbitt's trial on charges<lb/>
of cutting off her husband's pe-<lb/>
nis with a kitchen knife.<lb/>
"He said he liked to make<lb/>
girls squirm and yell, make them<lb/>
bleedJonathan Whitaker testi-<lb/>
fied. Another witness, Jonathan<lb/>
Kaupua, said Bobbitt once told<lb/>
him he liked women to "scream<lb/>
and squirm away. That turned<lb/>
him on<lb/>
Both acquaintances of<lb/>
Bobbitt testified Tuesday, along<lb/>
with two others who said they<lb/>
saw Bobbitt hit his wife, as the<lb/>
defense tried to show that Mrs.<lb/>
Bobbitt was subjected to years of<lb/>
sexual abuse and other battering<lb/>
that caused an "irresistible im-<lb/>
pulse" to maim her husband on<lb/>
June 23.<lb/>
Mrs. Bobbitt, 24. is charged<lb/>
with malicious wounding. If con-<lb/>
victed, the Ecuadoran-born<lb/>
manicurist could get up to 20<lb/>
years in prison and be deported.<lb/>
Bobbitt, 26, was acquitted<lb/>
last year of charges he sexually<lb/>
assaulted her just before she cut<lb/>
off his penis.<lb/>
Terri McComber, who once<lb/>
worked with Mrs. Bobbitt at a<lb/>
manicure salon, took the stand<lb/>
to describe a soured weekend<lb/>
outing to a Maryland beach in<lb/>
1989, shortly after the couple<lb/>
were married. She said Bobbitt<lb/>
dragged his wife from the board-<lb/>
walk at Ocean City, accusing her<lb/>
of inviting whistles from pass-<lb/>
ing men.<lb/>
"He came up, grabbed her<lb/>
bv the hair. He said the weekend<lb/>
was over. 'We're going home.<lb/>
That's it McComber said. In<lb/>
the car. Bobbitt shoved and<lb/>
slapped his wile, the witness<lb/>
said.<lb/>
Another witness, Amalia<lb/>
Hoyt, said Bobbitt roughed up<lb/>
his wife in public. Bobbitt gave<lb/>
his wife a present of bikini un-<lb/>
derwear at a Christmas Eve party<lb/>
in 1989, then berated her when<lb/>
she balked at showing the gift to<lb/>
a group of men, Hoyt said.<lb/>
"He grabbed her by the arm<lb/>
and he pushed her against the<lb/>
wall Hoyt said. "Heasked her,<lb/>
'What's wrong with you? Why<lb/>
can't you show it?<lb/>
Bobbitt retook the stand to<lb/>
deny that he ever abused his wife,<lb/>
saying she often scratched,<lb/>
kicked and hit him.<lb/>
"1 never hit my wife. I just<lb/>
pushed her, restrained her and<lb/>
held her down to keep her from<lb/>
hitting me the former Marine<lb/>
said. "She's only like 90 pounds,<lb/>
and I'm 185<lb/>
THE STUDENT UNION MINORITY ARTS COMMITTEE<lb/>
INVITES YOU TO PARTICIPATE IN<lb/>
THEIR ANNUAL.<lb/>
CANDLELIGHT MARCH<lb/>
on<lb/>
January 17,1994<lb/>
at 7:00 pm<lb/>
(:<lb/>
<lb/>
"j1<lb/>
The march will begin at Christenbury Memorial Gym<lb/>
 and and at Mendenhall Student Center.<lb/>
Call 757-4715 for further information.<lb/>
Rush hour<lb/>
proves fatal<lb/>
for woman<lb/>
PHILADELPHIA<lb/>
(AP) ? A morning rush-<lb/>
hour argument on one of<lb/>
Philadelphia's busiest<lb/>
highways ended when a<lb/>
driver in a business suit<lb/>
shot and killed a passen-<lb/>
ger in another car.<lb/>
Eileen McGuigan, 36,<lb/>
was shot in the head Tues-<lb/>
day as she rode to her job<lb/>
as a cashier.<lb/>
Her fiance, John F.<lb/>
O'Kane Jr was driving<lb/>
down the Schuykill Ex-<lb/>
pressway when a car cut<lb/>
him off. At a bottleneck,<lb/>
the cars stopped beside<lb/>
each other and "wordsand<lb/>
gestures were exchanged<lb/>
Sgt. Thomas Burke said.<lb/>
The driver in a suit<lb/>
opened fire from an exit<lb/>
ramp and drove off, disap-<lb/>
pearing in the city.<lb/>
"I gave him the fin-<lb/>
ger for cutting me off and<lb/>
he shot her in the head<lb/>
O'Kane said. "She had no<lb/>
idea what hit her<lb/>
I0l IB Charles Blvd.<lb/>
Our Trail's Arc Also On The Water<lb/>
patagonia Wffi<lb/>
Sports'<lb/>
Pad<lb/>
Sports Pad<lb/>
DOWNTOWN BLOCK PfiRTY<lb/>
?4 in 1"<lb/>
Sports Pad Sharkys-Splash<lb/>
 ?<lb/>
 ??<lb/>
Sharky's<lb/>
Sports<lb/>
Pott<lb/>
Splash Sports Bar<lb/>
THURSDAY.<lb/>
FREE COVER TILL 10:00PM<lb/>
?&amp;<lb/>
Sharky's<lb/>
Sports<lb/>
Pat<lb/>
Sports Pad Dollar N'lte All BdrS Sports Pad<lb/>
Come into any club entrance Thursday and then fee! free to roam from club to club!<lb/>
It is our big block party on Thursday!<lb/>
We Cover One City Block!<lb/>
MHCE ? BILLIARDS ? ROCK H1 ROLL<lb/>
<lb/>
?<lb/>
Sharky's<lb/>
Ewa Mataya<lb/>
Billiards Champion<lb/>
FREE MEMBERSHIPS!<lb/>
<pb facs="00058446_0003"/><lb/>
January 13, 1994<lb/>
The East Carolinian 3<lb/>
AWARD<lb/>
"I want to improve the resident<lb/>
halls on campus as well as re-<lb/>
gionally and nationally<lb/>
Working in the regional or-<lb/>
ganization would give him the<lb/>
chance to do just that.<lb/>
"I sincerely hope Jamie will<lb/>
continue in a leadership role at<lb/>
East Carolina Sessoms said.<lb/>
"But I know the regional organi-<lb/>
zation would also greatly benefit<lb/>
from his contributions<lb/>
Moretz received the<lb/>
President's Choice Award from<lb/>
ECU this past year, as well a<lb/>
several regional awards.<lb/>
Continued from page 1<lb/>
RHA plays an important<lb/>
role on college campuses. It is the<lb/>
liaison between residents, school<lb/>
administration and the commu-<lb/>
nity. The organization plans ser-<lb/>
vices for all residential students.<lb/>
Some of the services include re-<lb/>
frigeratormicrowave rentals,<lb/>
carpet sales and student loans.<lb/>
In addition to services, RHA<lb/>
sponsors various programs on<lb/>
campus like "S.E.X. Week RHA<lb/>
week, the upcoming Jell-O wres-<lb/>
tling, and the Hall Olympics.<lb/>
RHA encourages leadership de-<lb/>
velopment within the residence<lb/>
halls.<lb/>
MONEY<lb/>
Continued from page 1<lb/>
PROF<lb/>
"Every gift is important<lb/>
Charles Phlegar, campaign di-<lb/>
rector, points out. "A lot of the<lb/>
gifts we are working on now<lb/>
range between $25,000 and<lb/>
$100,000<lb/>
The proposed spending<lb/>
budget will allocate funds to stu-<lb/>
dent development, faculty en-<lb/>
richment, program enhancement<lb/>
and campus development.<lb/>
Student development will<lb/>
receive $10 million. This sum in-<lb/>
cludes $4.5 million for merit-<lb/>
based scholarships, $3 million for<lb/>
graduate fellowships, $1 million<lb/>
Continued from page 1<lb/>
for NCAA scholarships, $1 mil-<lb/>
lion for athletic personal devel-<lb/>
opment and $500,000 for minor-<lb/>
ity leadership awards.<lb/>
Acampaignbrochurecom-<lb/>
piled by Shared Visions boasts<lb/>
that faculty is ECU's greatest<lb/>
source of contributions ? $6 mil-<lb/>
lion will be used for faculty en-<lb/>
richment.<lb/>
Professorships and distin-<lb/>
guished professorships will be<lb/>
financed by $3.5 million, $1.5<lb/>
million will go toward research<lb/>
initiatives and teaching enhance-<lb/>
ments and $1 million will be<lb/>
granted tor endowed lecture-<lb/>
ships.<lb/>
Program enhancement will<lb/>
be given $8.5 million to divide<lb/>
between the v isual and perform-<lb/>
ing arts, library collections will<lb/>
receive $1.5 million. Initiatives<lb/>
to improve public schools will<lb/>
receive $1.5 million, program-<lb/>
specific gifts for schools and de-<lb/>
partments will total over $3 mil-<lb/>
lion and the International Stud-<lb/>
ies program will receive<lb/>
$300,000.<lb/>
Campus development will<lb/>
receive the largest amount ? $18<lb/>
million ? and $9 million will<lb/>
be used to expand Ficklen Sta-<lb/>
dium and renovate Minges<lb/>
Coliseum. Almost $2 million<lb/>
will be spent on the addition<lb/>
to Joyner Library, and $3 mil-<lb/>
lion for the Leo W. Jenkins<lb/>
Cancer Center.<lb/>
ECU's Diabetes Center<lb/>
and Center for Alcohol and<lb/>
Drug Abuse will each receive<lb/>
$2 million. Campus beautifi-<lb/>
cation will receive $200,000.<lb/>
The largest private fund-<lb/>
raiser in previous years totaled<lb/>
$2 million in 1988.<lb/>
In fulfilling his duties as<lb/>
president, Peden expects to<lb/>
speak for conferences and com-<lb/>
mittees throughout the year, as<lb/>
well as write a column for the<lb/>
organization's newsletter.<lb/>
Peden plans to actively<lb/>
lobby the Association of Medi-<lb/>
cine and Psychiatry in order to<lb/>
obtain proper coverage under<lb/>
the new national health care<lb/>
plan.<lb/>
"This is a dynamic and in-<lb/>
triguing field that shows prom-<lb/>
ise of improving the lives and<lb/>
health of many people Peden<lb/>
said.<lb/>
Here at ECU, Peden is a<lb/>
primary care psychiatrist, an as-<lb/>
sociate professor of internal<lb/>
medicine, a member of the ad-<lb/>
missions committee and super-<lb/>
visor for medical students ful-<lb/>
filling their residencies.<lb/>
East Carolina University's<lb/>
Student Union Board of Directors<lb/>
is taking applications for<lb/>
STUDENT UNION PRESIDENT<lb/>
for the 19944995 Term<lb/>
Any full-time student with<lb/>
a minimum G.P.A. of 2.5 can apply.<lb/>
Applications are available at the Student Union Office<lb/>
Room 236 Mendenhall Student Center.<lb/>
Deadline To Apply: January 19, 1994<lb/>
DAY STUDENTS<lb/>
DO YOU WANT TO MAKE<lb/>
A DIFFERENCE?<lb/>
Apply now for position of<lb/>
Day Student Representative on the ECU<lb/>
Media Board. (A student living off campus<lb/>
and not a member of a fraternity or sorority.)<lb/>
Help set policies for operation of WZMB,<lb/>
The Rebel, The East Carolinian,<lb/>
Expressions &amp; The Photo Lab.<lb/>
Apply in The Media Board Office, 757-6009<lb/>
2nd Floor Student Publications Building<lb/>
Macintosh Quadra? 660av823O, with internal<lb/>
AppleCD " 300i CD-ROM drive, Apple AudioVision ? 14'<lb/>
Display, Apple Extended Keyboard II and mouse.<lb/>
Ont)'$3,037. Or about $47.00 a month<lb/>
with the new Apple Computer loan.<lb/>
flie<lb/>
Computer<lb/>
Loan<lb/>
Macintosh LC 4J5 4:80, Apple Color Plus 14' Display.<lb/>
Apple Keyboard II and mouse. Only $1,280. Or, about<lb/>
$20001 a month with the new Apple Computer Loan.<lb/>
Mx<lb/>
Introducing Tin<lb/>
Introducing The Great Apple Campus<lb/>
Deal. Right now, buy any select Macintosh'<lb/>
or PowerBook computer, and you'll also<lb/>
get seven useful software programs. It's all<lb/>
included in one low price. (The software<lb/>
alone has a combined SRP of $596.) And,<lb/>
the new Apple Computer Loan offers low<lb/>
monthly payments that make the deal<lb/>
even better. Apply by January 28,1994. and<lb/>
your first payment is deferred for 90 days.<lb/>
All you have to do is qualify. So, what<lb/>
are you waiting for? An Apple" computer.<lb/>
It does more. It costs less. It's that simple.<lb/>
Apple PouerBook 145B 4180. Only $1,262 Or about<lb/>
$19.00 a month uitb the new Apple Computer Loan<lb/>
All easy application process. Mid you ctld'qualify for<lb/>
loir monthly payments on a Macintosh or PouerBook.<lb/>
It does more. It costs less. It's that simple.<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/>
ban jnounu and monthtv payment<lb/>
wuertst raw<lb/>
<pb facs="00058446_0004"/><lb/>
4 The East Carolinian<lb/>
January 13, 1994<lb/>
Yeltsin promises reform while support wavers<lb/>
MOSCOW (AP) ? A leading<lb/>
pro-reform group threatened today<lb/>
to withdraw itssupportfrom Presi-<lb/>
dent Boris Yeltsin if reformers lose<lb/>
out in a planned Cabinet reshuf-<lb/>
fling.<lb/>
Yeltsin supportersare already<lb/>
outnumbered in Russia's new par-<lb/>
liament bv Communists, ultrana-<lb/>
tionalists and other anti-reform<lb/>
forces. A splintering among reform-<lb/>
ists, which thethreatby Democratic<lb/>
Russia could portend, likely would<lb/>
further weaken their position.<lb/>
Parliament opened its first<lb/>
session Tuesday but has so far been<lb/>
mostly concerned with selecting its<lb/>
leadership and other housekeeping<lb/>
matters.<lb/>
On Monday, Yeltsin ordered<lb/>
Prime Minister Viktor<lb/>
Chernomyrdin tocutthenumber of<lb/>
deputy prime ministers from nine<lb/>
to four and to name candidates for<lb/>
those positions within a week.<lb/>
Yeltsin has promised that Econom-<lb/>
ics Minister Yegor Gaidar, the ar-<lb/>
chitect of Russia's free-market re-<lb/>
MUSIC<lb/>
forms, will remain in the Cabinet<lb/>
and that the reforms will continue.<lb/>
But reformers and Western econo-<lb/>
mists weary reformers will lose in-<lb/>
fluence. "Seriousdangers are loom-<lb/>
ing over the reforms said a warn-<lb/>
ing issued today by the Democratic<lb/>
Russia movement.<lb/>
Democratic Russia, which<lb/>
claims tens of thousands of sup-<lb/>
porters across the country, Ls one of<lb/>
several groups that last year formed<lb/>
Russia's Choice, the leading pro-<lb/>
reform bloc in parliament.<lb/>
Continued from page 1<lb/>
mance.<lb/>
"McVey isa very gifted pia-<lb/>
nist and musician said Dr. Henry<lb/>
Doskey, McVey's professor. "It is<lb/>
a great honor to reach the<lb/>
regionals. We're proud of him<lb/>
While McVey appears calm<lb/>
about the Mississippi competition,<lb/>
Meyer savs that he is very ner-<lb/>
vous about competing.<lb/>
"I'm happy to get into the<lb/>
finals Mever said. "The guys<lb/>
I'm going against are really good<lb/>
players<lb/>
Meyer will finish his gradu-<lb/>
ate degTee in the Spring of 1995.<lb/>
He plans to continue his educa-<lb/>
tion to get his doctorate in classi-<lb/>
cal guitar. He wants to teach and<lb/>
MLK<lb/>
perform during his musical ca-<lb/>
reer. ECU students can see Meyer<lb/>
play a guitar concerto with the<lb/>
school orchestra later in the spring.<lb/>
Elliot Frank, Meyer's pro-<lb/>
fessor, said that the Mississippi<lb/>
competition is a great opportu-<lb/>
nity for students because per-<lb/>
formers will be heard by people<lb/>
who would otherwise never hear<lb/>
them. Even if they do not win<lb/>
the competition, many people<lb/>
will recognize the competitors'<lb/>
talent. Frank said that Meyer<lb/>
has been a genuine pleasure to<lb/>
teach.<lb/>
"Meyer is one of the most<lb/>
talented people I have taught in<lb/>
a long time Frank said.<lb/>
Continued from page 1<lb/>
Other students who com-<lb/>
peted in the state MTA auditions<lb/>
include clarinetists Laura Avery<lb/>
and Angela Harris, who were<lb/>
named alternate winner and hon-<lb/>
orable mention winner respec-<lb/>
tively, in the NC MTA collegiate<lb/>
woodwinds category. Three pri-<lb/>
vate students of ECU's Suzuki<lb/>
strings program director Joanne<lb/>
Bath also placed as alternate or<lb/>
honorable mention winners.<lb/>
LIBRARY<lb/>
Continued from page 1<lb/>
add about 160,000 square feet to<lb/>
the existing space Marks said.<lb/>
"We will end up with a library<lb/>
that is approximately 300,000<lb/>
square feet in size<lb/>
The new librarv will be able<lb/>
to house more books and stu-<lb/>
dents as well. There wil i bo space<lb/>
for 1.5 million volumes, up from<lb/>
the current capacity of 970,000.<lb/>
There will also be seating for<lb/>
2.000 students up from 1,100.<lb/>
"Perhaps the most critical<lb/>
thing for students is right now<lb/>
we don't have anv group studv<lb/>
rooms at all Marks said. "The<lb/>
completed facility will have 36<lb/>
to 38 group studv rooms with a<lb/>
seating capacity of four to eight<lb/>
students<lb/>
With new construction tak-<lb/>
ing place, the West end of campus<lb/>
will lose additional parking places.<lb/>
"The new building will take much<lb/>
of the parking direct! v behind the<lb/>
library Marks said. "The con-<lb/>
struction lot, the part that will be<lb/>
fenced, will start on the far end of<lb/>
peace.<lb/>
Tuesday's board will be at<lb/>
the Wright Place, Wednesday's<lb/>
board will be located at the De-<lb/>
partment of Athletics and<lb/>
Thursday's board will be in the<lb/>
3rody Building.<lb/>
On Thursday evening, at<lb/>
7:00, the week's events will con-<lb/>
clude with a public presentation<lb/>
and panel discussion on "The<lb/>
Civil Rights Movement and Its<lb/>
Portrayal in the Media Barry<lb/>
Saunders, a columnist with the<lb/>
Netvs and Observer, will be fea-<lb/>
tured at the discussion.<lb/>
In addition to next week's<lb/>
events, ECU has invited its stu-<lb/>
dents to submit essays and art on<lb/>
the Martin Luther King, Jr. birth-<lb/>
day theme of "A Commitment to<lb/>
Human Rights and World Peace<lb/>
Entries should be submitted by<lb/>
Monday, Feb. 28,1994 at 5:00 p.m.<lb/>
in Mendenhall, room 244. Win-<lb/>
ners will be announced on April<lb/>
4, the anniversary of King's death.<lb/>
Each category will receive $100<lb/>
for first place and $50 for second<lb/>
place.<lb/>
Central Book &amp;<lb/>
News<lb/>
Girls of Greenville<lb/>
Calendar<lb/>
p L U including tax<lb/>
756-7177<lb/>
Mon-Fri 8:30-9:30 Sat &amp; Sun 9:00-9:30<lb/>
Greenville Square shopping Center (next to Kmart)<lb/>
SPRING<lb/>
TryGumby's J drJVlrNVx<lb/>
Buffalo Wings &amp; I<lb/>
peeved SPECIALS!<lb/>
Pick-Up In Only 10Min.<lb/>
And you thought you had<lb/>
already seen the ball drop.<lb/>
Roundball excitement abounds in January.<lb/>
Don't drop the ball and miss intramural<lb/>
basketball registration.<lb/>
Spring Basketball Invitational Tournament<lb/>
to be held January 19. 20.22. &amp; 23<lb/>
Poole play and tournament action<lb/>
S15.00 fee per team<lb/>
Registration begins January 10 - January 19<lb/>
Register in 204 Christenbury Gym from 9:00am ? 5:00pm<lb/>
Don't miss these basketball deadlines:<lb/>
5-on-5 registration &amp; Preview Tournament lottery<lb/>
January 18 at 5;00pm in Bio 103<lb/>
Basketball Shooting Triathlon registration: February 8 at 8:30pm in CG Gym<lb/>
Slam Dunk registration: February 16 at 5:00pm in Bio 103<lb/>
Call Recreational Services at 757-6387 for more details.<lb/>
21-GUM-B<lb/>
321-4862<lb/>
315 S.E. GREENVILLE BLVD.<lb/>
Located next to Blockbustervldeo<lb/>
HOURS<lb/>
MON-THURS:<lb/>
11:OOAM-1:30 AM<lb/>
FRI-SAT:<lb/>
11:00 AM-2:30 AM<lb/>
SUN:<lb/>
11:00 AM-1 :OOAM<lb/>
Gumb Jones<lb/>
X-LARGE<lb/>
2ltem Pizza<lb/>
ONLY<lb/>
$539<lb/>
gjji<lb/>
Gumby Destroyer<lb/>
2 LARGE<lb/>
11tem Pizzas<lb/>
ONLY<lb/>
$9.99<lb/>
GARRY OUT<lb/>
SPECIAL<lb/>
Large 1 tern Pizza<lb/>
ONLY<lb/>
$439<lb/>
Gumby Solo<lb/>
Medium 11tem Pizza<lb/>
and 1 Soda<lb/>
ONLY<lb/>
$529<lb/>
Gumby Feast<lb/>
2 Smaa 2 tern Pizzas<lb/>
and 2 Sodas<lb/>
ONLY<lb/>
$737<lb/>
Massive Gumby<lb/>
Giant 20 inch<lb/>
1 temRzza<lb/>
ONLY<lb/>
$10.15<lb/>
the library, taking in the staff lot,<lb/>
and will end up where the house<lb/>
is on Ninth Street<lb/>
Parking that will be lost in-<lb/>
cludes approximately half of the<lb/>
PERSONAL CHECKS<lb/>
Above Prices DO NOT Include Tax. Oiler Ma) Expire<lb/>
Without Notice. $5.00 Minimum Order For Deliven.<lb/>
FAST, FREE DELIVERY<lb/>
spaces behind the library, all of<lb/>
the staff lot behind the library and<lb/>
the d irt lot that borders the woods<lb/>
Marks said the fence should go up<lb/>
in April.<lb/>
FREE PREGNANCY TEST<lb/>
while you wait<lb/>
Free &amp; Confidential<lb/>
Services &amp; Couaseling<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/>
ew JLJie<lb/>
P eMowslhip<lb/>
Come join us every Thursday night at<lb/>
7:00 in the General Classroom Bldg.<lb/>
Room 1018.<lb/>
Everyone is welcome for fun fellowship<lb/>
and Bible study!<lb/>
For more information contact<lb/>
Eddie Hilliard at 830-6814<lb/>
you Are Invited<lb/>
to aft of our spring activities1.<lb/>
Among the things that are happening this semester:<lb/>
f<lb/>
State Methodist'Presbyterian Student Conference<lb/>
CJan.28-30 @ Qreensboro)<lb/>
Study Trip to IsraelSpring "Breaks<lb/>
Wor Trip to Mexico in May<lb/>
'Jugular 'Wednesday Meetings<lb/>
5:00 TM. 'Dinner<lb/>
5:45 TM. 'Program<lb/>
'Worship<lb/>
Interesting Speakers<lb/>
fun and games<lb/>
Jorum 'Discussions<lb/>
Living Quarters available for Summer &amp; "Jail'94<lb/>
We are located at 501 'E. fifth Street, directly accross from<lb/>
the Art'Budding<lb/>
!cv. Dan<lb/>
'Earnhardt<lb/>
M 'csku foundation<lb/>
75S-2030<lb/>
!ev. 'Mary graham<lb/>
Trcsbytcrian<lb/>
Ca mp us jdin ister<lb/>
752-7240<lb/>
CONGRATULATIONS TO OUR HENDRIX THEATRE WINNERS,<lb/>
TO MELISSA R. CONLEY-SPENCER FOR WINNING A HICKORY<lb/>
HAMS GIFT BASKET AND TO BOUKEO HOMSOMBATH FOR<lb/>
WINNING A100.00 GIFT CERTIFICATE TO<lb/>
ECU STUDENT STORES.<lb/>
THERE WILL BE FOUR MORE GIVE AWAYS THIS SEMESTER,<lb/>
INCLUDING TICKETS TO ROBERT FULGHUM AND A SPECIAL<lb/>
HOT AIR BALOON RIDE FOR TWO (VALUE:225.00)<lb/>
REMEMBER THAT THE 35,000TH PERSON THROUGH THE<lb/>
DOORS OF HENDRIX WINS350.00. AT PRESENT,<lb/>
THE ATTENDANCE IS AT 12,573.<lb/>
BE ON THE WATCHOUT FOR MORE BLOCKBUSTER HITS, SUCH AS,<lb/>
"THREE MUSKATEERS "THE<lb/>
 FIRM AND "CARLITO'S WAY"<lb/>
REACHING OUT TO SERVE YOU I<lb/>
WHO? Vic Henley<lb/>
WHERE? Monday January 24<lb/>
MSC Room 244<lb/>
WHEN? 7:37pm<lb/>
Doors open at 7:30pm.<lb/>
Free 7 student or faculty ID.<lb/>
Free refreshments.<lb/>
Vic Henley - Comedian<lb/>
<pb facs="00058446_0005"/><lb/>
The East Carolinian<lb/>
January 13, 1994<lb/>
Opinion<lb/>
Page 5<lb/>
The East Carolinian<lb/>
Lindsay Fernandez, General Manager<lb/>
Gregory Dickens, Managing Editor<lb/>
Matthew A. Hege, Advertising Director<lb/>
Printed on<lb/>
w<lb/>
100 recycled paper<lb/>
Maureen Rich, News Editor<lb/>
Jason Williams, Asst. News Editor<lb/>
Stephanie Ttlllo, Lifestyle Editor<lb/>
Laura Wright, Asst. Lifestyle Editor<lb/>
Robert S. Todd, Sports Editor<lb/>
Brian Olson, Asst. Sports Editor<lb/>
Amy E. WirtZ, Opinion Page Editor<lb/>
Amelia Yongue, Copy Editor<lb/>
Phebe Toler, Copy Editor<lb/>
Wes Tinkham, Account Executive<lb/>
Kelly Kellis, Account Executive<lb/>
Shelley Furlough, Account Executive<lb/>
Tonya Heath, Account Executive<lb/>
Brandon Perry, Account Executive<lb/>
Tony Dunn, Business Manager<lb/>
Margie O'Shea, Circulation Manager<lb/>
Burt AyCOCk, Layout Manager<lb/>
Franco Sacchi, Asst. Layout Manager<lb/>
Mike Ashley, Creative Director<lb/>
Elain Calmon, Asst. Creative Director<lb/>
Cedric Van Buren, Photo Editor<lb/>
Chris Kemple, Staff Illustrator<lb/>
Matt MacDonald, Systems Manager<lb/>
Deborah Daniel, Secretary<lb/>
Serving the ECU community since 1925. The East Carolinian publishes 12,000 copies every Tuesday and Thursday. The masthead<lb/>
editorial in each edition is the opinion of the Editorial Board. The East Carolinian welcomes letters, limited to 250 words, which may be edited<lb/>
for decency or brevity. The East Carolinian reserves the right to edit or reject letters for publication. Letters should be addressed to: Opinion<lb/>
Editor, The East Carolinian, Publications Bldg ECU, Greenville. N.C 27858-1353. For more information, call (919) 757-6366.<lb/>
Preservation of Auschwitz debated I<lb/>
There is actually an international de-<lb/>
bate under way about how Poland preserves<lb/>
the decaying remains of the Nazi death camp<lb/>
at Auschwitz for future memory.<lb/>
A debate. Does this strike anyone as<lb/>
odd? What is being discussed is whether or<lb/>
not Auschwitz ? the concrete and brick<lb/>
building, the history that emanates from it,<lb/>
the pain and the memories deserve to exist<lb/>
as a reminder of days gone<lb/>
by. In other words ? is it<lb/>
appropriate for Auschwitz to<lb/>
exist?<lb/>
Those in favor of pre-<lb/>
serving the ruins argue that<lb/>
this is one of the best ways<lb/>
for the Nazi atrocities to be<lb/>
remembered. They concur<lb/>
that it can also serve as a<lb/>
teaching tool for future gen-<lb/>
erations to learn from.<lb/>
Approximately 1.6 mil-<lb/>
lion people, most of them<lb/>
Jews, were killed at<lb/>
Auschwitz during World<lb/>
War II. As it stands now,<lb/>
Auschwitz has one small<lb/>
sign indicating that the ashes<lb/>
of about 100,000 people lie<lb/>
in the small pond near the<lb/>
death camp. The grounds are barren, save<lb/>
for periodic slabs of concrete and brick where<lb/>
once stood gas chambers and crematories.<lb/>
Now the deterioration of the Birkenau<lb/>
section of the camp is beginning to force<lb/>
decisions by the Polish government on<lb/>
whether it should be restored, somewhat<lb/>
restored or be allowed to fade into history.<lb/>
Taking different positions in the debate over<lb/>
Auschwitz are historians, conservation ex-<lb/>
perts, Jewish representatives and Poles lay-<lb/>
ing plans for its future.<lb/>
The debate has been driven by renewed<lb/>
interest in the Holocaust in the past few<lb/>
years, prompted in part by the aging of the<lb/>
generation of survivors and by a changed<lb/>
attitude of many younger Jews who want to<lb/>
remember rather than forget.<lb/>
What we have with those in opposition<lb/>
to the preservation is a sort of state of de-<lb/>
nial. They believe that if they<lb/>
ignore the act long enough<lb/>
that it will go away as if it<lb/>
never existed.<lb/>
What they are denying is<lb/>
the unsettling feeling a visit<lb/>
to one of the many concentra-<lb/>
tion camps can evoke. For<lb/>
many, it is the most eloquent<lb/>
testimony to what occurred.<lb/>
It seems almost as if time stops<lb/>
? reverses even ? and what<lb/>
one is met with is a great inner<lb/>
sadness for those tortured and<lb/>
killed, along with a contempt<lb/>
towards those involved with<lb/>
the brutal acts. It is one of the<lb/>
greatest spiritual experiences<lb/>
and one of the hardest to en-<lb/>
dure ? not a memory, but an<lb/>
experience that is as powerful<lb/>
as a memory.<lb/>
Too often have people ignored history<lb/>
and committed the same unspeakable acts<lb/>
without regard to the lessons that are star-<lb/>
ing us right in the face. Case in point:<lb/>
Bosnia's ethnic cleansing. History repeats<lb/>
itself, indeed! But only because of human<lb/>
stupidity and stubbornness in realizing<lb/>
truth.<lb/>
Auschwitz exists not only in its mean-<lb/>
ing but also in its physical site.<lb/>
By Brian Hall<lb/>
O'Neil's pure intent increased power of state<lb/>
Listening to the radio on<lb/>
my way back to Greenville last<lb/>
Thursday, I heard the report that<lb/>
the country had lost two promi-<lb/>
nent citizens. While I disagree<lb/>
more often than not not with<lb/>
President Clinton's policies, I was<lb/>
saddened by the <lb/>
news of the ?<lb/>
death of his<lb/>
mother, Virginia<lb/>
Kelly. There is<lb/>
no good time for<lb/>
such a tragedy,<lb/>
but for Mr.<lb/>
Clinton this<lb/>
blow, coming so<lb/>
soon after his<lb/>
recent troubles ??Mm<lb/>
and immedi-<lb/>
ately before his trip abroad, must<lb/>
be particularly difficult to bear.<lb/>
At the same timecamenews<lb/>
of the passing of former Speaker<lb/>
of the House, Tip O'Neil. After<lb/>
summarizing Mr. O'Neil's life in<lb/>
the depressingly brief manner of<lb/>
newsmen (as if one's life can ad-<lb/>
equately be summed up in a one-<lb/>
minute spot), the reporter closed<lb/>
his report by stating that Mr.<lb/>
O'Neil would be remembered as<lb/>
a champion of the working man.<lb/>
This statement caused me to think<lb/>
for the rest of my trip.<lb/>
No one would dispute that<lb/>
O'Neil was a paragon of modern<lb/>
liberalism. He was a firm be-<lb/>
liever in the ability and necessity<lb/>
of using the power of the govern-<lb/>
ment to help the lower classes. I<lb/>
do not question the intentions of<lb/>
liberals who try to help the<lb/>
beatendown. What bothers me is<lb/>
 our rights are not<lb/>
granted to us by the<lb/>
state, but are<lb/>
something we are<lb/>
endowed with at birth<lb/>
by our Creator<lb/>
the unquestioned assumption that<lb/>
one's pure motives will automati-<lb/>
cally bring about good results. As<lb/>
the saying goes, the road to hell is<lb/>
paved with good intentions.<lb/>
The liberal social program of<lb/>
the past 60 years, which have<lb/>
 been en-<lb/>
? acted with<lb/>
the inten-<lb/>
tion of mak-<lb/>
ing life more<lb/>
fair, have<lb/>
done noth-<lb/>
ing so much<lb/>
as greatly<lb/>
enhance the<lb/>
power of the<lb/>
federal gov-<lb/>
ernment.<lb/>
Nowhere in the Constitution can<lb/>
one find any authority for such<lb/>
actions. The closest (and only de-<lb/>
fense that I have ever heard put<lb/>
forth) is the so called "elastic<lb/>
clause As many of you no doubt<lb/>
remember from your high school<lb/>
history7 classes, this is the clause<lb/>
which you were told allowed Con-<lb/>
gress to make whatever laws were<lb/>
"necessary and proper I was<lb/>
always told that it was this ability<lb/>
to stretch which allowed the Con-<lb/>
stitution to be a "living document<lb/>
Stop me when you have heard this<lb/>
before.<lb/>
What is always left out of<lb/>
such discussions is the words im-<lb/>
mediately after "necessary and<lb/>
proper which are "for carrying<lb/>
into Execution the foregoing Pow-<lb/>
ers" which are carefully enumer-<lb/>
ated and limited. What we have<lb/>
forgotten is that the purpose of the<lb/>
Constitution is not to grant us<lb/>
certain rights. As the Declaration<lb/>
of Independence states, our rights<lb/>
are not granted to us by the state,<lb/>
but are something we are en-<lb/>
dowed with at birth by our Cre-<lb/>
ator (or Nature, if you prefer).<lb/>
What the Constitution does<lb/>
is limit the power of the govern-<lb/>
ment so that it cannot take away<lb/>
those rights. The limited power<lb/>
of the state is our only protection.<lb/>
It is interesting to read the Feder-<lb/>
alist, in which Hamilton, Madi-<lb/>
son and Jay try to convince the<lb/>
people of New York that the Con-<lb/>
stitution does not give too much<lb/>
power to the federal government.<lb/>
This effort was necessary because<lb/>
many, like Jefferson and Henry,<lb/>
thought that a government as<lb/>
strong as the one in the Constitu-<lb/>
tion would deprive its citizens of<lb/>
their rights.<lb/>
Once we permit the state to<lb/>
seize more power by interpreting<lb/>
the Constitution in any manner it<lb/>
wishes, it is only a matter of time<lb/>
before this same government,<lb/>
which we have strengthened in<lb/>
hopes that it will accomplish good,<lb/>
falls into the hands of those who<lb/>
will use that same power to seize<lb/>
our rights.<lb/>
Before we crown anyone as<lb/>
a champion of the oppressed and<lb/>
downtrodden, let's examine what<lb/>
his real deeds were. If the most<lb/>
enduring legacy of Mr. O'Neil is<lb/>
that during his many years of<lb/>
public service he helped<lb/>
strengthen the power of the state,<lb/>
despite any short term gain, we<lb/>
are all worse off in the long run<lb/>
By Laura Wright<lb/>
Ponderable parking solution: raize traffic office<lb/>
Let me tell you a story about<lb/>
a woman.<lb/>
I don't remember her name,<lb/>
so for this article, I'll call her Ber-<lb/>
tha. Bertha lived in a college town<lb/>
where she placed wheel locks on<lb/>
cars that were parked illegally in<lb/>
apartment parking spaces. For<lb/>
those of you who aren't familiar<lb/>
with wheel locks, they are devices<lb/>
that are placed upon the front tires<lb/>
of cars. The car is rendered immo-<lb/>
bile and in order to drive again,<lb/>
the owner of the car must pay a fee<lb/>
(in this case, to Bertha) in order to<lb/>
have the lock removed.<lb/>
Various apartment com-<lb/>
plexes hired Bertha to disable the<lb/>
vehicles of wayward college stu-<lb/>
dents who didn' t live in the apart-<lb/>
ments but parked their cars in the<lb/>
lots and walked to class. Bertha, in<lb/>
a very nondiscriminatory way,<lb/>
even wheel locked the unfortu-<lb/>
nate visitors of various apartment<lb/>
dwellers.<lb/>
Now, while Bertha was do-<lb/>
ing a service to the university (en-<lb/>
couraging students to purchase<lb/>
parking stickers) and the rental<lb/>
property owners, the college stu-<lb/>
dents whose cars were wheel<lb/>
locked were pissed.<lb/>
I suppose that it's one thing<lb/>
to get towed and quite another to<lb/>
have a lock placed upon your front<lb/>
tire?and begging mercy from the<lb/>
merciless Bertha was futile.<lb/>
Anyway, after a period of a<lb/>
couple years, most of the college<lb/>
student community was aware of<lb/>
Bertha's job and this woman was<lb/>
given the endearing nickname<lb/>
"The Wheel Lock Hog So much<lb/>
animosity accumulated towards<lb/>
Bertha that she had to deal with<lb/>
verbal abuse at every turn A group<lb/>
of students made t-shirts that said<lb/>
"kill the Wheel Lock Hog" and<lb/>
Bertha even received death threats.<lb/>
A bit extreme, you say? Yep,<lb/>
but it is true. Eventually, Bertha<lb/>
had to leave town. I don't know<lb/>
what she's doing now but I would<lb/>
imagine that she stays as far away<lb/>
from parking lots as possible. The<lb/>
moral to this story is clear: Don't<lb/>
mess with a college student body<lb/>
when it comes to parking because<lb/>
parking may be one of the few<lb/>
things that college students take<lb/>
seriously.<lb/>
I stand firmly behind my<lb/>
decision not to buy a parking<lb/>
sticker. I came back from break to<lb/>
discover that a very large section<lb/>
of one of the parking lots h ad been<lb/>
very neatly fenced in. Some day a<lb/>
rec center will stand there. Since it<lb/>
appears that this rec center thing<lb/>
is inevitable, wouldn't it make<lb/>
more sense to start work on it in<lb/>
the summer when all of those<lb/>
people who bought $70 parking<lb/>
stickers are elsewhere? To rectify<lb/>
the present situation, we could<lb/>
build a parking lot where the traf-<lb/>
fic office now stands.<lb/>
And while I'm one subject, I<lb/>
appealed a ticket that I got way<lb/>
back in September. I waited all<lb/>
semester to find out whether or<lb/>
not I won my case but I never<lb/>
heard anything. When I regis-<lb/>
tered for classes for this semes-<lb/>
ter, there were no outstanding<lb/>
fees to be paid so I assumed that<lb/>
my appeal had been successful.<lb/>
On Dec. 10 or so, I got a letter tha t<lb/>
told me that I owed $35 for the<lb/>
ticket that I got in September.<lb/>
They didn't even wish me a Merry<lb/>
Christmas. I think that efficiency<lb/>
is a virtue, how about you guys?<lb/>
But even better than this<lb/>
post-semester ticket were the ar-<lb/>
ticles that were sent from the li-<lb/>
brary to my house on January 5.<lb/>
I ordered some research material<lb/>
through inter-library loan (be-<lb/>
cause our library didn't have<lb/>
what I needed) near the end of<lb/>
last semester. I needed this stuff<lb/>
for a paper that I was writing that<lb/>
was due on Dec. 7. Only a month<lb/>
late, that's not so bad.<lb/>
I can't really complain too<lb/>
much about the library though,<lb/>
since it is about to get a much<lb/>
needed overhaul. Unfortunately,<lb/>
I won't be around to experience<lb/>
it. But for those of you who are<lb/>
still here when all of this work<lb/>
has been completed and the next<lb/>
project is underway (maybe a pet-<lb/>
ting zoo), study hard, recreate<lb/>
hard and get a bike?it won't<lb/>
require a parking space and I<lb/>
doubt that there will be many<lb/>
spaces around. Bike parking<lb/>
stickers may be the wave of the<lb/>
future.<lb/>
Welcome back.<lb/>
Letters to the Editor<lb/>
To the Editor:<lb/>
In regards to the editorial of November 30,<lb/>
"Clinton's first year proves productive the quan-<lb/>
tity was there but what about quality?<lb/>
It should surprise no one that a President<lb/>
working with a House and Senate of the same<lb/>
party could pass an abundance of feel good legis-<lb/>
lation.<lb/>
Case and point, "the motor voter bill I<lb/>
didn't know that registering was so strenuous.<lb/>
Granted, a number of people might be confused<lb/>
on where the library is but I would think that it<lb/>
couldn't hurt anyone to visit it. By the way, since<lb/>
registering to vote is so perplexing, I can only<lb/>
imagine what kind of mental anguish voting will<lb/>
cause.<lb/>
That brings us to economics. Mr. Clinton<lb/>
wants to tax cigarettes to help stop people from<lb/>
smoking but also wants to use the revenue to fund<lb/>
his new health care plan. How can an expensive<lb/>
social program be fully funded with revenue<lb/>
derived from tax that is supposed to stop an<lb/>
activity?<lb/>
Which brings me to his "deficit-reduction<lb/>
package Didn't a President get fired for raising<lb/>
taxes and implementing his $500 billion pack-<lb/>
age? How can the President be expected to be<lb/>
taken seriously on cutting the budget when he<lb/>
lobbied on shooting down the PennyKasich bill<lb/>
that would cut the budget by $100 billion.<lb/>
Then there is the Brady bill. Something tells<lb/>
me that a person that is going to use a gun in an<lb/>
illegal manner probably won't be hesitant to buy<lb/>
the gun in an illegal manner. How about a wait-<lb/>
ing period for parolees?<lb/>
Eric R. Sandberg<lb/>
Junior<lb/>
Clinical Laboratory Science<lb/>
Stuff you should know<lb/>
?Something to consider when exiting Joyner Library ? You know the security system that protects<lb/>
the library from students and patrons walking away with a book that hasn't been checked out? To avoid<lb/>
getting overly technical, each book checked into Joyner is equipped with a magnetic strip that triggers an<lb/>
alarm in the apparatus located near the exit door. To avoid setting this alarm off, at check-out time, the<lb/>
library de-magnifies each book. Apparently, in the event that a patron absent-mindedly leaves the building<lb/>
without checking a book out, the alarm will sound and the red-faced individual reverses hisher position<lb/>
to await the scorn of a library attendant.<lb/>
"Sounds fair you say. Well, is it also fair for Joyner Library to require these "offenders" to relinquish<lb/>
information (name, ID number, possibly an address) that is kept on file with a written explanation from the<lb/>
"offender" as to why they tried to leave illegally? This info is kept on file for a month and then sent to Steve<lb/>
Nelson, the assistant dean of students. If an incident occurs twice, that person will be subject to<lb/>
disciplinary legal action. This policy was enacted by the employees of the circulation desk?not by ECU,<lb/>
or the state even, but by a handful of people who work at Joyner.<lb/>
Sounds like a system that doesn't accomplish much of anything in terms of nabbing the people who<lb/>
really try to steal books. The true criminals are entirely more resourceful than the Uibrary gives them credit<lb/>
for. They certainly would not be stupid enough to waltz out the door with a hot book. Twice.<lb/>
So who else sees The List and how long does a name stay on it? This system is twin to the age-old<lb/>
elementary school method called a Permanent Record and just as ineffectual.<lb/>
Take heed, folks<lb/>
<pb facs="00058446_0006"/><lb/>
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-it iii hi mmmmiKmnmmmimMmammmwMrmmmtmvtMwmTiwmmm<lb/>
Page 6<lb/>
inWfai??fcliwT.?iiiiflirtHim<lb/>
'The East Carolinian<lb/>
Classifieds<lb/>
?iiniir ,mmmmmmmmmMmMmmmmwmmmmmm&amp;mmmmmmmm0mMmmmmmmmB<lb/>
January 13, 1994<lb/>
For Rent<lb/>
SUBLEASE: One bedroom<lb/>
apartment near Pitt Commu-<lb/>
nity College. Call 355-8737<lb/>
APT. FOR SUBLEASE, 1 bed-<lb/>
room, unfurnished, $265 mo<lb/>
deposit neg 830-9547<lb/>
2 ROOMMATES (male or fe-<lb/>
male) wanted immediately to<lb/>
share 4 bdrm apt. 2 12 baths<lb/>
$156rent l4bills. Convenient<lb/>
Location. 752-6835<lb/>
ROOMMATE NEEDED to<lb/>
share 2 bedroom2 bath apart-<lb/>
ment 1 block from campus.<lb/>
Rent $225-237, Deposit $225,1 <lb/>
2 utilities. Prefer non-smoker.<lb/>
Callleave message 830-9595.<lb/>
FEMALE ROOMMATE<lb/>
needed for apt. 12 block from<lb/>
campus, 3 blocks from down-<lb/>
town, 2 blocks from supermar-<lb/>
ket, rent includes phone, utili-<lb/>
ties, cable. Call 757-1947<lb/>
ROOMMATE(S) NEEDED<lb/>
3 bedroom townhouse, 2 B's.<lb/>
Located 5 mins from campus.<lb/>
Furnished completely, except<lb/>
for your bedroom. Only $250<lb/>
perrmonth, water, sewer and<lb/>
cable. Please call 321-2379 and<lb/>
leave message.<lb/>
THflEE FEMALE ROOM-<lb/>
MATES needed to take over<lb/>
lease. 2 bedrooms 112 bath.<lb/>
Close to campus, $128.75 a<lb/>
month plus 14 utilities. Call<lb/>
Brookie or Lorie 758-6692.<lb/>
ROOMMATE WANTED to<lb/>
share a house close to campus.<lb/>
Rent $250.00 and deposit. 1 3<lb/>
of utilities. Call Scott 758-9604<lb/>
ROOMMATE NEEDED: for 2<lb/>
bdrm townhouse apartment.<lb/>
Rent is $170.00 per month and<lb/>
For Rent<lb/>
12 utilities. Includes on-site<lb/>
laundry, pool, and ECU tran-<lb/>
sit. Callleave message. Stacy<lb/>
Peterson 321-1532<lb/>
MATURE CLEAN, male room-<lb/>
mate needed to share a house<lb/>
in a quite neighborhood. 13<lb/>
utilities and $200 a month. Call<lb/>
355-8783 or 321-2830 ask for<lb/>
Kevin.<lb/>
NEED FEMALE ROOM-<lb/>
MATE immediately Prefer<lb/>
non-smoking, serious student.<lb/>
Walking distance to campus,<lb/>
private room, private bath.<lb/>
Pay 12 rent, 12 utilities.<lb/>
Pleasecall757-1738or 758-5862.<lb/>
FEMALE ROOMMATE<lb/>
needed immediately to share 4<lb/>
br townhouse in Tar River.<lb/>
$162.50 14 utilities. Non-<lb/>
smoker. 758-4332<lb/>
H Help Wanted<lb/>
CRUISE JOBS<lb/>
Students Needed!<lb/>
Earn up to J2,000mo. working for<lb/>
Cruise Ships or Land-Tour companies.<lb/>
World Travel. Summer and Full-Time<lb/>
employment available. No experience<lb/>
necessary. For more information call:<lb/>
(206) 634-0468 ext. C5362<lb/>
 FREE TRIPS &amp; CASH ?<lb/>
Call us and find out how hun-<lb/>
dreds of students are already<lb/>
earning free trips and lots of<lb/>
cash with America's 1 Spring<lb/>
Break company! ChooseCancun,<lb/>
Bahamas, Jamaica, Panama,<lb/>
Daytona or Padre! Call now!<lb/>
TAKE A BREAK STUDENT<lb/>
TRAVEL (800) 328-SAVE or<lb/>
(617)424-8222.<lb/>
$10-$400UP WEEKLY. Mailing<lb/>
brochures! Sparefull time. Set<lb/>
own hours! Rush Stamped en-<lb/>
velope: Publishers (GI) 1821<lb/>
K Help Wanted<lb/>
Hillandale Rd. 1B-295 Durham<lb/>
NC 27705<lb/>
HELP WANTED Ladies earn<lb/>
$500 a week full-time part-<lb/>
time daily payout. Playmates<lb/>
Adult Entertainment Snow Hill,<lb/>
NC. Call for interview 747-7686<lb/>
COUNSELORS to lead thera-<lb/>
peutic groups for youths with<lb/>
emotional behavioral problems<lb/>
in outdoor and indoor settings.<lb/>
Live in. BABS degree in Psy-<lb/>
chology, Social Work or a re-<lb/>
lated field required. Apply to<lb/>
Three Springs of North Caro-<lb/>
lina. ECUPOboxl320Pittsboro,<lb/>
NC 27312<lb/>
SOCCER REFEREES USSF cer-<lb/>
tification clinic to be held in<lb/>
Greenville Jan. 21-23. Earn extra<lb/>
$ and get plenty of exercise. Call<lb/>
752-7514 for details<lb/>
TWO PHYSICIANS seekingre-<lb/>
sponsible student(s) to care for<lb/>
child in our home full or part<lb/>
time. Possibility of shared shifts.<lb/>
References required. 321-1410<lb/>
HOUSECLEANING for faculty<lb/>
family- walking distance- 5 hrs<lb/>
wk- very flexible, $5hr. Call<lb/>
only between 5-6pm. ph 752-<lb/>
0306<lb/>
For Sale<lb/>
SPRINGBREAKSALE1994!We<lb/>
have the hottest destinations! Ja-<lb/>
maica,Cancun, Bahamas, Florida.<lb/>
Allattheguaranteed lowestprices<lb/>
with the ultimate party package.<lb/>
Organize small group and Travel<lb/>
free! Call Sun Splash Tours 1-800-<lb/>
426-7710<lb/>
SPRING BREAK Bahamasparty<lb/>
cruise! 6 days $279! Trip includes<lb/>
For Sale<lb/>
Tired of trying to<lb/>
stretch your dollar?<lb/>
We pay cash on the spot fon<lb/>
?USED BRAND NAME<lb/>
MEN'S CLOTHING<lb/>
?STEREO &amp; VIDEO<lb/>
?EQUIPMENT<lb/>
?MICROWAVES<lb/>
?TELEVISIONS<lb/>
?FURNITURE<lb/>
If you are selling you must be 18 with a<lb/>
picture 1D.(NCDL, ECU)<lb/>
s<lb/>
TUDENT<lb/>
WAP<lb/>
HOP<lb/>
752-3866<lb/>
EVANS STREET MALL<lb/>
Park behind Globe Hardware<lb/>
&amp; use our new rear entrance<lb/>
MON-FRI10-12 &amp; ?li;<lb/>
Sat 10am-l pm<lb/>
Cruise room, 12 meals 6 free<lb/>
parties! Hurry! This will sell out!<lb/>
1-800-678-6386<lb/>
SPRING BREAK! Cancun Ja-<lb/>
maica! Fly out of Raleigh and<lb/>
spend 8 days on the Beach! We<lb/>
have the best trips prices! In-<lb/>
cludes air hotel parties from<lb/>
$429! 1-800-678-6386<lb/>
SPRING BREAK! Panama City!<lb/>
8 days oceanview room with<lb/>
kitchen $1 Walk to best bars!<lb/>
Includes free discount card- save<lb/>
$50 on cover charges! 1-800-678-<lb/>
FLORIDA'S new Spring Break<lb/>
hotspots! Cocoa BeachKey West!<lb/>
More upscale than Panama City<lb/>
Daytona! Great beaches <lb/>
nightlife! 8 days in 27 acre Cocoa<lb/>
For Sale<lb/>
Beachfront resort159! Key West<lb/>
$249! 1-800-678-6386<lb/>
8-BIT NINTENDO with 33<lb/>
games, includes 11 sports, Tetris,<lb/>
Chess; two controls and zapper,<lb/>
hint book and codes. $300OBO.<lb/>
931-8024, leave message<lb/>
SPRING BREAK 1994!<lb/>
Cancun, Bahamas, Jamaica,South<lb/>
Padre, Florida at 110 Guaran-<lb/>
teed Lowest Prices from 1 spring<lb/>
break company! Call John 752-<lb/>
2992.<lb/>
SNOW SKIS K2 5500 size 203<lb/>
and Rossignol 75v bom pair in<lb/>
greatcondition,excellentpricecall<lb/>
John 752-2992<lb/>
E Services Offered<lb/>
SOUTH PADRE ISLAND<lb/>
NORTH PADREMUSTANG ISLAND<lb/>
r ?L0R?I?D'll<lb/>
DAYTONA BEACH<lb/>
PANAMA CITY BEACH<lb/>
ORLANDOWALT DISNEY WORLD<lb/>
C?0?L?0?II?A?D?0<lb/>
STEAMBOAT<lb/>
VAIUBEAVER CREEK<lb/>
BRECKENRIDGEKEYSTONE<lb/>
H.E-V-A.D.A<lb/>
LAS VEGAS<lb/>
S-O-U-T-K C-A-R O-L-I-M-A<lb/>
HILTON HEAD ISLAND<lb/>
RESERVATIONS AVAILABLE NOW<lb/>
CALL TOLL FREE FOR FULL<lb/>
DETAILS AND COLOR BROCHURE!<lb/>
1'800'SUNCHASE<lb/>
HEYMRDJ! Please play my<lb/>
favoritesong! It'stimetoplanfor<lb/>
spring socials and Mobile Music<lb/>
Plxxductionsisgearinguptomeet<lb/>
its popular demand with 2 com-<lb/>
plete systems and light shows.<lb/>
E Services Offered<lb/>
Widest variety of music, best<lb/>
DJs, most popular service with<lb/>
ECU greeks. Call Lee at 758-<lb/>
4644 for bookings.<lb/>
WML<lb/>
Personals<lb/>
WRITERMUSICIAN<lb/>
and poetic soul seeks like<lb/>
minded lady for friend-<lb/>
ship and fun. Send pho-<lb/>
tos and correspondence<lb/>
to: Kane, po box 8663,<lb/>
Greenville, NC 27835<lb/>
ANNA Thanks for mak-<lb/>
ing me so happy these<lb/>
past few months, I love<lb/>
you! John<lb/>
HAPPY BIRTHDAY<lb/>
Heather B.Carroll! Alright<lb/>
miss social butterfly,<lb/>
you're the "Big 2-0 We<lb/>
all hope you do great this<lb/>
semester and have fun to<lb/>
boot! Love always, Kelli <lb/>
the gang.<lb/>
FOUND 1-10-94: a scien-<lb/>
tific calculatoi between<lb/>
Joyner Library and Stu-<lb/>
dent Health Center. Call<lb/>
321-6505<lb/>
aS Greek<lb/>
PI LAMBDA PHI is looking<lb/>
for a few good men who are<lb/>
interested in joiningcampuses<lb/>
youngest but fastest growing<lb/>
fraternities call 830-51 for<lb/>
details.<lb/>
ALPHA PHI EXEC: Can't<lb/>
wait for our trip to the moun-<lb/>
tains! We have lots of plan-<lb/>
ning to do this weekend!<lb/>
ALPHA PHI would like to<lb/>
welcome everyone back!<lb/>
Good luck this semester.<lb/>
Announcements<lb/>
OPPORTUNITIES<lb/>
are available to students<lb/>
who are interested in be-<lb/>
coming Personal care at-<lb/>
tendants to students in<lb/>
wheelchairs, readers and<lb/>
tutors. Past experience is<lb/>
desired but not required.<lb/>
If interested, contact ei-<lb/>
ther of the following: Of-<lb/>
fice of Coordinator 103<lb/>
Greene Hall Telephone:<lb/>
(919)757-6110, Officefor<lb/>
disability support ser-<lb/>
vices Brewster A-l 16 or<lb/>
A-114 Telephone:<lb/>
(919)757-6799<lb/>
ENVIRONMENTAL<lb/>
HEALTH &amp; SAFETY<lb/>
2 work study positions<lb/>
available in Recycling.<lb/>
8am-5pmMonFri. If in-<lb/>
terested, please call 757-<lb/>
6096. Leave message-<lb/>
name, phone number and<lb/>
time to be reached.<lb/>
MEDICINE STUDENT<lb/>
NATIONAL MEDICAL<lb/>
ASSOCIATION<lb/>
on Jan. 22, 1994 will<lb/>
present the Ninth Annual<lb/>
Dr. Martin Luther King,<lb/>
Jr. Senior recognition<lb/>
banquet at the Ramada<lb/>
Inn in Greenville. The<lb/>
event will begin at 6:30.<lb/>
Dr. Brenda Armstrong,<lb/>
one of four pediatric car-<lb/>
diologists in the country<lb/>
will be the keynote<lb/>
speaker. Tickets are<lb/>
$20.00 and include a din-<lb/>
ner, gospel and jazz en-<lb/>
tertainment. Proceeds<lb/>
will benefit the Eastern<lb/>
NC Maternity Home and<lb/>
the SNMA adopt a family.<lb/>
For more information con-<lb/>
tact: Annette Wagner at<lb/>
752-2416.<lb/>
LITERACY<lb/>
VOLUNTEERS OF<lb/>
AMERICA-PITT<lb/>
COUNTY<lb/>
will hold a 16-hour work-<lb/>
shop beginning Thur. Jan.<lb/>
13th with an orientation<lb/>
from 7 to 8pm. Classes<lb/>
will be held on Thur. and<lb/>
Mon. evenings from 7 to<lb/>
9:30pm beginning Jan.<lb/>
20th. One in every four<lb/>
adults in Pitt County is<lb/>
functionally illiterate.<lb/>
Volunteer tutors are<lb/>
greatly needed to combat<lb/>
this disability. Please<lb/>
help. Call 752-0439 for<lb/>
details.<lb/>
LDSSA<lb/>
will be sponsoring 2 reli-<lb/>
gion classes spring semes-<lb/>
ter. The 1st class will be<lb/>
Wed. 12:00nto l:30pmai<lb/>
MSC Room 242. The<lb/>
other class will be at<lb/>
6:30pm -8:00pm at the<lb/>
IDS Church in Lyndale.<lb/>
The course of study will<lb/>
betheDC. The LDS so-<lb/>
rority will also be meet-<lb/>
ing following the Thurs.<lb/>
evening institute class.<lb/>
Everyone is invited to at-<lb/>
tend. For more informa-<lb/>
tion call Lew Williams<lb/>
(collect) 919-523-1755.<lb/>
INVESTMENTS CLUB<lb/>
will hold its first meeting<lb/>
of the year on Thur. Jan.<lb/>
13. It will take place in<lb/>
GCB 3007 at 5:00. All<lb/>
majors are welcome.<lb/>
Come learn about invest-<lb/>
ing<lb/>
CAREER SERVICES<lb/>
WORKSHOPS<lb/>
to following workshops<lb/>
sponsored by Career Ser-<lb/>
vices are open to any in-<lb/>
terested students: Re-<lb/>
sume writing: Tue. Jan.<lb/>
18 Mendenhall 14<lb/>
4:00pm. Interview Skills:<lb/>
Wed. Jan. 19 Mendenhall<lb/>
14 5:00pm. Prospective<lb/>
May and Summer 1994<lb/>
graduates who have not<lb/>
done so can still register<lb/>
with Career Services at<lb/>
the next Orientation<lb/>
meeting which will be<lb/>
held on Thur. Jan. 20 at<lb/>
3:00pm in MSC 221.<lb/>
GREENVILLE, AREA<lb/>
Bisexual, Lesbian and Gay<lb/>
community group spon-<lb/>
sors discussions and ac-<lb/>
tivities, meetings are<lb/>
closed. For information,<lb/>
758-8619<lb/>
ECLUAfOMEN'S<lb/>
Ultimate Frisbee team.<lb/>
Anyone interested in<lb/>
playing Ultimate Frisbee,<lb/>
please call Michelle,<lb/>
Leslie or Holly at 752-<lb/>
2520. No experience is<lb/>
necessary. Come feel the<lb/>
Ultimate experience.<lb/>
STUDENT EXCHANGE<lb/>
England, Netherlands,<lb/>
California, Colorado,<lb/>
these are a few places<lb/>
some of your peers will<lb/>
be going this semester<lb/>
because they came by<lb/>
the office in the fall! It is<lb/>
time to consider a stu-<lb/>
dent exchange or study<lb/>
abroad experience for<lb/>
fall semester! IF you are<lb/>
interested in study sites<lb/>
which are available,<lb/>
please contact Stephanie<lb/>
Evancho, International<lb/>
Programs, 757-6769 for<lb/>
details on how you can<lb/>
pay ECU tuition and study<lb/>
at another location! Do it<lb/>
today!<lb/>
ATTENTION<lb/>
COMMUNICATION<lb/>
STUDENTS!<lb/>
EC3 will be holding then-<lb/>
first 1994 meeting on<lb/>
Wed. Jan. 19th at Chico's<lb/>
restaurant. Majors and<lb/>
minors welcome. For fur-<lb/>
ther information call Laura<lb/>
at 830-0551.<lb/>
RECREATIONAL<lb/>
SERVICES<lb/>
show off your racquet-<lb/>
ball skills when Recre-<lb/>
ational Services hosts a<lb/>
Racquetball singles tour-<lb/>
nament. Come to the reg-<lb/>
istration meeting on Jan.<lb/>
25 at 5:30pm in BIO. 103.<lb/>
for more information call<lb/>
Recreational Services at<lb/>
757-6387 or stop by 203<lb/>
Christenbury Gym.<lb/>
RECREATLONAL<lb/>
SERVICES<lb/>
come play water polo<lb/>
with Recreational Ser-<lb/>
vices! There will be a<lb/>
registration meeting on<lb/>
Jan. 25 at 5pm in<lb/>
BIO 103. For more in-<lb/>
formation call Recre-<lb/>
ational Services at 757-<lb/>
6387 or stop by 203<lb/>
Christenbury Gym.<lb/>
RECREATIONAL<lb/>
SERVICES<lb/>
you don't have to wait<lb/>
until March to find bas-<lb/>
ketball madness at ECU!<lb/>
There will be a basket-<lb/>
ball preview, basketball<lb/>
invitational, and bas-<lb/>
ketball registration<lb/>
meeting on Jan. 18 at<lb/>
5pm in BIO. 103. for<lb/>
more information call<lb/>
Recreational Services at<lb/>
757-6387 or come by<lb/>
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call 757-6366.<lb/>
<pb facs="00058446_0007"/><lb/>
???? ?-??<lb/>
&amp;<lb/>
Phoebe<lb/>
9 ?<lb/>
Alright, tough guys! It's<lb/>
1994, and it's time to get<lb/>
down wit the cartoonin'<lb/>
bidness! So all you Pirate,<lb/>
Comics jerkies meet at the<lb/>
East Carolinian at 5:30 on<lb/>
Friday, Jan. 14th. And if<lb/>
you're all good HI' kids<lb/>
FREE DRINKS!<lb/>
(And no stragglers.)<lb/>
FolJowsd by MOilS'JJ&amp;jB 'J'JiUOJL 3iIDW<lb/>
ixid Tli-riD'J'OIl PULL I! 3a sis 33 3 3-r.r.r 3i<lb/>
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ICEMftf 11<lb/>
by Aycock<lb/>
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I HOLT HERE, i My "FT<lb/>
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4. HEALTH CARE PLArt CodsiSri of<lb/>
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The East Carolinian<lb/>
Page 8<lb/>
Lifestyle<lb/>
January 13, 1994<lb/>
Hendrix holds Scottish theme dinner<lb/>
Come and visit Scotland for dinner and a movie at<lb/>
Hendrix for an evening.<lb/>
Photo Courtesy of the British Tourist Authority<lb/>
The Edinburg Festival is an example of what can be seen on Thursday.<lb/>
Two screenings wilt be held at 4:00 p.m. and 8:00 p.m. with dinner.<lb/>
Richard Attenborough<lb/>
reminisces long career<lb/>
By Bridset Hemenway<lb/>
Staff Writer<lb/>
Have you wondered about the<lb/>
life of the Scottish? A land where<lb/>
bagpipes, highland games and high-<lb/>
land flings continue to fascinate the<lb/>
world peeping in. Scotland is a land<lb/>
where explorers battle the raging<lb/>
North Sea to tap the crude petro-<lb/>
leum locked in beneath it. A place<lb/>
where fisherman roam the most<lb/>
famous lochs catching the fish that<lb/>
feed the world. A place everyone<lb/>
should visit.<lb/>
On Thursday, Jan. 13th<lb/>
,Hendrix Theatre will present to you<lb/>
the opportunity to travel to Scot-<lb/>
land and the Scottish Isles through<lb/>
the TravelAdventure film Theme<lb/>
Dinners. After enjoying a filmabout<lb/>
the exciting land of Scotland visi-<lb/>
tors will feast on an authentic Scot-<lb/>
tish dinner. There will be matinee<lb/>
and an evening showing for this<lb/>
film and dinner will be served at<lb/>
6:15 p.m. for the convenience of<lb/>
viewers.<lb/>
This exciting experience is<lb/>
brought to ECU by Joe and Mary<lb/>
Liz Adair. Joe and Mary Liz have<lb/>
lived, worked and traveled in over<lb/>
60 nations and have produced<lb/>
travel-destination films on four con-<lb/>
tinents. With the help of Joe Adair's<lb/>
work in International Studies and<lb/>
his experience in the American<lb/>
Peace Corps and Mary Liz's sociol-<lb/>
ogy, philosophy and music back-<lb/>
ground, the two create an adven-<lb/>
ture for those who are unable to<lb/>
travel to exotic lands. Their films<lb/>
have won several awards includ-<lb/>
ing the Kentucky Thoroughbred<lb/>
Award, which is the highest public<lb/>
relations honor within their home<lb/>
state of Kentucky. Joe Adair is a<lb/>
past-president of the International<lb/>
Motion Picture and Lecturers Asso-<lb/>
ciation. Together the Adairs recently<lb/>
received the prestigious Speaker of<lb/>
the Year Award.<lb/>
Also during the tour viewers<lb/>
will visit Edinburg and her royal<lb/>
mile , greet Glasgow , Aberdeen<lb/>
and Perth. They will experience the<lb/>
excitement of teeing off along the<lb/>
hallowed fairways of Turnberry,<lb/>
Gleneagles and St. Andrews in this<lb/>
historic home of golf and unravel<lb/>
the intrigues surrounding Mary<lb/>
Queen of Scots while roaming in<lb/>
the palaces. If they wish viewers<lb/>
cansampledelicaciessuchas,baked<lb/>
fish with dill cream sauce, roast<lb/>
pork with apples and red cabbage,<lb/>
baked butternut squash and almond<lb/>
cakes. The English language with a<lb/>
Gaelic lilt will catch everyone's at-<lb/>
tention as they travel aboard The<lb/>
Royal Scotsman-the worlds most<lb/>
luxurious and romantic train. Itwill<lb/>
be a night to remember as you expe-<lb/>
rience. Scotland and the Scottish<lb/>
Isles.<lb/>
Tickets to the screening of the<lb/>
film will be $4 and$12.50 for dinner<lb/>
seats. The film will be shown at 4:00<lb/>
&amp; 8:00 p.m. and is sponsored by the<lb/>
Department of University Unions<lb/>
at ECU.<lb/>
Film and dinner tickets are on<lb/>
sale now and can be purchased at<lb/>
the ECU central ticket office in<lb/>
Mendenhall student center. Tickets<lb/>
canbecharged to major credit cards<lb/>
by mail or phone at 757-4788. If that<lb/>
is long distance, call 1-800-ECU-<lb/>
ARTS.<lb/>
LOS ANGELES (AP) ? He<lb/>
had a long career as one of<lb/>
England's best actors. He has<lb/>
earned knighthood from the<lb/>
Queen and Academy Awards for<lb/>
directing and producing Gandhi.<lb/>
For all this, Richard<lb/>
Attenborough may be most re-<lb/>
membered as the build er of Ju ras-<lb/>
sic Park.<lb/>
This bothers Sir Richard not a<lb/>
whit. After 50 years at his trade,<lb/>
he knows the value of starring in<lb/>
what is likely to be the most suc-<lb/>
cessful movie of all time.<lb/>
"Probably in that one movie,<lb/>
more people have seen what I've<lb/>
done than in all the other films<lb/>
put together he mused duringa<lb/>
visit here for the opening of his<lb/>
latest film as a director,<lb/>
Shadowlands. He added with a<lb/>
chuckle: "I've done one or two<lb/>
things that were better than that.<lb/>
Not much, though<lb/>
Attenborough almost didn't<lb/>
play the pivotal role of John<lb/>
Hammond, the tycoon who rep-<lb/>
licates dinosaurs for an island at-<lb/>
traction. Steven Spielberg previ-<lb/>
ously had asked him to appear in<lb/>
two of his films, but<lb/>
Attenborough was unable to do<lb/>
so. He succumbed to Spielberg's<lb/>
pleading ? and immediately re-<lb/>
gretted it.<lb/>
"I hadn't acted in 14 years<lb/>
he said. "It's much easier to be a<lb/>
director than an actor. If vou're<lb/>
an actor, you've got to get it right.<lb/>
Who's to say whether you got it<lb/>
right as a director? I thought to<lb/>
myself, all those lines to remem-<lb/>
ber<lb/>
Always the perfectionist, he<lb/>
remarked that he wished he could<lb/>
do some of his scenes over again.<lb/>
But he had high praise for<lb/>
Spielberg.<lb/>
"He's marvelous, brilliant. I<lb/>
don't understand, and there's no<lb/>
use denying it, a certain jealousy<lb/>
as far as he's concerned, or a cer-<lb/>
tain lack of warmth toward him<lb/>
in certain areas of Los Angeles.<lb/>
For he's a genius<lb/>
Richard -Samuel<lb/>
Attenborough was born 70 years<lb/>
ago in Cambridge, where his fa-<lb/>
ther was a college president. He<lb/>
won a scholarship to the Royal<lb/>
Academy of Dramatic Art and<lb/>
soon was appearing in West End<lb/>
plays. An agent took him to Noel<lb/>
Coward, who was seeking fresh<lb/>
faces for his film tribute to the<lb/>
navy, In Which We Seri'e.<lb/>
His budding film career was<lb/>
interrupted by the air force, and<lb/>
Attenborough ended up photo-<lb/>
graphing bombing missions over<lb/>
Germany.<lb/>
After the war,<lb/>
Attenborough's acting career<lb/>
flourished, both in British films<lb/>
(Brighton Rock, Dunkirk) and<lb/>
See RICHARD page 10<lb/>
Alternate Roots hits Durham<lb/>
By Daniel Willis<lb/>
Staff Writer<lb/>
Activists, community orga-<lb/>
nizers and artists are joining to-<lb/>
gether in Durham on Jan. 26-30<lb/>
for a Community Arts Revival.<lb/>
The event will analyze ways in<lb/>
which artists and communities<lb/>
can act as partners for social<lb/>
progress.<lb/>
The Arts Revival is presented<lb/>
by Alternate Roots (Regional Or-<lb/>
ganization of Theaters South) as<lb/>
parts of its CommunityArtists<lb/>
Partnership project. The event is<lb/>
open to the public and will in-<lb/>
clude performances, celebrations,<lb/>
workshops, forums, case studies<lb/>
and small group discussions.<lb/>
Kathie de Nobriga, the<lb/>
ROOTS Executive Director said,<lb/>
"We called it a revival because<lb/>
we believe artists are again tak-<lb/>
ing an active part in the develop-<lb/>
ment of the communities where<lb/>
BH<lb/>
they live and work. We feel it is<lb/>
time to bring together those who<lb/>
are immersed in this work, to<lb/>
share our knowledge, examine<lb/>
key issues, sing, eat and make art<lb/>
together<lb/>
The festivities will be held at<lb/>
the Durham<lb/>
Arts Council,<lb/>
Omni Hotel,<lb/>
Hayti Heritage<lb/>
Center,<lb/>
Durham Convention Center, The<lb/>
Palace International and other lo-<lb/>
cations near downtown Durham.<lb/>
Notable performers from all<lb/>
over the Southeast such as story-<lb/>
tellers, John Spelman and Cynthia<lb/>
Watt; poet Alice Lovelace; and<lb/>
singer, Elise Witt, will be featured.<lb/>
Renowned artists and cul-<lb/>
tural activists including E'Vonne<lb/>
Coleman of the Durham Arts<lb/>
Council, Bill Cleveland of the<lb/>
Center for the study of Arts and<lb/>
Community, and Matt<lb/>
Scharzman of the Arts and Social<lb/>
Change program at the New Col-<lb/>
lege of California will lead the<lb/>
discussions.<lb/>
This CommunityArtists<lb/>
Project is made possible through<lb/>
the support of The Nathan<lb/>
Cummings<lb/>
Founda-<lb/>
tions, The<lb/>
National<lb/>
Endow-<lb/>
ment for the Arts Presenting and<lb/>
Commission Program, The North<lb/>
Carolina Arts Council, The Mary<lb/>
Duke Dibble Foundation, The<lb/>
Lila-Walace Reader's Digest Fund<lb/>
and The Durham Arts Council.<lb/>
Registration for the event is<lb/>
possible until Jan. 17, but limited<lb/>
space is available. Registration<lb/>
fees are: $85 for artists, $100 for<lb/>
the general public, $125 for rep-<lb/>
resentatives of an Institution or<lb/>
University and $35 for local rep-<lb/>
resentatives.<lb/>
Geronimo documents American Indians<lb/>
By Ike Shibley<lb/>
Staff Writer<lb/>
The sad plight of the Native<lb/>
American has become a popular<lb/>
theme for American cinema. Be-<lb/>
ginning with Dances With Wolves<lb/>
and then continuing in films like<lb/>
Thunderheart and The Last of the<lb/>
Mohicans, the American Indian has<lb/>
firmly entered the collective na-<lb/>
tional psyche.<lb/>
A film like Michael Apted's<lb/>
Thunderheart was memorable be-<lb/>
cause it depicted not only the mis-<lb/>
treatment of American Indians 150<lb/>
years ago but the abuses inflicted<lb/>
on them today as they struggle to<lb/>
survive in ramshackle trailers on<lb/>
dilapidated reservations.<lb/>
The newest installment in the<lb/>
cinematic treatment of the Native<lb/>
American, Geronimo: An American<lb/>
Lege takes place over a hun-<lb/>
dred years ago.<lb/>
As told through the lens of<lb/>
Walter Hill, the film historically<lb/>
creates the atmosphere present<lb/>
during a time when the West was<lb/>
being settled, and the Native<lb/>
Americans were being shuttled<lb/>
onto reservations against their<lb/>
wills.<lb/>
The U.S. Army was assigned<lb/>
the task of herding the American<lb/>
Indians onto the reservations like<lb/>
so much cattle. The officers merci-<lb/>
See GERONIMO page 9<lb/>
CD Reviews CD Reviews<lb/>
mi<lb/>
Definite Purchase<lb/>
)?<lb/>
Worth A Try<lb/>
j<lb/>
Take Your Chances<lb/>
s<lb/>
No Alternative<lb/>
IH<lb/>
So alternative rcxk has been<lb/>
batted around a lot lately in the<lb/>
media, to both the music's better-<lb/>
ment and its detriment. Sure, it's<lb/>
great thataltemarive now ;ets some<lb/>
attention and that some talented<lb/>
people make the money they 'de-<lb/>
serve to be making. Butwhen record<lb/>
companies sink their fangs into any-<lb/>
thing, they tend to warp it in their<lb/>
own image. And it's only a matter<lb/>
of time before they screw up alter-<lb/>
native?has anyone really looked<lb/>
closely at Stone Temple Pilots?<lb/>
Could they be the Monkees of<lb/>
grunge? It's like a virus.<lb/>
Fortunately, the disease can<lb/>
be felt only occasionally on No Al-<lb/>
ternative, a compilation of alterna-<lb/>
tive music released late last year as<lb/>
an AIDS benefit. The producers<lb/>
make the point that the term alter-<lb/>
native is meaningless; any label that<lb/>
canbeused to cover both Smashing<lb/>
Pumpkins and the Beastie Boys (to<lb/>
use two examples from the album)<lb/>
has been stretched too tight. It's a<lb/>
good point. Bu 11 think the real ques-<lb/>
tion is, with Nirvana (the current<lb/>
altemati ve frontmen) riding the top<lb/>
of the charts, what is this music<lb/>
supposed to be alternative to?<lb/>
At any rate, No Alternative is<lb/>
a nice package overall. Most of the<lb/>
groups assembled here have im-<lb/>
pressive credentials, so who cares<lb/>
about labels? Real treats include<lb/>
Soundgarden toning down their act<lb/>
on "Show Me the Breeders (hear-<lb/>
ing Kim Deal is always nice) on<lb/>
"Iris altemativeelder, Bob Mould,<lb/>
with "Can't Fight It and Matthew<lb/>
Sweet doing another strange trib-<lb/>
ute to Japanese animation, in<lb/>
"Superdeformed<lb/>
The coolest track on the al-<lb/>
bum, however, is Pavement's "Un-<lb/>
seen Power of the Picket Fence<lb/>
which looks back to "the ancient<lb/>
time, when there was no fifty states<lb/>
in a tribute to REM. In meandering<lb/>
garage-band fashion, Pavement<lb/>
pretends to make a legend of Stipe<lb/>
and the boys while reallv just hav-<lb/>
ing a lot of silly fun. Expect lamen-<lb/>
tations on the rampant stupidity of<lb/>
our generation if many Baby<lb/>
Boomers figureoutthehowling his-<lb/>
torical inaccuracy in this song's fi-<lb/>
nal verse. What fun!<lb/>
No Alternative also has a few<lb/>
problems, however, like Soul<lb/>
Asylum's cover of "Sexual Heal-<lb/>
ing These guys were once one of<lb/>
the best rock bands on Earth, but<lb/>
this track makes me seriously won-<lb/>
der if they'vefinallysoldoutlmean,<lb/>
if you're going to do a Marvin Gaye<lb/>
song, you could at least do a good<lb/>
one. I sincerely hope tiiis track is<lb/>
meant as a joke, because, if not, it's<lb/>
truly pathetic.<lb/>
While "Sexual Healing" is<lb/>
the only glaring flaw in the album,<lb/>
several tracks are just plain boring.<lb/>
Sarah McLachlan's "Hold On for<lb/>
See ALTERNATIVE page 10<lb/>
Green Apple<lb/>
Quick Step<lb/>
Wonderful Virus<lb/>
m<lb/>
"Rapid flow of suburbiaIroni-<lb/>
callyifsyouMotherly anti-confusion,<lb/>
genocideTeach me Indian, How to<lb/>
listenBuild a bridge over my sky<lb/>
Two films<lb/>
close to<lb/>
perfect<lb/>
By Ike Shibley<lb/>
Staff Writer<lb/>
Two films opening in the<lb/>
rest of the country but have<lb/>
not yet made it to Greenville<lb/>
are 77k Remains of the Day and<lb/>
Schindler's List. Both films<lb/>
achieve cinematic perfection.<lb/>
Remains of the Day stars<lb/>
Anthony Hopkins as Mr.<lb/>
Stevens, a prim and profes-<lb/>
sional English butler work-<lb/>
ing for Lord Darlington in<lb/>
the time just before World<lb/>
War II. Emma Thompson<lb/>
plays Miss Kenton, a house-<lb/>
keeper who works for the<lb/>
Darlington house. The affec-<lb/>
tion between Mr. Stevens and<lb/>
Miss Kenton is only gradu-<lb/>
ally revealed and even then<lb/>
not fully.<lb/>
The Remains of the Day is<lb/>
based on the 1989 novel of<lb/>
the same name by Kazuo<lb/>
Ishiguro. The novel was<lb/>
adapted for the screen by<lb/>
Ruth Prawer Jhabvala and<lb/>
she once again, as happened<lb/>
last year for her adapta tion of<lb/>
Howard's End, should receive<lb/>
an Oscar nomination.<lb/>
Jhabvala worked again<lb/>
with producer Ismail Mer-<lb/>
chant and director James<lb/>
Ivory. Ivory has never been<lb/>
awarded an Oscar, and prob-<lb/>
ably will not receive one this<lb/>
year, he certainly deserves<lb/>
one. He has now directed two<lb/>
of the most magnificent films<lb/>
of the'90s?Howard's Endand<lb/>
The Remains of the Day.<lb/>
Though Ivory has now firmly<lb/>
established himself as a di-<lb/>
rector of impeccable artistic<lb/>
taste. He has moved beyond<lb/>
the limited realm of art house<lb/>
films and is now becoming a<lb/>
recognizable name in the<lb/>
world of cinema.<lb/>
The most remarkable<lb/>
compliment thatcanbe given<lb/>
to The Remains of the Day is<lb/>
trtatitsurpassesHoawvf sErui<lb/>
in quality. 77k Remains of the<lb/>
Day pulsates with passions<lb/>
that remain caged inside the<lb/>
souls of these English charac-<lb/>
ters. The film's finale is emo-<lb/>
tionally devastating, and the<lb/>
images in that final reel will<lb/>
not soon leave the viewer.<lb/>
Schindler's List, if pos-<lb/>
sible, is even more powerful<lb/>
than 77k Remains of the Day.<lb/>
Oskar Schindler (magnifi-<lb/>
cently brought to life by Liam<lb/>
Neeson) was a German en-<lb/>
trepreneur whose sympa-<lb/>
thies swung toward the Jew-<lb/>
ish community as World War<lb/>
See FILMS page 10<lb/>
mr<lb/>
Don't Buy<lb/>
Sounds a little confusing you<lb/>
say? Well, squeeze these lyrics be-<lb/>
tween some excellent cords and<lb/>
rhythm and you have Green Apple<lb/>
Quick Step. Taken from the song<lb/>
"Rapid" theselyricscould represent<lb/>
the unique and progressive sound<lb/>
of a new band taking the alternative<lb/>
scene by storm.<lb/>
The band first hit the scene in<lb/>
1989 as Inspector Luv and die Ride<lb/>
Me Babies. However, when their<lb/>
following began to spread further<lb/>
than their home town of Tacoma,<lb/>
Wash. ,menameGreenAppleOuick<lb/>
Step took form.<lb/>
During their stint as Inspector<lb/>
Luv the group played parties, ga-<lb/>
rages and street comers throughout<lb/>
Tacoma. It was late 1991 when the<lb/>
group released a 4-song indepen-<lb/>
dentEPcallednofKTWorW.Shortly<lb/>
See GREEN APPLE page 10<lb/>
<pb facs="00058446_0009"/><lb/>
January 13, 1994<lb/>
The East Carolinian 9<lb/>
Bach festival begins this weekend<lb/>
"Bach: Before and Beyond<lb/>
a series of free concerts sched-<lb/>
uled at East Carolina University<lb/>
this month, will brighten this<lb/>
wintry season for Eastern North<lb/>
Carolina music devotees.<lb/>
The series is billed as a "basi-<lb/>
cally Baroque festival celebrat-<lb/>
ing solo and chamber music bv<lb/>
its sponsor, the ECU School of<lb/>
Music, with faculty and guest<lb/>
artist performers.<lb/>
Opening the series on Fri-<lb/>
day, Jan. 14 is "Rigaudon to Raga-<lb/>
Harpsichord Music from Four<lb/>
Centuries a performance by<lb/>
harpsichordist Elaine Funaro of<lb/>
Chapel Hill. Ms. Funaro will<lb/>
present keyboard music of vari-<lb/>
ous types and periods, including<lb/>
GERONIMO<lb/>
works by early composers Henry<lb/>
Purcell, William Byrd and Jean-<lb/>
Phillipe Rameau and contempo-<lb/>
rary pieces by Bela Bartok, Penka<lb/>
Kouneva, Dan Locklari, Tom<lb/>
Robin Harris and Peter<lb/>
Klausmeyer.<lb/>
Featured in thisand other con-<lb/>
certs in the festival will be the<lb/>
handcrafted replica of a mid- 18th<lb/>
century French harpsichord that<lb/>
was donated to the School of Mu-<lb/>
sic last spring by Conrad Sharpe<lb/>
of Greenville.<lb/>
The second festival concert,<lb/>
set for Thursday, Jan. 20, is "J.S.<lb/>
Bach: The Splendor of the Ba-<lb/>
roque with Cornell University<lb/>
ha rpsichordist William Cowdery,<lb/>
and several ECU faculty singers<lb/>
and strings and woodwinds instru-<lb/>
mentalists. One selection will show-<lb/>
case the talents of Greenville surgeon<lb/>
and music aficionado Ira M. Hardy III<lb/>
"in an operation of the vocal sort<lb/>
The festival concludes Monday,<lb/>
Jan. 24, with "Trumpet Tunes and<lb/>
Ayres a program of 17th century and<lb/>
early 19thcentury English and Italian<lb/>
music for trumpet and harpsicJiord<lb/>
presented by faculty trumpeter Tho-<lb/>
masHuenerandharpsichordistJanette<lb/>
Fishell. Assisting will be two faculty<lb/>
colleagues?tenor Perry Smith and<lb/>
George Broussard, performing on the<lb/>
sackbut (a medieval trombone).<lb/>
Each concert will begin at 8 p.m.<lb/>
in the Hetcher Music Center Recital<lb/>
Hall.<lb/>
Continued from page 8<lb/>
lessly carried out their orders<lb/>
and forced these people onto<lb/>
small tracts of land with poor<lb/>
soil.<lb/>
A story of such mistreatment<lb/>
deserves more empathy than<lb/>
Geronimo gives it. Instead of<lb/>
plumbing the emotional depths<lb/>
and the motivations of some of<lb/>
the participants of the<lb/>
"Geronimo Campaign the film<lb/>
opts to relate its tale in quasi-<lb/>
documentary style.<lb/>
The emotional impact be-<lb/>
comes muted in the hands of<lb/>
Hill. Instead of trying to under-<lb/>
stand the driving forces behind<lb/>
the savagery exhibited bv both<lb/>
the Apaches and the army, Hill<lb/>
matter-of-factly relates the<lb/>
events as told by a young officer<lb/>
on the campaign to capture<lb/>
Geronimo.<lb/>
The actors try their best and<lb/>
all give credible performances.<lb/>
Jason Patric has the lead as Lieu-<lb/>
tenant Charles B. Gatewood, an<lb/>
idealistic young officer who senses<lb/>
the futility of the Apache resis-<lb/>
tance and tries to communicate to<lb/>
them that they should accept their<lb/>
fate and move quietly onto the<lb/>
reservations. He urges the Apache<lb/>
to acquiesce to the government<lb/>
demands not out of loyalty to his<lb/>
country but out of compassion for<lb/>
the Apache.<lb/>
Wes Studi ably fills the role<lb/>
of Geronimo. He makes<lb/>
Geronimo almost supernaturally<lb/>
powerful yet he allows his frail-<lb/>
ties to show through.<lb/>
One scene that rises above<lb/>
the rest of the film involves the<lb/>
two leads. As Lieut. Gatewood<lb/>
confronts Geronimo for the last<lb/>
time, Geronimo tells him: "I am<lb/>
Geronimo, an Apache warrior.<lb/>
Who are you?"<lb/>
"Just a man replies<lb/>
Gatewood, "like yourself<lb/>
Had the rest of the film con-<lb/>
centrated on these two "men" the<lb/>
film may have developed into a<lb/>
powerful film. Unfortunately,<lb/>
Geronimo introduces a bevy of<lb/>
other characters who dilute the<lb/>
emotions of the two leads.<lb/>
The other cast members try to<lb/>
bring spark to poorly written roles.<lb/>
Robert Duvall plays a hired hunter<lb/>
of Apache and Gene Hackman<lb/>
portrays an army general who is<lb/>
sympathetic to the Apache cause.<lb/>
Both men try valiantly but they<lb/>
cannot fully develop their charac-<lb/>
ters in the short screen time they<lb/>
are given.<lb/>
Geronimo never bristles with<lb/>
the necessary intensity to really<lb/>
propel it. Walter Hill has man-<lb/>
aged to take a compelling story<lb/>
and drain it of its emotional im-<lb/>
pact. He succeeds in telling an in-<lb/>
teresting story but a tale this excit-<lb/>
ing should not be so dull on film.<lb/>
On a scale of one to 10,<lb/>
Geronimo rates a seven.<lb/>
-?<lb/>
THIS WEEK 0T THE ELBO!<lb/>
TUE:<lb/>
WED:<lb/>
THUR:<lb/>
Edge Olub Otf Draft<lb/>
Classics Nite 0? Draft<lb/>
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$1.00 House Highballs<lb/>
75$ Shot Specials<lb/>
Admission $x.OO Members and $3.00 Guest<lb/>
FRI:<lb/>
HAPPY HOUR!<lb/>
Come celebrate 25 years of Happy Hour with<lb/>
$1-25 Domestics and $275 Pitchers<lb/>
' ALL DAY LONG ,<lb/>
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Reduced Admission For Guest!<lb/>
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Admission $1.00 Members and $3.00 Guest<lb/>
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The<lb/>
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Undefeated, Undisputed!<lb/>
Thanks For Voting Us<lb/>
The "Best Place To Hear Live Music"<lb/>
1987198819891990199119921 993<lb/>
GREENVILLE TIMES READERS'POLL<lb/>
r<lb/>
A Every Wednesday W@ )<lb/>
JAN 19 Ron Roberson<lb/>
JAN 26 Lou Warren<lb/>
FEB 2 Mark Deshera<lb/>
Bring this coupon for $3.00 adm.<lb/>
ThurJan 13<lb/>
TONIGHT!<lb/>
1 Party school meets the 1 Party night<lb/>
Together at last.Bring in the new year<lb/>
with your buddies!<lb/>
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Sat Jan.22<lb/>
'Rolley Grey And Sunfire H<lb/>
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Special Sunday<lb/>
AvitW Acoustic Bus<lb/>
I<lb/>
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w special guest<lb/>
Dcihli llama<lb/>
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featured on MTV's<lb/>
Austin, Texas Music Scene<lb/>
r<lb/>
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i<lb/>
$2.00 32oz DRAFT<lb/>
ThurJan 27<lb/>
t<lb/>
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HOOIE &amp;lheBlowfish 1<lb/>
Last Greenville appearance before<lb/>
they go to L.A. to record their Atlantic Records CD.<lb/>
Fn Jan 28<lb/>
$2.00 32oz DRAFT<lb/>
EVERYTHING<lb/>
"ECUs 1 Party band"<lb/>
29 SAT<lb/>
tfp<lb/>
r<lb/>
CRY SH LOVE<lb/>
COLUMBIA RECORDING ARTIST<lb/>
Only $8 Adv Tix<lb/>
w special guest DAG<lb/>
(formerly Mr. Potato Head)<lb/>
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kkkkkkkkkkkkkkkkkkkkkkkkkkkki<lb/>
<pb facs="00058446_0010"/><lb/>
  MM MM <lb/>
10 The East Carolinian<lb/>
January 13, 1994<lb/>
RICHARD<lb/>
Continued from page 8<lb/>
? American (The Great Escape, The<lb/>
Sand Pebbles). By the mid-1960s,<lb/>
the acting life had paled.<lb/>
"1 was blessed or cursed or<lb/>
whatever with this ridiculous<lb/>
sort of cherubic face he said. "I<lb/>
played the quivering psychopa th<lb/>
on the lower decks of Her<lb/>
Majesty's navy or something<lb/>
similar. 1 was type-cast, and I got<lb/>
fed up with it. I thought when<lb/>
this disappears, I'd have noth-<lb/>
ing to survive on. So I went into<lb/>
production<lb/>
Attenborough began pro-<lb/>
FILMS<lb/>
ducing films with Bryan Forbes<lb/>
and turned to directing with Oh!<lb/>
What a Lovely War. His 20-year<lb/>
effort to make a film biography of<lb/>
Gandhi paid of f in 1982 with eight<lb/>
Academy Awards, including best<lb/>
picture and director. He has also<lb/>
directed A Bridge Too Far, Young<lb/>
Winston, Cry Freedom and Chaplin,<lb/>
which failed at the box office.<lb/>
The director has bounced<lb/>
back with Shadoiulands, a singular<lb/>
love story based on a real-life<lb/>
English writer-teacher and the<lb/>
American divorcee he married.<lb/>
Continued from page 8<lb/>
II progressed. He was able to<lb/>
single-handedly save more than<lb/>
1,000 Jews from the gas chambers<lb/>
at Auschwitz.<lb/>
As directed by Steven<lb/>
Spielberg, Schindler's List paints<lb/>
one of the most vivid portraits of<lb/>
the Holocaust yet. In stunning<lb/>
black and white, Spielberg con-<lb/>
veys the atrocities of the Holo-<lb/>
caust with an artistic sense that<lb/>
forces a reevaluation of his entire<lb/>
career. With this film, Spielberg<lb/>
has proven that he has matured.<lb/>
Schindler's List defies superla-<lb/>
tives. It is simply the most accom-<lb/>
plished picture of the year and<lb/>
possibly of the decade. The com-<lb/>
pliments lauded it thus far still do<lb/>
not do the film justice. Schindler's<lb/>
List is not just a film?it is an expe-<lb/>
rience.<lb/>
When the next installment on the<lb/>
history of cinema isvmtta,Schindtcr's<lb/>
List will play a prominent role. It is,<lb/>
quite simply, that good.<lb/>
Both films can be seen in Raleigh.<lb/>
And if ever films were worth a road<lb/>
trip, The Remains of the Day and<lb/>
Schindler's List are. Better yet, take a<lb/>
Saturday and see both, but leavesome<lb/>
room in between the two in order to<lb/>
absorb the emotional impact. Perhaps<lb/>
the films will soon come to Green ville.<lb/>
Schindler's List is being advertised as a<lb/>
comingattractionatalcxaltheater,but<lb/>
there is no guarantee the Holocaust<lb/>
images will ever flicker inside a theater<lb/>
in this town. We can only hope that<lb/>
bothfilms will open here.If they do,see<lb/>
them immediately, because a perfect<lb/>
film is hard to find.<lb/>
On a scale of one to 10, both films<lb/>
rate a ten.<lb/>
GREEN APPLE<lb/>
Continued from page 8<lb/>
after the release of their EP, the group<lb/>
relocated toSeattle. After trying toavoid<lb/>
the music explosion going on there,<lb/>
they hit the road on a West Coast van<lb/>
tour during the Summer of '91. They<lb/>
still felt they liadn't quite developed<lb/>
the sound they were after.<lb/>
Ty Will Man, lead vocalist of Cain<lb/>
AppleQuickStep,saidaboutthistime<lb/>
period, "We wereout in left field, hang-<lb/>
ingbackuntilwegotthesoundthatwe<lb/>
were after<lb/>
Thechange they were waiting for<lb/>
occurred after they lost their original<lb/>
bassist. When the band recruited Mari<lb/>
Anne Braeden to fill the missing bass<lb/>
slot, it added a whole new dimension<lb/>
to the sound through the use of Mari<lb/>
Anne's back-up vocals.<lb/>
Finally, in the fall of '92, after a<lb/>
performance at a tiny Seattle bar, they<lb/>
were approached by Medicin label's<lb/>
president, Kevin Patrick, who had<lb/>
worked with such acts as P.M. Dawn<lb/>
and PJ Harvey. This of course lead to a<lb/>
contract and a debut album which<lb/>
embodies Green Apple Quick Step's<lb/>
awesome energy, provocative song<lb/>
writing and an abundance of authen-<lb/>
tic attitude.<lb/>
Wonderful Virus, the title of their<lb/>
debut album, states how their music<lb/>
affectsitslisteners?easy tocatch, hard<lb/>
to get nd of. The 10-track CD offers a<lb/>
variety of sounds and rhythms. One<lb/>
particular style could not appropri-<lb/>
ately represent Green Apple Quick<lb/>
Step's Sound each sting is different.<lb/>
Guitarists, Steve Ross and Dan<lb/>
Kempthorne, and bassist, Mari Anne<lb/>
Braeden,combineacousticchordswith<lb/>
"grunge" drums using several differ-<lb/>
ent rhythmical techniques for a sound<lb/>
that belongs to Green Apple Quick<lb/>
alone.<lb/>
The one section that Ls most ap-<lb/>
pealing to this critic was the combina-<lb/>
tion of Ty Willman on lead vocals and<lb/>
Mari Anne Braeden on back up vocals.<lb/>
The two voices produce a sound that<lb/>
accent the musical background, mak-<lb/>
ing i t stand on t from any other a 1 terna-<lb/>
tive band around.<lb/>
Green Apple Quick Step's Wom-<lb/>
derful Virus is one CD worth the cost of<lb/>
CDprices,and afteronelLsten,you too<lb/>
will want to make a quick step toward<lb/>
becoming a Green Apple Quick Step<lb/>
to Bridget<lb/>
Hemenway<lb/>
"IT WAS<lb/>
THIS BIG!<lb/>
HUNCRY PIRATE $3.45<lb/>
THE BICCEST BURRITO YOU VE EVER SEEN!<lb/>
STUFFED WITH BEEF, BEANS, RICE, LETTUCE, SOUR CREAM<lb/>
AND SMOTHERED WITH ENCHILADA SAUCE AND CHEESE<lb/>
Guaranteed to fill you up!<lb/>
MON-FRI 2-5<lb/>
SAT, SUN 11-5<lb/>
OPEN DAILY<lb/>
FOR LUNCH &amp; DINNER<lb/>
ALL ABC PERMITS<lb/>
rv<lb/>
DOWNTOWN<lb/>
CREENVILLE<lb/>
757-1666<lb/>
'ti<lb/>
ALTERNATIVE<lb/>
Continued from page 8<lb/>
instance, kind of stops things dead<lb/>
right in the center of the album.<lb/>
UncleTupelo's "Effigy" is alsoworth<lb/>
missing, as Ls the Verlaines' "Heavy<lb/>
33 It's not that these tracks are bad<lb/>
jctly; they're simply mediocre,<lb/>
something to fill up space between<lb/>
trackone(MatthewSweet)and track<lb/>
nineteen (Nirvana).<lb/>
The spirit of the 70s also<lb/>
haunts No Alternative, and the less<lb/>
said about that the better. While I<lb/>
can handle the retro fad as a clever<lb/>
and somewhat nasty joke, the fact<lb/>
that people take it seriously scares<lb/>
the hell out of me. Personally, I think<lb/>
the whole thing was masterminded<lb/>
by the Boomers to warp us in their<lb/>
image. Lots of Boomer record execs<lb/>
out there, you know<lb/>
The producers claim that No<lb/>
Alternative is the voice of our gen-<lb/>
eration, but I can't quite accept that.<lb/>
Now don't get me wrong. There's a<lb/>
lot of good music here, and I recom-<lb/>
mend buying it whole-heartedly.<lb/>
Get the cassette, though, if you can;<lb/>
it's cheaper, and there's a Sonic<lb/>
Youth track that can only be found<lb/>
there. And while I'd let Pavement<lb/>
step up to the podium for me any<lb/>
day of the week, 1 want nothing to<lb/>
do with "Sexual Healing no mat-<lb/>
ter who plays it.<lb/>
? Mark<lb/>
Brett<lb/>
lifestyle stuff writers-let's have fun<lb/>
New Year's<lb/>
I will<lb/>
exercise at<lb/>
least once<lb/>
this year.<lb/>
Balance out your lifestyle with fitness<lb/>
programs from Recreational Services<lb/>
Fitness Class Registration Information<lb/>
Registration Dates<lb/>
January 18 - 25<lb/>
March 1-15<lb/>
Cost per Session<lb/>
SlO.OOStudents<lb/>
$20.00FacultyStaffSpouse<lb/>
Session Dates<lb/>
January 24 - March 3<lb/>
March 14 - April 22<lb/>
Cost ptr Prop-in Class<lb/>
$5.00 for 5 classesStudents<lb/>
$10.00FacultyStaffSpouse<lb/>
Choose from Aerobics, STEP, Low Impact, Hi-Lo, Funk, Funk Step,<lb/>
Sport Moves, Outdoor Athlete, Aquarobics, Hi-Lo STEP, Power STEP,<lb/>
Jump Start, and Toning. Pick up a class schedule with times, days,<lb/>
location and instructor information in 204 Christenbury (Jym and<lb/>
register from 9:00am-5:00pm.<lb/>
Start the year off with a FREE Fitness Fizzical<lb/>
FREE to all ECU students. The Fitness Fizzicals Program assesses body<lb/>
composition, cardiovascular endurance, muscular strength and endurance,<lb/>
flexibility, and blood pressure. Results help in formulating a personalized<lb/>
plan for improving and maintaining optimal fitness with testing conducted by<lb/>
the Human Performance Lab (M-T-Th-F 1 -5pm). Appointments and wellness<lb/>
information may be obtained during hours of operation Monday Thursday<lb/>
from 3:OOpm-5:30pm in I07A CO. Cost for faculty and staff is $15.<lb/>
Pick up your RSVP (Recreational Services vitality<lb/>
Program) package in 204 Christenbury Gym when<lb/>
you come by to register.<lb/>
()r call 7r7-(387 for more details.<lb/>
Presents<lb/>
THURSDAY<lb/>
OUNTRY- DANCE<lb/>
NIGHT<lb/>
Weekly UNE DANCE LESSONS<lb/>
Begin at 9:30pm-11:30pm<lb/>
LADIES FREE ADMISSION<lb/>
UNTIL 11:30pm<lb/>
$1.00 domestics<lb/>
$1.00 shooters<lb/>
at the new dollar bar<lb/>
FRIDAY<lb/>
ROCK<lb/>
RODEO<lb/>
<lb/>
HOUR<lb/>
<lb/>
&amp;<lb/>
Weekly UNE DANCE LESSONS<lb/>
Begin at 8:00pm-11:30pm<lb/>
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w a blend of Country, mixed w T-40<lb/>
LADIES FREE ADM.<lb/>
UNTIL 11.30pm<lb/>
<pb facs="00058446_0011"/><lb/>
The East Carolinian<lb/>
January 13, 1994<lb/>
What's On Tap?<lb/>
Friday, Jan. 14<lb/>
W. Basketball, home<lb/>
vs. George Mason,7 p.m.<lb/>
Saturday, Jan. 15<lb/>
M. Basketball, away<lb/>
at Old Dominion, Norfolk, VA<lb/>
noon(HTS)<lb/>
M. &amp; W. Swimming<lb/>
at Duke University, Durham, NC<lb/>
1 p.m.<lb/>
M. Indoor Track<lb/>
at Florida Invit Gainesville, FL<lb/>
Sunday, Jan.16<lb/>
W. Basketball<lb/>
vs. American University at 3 p.m.<lb/>
W. Indoor Track<lb/>
at Joe Hilton Invit UNC, Chape<lb/>
Hill, N.C.<lb/>
Monday, Jan. 17<lb/>
M. Basketball<lb/>
vs. Fairfield at 7 p.m.<lb/>
The 411<lb/>
Monday, Jan. 10<lb/>
M. Basketball, home<lb/>
beat George Mason, 86-72<lb/>
,Vft'?'s CAA Uuchrs<lb/>
STANDINGS<lb/>
Team Conference GB<lb/>
ECU 2-0 1.000 ?<lb/>
Overall<lb/>
UNCW 2-0<lb/>
JMU<lb/>
UR<lb/>
W&amp;M<lb/>
ODU<lb/>
GMU<lb/>
AU<lb/>
1-0<lb/>
0-0<lb/>
0-0<lb/>
0-1<lb/>
0-2<lb/>
0-2<lb/>
1.000<lb/>
1.000<lb/>
.000<lb/>
.000<lb/>
.000<lb/>
.000<lb/>
.000<lb/>
0.5<lb/>
1<lb/>
1<lb/>
1.5<lb/>
2<lb/>
2<lb/>
9-1<lb/>
8-4<lb/>
7-4<lb/>
4-7<lb/>
1-8<lb/>
7-5<lb/>
5-8<lb/>
2-10<lb/>
.750<lb/>
.667<lb/>
.636<lb/>
.364<lb/>
.111<lb/>
.583<lb/>
.385<lb/>
.167<lb/>
INDIVIDUAL LEADERS<lb/>
Scoring Avg<lb/>
Kent Culuko, JMU 20.0<lb/>
Odell Hodge. ODU 19.1<lb/>
Donald Ross, GMU 18.5<lb/>
TimFudd, AU 17.8<lb/>
Kurt Small, W&amp;M 17.1<lb/>
Rebounding Avg<lb/>
Sherif El-Sanadily, UNCW 8.8<lb/>
David Cully, W&amp;M 8.7<lb/>
Khyl Horton, GMU 8.6<lb/>
Mike Hodges, UR 7.9<lb/>
Odell Hodge, ODU 7.8<lb/>
Assist Avg<lb/>
Troy Manns, GMU 7.6<lb/>
Kevin Larkin, ODU 5.0<lb/>
Drew Phillips, UNCW 4.7<lb/>
Kevin Swann. ODU 4.4<lb/>
Curtis McCants, GMU 3.8<lb/>
Field Goal <lb/>
Clayton Ritter, JMU .642<lb/>
Odell Hodge, ODU .527<lb/>
Kass Weaver.UR .523<lb/>
Anton Gill, ECU .500<lb/>
Carl Parker, W&amp;M .493<lb/>
Free Throw <lb/>
Kent Culuko, JMU .915<lb/>
Kevin Swann, ODU .881<lb/>
Darren McLinton, JMU .833<lb/>
Matt Verkey, W&amp;M .806<lb/>
Kurt Small, W&amp;M .794<lb/>
3-pt Field Goal <lb/>
Kent Culuko, JMU.535<lb/>
Sean Duff, W&amp;M.469<lb/>
Darren McLinton, JMU.467<lb/>
Lester Lyons, ECU.438<lb/>
Dennis Leonard, JMU.433<lb/>
TEAM LEADERS<lb/>
Scoring Margin<lb/>
East Carolina8.6<lb/>
Old Dominion7.4<lb/>
James Madison4.7<lb/>
UNC Wilmington2.4<lb/>
Richmond-1.2<lb/>
George Mason-4.0<lb/>
William &amp; Mary-8.1<lb/>
American-11.4<lb/>
Rebounding Margin<lb/>
UNC Wilmington6.4<lb/>
East Carolina3.5<lb/>
Richmond3.1<lb/>
George Mason2.8<lb/>
Old Dominion1.3<lb/>
James Madison-2.8<lb/>
American-3.3<lb/>
William &amp; Mary-5.8<lb/>
Field Goal <lb/>
James Madison48.6<lb/>
UNC Wilmington45.7<lb/>
East Carolina44.4<lb/>
Richmond43.8<lb/>
Old Dominion43.8<lb/>
George Mason42.4<lb/>
William &amp; Mary41.7<lb/>
American39.2<lb/>
Def. Field Goal <lb/>
East Carolina 41.9<lb/>
UNC Wilmington 42.9<lb/>
Old Dominion 44.6<lb/>
James Madison 45.0<lb/>
George Mason 45.4<lb/>
Richmond 45.8<lb/>
William &amp; Mary 46.6<lb/>
American 49.9<lb/>
Compiled by Brad Oldham<lb/>
Sports<lb/>
Page 11<lb/>
Charlesworth makes early impact<lb/>
File Photo<lb/>
Dannielle Charlesworth<lb/>
Cowboys' Smith<lb/>
corrals NFL MVP<lb/>
(AP) ? Emmitt Smith keeps<lb/>
conquering new frontiers.<lb/>
"History, again said Smith,<lb/>
who did something that Roger<lb/>
Staubach, Tony Dorsett and Bob<lb/>
Lilly never accomplished with the<lb/>
Dallas Cowboys.<lb/>
He became the first player in<lb/>
franchise history to win the NFL's<lb/>
MVP award.<lb/>
Smith, passed over by 16 other<lb/>
teams in the 1990 NFL dra ft, called<lb/>
winning The Associated Press<lb/>
award "sweet, about as sweet as<lb/>
it gets<lb/>
"There are so many great<lb/>
players who have played for the<lb/>
Cowboys, and there are so many<lb/>
great players who are in the league<lb/>
this year Smith said. "That's<lb/>
why this award is so special<lb/>
Staubach won the NFC MVP<lb/>
award, but never earned it for the<lb/>
entire league.<lb/>
"It's all a little overwhelm-<lb/>
ing said Smith, who recently<lb/>
won his third consecutive NFL<lb/>
rushing title although he missed<lb/>
the first two games of the season.<lb/>
"I guess God had a plan when he<lb/>
had Emmitt Smith in mind. I'm<lb/>
glad to be a part of that plan.<lb/>
"Look at the things that have<lb/>
happened to me. I just won a third<lb/>
rushing title after spotting the field<lb/>
two games, and I've got a chance<lb/>
for another Super Bowl ring<lb/>
Smith said it still burned him<lb/>
that no team would take a chance<lb/>
on him but the Cowboys.<lb/>
"I thought Tampa Bay might<lb/>
want me Smith said. "I was just<lb/>
an hour away there in Pensacola.<lb/>
I had a lot of second thoughts<lb/>
about coming out as a junior on<lb/>
that draft day. I kept slipping and<lb/>
slipping. Then Dallas traded draft<lb/>
picks so it could move up to get<lb/>
me<lb/>
In his young career, Smith is<lb/>
rapidly running out of goals to<lb/>
shoot at. But he still has a few.<lb/>
"I've got some things to keep<lb/>
me going he said. "I want to<lb/>
take a good shot at Walter<lb/>
Pay ton's rushing record, and that<lb/>
will take awhile. I also wouldn't<lb/>
mind being in the Professional<lb/>
Football Hall of Fame some day<lb/>
Earl Campbell, Jim Brown<lb/>
and Steve van Buren are the only<lb/>
other players to win three con-<lb/>
secutive NFL rushing titles ?<lb/>
Brown actually leading the league<lb/>
for five straight years, 1957<lb/>
through 1961. All three arc en-<lb/>
shrined at Canton, Ohio.<lb/>
"Emmitt earned it, that's for<lb/>
sure Dallas quarterback Troy<lb/>
Aikman said of Smith's winning<lb/>
the award.<lb/>
"Emmitt played hurt and he<lb/>
played great agreed Cowboys<lb/>
offensive lineman Erik Williams.<lb/>
"It's a tremendous accomplish-<lb/>
ment for someone who missed<lb/>
the first two games of the season.<lb/>
He had a great regular season<lb/>
Smith, selected Monday as<lb/>
MVP in voting by 81 national me-<lb/>
dia members, narrowly beat last<lb/>
year's winner, Steve Young of the<lb/>
San Francisco 49ers. Smith re-<lb/>
ceived 26 votes, while Young, the<lb/>
league's top passer, had 21.<lb/>
"It's a great honor because it<lb/>
means you've done what you're<lb/>
supposed to do and done it as<lb/>
well as anyone said Smith, who<lb/>
ran for 1,486 yards this season,<lb/>
with nine touchdowns, and<lb/>
caught 57 passes, with one TD.<lb/>
Track sprints into winter season<lb/>
(SID)?The EastCarolina men's<lb/>
andwomen'strackteamopenedtheir<lb/>
indoor season Saturday at the Father<lb/>
Diamond Invitational meet hosted<lb/>
by George Mason University.<lb/>
While the field was dominated<lb/>
by participants from track clubs and<lb/>
larger university programs, promis-<lb/>
ing performances were turned in by<lb/>
several Pirate runners.<lb/>
Freshman standout Brian<lb/>
Johnson placed sixth in the400 meter<lb/>
dash with a time of 50.49. He was<lb/>
followed by the contribution of his<lb/>
teammate, Danny Allette, who fin-<lb/>
ished ninth.<lb/>
Lewis Harris also competed for<lb/>
the Pirates, finishing 14th in the 200<lb/>
meter dash and Chris McKinney<lb/>
turned out a fifth-place finish in the<lb/>
Richmond transfer helps set<lb/>
off loss of Gaynor O'Donnell<lb/>
By Dave Pond<lb/>
Staff Writer<lb/>
For Danielle Charlesworth,<lb/>
playing her second year of college<lb/>
hoops took a year longer than she<lb/>
had anticipated. Under NCAA<lb/>
regulations, Charlesworth sat out<lb/>
last season but still has three years<lb/>
of eligibilty left for Rosie<lb/>
Thompson's Lady Pirates.<lb/>
After playing her freshman<lb/>
season for the Richmond Spiders,<lb/>
Charlesworth has come a little<lb/>
closer to home to play roundball<lb/>
for the Lady Pirates. She plans to<lb/>
wreck havoc on Buc oppponents<lb/>
for a long, long time, and has al-<lb/>
ready begun to leave her mark.<lb/>
"Danielle is one of the most<lb/>
dedicated athletes that I have ever<lb/>
worked with said women's head<lb/>
coach Rosie Thompson. "She's an<lb/>
excellent ball handler, and she is<lb/>
great at putting pressure on the ball<lb/>
defensively<lb/>
Charlesworth grew up in a very<lb/>
athletic environment. "I've always<lb/>
been involved in sports, whether it<lb/>
was basketball, soccer or tennis<lb/>
she said. Her older sister was a<lb/>
member of an N.C. State's national<lb/>
championship cheerleading squad<lb/>
while she was in college.<lb/>
Charlesworth went to Rich-<lb/>
mond out of Millbrook High in<lb/>
Raleigh, N.C, lettering four times<lb/>
in basketball as well as in soccer.<lb/>
During her senior season,<lb/>
Charlesworth was named captain<lb/>
of both the basketball and soccer<lb/>
team. After her senior year, in which<lb/>
she captained both squads,<lb/>
Charlesworth was named an All-<lb/>
State hoopster and an All-Ameri-<lb/>
can soccer player<lb/>
"I wanted to go to college to<lb/>
possibly play both soccer and bas-<lb/>
ketball, and in fact, I was recruited<lb/>
higher as a soccer player than I was<lb/>
for basketball she said. "I went to<lb/>
Richmond to play basketball be-<lb/>
cause I thought it would be a good<lb/>
opportunity to step in and play<lb/>
quickly<lb/>
For the 1991-1992 Spiders,<lb/>
Charlesworth played in all 29<lb/>
games, earning a spot on the Colo-<lb/>
nial Athletic Assosciation All-<lb/>
Rookie team. She is a exceptional<lb/>
three-point shooter, nailing 47.4<lb/>
percent of attempts her freshman<lb/>
year.<lb/>
However, Charlesworth was<lb/>
not happy in Richmond.<lb/>
'Theentirecoachingstaffthat<lb/>
recruited me went to another<lb/>
school after I signed, and I just<lb/>
didn't like it as much<lb/>
Chrlesworth said, "It was too<lb/>
small of a school for me. Also,<lb/>
ECU was a lot closer to home<lb/>
she said.<lb/>
"We recruited Danielle out<lb/>
of Millbrook and would have<lb/>
loved to have had her play for us<lb/>
then, but we had no scholarship<lb/>
to offer her Thompson said,<lb/>
"With her transferring with three<lb/>
years left, it seems like it worked<lb/>
out good for everyone involved<lb/>
This year, Charlesworth is a<lb/>
key player in the success of the<lb/>
Lady Pirates.<lb/>
Thompson went on to stress<lb/>
how much Charlesworth loves<lb/>
the game. "Last year when she<lb/>
couldn't play in games and was,<lb/>
See CHARLESWORTH page 14<lb/>
FBI probes Kerrigan attack<lb/>
(AP) ? Allegations that the<lb/>
husband of figure skater Tonya<lb/>
Harding and her bodyguard ar-<lb/>
ranged last week's attack on rival<lb/>
skater Nancy Kerrigan are being<lb/>
investigated by the FBI, accord-<lb/>
ing to a published report.<lb/>
The Oregonian reported in a<lb/>
copyright story that Handing's<lb/>
husband, Jeff Gillooly, acknowl-<lb/>
edged he was one of the two men<lb/>
being investigated, but told the<lb/>
newspaper he was not involved.<lb/>
"I wouldn't do that Gillooly<lb/>
said. "I have more faith in my<lb/>
wife than to bump off her compe-<lb/>
tition<lb/>
There was no indication that<lb/>
Harding had any involvement in<lb/>
theattackor knew anything about<lb/>
it, the newspaper said.<lb/>
In an interview Tuesday with<lb/>
KOIN-TV in Portland, Harding<lb/>
denied any link to the attack, say-<lb/>
ing she felt cheated of the chance to<lb/>
compete with Kerrigan.<lb/>
"I really wanted to skate against<lb/>
her she said.<lb/>
Handing's bodyguard, Shawn<lb/>
Eric Eckardt, who also is being in-<lb/>
vestigated, called the allegations<lb/>
"absurd<lb/>
"I would never get involved in<lb/>
anything like that Eckardt told<lb/>
TheOregonian. "Thatwouldbejeop-<lb/>
ardizing my future, my career. I<lb/>
mean, that's not something I could<lb/>
do or allow<lb/>
The newspaper, in the front<lb/>
page story, said that Eugene C.<lb/>
Saunders, a 24-year-old Portland<lb/>
minister, told investigators that he<lb/>
had listened to a tape record-<lb/>
ing of Gillooly and Eckardtplot-<lb/>
ting to injure Kerrigan with a<lb/>
third man, described as a "hit<lb/>
man" from Arizona.<lb/>
There is no phone listing<lb/>
for a Eugene C Saunders in the<lb/>
Portland area. Efforts to find<lb/>
him early today were unsuc-<lb/>
cessful.<lb/>
A woman who answered<lb/>
the phone at the Portland office<lb/>
of the FBI referred all calls to its<lb/>
Oregon spokesman, Bart Gori,<lb/>
who was unavailable for com-<lb/>
ment.<lb/>
Earlier, however, Gori told<lb/>
The Oregonian that "the events<lb/>
surrounding that attack possi-<lb/>
See SKATING page 14<lb/>
3<lb/>
Scholarship cuts outrage<lb/>
NCAA minority coaches<lb/>
(AP) ? Boil down the rheto-<lb/>
ric from the camps warring over<lb/>
the NCAA's decision not to re-<lb/>
store a single basketball scholar-<lb/>
ship at each school and what it<lb/>
comes down to is a debate about<lb/>
opportunity. Plain and simple.<lb/>
And raw.<lb/>
Paying positions in college<lb/>
sports are scarce right now. It<lb/>
seems hard to believe that in these<lb/>
days of $1 billion TV payouts (over<lb/>
four years) for the basketball tour-<lb/>
nament and offers of $50 million<lb/>
or more per year for a college<lb/>
football playoff.<lb/>
But something has to give, if<lb/>
the outgoing chairman of the<lb/>
NCAA Presidents Commission<lb/>
can be believed. According to Gre-<lb/>
gory O'Brien, who is also chancel-<lb/>
lor of the University of New Or-<lb/>
leans and an adequate mathema-<lb/>
tician, 70 percent of Division I<lb/>
schools, including many of the<lb/>
big-time programs, are already<lb/>
operating at a deficit.<lb/>
Two years ago, the NCAA<lb/>
voted to cut the number of bas-<lb/>
ketball scholarships at each school<lb/>
from 15 to 13. Black coaches voiced<lb/>
objections at the time that the cuts,<lb/>
in conjunction with tougher aca-<lb/>
demic standards, would mean less<lb/>
opportunities forblack kids. They<lb/>
were no doubt right.<lb/>
And with even tougher stan-<lb/>
dards set to go into effect next<lb/>
year, those same coaches let it be<lb/>
known as the NCAA convention<lb/>
See NCAA page 14<lb/>
triple jump at 49-01.0 feet<lb/>
SeniorCharlesMilesplaced 10th<lb/>
in a competitive 55-meter dash with<lb/>
a 6.51 finish.<lb/>
The women turned in some fine<lb/>
performances with only one day of<lb/>
practice since the Christmas break.<lb/>
Lady Pirate indoor records werebro-<lb/>
ken in thelongjump, the3000meters<lb/>
and 500 meters.<lb/>
In the long jump, Amanda<lb/>
Johnson leaped 17-feet, 7-inches to<lb/>
set the new record, Dava Rhodes ran<lb/>
the3000metersin 10:29.79 and Alexis<lb/>
Jacks turned in a time of 1:2120 in the<lb/>
500 meters.<lb/>
"Thiswaseverybody'sfirstmeet<lb/>
of the year, so they ran it more of an<lb/>
individual meet Head Coach<lb/>
Charles Justice said. "As a team,<lb/>
File Photo<lb/>
The East Carolina men's and women's track teams competed recently in<lb/>
the Father Diamond Invitational. Three school records were topped.<lb/>
we're further ahead than we were<lb/>
last year at this point<lb/>
The Lady Pirates return to ac-<lb/>
tion Sunday, Jan. 16atthe Joe Hilton<lb/>
Invitational in Chapel Hill, N.C. on<lb/>
the campus of North Carolina.<lb/>
The men will be in Gainesville,<lb/>
Horida on Jan. 21 to compete in the<lb/>
Horida Invitational meet.<lb/>
J<lb/>
Holtz pushes<lb/>
for college<lb/>
playoff system<lb/>
(AP) ? A college football<lb/>
playoff is inevitable, said Notre<lb/>
Dame coach Lou Holtz, whose<lb/>
team finished No. 2 in the polls<lb/>
this year.<lb/>
"We'll see a two- or four-<lb/>
team playoff in my coaching life-<lb/>
time, and I don't plan on coach-<lb/>
ing much longer he said. "I<lb/>
think it definitely will happen in<lb/>
the next two years<lb/>
Holtz spoke Tuesday at the<lb/>
Greensboro Area Chamber of<lb/>
Commerce's annual meeting.<lb/>
Notre Dame defeated<lb/>
Florida State 31-24 in the next-<lb/>
to-last regular-season game, and<lb/>
both emerged with bowl victo-<lb/>
ries. Florida State finished 12-1<lb/>
Notre Dame 11-1.<lb/>
Florida State finished No. 1<lb/>
in the polls.<lb/>
' College football is the only<lb/>
sport in America in which a<lb/>
champion isn't determined on<lb/>
the field Holtz said. "A play-<lb/>
off after the bowl games would<lb/>
produce tremendous revenue<lb/>
that could be used to fund mi-<lb/>
nority scholarships and gender<lb/>
equity throughout college ath-<lb/>
letics.<lb/>
"The college presidents'<lb/>
main concern about a playoff is<lb/>
that it would take players away<lb/>
from classes. But a four-team<lb/>
playoff would only take two<lb/>
weeks, and most schools don't<lb/>
even hold classes for at least a<lb/>
week after New Year's Day"<lb/>
If a selection process for a<lb/>
playoff is required, Holtz said it<lb/>
should be handled by an impar-<lb/>
tial committee like the NCAA<lb/>
See HOLTZ page 13<lb/>
<pb facs="00058446_0012"/><lb/>
?????gffininnr ii<lb/>
iWHHHHHMmaHIIHfrk.<lb/>
?mm - . . am h<lb/>
-a? tMii?Miwi i ?.?? ? i' 1.1 ii i ? wt M ? <lb/>
12<lb/>
77i? ?as Carolinian<lb/>
January 13, 1994<lb/>
Money persuades players<lb/>
(AP) ? Money wasn't an issue<lb/>
for Tyrone Wheatley. It was for<lb/>
David Palmer.<lb/>
Wheatley, one of the best run-<lb/>
ning backs in Michigan history an-<lb/>
nounced Monday that he will pass<lb/>
up a chance for millions in the NFL<lb/>
to return for his senior season in<lb/>
Ann Arbor.<lb/>
"A lot of people talk about<lb/>
money said Wheatley, who needs<lb/>
1,359 yards to become the Wolver-<lb/>
ines' career rushing leader. "But the<lb/>
money's going to be there for me<lb/>
next year. I want to stay here, try to<lb/>
win the Heisman Trophy I want<lb/>
to go out a winner<lb/>
Michigan coach Gary Moeller<lb/>
was delighted with Wheatley's de-<lb/>
cision.<lb/>
"We always expect the unex-<lb/>
pected from him, and this is one of<lb/>
those cases he said. "It's good for<lb/>
a lot of reasons, and it's not just the<lb/>
touchdowns. He's a good person to<lb/>
have around<lb/>
Palmer, an all-purpose star who<lb/>
finished third in the 1993 Heisman<lb/>
balloting, said throughout the sea-<lb/>
son that he planned to return for his<lb/>
senior year at Alabama. But he<lb/>
changed his mind and decided to<lb/>
enter the NFL draft, in part because<lb/>
he has two young children to sup-<lb/>
port.<lb/>
"I've tried to look at all sides,<lb/>
but the bottom line is I have to fulfill<lb/>
the needs of me and my family<lb/>
said Palmer, a record-setting re-<lb/>
ceiver who also contributed to the<lb/>
Crimson Tide as a quarterback, run-<lb/>
ning back and kick returner.<lb/>
Birmingham attorney Rodger<lb/>
Smitherman, who will probably<lb/>
represent Palmer in contract nego-<lb/>
tiations, said family obligations<lb/>
were a major factor in the player's<lb/>
decision to rum pro.<lb/>
"These were very serious con-<lb/>
siderations he had Smitherman<lb/>
said.<lb/>
Other underclassmen also an-<lb/>
nounced their decisions Monday,<lb/>
the deadline for declaring eligibil-<lb/>
ity for the NFL draft.<lb/>
Running backs James Bostic of<lb/>
Auburn and Calvin Jones of Ne-<lb/>
braska are going pro, while Ohio<lb/>
State receiver Joey Galloway is stay-<lb/>
ing in school.<lb/>
"I don't put muchemphasison<lb/>
material things?I wasn'tbrought<lb/>
up that way said Galloway, who<lb/>
tied an Ohio State record with 11<lb/>
touchdown catches in 1993 'Money<lb/>
is important, but it doesn't drive my<lb/>
life<lb/>
Bostic, who led the Southeast-<lb/>
em Conference in rushing, said he<lb/>
had nothing more to accomplish at<lb/>
Auburn, which went 11-0 this sea-<lb/>
son.<lb/>
Rice hauls in passes and awards<lb/>
(AP) ? What began as a frus-<lb/>
trating season for Jem' Rice ended<lb/>
up as one of his best.<lb/>
The San Francisco 49ers wide<lb/>
receiver had just three touchdown<lb/>
receptions in the first sue games, but<lb/>
recovered to lead the league in<lb/>
touchdowns (16) and receiving<lb/>
yardage (1,503).<lb/>
Early next season, Rice should<lb/>
pass Jim Brown's NFL career mark<lb/>
of 126 touchdowns. Rice, already<lb/>
the all-time touchdown reception<lb/>
leader with 118, has 124 career TDs,<lb/>
including six rushing.<lb/>
Recognizing his durability as<lb/>
the game's premier receiver and his<lb/>
integral role in the 49ers' league-<lb/>
leading offense, a national panel of<lb/>
media members Wednesday se-<lb/>
lected Rice as The Associated Press<lb/>
1993 Offensive Player of the Year.<lb/>
' 'This feels really good because<lb/>
it's been awhile since I've received<lb/>
an award like this said Rice, who<lb/>
also won the award in 1987, when<lb/>
he caught 22 touchdown passes in<lb/>
just 12 games. "You've got to have<lb/>
guys around you to complement<lb/>
you, but you also have to have an<lb/>
inner drive in yourself to get the job<lb/>
done<lb/>
Rice's closest competition in<lb/>
voting by 81 panel members was<lb/>
49ersquarterbackSteve Young, who<lb/>
won the award in 1992. Rice had 28<lb/>
votes to 21 for Young, the league's<lb/>
leading passer for a third straight<lb/>
season.<lb/>
Young and Rice kept working<lb/>
on their timing and the payoff came<lb/>
when thev and the team went on a<lb/>
six-game tear, winning all of them.<lb/>
Rice had 10 touchdown catches in<lb/>
that span, including four in a 45-21<lb/>
victory at Tampa Bay on Nov. 14.<lb/>
"I think we're making big<lb/>
progress Rice said. "We're going<lb/>
to get better down the road. We're<lb/>
talking about different situations,<lb/>
on the field and off the field. When<lb/>
you communicate like that, you<lb/>
have the feeling you're on the same<lb/>
wavelength<lb/>
Attention all sportswtiters!<lb/>
There will be a prospective writers meeting Friday at<lb/>
4:30p.m. at the Student Pubs, building.<lb/>
r<lb/>
It's TOURNAMENT TIME<lb/>
at Mendenhall Student Center!<lb/>
You could represent ECU at Regional Competitions in<lb/>
BILLIARDS TABLE TENNIS<lb/>
BOWLING<lb/>
CHESS<lb/>
SPADES<lb/>
Tournament winners will be awarded trophies and the opportunity to represent ECU at regional<lb/>
competitions to be held at East Tennesee State University in Johnson City the weekend of<lb/>
February 25-27, 1994. All expenses will be paid by the Department of University Unions.<lb/>
ARE YOU THE BEST?<lb/>
If you think you could be, we want to give you the opportunity to find out.<lb/>
All-Campus Men's and Women's Billiards (Pool) Tournament<lb/>
Tuesday, January 18<lb/>
6:00 p.m.<lb/>
Mendenhall Billiards Center<lb/>
All-Campus Men's and Women's Table Tennis Tournament<lb/>
Wednesday, January 19<lb/>
6:00 p.m.<lb/>
Mendenhall Billiards Center<lb/>
All-Campus Co-Rec Bowling Tournament<lb/>
Thursday, January 20<lb/>
6:00 p.m.<lb/>
Mendenhall Bowling Center<lb/>
All-Campus Chess Tournament<lb/>
Tuesday, January 25<lb/>
6:00 p.m.<lb/>
Mendenhall Student Center, Rooms 8 C-D-E<lb/>
All-Campus Spades Tournament<lb/>
Wednesday, January 26<lb/>
6:00 p.m.<lb/>
Mendenhall Student Center, Rooms 8 C-D-E<lb/>
V<lb/>
There is $2.00 registration fee for each tournament. Registration forms are available at the<lb/>
Mendenhall Information Desk and in the Billiards and Bowling Centers located on the ground floor<lb/>
of Mendenhall Student Center. Call the Student Activities Office. 757-4766, for more information.<lb/>
Harris Teeter<lb/>
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Only We Reserve The Right To Limit Quantities. None Sold To Dealers. We Gladly Accept Federal Food btamps<lb/>
PW &amp;.<lb/>
<pb facs="00058446_0013"/><lb/>
January 13. 1994<lb/>
The East Carolinian<lb/>
13<lb/>
Track athletes awarded<lb/>
(AP) ? Track stars Michael<lb/>
Johnson and Gail Devers were<lb/>
named sportsman and sports-<lb/>
woman of 1993 by the U.S. Olym-<lb/>
pic Committee on Tuesday.<lb/>
Johnson was unbeaten in 400-<lb/>
meter races last year, winning gold<lb/>
medals at the World Track and<lb/>
Field Championships in the 400<lb/>
(43.65 seconds, the third-fastest<lb/>
ever)and 1,600-meter relay (a42.94<lb/>
anchor leg in a 2:54.29 clocking).<lb/>
The 26-year-old Rockwall,<lb/>
Texas, runner was world cham-<lb/>
pion at 200 meters in 1991. He con-<lb/>
centrates on the 400 now and has<lb/>
won 23 races in a row at that dis-<lb/>
tance.<lb/>
Devers, also 26, from Palmdale,<lb/>
Calif, won the 100 meters and 100-<lb/>
meter hurdles at the world cham-<lb/>
pionships, the first athlete to win<lb/>
both at an Olympics or world cham-<lb/>
pionship meet since Fanny<lb/>
Blankers-Koen of the Netherlands<lb/>
at the 1948 Games in London.<lb/>
The 1992 Olympic gold med-<lb/>
alist in the 100 also anchored the<lb/>
United States to a silver medal in<lb/>
the women's 400-meter relay at the<lb/>
world championships.<lb/>
Johnson received 478 points<lb/>
from a national panel of sports-<lb/>
writers and broadcasters, USOC<lb/>
officials and fellow athletes, beat-<lb/>
ing wrestler Bruce Baumgartner<lb/>
by 68 points. Baumgartner gained<lb/>
more first-place votes, 19-15.<lb/>
Devers edged gymnast Shan-<lb/>
non Miller 538-526, getting one<lb/>
more first-place vote, 23-22.<lb/>
Both Devers and Johnson were<lb/>
first-time winners of the award,<lb/>
which started in 1974. It was the<lb/>
first time track athletes had swept<lb/>
the honors since 1985, when triple-<lb/>
jumper Willie Banks and distance<lb/>
runner Man' Decker Slanev won.<lb/>
Woodson picks off AP award<lb/>
(AC) ? Rod Woodson always<lb/>
lias wanted to play on both ikies oi<lb/>
the ball Now that he has been se-<lb/>
lected The Associated Press 1993<lb/>
Defensive Player of the Year, maybe<lb/>
he'll let that dream die.<lb/>
Woodson, the star oornerbackol<lb/>
the Pittsburgh Steelers, was a run-<lb/>
away winner in balloting by 81 na-<lb/>
tional media members, receiving 35<lb/>
votes. Abig-plavspecialistWcxxlson<lb/>
had eight inteceptions this season,<lb/>
returning one for a touchdown. He<lb/>
also is a fine punt returner.<lb/>
Mostimportantlv.heis the leader<lb/>
of the aggressive Steelers' defensive<lb/>
unit, even if he does it without shout-<lb/>
ingormakinginspirational speeches.<lb/>
"I'mnotcomfortabledoingtliat.<lb/>
I'm not a rah-rah guy, unless you get<lb/>
me mad on the football field<lb/>
Woodson said.<lb/>
When he was a star at Purdue,<lb/>
Wixxlson played receiver and defen-<lb/>
siveback. 1 fehasmadeitnosecretthat<lb/>
hew (mid like a chance tocatch or carry<lb/>
the ball with the Steelers, tu.<lb/>
But Woodson hasn't mentioned<lb/>
anything along those lines recently,<lb/>
ivali.inghowimportantfhecomeiUKk<lb/>
position is.<lb/>
"I think nowadays teams recog-<lb/>
nize that if you have Jerry Rices and<lb/>
Michael In ins and AndreRisonsand<lb/>
Andre Reeds running around on of-<lb/>
fense, you need guxl DBs to cover<lb/>
them he said. "In retrospect, you get<lb/>
an athlete, you sav put him at running<lb/>
back or receiver, but now they're say-<lb/>
ing, 'Let's put him at defensive back 1<lb/>
think that s giving respect; we need<lb/>
tl ?ese players back here.<lb/>
"I think most of the good athletes<lb/>
in the league now are! )Bs. I'm trying to<lb/>
being unbiased, but that's the way I<lb/>
think it is<lb/>
Woodson's seventh season was<lb/>
his most impressive, ami he was the<lb/>
leading vote-getter on defense for the<lb/>
AP All-Pro team, his third year on that<lb/>
select group.<lb/>
Reggie White of Green Bay fin-<lb/>
ished second with 12 votes. The defen-<lb/>
siveend,whowasthepriecatchoftlie<lb/>
first true free-agent market in NFL his-<lb/>
ton won the award in 1987.<lb/>
Deion Sanders needed only 11<lb/>
games to impress nine voters; he spent<lb/>
the first month of the season playing<lb/>
baseball with the Braves.<lb/>
Warm Up with a1<lb/>
Delicious<lb/>
Hot Drink!<lb/>
Panthers grab Bills' Polian<lb/>
(AP) ? The Carolina Panthers<lb/>
will add great depth to their stiH-<lb/>
forming brain trust by signing the<lb/>
man credited with converting the<lb/>
Buffalo Bills from losers to contend-<lb/>
ers, a football insider says.<lb/>
Bill Polian, a two-time NFL ex-<lb/>
ecutive of the year, was to be named<lb/>
general manager of the NFL expan-<lb/>
sion team at an afternoon news con-<lb/>
ference today.<lb/>
Owner Jerry Richardson also<lb/>
was to announce the elevation of<lb/>
current general manager Mike<lb/>
McCormack to the newly created<lb/>
HOLTZ<lb/>
position of team president.<lb/>
"I hope you people realize how<lb/>
lucky you are said Denver Broncos<lb/>
director of football operations and<lb/>
player personnel Bob Ferguson, who<lb/>
assisted Polian in Buffalo and was a<lb/>
scout for McCormack with the Se-<lb/>
attle Seahawks.<lb/>
"WhatCharlottenow has in Bill<lb/>
and Mike are two great minds in the<lb/>
football business leading their foot-<lb/>
ball team. Looking around the<lb/>
league,Ican'trhinkofanythingstron-<lb/>
See PANTHERS page 14<lb/>
Continued from page 11<lb/>
GEMSTONE SHOW<lb/>
THOUSANDS OF GEMSTONES TO CHOOSE FROM<lb/>
AMETHYST &amp; BLUE TOPAZ<lb/>
from $3.00 PER CARAT<lb/>
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basketball tournament.<lb/>
Then he got to the heart of the<lb/>
matter tha t he began protesting 10<lb/>
days ago.<lb/>
"I'm convinced that sports-<lb/>
writers, coaches and even confer-<lb/>
ence commissioners vote in a self-<lb/>
serving manner said the Notre<lb/>
Dame coach. "Leave us out of it for<lb/>
a minute. North Carolina lost to<lb/>
Alabama 24-10 in the Gator Bowl<lb/>
and dropped from No. 11 to No. 21<lb/>
in the coaches' poll. That was un-<lb/>
called for. Do you suppose maybe<lb/>
some coaches were anxious to stem<lb/>
the recruiting momentum North<lb/>
Carolina has been gaining? It cer-<lb/>
tainly looks that way to me.<lb/>
IN ADDITION TO OUR GEM<lb/>
SHOW WE HAVE REDUCED<lb/>
OUR DIAMOND AND 14KT<lb/>
GOLD CHAIN AND BRACELET<lb/>
INVENTOR TO 50 OFF FOR<lb/>
THESE TWO DAYS ONLY<lb/>
PAYNE'S JEWELERS<lb/>
FRIDAY &amp; SATURDAY JANUARY 14th &amp; 15th<lb/>
ARLINGTON VILLAGE ? GREENVILLE ? 355-5090<lb/>
Cappucino<lb/>
Equal parts expresso &amp;<lb/>
steamed milk with<lb/>
froth and a dash of<lb/>
cinnamon or nutmeg<lb/>
if you like.<lb/>
Hot<lb/>
, Chocolate<lb/>
Hot Teas<lb/>
pafe Latte<lb/>
Expresso, 7 oz. of<lb/>
steamed milk capped <lb/>
with froth - ado1 nut-<lb/>
meg if you like.<lb/>
Single $1.30<lb/>
Double $1.80<lb/>
Cafe Mocha<lb/>
Latte with chocolate<lb/>
topped with whipped f (<lb/>
cream.<lb/>
Single $1.85<lb/>
Double $2.35 L<lb/>
HjLZ<lb/>
Whitey &amp; the<lb/>
Yardapes<lb/>
Acoustic Guitar,<lb/>
friday 7pm ,<lb/>
yrfm<lb/>
Charles Blvd<lb/>
Shoppes<lb/>
Carolina<lb/>
Ice Cream<lb/>
Sandwiches<lb/>
990<lb/>
Carl Buddig<lb/>
Thin Sliced Deli Meats<lb/>
Assorted Variety<lb/>
490<lb/>
Kleenex<lb/>
Boutique<lb/>
Facial Tissues<lb/>
tarnation<lb/>
v HotCoccaMix<lb/>
lust add hot vs.iti-r<lb/>
Plain or Mini Marshmallow<lb/>
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FRESH CRISP<lb/>
LETTUCE<lb/>
Two Heads for<lb/>
790<lb/>
Individual Envel"<lb/>
Donald Duck<lb/>
Chilled Orange<lb/>
Juice<lb/>
12 gal. container<lb/>
12 gal.<lb/>
Budweiser<lb/>
-V&amp;0&amp;<lb/>
<lb/>
.&amp;<lb/>
$9.99<lb/>
18 pak 12 o. cans<lb/>
2512 S. MEMORIAL DRIVE 756-0110<lb/>
1112 N. GREENE STREET 752-4111<lb/>
1204 N. MEMORIAL DRIVE 758-2501<lb/>
BELL'S FORK SQUARE 765-6105<lb/>
2520 E.10th STREET 757-1880<lb/>
FicMen Stadium<lb/>
O<lb/>
QO<lb/>
Charles Blvd. <lb/>
PRICESGOOD<lb/>
JANUARY 12 THRU JANUARY 16<lb/>
MM Mtl<lb/>
'liilMIiUik.<lb/>
<pb facs="00058446_0014"/><lb/>
14 The East Carolinian<lb/>
January 13, 1994<lb/>
PANTHERS<lb/>
Continued from page 13<lb/>
ger. That is a great mix. The more<lb/>
experience you have, the faster the<lb/>
winningcancomehetold77u'Cwr-<lb/>
lotte Observer.<lb/>
Polian, 51, will step down as the<lb/>
NFL's vice president of football de-<lb/>
velopment to take the Charlotte job.<lb/>
Polian hasbeena widely-sought<lb/>
commodity since his controversial<lb/>
firing by Bills owner Ralph Wilson<lb/>
following last season's 52-17 Super<lb/>
Bowl loss to the Dallas Cowboys,<lb/>
Buffalo's third consecutive Super<lb/>
Bowl defeat.<lb/>
Polian joined the Bills in 1984 as<lb/>
pro personnel director and was pro-<lb/>
moted to general manager prior to<lb/>
the 1986 season, following consecu-<lb/>
tive 2-14 records. He built the Bills<lb/>
into a Super Bowl team by 1990 after<lb/>
a series of clever signings, draft<lb/>
choices and trades.<lb/>
He is one of only three men ?<lb/>
along with general managers Bobby<lb/>
Beathard of San Diego and George<lb/>
Young of the New York Giants ?<lb/>
who have been named league ex-<lb/>
ecutive of the year more than once.<lb/>
The Observer quoted NFL<lb/>
sources as saying Polian's hiring in<lb/>
the role of general manager is unre-<lb/>
lated to McCormack's quadruple<lb/>
bypass heart surgery last weekend.<lb/>
Sources said the club initially<lb/>
offered Polian the position of player<lb/>
personnel director, with the under-<lb/>
standing that he would become gen-<lb/>
eral manager upon McCormack's<lb/>
SKATING<lb/>
bly involved a federal violation. 1<lb/>
don't want to go beyond that<lb/>
The newspaper said Saunders<lb/>
turned to Portland private investi-<lb/>
gator Gary Crowe for advice after<lb/>
hearing the tape. Crowe knew both<lb/>
Saunders and the man who had<lb/>
clayed the tape for him, but The<lb/>
Oregonian said his motive for re-<lb/>
vealing it was unclear.<lb/>
Saunders retained a lawyer and<lb/>
went to the authorities Monday af-<lb/>
ternoon, Vie Oregonian said, add-<lb/>
ing that after questioning him, the<lb/>
FBI talked to Crowe on Tuesday.<lb/>
Crowe said that an unidenti-<lb/>
fied Portland man with connections<lb/>
to Harding had approached the man<lb/>
known to Saunders and asked him<lb/>
to arrange an "accident that would<lb/>
knock Kerrigan out of the figure-<lb/>
skating competition.<lb/>
Kerrigan, the 1992 Olympic<lb/>
expected retirement in three to five<lb/>
years.<lb/>
But with other NFL teams, in-<lb/>
cluding the Philadelphia Eagles,<lb/>
apparently willing to offer Polian a<lb/>
general manager's position, sources<lb/>
said the Panthers upgraded their<lb/>
offer with the same title.<lb/>
Polian was Buffalo's general<lb/>
manager and vice president of ad-<lb/>
ministration.<lb/>
Polian apparently also dis-<lb/>
cussed job opportunities with the<lb/>
Los Angeles Rams, New Orleans<lb/>
Saints and thejacksonvillejaguars,<lb/>
the NFL's other expansion team.<lb/>
McCormack, 63, is recovering<lb/>
well and he was expected to be<lb/>
released from the hospital by Fri-<lb/>
day, according to a nurse at Presby-<lb/>
terian Hospital who asked not to be<lb/>
named. She said his recovery is ex-<lb/>
pected to take four to six weeks, The<lb/>
Gaston Gazette reported today.The<lb/>
Panthersconsider itessential to have<lb/>
scouts in place for next month's<lb/>
NFL Combine Camp in Indianapo-<lb/>
lis, which will bring together the<lb/>
top 300 college prospects for testing<lb/>
. and evaluation, The Gazette re-<lb/>
ported.<lb/>
Carolina won't draft until 1995,<lb/>
but many of the players in this crop<lb/>
could be available in the supple-<lb/>
mental draft and through free<lb/>
agency.<lb/>
The Pantliers will begin play in<lb/>
September, 1995.<lb/>
Continued from page 11<lb/>
Olson's Trivial Quiz<lb/>
Q: What bowl did the ECU<lb/>
football team win in 1964 ,<lb/>
and 1965?<lb/>
?jaioq snxr) vpuotf<lb/>
di$ sv umouy oiou 'pioq dutwSuvi dii :y<lb/>
ALFREDO'S, he<lb/>
NCAA<lb/>
Continued from page 11<lb/>
bronze medalist, was a favorite to<lb/>
defend her national title at the U.S.<lb/>
FigureSkatingChampionshipsand<lb/>
Olympic team trials last week in<lb/>
Detroit.<lb/>
Kerrigan was struck on the leg<lb/>
after a practice session Thursday,<lb/>
suffering severe bruises that forced<lb/>
her to withdraw from the competi-<lb/>
tion.<lb/>
Harding, the 1991 national<lb/>
champion who was fourth in the<lb/>
1992 Olympics, went on to skate<lb/>
two clean programs and easily won<lb/>
the national title.<lb/>
Immediately after Harding was<lb/>
awarded her medal, the Interna-<lb/>
tional Committee of the U.S. Figure<lb/>
Skating Association appointed<lb/>
Kerrigan to the Olympic team,<lb/>
bumping national runner-up<lb/>
Michelle Kwan to the alternate's<lb/>
spot.<lb/>
got underway this week in San<lb/>
Antonio that if the proposal to<lb/>
restore the 14th scholarship failed,<lb/>
they would do more than simply<lb/>
talk.<lb/>
So now we apparently are go-<lb/>
ing to have a boycott of some kind<lb/>
or other beginning as early as Sat-<lb/>
urday, the birthday of slain civil-<lb/>
rights leader Martin Luther King<lb/>
Jr. For all its symbolic value, the<lb/>
coaches leading the boycott would<lb/>
rather the rest of us focus specifi-<lb/>
cally on what the defeated pro-<lb/>
posal meant: One more scholar-<lb/>
ship at each Division I school trans-<lb/>
lates into 300-plus more opportu-<lb/>
nities, most of which would be<lb/>
snapped up by black kids in the<lb/>
inner cities.<lb/>
A long time ago, college schol-<lb/>
arships were supposed to be the<lb/>
means to a better life. Though ev-<lb/>
erything else about the games has<lb/>
changed, and the term student-<lb/>
athlete has become an oxymoron,<lb/>
some things have not changed.<lb/>
"We have lost sight of the role<lb/>
of athletics Georgetown coach<lb/>
CHARLESWORTH<lb/>
John Thompson told Newsday in<lb/>
an interview. "This is a means of<lb/>
survival for some kids<lb/>
The NCAA vote, by a 191-119<lb/>
margin, was not without symbolic<lb/>
value of its own. When the presi-<lb/>
dents commission took control of<lb/>
the organization a few years ago,<lb/>
its stated goal was to reign in col-<lb/>
lege athletic departments with<lb/>
their runaway budgets and re-<lb/>
peated abuses.<lb/>
Still, if we're going to priori-<lb/>
tize ? as CEOs like to say ? it<lb/>
only seems fair to start with those<lb/>
who otherwise have the least op-<lb/>
portunity. And besides, there's<lb/>
always the chance that a handful<lb/>
of the kids who go on to become<lb/>
pros will take the lessons they<lb/>
learned on campus about oppor-<lb/>
tunity to heart.<lb/>
After leaving before his se-<lb/>
nior year and signing a multimil-<lb/>
lion-dollar deal with the NBA's<lb/>
Dallas Mavericks, Jamal<lb/>
Mashbi i turned around and en-<lb/>
dowed the University of Kentucky<lb/>
with a $300,000 scholarship.<lb/>
Continued<lb/>
from<lb/>
Page 11<lb/>
ECU'S Favorite Pizza Place<lb/>
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in essence, a practice player, you<lb/>
could look at Danielle and nine out<lb/>
of 10 times she would have a bas-<lb/>
ketball in her hand, trying to im-<lb/>
prove her game and get ready for<lb/>
this season<lb/>
When asked to give a view on<lb/>
her own strengths and weaknesses,<lb/>
Charlesworth stated, "My quick-<lb/>
ness and ball-handling skills offset<lb/>
my height disadvantage, since I'm<lb/>
only 5-foot-3<lb/>
Thompson agreed, noting that<lb/>
"Danielle's only weakness is her<lb/>
height, and that will only factor into<lb/>
the game when she is matched up<lb/>
against a much taller point guard<lb/>
In the classroom, Charlesworth<lb/>
is a junior majoring in education,<lb/>
and minoring in mathematics. She<lb/>
is also considering a double major<lb/>
in these areas.<lb/>
At her present pace, Danielle<lb/>
Charlesworth will be a well-known<lb/>
name in Greenville for years to<lb/>
come.<lb/>
NOW TWO CAN DINE FOR JUST $15<lb/>
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8 oz. Tenyaki Top Sirloin Darryl's Chicken &amp; Pasta<lb/>
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Monday - Thursday, 4 p.m. till Closins.<lb/>
Offer good tor a I'rrcted lime<lb/>
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TUES SAT 4:30 8:30 SERVING DINNER<lb/>
LATE NIGHT APPETIZERS WED &amp; SUN 12 PRICE.<lb/>
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are on sale at the<lb/>
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<pb facs="00058446_0015"/>
</div></body></text></TEI>