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<p rend="align(centerbold)">[This text is machine generated and may contain errors.]</p>
<pb facs="00058468_0001"/>
Comics<lb/>
Hot Crackers, Pirate Comics!<lb/>
The long-awaited return of<lb/>
Wang TV (for real this time!).<lb/>
Plus a big duke-a-roo in<lb/>
Kemple Boy, and much more!<lb/>
All on page 6.<lb/>
Lifestyle<lb/>
Where's the Beer?<lb/>
Dr. Nancy E. Crouch of<lb/>
the Nutrition and<lb/>
Hospitality Management<lb/>
Department says<lb/>
restaurants are skimping<lb/>
on beer. Story on page 9.<lb/>
Today<lb/>
ii-MiiviVivWn:iiir<lb/>
The East Carolinian<lb/>
Vol.69No.?3<lb/>
Circulation 12,000<lb/>
Greenville, North Carolina<lb/>
Thursday, April 7,1994<lb/>
18 Pages<lb/>
SGA faces another election<lb/>
STOPP!<lb/>
If you're fed up with campus parking (or lack<lb/>
thereof), attend the Students Tired Of Parking<lb/>
Problems, April 14, at 2 p.m. in GCB1011.<lb/>
Chancellor Eakin plans to speak to the group, and<lb/>
wouldn't that be a great time to asksome<lb/>
questions? Speak but and be heard!<lb/>
Conference offers help<lb/>
By Jeb Brookshire<lb/>
Staff Writer<lb/>
No one really knows what<lb/>
the future holds for our educa-<lb/>
tion system. However, ECU'S<lb/>
School of Education has some<lb/>
pretty good ideas.<lb/>
For the past five<lb/>
years, a conference has fTr<lb/>
convened to present to mm<lb/>
North Carolina's Tr<lb/>
teachers the available ??<lb/>
technology for their wwC<lb/>
classrooms. This year, n"<lb/>
the conference, titled "<lb/>
"Connections: Linking the<lb/>
Classroom to the World dem-<lb/>
onstrated to the 900 participants<lb/>
that learning should not only<lb/>
teach the students but make the<lb/>
over-all learning experience fun.<lb/>
"We want to show the<lb/>
teachers things that are possible,<lb/>
not the things that would be nice<lb/>
HHr<lb/>
for them to have said confer-<lb/>
ence co-chair, Dr. James S.<lb/>
Pressley.<lb/>
At the conference, public<lb/>
school teachers participated in<lb/>
hands-on demonstrations of com-<lb/>
puter ware that not only aids their<lb/>
students in learning, but<lb/>
connects their class-<lb/>
Tr room to the world. A<lb/>
key note speaker<lb/>
from the National<lb/>
8 ?? Telecommunications<lb/>
" and Information Ad-<lb/>
ministration and an<lb/>
advisor to Governor<lb/>
Hunt spoke on the theme<lb/>
of "Development of the Informa-<lb/>
tion Highway and Its Impact on<lb/>
Public Schools<lb/>
Participants were able to<lb/>
choose from several sessions and<lb/>
labs that included working with<lb/>
See TECH page 5<lb/>
By Maureen Rich<lb/>
News Editor<lb/>
Amid protests of dirty cam-<lb/>
paigning, claims of fixed voting<lb/>
booths and charges that all three<lb/>
candidates were over budget, the<lb/>
SGA elections screeched to a halt<lb/>
last night. A new obstacle cap-<lb/>
tured participants' attention ?<lb/>
the need for a three-way run-off<lb/>
for the position of SGA president.<lb/>
Brynn Thomas received 40.6<lb/>
percent of the vote, while both Ian<lb/>
Eastman and David Reid received<lb/>
29.3 percent of the student body<lb/>
vote. To win an election, one must<lb/>
garner 50 percent of the voting<lb/>
body.<lb/>
Similarly, the race for vice-<lb/>
president also resulted in a run-<lb/>
off, this time between only two<lb/>
candidates, Sheila Boswell and<lb/>
Chris Munley. Boswell captured<lb/>
43.5 percent of the vote, while<lb/>
Munley grabbed 30.5 percent.<lb/>
Scarlette Gardner received 24.2<lb/>
percent, and as the third-place<lb/>
candidate, is not qualified for the<lb/>
run-off.<lb/>
The run-off will take place<lb/>
April 20, exactly two weeks from<lb/>
the original election date, unless<lb/>
all candidates involved agree to a<lb/>
run-off in one week. Their unani-<lb/>
mous consent would then prompt<lb/>
a legislative vote. A run-off in one<lb/>
week is unlikely, said Keith Dyer,<lb/>
spokesman for Brynn Thomas,<lb/>
because Thomas will not want the<lb/>
run-off to take place in one week<lb/>
as he is out of town.<lb/>
The elections for the posi-<lb/>
tions of secretary and treasurer<lb/>
resulted in two clean sweeps.<lb/>
Michael Carnes won the position<lb/>
of treasurer with 53.5 percent of<lb/>
the vote, and Doug Spears won<lb/>
with 52.3 percent of the vote.<lb/>
The results were tabulated<lb/>
by Wendy Creasey, research co-<lb/>
ordinator, using the same com-<lb/>
puterized system that professors<lb/>
use to tabulate test results taken<lb/>
from blue or "bubble" sheets.<lb/>
"We ran multiple data<lb/>
checks to insure accuracy<lb/>
Creasey said. "These results are<lb/>
completely accurate<lb/>
Both Dyer (speaking for<lb/>
Thomas) and Eastman expressed<lb/>
satisfaction with the results.<lb/>
"I'm excited about the run-<lb/>
off Eastman said. "Maybe now<lb/>
we can get away from the dirty<lb/>
campaigning  and concentrate<lb/>
on the issues. I'm very pleased<lb/>
with the number of people who<lb/>
came out and voted. They know<lb/>
what I'm about ? I'm very satis-<lb/>
fied<lb/>
Dyer expressed confidence<lb/>
that Thomas would win the run-<lb/>
off, and shunned all allegations of<lb/>
dirty politicking.<lb/>
"We feel like this is a vic-<lb/>
tory Dyer said. "Brynn is the<lb/>
better candidate, and this was a<lb/>
psychological victory<lb/>
Dyer pointed out that the<lb/>
four candidates running together<lb/>
? Thomas, Boswell, Carnes and<lb/>
Spears ? either won their posi-<lb/>
tion or will participate in the run-<lb/>
off.<lb/>
Reid, speaking from<lb/>
Filibuster's restaurant shortly af-<lb/>
ter the results were announced,<lb/>
voiced confusion that such a tie<lb/>
could have occurred.<lb/>
"Does that not sound<lb/>
strange?" Reid said. "I'mjustlook-<lb/>
ing forward to talking about real<lb/>
issues: crime, parking, student<lb/>
fees. Obviously, there was some<lb/>
wrong-doing going on. I'm not<lb/>
See ELECTION page 4<lb/>
Water gun<lb/>
fight leads<lb/>
to arrest<lb/>
By Jason Williams<lb/>
Former Russian spokesman to visit<lb/>
By Laura Allard<lb/>
Staff Writer<lb/>
Russian media comes to<lb/>
ECU tomorrow in the form of a<lb/>
very famous individual. Former<lb/>
spokesman for Soviet President<lb/>
Mikhail Gorbachev, Gennadi<lb/>
Gerasimov, will wpend all day<lb/>
Friday at ECU.<lb/>
Gerasimov served as<lb/>
spokesman for Gorbachev and<lb/>
Eduard Schevardnadze during<lb/>
theeraofglasnostandperestroika.<lb/>
He also served as political advi-<lb/>
sor to Yuri Andropov, who be-<lb/>
came head of the KGB and later<lb/>
lead the Communist party.<lb/>
"Gerasimov's familiarity<lb/>
with the Russian political scene is<lb/>
significant and his viewpoints will<lb/>
be fascinating said political sci-<lb/>
ence professor Maurice Simon,<lb/>
who helped arrange the visit.<lb/>
Gerasimov's topic is "Post-<lb/>
Communist Russia: Continuity<lb/>
and Change Therefore, he will<lb/>
be open to questions about the<lb/>
former Soviet Union and about<lb/>
current Russian-American rela-<lb/>
tions.<lb/>
Gerasimov will speak to<lb/>
political science students in Dr.<lb/>
Carmine Scavo's "Media and Pub-<lb/>
lic Policy" course at 10:00 a.m.<lb/>
Friday in the C wing of Brewster,<lb/>
room 101. He will givea 25-minute<lb/>
speech and will be open to ques-<lb/>
tions for the remaining 25 min-<lb/>
utes. Gerasimov will also hold an<lb/>
open question and answer forum<lb/>
in General Classroom building<lb/>
3007 from 3:00-4:30 p.m.<lb/>
Both discussions are open<lb/>
to ECU students and the general<lb/>
public.<lb/>
"Gerasimov's visit presents<lb/>
a rare opportunity for ECU stu-<lb/>
dents to interact with someone<lb/>
who has held important positions<lb/>
in the Soviet and Russian media<lb/>
Simon said.<lb/>
Later, Pi Sigma Alpha, the<lb/>
political science honors society<lb/>
hosting Gerasimov's visit, will<lb/>
host a dinner and speech featur-<lb/>
ing the topic "American-Russian<lb/>
Relations in a Changing World<lb/>
This event is open to Pi<lb/>
Sigma Alpha members only.<lb/>
He is spending this semes-<lb/>
ter as a visiting professor in the<lb/>
political science and communica-<lb/>
tions departments at the Univer-<lb/>
sity of North Carolina at<lb/>
Wilmington.<lb/>
Assistant News Editor<lb/>
Police arrested ECU<lb/>
football player (John)<lb/>
Allen Williams late Tues-<lb/>
day night and charged him<lb/>
with disorderly conduct<lb/>
and resisting arrest, cam-<lb/>
pus police said yesterday.<lb/>
The incident took place af-<lb/>
ter a water gun fight in<lb/>
Scott Residence Hall got<lb/>
out of hand.<lb/>
At approximately 10<lb/>
p.m ECU Public Safety<lb/>
and Greenville Police re-<lb/>
sponded to a complaint by<lb/>
Scott Residence Hall staff<lb/>
that a "large number of<lb/>
individuals were engag-<lb/>
ing in water gun fights<lb/>
with Super Soaker water<lb/>
guns said Lt. Keith Knox,<lb/>
Public Safety information<lb/>
officer.<lb/>
Upon arrival, offic-<lb/>
ers observed Williams, a<lb/>
starting wide receiver on<lb/>
ECU's football team, in<lb/>
possession of a water gun.<lb/>
As the officer was escort-<lb/>
ing Williams to his police<lb/>
vehicle to issue him a cam-<lb/>
pus citation, he became<lb/>
disruptive and uncoop-<lb/>
erative, at which time he<lb/>
was placed under arrest<lb/>
for disorderly conduct,<lb/>
Knox said.<lb/>
"Williams became<lb/>
belligerent, demanding<lb/>
that I return the water pis-<lb/>
tols wrote Public Safety<lb/>
Officer S.B. Kittrell in his<lb/>
police report. "I refused<lb/>
and he stated: 'You will<lb/>
not take those water<lb/>
guns<lb/>
After Kittrell es-<lb/>
corted him outside, Will-<lb/>
iams struggled with<lb/>
Kittrell for "approxi<lb/>
mately 30 seconds to 1<lb/>
minute" before being<lb/>
forced into the car, the re-<lb/>
See ARREST page 5<lb/>
Spring cleaning hits streets of Greenville, thanks to fraternity<lb/>
By Brian Olson<lb/>
Staff Writer<lb/>
When fraternity brothers<lb/>
just do not feel like conducting<lb/>
spring cleaning at their own<lb/>
houses, they hit the streets of<lb/>
Greenville. In this case, Fifth<lb/>
and Summit treets received the<lb/>
cleaning.<lb/>
The Sigma Phi Epsilon fra-<lb/>
ternity scoured the streets from<lb/>
top to bottom, picking up pa-<lb/>
pers, cigarette butts and vari-<lb/>
ous assorted pieces of trash dur-<lb/>
ing the five hour cleaning spree.<lb/>
Some brothers expressed<lb/>
disgust at what they found.<lb/>
"Students at ECU should<lb/>
be more conscious of their lit-<lb/>
tering habits said a tired-look-<lb/>
ing Saed Hamad, vice-president<lb/>
of the fraternity. "Maybe if ev-<lb/>
erybody cuts down with pollu-<lb/>
tion on campus and around<lb/>
Greenville, it will make the area<lb/>
look better than it already does.<lb/>
We feel it is our responsibility<lb/>
to give back to the campus and<lb/>
the whole community<lb/>
Many Greek and other lo-<lb/>
cal organizations adopt streets<lb/>
and help take responsiblity for<lb/>
them. The familiar signs read-<lb/>
ing 'This street adopted by <lb/>
' can be seen throughout<lb/>
Greenville and are part of the<lb/>
Adopt a Street program.<lb/>
Sig Ep adopted Fifth and<lb/>
Summit Streets from the city<lb/>
of Greenville a few years ago.<lb/>
There is a sign on Summit<lb/>
See CLEAN-UP page 5<lb/>
eople<lb/>
on the street<lb/>
Did you vote in the SGA<lb/>
elections? Why or why not?<lb/>
Bob Wharton, senior: "Yes,<lb/>
because students should not have<lb/>
any right to opinions involving<lb/>
school issues if they do not vote<lb/>
Allison DeBastiani, sophomore:<lb/>
"Yes, I read some good information<lb/>
on one particular candidate, and<lb/>
felt they would do a good job<lb/>
Katiti McCuller, sophomore: "Yes,<lb/>
because I think it is important to<lb/>
elect good officers to represent<lb/>
the student body<lb/>
Ramon Navarro, junior: "Yes,<lb/>
because I think the people that are<lb/>
running are going to do something<lb/>
about a major issue. As a part of<lb/>
the student body it's my<lb/>
responsibility to vote, and the<lb/>
people I vote for are my voice<lb/>
<pb facs="00058468_0002"/><lb/>
2 The East Carolinian<lb/>
April 7, 1994<lb/>
March 30<lb/>
Austin Building ?M:34 a.m. Bomb threat.<lb/>
Scott Residence Hall ? 8:38 p.m. Damage to real property (bathroom).<lb/>
March 31<lb/>
Bottom of College Hill ? 2:13 a.m. Armed robbery; assault with a deadly weapon.<lb/>
South of Christenbury Gym ? 2:56 p.m. Driving while license revoked; speeding.<lb/>
April 1<lb/>
Southeast of the Galley ? 5:47 p.m. Report of communicating threats.<lb/>
April 2<lb/>
Tyler Residence Hall ? 3:18 p.m. Report of harassing phone calls with communicating<lb/>
threats and disorderly conduct.<lb/>
April 3<lb/>
Basketball court area, Belk Residence Hall ? 8:55 p.m. Report of assault.<lb/>
South of Scales field house ? 9:45 p.m. Breaking and entering; larceny (auto).<lb/>
April 4<lb/>
General Classroom Building ? 2:10 p.m. Report of larceny of ECU property.<lb/>
South of Ficklen Stadium ? 6:50 p.m. Breaking and entering; larcenv of a vehicle.<lb/>
April 5<lb/>
West of Mendenhall ? 1 43 am. Second degree trespass; larceny of a sign.<lb/>
Tyler Residence Hall ? 4:20 a.m. Report of communicating threats bv telephone.<lb/>
Belk Residence Hall ? 4:35 a.m. Possession of marijuana, drug paraphernalia.<lb/>
Aycock Residence Hall ? 6:00 a.m. Arrest of student for communicating threats over the<lb/>
telephone.<lb/>
Brody School of Medicine ? 9:00 a.m. Report of larcenv; credit card fraud.<lb/>
Compiled by Jason Williams Taken from official ECU crime reports.<lb/>
4<lb/>
&amp;<lb/>
t0n ?a W<lb/>
t<lb/>
A<lb/>
<lb/>
PHASE 3<lb/>
ECU WELLNESS FAIR<lb/>
Thursday, April 14 from 10:00 a.m. - 4:00 p.m.<lb/>
Mendenhall Student Center<lb/>
(see Tuesday, April 12 East Carolinian for<lb/>
the Complete Evolution)<lb/>
Disabled students speak out<lb/>
By Tammy Zion<lb/>
Staff Writer<lb/>
Take a walk bv the student<lb/>
stores Monday and you may see<lb/>
something of interest ? an ob-<lb/>
stacle course sponsored by PUSH<lb/>
(People United to Support the<lb/>
Handicapped) Monday will mark<lb/>
the beginning ot a series of events<lb/>
to promote Disabilities Awareness<lb/>
Week.<lb/>
"Sometimes disabled stu-<lb/>
dents get lost in the crowd and<lb/>
thev need a voice for their con-<lb/>
cerns and to raise awareness and<lb/>
to show what thev can do, not so<lb/>
much as what thev can't do said<lb/>
Susan Pogemiller, advisor for<lb/>
PUSH.<lb/>
Showing ECU what thev can<lb/>
do is the objective for Tuesdav<lb/>
night. Ml students are invited to<lb/>
join in Mendenhall from 7-9 p.m.<lb/>
to strut their stuff at a party com-<lb/>
plete with a live band. Wednes-<lb/>
dav night the activities will return<lb/>
to Mendenhall with the puppet<lb/>
show "Kids on the Block Each<lb/>
puppet has its own unique dis-<lb/>
ability.<lb/>
Thursdav has been titled<lb/>
"Assume a Disability Day" and<lb/>
able-bodied students are asked to<lb/>
assume a disability for the entire<lb/>
day and then speak about this<lb/>
learning experience ip. Mendenhall<lb/>
at 7 p.m.<lb/>
"This vear the main thrust ot<lb/>
Disability' Awareness Week is to<lb/>
show our abilities rather than our<lb/>
disabilities said Mark Jayson,<lb/>
president of PUSH<lb/>
"We have the same hopes<lb/>
and aspirations of everyone else<lb/>
The organization partici-<lb/>
pated in a rock-a-thon March 1?.<lb/>
Phi Sigma Pi sponsored the event<lb/>
and WZMB broadcast some of the<lb/>
rockers on the air, Jayson said.<lb/>
ECU currently has 20 stu-<lb/>
dents in wheelchairs, nine sight<lb/>
impaired, 30 hearing impaired, 130<lb/>
learning disabled and 30students<lb/>
with other disabilities. Some ex-<lb/>
amples ot other disabilities are<lb/>
severe arthritic conditions or<lb/>
Lymes disease.<lb/>
"All ot these people have<lb/>
special needs, and sorru need more<lb/>
attention than others said C.C<lb/>
Rowe.directorot 1 y I disabilities<lb/>
services. "W hat we try to do is in<lb/>
view of the limitation imposed by<lb/>
the disability, we provide reas n-<lb/>
ably support services<lb/>
Rowe began the disabilities<lb/>
program at ECU in 1977.<lb/>
A brochure distributed<lb/>
through the program lists the ob-<lb/>
jectives as; no individual with a<lb/>
disability will be discriminated<lb/>
against, all physical and attitudi-<lb/>
nalbarriers be removed insofar as<lb/>
possibleand full assistance to stu-<lb/>
dents with disabilities.<lb/>
Rowe said that the largest<lb/>
recent expansion of the office has<lb/>
been to accommodate students<lb/>
with learning disabilities.<lb/>
The Americans With Dis-<lb/>
abilities Act, passed in 1991, makes<lb/>
life a lot easier for people with<lb/>
disabil.ties.<lb/>
"Before then we had section<lb/>
304 of the rehabilitation act of<lb/>
1973 Rowe said. "The ADA just<lb/>
extended some requirements of<lb/>
section 304<lb/>
Because of the ADA, Rowe<lb/>
had to make a complete evalua-<lb/>
tion of ECU in order to meet new-<lb/>
standards.<lb/>
"We had to publicly ac-<lb/>
knowledge where we had some<lb/>
deficiencies Rowe said. "Also<lb/>
we've had an cm-sight review bv<lb/>
the office of civil rights about four<lb/>
years ago. This campus was<lb/>
viewed as being very friendly but<lb/>
not perfect for people with dis-<lb/>
abilities  this is an older c impus<lb/>
and most of our buildings were<lb/>
builtbetore thecodes required the<lb/>
accessibility standards that they<lb/>
do today<lb/>
Rowe has proposed that<lb/>
more than Sll million from the<lb/>
state legislature go toward up-<lb/>
grading facilities on campus.<lb/>
"We have an ongoing and<lb/>
rather massive program for cre-<lb/>
ating a barrier free campus <lb/>
automatic doors, curb cuts,<lb/>
ramps. We are trying to get fund-<lb/>
ing now I or elevators on campus<lb/>
but all of these items cost a lot of<lb/>
money Rowe said. "We have<lb/>
things that you don't even think<lb/>
about, we need better fire alarm<lb/>
sv stems. When a fire alarm goes<lb/>
off deaf people can't hear that<lb/>
Regina Duncan credits<lb/>
Rowe for making ECU a friendly<lb/>
environment for students with<lb/>
disabilities<lb/>
"Many architects think that<lb/>
their buildings are handicap-ac-<lb/>
cessible if it has a ramp in the<lb/>
front, but accessibility is more<lb/>
than ramps Duncan said. "Ac-<lb/>
cessibility means that a disabled<lb/>
person is able to go anywhere an<lb/>
able bodied person goes<lb/>
Duncan will not allow her<lb/>
wheelchair to get in the way of<lb/>
everyday activities.<lb/>
"if 1 can't get in somewhere,<lb/>
1 just get someone to carry me<lb/>
in Duncan said.<lb/>
Not all students with dis-<lb/>
abi iities are lucky enough to find<lb/>
such simplesolutionsaround the<lb/>
barriers.<lb/>
Theautomaticdoors wesee<lb/>
all overcampuscost about $2,500<lb/>
each, Rowe said. He believes that<lb/>
ECU is fortunate because cases<lb/>
of vandalism to equipment are<lb/>
rare.<lb/>
"Some of the wall switches<lb/>
have been kicked but I wouldn't<lb/>
say we've had any problem with<lb/>
vandalism and I think that's a<lb/>
real compliment to the students<lb/>
Rowe said.<lb/>
Several buildings on cam-<lb/>
pus are in need of elevators.<lb/>
Rawi, Austin, Graham, Spillman<lb/>
and Whichard top floors are all<lb/>
inaccessible to those with dis-<lb/>
abilities.<lb/>
Students with disabilities<lb/>
See DISABILITIES page 5<lb/>
I 210 E. 5th Street<lb/>
 758-8612<lb/>
I<lb/>
I Valid thru Sat.<lb/>
! April 16, 1994<lb/>
Don't let April<lb/>
showers keep<lb/>
you away from<lb/>
atalog<lb/>
connection<lb/>
Discount Catalog Clothing for<lb/>
MEN and WOMEN<lb/>
Bring in this ad for an<lb/>
EXTRA 20 OFF!<lb/>
MS 10-6 <lb/>
Division of UBE j<lb/>
(A TRADITION SINCE LATE SEPTEMBER)<lb/>
752-5S55 1 10 E. 4th Sf? Downtown<lb/>
GOFREEK<lb/>
OH JOy. ITS FREEK WEEK AT PEASANTS<lb/>
IF YOU'RE A FREEK. WE GOT YOUR WEEK<lb/>
Sponsored by ECU Student Health Services, Health Promotion and Well-Being,<lb/>
and Recreational Services<lb/>
fhursday<lb/>
1<lb/>
r<lb/>
Saturday<lb/>
Sunday<lb/>
Tuesday<lb/>
KNOCKED DOWN SMILIN'<lb/>
CQME SEE THE PRETTY BOY SING)<lb/>
HEAPCTONE CiRTUS<lb/>
(COME OUT EARLY AND BET ON THE ELEPHANT RACES)<lb/>
CODS WATER<lb/>
(IT SHOULD BE Ml UPLIFTING EXPERIENCE)<lb/>
85 C Molson Night ,<lb/>
 $1.50 House Hiballs<lb/>
? ITS MUGNITE<lb/>
OUR MOTTO: IF IT AIN'T 60T A HANDLE, IT AIN'T A MUG.<lb/>
Kr?<lb/>
NEXT WEEK ? THURS. EDWIN McCAINE<lb/>
&amp; FRI. THE HATTERS (ATLANTIC RECORDING ARTIST)<lb/>
Home Finders 321-6708<lb/>
<pb facs="00058468_0003"/><lb/>
April 7, 1994<lb/>
The East Carolinian 3<lb/>
Help wanted for Special Olympics<lb/>
By Stephanie Lassiter<lb/>
Staff Writer<lb/>
If you did not get enough of<lb/>
the Olympics in February, you will<lb/>
have another chance on April 15.<lb/>
This time, however, there will be<lb/>
no scandal involving Nancy<lb/>
Kerrigan and the infamous Tonya<lb/>
Harding.<lb/>
Instead, there will be hun-<lb/>
dreds of special people compet-<lb/>
ing in sports from rollerskating to<lb/>
track and field. These athletes are<lb/>
called Special Olympians because<lb/>
of their handicaps.<lb/>
The participants are all men-<lb/>
tally reatarded individuals, but<lb/>
many of the contestants have other<lb/>
handicaps such as blindness, deaf-<lb/>
ness or Down's Syndrome.<lb/>
This year's Olympics will be<lb/>
held from 9 a.m. until 2 p.m. at<lb/>
Rose High School Stadium on<lb/>
Arlington Boulevard.<lb/>
"Without volunteers these<lb/>
games would not be possible said<lb/>
Connie Sappenfield, coordinator<lb/>
of Pitt County Special Olympics.<lb/>
An orientation for volunteers<lb/>
will be held on Wednesday, April<lb/>
13, in the Old Joyner Library, room<lb/>
221, from 5 p.m. to 6 p.m. Volun-<lb/>
teers must be able to commit to the<lb/>
all day event (from 9 a.m. to 2 p.m<lb/>
). Volunteers will be selected on a<lb/>
first-come, first-serve basis.<lb/>
Volunteers will be respon-<lb/>
sible for being "buddies" to the<lb/>
athletes, primarily to help them<lb/>
get to their events on time. Stu-<lb/>
dent organizations on campus reg-<lb/>
istered early to be volunteers re-<lb/>
sponsible for lunches, drink<lb/>
stands, timing and other necessi-<lb/>
ties of the games. The games re-<lb/>
quire approximately 1,000 volun-<lb/>
teers, and more than 700 of whom<lb/>
come from ECU, Sappenfield said.<lb/>
Long-term volunteers were<lb/>
selected as early as August to coach<lb/>
the athletes in bowling, track and<lb/>
field and other sports. Many vol-<lb/>
unteers are recruited from the ECU<lb/>
Student Volunteer Program, di-<lb/>
rected by Judy Baker.<lb/>
"We are making it easier for<lb/>
them jnd for us Baker said.<lb/>
Eight track and field athletes<lb/>
will be selected to go on to the<lb/>
State Special Olympics to be held<lb/>
May 19 in Greensboro.<lb/>
Students interested in vol-<lb/>
unteering for the Special Olym-<lb/>
pics should attend the special ori-<lb/>
entation session scheduled for<lb/>
April 13. For more information,<lb/>
call Lisa Ihley, volunteer coordi-<lb/>
nator for Special Olympics, at 830-<lb/>
4551.<lb/>
Students or groups inter-<lb/>
ested in the ECU Student Volun-<lb/>
teer Program can call Judy Baker<lb/>
at 757-6432 or stop by 201<lb/>
Christenbury Gym.<lb/>
News writers!<lb/>
Meeting today at<lb/>
4:00 p.m. Please,<lb/>
please don rt bring<lb/>
leftover Easter candy.<lb/>
I have enough.<lb/>
Chancellor holds arts contest<lb/>
By Tammy Zion<lb/>
Staff Writer<lb/>
Michael Preston, D'Jean<lb/>
Jawrunner and Wendy Eaves met<lb/>
the chancellor in his office at 11<lb/>
a.m. Monday. Thesestudents were<lb/>
given awards and commended bv<lb/>
Chancellor Eakin for winning an<lb/>
essay and art exhibit contest, spon-<lb/>
sored by ECU's Martin Luther<lb/>
King committee. The ceremony<lb/>
was April 4, the anniversary of<lb/>
Martin Luther King's death.<lb/>
Michael Preston's essay won<lb/>
first place. He said he did not write<lb/>
it to compete, but because he feels<lb/>
strongly about civil rights.<lb/>
"I wrote about how we need<lb/>
to take more responsibility for civil<lb/>
rights and instead of blaming ev-<lb/>
erything on everybody else<lb/>
Preston said. "Its not a black or<lb/>
white thing as to why I wrote the<lb/>
essay, just taking responsibility for<lb/>
human rights and for the rights of<lb/>
others, that we all have a respon-<lb/>
sibility to the whole cause<lb/>
"I wrote that the recent<lb/>
events that you see happening<lb/>
with the Rodney King case and<lb/>
events such as David Duke nearly<lb/>
getting elected in Louisiana for<lb/>
senator  it shows a lack of re-<lb/>
sponsibility on both parts<lb/>
Preston said. "Here you see people<lb/>
in Los Angeles destroying the only<lb/>
homes they've ever had. Martin<lb/>
Luther King never stood for that.<lb/>
He preached nonviolent protest,<lb/>
doing it judicially and through the<lb/>
legislation, and getting out there<lb/>
and voting<lb/>
A series of three prints won<lb/>
first place for the art exhibit por-<lb/>
tion. D'Jean Jawrunner, a gradu-<lb/>
ate student in art, said she entered<lb/>
the contest because she had de-<lb/>
cided to try to show more of her<lb/>
work.<lb/>
"I did a series called 'Dis-<lb/>
card and these are done on the<lb/>
principle that some things should<lb/>
be discarded and some things<lb/>
should not be discarded<lb/>
Jawrunner said.<lb/>
She made the intaglio prints<lb/>
by etching metal plates.<lb/>
"The first one is a Chinese<lb/>
take-outboxwhichontheoutside<lb/>
of it depictsa city, tall buildings,<lb/>
and on the inside at the very bot-<lb/>
tom of the cup, you see faces of<lb/>
children, who are runaways- chil-<lb/>
dren who really aren't cared for<lb/>
and are lost in those areas<lb/>
Jawrunner said.<lb/>
"There are also two other<lb/>
boxes, one of them is a pie-shaped<lb/>
box that also has stripes on the<lb/>
outside like an American flag<lb/>
folded, yet it is also shaped like a<lb/>
wedge of pie she said. "On the<lb/>
inside, there are stars and a pic-<lb/>
ture of the face of an old woman.<lb/>
That one deals with the problem<lb/>
of American aging society. I know<lb/>
a lot of people who have worked<lb/>
very hard and they're very fright-<lb/>
ened for their futures<lb/>
Jawrunner's third print<lb/>
looked somewhat different from<lb/>
the other two. The matte contained<lb/>
a red light which cast shadows<lb/>
across the picture when lit up.<lb/>
"The third one is designed<lb/>
in the shape of a Dixie cup. The<lb/>
outside is full of Ku Klux Klan<lb/>
she said. "Its a hood, and you can<lb/>
see these eyes. On the inside are<lb/>
printed crosses and people being<lb/>
hung, hanging from crosses<lb/>
Completing the series has<lb/>
taken over a year and she is hop-<lb/>
ing to add more print to the collec-<lb/>
tion.<lb/>
A second-place prize was<lb/>
also given for the art exhibit.<lb/>
Wendy Eaves, an elementary edu-<lb/>
cation major, sketched her pencil<lb/>
See AWARDS page 5<lb/>
Ah,<lb/>
sunshine!<lb/>
Finally, warm<lb/>
weather is here. An<lb/>
excuse to cut class,<lb/>
or try to convince<lb/>
your professors to<lb/>
hold class outside!<lb/>
Despite windy<lb/>
conditions yesterday,<lb/>
only several dozen<lb/>
hats were seen flying<lb/>
off into the Greenville<lb/>
sky, and only a<lb/>
handful of faculty.<lb/>
With exams coming<lb/>
up fast, don't forget<lb/>
to take advantage of<lb/>
this great weather<lb/>
before it means<lb/>
flunking a class. And<lb/>
don't ever work for a<lb/>
newspaper where<lb/>
they give you this<lb/>
much room to run a<lb/>
cut line.<lb/>
jm&amp;&amp;&amp;&amp;:<lb/>
Photo by<lb/>
Cedric Van Buren<lb/>
ECONOMY MINI<lb/>
STORAGE<lb/>
USE YOUR<lb/>
STUDENT<lb/>
DISCOUNT<lb/>
SHARE WITH A ROOMMATE<lb/>
SPECIAL RATES<lb/>
MAY 1 - AUG 31<lb/>
300 FARMER ST<lb/>
GREENVILLE<lb/>
757-0373<lb/>
ofci ?hie pLaces<lb/>
m<lb/>
&amp;<lb/>
SORORITY RUSH<lb/>
Informal Convocation<lb/>
April 13, 1994 TK<lb/>
5:00 P.M.<lb/>
Mendenhall, Great Room<lb/>
FALL INFORMAL RUSH n<lb/>
August 17-22, 1994 jU<lb/>
 ? casual attire<lb/>
 IjIj ? any questions?<lb/>
call 757-4235<lb/>
 THE fe<lb/>
?MlNQRJTY?<lb/>
BEACHING OUT TO SEHVE YOU !<lb/>
Sponsored by the Student Union Minority Arts Committee.<lb/>
APRIL 13th7:30 P.M. Coffeehouse PICASO Featuring Three Guest Speakers.<lb/>
This event will be c audience participin informal discussion in which ation is encouraged.<lb/>
mm<lb/>
<pb facs="00058468_0004"/><lb/>
?I MMMPMH<lb/>
- 4 The East Carolinian<lb/>
April 7. 1994<lb/>
4-H kids learn to sew<lb/>
Summer sewing program teaches lost art<lb/>
By Stephanie Lassiter<lb/>
Staff Writer<lb/>
Technology may be great<lb/>
For some things, but if asked, 4-<lb/>
H leaders will say technology<lb/>
has been the cause of a rapid<lb/>
decline of men or women's abil-<lb/>
ity to create necessities for them-<lb/>
selves, such as hand-sewn gar-<lb/>
ments.<lb/>
. . "I would dare say that sew-<lb/>
ing is a disappearing skill said<lb/>
Ginger Ausband, program co-<lb/>
ordinator for the 4-H club sum-<lb/>
mer sewing program. "It is no<lb/>
longer a necessity of life, so the<lb/>
baby boomer generation never<lb/>
learned and now their children<lb/>
are growing up with no one to<lb/>
teach them<lb/>
:i i This summer, local 4-H<lb/>
kids will have the opportunity<lb/>
to learn to sew thanks to the<lb/>
efforts of many volunteers, that<lb/>
i? if the volunteers can be found.<lb/>
Kids have been turned away for<lb/>
the past several years because<lb/>
there have not been enough vol-<lb/>
unteers to teach them to sew,<lb/>
Ausband said.<lb/>
"We have people out there<lb/>
who want to sew with no one to<lb/>
teach them Ausband said.<lb/>
The 4-H club, which stands<lb/>
for Health, Heart, Hands and<lb/>
Head, was formed to offer op-<lb/>
portunities to children where<lb/>
they can reach their own poten-<lb/>
tial and better themselves for<lb/>
adulthood. The Pitt County 4-H<lb/>
club was the only North Caro-<lb/>
lina 4-H club to win the sewing<lb/>
promotion grant from the<lb/>
American Sewing and Craft As-<lb/>
sociation. The grant, for $700.00,<lb/>
will be used for supplies, print-<lb/>
ing costs, advertising costs and<lb/>
other related costs.<lb/>
So you do not know how<lb/>
to sew, or even how to thread a<lb/>
needle. It is okay, the 4-H club<lb/>
will provide short cram sessions<lb/>
where volunteers are given les-<lb/>
sons on how to choose patterns,<lb/>
how to cut patterns and fabrics<lb/>
and other basic sewing guide-<lb/>
lines.<lb/>
Volunteers will be teach-<lb/>
ing approximately 30 4-H mem-<lb/>
bers from the ages of 10-19 at<lb/>
the N. C. Cooperative Extension<lb/>
Service of Pitt County Center<lb/>
located at the new Agricultural<lb/>
Facility of Pitt County Center.<lb/>
The lessons will take place June<lb/>
11-14, June 20-23, June 27-30,<lb/>
July 18-21 and July 25-28. A fash-<lb/>
ion review will be held July 28<lb/>
where the seamstresses have the<lb/>
opportunity to model their fash-<lb/>
ions.<lb/>
"Our primary function is<lb/>
how to pick out a pattern and<lb/>
proper materials and prepare<lb/>
the patterns and fabrics for use<lb/>
Ausband said. "The children<lb/>
will focus on straight and curved<lb/>
seams and hemming and they<lb/>
will use not only a regular sew-<lb/>
ing machine, but also a serger<lb/>
for construction and finishing<lb/>
Sessions will be held for<lb/>
the volunteers on June 10 from 9<lb/>
a.m. to 12 a.m. and on July 8<lb/>
from 9 a.m. to 12 a.m. Those<lb/>
interested in volunteering can<lb/>
contact Dale Panaro or Evelyn<lb/>
Spangler at 757-2802.<lb/>
Earthquake center investigates tremors<lb/>
EDITOR'S NOTE ? In the<lb/>
basement of the nation's earth-<lb/>
quake center in Golden, Colo is a<lb/>
bank of computers that monitors a<lb/>
network of 130 seismic sensors<lb/>
across the country, automatically<lb/>
issuing a detailed report on every<lb/>
seismological incident that might<lb/>
be interpreted as an earthquake.<lb/>
The idea is to get the word out fast,<lb/>
to save lives.<lb/>
GOLDEN, Colo. (AP) ?<lb/>
When the ground began shaking<lb/>
in California, the phonesat the U.S.<lb/>
Geological Survey's National<lb/>
Earthquake Information Center<lb/>
started ringing. And they did not<lb/>
stop for eight straight hours.<lb/>
The NEIC is the nerve center<lb/>
of a computerized nationwide net-<lb/>
work of seismological sensors that<lb/>
record even the faintest seismic<lb/>
activity ? including trucks rum-<lb/>
bling over rough roads and small<lb/>
mine blasts.<lb/>
"We locate all the significant<lb/>
earthquakes around the world and<lb/>
distribute information about them<lb/>
as quickly as we can to people who<lb/>
have the ability to prevent a disas-<lb/>
ter and save lives says Waverly<lb/>
Person, the center's operations<lb/>
manager and the jovial, graying<lb/>
man who routinely appears on<lb/>
network television when big<lb/>
quakes hit.<lb/>
IT'S BACK !<lb/>
SEMI-ANNUAL<lb/>
WRESTLING TOURNAMENT<lb/>
APRIL 17<lb/>
CHRISTENBURY GYM<lb/>
REGISTER: APRIL 5 - 13<lb/>
Sign -up at Z04 Christenbury Gym<lb/>
ELECTION<lb/>
Continued from page 1<lb/>
When the 6.6-magnitude<lb/>
earthquake struck Northndge,<lb/>
Calif in Januarv, Person wasawak-<lb/>
ened by his pager shortly after 5:30<lb/>
a.m. Information relayed to his<lb/>
pager indicated a major tremor that<lb/>
had caused extensive-damage. Be-<lb/>
fore he could leave his house,<lb/>
"Good Morning America" had<lb/>
called and asked him what he<lb/>
knew.<lb/>
"That's not unusual Per-<lb/>
sons says. "Peop le often ca 11 us and<lb/>
ask for inf orma tionbefore the shock<lb/>
waves (which travel at the speed of<lb/>
sound) reach us<lb/>
Personarrived at NEIC about<lb/>
6 a.m. and spent the next seven<lb/>
hours standing in the control room,<lb/>
giving interview after interview<lb/>
and update after update.<lb/>
"I started the day at 6:10 a.m.<lb/>
and went home at 2 o'clock the<lb/>
next morning he says. "And I<lb/>
was back by 5 a.m. because they<lb/>
wanted me to go live on the 'To-<lb/>
day' show<lb/>
Asked about the big5.3after-<lb/>
shock in California in late March,<lb/>
Person said, "People were very,<lb/>
very excited and it frightened a lot<lb/>
of people. Itdid cause some signifi-<lb/>
cant damage, but I think the main<lb/>
effect was it scared people.<lb/>
"Many scientists expected<lb/>
that an aftershock of that magni-<lb/>
tude could occur. But many of the<lb/>
people in California felt that since<lb/>
they had gone so long without<lb/>
getting an aftershock, it wasn't<lb/>
going to happen again<lb/>
Person, 60, says he is no<lb/>
celebrity, but he does consider<lb/>
himself a pioneer and role model.<lb/>
"I'm more or less a pioneer<lb/>
as an African-American in this<lb/>
field hesays. "There may have<lb/>
been one or two before me, but<lb/>
I'm the first I know to come this<lb/>
far. I get more requests for inter-<lb/>
views than I can handle, most<lb/>
from predominantly black maga-<lb/>
zines who are looking for role<lb/>
models<lb/>
The NEIC was founded by<lb/>
the U.S. Department of Com-<lb/>
merce in 1966 and was based in<lb/>
Rockville, Md. Thecenter moved<lb/>
to the National Oceanic and At-<lb/>
mospheric Administration facil-<lb/>
ity in Boulder, Colo in 1972.<lb/>
After the center was moved to<lb/>
the U.S. Department of the Inte-<lb/>
rior, it relocated to the Colorado<lb/>
School of Mines campus in 1973.<lb/>
Gathering earthquake in-<lb/>
formation in those early years<lb/>
was difficult because there were<lb/>
few seismic sensors to provide<lb/>
data. Technological advances<lb/>
have made the task simpler.<lb/>
A bank of computers in the<lb/>
basement of the NEIC building<lb/>
constantly monitors a network<lb/>
saying it swayed the vote that<lb/>
much, but things definitely need<lb/>
to change<lb/>
All three presidential can-<lb/>
didates voiced the hope that is-<lb/>
sues would be pushed to the fore-<lb/>
front during the ensuing cam-<lb/>
paign days.<lb/>
"I plan to sit down with the<lb/>
three presidential candidates and<lb/>
ask them what we could do to<lb/>
make the run-off better said elec-<lb/>
tions chair Dale Emery. "I want<lb/>
them to cut down on the negative<lb/>
campaigning. We're all grown-up<lb/>
here<lb/>
Emery compared the presi-<lb/>
dential campaigns to those of sec-<lb/>
retary and treasurer. "The secre-<lb/>
tary and treasurer candidates ran<lb/>
exemplary campaigns Emery<lb/>
said. "I wish they were all like<lb/>
that<lb/>
r<lb/>
SPONSORED BY: RECREATIONAL SERVICES<lb/>
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For all those who voted in yesterday's elec<lb/>
turns ? feel proud. For those that didn't<lb/>
vote ? be glad you have another chance.<lb/>
Read the paper and listen to the debates.<lb/>
It's your campus; speak out and be heard.<lb/>
<lb/>
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<pb facs="00058468_0005"/><lb/>
<lb/>
April 7, 1994<lb/>
The East Carolinian 5<lb/>
QUAKE<lb/>
Continued from page 4<lb/>
of 130 seismic sensors across the<lb/>
country, automatically issuing a<lb/>
detailed report on every seismo-<lb/>
logical incident that might be inter-<lb/>
preted as an earthquake.<lb/>
The report includes informa-<lb/>
tion on the earthquake's date, time<lb/>
and location; its magnitude, epi-<lb/>
center and proximity to key popu-<lb/>
lation centers, and a list of local<lb/>
emergency preparedness officials<lb/>
to contact and their phone num-<lb/>
bers.<lb/>
The system also automati-<lb/>
cally rings up pagers worn by ev-<lb/>
ery NEIC employee and by certain<lb/>
local officials ? such as railroad<lb/>
routing centers and dam mainte-<lb/>
nance and monitoring officials.<lb/>
"In 1992 we located 19,540<lb/>
earthquakes worldwide, between<lb/>
1 and 8 on the Richter scale Per-<lb/>
son says. "In 1993, we're going to<lb/>
have more ? about 20,000. That's<lb/>
not because our technology is get-<lb/>
ting better at detecting them Last<lb/>
year, there were just more earth-<lb/>
quakes.<lb/>
The Richter scale is a mea-<lb/>
sureof ground motion as recorded<lb/>
on seismographs. Every increase<lb/>
of one number means a tenfold<lb/>
increase in magnitude. Thus, a<lb/>
readingof7.5reflects an earthquake<lb/>
10 times stronger than one of 6.5.<lb/>
When an earthquake hi ts, the<lb/>
NEIC's 22-person staff swings into<lb/>
action, alerting the proper authori-<lb/>
ties, verifying and updating com-<lb/>
puter reports and using every<lb/>
means possible ? including tele-<lb/>
vision and radio interviews, tele-<lb/>
phone calls, fax machines and tele-<lb/>
grams ? to get the word out.<lb/>
Usually within minutes after<lb/>
a major earthquake is reported,<lb/>
Denver-area television news crews<lb/>
are in the NEIC's control room,<lb/>
lined with rotating drums that dis-<lb/>
play seismic activity from sensors<lb/>
across the nation.<lb/>
That is when Person takes<lb/>
center stage.<lb/>
"Waverly may be the most<lb/>
important person we have here in<lb/>
terms of getting out information<lb/>
that people can understand says<lb/>
John Filson, the NEIC's branch<lb/>
manager. "I've got a Ph.D. and I<lb/>
just can't seem to get the point<lb/>
across with the cameras rolling.<lb/>
I'm really happy we've got Waverly<lb/>
here<lb/>
DISABILITIES<lb/>
Besides disseminating infor-<lb/>
mation about earthquakes that<lb/>
have just occurred, the center also<lb/>
compiles and publishes informa-<lb/>
tion about earthquakes and seis-<lb/>
mic activity.<lb/>
"Our historical database is<lb/>
second to none from 1900 to the<lb/>
present. And it's updated every<lb/>
week Person says.<lb/>
He says the center'sdatabase<lb/>
is tapped often by builders who<lb/>
want to know an area's seismo-<lb/>
Continued from page 2<lb/>
Central Book &amp;<lb/>
IF YOU FIRST DON'T<lb/>
 YOU'RE<lb/>
ABOUT AVERAGE<lb/>
756-7177-<lb/>
Mort-Fri 8t3(V9:30 Sat &amp; Sun 9:Q0-9;30<lb/>
Greenville Square shopping-enter (next to Kmart)<lb/>
Most College 'Graduates Enter<lb/>
the Real World As a Stiles Representative<lb/>
After Graduation<lb/>
You need the experience and we can help you gain<lb/>
that experience before you graduate.<lb/>
Qualifications:<lb/>
?A full-time student with no more<lb/>
than 15 semester hours of classes<lb/>
'At least a 2.0 average<lb/>
'Your own transportation<lb/>
?An excellent work ethic and<lb/>
a willingness to learn<lb/>
'Available to work about 20 hours<lb/>
per week, Monday-Friday<lb/>
?Previous sales experience is not required<lb/>
is the correct term.<lb/>
"They are students first, who<lb/>
just happen to have a disability<lb/>
Rowe said. "When you say 'dis-<lb/>
abled students that means that<lb/>
they are not able  if you are a<lb/>
person with a disability that means<lb/>
that there may be some things, or<lb/>
maybe one thing, they can't do<lb/>
Angelina Pavone agrees<lb/>
with that. She was diagnosed with<lb/>
multiple sclerosis at the age of 20.<lb/>
"I was withqut disabilities<lb/>
for 20 years then I'm told that I<lb/>
may have an attack where I can<lb/>
never walk again I have to look<lb/>
out for a lot of things Pavone<lb/>
said.<lb/>
Pavone said that students<lb/>
generally treat her as a normal<lb/>
human being and that her life at<lb/>
ECU is more normal than her life<lb/>
at home.<lb/>
"Here I have bars in the bath-<lb/>
room athomel'mpulling on the<lb/>
sink Pavone said.<lb/>
Pavone said that people are<lb/>
all too often unaware of barriers<lb/>
that can be prevented. She men-<lb/>
tioned a WZMB display in front of<lb/>
the only accessible entrance to the<lb/>
student stores. She said that she<lb/>
has encountered rudeness and<lb/>
misconceptions over her disabil-<lb/>
ity butrefuses to let anything bring<lb/>
her down.<lb/>
"Having MS has really made<lb/>
me stronger, because I think, if<lb/>
I can beat this, I can beat any-<lb/>
thing she said.<lb/>
Pavone suffered a stroke<lb/>
in the spring of 1990 and since<lb/>
learning to walk again is un-<lb/>
able to walk far due to numb-<lb/>
ness in her feet.<lb/>
"They've told me twice<lb/>
that I would never walk again<lb/>
and I'm walking. I use my dis-<lb/>
ability to encourage myself, es-<lb/>
pecially when it comes to test<lb/>
time she said.<lb/>
Pavone said that she does<lb/>
not want special attention, just<lb/>
consideration. Her advice to<lb/>
students across campus is not<lb/>
to look at disabled students with<lb/>
pity, but with encouragement.<lb/>
Having a disability can<lb/>
also have some advantages.<lb/>
Pavone said she gets to park in<lb/>
the best spots, has early regis-<lb/>
tration so that classes can be<lb/>
moved when necessary to ac-<lb/>
cessible spots and has her own<lb/>
remote control to open the door<lb/>
to her dorm.<lb/>
Keep an eye out for bal-<lb/>
loons across campus next week.<lb/>
They will mark the accessibility<lb/>
of buildings, Jay son said. Pub-<lb/>
lic announcements, flyers and a<lb/>
banner on the mall will all re-<lb/>
mind us of ECU students with,<lb/>
disabilities.<lb/>
logical history.<lb/>
Despite all the data available,<lb/>
Person says it still is not possible to<lb/>
predict earthquakes or to identify<lb/>
trends.<lb/>
"You can't predict earth-<lb/>
quakes. Period he says. "Wehave<lb/>
AWARDS<lb/>
drawing titled "People at Har-<lb/>
mony with Nature" for a home-<lb/>
work assignment.<lb/>
"It represents people con-<lb/>
nected with nature, a flower and<lb/>
butterfly and persons face all con-<lb/>
nected with a vine. The vine was<lb/>
green, that was the only thing in<lb/>
the picture that had color Eaves<lb/>
said.<lb/>
All of the winners were glad<lb/>
to have had the opportunity to<lb/>
meet the committee that selected<lb/>
the winners.<lb/>
"We went to the chancellor's<lb/>
office, and he was most cordial<lb/>
Jawrunner said. "We were intro-<lb/>
psychics call in all the time who<lb/>
tell us, 'There's going to be an<lb/>
earthquake in California But<lb/>
that's not really a prediction. You<lb/>
have to know magnitude and<lb/>
location, and so far that hasn't<lb/>
been done<lb/>
Continued from page 3<lb/>
duced to the committee who was<lb/>
responsible for judging our<lb/>
work. It made me feel real spe-<lb/>
cial<lb/>
"Ienjoyed meeting the com-<lb/>
mittee Preston said. "I like to<lb/>
see who had read my essay, and<lb/>
it was nice to see their reactions. I<lb/>
got a very positive reaction to my<lb/>
message. It's an honor that the<lb/>
chancellor of the university has<lb/>
read something that I wrote<lb/>
All of the winners were<lb/>
given certificates, and first place<lb/>
winners were awarded $100.<lb/>
Wendy Eaves received $50 for<lb/>
second place.<lb/>
TECH<lb/>
demonstrations of the Internet<lb/>
and virtual reality programs.<lb/>
Through these hands-on sessions,<lb/>
teachers were able to see the fea-<lb/>
sibility of incorporating' this tech-<lb/>
nology into their classrooms.<lb/>
In its fifth year, the confer-<lb/>
ence has seen a drastic increase in<lb/>
the number of participants, from<lb/>
71 at the first conference, to about<lb/>
900 at the most recent.<lb/>
Although the conference is<lb/>
primarily for North Carolina's<lb/>
teachers, there were also partici-<lb/>
pants from Virginia as well as<lb/>
Costa Rica.<lb/>
About 23 vendors were also<lb/>
present at the conference, to pro-<lb/>
vide information on product<lb/>
availability and display the ac-<lb/>
tual products that were demon-<lb/>
strated in the labs.<lb/>
EAST<lb/>
CAROUNAN<lb/>
The East Carolinian is an equal opportunity employer 2<lb/>
ARREST<lb/>
port said.<lb/>
"Mr. Williams resisted the<lb/>
arrest and had to be forcibly<lb/>
placed into the police car by the<lb/>
arresting officer Knox said. Wil-<lb/>
liams was released on a $500 se-<lb/>
cured bond. A court date was set<lb/>
for May 25.<lb/>
About 80 to 100 people gath-<lb/>
ered to protest the arrest; how-<lb/>
ever, no other arrests took place,<lb/>
Knox said. After Williams was<lb/>
taken to the car, "approximately<lb/>
100 irate subjects continued with<lb/>
Continued from page 1<lb/>
Planning has already be-<lb/>
gun for next year's conference.<lb/>
The conference, as Pressley said,<lb/>
is "out-growingGreenville The<lb/>
presentations are free to the gen-<lb/>
eral public. The labs require alee<lb/>
in order to participate.<lb/>
Not only did the confer-<lb/>
ence provide its participants with<lb/>
hands-on experience, but there<lb/>
is also a reference guide pub-<lb/>
lished after the conference to pro-<lb/>
vide the teachers with descrip-<lb/>
tions of the software and listings<lb/>
of people to contact for purchas-<lb/>
ing the software.<lb/>
Pressley expressed the goal<lb/>
of the conference when he said,<lb/>
"Technology is invading our<lb/>
public classrooms. Our teachers<lb/>
need to accept it, know where to<lb/>
get it, and learn how to use it<lb/>
Continued from page 1<lb/>
verbal and obscene language<lb/>
Public Safety Officer K.L. Jack-<lb/>
son wrote in his report.<lb/>
After Public Safety's at-<lb/>
tempts to disperse the crowd<lb/>
failed, "Greenville had its dog<lb/>
exit his vehicle and while still<lb/>
leashed backed the crowd back<lb/>
into the lobby of Scott the re-<lb/>
port said.<lb/>
"There was no riot Knox<lb/>
said in an interview with The Daily<lb/>
Reflector. "It was more than the<lb/>
officers on the scene felt like they<lb/>
could handle, so they called the<lb/>
Greenville police to stand by. The<lb/>
water gun was not mistaken as a<lb/>
weapon. It was just that the indi-<lb/>
vidual got uncooperative and did<lb/>
not want to get into the car<lb/>
Knox said police pinned<lb/>
Williams against the police car in<lb/>
order to force him in the vehicle.<lb/>
At that time, Williams began<lb/>
shouting and hollering, which led<lb/>
to the charge of resisting arrest.<lb/>
"That's when people started<lb/>
coming in and hollering back<lb/>
he said. "But that's as far as it<lb/>
went. I think it was a little blown<lb/>
out of proportion. It was just an<lb/>
unfortunate situation<lb/>
Head football coach Steve<lb/>
Logan had no comment on the<lb/>
incident. However, Sports In-<lb/>
formation Director Charles<lb/>
Bloom said that Williams will<lb/>
remain on the football team.<lb/>
Williams, 20, lives in Scott<lb/>
Residence Hall and is originally<lb/>
from Rock Hill, S.C. Williams<lb/>
was unavailable for comment.<lb/>
CLEAN<lb/>
-UP<lb/>
Con't<lb/>
from<lb/>
pagel<lb/>
Coming Attractions:<lb/>
Leaders Educating &amp; Developing<lb/>
LeadershipWorkshops<lb/>
street announcing their new<lb/>
parental status.<lb/>
"It gives the adopter<lb/>
something to be proud of and<lb/>
the best thing of all is that it<lb/>
benefits the environment of<lb/>
ECU said fraternity brother<lb/>
Scott Gagain.<lb/>
Sig Ep does this clean-up<lb/>
three times a semester. The fi-<lb/>
nal contribution will be just<lb/>
before final exam week.<lb/>
Use these skills to put you in the director's chair<lb/>
April 12,1994<lb/>
7:30 pm<lb/>
109 MSC<lb/>
The Actors &amp; Actresses<lb/>
Who Make the Cast!<lb/>
Presented by Ken Knighten<lb/>
Try diversity to develop your team<lb/>
April 13,1994<lb/>
5:00 pm<lb/>
109 MSC<lb/>
M2<lb/>
M2: Motivation Day<lb/>
Presented by Valerie Langford<lb/>
Here to pump you up!<lb/>
Watch the dominc effect on your<lb/>
friends and members.<lb/>
April 14,1994<lb/>
4:30 pm<lb/>
MSC MPR<lb/>
Time Busters! For Leaders!<lb/>
Presented by Richard Pappas<lb/>
(The Prince of Time)<lb/>
If you need to turn back time,<lb/>
If you don't have time to come to this<lb/>
session, then you need to be there!<lb/>
For More Information Call 757-4796.<lb/>
SUMMER<lb/>
EMPLOYMENT<lb/>
North American Van Lines is now<lb/>
accepting applications from college<lb/>
students and staff for its Summer Fleet<lb/>
Program.<lb/>
Summer is the busy season in the mov-<lb/>
ing industry, and we need your help to<lb/>
handle the load. We will teach you to<lb/>
safely operate an 18-wheel rig and<lb/>
load household goods cargo - at no<lb/>
cost. We pay your room and board<lb/>
while you're in training. Once you<lb/>
receive your Commercial Driver's Li-<lb/>
cense, we'll pay you $425 per week,<lb/>
plus $125 per week living expenses,<lb/>
plus bonus.<lb/>
To qualify, you must be 21 years old,<lb/>
have a good driving record, and be<lb/>
available for training in May (the end<lb/>
of April would be even betterl)<lb/>
Take a break from the classroom, and<lb/>
make the most of your summer with<lb/>
North American Van Lines. We'll<lb/>
promise you an adventure you'll never<lb/>
forget.<lb/>
Call 1-800-348-2147, Dept. ZB-84.<lb/>
nofttiAmerican.<lb/>
?<lb/>
" WMMiMiVM<lb/>
<pb facs="00058468_0006"/><lb/>
mf0mtl0M<lb/>
The East Carolinian<lb/>
Page 6<lb/>
Opinion<lb/>
April 7, 1994<lb/>
The East Carolinian<lb/>
Lindsay Fernandez, General Manager<lb/>
Gregory Dickens, Managing Editor<lb/>
Maureen Rich, News Editor<lb/>
Jason Williams, Assi. News Editor<lb/>
Stephanie Tullo, Lifestyle Editor<lb/>
Gina Jones, Asst. Lifestyle Editor<lb/>
Brian Olson, Sports Editor<lb/>
Dave Pond, Asst. Sports Editor<lb/>
Amy E. Wirtz, Opinion Page Editor<lb/>
Chris Kemple, Staff Illustrator<lb/>
Matthew A. Hege, Advertising Director<lb/>
Tony Dunn, Business Manager<lb/>
Jodi Connelly. Copy Editor<lb/>
Phebe Toler, Copy Editor<lb/>
Deborah Daniel, Secretary<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/>
Chinh Nguyen, Systems Manager<lb/>
Serving the ECU community since 1925, The East Carolinian publishes 12,000 copies every Tuesday and Thursday. The<lb/>
3asthead editorial in each edition is the opinion of the Editorial Board. The East Carolinian welcomes letters, limited to 250<lb/>
??Words, which may be edited for decency or brevity. The East Carolinian reserves the right to edit or reject letters for publication.<lb/>
Letters should be addressed to: Opinion Editor. The East Carolinian, Publications Bldg ECU, Greenville, N.C 27858-4353.<lb/>
?? For more information, call (919) 757-6366.<lb/>
Media reflects society, not vice-versa J<lb/>
What is it with blaming the media for every<lb/>
problem that occurs in the world? Those involved<lb/>
in media don't sit around having secret meetings<lb/>
- about how they can destroy the social fabric that<lb/>
seemingly innocent people base their entire exist-<lb/>
' ence on. Nor are we even a single entity, poised<lb/>
' and ready to scarf up any fallen scraps of morality<lb/>
that fall into our line of vision. We report and we<lb/>
comment. We offer solutions. We try to improve<lb/>
those things that are orf of joint.<lb/>
For example, the recent occurrances in<lb/>
" Wedowee, Ala whereahigh school principal has<lb/>
, stirred up a considerable amount of controversy<lb/>
I supposed racial beliefs, spawned a large interest<lb/>
in a small southern town, heretofore unknown.<lb/>
The USA Today story pointed out that "Many<lb/>
? white residents blame the media for fueling con-<lb/>
?troversy<lb/>
Now, comeon. To make a statement like that<lb/>
? is to declare mat somehow, the news cameras,<lb/>
reporters and journalists conspired with the prin-<lb/>
cipal, deliberated on an idea, men put the contro-<lb/>
versy into action. Seems absurd, no? The media<lb/>
(and we are not a single entity) is not to blame for<lb/>
the nation's ills. We simply want to expose stories<lb/>
for what they are ? truth or fiction.<lb/>
Maybe this example sounds too ridiculous<lb/>
and far-fetched. Another such instance along the<lb/>
same lines is the report that we know all too well<lb/>
i ? teen sex. This dilemma finds its way into the<lb/>
J 'newsabouteveryothermonth. Newstudiescome<lb/>
 , up with the same explanation as every one that<lb/>
I J has gone before them: Nothing. The real answer<lb/>
that no one wants anyone to discover as to why<lb/>
teens have sex so early (and why it keeps getting<lb/>
earlier) is two-fold.<lb/>
First of all, we humans may have a higher<lb/>
intelligence than other animals (according to us),<lb/>
but the commonality we all have is that we are all<lb/>
animals. The biggest drives in animals are food and<lb/>
sex, for reproducting the species. It's that simple.<lb/>
No religious teaching will ever destroy that, it only<lb/>
staves it off for awhile.<lb/>
The other factor is fha t the age for teens ha v ing<lb/>
sex for the first time isn't really getting earlier. It's<lb/>
just that we talk about it a lot more. Teens had sex<lb/>
in the '50s, folks. I hate to break it to ya.<lb/>
So this AP wire story crosses my computer<lb/>
screen concerning the issue of teen sex. I scan it, not<lb/>
expecting anything new and enlightening and<lb/>
instead I come across the revelation: "Approaches<lb/>
to sex are often affected by culture, but social<lb/>
forces are changingatti hides like the impact of<lb/>
urbanization, changing family structures and mass<lb/>
media<lb/>
Yes, they're so right, the wholedownfall of the<lb/>
American society (namely you) is in the our hands.<lb/>
The Media. We cannot endure the burden any<lb/>
longer. We are the reason you lost your virginity at<lb/>
the age of 13. We've been such bad parents.<lb/>
That right there is the true problem?the real<lb/>
parents drop their kids down in front of the TV and<lb/>
let their minds turn to mush. Make 'em read a book.<lb/>
Oh, wait, not the D.H. Lawrence.<lb/>
I suggest in addition to regulating the amount<lb/>
of television watched, implemeting a little sex edu-<lb/>
cation and making kids aware of the dangers of<lb/>
sexual intercourse in the '90s before blaming the<lb/>
very people that attempt to inform the public of<lb/>
such dangers. This paranoid bashing of anything<lb/>
that moves is destructive and harmful.<lb/>
Or am I just altering your views?<lb/>
By Laura Wright<lb/>
Madonna: Social critic or social embarassment?<lb/>
I have never been a Da vid<lb/>
Letterman fan. I didn't watch<lb/>
his show before he switched<lb/>
networks and I don't watch it<lb/>
now.<lb/>
Once, when my mother<lb/>
; was in New York City, she ran<lb/>
into Letterman on the side-<lb/>
walk. I mean literally ran into<lb/>
him. They <lb/>
said<lb/>
ex-<lb/>
By using a contrived<lb/>
lesbianism to appeal to<lb/>
male sexuality, she<lb/>
undermined an entire<lb/>
group of individuals ?<lb/>
real lesbians do not love<lb/>
women in order to get<lb/>
attention from men.<lb/>
?-$se me<lb/>
? to one an-<lb/>
- other and<lb/>
r- proceeded<lb/>
oh their re-<lb/>
specti ve<lb/>
ways. Nei-<lb/>
ther one of<lb/>
them knew<lb/>
who the MHHaiHHi<lb/>
other was<lb/>
but my mom's companions<lb/>
told her with whom she had<lb/>
just had the privilege of collid-<lb/>
ing.<lb/>
Not that this story about<lb/>
? my mother has anything at all<lb/>
to do with the fact that I don't<lb/>
watch Letterman, but it's the<lb/>
closest that anyone in my fam-<lb/>
ily has ever come to meeting<lb/>
- someone famous. Wait, I take<lb/>
that back. Once in the Atlanta<lb/>
?"airport, I think I was about<lb/>
eight years old at the time, I<lb/>
h met Jim and John?the Haggar<lb/>
Brothers?from "Hee Haw<lb/>
Back to Letterman. I<lb/>
heard about his experience<lb/>
with Madonna, as is usually<lb/>
- the case with me, several days<lb/>
I i after the fact. I was, however,<lb/>
fortunate enough to see a vid-<lb/>
eotape of the event this past<lb/>
Monday. I may start watching<lb/>
 Dave from now on; I have a<lb/>
, new respect for anyone who<lb/>
could endure what he en-<lb/>
dured.<lb/>
Watching Madonna's at-<lb/>
tempts to beat Dave at his own<lb/>
game, I starting thinking about<lb/>
the cultural phenomenon that is<lb/>
Madonna. You've got to hand it<lb/>
to her; she is constantly capable<lb/>
of finding ways to stay well<lb/>
within the public eye. I keep<lb/>
thinking that she's gone as far<lb/>
 as is humanly<lb/>
possible, that<lb/>
there is noth-<lb/>
ing left for her<lb/>
to exploit, that<lb/>
she will fade<lb/>
into obscurity,<lb/>
but then she<lb/>
turns around<lb/>
and tops her<lb/>
last scandal.<lb/>
?hmbb I don't<lb/>
know why I'm<lb/>
writing about Madonna, I mean<lb/>
she gets enough attention as it is<lb/>
and she is on my top ten list of<lb/>
things never to write about<lb/>
(she's number five on said list,<lb/>
right after Dan Quayle and right<lb/>
before the "Long Island Lolita"<lb/>
ordeal). I guess I feel as though<lb/>
1 have grown up with Madonna<lb/>
and have seen her go through<lb/>
her various personaes.<lb/>
In high school, I wanted to<lb/>
be her ? she was rebellious,<lb/>
sexual and talented. In college,<lb/>
I admired the way she openly<lb/>
flew in the face of what America<lb/>
felt to be acceptable behavior.<lb/>
She had no shame. She didn't<lb/>
care what anybody said about<lb/>
what she was doing, in fact, the<lb/>
more controversial she could be,<lb/>
the better.<lb/>
Then, at some point, I lost<lb/>
interest. I think it had something<lb/>
to do with the fact that with the<lb/>
"Justify My Love" video and the<lb/>
Sex book, I felt she was selling<lb/>
out. By using a contrived lesbi-<lb/>
Letters to the Editor<lb/>
To the Editor:<lb/>
As my fourth year at East Carolina draws to a<lb/>
close, I am becoming disgusted with the lack of<lb/>
cynicism toward the recent media saturation of the<lb/>
public with negative gun "hype Considering the<lb/>
popular use of "Question Authority" bumper stick-<lb/>
ers, it stands to reason that "Gen. X" would be leery<lb/>
of any further centralized control over ourcollective<lb/>
lives. Obviously, it is not the case.<lb/>
Well ga ther round 'ca use here's something they<lb/>
won't teach you on MTV. An oligarchy is a military<lb/>
state. Its citizens are subject to tyranny and unjust<lb/>
legislation ? pressed upon them by a centralized<lb/>
"policing force In other words "Spaud ng, you'll<lb/>
get nothing and like it An oligarchy comes to be, if<lb/>
and when the power to assemble and overthrow is<lb/>
extracted from civilians.<lb/>
Now chew on this. Have any of you authority<lb/>
questioners found itodd that violentcrimein America<lb/>
dropped in 1993, yet media coverage (stoked by the<lb/>
executive branch) has used grim and shocking foot-<lb/>
age to create a phobia of private gun ownership? One<lb/>
might ask "Why did the media blitz begin?" Well,<lb/>
it looks like if we are to be quilted into the "security<lb/>
blanket" of the international community, certain<lb/>
unalienablc rights must be usurped from America's<lb/>
citizens. It must happen because Americans cur-<lb/>
rently have more freedoms than any other nation in<lb/>
the world. Because many of these nations function<lb/>
as socialist systems (cloaked in monarchy), we<lb/>
must also assume this appearance? if we are to be<lb/>
homogenized into a redistributive world culture.<lb/>
It doesn't take a college education to realize<lb/>
that violence and civil unrest cannot be curtailed by<lb/>
making it a crime for honest citizens to own fire-<lb/>
arms. Instead, they are problems spawned by so-<lb/>
cial, political and economic inadequacies. Will "Gen.<lb/>
X" wake up in time to realize that power in the<lb/>
hands of the few ? sucks? Or will we continue to<lb/>
allow the laying of groundwork for a submissive<lb/>
and servile populace to come? Time will tell.<lb/>
Jason A. Horton<lb/>
Senior<lb/>
English<lb/>
anism to appeal to male sexual-<lb/>
ity, she undermined an entire<lb/>
group of individuals ? real les-<lb/>
bians do not love women in or-<lb/>
der to get attention from men.<lb/>
Still, I wait to see what<lb/>
Madonna will come up with<lb/>
next. I think she's interesting<lb/>
and I think that culturally she's<lb/>
important by virtue of the fact<lb/>
that she does push people's but-<lb/>
tons. She's not really testing to<lb/>
see how much she can get away<lb/>
with before she loses her fan<lb/>
base; she doesn't really care to<lb/>
stop even if it means that she<lb/>
falls out of favor with a lot of<lb/>
people.<lb/>
Entertainers like Madonna<lb/>
are actually valuable in discov-<lb/>
ering how socially unacceptable<lb/>
behavior triggers potentially<lb/>
damaging reactions. I don't<lb/>
think, for example, that Sinead<lb/>
O'Connor has been very popu-<lb/>
lar since her appearance on "Sat-<lb/>
urday Night Live Remember<lb/>
that? After her performance, she<lb/>
tore a picture of the Pope in half?<lb/>
Last I heard, she had attempted<lb/>
suicide. Rosanne Barr was some-<lb/>
what less stigmatized when she<lb/>
grabbed her crotch during a<lb/>
renditition of the "National An-<lb/>
them but her public appeal<lb/>
was greatly lessened at least for<lb/>
a while.<lb/>
As for Madonna, she is liv-<lb/>
ing proof that if a person contin-<lb/>
ues to "act up it may be pos-<lb/>
sible to numb public outcry.<lb/>
Madonna has pushed the<lb/>
boundaries so many times that<lb/>
we don't really criticize her any-<lb/>
more when she does something<lb/>
like tell off David Letterman.<lb/>
We just sort of say, "that's Ma-<lb/>
donna for you and then,<lb/>
maybe, we secretly wish that we<lb/>
had that much nerve.<lb/>
To the Editor:<lb/>
 I went out in front of General Classroom at<lb/>
4:30 amon registration day. I was the third person<lb/>
there. As people began to arrive I asked them what<lb/>
terminal they were using, etc. and etc; they informed<lb/>
me that whoever got in the door first and up the stairs<lb/>
first won, in other words, a free for all. I had just had<lb/>
a cast taken off a week earlier and was walking with<lb/>
a limp. I tried to speak rationally to these people but<lb/>
nothing worked: registration had turned them into<lb/>
anarchists.<lb/>
When these people told me that they were not<lb/>
going to respect the fact that I had woken up earlier,<lb/>
gotten out of bed earlier and dragged my butt across<lb/>
campus earlier, 1 vowed to be first in line. When the<lb/>
little old lady came and unlocked the door at 7am, I<lb/>
screamed please why don't we let her in first, it was<lb/>
obvious that that wasn't going to happen so I just<lb/>
pushed through like everyone else. I would have<lb/>
thrown people down the stairs if they got in front of<lb/>
me, luckily no one did.<lb/>
So the time came, I was first and do you know<lb/>
what happened next? Of course you do, I got<lb/>
screwed. I had listed 18 hours of primary classes<lb/>
and 18 hours of alternatives and I walked out with<lb/>
4 hours: two night classes.<lb/>
If anyone at ECU wants to tell me there is<lb/>
nothing wrong with this system, I would like to<lb/>
have a few words with them. After this latest upset<lb/>
(terminal problems) I debated storming Chancellor<lb/>
Eakin's office with tears in my eyes. Yes I will admit<lb/>
it when I finally left my sacred terminal, I bawled,<lb/>
I was not immediately emotionally capable of com-<lb/>
pletely my registration process, I took ten minutes<lb/>
to pull myself together.<lb/>
But really, who can I blame? I know that if I<lb/>
tried the ECU bureaucracy would shift me around<lb/>
for hours of my precious time. So please tell me,<lb/>
who can I urge to change this terrible system or at<lb/>
least put some public safety on the scene to main-<lb/>
tain order?<lb/>
Tammy Zion<lb/>
Sophomore<lb/>
Communications<lb/>
To the Editor:<lb/>
I can not help but think how some professors<lb/>
(in the Chemistry dept.)think that they are Gods and<lb/>
no one can touch them. I wonder how many students<lb/>
share this feelings with me? I will, later on share my<lb/>
experience at ECU since my arrival in summer 1993.<lb/>
Thanks to Dr. Donald F. Clemens my visit here has<lb/>
come to an end. I see no need for abuse, mistreatment<lb/>
and most of all insult.<lb/>
What do I mean by this? Why am I bothering to<lb/>
write this letter especially since I am leaving in 5<lb/>
weeks? To answer this question I must say that I feel<lb/>
sorry for any student to accept sic the abuse by<lb/>
some professors and hope that they stand for their<lb/>
rights. How can they forget that we are paying their<lb/>
salaries, giving them an easy life? Working few<lb/>
hours a day, 9 monthes ski a year.<lb/>
I would like to share an unfortunate experi-<lb/>
ment with the readers to show the degree of abuse by<lb/>
a professor toward his student. After completing a<lb/>
chemistry class (taught by Dr. Clemons) I received a<lb/>
grade that I thought 1 did not believe I had earned<lb/>
I asked him if I could see my final test (after a few<lb/>
minutes of arguing with him) he stood up and said,<lb/>
"I am FUCKING tired of you, if you dont fsfcj leave<lb/>
I will sue you I was very shocked as well as<lb/>
disappointed. I wrote a letter to the dean of Chem.<lb/>
department and chanceller hk Eakin, all I re-<lb/>
ceived was an apology letter. I do not think that is<lb/>
enough and nor do I beleive that the letter of<lb/>
apology is sincere. I have spoken to many chem.<lb/>
students and most are unhappy with the dept.<lb/>
Last semester Dr. Clemons failed 87 students<lb/>
out of 190. Dr. Holly failed 55 of his students.<lb/>
How can 50-55 of students be dumb and stupid<lb/>
and unable to pass an entry level class? Or is it that<lb/>
ECU accepted all applicant fsfcj whether qualified<lb/>
or not? Or maybe, just maybe, most chemistry<lb/>
professors just dont fsfcj care and not worth a ??<lb/>
Rizz Khoshnan<lb/>
Senior<lb/>
Chemistry<lb/>
To the Editor:<lb/>
In response to Mrs. lrwin's editorial on 3<lb/>
29: I too find it sickening that the Republican<lb/>
party is hounding our great President on issues as<lb/>
stupid as honesty or integrity.<lb/>
What are they thinking?! They should be out<lb/>
working for their constituents, not doing inane<lb/>
investigations into such an important figure, re-<lb/>
gardless of his dealings with James McDougal. So<lb/>
what if McDougal was tried on eight counts of<lb/>
bank fraud? So what if Susan McDougal, long-<lb/>
time friend and business partner of the Clintons,<lb/>
is being sued for writing over 300 unauthorized<lb/>
checks reaching almost $200,000? There is (fortu-<lb/>
nately) no law that says we have to associate with<lb/>
reputable people.<lb/>
Who cares how much they report on their<lb/>
income tax forms? After all, we play the num-<lb/>
bers with the IRS (wink), why not the President?<lb/>
As for the $20,000 check he wrote to buy a house<lb/>
for his mother, who wouldn't! Heck, I like The<lb/>
East Carolinian so much, I'm going to send you<lb/>
check for $50,000. Hope ya'll don't mind I got<lb/>
the money by cheating on my state taxes. 1 just<lb/>
want to help my dear old school paper!<lb/>
Bill Clinton is the President of this great<lb/>
country. Why should he be distracted by such<lb/>
silly investigations into his dealings while he<lb/>
was Governor of Arkansas? It is time we left this<lb/>
brave man alone so he can enjoy his Big Macs<lb/>
and morning jogs in peace!<lb/>
John Dillard<lb/>
Freshman<lb/>
Undecided<lb/>
? '?mmm<lb/>
<pb facs="00058468_0007"/><lb/>
April 7. 1994<lb/>
The East Carolinian<lb/>
Classifieds<lb/>
Page 7<lb/>
For Rent<lb/>
For Rent<lb/>
El Help Wanted! SI Help Wanted<lb/>
RINGGOLD TOWERS<lb/>
Now Taking Leases for<lb/>
1 bedroom, 2 bedroom &amp;<lb/>
Efficiency Apartments.<lb/>
CALL 752-2865<lb/>
TWO ROOMS FOR RENT in 3br, 2<lb/>
12 bath. One bed furnished. Many<lb/>
ameneties at the complex. Available<lb/>
May. Please call Lisa 321-2922, leave<lb/>
message.<lb/>
FEMALE ROOMMATE NEEDED<lb/>
responsible, non-smoker to share 2<lb/>
bedroom apartment. $167 a month<lb/>
plus 12 utilities. Deposit required.<lb/>
Available May 1. Call April 752-7599<lb/>
1-6 BEDROOM HOMES, condo's,<lb/>
duplexes, and apartments for rent.<lb/>
$190 up! Short term lease available!<lb/>
Finders 321-6708 small fee. Near cam-<lb/>
pus rentals available now!<lb/>
NEW ROOMMATE LISTING SER-<lb/>
VICE! Need a roommate list your ad<lb/>
free. To get a list of all the people<lb/>
looking for a roommate 321-6708<lb/>
small fee<lb/>
RINGGOLD TOWERS. Sub-lease<lb/>
efficiency apartment. (May-July) Per-<lb/>
fect for summer school. Practically<lb/>
on-campus- free parking. Call- Leave<lb/>
a message 758-7882<lb/>
UNFURNISHED LARGE FRAME<lb/>
HOUSE, 6-8 bedrooms, 2 baths, for-<lb/>
mal areas, suitable for responsible<lb/>
student group. 2 blocks from cam-<lb/>
pus. $960month. Available June 1,<lb/>
possibly sooner. Also, private effi-<lb/>
ciency garage apt. for one. $250<lb/>
month. Available May 15. Pleasee<lb/>
call 752-5296<lb/>
2 BEDROOM APARTMENT Tar<lb/>
River Estates May-August or take<lb/>
over lease Near pool and bus stop<lb/>
contact (Chris) 757-1022<lb/>
FOR RENT: $250 per room each sum-<lb/>
mer session; phone, cable, util. in-<lb/>
cluded. For more info, call 758-3936.<lb/>
NEEDED- one female to sublease<lb/>
apt. for both summer sessions. Own<lb/>
bedroom. $175 utilities per month.<lb/>
Call Dawn at 752-3422<lb/>
AVAIL. MAY 1ST contemporary,<lb/>
two story, three bedroom, 2 bath du-<lb/>
plex. Cathedral ceilings, second floor<lb/>
w 'balcony overlook. Walk in<lb/>
closets,closets with shelving in bed-<lb/>
rooms, ceiling fans, wd hookup,<lb/>
dishwasher, disposal, storage shed,<lb/>
energy efficient. $600month $600<lb/>
deposit. Call Michele or Debra, 321-<lb/>
4793<lb/>
FEMALE ROOMMATE NEEDED<lb/>
to share 2 bedroom 1 12 bath<lb/>
townhouse apt. Washerdryer, pool,<lb/>
tennis court. $215 month 1 2 utili-<lb/>
ties, avail. May 1, 94. 321-8406<lb/>
FEMALE ROOMATE NEEDED to<lb/>
share 4 bedroom house close to cam-<lb/>
pus. $118.75month 14 utilities.<lb/>
May- August only. Call Amy 758-<lb/>
7328.<lb/>
MOVING TO THE OUTER BANKS<lb/>
of North Carolina (Nags Head) this<lb/>
summer? For summer employment<lb/>
info, please call Pat or Lea at 1-800-<lb/>
833-5233.<lb/>
MID-MAY-1 bedroom apartment, 1<lb/>
block from GC building. $320month<lb/>
includes watersewerbasic cable.<lb/>
Laundry facilities and pool. Call 758-<lb/>
3364.<lb/>
FEMALE ROOMMATE WANTED<lb/>
to share 2 bedroom apartment. Close<lb/>
to campus great location. Call<lb/>
Patricia 752-0009<lb/>
AVAILABLE FOR FALL SEMES-<lb/>
TER- 1 bedroom, in 2bedroom apart-<lb/>
ment located in Tar River apartment<lb/>
complex. Mature, responsible female<lb/>
preferred. Deposit required. $240<lb/>
monthly rent plus 1 2 bills. 830-8984<lb/>
NOW AVAILABLE: 1 bedroom in<lb/>
Sheraton Village 3 bedroom<lb/>
townhouse. Mature, responsible fe-<lb/>
male NS only. Quiet environment,<lb/>
nicely decorated with all major ap-<lb/>
pliances. $230 1 3 bills. 756-8459<lb/>
(Sara).<lb/>
SUBLEASE for summer or take over<lb/>
lease. Two bedroom apt. near cam-<lb/>
pus, $380 monthly. Need one or two<lb/>
people to cover half rent or more.<lb/>
May is paid, call Neil, 758-2334<lb/>
APARTMENT FOR RENT 2 bed-<lb/>
room duplex, pets ok (deposit re-<lb/>
quired), close to campus, wd hook-<lb/>
ups, available 4th of May, rent $350<lb/>
call 752-5080<lb/>
FEMALE ROOMMATE NEEDED<lb/>
to share large 2 bedroom, 212 bath<lb/>
townhouse. Quiet area. 12 rent 1 <lb/>
2 utilities. Non-smoker and studi-<lb/>
ous individual. If interested cail<lb/>
Michelle at 355-1754<lb/>
AVAILABLE MAY. 2 bedroom, 1.5<lb/>
bath condo with all appliances $450<lb/>
month call Eric at 355-0005<lb/>
ROOMMATES NEEDED FOR<lb/>
SUMMER: 4 bedroom, 2 12 bath<lb/>
house, need 2 roommates for sum-<lb/>
mer. Rent$165per month plus utili-<lb/>
ties, close to campus. Cail 758-8616<lb/>
ask for Tricia 205 N. Eastern St.<lb/>
ROOMMATE NEEDED to share 2<lb/>
bdrm carriage house townhouse- so-<lb/>
cial, non-smoker- 1 2 utilities- May<lb/>
94 to May 95 pref. Rent $170 mo. call<lb/>
Jason at 321-6693<lb/>
FEMALE NEEDED to share apart-<lb/>
ment at Wyndham Cir. 4 blocks from<lb/>
campus $190month plus 12 utili-<lb/>
ties call Kelly 758-4450<lb/>
WALK TO CAMPUS! Available<lb/>
May 1st. Young professional couple<lb/>
seeks responsible student to rent a<lb/>
room one house from campus! In-<lb/>
cludes cable, phone, utilities and<lb/>
private entrance. Graduate student<lb/>
preferred. References required. Call<lb/>
758-9903.<lb/>
SUBLEASE FOR SUMMER. 1 bed-<lb/>
room, newly built. $275 month.<lb/>
Available May. Call Lynn 355-1486<lb/>
or Kathy 830-4983 leave message.<lb/>
FEMALE ROOMMATE NEEDED<lb/>
to share brand new Wyndham Court<lb/>
duplex starting August 1st. Non-<lb/>
smoker please! Call Jamie 931-7426<lb/>
SI Help Wanted<lb/>
SUMMER CAMP STAFF: Counse-<lb/>
lors, Instructors, Kitchen, Office,<lb/>
Grounds for western North<lb/>
Carolina's finest Co-ed youth sum-<lb/>
mer sports camp. Over 25 activities<lb/>
including water ski, heated pool,<lb/>
tennis, horseback, art Cool moun-<lb/>
tain climate, good pay and great<lb/>
fun! Non-smokers. For application<lb/>
brochure: 704-692-6239 or Camp<lb/>
Pinewood, Hendersonville, NC<lb/>
28792<lb/>
POSTAL JOBS AVAILABLE! Many<lb/>
positions. Great benefits. Call 1 -800-<lb/>
436-4365 ext.P-3712<lb/>
ATTENTION STUDENTS: Earn<lb/>
extra cash stuffing envelopes at<lb/>
home. All materials provided. Send<lb/>
SASE to Midwest Mailers Po Box<lb/>
395, Olathe, KS 66051. Immediate<lb/>
Response.<lb/>
$10-$400UP WEEKLY. Mailing Bro-<lb/>
chures! SpareFull-time. Set own<lb/>
hours! Rush stamped envelope:<lb/>
Publishers (Gl) 1821 HillandaleRd.<lb/>
1B-295 Durham, NC 27705.<lb/>
INTERNATIONAL EMPLOY-<lb/>
MENT- Make up to $2,000-4,000 <lb/>
mo. teaching basic conversational<lb/>
English in Japan, Taiwan, or S. Ko-<lb/>
rea. No teaching background or<lb/>
Asian languages required. For info,<lb/>
call: (206) 632-1146 ext. J5362<lb/>
NEEDED AT ONCE Girls, Girls,<lb/>
Girls. Earn big summer cash. The<lb/>
best summer job around. Playmates<lb/>
Adult Entertainment call for more<lb/>
info. 747-7686<lb/>
RESPONSIBLEPERSONtocarefor<lb/>
children in our home. Tuesday and<lb/>
Thursday- 7:30-5:30 references re-<lb/>
quired. Call 756-0417before9:00pm<lb/>
HELP WANTED female escorts ap-<lb/>
plications available now. Lucrative<lb/>
financial opportunities. Call 321-<lb/>
8252 anytime or 714-5350 after<lb/>
4:00pm<lb/>
CASHIERSSERVERS Andy's<lb/>
Cheesesteaks @ the Plaza. Must be<lb/>
available a min. of 11-2 M-F will<lb/>
consider 11-2 MWF and 11-2 TTH.<lb/>
Some weekends. No phone calls<lb/>
please.<lb/>
POSITIONS OPEN: water analy-<lb/>
sis- established pool company. 8-1<lb/>
or 1-6 and every other Saturday.<lb/>
Must be able to work on Holidays.<lb/>
Call 355-7121<lb/>
WAREHOUSE POSITIONS: Full-<lb/>
time- April until September. Satur-<lb/>
days may be required. Ca 11355-7121.<lb/>
HELP WANTED modeling, danc-<lb/>
ing, adult conversation full or part-<lb/>
time. Will accomodateschool sched-<lb/>
ule. $300-500 weekly call 746-6762<lb/>
BRODY'S is accepting applications<lb/>
for office associates. Positions offer<lb/>
a variety of job duties including:<lb/>
Trader Kate's<lb/>
Opening for Stock &amp; Delivery Person<lb/>
30-35 hours a week. Must be neat, well mannered,<lb/>
and outgoing. Must be able to lift heavy merchandise<lb/>
and have a clean driving record.<lb/>
Salary based on experience.<lb/>
Apply in person Tuesday April 5, between<lb/>
l-6pm &amp; Thursday April 7 between 1-6 pm.<lb/>
SUMMER JOB OPPORTUNITY<lb/>
Did you save any money last summer?<lb/>
Earn $4,000 $5,000 this Summer!<lb/>
3 Credit Hours<lb/>
Contact VARSITY INTERNSHIP PROGRAM<lb/>
1-800-251-4000 Ext. 1576<lb/>
computer data entry, preparation<lb/>
of mailer, supply requisitionsdis-<lb/>
tribution. For computer position, in-<lb/>
dividual must be proficient with<lb/>
Microsoft Excel, Microsoft word,<lb/>
Pagemaker, Access and others. In-<lb/>
terview Mon. and Thursdays, 1-<lb/>
4pm, Brody's The Plaza.<lb/>
BRODY'S is accepting applications<lb/>
tor addtional sales associates in the<lb/>
Juniors and Men's Departments.<lb/>
Flexible Part-time am, afternoon, or<lb/>
pm scheduling options. Interview<lb/>
Mondays and Thursdays, l-4pm,<lb/>
Brody's The Plaza.<lb/>
EARN MONEY in your own home<lb/>
or business stuffing envelopes.<lb/>
Great opportunity! Tired of work-<lb/>
ing for someone else? For info, rush<lb/>
$1 and self addressed stamped en-<lb/>
velope: Po box 1811 Greenville, NC<lb/>
27835<lb/>
'ct.Aj.)fll K nirrcntly a rpptin;<lb/>
applications for the position of<lb/>
Production Manager. Some<lb/>
audio editing experience is<lb/>
required and Audio Production<lb/>
Majors are preferred. Apply at<lb/>
WZMB andor contact A. Lee<lb/>
Judge at WZMB at 757-4751<lb/>
For Sale<lb/>
GOVERNMENT SEIZED cars,<lb/>
trucks, boats, 4 wheelers,<lb/>
motohomes, by FBI, IRS, DEA. Na-<lb/>
tionwide auction listings available<lb/>
now. Call 1-800-436-4363 Ext. C-5999.<lb/>
EUROPE THIS SUMMER? Fly-only<lb/>
$169! California- $129 ea. way!<lb/>
Florida too. CaribbeanMexican<lb/>
Coast rt $189! No gimmicks-no<lb/>
hitches. Airtech 1-800-575-TECH<lb/>
QUEEN SIZE WATERBED, frame,<lb/>
mattress, heater, padded rails $175<lb/>
or obo. 757-9645<lb/>
1985 CONNER MOBILE HOME,<lb/>
12'x56 Two bedrooms, one bath,<lb/>
kitchen and livingroom. Located in<lb/>
Evans Mobile Home Park. Partly<lb/>
furnished, underpinning and a 6'x6'<lb/>
storage building included in the<lb/>
price. Perfect for starting couple or<lb/>
ECU students trying to save on<lb/>
monthly rental costs. Available for<lb/>
move in on August 1st. Asking<lb/>
$9,500. Those interested please call<lb/>
(919)321-2577 for more information.<lb/>
HAWAIIAN ISLAND CRE-<lb/>
ATIONS SURFBOARD (6ft) and<lb/>
O'Neil wet suit, $220 for both. Call<lb/>
758-1818<lb/>
LOSE WEIGHT NOW! 25- 30 people<lb/>
wanted. No will power needed. Doc-<lb/>
tor recommended. All natural. 100<lb/>
guarantee. Products for body build-<lb/>
ers too! Call: 752-2551<lb/>
HATE TO SELL '76Volvo wagon.<lb/>
Almost 119,000 miles. Great me-<lb/>
chanical condition! Very reliable!<lb/>
Kept good maintenance records. Still<lb/>
have owner's manual $980 firm.<lb/>
752-6993.<lb/>
KICKER CTF SPEAKERBOX, ex-<lb/>
cellent condition, paid $385 new, ask-<lb/>
ing $275 obo. Call John at 355-8996.<lb/>
FOR SALE: couch with matching<lb/>
chair, $125 Dorm loft with headboard<lb/>
and bookshelf, $90 ask for Lee Ann<lb/>
752-1360<lb/>
78 VOLKS RABBIT good condition<lb/>
$700 obo must sell asap at, 2 dr call<lb/>
931-7381<lb/>
ATTENTION WEIGHT LIFTERS<lb/>
AND WATCHERS: warm weather<lb/>
is approaching and you want to look<lb/>
your best! Sports supplements at ma-<lb/>
jor discount prices: Met-rx, OXG,<lb/>
Creatine, Cybergenics, Vanadyl Sul-<lb/>
f ate, Hot Stuff, Weight gain powders<lb/>
(all), Amino Acids, Super<lb/>
Chromoplex, Tri-Chromelene,<lb/>
Cybertrim, Quick Trim, Super Fat<lb/>
Burners, Herbs, Multi-Vitamins, Su-<lb/>
For Sale<lb/>
per Golden Seal, and manv more!<lb/>
Call Brad at 931-9097 for more info.<lb/>
E3 Services Offered<lb/>
For Advertising<lb/>
Information, Contact out<lb/>
of our Account 'Executive<lb/>
1 ?<lb/>
SHELLEY FURLOUGH<lb/>
TONYA HEATH<lb/>
SEAN MCLAUGHLIN<lb/>
BRANDON PERRY<lb/>
10 Services Offered<lb/>
Sorority socials and weddings. For<lb/>
the widest selection of music and<lb/>
unbeatable sound and professional-<lb/>
ism, except no imitations! Discounts<lb/>
to all ECU students. Call Rob @ 757-<lb/>
2658 ,<lb/>
OLDER ECU STUDENT with fam-<lb/>
ily seeks position of groundskeeper<lb/>
in exchange for living quarters. 11<lb/>
years landscaping experience. Mov-<lb/>
ing to Greenville in May. Please call<lb/>
Phil at (919)426-1409<lb/>
E<lb/>
i<lb/>
Personals<lb/>
TYPING- Quick and accurate re-<lb/>
sumes- letters - term papers, excellent<lb/>
proofreading skills, satisfaction guar-<lb/>
anteed. Wed Fri. 9am- 5pm reason-<lb/>
able rates 321-1268<lb/>
ACCURATE, FAST, CONFIDEN-<lb/>
TIAL, PROFESSIONAL Resume<lb/>
secretarial work. Specializing in re-<lb/>
sume composition w cover letters<lb/>
stored on disk, term papers, general<lb/>
typing. Word perfect or Microsoft<lb/>
Word for windows software. Call to-<lb/>
day (8a-5p?752-9959) (evenings?<lb/>
527-9133)<lb/>
EXPERIENCED DJ from Bogies for<lb/>
hire. Specializing in Fraternity and<lb/>
LAST SATURDAY, ECU'S Goju<lb/>
Shorin Martial Arts Club kicked butt<lb/>
in Wilmington, NC once again. Match<lb/>
19th ended with a bang when Ea$t<lb/>
Carolina University cleaned up th;<lb/>
awards table. Congratulations gods<lb/>
to Jason Davis, Pam Marr, CKris<lb/>
Richards, and Sonia Swaney for first<lb/>
place in Kata; Kiesha Kerns and<lb/>
Michelle Trnnt for first place in spar-<lb/>
ring; Jose Bercedoni, Kiesha Kerns,<lb/>
and Michelle Trant for second place<lb/>
in Kata; Randy Bower, Kim Brinson,<lb/>
Chad Doherty, Pam Marr, and James<lb/>
Roberts for second place in sparring;<lb/>
Lee Baird, Kim Brinson, and Chris<lb/>
Newton for third place in Kata;DaVid<lb/>
Jordan and Chris Richards for third<lb/>
place in sparring; Mike Schertizinger<lb/>
and Sonia Swaney for fourth place in<lb/>
sparring; and Paul Rogers for honor-<lb/>
able mention. Overall, East Carolina<lb/>
University was well represented and<lb/>
honored by its Goju Shorin Martial<lb/>
Arts Club. Keep up the good work<lb/>
and congratulationsfordoingitagain!<lb/>
IQ<lb/>
Greek<lb/>
SIG MA NU-congra tula tions to Steve<lb/>
Mann and MikeCollini, thesoul men,<lb/>
for winning the Greek Week all sing.<lb/>
CONGRATULATIONS<lb/>
CHANDRA on your PIKA lavalier!<lb/>
Love, your Sigma sisters.<lb/>
SIG EP, we had a great time last Wed.<lb/>
night, the surprise was very enter-<lb/>
taining! Let's get together again soon.<lb/>
Love, Sigmas. ; i<lb/>
Carolina Imprints<lb/>
Now hiring for 2nd &amp; 3rd shifts.<lb/>
Requirements are as follows:<lb/>
?High School Diploma<lb/>
?Valid Drivers License &amp;Transportation<lb/>
?Drug Screening Mandatory<lb/>
?Steady Past Employment a must.<lb/>
Call Monday through Thursday from 6 to 8 pm only<lb/>
for phone interview at (919) 830-1929 ? Weekend shifts available.<lb/>
2<lb/>
ITRACT<lb/>
FOR T.<lb/>
GOOD<lb/>
(NO<lb/>
(BRINi<lb/>
on camera inte<lb/>
t-s:<lb/>
at GUNSMOKE<lb/>
15 MILES SO<lb/>
12 BLOCK<lb/>
3pm to<lb/>
ODUCnONS<lb/>
ON RIGHT<lb/>
WIGGLY<lb/>
i.<lb/>
FIELD SCOUTS - LATE MAY TO MID-SEPTEMBER.<lb/>
MUST BE TRUSTWORTHY, RELIABLE, AND<lb/>
CONSCIENTIOUS, IN GOOD PHYSICAL SHAPE,<lb/>
LOVE THE OUTDOORS AND HAVE RELIABLE <lb/>
TRANSPORTATION. SALARY PLUS MILEAGE.<lb/>
EXCELLENT OPPORTUNITY FOR COLLEGE <lb/>
STUDENTS AND TEACHERS LOOKING FOR<lb/>
SUMMER WORK. SEND RESUME TO MCSI, '<lb/>
P.O. BOX 370, COVE CITY, NC 28523<lb/>
OR FAX TO 919-637-2125.<lb/>
Announcements<lb/>
SPECIAL OLYMPICS<lb/>
1994 Greenvi"e Pitt County Special<lb/>
Olympics spring games will be held on<lb/>
Fri. April 15 at Rose High School Sta-<lb/>
dium. Volunteers are needed to help<lb/>
serve as buddieschaperones for the<lb/>
special olympians. Volunteers must be<lb/>
able to work all day from 9am to 2pm.<lb/>
An orientation meeting will be held on<lb/>
Wed. April 13inold Joyner library room<lb/>
221 from 5 til 6pm for more info, contact<lb/>
Lisa Inly at 8304551<lb/>
ART AND RELIGION IN THE<lb/>
SAMUEL H.KREST<lb/>
COLLECTION.<lb/>
Art History society presents a lecture by<lb/>
Dr. David Steel,curatorofEuropean art,<lb/>
North Carolina museum of art on Wed.<lb/>
April 13at 7:00pm in the Francis Speight<lb/>
Auditorium in Jenkins Fine Arts Build-<lb/>
ing.<lb/>
ECU SCHOOL OF MUSIC EVENTS<lb/>
FOR APRIL 5-11<lb/>
Tues. April 5?Ned Holder, trombone,<lb/>
graduate recital (AJ Fletcher Recital Hall,<lb/>
7:00pm, free) Also on Apr. 5?Bryant<lb/>
Moore, piano, senior recital (AJ Fletcher<lb/>
Recital hall, 9:00pm, free) Wed. Apr. 6?<lb/>
ECU Trombone choir, George<lb/>
Broussard, Dir. (A Retcher recital hall,<lb/>
8:00pm free) Thur. Apr. 7?ECU Con-<lb/>
cert Choir, Brett Watson, Conductor (AJ<lb/>
Hetcher recital hall, 8:00pm, free)Fri.<lb/>
Apr. 8?Angela Gomes, cello, graduate<lb/>
recital (AJ Fletcher recital hall, 7:00pm,<lb/>
free) Also on Apr. 8?Rodger Bryan,<lb/>
string bass, senior recital (AJ Fletcher<lb/>
recital hall, 9:00pm, free) Sat. Apr. 9?<lb/>
Michael A. McDonald, tuba, junior re-<lb/>
cital (AJ Hetcher recital hall, 4:00pm,<lb/>
free) Also on Apr. 9? Fred Richard<lb/>
Smith, trumpet, senior recital (AJ<lb/>
Hetcher recital hall, 7:00pm, free) Also<lb/>
on Apr. 9?Mike McGinnis, composi-<lb/>
tion, graduate recital (AJ Hetcher recital<lb/>
hall, 9:00pm, free) Sun. Apr. 10? Sun-<lb/>
days at theGallery concert Vocal cham-<lb/>
ber music by ECU students dir. by A.<lb/>
Louise Toppin (Greenville museum of<lb/>
Art, 2:00pm free) Also on Apr. 10?ECU<lb/>
concert choir, Brett Watson, conductor<lb/>
(First Presbyterian Church, Kinston, NC,<lb/>
7:30pm free) Also on Apr. 10? ECU<lb/>
trumpet choir and Quintessential Brass<lb/>
Quintet, Britton Theurer, Dir. (AJ<lb/>
Hetcher recital hall, 8:30pm, free) Mon,<lb/>
Apr. 11? ECU Percussion players,<lb/>
Harold Jones, Dir. (AJ Hetcher recital<lb/>
hall, 8:00pm, free)<lb/>
ATTENTION ALL<lb/>
ORGANIZATIONS<lb/>
Gamma Sig and Alpha Sig are collecting<lb/>
coins for the Dream Factory April 4-15 in<lb/>
front of the Student Store. Please help us<lb/>
grant a child a dream.<lb/>
THE PRE-PHYSICAL<lb/>
THERAPY CLUB<lb/>
will be holding a meeting April 11th in<lb/>
Mendenhall (rrom 14) at 8:00pm. All<lb/>
are welcome. Elections will be held dur-<lb/>
ing this meeting. If you have questions,<lb/>
call Dawn (757-0573)<lb/>
AMERICAN CHEMICAL SOCIETY<lb/>
(ACS) meeting Thursday 5:30 Hanagan.<lb/>
Interested students welcome.<lb/>
ECU POETRY FORUM<lb/>
will meet on Thursday, April 7th in<lb/>
Mendenhall StudentCenter, Room 248at<lb/>
8pm. Open to the general public, the to-<lb/>
rum is a free workshop. Those planning to<lb/>
attend and wanting critical feedback on<lb/>
their work should bring 8 or 10 copies of<lb/>
each poem. Listeners welcome.<lb/>
IS IT FRISBEE IS IT GOLF?<lb/>
No it's frisbee golf! Come join a frisbee<lb/>
golfsinglestournamentonWed.andThur.<lb/>
April 13-14.Cometothedisccourseat3:00<lb/>
and be ready to show us what you've got!<lb/>
For more info, call Recreation Sen ices at<lb/>
757-6387orstopby204ChristenburyGym.<lb/>
MASSAGE CLINIC<lb/>
given by ECU FT students, April 13 from<lb/>
6pm to 9pm at Allied Health Bldg. $1.50<lb/>
per 10 min, max. 30min. $2.00at thedoor.<lb/>
Tickets may be purchased from FT stu-<lb/>
dents or Back &amp; Limb Clinic in advance.<lb/>
Ladies wear halter orbikini top&amp;shorts,<lb/>
men t-shirt and shorts.<lb/>
THE NEXT GAMMA BETA PHI<lb/>
MEETING<lb/>
will be held on April 12 at 5:00pm in<lb/>
MSC Multipurpose room. All members<lb/>
must attend! Officer nominations and<lb/>
elections will be held at this meeting.<lb/>
Don'tforgetyour baked good for Teacher<lb/>
Appreciation Dav! We would also like to<lb/>
thank all members who helped with the<lb/>
book drive and who donated books. We<lb/>
look forward to seeing you there! for<lb/>
more info, contact Allison at 931-8285.<lb/>
?p-<lb/>
<pb facs="00058468_0008"/><lb/>
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<pb facs="00058468_0009"/><lb/>
The East Carolinian<lb/>
April 7, 1994<lb/>
Lifestyle<lb/>
Page 9<lb/>
Paintbrush taken to fashion<lb/>
i<lb/>
By Cindy Hawkins<lb/>
Staff Writer<lb/>
Jacqueline PetersCully is a New<lb/>
York designer and colorist who has<lb/>
her paintbrush on the pulse of the<lb/>
international fashion industry.<lb/>
Sponsored by the Minority Pres-<lb/>
ence Initiative Series, this distin-<lb/>
guished designer will be conduct-<lb/>
ing a lecture and workshops in the<lb/>
Jenkins Fine Art Center April 7-9.<lb/>
Sara Edmiston, a textiles professor<lb/>
in the School of Art states, "We are<lb/>
very lucky to have such a distin-<lb/>
guished artist on campus<lb/>
Cully, who aspired to be a fash-<lb/>
ion designer in the 1950s, traveled<lb/>
to France to attend an esteemed<lb/>
fashion school run bv the Paris Cou-<lb/>
ture Houses. Upon<lb/>
entering New York<lb/>
City, she met with<lb/>
fashion editors who<lb/>
proved to be deter-<lb/>
rents to fashion de-<lb/>
sign, compelling her<lb/>
to seek a career in tex-<lb/>
tile design instead.<lb/>
The initial rejections<lb/>
allowed Cully to<lb/>
flower as a designer<lb/>
and eventually she<lb/>
founded the Jackie<lb/>
Peters Design Studio.<lb/>
Her clients include Liz<lb/>
Claiborne, Oscar de la Renta and<lb/>
Gottex Swimwear. She has been<lb/>
profiled as a fashion god-head in<lb/>
Ebony and Galleria magazine. Her<lb/>
Era<lb/>
IAS I<lb/>
CAKOl INA<lb/>
UNIVERSITY<lb/>
thriving business is<lb/>
the result of an<lb/>
ingenuitive selling<lb/>
strategy in which she<lb/>
began to display de-<lb/>
signs on silk instead<lb/>
of using the tradi-<lb/>
tional paper model.<lb/>
"This makes it pos-<lb/>
sible to drape it over<lb/>
your arm or gather it<lb/>
up like a skirt. It<lb/>
makes a design so<lb/>
much easier to sell<lb/>
Cully said.<lb/>
Cully is also a painter whose<lb/>
passion is watercolors. She has ex-<lb/>
hibited her work in American and<lb/>
Canadian galleries for many years<lb/>
and has been featured in Watercol-<lb/>
ors magazine.<lb/>
"Creating a textile is more regi-<lb/>
mented-there's more of a formula-<lb/>
whereasevery timeldoanewpaint-<lb/>
ing, it challenges me with new ob-<lb/>
stacles Cully said.<lb/>
For all interested persons, the<lb/>
free lecture isat7p.m. on Thursday,<lb/>
April 7th. The workshops will be<lb/>
on the following two days and will<lb/>
offer instruction on the use of French<lb/>
Sennelier dyes on silk. This dy-<lb/>
namic artist and business woman<lb/>
promises to be an interesting and<lb/>
open teacher. "Teaching has taught<lb/>
me to analyze what I was doing in<lb/>
order to give the information to<lb/>
students and this industry has given<lb/>
me a lot she says. "I think I should<lb/>
give something back<lb/>
Where's<lb/>
taste in<lb/>
our beer?<lb/>
Staff Reports<lb/>
The East Carolinian<lb/>
There are ales and lagers,<lb/>
lights and stouts, porters, bocks,<lb/>
pilseners and specialty brews.<lb/>
But the average American res-<lb/>
taurant patron might never<lb/>
know it, and that's a shame,<lb/>
according to an East Carolina<lb/>
University beverage manage-<lb/>
ment expert.<lb/>
Or. Jennifer E. Crouch, a<lb/>
professor in the Department of<lb/>
Nutritionand Hospitality Man-<lb/>
agement, is convinced that the<lb/>
majority of beer drinkers are<lb/>
missing out on the flavor of<lb/>
Win at Hendrix Theatre<lb/>
good brews and it may be time<lb/>
for restaurants to help broaden<lb/>
the tastes of their customers.<lb/>
Restaurants should use<lb/>
their menus to give their cus-<lb/>
tomers a beer flavor range,<lb/>
Crouch said.<lb/>
In England and Germany,<lb/>
where beer is socially accepted<lb/>
as a food, restaurants and tav-<lb/>
erns offer as many as eight dif-<lb/>
ferent brands on tap in varieties<lb/>
ranging from lights to darks,<lb/>
See BEER page 12<lb/>
By Stephanie Tullo<lb/>
Lifestyle Editor<lb/>
The Films Committee for the<lb/>
Student Union has altered the nor-<lb/>
mal program of movies by creating<lb/>
promotions to attract more view-<lb/>
ers, such as Pennies from Hendrix.<lb/>
The current attendance count for<lb/>
Pennies from Hendrix as of April 4<lb/>
of this year is 30,466.<lb/>
The door attendants account<lb/>
for the number of people whocome<lb/>
through the door, and the 35,000th<lb/>
person through the door will re-<lb/>
ceive $350 in cash. "There will be<lb/>
numerous give-aways during the<lb/>
season, such as lottery-coupons and<lb/>
shows said Franco Sacchi, a mem-<lb/>
ber of the Films Committee.<lb/>
"We started keeping track of<lb/>
numbers last year, this year's atten-<lb/>
dance is varied in number, but last<lb/>
year's total was 31,000 said J.<lb/>
Marshall assistant director of Stu-<lb/>
dent Activities.<lb/>
"Last year's attendance<lb/>
dropped a lot because the Film Com-<lb/>
mittee had a lack of money so not<lb/>
always the more popular films were<lb/>
shown said Marshall.<lb/>
"This year, there are more cur-<lb/>
rent releases and a wide variety of<lb/>
movies and we hope the numbers<lb/>
will be better than last year's said<lb/>
Marshall We are attempting to get<lb/>
the movies before they get on<lb/>
video<lb/>
The Film Committee meetings<lb/>
are open to all students and they<lb/>
can vote on films to come to Hendrix<lb/>
Theatre.<lb/>
There will be several other<lb/>
movies this semester including<lb/>
"Three Musketeers" starting on<lb/>
April 6-9.<lb/>
"We gave away Robert<lb/>
Fulghum tickets, as promotion, and<lb/>
we are planning to schedule<lb/>
theRoc&amp;y Horror Picture Show for<lb/>
Barefoot on the Mall. Hopefully,<lb/>
this will appeal to students and en-<lb/>
courage them toattend the free films<lb/>
wehaveatHendrix'said Marshall.<lb/>
Riders<lb/>
day out<lb/>
Bicyclers appear out of<lb/>
no where to take a ride<lb/>
and enjoy the glorious<lb/>
weather mom nature<lb/>
has sprung on us. There<lb/>
is no better way to enjoy<lb/>
a spring day than riding<lb/>
bikes across campus!<lb/>
Photo by Cedric<lb/>
Van Buren<lb/>
m<lb/>
r<lb/>
CD Reviews CD Reviews CD Reviews<lb/>
J Don't Buy<lb/>
ss<lb/>
00 Take Your Chances<lb/>
m<lb/>
an<lb/>
Worth A Try<lb/>
Definite Purchase<lb/>
Reg. E. Gaines<lb/>
Please Don't Take<lb/>
My Air J or dans<lb/>
RegE.GainescomesfromMTV.<lb/>
This tells us more about him than<lb/>
any geographic point of origin ever<lb/>
could. Being from New York means<lb/>
at least a passing familiarity with<lb/>
crime and urban decay. Being from<lb/>
MTV, however, means that you're<lb/>
young, hip and trendy. It means<lb/>
you're a rap star from the ghetto, or<lb/>
a self-destructive prophet of grunge,<lb/>
or a cute girl singer with a hit movie<lb/>
or that you know one of these<lb/>
people. It means you wear certain<lb/>
clothes and talk about certain things<lb/>
and are easily sold to a certain mar-<lb/>
ket (the young, hip and trendy, or<lb/>
rather those who want to be young,<lb/>
hip and trendy). It means you fit<lb/>
whatever arbitrary version of cool-<lb/>
ness MTV is selling at a given mo-<lb/>
ment. Reg E. Gaines comes from<lb/>
MTV. And yet, I still kind of like the<lb/>
guy-<lb/>
Gaines is what they're calling a<lb/>
"spoken word" performer these<lb/>
days (he would have been called a<lb/>
poet in years past, but now I'm just<lb/>
splitting hairs).<lb/>
He traveled with MTV's Spo-<lb/>
ken Word tour last year to good<lb/>
response, so now someone's gone<lb/>
and given him a record contract.<lb/>
Gaines takes a lot of his style from<lb/>
rap, from black story-tellers like<lb/>
Rudy-Ray Moore (of Dolemite<lb/>
fame), and from the white beat po-<lb/>
ets of the '50s. Of course, the beats<lb/>
were borrowing rhythms from black<lb/>
jazz artists, so I guess it's just a case<lb/>
of some wayward pigeons coming<lb/>
home to roost.<lb/>
On Please Don't Take My Air<lb/>
Jordans, Gaines' first album, he talks<lb/>
about a lot of trendy issues. In the<lb/>
title track, he goes into the mind of<lb/>
a ghetto kid who kills to get a pair of<lb/>
tennis shoes. While Gaines does a<lb/>
good jobof ill us tratingthe mind-set<lb/>
and social situations that bring<lb/>
people to murder for footwear, this<lb/>
track is a good example of what I<lb/>
don't like about his work. Like ev-<lb/>
erything else involved with MTV,<lb/>
this stuff is too trendy. He exploits<lb/>
big media issues too often for my<lb/>
taste; Gaines has a flair for language,<lb/>
but ultimately, I've heard it all be-<lb/>
fore.<lb/>
Having said that, however, I<lb/>
must admit that this album is not all<lb/>
bad. One track in particular, "Wa-<lb/>
termelon, Lox &amp; Bagels which<lb/>
deals with relations between the<lb/>
black and Jewish communities, is<lb/>
clever enough to transcend its "is-<lb/>
sue of the week" mentality. Also<lb/>
scoring points in the cleverness de-<lb/>
partment is "When I Grow Up I<lb/>
Wanna Be Just Like John Gotti a<lb/>
sarcastic indictment of gangsterism.<lb/>
Similarly, Gaines' jabs at Michael<lb/>
Jackson in "Off Da Wall" strike<lb/>
home with a weird finesse. Gaines<lb/>
is a good enough poet to sometimes<lb/>
impress me so much with his ap-<lb/>
proach that I forget to be cynical<lb/>
about his choice of subject matter.<lb/>
Overall, Please Don't Take My<lb/>
Air jordans is a fairly entertaining<lb/>
spoken word album. I enjoy all of<lb/>
the material that's influenced Reg<lb/>
E. Gaines, and he meshes them<lb/>
rather well. A couple of tracks had<lb/>
me wondering what would hap-<lb/>
pen if Jack Kerouac had been a mem-<lb/>
ber of Public Enemy instead of a<lb/>
white intellectual. Gaines is also a<lb/>
good poet, and the backing music<lb/>
he's chosen to read over (mostly<lb/>
jazz and hip hop) keeps things from<lb/>
getting boring. I just wish he could<lb/>
break out of tha t MTV loop of trendy<lb/>
topics and get down to something<lb/>
real.<lb/>
? Mark<lb/>
Brett<lb/>
Voices color<lb/>
'Sister! Sister<lb/>
Staff Reports<lb/>
The East Carolinian<lb/>
Women of many colors and<lb/>
cultures will find their voices in<lb/>
Vinie Burrows' one-woman<lb/>
show, "SisteriSister which is to<lb/>
be performed here Saturday,<lb/>
April 9.<lb/>
The performance is sched-<lb/>
uled for 8 p.m. at the Rio in the<lb/>
Hilton Inn and is presented in<lb/>
conjunction with the 18th annual<lb/>
Southeastern Women's Studies<lb/>
Association Conference hosted<lb/>
by ECU. The "Sister! Sister<lb/>
show is free and open to the pub-<lb/>
lic.<lb/>
One of seven one-woman<lb/>
shows in Burrows' repertoire,<lb/>
"Sister! Sister includes words<lb/>
from writers and speakers in the<lb/>
United States, Ireland and South<lb/>
Africa.<lb/>
The performer, an African<lb/>
American and native New<lb/>
Yorker, began her career as a<lb/>
child actress on Broadway with<lb/>
Helen Hayes and has appeared<lb/>
in seven Broadway productions.<lb/>
Later, Burrows assembled he'<lb/>
solo productions because of the J<lb/>
lack of quality roles for black<lb/>
actors. She has performed on<lb/>
numerous Americancampuses<lb/>
and toured widely in Europe<lb/>
and Africa.<lb/>
In addition to her stage ca-<lb/>
reer, Burrows has writing and"<lb/>
producing credits in radio, TV<lb/>
and film. She has also partici-jj<lb/>
pated inmany U.N. conferences;<lb/>
and has been involved with ??<lb/>
sues of apartheid, women's<lb/>
rights, sustainable development<lb/>
and youth. She chairs the U.N<lb/>
Non-Governmental Organiza-<lb/>
tions Committee on Southern<lb/>
Africa and serves as interna-<lb/>
tional secretary for Women for<lb/>
Racial and Economic Equality. <lb/>
Among her honors has been<lb/>
the National Organization for<lb/>
Women's Susan B. Anthony<lb/>
Award.<lb/>
Further information about<lb/>
Burrows' Greenville perfor-<lb/>
mance is available from the<lb/>
Women's Studies Office at ECU,<lb/>
phone (919)-757-6268.<lb/>
Hiking opportunities for<lb/>
adventurous volunteers<lb/>
By Steve Griffin<lb/>
Staff Writer<lb/>
The American Hiking Society<lb/>
has created a program called the<lb/>
"1994 Helping Out in the Out-<lb/>
doors" which offers a variety of<lb/>
volunteer opportunities. The need<lb/>
for volunteers in a national or state<lb/>
park is at an all-time high.<lb/>
A directory is available<lb/>
with more than 2,000 volun-<lb/>
teer jobs from campground<lb/>
hosts to trail crews. Susan<lb/>
Henley of AHS said, "It is a<lb/>
chance to meet new<lb/>
people, see great scenery,<lb/>
get valuable experience<lb/>
and learn more about<lb/>
America's outdoor trea-<lb/>
sures while making a dif-<lb/>
ference for public parks<lb/>
and forests<lb/>
AHS is also offering<lb/>
a "Volunteer Vacations<lb/>
program this summer. This<lb/>
sends teams of volunteers on a<lb/>
10 day vacation to some beau-<lb/>
tiful parts of the country. Last<lb/>
year, 350 volunteers worked<lb/>
in locations that range from<lb/>
the exotic, such as Maui in<lb/>
Hawaii, to the pristine Ad-<lb/>
miralty islands in the Alas-<lb/>
kan Pacific. Working projects<lb/>
can range horn trail maintenance<lb/>
to bridge building. Volunteers<lb/>
should be experienced hikers, 18<lb/>
years of age and up, who are com-<lb/>
fortable in these settings and<lb/>
physically able to backpack in and<lb/>
work hard said Susan Henley.<lb/>
Since 1979, volunteer vacation- ?<lb/>
ers have helped make some of<lb/>
the country's most spectacular<lb/>
recreation areas safer and moreJ<lb/>
accessible.<lb/>
The American Hiking Soci-<lb/>
ety is also sponsoring the second<lb/>
"National Trails Dav Last year,<lb/>
the first Trails day had more than<lb/>
750,000 outdoor enthusiasts!<lb/>
attend 2,500 public!<lb/>
events. Like<lb/>
America's trails and I<lb/>
green ways, National<lb/>
Trails Day offers some<lb/>
thing for everyone<lb/>
says AHS President:<lb/>
Bruce Ward.<lb/>
i<lb/>
' "Whether your plea<lb/>
sure is walking, riding j<lb/>
a bicycle or horse, or if<lb/>
you're looking foranac<lb/>
cessible pathway to<lb/>
wheel a wheelchair, there<lb/>
will be a National Trails<lb/>
Dayeventnearby Theday<lb/>
is also promoting the estab-<lb/>
lishment of an intercon- ?<lb/>
nected, nationwide network -<lb/>
of trails across America. The<lb/>
day also celebrates Ameri-<lb/>
can volunteerism, because<lb/>
a majority of the nation's 1<lb/>
300,000 miles of trails I<lb/>
are maintained by vol-<lb/>
unteer crews. The<lb/>
events will be held on June 4.  <lb/>
For more information about<lb/>
the AHS summer programs, write<lb/>
to American Hiking Society, P.O. I<lb/>
Box 20160, Washington DC<lb/>
2 0 0 4 1-2160.<lb/>
Broadway hosts English drama<lb/>
LONDON (AP)?The year was<lb/>
1968, the play was "Loot and British<lb/>
actor Kenneth Cranham was out of<lb/>
work on Broadway after five weeks.<lb/>
Twenty-six years later, Cranham<lb/>
is heading back to New York in a<lb/>
London hit, J.B. Priestley's 1945 "An<lb/>
Inspector Calls in the title role of the<lb/>
morally inquiring Goole.<lb/>
Cranham hasn't performed in<lb/>
New York since that quick failure in<lb/>
Joe Orton's subversive farce. "I've<lb/>
tended to borrow the charisma of<lb/>
friends who have played there he<lb/>
joked.<lb/>
This time Cranham is signed for<lb/>
nine months, and the prospects look<lb/>
good. Co-starring Rosemary Harris<lb/>
and Philip Bosco as a posh Yorkshire<lb/>
couple ? the Birlings ? whose el-<lb/>
egantworld literally collapses around<lb/>
rhemAnInspectorCalls"opensApril<lb/>
27 at the Royale Theater.<lb/>
In London, Stephen Daldry's<lb/>
Olivier Award-winning revival turned<lb/>
an English theatrical warhorse into<lb/>
political theater?abetted by a set (by<lb/>
IanMacNeil)rhatconstituteditsown<lb/>
must-see. Small wonder, then, mate<lb/>
after 400 detections, Cranham re- <lb/>
fusedtohangupliislrispector'scloak.<lb/>
"When youha ve very vital writ-<lb/>
ing to perform in the theater, you I<lb/>
never want to stop doing it theN 1<lb/>
actor said in an interview backstage j<lb/>
attheAldvvychTheateronthedayof J<lb/>
hislasttwoWestEndperformances j<lb/>
"It's like a painting you've i<lb/>
worked and worked on he saida ;<lb/>
poster of the 1954 film at "Inspect ;<lb/>
tor with Alastair Sim, above his J<lb/>
dressing room bed. "The whole text J<lb/>
is covered in scar tissue<lb/>
Serious plays are dicey on,<lb/>
Broadway, but Daldry keeps, <lb/>
Priestley'sclassic morality play crack<lb/>
ling, as the investigation of a young-<lb/>
woman's death blows open the in- 3<lb/>
sularity ? and cruelty ? of an old,<lb/>
privileged order. J<lb/>
The success of this "Inspector<lb/>
took London theater folk by suj.<lb/>
?<lb/>
See THEATRE page 12<lb/>
<pb facs="00058468_0010"/><lb/>
10 The East Carolinian<lb/>
April 7. 1994<lb/>
Actor Thewlis improvises<lb/>
LOS ANGELES (AP) ? For de-<lb/>
cades screenwriters have screamed<lb/>
every time an actor declares he in-<lb/>
vented some of his dialogue. Here's<lb/>
one actor who can safely make that<lb/>
claim: David Thewlis.<lb/>
The British actor says that he<lb/>
improvised all his dialogue as the<lb/>
erratic, anti-social Johnny in Naked.<lb/>
The role brought ?MHMiHHH<lb/>
him best-actor<lb/>
awards from the<lb/>
Cannes Film<lb/>
Festival, New<lb/>
York Film Crit-<lb/>
ics, National So-<lb/>
ciety ofFilmCrit-<lb/>
ics,LondonFilm<lb/>
Critics Circle<lb/>
and several in-<lb/>
dividual critics.<lb/>
3 Thewlis en-<lb/>
thusiasts were mmmmmmm<lb/>
disappointed when he was over-<lb/>
looked foran Academy Awardnomi-<lb/>
riation. Thefilm'slimited releasemay<lb/>
have contributed to the oversight. Or<lb/>
perhaps more conservativemembers<lb/>
df the academy's acting branch were<lb/>
put offby the often despicable Johnny.<lb/>
Thewlis himself seems an ami-<lb/>
able fellow, pencil-thin with unruly<lb/>
hir and a leprechaun smile.<lb/>
? Whenaskedabouthisnewfound<lb/>
cfelebrity, Thewlis provided the po-<lb/>
litically correct answer: "I think ac-<lb/>
tors mainly seek to do good work<lb/>
rgther than seeking fame or celebrity.<lb/>
Ybu want to work with good direc-<lb/>
tors and keep on doing good perfor-<lb/>
mances.<lb/>
"In Britain (celebrity) is nothing<lb/>
new because I've been on television.<lb/>
But Naked has elevated it. You like to<lb/>
go to a bar or a restaurant and have a<lb/>
good time, but you can't really relax<lb/>
when people know who you are and<lb/>
eavesdrop on your conversations<lb/>
??i?? Mike<lb/>
??Anarchy? No, it's<lb/>
actually very<lb/>
structured and less<lb/>
anarchic than<lb/>
ordinary methods of<lb/>
filmmaking.<lb/>
99<lb/>
Mike Leigh<lb/>
Film Director<lb/>
Leigh di-<lb/>
rected Naked<lb/>
in his unique<lb/>
style.Thewlis,<lb/>
who previ-<lb/>
ously had<lb/>
worked with<lb/>
Leigh in a<lb/>
shortfilmand<lb/>
Life Is Sweet,<lb/>
talked about<lb/>
how the new<lb/>
mmmammmmmmmmm film came<lb/>
about.<lb/>
"Mike asked me if I wanted to be<lb/>
in his next film he recalled. "I didn't<lb/>
knowwhatitwouldbe,nordidMike.<lb/>
I immediately said yes, because 1 ad-<lb/>
mire his work and the way he works.<lb/>
He gets the money, casts as many<lb/>
actors as possible, sits down on the<lb/>
first day and says, 'OK, what'll we<lb/>
do?'<lb/>
"Anarchy? No, it's actually very<lb/>
structured and less anarchic than or-<lb/>
dinary methods of filmmaking. We<lb/>
spend four months of improvisation<lb/>
and investigation. We begin by intro-<lb/>
ducing characters, then we impro-<lb/>
vise on them. The fruit of those impro-<lb/>
visations become the substance of the<lb/>
film. By the time we start shooting, we<lb/>
know what we're going to do<lb/>
Thewlisconceded thatsuchmeth-<lb/>
ods would be impossible in the Holly-<lb/>
wood scheme of things.<lb/>
"You'dhavetopaybig-namestars<lb/>
for seven months and ask them to do<lb/>
a job when they don't know what<lb/>
they're playing he said. "And they<lb/>
might end up with two scenes in the<lb/>
film. When I worked with Mike in Life<lb/>
k Sweet, that's what I had: two scenes<lb/>
Growing up in Blackpool the son<lb/>
of shopkeepers, Thewlis didn't have<lb/>
the foggiest notion of becoming an<lb/>
actor: "From my own background it<lb/>
wasn'tan orthodox thing todo. Itwas<lb/>
a northern working-class town. You'd<lb/>
watch television and films, but you<lb/>
wouldn't say, 'I'd like to do that' I<lb/>
didn't know how you did that. I<lb/>
wanted to be a racing-car driver<lb/>
Instead, he joined a rock band.<lb/>
When two of his fellow musicians<lb/>
auditioned at the Guildhall School of<lb/>
Music and Drama, Thewlis went<lb/>
along. All three were accepted.<lb/>
His acting career followed a low-<lb/>
key course, with roles in films and<lb/>
plays. His biggest notice came in tele-<lb/>
vision, especially in "Prime Suspect<lb/>
IHwimHelenMirren,seenthismonth<lb/>
on PBS' "Mystery He'll appear this<lb/>
summer in the remake of Black Beauhj,<lb/>
directed by Caroline Thompson (Die<lb/>
Secret Garden).<lb/>
Actress Betty Furness dies at age 78<lb/>
NEW YORK (AP) ? Bett<lb/>
Furness, a B-movie actress who be-<lb/>
came a household name hawking<lb/>
refrigerators in the early days of tele-<lb/>
vision, then assumed the role of a<lb/>
consumer advocate and reporter,has<lb/>
died. She was 78.<lb/>
Furness died Saturday at Sloan-<lb/>
Kettering Memorial Hospital, where<lb/>
she was being treated for stomach<lb/>
cancer, said her husband, Leslie<lb/>
Midgley.<lb/>
Her career began in the 1930s as<lb/>
aHollywoodactress,butsheachieved<lb/>
widespread fame overnight in 1952<lb/>
when she did an ad during the first<lb/>
televised Republican and Democratic<lb/>
conventions.<lb/>
A front-page cartoon in the In-<lb/>
dianapolis News during the GOP<lb/>
convention had a character asking,<lb/>
"Who's winning, Pop? Taft? Ike? or<lb/>
Betty Furness?"<lb/>
"You can be sure if it's<lb/>
Westinghouse" was her tag line in<lb/>
countless live spots for refrigerators<lb/>
and vacuums.<lb/>
Presidentjohnsonappointedher<lb/>
as his special assistant for consumer<lb/>
affairsin l7despiteskepticismfrom<lb/>
consumer groups who feared her<lb/>
association with Westinghouse<lb/>
would make her pro-industry.<lb/>
She won over critics with her<lb/>
energetic advocacy on issues such as<lb/>
hidden interest rates, credit regula-<lb/>
tion and federal meat inspection.<lb/>
"She pioneered consumer TV<lb/>
news reporting, and she pursued it<lb/>
withintelligence,inquisitivenessand<lb/>
irrepressibilitv said fellow advocate<lb/>
Ralph Nader when NBC let her go in<lb/>
1992 at age 76.<lb/>
Elizabeth Man'Furness was bom<lb/>
Jan. 3, 1916 in New York City, the<lb/>
daughter of a Union Carbide execu-<lb/>
tive.<lb/>
At age 16 she took a screen test<lb/>
and for thenextsixyearssheappeared<lb/>
in 35 movies, most of them low-bud-<lb/>
get B flicks.<lb/>
"They were appalling shesaid<lb/>
later, "except for two ? Swing Time<lb/>
with Fred Astaireand Ginger Rogers,<lb/>
and the first Magnificent Obsession'<lb/>
withRobertTay lor and Irene Dunne.<lb/>
She appeared on stage in vari-<lb/>
ous summer stock and road produc-<lb/>
tions, and was spotted by<lb/>
Westinghousewhenshetookasmall<lb/>
part in a 1949 drama on CBS televi-<lb/>
sion.<lb/>
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<pb facs="00058468_0011"/><lb/>
April 7, 1994<lb/>
The East Carolinian 11<lb/>
1wZMb 1. Pavement<lb/>
Cut Your Hair<lb/>
?fifl 12. Nine Inch Nails<lb/>
111 1 fclHDead Souls 3. Rollins Wire 4. Beck Pay No Mind 5. Rage Against The Machine<lb/>
? ?Darkness<lb/>
I1J6. Soundgarden Black Hole Sun 7. Phish Down With Disease 8. Greenday<lb/>
ESIBasketcase<lb/>
?ij9. Enigma Return to Innocence 10. Crash Test Dummies MMM, MMM, MMM<lb/>
Actresssinger Ross returns to screen<lb/>
FREE PREGNANCY TEST<lb/>
while you wait<lb/>
Free &amp; Confidential<lb/>
Services &amp; Counseling<lb/>
Carolina Pregnancy Center<lb/>
209 S Evans St<lb/>
Pittman Building<lb/>
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757-0003<lb/>
Hours:<lb/>
Monday - Friday<lb/>
8:30-3:30<lb/>
NEW YORK(AP)?Diana Ross<lb/>
has often been criticized tor Hie way-<lb/>
she left the Supremes, pop music's<lb/>
most famous girl group since the<lb/>
Andrews Sisters, and for being arro-<lb/>
gant and insensitive.<lb/>
Her memoirs, "Secrets of a Spar-<lb/>
row which waspublishedbyVillard<lb/>
inOctober,attempted toanswersome<lb/>
of tha t criticism. The book bombed.<lb/>
But Miss Ross, who turned 50 on<lb/>
March 26, was highly praised for her<lb/>
first television movie, "Out of Dark-<lb/>
ness which was shown in January.<lb/>
Sheproduced the movie in which she<lb/>
played a paranoid schizophrenic.<lb/>
Thesinger's personal life also has<lb/>
been subject to public scrutiny. Her<lb/>
second husband is Norwegian ship-<lb/>
ping magnate Ame Naess, who lives<lb/>
in London while she remains in this<lb/>
country.<lb/>
"He has tried to work from here<lb/>
and I've tried to work from there she<lb/>
says. "I like raising children in<lb/>
America.<lb/>
"I'm looking at the career,<lb/>
whether I want to travel and tour the<lb/>
way I've always done. Packing and<lb/>
unpacking, I find that really hard, and<lb/>
leaving my children is very difficult.<lb/>
"I like being on the stage. If I<lb/>
didn't work, I think I would find it<lb/>
hard just waiting for him to come<lb/>
home. But I may have to move there.<lb/>
Otherwise we keep it like this, which<lb/>
is not healthy for either one of us<lb/>
They get together every month,<lb/>
Ross says, and run up huge telephone<lb/>
bills.<lb/>
Miss Ross has been widely criti-<lb/>
cized in print, with allegations that<lb/>
she rode roughshod over fellow<lb/>
Supremes Mary Wilson and Horence<lb/>
Ballard, that she's an unreasonable<lb/>
employer, the queen of perks among<lb/>
pop singers.<lb/>
Did she write her memoirs to<lb/>
offset that criticism?<lb/>
She says no, then adds, "I tried to<lb/>
do some of it. It makes a balance.<lb/>
People have a chance to hear my<lb/>
thinking. If Ineversaidanything,what<lb/>
hasbeen said becomes theonly truth<lb/>
As for claims of her elaborate<lb/>
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REC EIVE A EREE PASS TO COMEDY ZONE<lb/>
i<lb/>
backstage protection and demands<lb/>
for certain food and a special brand of<lb/>
cognac, she says, "Police cars, secu-<lb/>
rity guards, people not supposed to<lb/>
look at me ? I've heard that one.<lb/>
People can't look at me. That's the<lb/>
silliest. In my dressing room I don't<lb/>
have any food.Ihavehot decaf coffee,<lb/>
Equal and skimmed milk and that'sit.<lb/>
Cognac? No. I don't even like cham-<lb/>
pagne. I like red wine and chablis. I<lb/>
don't have that either.<lb/>
"My temperamental side? Do I<lb/>
get upset for no reason? I don't think<lb/>
so. I can get angry. I think I'm nor-<lb/>
mal<lb/>
The book idea came about, she<lb/>
says, when she listened to her old<lb/>
records, to choose 80 ? from 1963 to<lb/>
1993?for the four-CDset titled "For-<lb/>
ever<lb/>
"I started trying to remember<lb/>
what I was doing then, with each<lb/>
song she says. "I started putting<lb/>
thoughts on tape When 1 first met<lb/>
Barry Gordy (president of Motown<lb/>
Records), that first audition, things<lb/>
like mat. We seem to remember firsts.<lb/>
I had memories of being called Spar-<lb/>
row asachild. I hadn't thought about<lb/>
that in many years.<lb/>
"Certain thingshookyourmemo-<lb/>
ries. What I liked about writing mem-<lb/>
oirs instead of a biography was Ididn't<lb/>
have to get stuck in time. Now is<lb/>
combined with vesterday and my<lb/>
dreams for tomorrow and all that<lb/>
Ross is a little surprised by the<lb/>
bad press her txxk received.<lb/>
"Ididn'tthinklwaswritingsome-<lb/>
thing incredibly profound she says.<lb/>
"I wanted to have my thinking and<lb/>
point of view. A lot of people are<lb/>
finding it interesting<lb/>
Thebookdoesn'tsay muchabout<lb/>
her romances, including her relation-<lb/>
ship wimBarry Gordy. In answer toa<lb/>
question, she says he's the father of<lb/>
heroldestchild, Rhonda. It'snotin the<lb/>
book she savs, "because it's nobody's<lb/>
business. Rhonda can write a book<lb/>
Asked about the possibility of<lb/>
marryingGordyatmetime,shesays,<lb/>
"Even if he had asked, I don't think<lb/>
so.<lb/>
"People are so interested in that.<lb/>
Only the sensational side of things. I<lb/>
wasn't trying to do that. I like what I<lb/>
wrote. I like thinking about my<lb/>
mother and my family and upbring-<lb/>
ing and I love having pictures of<lb/>
children and family in there. That s<lb/>
probably a bigger part of who I am<lb/>
than the years with Motown.<lb/>
"I was with the Supremes for 10<lb/>
years. fVe been singing for 30. They<lb/>
were very nice girls. What is this that<lb/>
people keep asking me about that<lb/>
time.<lb/>
"I'vedoneextremely good work<lb/>
since then. I've had a lot of hit records<lb/>
and sung some beautiful songs. I<lb/>
raised wonderful children. That's<lb/>
more important than any of the crap<lb/>
people want to talk about<lb/>
Her three daughters use Ross<lb/>
as a last name instead of the name<lb/>
of her first husband, publicist Rob-<lb/>
ert Silberstein. She had hoped<lb/>
they'd be lawyers or doctors but all<lb/>
want show business. Her sons by<lb/>
Naess, ages 5 and 6, like to dance.<lb/>
It's in their genes she says.<lb/>
Ross, whose movies include<lb/>
hhiu Sing tlic Blues Mahogany and<lb/>
Tfw Wiz, wanted to play Josephine<lb/>
Baker in a movie but couldn't get<lb/>
financing.<lb/>
"It would have been expen-<lb/>
sive she says. "The time wasn't<lb/>
right. There may still be an oppor-<lb/>
tunity sometime. Maybe one of my<lb/>
daughters will do it<lb/>
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ATTIC<lb/>
<pb facs="00058468_0012"/><lb/>
72 The East Carolinian<lb/>
April 7, 1994<lb/>
THEATRE<lb/>
Continued from page 9<lb/>
"prise, not least because the play has the<lb/>
sort of shopworn, over-familiar status<lb/>
of,sayThomtonWilder's"OurTovrn"<lb/>
in the United States.<lb/>
On tour to the northern England<lb/>
city of Bradford, Cranham was told<lb/>
that"70percentoftheaudiencewould<lb/>
liaveplavedtheInspeior"inamateur<lb/>
stagings, he said with a smile.<lb/>
"When we were rehearsing,<lb/>
peopiesaidWhy are they doingthat?'<lb/>
with real contempt in their voice re-<lb/>
called Cranham with a low, explosive<lb/>
laugh,hisowncraggy features belying<lb/>
his immediate warmth.<lb/>
'They were really disappointed<lb/>
that the play was being done<lb/>
Whatno one predicted was direc-<lb/>
tor Daldrv's visually expressionistic<lb/>
?and highly politicized?takeonthe<lb/>
material.<lb/>
Set amid a vast, nibble-strewn<lb/>
landscape upon which the Birling<lb/>
house uneasily perches, the play was<lb/>
blasted ou t of any realist framework to<lb/>
become an ode to the virtues of the<lb/>
welfare state and of society at large.<lb/>
The program pointedly cites<lb/>
former Prime Minister Margaret<lb/>
Thatcher's 1987 remark, "There is no<lb/>
such thing as society" ? an opinion<lb/>
the production attacks with vigor.<lb/>
Its angry sub text struck a nerve in<lb/>
a country still absorbing Mrs.<lb/>
Thatcher's individualist ethos, and<lb/>
Priestley's clever craftsmanship did<lb/>
the rest.<lb/>
(.Opening in September 1992 on<lb/>
the Royal National Theater's Lyttelton<lb/>
stage, the production moved later that<lb/>
season to the larger Olivier audittv<lb/>
num.<lb/>
It won three Olivier Awards ?<lb/>
London's equivalent of the Tony ?<lb/>
and last August made yet another<lb/>
move: to the commercial West End,<lb/>
whereithas recouped its$450,000cost.<lb/>
The New York revival will cost SI.5<lb/>
million<lb/>
Bevond Broadway, "Inspector" is<lb/>
beingmooted for Hungary andjapan,<lb/>
among others. That makes it the first<lb/>
socialist drama to embark upon the<lb/>
wide-ranging theatrical course of<lb/>
"Cats<lb/>
Had Cranham anticipated such a<lb/>
response?<lb/>
"Ithinkit'squiteanextraordinary<lb/>
playinthatit'sfantasticallysimpleand<lb/>
vet mysterious; it's quite a thing to<lb/>
cam-off.<lb/>
"It's usually set in a room, bu t if it's<lb/>
set in a wasteland, something else hap-<lb/>
pens to it he said, referring to de-<lb/>
signer MacNeil's bleak, cobbled, ulti-<lb/>
mately calamitous set.<lb/>
Cranham's success in a part cre-<lb/>
ated by the late Ralph Richardson typi-<lb/>
fies an actor who has made his name in<lb/>
contemporary,notdassical,playssince<lb/>
he left London's prestigious Royal<lb/>
Academy of Drama tic Arts (RAD A) in<lb/>
1966.<lb/>
Whilecolleaguesnotcheduptheir<lb/>
Shakespeare, Ibsen and Shaw,<lb/>
Cranham was forging his reputation<lb/>
in new plays and nuxiern revivals ?<lb/>
Aston in Harold Pinter's "The Care-<lb/>
takeroppasiteJonathanPrvce;Trevor<lb/>
Griffiths' "Comedians and seven<lb/>
vearsat the Royal Court in plays by Joe<lb/>
Orton ("Ruffian On the Stair"), Ed-<lb/>
ward Bond ("Saved") and Caryl<lb/>
Churchill ("Owners").<lb/>
"I love being in things that com-<lb/>
municate strongly hesaid. "I get very<lb/>
distressed doing Jacobean or Restora-<lb/>
tion plays where I know the audience<lb/>
doesn't know what I'm talking about.<lb/>
It's very difficult<lb/>
So, too, is making a living in the<lb/>
theater, whichexplainswhyCranham<lb/>
for much of the past decade has stuck<lb/>
to television and the (xxasional film?<lb/>
'UnderSuspidoa"withLiamNeeson,<lb/>
for example.<lb/>
"I got wheelclamped by a mort-<lb/>
gage, and if you do that, you actually<lb/>
can't afford to do theater said the<lb/>
actor, who lives in a conservation area<lb/>
of north London's Islington with his<lb/>
Irish wife, actress Fiona Victory, and<lb/>
their baby, Cathleen.<lb/>
'This is unusual, this situation?<lb/>
to be in a successful run of 'An Inspec-<lb/>
tor Calls' in the West End<lb/>
Thesonof an English civil servant<lb/>
father andaScottishmother,Cranham<lb/>
was bom in Scotland and brought to<lb/>
London at the age of 4.<lb/>
He received little formal educa-<lb/>
tion ?he's the only man in his imme-<lb/>
diate family without an advanced de-<lb/>
gree ? but takes comfort in the idea<lb/>
that "acting is an education<lb/>
Continued from page 9<lb/>
lagers toales. Consumers select their<lb/>
beer according to the time of day<lb/>
and to complement the food they<lb/>
eat.<lb/>
In those places, customers<lb/>
would no more say "Gimme a beer<lb/>
than they would "Gimme a din-<lb/>
ner<lb/>
Beer flavor, according to<lb/>
Crouch, is too rich and varied to be<lb/>
limited to a selection of brands that<lb/>
taste nearly the same.<lb/>
The professor teaches courses<lb/>
on running restaurantsand manag-<lb/>
ing food and beverage selection.<lb/>
When it comes to beer, she has more<lb/>
than a sampling interest. She says<lb/>
she doesn't care much for the trendy<lb/>
brews?thelightsand "ices Ameri-<lb/>
can specialty beer made by<lb/>
microbreweries are her favorites<lb/>
because the brew makers pay par-<lb/>
ticular attention to taste.<lb/>
The subject so intrigues her that<lb/>
Crouch once worked ata small brew-<lb/>
ery in England just to learn how to<lb/>
makea finebeer. Shealso worked in<lb/>
product marketing for a large Ameri-<lb/>
can brewery.<lb/>
With this background, it's no<lb/>
wonder she chose beer as the sub-<lb/>
ject for her doctoral dissertation at<lb/>
Cornell University. This year she<lb/>
completed her Ph.D.<lb/>
The academic question for<lb/>
Crouch involved looking at how<lb/>
people acquire a taste for stronger<lb/>
beer flavors. Some social and cul-<lb/>
tural factors come into play here,<lb/>
and it appears that people in some<lb/>
regions of the country enjoy beer<lb/>
flavors that people in other parts of<lb/>
the country don't care for very much.<lb/>
Let's face it. The first taste that<lb/>
most people remember about beer<lb/>
is bitter.<lb/>
"It isanacquired tasteCrouch<lb/>
explained. "Few people like it the<lb/>
first time, but most are willing to<lb/>
learn to like it<lb/>
In Syracuse, N.Y where she<lb/>
conducted part of her study, she<lb/>
discovered that beer drinkers fol-<lb/>
lowed the mainstream and picked<lb/>
the mild American pilsenerbrands.<lb/>
However, in Seattle, Wash where<lb/>
she also conducted research, most<lb/>
beer drinkers favored the stronger<lb/>
flavor of specialty beers.<lb/>
Interestingly, the beer consum-<lb/>
ers in Seattle have virtually the same<lb/>
taste recognition towards the bitter-<lb/>
ness in strong flavored beer as the<lb/>
drinkers in Syracuse. The difference<lb/>
is that the Seattle consumers chose<lb/>
to learn to like the stronger beer<lb/>
while those in Syracuse did not.<lb/>
She also found a person's taste<lb/>
tor beer carries to food. Someone<lb/>
whoenjoysa strong, flavorful beer<lb/>
usually enjoys flavorful fixxl hx?.<lb/>
Those that drink for flavor, ac-<lb/>
cording to Crouch, also demon-<lb/>
strate a greater sense of curiosity<lb/>
and enjoyment of adventure.<lb/>
Her study survey in-<lb/>
cluded 194 beer drinkers in Syra-<lb/>
cuse and 242 in Seattle.<lb/>
She said when a population<lb/>
in one region of society changes<lb/>
its tastes, such as what she found<lb/>
in Seattle, it is important to try to<lb/>
find out what things brought<lb/>
about these changes.<lb/>
"Laying down rules: telling<lb/>
people that some foods are good<lb/>
for them while other foods such<lb/>
as bacon, eggs and buttered toasts<lb/>
are not, doesn't work said<lb/>
Crouch. "There is such a social,<lb/>
cultural ant' emotional involve-<lb/>
ment with food that it is hard to<lb/>
change eating behavior<lb/>
Steve Briley's<lb/>
Automotive Service<lb/>
Center<lb/>
3140-H Mosely Drive <lb/>
752-5043<lb/>
1 Lube &amp; Oil Filter 1<lb/>
288BE.1Bth.Street<lb/>
Eastgate Shopping Center<lb/>
Across from Highway Patrol<lb/>
Behind Car-Quest<lb/>
752-3318<lb/>
MON-FRI. 9-6<lb/>
LUalk-lns Rnytime<lb/>
ELTORO<lb/>
men's hair styling shoppe<lb/>
$6.00<lb/>
Haircut<lb/>
WITH E.C.U. I.D.<lb/>
Oil change up to 5 quarts<lb/>
: Castroi Oil<lb/>
Replace Oil Filter<lb/>
i Check all fluid levels<lb/>
Check belts &amp; hoses<lb/>
Lube chassis<lb/>
W Check air filter<lb/>
Reg. $17.58<lb/>
Expires April 29th, 1994<lb/>
SGA WILL BE HOLDING<lb/>
ANNUAL APPROPRIATIONS<lb/>
THE WEEK OF<lb/>
APRIL 11 THRU APRIL 15<lb/>
FROM 3 TO 6PM DAILY.<lb/>
FOR ANY QUESTIONS OR TO<lb/>
SET UP AN APPOINTMENT<lb/>
CALL THE SGA OFFICE AT<lb/>
757-4726 OR DEMETRIUS<lb/>
CARTER AT 757-0986<lb/>
APPROPRIATIONS<lb/>
CHAIRMAN.<lb/>
WijjWi?<lb/>
DOWNTOWN<lb/>
Sports Pad<lb/>
Sharky's<lb/>
18 and Over<lb/>
Sports Pad Sharky's Splash<lb/>
? Splash Sparts Bar ?<lb/>
EVERY THURSDAY<lb/>
Dollar<lb/>
Nite<lb/>
All Bars<lb/>
Dollar<lb/>
Nite<lb/>
E Q All Bars<lb/>
FREE COVER TILL 9:00PM<lb/>
Come into any club entrance Thursday and then<lb/>
feel free to roam from club to club!<lb/>
FREE MEMBERSHIPS<lb/>
DANCE ? BI WARDS- ROCK H ROLL<lb/>
BLOCK PfiRTY<lb/>
krkrLrkrrkrLrkrr<lb/>
<pb facs="00058468_0013"/><lb/>
MMMMBMMNI ? ht - -ii tjuil i<lb/>
The East Carolinian<lb/>
April 7, 1994<lb/>
Sports<lb/>
Page 13<lb/>
What's On Tap?<lb/>
Thursday, April 7<lb/>
W. Tennis<lb/>
at Peace College, Raleigh,<lb/>
N.C 2:30 p.m.<lb/>
Friday, April 8<lb/>
Softball<lb/>
at UNC Tournament, Chapel<lb/>
Hill, N.C.<lb/>
M. Tennis<lb/>
at UNC Wilmington,<lb/>
Wilmingon, N.C, 2:30 p.m.<lb/>
W. Track<lb/>
at Duke Invitational, Durham,<lb/>
N.C.<lb/>
Golf<lb/>
Hosts CAA Conference<lb/>
Championship, Wilson<lb/>
Country Club, Wilson, N.C.<lb/>
Saturday, April 9<lb/>
Baseball<lb/>
vs. William &amp; Mary, 2 p.m.<lb/>
(DH).<lb/>
M. Track<lb/>
at Florida Four Team<lb/>
Invitational, Gainseville, Fla.<lb/>
Te4ll<lb/>
Monday, April 4<lb/>
M. Tennis<lb/>
lost to Old Dominion 3-4.<lb/>
Tuesday, April 5<lb/>
Softball<lb/>
split a doubleheader with<lb/>
Cambell3-2, 1-3.<lb/>
Men's CAA Leaders<lb/>
(Through April 3)<lb/>
STANDINGS<lb/>
Team Conference GB<lb/>
ODU 10-2 .833 ?<lb/>
UR 6-3<lb/>
UNCW 5-4<lb/>
JMU 6-6<lb/>
ECU 4-5<lb/>
W&amp;M 5-7<lb/>
GMU 0-9<lb/>
.667<lb/>
.556<lb/>
.500<lb/>
.444<lb/>
.417<lb/>
.000<lb/>
2.5<lb/>
3.5<lb/>
4<lb/>
4.5<lb/>
5<lb/>
8.5<lb/>
Overall<lb/>
27-3 .900<lb/>
20-10.667<lb/>
18-16.529<lb/>
17-11 .607<lb/>
24-9 .727<lb/>
16-14.533<lb/>
5-15-1 .267<lb/>
INDIVIDUAL LEADERS<lb/>
Saiiif<lb/>
Average<lb/>
Matt Quatraro, ODU.418<lb/>
Kevin Gibbs, ODU.405<lb/>
Dan Almonte, ODU.400<lb/>
Brian Yerys, ECU.400<lb/>
Battle Holley, UNCW.400<lb/>
Triples<lb/>
Matt Quatraro. ODU7<lb/>
Kevin Gibbs. ODU5<lb/>
Brian Fiumara, ODU4<lb/>
Jeff Dausch, ODU3<lb/>
Ryan Wilson, W&amp;M3<lb/>
Home runs<lb/>
Jeff Dausch, ODU11<lb/>
Sean Casey. UR10<lb/>
Chad Tripplet, ECU9<lb/>
Scott Birmingham, ECU8<lb/>
Jon Higman, JMU8<lb/>
Runs Batted In<lb/>
Jeff Dausch, UR43<lb/>
Sean Casey, UR38<lb/>
Brian Yerys, ECU37<lb/>
Matt Quatraro, ODU35<lb/>
Rick Britton, ECU34<lb/>
Stolen Bases (sbsba)<lb/>
Jamie Borel, ECU2841<lb/>
Kevin Gibbs. ODU2326<lb/>
Shawn Knight, W&amp;M1821<lb/>
Jeff Kaufman. JMU1111<lb/>
Maika Symmonds, ODU910<lb/>
.PHshilmi<lb/>
Wins<lb/>
John Smith, ODU8-0<lb/>
Johnny Beck, ECU7-1<lb/>
Brett Wheeler, ODU6-0<lb/>
Anthony Eannacony, ODU6-1<lb/>
Bobby St. Pierre, UR5-1<lb/>
Earned Run Average<lb/>
Brett Wheeler, ODU1.17<lb/>
Lyle Hartgrove, ECU1.58<lb/>
Greg Whiteman, JMU1.59<lb/>
Anthony Eannacony, ODU2.03<lb/>
Richie Blackwell, ECU2.38<lb/>
Strikeouts<lb/>
Bobby St. Pierre, UR62<lb/>
Bryan Smith, UNCW53<lb/>
John Smith, ODU53<lb/>
Scott Forster, JMU51<lb/>
Richie Blackwell, ECU50<lb/>
Saves<lb/>
Denis McLaughlin, ODU5<lb/>
John O'Reilly, ODU3<lb/>
Dixon Putnam, UNCW2<lb/>
Dalton Maine, UR2<lb/>
'r-i-iiu i!ii!s:is3<lb/>
Batting Average<lb/>
Old Dominion.344<lb/>
James Madison.331<lb/>
East Carolina.318<lb/>
Richmond.311<lb/>
William &amp; Mary.284<lb/>
UNC Wilmington.279<lb/>
George Mason.233<lb/>
Earned Run Average<lb/>
East Carolina2.43<lb/>
Old Dominion2.45<lb/>
UNC Wilmington3.74<lb/>
James Madison4.06<lb/>
William &amp; Mary4.35<lb/>
Richmond4.85<lb/>
George Mason4.99<lb/>
ECU, Campbell split<lb/>
(SID) ?Campbell and East<lb/>
Carolina split a softball double-<lb/>
header on Tuesday afternoon at the<lb/>
Eakes Athletic Complex. ECU<lb/>
scored all three of its runs in the first<lb/>
inning and held on for a 3-2 deci-<lb/>
sion in the opener. Campbell<lb/>
notched a 3-1 victory in the night-<lb/>
cap.<lb/>
Campbell improved to a 27-13<lb/>
on the year, just two wins shy of its<lb/>
school-record 29 victories set last<lb/>
season. The Lady Camels return to<lb/>
action this weekend with Big South<lb/>
doubleheaders at Marylan Balti-<lb/>
more County on Friday (2:00 p.m.)<lb/>
and Towson State on Saturday<lb/>
(12:00 p.m.). East Carolina tipped<lb/>
its mark to 33-11 this season head-<lb/>
ing into the Lady Tar Heel Invita-<lb/>
tional this weekend at Chapel Hill.<lb/>
In the opener, the Lady Pirates<lb/>
scored three runs, two unearned, in<lb/>
the top of the first. Lisa Corprew<lb/>
singled with one out, then stole<lb/>
second and scored on Leann Myers'<lb/>
two-out single. Sherri Allen then<lb/>
reached on an error that allowed<lb/>
Myers to score and was singled<lb/>
home by John Eckman.<lb/>
Campbell's Sara Goodman<lb/>
tripled home Denelle Hicks to out<lb/>
the score to 3-1 in the fourth. Denise<lb/>
Simmon's RBI hit brought CU<lb/>
within 3-2 with one out in the sev-<lb/>
. enth, but ECU's Jill Rowlands re-<lb/>
tired Andrea Nardolillo and Robin<lb/>
Marshall to end the game.<lb/>
Rowlands improved to 15-2 on<lb/>
See SOFTBALL page 17<lb/>
Photo courtesy of Garret Killian<lb/>
This weekend the team will play: FSU, UNC, GT, GMU, UNC-W, UNC-<lb/>
C, Virginia and Coastal Carolina.<lb/>
Golf sets hopes to 5-peat<lb/>
File Photo<lb/>
The Pirates have captured the last<lb/>
six of seven CAA Championships.<lb/>
(SID)? The Pirates had the<lb/>
week off in order to get ready to host<lb/>
the CAA Championships to be<lb/>
played April8-10. ECUhasLaptured<lb/>
the title four years in a row. The<lb/>
tournament will be played at Wilson<lb/>
Country Club in Wilson, N.C.<lb/>
Last week, ECU competed in<lb/>
the Furman Intercollegiate Tourna-<lb/>
ment in Greenville, S.C. finishing in a<lb/>
tie for fourth place with Maryland<lb/>
(298-293 591). The field of 24 teams<lb/>
saw play cut short when the final day<lb/>
wascancelled duetosevereweather.<lb/>
Freshman Rob Anderson shot<lb/>
an impressive two-under par in the<lb/>
two-day event (72-70 142). He fin-<lb/>
ished tied forthirdwithGarrettWillis<lb/>
of East Tennessee State for the indi-<lb/>
vidual title. 130 golfers competed in<lb/>
the event.<lb/>
1994 Pirate Golf Individual<lb/>
Results<lb/>
Treyjervis<lb/>
Imperial Lake-222 (61st)<lb/>
Sheraton-Emerald-73-73-<lb/>
77223 (5th)<lb/>
Furman Inter74-75149(t27th)<lb/>
Josh Dickinson<lb/>
Imperial Lake-214 (11th)<lb/>
Sheraton-Emerald-81-80-<lb/>
79240 (t22nd)<lb/>
Furman Inter75-72147(tl4th)<lb/>
Rob Anderson<lb/>
Imperial Lake-215 (15th)<lb/>
Sheraton-Emerald-77-74-<lb/>
79230(12th)<lb/>
Furman Inter72-70142(Brd)<lb/>
Brent Padrick<lb/>
Imperial Lake-217 (26th)<lb/>
Sheraton-Emerald-81-82-<lb/>
73236 (tl8th)<lb/>
FurmanInter77-77154(t58th)<lb/>
Dave Coates<lb/>
Imperial Lake-223 (65th)<lb/>
Sheraton-Emerald-77-78-<lb/>
78233 (tl5th)<lb/>
Furman Inter78-76154(t58th)<lb/>
Monarchs use singles to sneak out win<lb/>
(SID)?The EastCarolina Uni-<lb/>
versity Men's tennis team fell 4-3 to<lb/>
CAA foe Old Dominion<lb/>
on Monday. The Pirates<lb/>
swept the doubles action<lb/>
but were unable to pick<lb/>
up the decisive third<lb/>
singles victory to claim<lb/>
the match. For the Mon-<lb/>
archs Christian Dalzell<lb/>
defeated East Carolina's<lb/>
Markku Savusalo<lb/>
(Ylivieska, Finland) 6-0,<lb/>
7-6 (7-2) at the number<lb/>
one seed. Also dairning<lb/>
victories for the Monarchs was<lb/>
Miguel Rosa over Tal Frydman<lb/>
(Woodbridge, CT) 6-2,6-2, Reuben<lb/>
Burke over Jaime Holt (Hickory,<lb/>
NC) 6-1, 7-6, and Farhad<lb/>
Tadayon upended Dave<lb/>
Wallace (Sanford, N.C.) 7-<lb/>
6,7-6.<lb/>
The Pira tes swept the<lb/>
doubles action but due to<lb/>
strong singles play by<lb/>
ODU came up one point<lb/>
short of the victory.<lb/>
Tommy<lb/>
McDonald<lb/>
Doubles Results<lb/>
SavusaloHolt<lb/>
(ECU) d. RosaBurke<lb/>
(ODU) 8-5<lb/>
McDonald Wallace (ECU) d.<lb/>
DalzellValor(ODU)8-2<lb/>
FrydmanAtkinson (ECU) d.<lb/>
TadayonSmith (ODU) 9-7<lb/>
Singles Results<lb/>
Christian Dalzell (ODU) d.<lb/>
Markku Savusalo (ECU) 6-0,7-6 (7-<lb/>
2)<lb/>
Tommy McDonald (ECU) d.<lb/>
Diego Valor (ODU) 6-1,6-3<lb/>
Miguel Rosa (ODU) d. Tal<lb/>
Frydman (ECU) 6-2,6-2<lb/>
Rueben Burke (ODU) d. Jaime<lb/>
Holt (ECU) 6-1,7-6<lb/>
Farhad Tadayon (ODU) d.<lb/>
Dave Wallace (ECU) 7-6,7-6<lb/>
Ben Atkinson (ECU) d. Jamie<lb/>
Smith (ODU) 6-7,6-3,6-2<lb/>
Children to benefit from 3-on-3 basketball event<lb/>
Compiled by Dace Pond<lb/>
(RS)?"The Battle of the Weekend Warriors"<lb/>
will take place in Greenville on Saturday, April<lb/>
23 at Carolina East Centre.<lb/>
The "Braggin' Rights 3-on-3 Basketball Se-<lb/>
ries" makes its first appearance in eastern North<lb/>
Carolina, benefitting Greenville's Adventures in<lb/>
Health Children's Museum. Over 100 teams rep-<lb/>
resenting 400 plus amateur basketball enthusi-<lb/>
asts ranging in age from 13 to 50 will take part.<lb/>
The all day outdoor event begins at 8:00am with<lb/>
competitive divisions for all levels of ability.<lb/>
Sandra Stroehmann; executive director of the<lb/>
Children's Museum, stated, "This will be a great<lb/>
activity for participants and spectators alike as<lb/>
well as a fine opportunity to inform the general<lb/>
public of the Children's Museum's programs<lb/>
and facilities. Being part of the 10 city Braggin'<lb/>
Rights 3 on 3 Series also means that we will be<lb/>
attracting visiting players from across the state<lb/>
and EastCoast. Weareexcited to be bringing this<lb/>
See BASKETBALL page 17<lb/>
Indians victor<lb/>
in exhibition<lb/>
Editors Note: This is a special<lb/>
from the Kinston Free Press.<lb/>
If Tuesday's exhibition<lb/>
game with East Carolina is any<lb/>
indication, the Kinston Indians<lb/>
could be a hitting machine in<lb/>
1994.<lb/>
Kinston pounded out lOhits<lb/>
as the Tribe defeated ECU in<lb/>
their annual 7-inning duel, 7-3.<lb/>
Patricio Claudio led<lb/>
Kinston's 10-hitattck withapair<lb/>
of singles and three stolen bases.<lb/>
Nobody else had more than one<lb/>
hit for the Tribe.<lb/>
Juan Andujar and Sam<lb/>
Hence each had a triple and Todd<lb/>
Johnson had a run-scoring<lb/>
double.<lb/>
Indians starter JoseCabrera<lb/>
and three relievers combined to<lb/>
limit East Carolina to a total of<lb/>
four hits. Cabrera worked the<lb/>
first two innings to get the win.<lb/>
He allowed just one hit and<lb/>
struck out three.<lb/>
Following Cabrera to the<lb/>
mound for the Tribe were Pep<lb/>
Harris, Carl Johnson and Bo<lb/>
Magee.<lb/>
ECUstarterMikeJacobswas<lb/>
tagged with the loss. ECU's<lb/>
lineup included none of its<lb/>
regulars, but Eddie Loesner<lb/>
and Grant Harman had run-<lb/>
scoring doubles for the Pirates.<lb/>
Kinston played its final<lb/>
exhibition gamelast night<lb/>
when the Indians toke on<lb/>
Mount Olive College in an-<lb/>
other 7-inning game that be-<lb/>
gan at 7 p.m.<lb/>
The Tribe opens the 1994<lb/>
season Thursday night against<lb/>
the defending Mills Cup<lb/>
champion Winston-Salem<lb/>
Spirits. Game time is 7 p.m.<lb/>
Aspecialrededication cer-<lb/>
emony wil be held at 5 p.m.<lb/>
featuring Cleveland Indians<lb/>
and local officials.<lb/>
The first 2,500 fans enter-<lb/>
ing Grainger Stadium that<lb/>
night will receive a magnetic<lb/>
schedule. All fans will be<lb/>
treated to a post-game fire-<lb/>
works display.<lb/>
Kinston's four-game se-<lb/>
ries with the Spirits continues<lb/>
throughSunday. Following an<lb/>
open date on Monday, April<lb/>
11, the Tribe his the road for a<lb/>
six-game trip to Prince Will-<lb/>
iam and Lynchburg.<lb/>
File Photo<lb/>
File Photo<lb/>
Reliever Mike Jacobs was used as a rare starter against the Tribe.<lb/>
ODU dominating<lb/>
CAA regular season<lb/>
By Dave Pond<lb/>
Assistant Sports Editor<lb/>
The CAA has been domi-<lb/>
nated by the Old Dominion<lb/>
University Monarchs, who<lb/>
have compiled a 27-3 overall<lb/>
record through April 4. Their<lb/>
10-2 conference record puts<lb/>
them in first place, ahead of<lb/>
second place Richmond.<lb/>
ODU southpaw John<lb/>
Smith upped his perfect record<lb/>
to 8-0 last week by beating C. W.<lb/>
Post and William &amp; Mary.<lb/>
Smith's start is the best by a<lb/>
Monarch since 1986. Freshman<lb/>
Brett Wheeler leads the CAA<lb/>
with a 1.17 ERA. At the plate,<lb/>
the Monarchs have been led by<lb/>
Matt Quatraro (.418), Kevin<lb/>
Gibbs (.405) and Dan Almonte<lb/>
(.400), who hold the top three<lb/>
batting averages in the confer-<lb/>
ence.<lb/>
The bats of Richmond Spi-<lb/>
ders (20-10,6-3 CAA) have kept<lb/>
them in the title hunt this sea-<lb/>
son. They lead the CAA in<lb/>
homeruns with 39 through<lb/>
their first 30 games. Senior Jeff<lb/>
Dausch leads the CAA in home<lb/>
runs (11) and runs batted in<lb/>
(43). On the mound, the Spi-<lb/>
ders are led by Bobby St.<lb/>
Pierre's 62 K's in just over 57<lb/>
innings.<lb/>
The suprise to date in the<lb/>
CAA has been the UNCW<lb/>
Seahawks. Outfielder Derek<lb/>
Williams has led the charge,<lb/>
and batted .500 last week, go-<lb/>
ing 9-for-18 at the plate. Third<lb/>
baseman Battle Holley batted<lb/>
.397 last week with two hom-<lb/>
ers andfive RBIs. Hurlers Brian<lb/>
Smith and Chris McBride are<lb/>
both in the top five in CAA<lb/>
strikeout leaders, with 53 and<lb/>
50, respectively.<lb/>
James<lb/>
Madison<lb/>
University's Joe Higman hit<lb/>
four home runs last week<lb/>
while hitting .529 (9-of-17).<lb/>
Pitcher Greg Whiteman<lb/>
upped his record to 5-2 after<lb/>
being moved into the closer's<lb/>
role for the Dukes. Since start-<lb/>
ing the season 7-1, JMU has<lb/>
vaulted their record to 17-11<lb/>
after a short slide in the stand-<lb/>
ings. A six-run JMU come-<lb/>
back over Radford was their<lb/>
biggest since 1988.<lb/>
East Carolina DH1B<lb/>
Brian Yerys batted .421 last<lb/>
week, with two homers and<lb/>
six RBIs, while 3B Rick Britton<lb/>
blasted two homers of his<lb/>
own against Richmond. Last<lb/>
week, Pirate lefthander<lb/>
Richie Blackwell struck out<lb/>
10 batters in eight innings of<lb/>
work, for his fourth double-<lb/>
digit strikeout game of the<lb/>
season. The East Carolina<lb/>
staff leads the CAA with a<lb/>
2.43 ERA.<lb/>
William &amp; Mary SS<lb/>
Shawn Knight is 18-of-21 in<lb/>
stolen bases in 1994. Senior<lb/>
OF Mike Rubieri is batting<lb/>
.340 and leads William &amp;<lb/>
Mary in doubles and hom-<lb/>
ers, with six a piece.<lb/>
George Mason Univer-<lb/>
sity is in the Colonial cellar,<lb/>
with a horrific 5-15-1 record<lb/>
(0-9 CAA). Freshman Joey<lb/>
Goodwin leads the club with<lb/>
a .324 batting average, bat-<lb/>
ting .364 last week. Patriot<lb/>
catcher J.J. Picollo added a<lb/>
.300, three HR, eight RBI per-<lb/>
formance for the week of<lb/>
March 28-April 3. GMU bat-<lb/>
ters ha?e hit ten homers in<lb/>
their last seven games. Se-<lb/>
nior Alex Roth and freshman<lb/>
Scott Lavendercombined on<lb/>
a three-hitter in a 3-0 victory<lb/>
over NY Tech.<lb/>
Ml<lb/>
t<lb/>
<pb facs="00058468_0014"/><lb/>
14 The Last Carolinian<lb/>
April 7. 1994<lb/>
Is that the guy<lb/>
who para-<lb/>
chuted into<lb/>
that Bowe-<lb/>
Holyfield fight<lb/>
a few months<lb/>
ago?<lb/>
Shula could be next to go<lb/>
(AP) ? The fallout from the<lb/>
jerry Jones-Jimmy Johnson-Barry<lb/>
Switzer affair is being felt from<lb/>
coast to coast. And not only with<lb/>
the bemusement with which many<lb/>
NFL people view football's an-<lb/>
swer to Billy Martin and George<lb/>
Steinbrenner.<lb/>
Don Shula isn't exactly over-<lb/>
joyed that Johnson is being men-<lb/>
tioned as the Dolphins' future<lb/>
coach.<lb/>
Shula didn't get a ringing en-<lb/>
dorsement from Wayne<lb/>
Huizenga, the team's new owner,<lb/>
. whosaidhewouldwaituntilafter<lb/>
next season to talk about a new<lb/>
contract for the NFL's winningest<lb/>
coach.<lb/>
Most coaches of Shula's stat-<lb/>
ure usually get a chance to rene-<lb/>
gotiate before their contracts ex-<lb/>
pire and most decide on their own<lb/>
terms when to retire.<lb/>
But Shula, 64, doesn't seem<lb/>
worried.<lb/>
He plays golf with Hu enga<lb/>
and doesn't seem inclined to re-<lb/>
tire. His new marriage seems to<lb/>
have revitalized him as a coach.<lb/>
During the long illness of his first<lb/>
wife, he often was preoccupied.<lb/>
Moreover, people around the<lb/>
Dolphins feel Huizenga implv<lb/>
didn't know NFL protocol when<lb/>
he made his comment about wait-<lb/>
ing on a new contract.<lb/>
Perhaps Johnson goes West,<lb/>
although he's not reallv a Califor-<lb/>
Equivalency<lb/>
test a knockout<lb/>
(AP) ? OK, wiseguy, think<lb/>
you're smarter than Mike Tyson?<lb/>
Then tell us: If the equation of a<lb/>
circle is X-squared plus Y-squared<lb/>
equals 34, what is the length of<lb/>
the radius?<lb/>
Don't know? Neither did<lb/>
Tyson. It's one of the questions<lb/>
that KO'd the former heavv-<lb/>
weight champ when he failed his<lb/>
high school equivalency test last<lb/>
month.<lb/>
The Daily News obtained five<lb/>
of the math questions that Tyson<lb/>
got wrong and printed them in<lb/>
Saturday's edition. The newspa-<lb/>
per said the questions came from<lb/>
Bert Sugar, publisher of Boxing<lb/>
Illustrated. Sugar did not divulge<lb/>
his source.<lb/>
According to Sugar, Tyson<lb/>
did well in the reading compre-<lb/>
hension, world history, language<lb/>
and social studies sections of the<lb/>
test, but couldn't connect with<lb/>
the math.<lb/>
No surprise, Sugar sa id. Anv-<lb/>
one who could answer the math<lb/>
questions "could probably<lb/>
qualify as a nuclear scientist<lb/>
Tyson is serving a six-year<lb/>
term at the Indiana Youth Facil-<lb/>
ity for raping a beauty pageant<lb/>
contestant. If he had passed the<lb/>
test, he would have shaved three<lb/>
months off his sentence.<lb/>
Because Tyson failed only one<lb/>
section, he can take the test every<lb/>
90 days until he passes.<lb/>
By the way, the answer to the<lb/>
question above is the square root<lb/>
of 34.<lb/>
And for the record: The equa-<lb/>
tion of a circle refers to plotting a<lb/>
circle on a graph which has axes<lb/>
of X and Y. The "equation of a<lb/>
circle" is XX plus YY equals RK.<lb/>
(i.e. the square of the length of the<lb/>
X axis plus thesquareof the length<lb/>
of the Y axis equals the square of<lb/>
the radius of the circle.)<lb/>
nia kind of guy.<lb/>
It's no secret that Edd<lb/>
DeBartolo was enamored ol<lb/>
Johnson before he hired George<lb/>
Seifert to replace Bill Wakh in 1990.<lb/>
Seifert's crime is not winning the<lb/>
Super Bowl since his first season,<lb/>
although he's 62-18 in the regular<lb/>
season and has been to three NFC<lb/>
title games since.<lb/>
If Johnson wants to stay in<lb/>
Florida, there's always Tampa<lb/>
Bay. It's unlikely Sam Wyche will<lb/>
survive another 5-11 season.<lb/>
Wyche has predicted that the Buc-<lb/>
caneers, losers of 10 or more ga mes<lb/>
for 11 straight seasons, will make<lb/>
the playoffs next year.<lb/>
You can probably scratch<lb/>
Carolina. The Panthers feel that<lb/>
JoeGibbs will make himself avail-<lb/>
able when the time comes. E en if<lb/>
he doesn't, Johnson and Bill Polian,<lb/>
the new general manager, aren't<lb/>
exactly a match made in heaven<lb/>
Polian, one of the NF1 - shrew ti-<lb/>
es! presonne!eeiiiti es, wants to<lb/>
control his own front office, some-<lb/>
thing hecouldn'tdo . ith ohnson<lb/>
But (ohnson will land on his<lb/>
feet. It's hard to pas up a<lb/>
who,over fn eyears, turned a 1-15<lb/>
team intotwostraightSuper Bowl<lb/>
winners<lb/>
Most p ?? e came away from<lb/>
the NF1 nil. tings believing thai<lb/>
Carolina is far ahead of Jackson-<lb/>
ville in the expansion race.<lb/>
i he t o teams are taking op-<lb/>
. iproaches.<lb/>
I he Panthers are building<lb/>
the top down, with Mike<lb/>
Mc( ormack and Bill Polian, two<lb/>
experienced NFL executives and<lb/>
one of the NFL's top public rela-<lb/>
tions men; and Charlie Davton,<lb/>
who left the Washington Redskins.<lb/>
I hey also have the framework of a<lb/>
scouting staff in place, and a sound<lb/>
philosophy: "Assuming we'll play<lb/>
a lot in the north, we want a team<lb/>
that can go into cold weather and<lb/>
win late in the season<lb/>
The Jaguars a re building with<lb/>
Tom Coughlin, their coach, but a<lb/>
front office headed by David<lb/>
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have no real experience. The two<lb/>
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their experience is more in busi-<lb/>
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"I think Tom Coughlin is an<lb/>
excellent coach Polian says of<lb/>
the team with which his Panthers<lb/>
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But Coughlin, from Boston<lb/>
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Bav, Boston and New York.<lb/>
Still looking for that perfect<lb/>
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<pb facs="00058468_0015"/><lb/>
tammmammmm<lb/>
mmhhh<lb/>
April 7, 1994<lb/>
The East Carolinian 15<lb/>
Floyd wins Tradition<lb/>
(AP)?Tournaments like The<lb/>
Tradition re supposed to demand<lb/>
extra effort from the winner, and<lb/>
Raymond Floyd had the right stuff<lb/>
this year.<lb/>
"I play to win golf tourna-<lb/>
ments Floyd said Sunday after<lb/>
his first-hole playoff victory over<lb/>
Dale Douglass in the Senior PG A's<lb/>
counterpart of The Masters. "Yes,<lb/>
the money is wonderful, but I re-<lb/>
ally and truly play because I love<lb/>
competing, and I love the thrill of<lb/>
victory<lb/>
He said he could commiserate<lb/>
with Douglass, who missed a<lb/>
chance to win in regulation when<lb/>
his 40-foot chip for an eagle rolled<lb/>
over the cup, hit the flagstick and<lb/>
came out.<lb/>
Douglass, who shot a 6-under-<lb/>
par final round of 66 to Floyd's 68,<lb/>
said he was only looking for the<lb/>
birdie it would take to match<lb/>
Floyd's birdie-4 and get into the 6-<lb/>
year-old tournament's first plav-<lb/>
off.<lb/>
"I wasn't trying to chip it in<lb/>
Douglasssaid. "On the playoff hole,<lb/>
I was, but you see what happens<lb/>
when 1 try. The shot on the 72nd<lb/>
hole was an excellent shot.<lb/>
Raymond was going to make birdie,<lb/>
and I had to make birdie<lb/>
After bogeys on Nos. 13 and 14,<lb/>
Floyd got back into position to win<lb/>
witha35-footbirdiechiponNo. 16.<lb/>
Then he went for the green on<lb/>
the 531-yard 18th hole twice and<lb/>
birdied it twice in 20 minutes ?<lb/>
once to keep up with Douglass and<lb/>
again to win the playoff. As it turned<lb/>
out, Douglass bogeyed the playoff<lb/>
hole.<lb/>
Floyd and Douglass finished a t<lb/>
17-under 271 on the 6,869-yard<lb/>
Cochise Course at Desert Moun-<lb/>
tain.<lb/>
Colbert shot a 70 for the round<lb/>
and was alone in third at 274.<lb/>
Nicklaus, Tom Weiskopf and<lb/>
Jimmv Powell were next at 278,<lb/>
with Gibby Gilbert and Mike Hill<lb/>
paired at 279.<lb/>
Olson's Trivia Quiz<lb/>
Q. What professional baseball team's media<lb/>
guide is a collector's item from the 1993<lb/>
season?<lb/>
-?6. u; sjaAed<lb/>
jo sseaiaj ensnun ue pei sajped am japeai urn aiuoii am sew jjugoiM pue uojduieip<lb/>
Guiueq 26, am sen piaijjaijs asneoaq aies seA ijOnoij) se uaj uojiezmefuo am apeji e<lb/>
jo aES joj 'J3A03 am uo siaAEd md jaAau weai am sjeaA joj uoseas aqj Buunp papejj sjsm<lb/>
oiM Pi3!J3MS Aieg pue jjugoiAl paid pajnieaj apmO am jo jsaod auj. sajped Q'S 9M1 V<lb/>
Burton makes name for himself with record performance<lb/>
(AP) ? Kris Bruton came into<lb/>
college basketball's slam dunk con-<lb/>
test looking for acceptance as much<lb/>
as victory.<lb/>
The 6-foot-8 senior from<lb/>
Benedict College in Columbia came<lb/>
away with both Sunday, becoming<lb/>
the first player in the six-year event<lb/>
to register three perfect scores.<lb/>
"When I first came into the hotel<lb/>
all the guvs knew each other and I<lb/>
was the misfit said Bruton, the only<lb/>
contestant in the seven-man field<lb/>
from a small NA1A school. "But af-<lb/>
ter the first shoot-around I knew I<lb/>
won their acceptance because 1 was<lb/>
doing all my dunks fairly easy.<lb/>
"My dunks are with power,<lb/>
charisma and style and (the other<lb/>
players) really liked that<lb/>
Bruton, last in the order of seven<lb/>
players, also quickly became the<lb/>
crowd favorite at Winthrop Col-<lb/>
lege, which is near Charlotte, N.C,<lb/>
site of this year's NCAA Final Four.<lb/>
He pumped up his Reebok shoes<lb/>
before each dunk, and then let the<lb/>
air out in the lane after his perfect<lb/>
scores.<lb/>
Contestants got three first-<lb/>
round dunks and the best two scores<lb/>
were counted.<lb/>
His first slam in the opening<lb/>
round set the tone. Bruton took a<lb/>
running start and left the air at the<lb/>
foul line, soaring and slamming the<lb/>
ball one-handed as he looked away.<lb/>
Former Chicago Bulls star Michael<lb/>
Jordan was one of the first to make<lb/>
that dunk famous.<lb/>
"I have been blessed with tre-<lb/>
mendous leaping ability he said.<lb/>
"I think it vvasappropriate for me to<lb/>
showcase it right here<lb/>
Judges whittled the field down<lb/>
to two finalists. Fans then had to<lb/>
wait about 45 minutes to have the<lb/>
winner declared bv television iew-<lb/>
ers voting by phone, but most fig-<lb/>
ured Bruton clinched the title with<lb/>
his last of five dunks.<lb/>
After fumbling the ball during<lb/>
his approach on his first dunk in the<lb/>
showdown with the 6-6<lb/>
Mohammed Acha of Coastal Caro-<lb/>
lina, Bruton brought the crowd to<lb/>
its feet after dunking one-handed<lb/>
over a rack of balls he had placed in<lb/>
the center of the lane.<lb/>
Heended upgetting4,950votes<lb/>
(66 percent) to 2,550 (34 percent) for<lb/>
Acha in an all-South Carolina final.<lb/>
Bruton said he practiced his<lb/>
winning dunk many times.<lb/>
"But usually I let one of my<lb/>
friends stand at the free throw line<lb/>
and I jump over them he said.<lb/>
"But since they said I couldn't use<lb/>
anyoneljustdecided toelevateover<lb/>
(the balls) without help<lb/>
"Sometimes I look a t television<lb/>
and see all the (NBA) guys doing<lb/>
these dunks and I say, 'Man, I know<lb/>
I can do a better dunk than that My<lb/>
time is coming. All I have to do is<lb/>
wait Bruton said.<lb/>
Acha's two final-round dunks<lb/>
were unspectacular reverse slams.<lb/>
The only other perfect score<lb/>
before Sunday came last year, when<lb/>
champion Isaiah (J.R.) Rider of<lb/>
UNLVdiditonce.<lb/>
The panel of judges included<lb/>
Charlotte Hornets Alonzo Mourn-<lb/>
ing and Rumeal Robinson, and<lb/>
coaches Billy Tubbs of Oklahoma<lb/>
and Rick Majerus of Utah.<lb/>
Wesley Person of Auburn hit<lb/>
13 of his last 15 attempts to win the<lb/>
men's 3-point shooting contest over<lb/>
Oklahoma State's Brooks Thomp-<lb/>
son 20-14.<lb/>
Karen Powell of Southern Illi-<lb/>
nois edged Oregon's Missy<lb/>
Croshaw 16-14 in the women's 3-<lb/>
point shooting contest.<lb/>
Register for these END OF THE SEMESTER activities!<lb/>
Frisbee Disc Golf<lb/>
April 13 &amp; 14<lb/>
This is a two day tournament on the Frisbee Disc<lb/>
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Men's and women's divisions are offered.<lb/>
Golf Singles<lb/>
April 22 &amp; 23<lb/>
Register Tuesday, April<lb/>
12 at 5:00pm in Bio ioj.<lb/>
This tournament will be<lb/>
held at the Wedgewood<lb/>
Golf Club in Wilson, NC.<lb/>
"Green fees vary and are<lb/>
paid at the course.<lb/>
ABOVE<lb/>
Tlte Sports Department is desperately seeking writers for this and<lb/>
summer semesters, fust drop by and fill out an application.The TEC is<lb/>
located across from Joyner library in the student publications building.<lb/>
?rim<lb/>
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<pb facs="00058468_0016"/><lb/>
16 I The East Carolinian<lb/>
April 7, 1994<lb/>
Gooden relates to Strawberry's problems<lb/>
Doc expects star to return<lb/>
Editors Note: This ai:<lb/>
printed in the USA Today on April<lb/>
6 1994 in Kit Stier<lb/>
New York Mets pitcher<lb/>
Dwight Gooden finds it hard to<lb/>
believe that Darryl Strawberry,<lb/>
liis friend and former teammate,<lb/>
lias a substance abuse problem.<lb/>
" There were definitely signs,<lb/>
but the way it came out was<lb/>
strange Gooden said "uesday<lb/>
before the Mets faced the Chi-<lb/>
cago Cubs.<lb/>
"There's more to this story<lb/>
than we're hearing<lb/>
Cooden wouldn't elaborate<lb/>
much, but said he found it odd<lb/>
that the Los Angeles Dodgers'<lb/>
outfielder was using drugs at the<lb/>
same time he was giving such<lb/>
positive interviews during spring<lb/>
training and working so hard to<lb/>
rehabilitate his injured back.<lb/>
Strawberry, who as a Met had<lb/>
treatment for alcohol abuse at the<lb/>
Smithers Center in Manhattan in<lb/>
thespringof 1990,admitted Mon-<lb/>
day to having a drug problem<lb/>
1 he 1 todgers ha e placed him<lb/>
on the disabled list and Straw-<lb/>
berrv plans to enter a treatment<lb/>
center.<lb/>
"I think he'll play again said<lb/>
Gooden, who had treatment for<lb/>
drug use in 1987.<lb/>
Gooden said for Straw berry<lb/>
to overcome his problem, it will<lb/>
take hard work and an iron will.<lb/>
"If he has a problem, you can't<lb/>
get angry with him Gooden<lb/>
said. "They teach you that. It's a<lb/>
disease. The biggest test is that<lb/>
when vou're inside, you're sur-<lb/>
rounded by good people and out- Mian Lans, the Mets' team psy-<lb/>
side, you're dealing with real chiatrist and director ot their<lb/>
people employee assistance program.<lb/>
ust facing the fact that you "It didn't happen right away<lb/>
have a problem, Cooden said, with him Gooden admitted. Tt<lb/>
isn't easv. tooka whiletoclick. It took awhile<lb/>
"I still don't take it for to trust him, for things to open<lb/>
granted he-said. "I know what I up<lb/>
went through. Going in is the first Cooden said he plans to con-<lb/>
step. Coming out. the first yearis tact Strawberry.<lb/>
very tough "Probably later when every-<lb/>
Gooden said the person who thing has calmed down the<lb/>
helped him the most was Dr. pitcher said.<lb/>
Dream Team II coming<lb/>
to N.C. over summer<lb/>
Be a Carolina Tar Heel!<lb/>
Session I: May 19-June 24,1994<lb/>
Session II: June 28-August 2,1994<lb/>
Students from any college or university, teachers, rising high s hooi seniors, and<lb/>
other tudents wh arc not enrolled .it I t C 11 ma) apply a Visiting Summer<lb/>
Students fen first, second or both sessions.<lb/>
UNC-CH offers during two 5 1 2 week sessions, over 900 courses in 4s<lb/>
discipline A t pica! course load per session is 6 semester hours.<lb/>
S)me evening and night courses and three-week short courses are ottered Spac<lb/>
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When requesting a catalog and application, please mention seeing this m. in The<lb/>
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Phone: 1-800-UNC1-123 or 919-962-1009<lb/>
Fax:919-962-2752<lb/>
(AP)-TheNBA team that will<lb/>
compete in this summer's world<lb/>
championships will plav exhibition<lb/>
games July 26 in Charlotte, .C,<lb/>
and Jury 31 in Oakland, Calif.<lb/>
Dream Team II, which will train<lb/>
from July 20-30 at Moody Bible In-<lb/>
stitute in Chicago, will plav the<lb/>
C ierman national team in Charlotte<lb/>
and the USA Goodwill Games team<lb/>
in Oakland.<lb/>
The L.S. team is coached bv<lb/>
)on Nelson of golden State and<lb/>
imposed ot 13 players: Derrick<lb/>
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of Detroit, Tim Harda wavofGolden<lb/>
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ot Phoenix, Reggie Miller of Indi-<lb/>
anaAlonoMourningof Charlotte<lb/>
ShaquilleCTWal of Orlando, Mar k<lb/>
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The work! championships are<lb/>
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<pb facs="00058468_0017"/><lb/>
Aprril 7. 1994<lb/>
The East Carolinian 17<lb/>
Baldwin defends Lemieux's<lb/>
uncharacteristic on ice actions<lb/>
Editors Note: 77ns article was<lb/>
printed in the USA Today on April 6,<lb/>
1994 by Kevin Allen.<lb/>
If the NHL suspens Mario<lb/>
Lemieux for Monday's tirade, Pitts-<lb/>
burgh Penguins owner Howard<lb/>
Baldwin vows to do "whatever it<lb/>
takes" to get it rescinded.<lb/>
"He had better not be sus-<lb/>
pended Baldwin said. "What<lb/>
would you suspend him for? He<lb/>
didn't go after the referee. He came<lb/>
out of the penalty box<lb/>
Lemieux received a game mis-<lb/>
conduct Monday during the game<lb/>
against the Tampa Bay Lightning<lb/>
after he exited the penalty box and<lb/>
mounted an angry charge atreferee<lb/>
Kerry Fraser. He was grabbed by<lb/>
teammate Ron Francis.<lb/>
Moments before, Lemiuex re-<lb/>
ceived a two-minute penalty for<lb/>
high-sticking Tampa Bay<lb/>
defenseman Roman Hamrlik.<lb/>
He left the penalgy box after<lb/>
Fraser gave him a misconduct pen-<lb/>
alty for tossing his stick over the<lb/>
glass.<lb/>
"He was fustrated, and he<lb/>
showed his frustration Baldwin<lb/>
said.<lb/>
Baldwin said Lemieux had been<lb/>
held and roughed by two<lb/>
defensemen earlier in the period.<lb/>
"The first time he goes out on<lb/>
the ice, he gets bearhugged and<lb/>
tackled to the ice Grands said.<lb/>
"That's the kind of thing tha t causes<lb/>
back injuries<lb/>
"A guy of his stature and his<lb/>
ability has to put up with the stuff<lb/>
he does. He's had two back surger-<lb/>
ies, and he was on the brink of<lb/>
retirement earlier this season<lb/>
Lemieux, who has missed 61<lb/>
games misseasonbecauseof chronic<lb/>
backproblems,hasbeenvocalabout<lb/>
seeking a crackdown on the harass-<lb/>
ment.<lb/>
"I think he's right Baldwin<lb/>
said. "If Mario had it to do over<lb/>
again, he probably wouldn't do it<lb/>
the same away. But he wants the<lb/>
league to (address) this issue<lb/>
Baldwin said the league must<lb/>
do more to protect stars so they<lb/>
don't have t take matters into their<lb/>
hands.<lb/>
"Do you want to see players<lb/>
like (Jaromir) Jagr and Mario play<lb/>
the game?" Baldwin asked. "Or do<lb/>
you want to see more of this clutch-<lb/>
ing and grabbing?"<lb/>
Baldwin doesn't fault the offi-<lb/>
cials. "I'mnotcriticalof them. It'san<lb/>
impossible task we give them he<lb/>
said. "We have to do something<lb/>
about the systme. Maybe we have<lb/>
to allow linesmen to call penalties<lb/>
or whatever it takes<lb/>
Baldwin said he had received<lb/>
no word from the league about<lb/>
whether a suspension was likely.<lb/>
"But count on this: I'll take<lb/>
whatever appeal process that is<lb/>
available if he is suspended<lb/>
Baldwin said.<lb/>
Indians move to new park and era<lb/>
Editors Note: This article ivas<lb/>
printed in the USA Today on April<lb/>
6,1994 by Mike Dodd.<lb/>
A fan paraded through the<lb/>
grandstand at Jacobs Field Mon-<lb/>
day carrying a sign that read, "The<lb/>
Giant is Awake<lb/>
In more ways than one.<lb/>
The fulfillment of a 30-year<lb/>
wait for a stadium could coincide<lb/>
with the end of the Cleveland<lb/>
Indians' 39-year pennant drought<lb/>
and the "mistake on the lake"<lb/>
jokes about the city. The three go<lb/>
hand-in-hand.<lb/>
"This club just didn't have<lb/>
the bucks to play the game (in the<lb/>
old stadium) says general man-<lb/>
ager John Hart, noting the team<lb/>
went from a small-market club to<lb/>
mid-sized with its 1-mile move<lb/>
uptown. "Now, this franchise is a<lb/>
factor<lb/>
Combined with the adjacent<lb/>
basketball arena that opens in the<lb/>
fall, it's part of a downtown rede-<lb/>
SOFTBALL<lb/>
velopment changing Cleveland's<lb/>
image.<lb/>
"We think 4.5-to-5.5 million<lb/>
people a year will come to the<lb/>
ballpark and the arena says Tom<lb/>
Chema, executive director of<lb/>
Gateway Economic Development<lb/>
Corp.<lb/>
"Already nine new restau-<lb/>
rants opened their doors<lb/>
Jacobs Field has the same feel<lb/>
as Baltimore's Camden Yards, but<lb/>
with a more modern architectural<lb/>
design and Cleveland touches.<lb/>
Instead of the bricks, intri-<lb/>
cate steelwork symbolizes and<lb/>
blends with the city's bridges and<lb/>
trusses.<lb/>
In the concourses, huge mu-<lb/>
rals depict Indians players in ac-<lb/>
tion, and billboards picture 25<lb/>
different great moments in Indi-<lb/>
ans history.<lb/>
Sluggers can take aim at the<lb/>
scoreboard above the left-center<lb/>
bleachers, a shot akin to hitting<lb/>
Camden's warehouse in right<lb/>
field.<lb/>
If the first two games are any<lb/>
indication, Cleveland could lead<lb/>
the league in doubles and<lb/>
misplayed pop-ups.<lb/>
The Indians hit four doubles<lb/>
Monday, two off the 19-foot high<lb/>
wall in left and center.<lb/>
The swirling winds ga ve ou t-<lb/>
fielders fits in Saturday's exhibi-<lb/>
tion game.<lb/>
"The winds are going to af-<lb/>
fect it a lot more than anybody<lb/>
thought manager Mike<lb/>
Hargrove says. "I think you'll get<lb/>
a lot of circling winds inside the<lb/>
ballpark It's something we're<lb/>
going to have to constantly<lb/>
watch<lb/>
The atmosphere inside the<lb/>
park has players excited, too.<lb/>
"The old place was so big,<lb/>
you'd have 40,000-to-50,000 and<lb/>
it still seemed empty says out-<lb/>
fielder Wayne Kirby.<lb/>
"In this stadium, you can hear<lb/>
a lot. You can hear everything<lb/>
Continued from page 13<lb/>
the year, scattering six hits and one<lb/>
walk. Campbell started Christine<lb/>
Homack , who saw her personal<lb/>
winning streak end at eight games<lb/>
and dropped to 13-4 on the year<lb/>
despite allowing just four hits and<lb/>
striking out four.<lb/>
In the second game, Angie<lb/>
Beech tripled and scored on<lb/>
Marshall's sacrifice fly for a 1-0<lb/>
Campbell lead after four innings.<lb/>
ECU tied the score wirhan unearned<lb/>
run on Eckman's two-out RBI hit in<lb/>
the top of the fourth.<lb/>
The Lady Camels, however,<lb/>
reclaimed the lead for good in the<lb/>
bottom of the framewhen Goodman<lb/>
walked and later scored on Melissa<lb/>
BASKETBALL<lb/>
Mullins' triple. CU added an insur-<lb/>
ance run in the bottom of the sixth<lb/>
on Michelle Little's squeeze bunt<lb/>
that scored Nardolillo.<lb/>
Nardolillo (9-8) scattered six<lb/>
ECU hits to earn the victory for<lb/>
Campbell. Teryn Ford (10-8) was<lb/>
the tough-luck Lady Pirate loser<lb/>
despite giving up just four hits.<lb/>
Continued from page 13<lb/>
outstanding event to Greenville<lb/>
and Eastern North Carolina<lb/>
Stroehmann added, "This tour-<lb/>
nament is open to all levels of<lb/>
ability. Although many top area<lb/>
prep, college, and former college<lb/>
players are expected to enter, the<lb/>
majority of teams will be Week-<lb/>
end Warriors, men and women<lb/>
who just enjoy playing recre-<lb/>
ational basketball. There is a com-<lb/>
petitive division for all levels of<lb/>
ability. There is no admission<lb/>
charge for spectators<lb/>
Entry fee is $80 per team with<lb/>
entry forms available at partici-<lb/>
pating area Burger Kings and<lb/>
River Park North. Entry deadline<lb/>
is April 15.<lb/>
Adventures in Health<lb/>
Children's Museum is a non-<lb/>
profit organization promoting<lb/>
healthy lifestyle choices for chil-<lb/>
dren and their families in Eastern<lb/>
North Carolina. The museum is<lb/>
located at 1000 Mumford Road,<lb/>
River Park North in Greenville.<lb/>
ECU's Intra-Fraternity Coun-<lb/>
cil has agreed to help sponsor<lb/>
this event by providing the vol-<lb/>
unteer staff. This will be the en-<lb/>
tire greek system working to-<lb/>
gether to help us out.<lb/>
For additional information<lb/>
for individuals or corporate par-<lb/>
ticipation, or individuals wish-<lb/>
ing to volunteer to assist with the<lb/>
event, contact the museum at<lb/>
(919)752-7231 in Greenville.<lb/>
1<lb/>
B<lb/>
HOMEMADE<lb/>
Stromboli<lb/>
Caizone<lb/>
Philly Cheesesteaks<lb/>
Hot or Cold Subs<lb/>
Spaghetti<lb/>
Ziti<lb/>
Pizzas<lb/>
Limit 1 per visit<lb/>
BEER<lb/>
$ 1.0.0 Domestics<lb/>
$ 1.50 Imports<lb/>
Lunch and Dinner Specials<lb/>
1 Large 18" I<lb/>
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Attention, voters!<lb/>
It's time to get to the nitty-gritty,<lb/>
folks. With a runoff, the emphasis on<lb/>
issues is paramount. The East<lb/>
Carolinian hereby invites the student<lb/>
body and faculty of ECU to a<lb/>
presidential debate. This will be an<lb/>
open forum panel discussion<lb/>
regarding the SGA runoff elections.<lb/>
Time and location will be<lb/>
announced in the next issue of The<lb/>
East Carolinian.<lb/>
Presidential candidates are urged<lb/>
to attend.<lb/>
? M? ? m WDMVMMNMVWVM<lb/>
s<lb/>
WE WANT YOU!<lb/>
(And you and you. You , too, and you.<lb/>
You. You, as well. And you on the left.)<lb/>
The East Carolinian's is a'hirin' and we<lb/>
mean bidness!<lb/>
Position! available include:<lb/>
Lifestyle Editor and Asst. Editor<lb/>
Cover the entertainment, extracurricular<lb/>
activities and fields of interest of the<lb/>
students and faculty of ECU. Assign<lb/>
stories of such and work with publishing<lb/>
deadlines.<lb/>
Account Executive<lb/>
Represent the pappr to potential<lb/>
advertisers and work with Creative<lb/>
Directors to insure the patron's ideas can<lb/>
work in an a<lb/>
?<lb/>
-<lb/>
Creative Director and Asst. Director<lb/>
Compose and design ads based on<lb/>
customer's ideas and publication<lb/>
feasibility. Macintosh experience is crucial<lb/>
for both positions.<lb/>
?<lb/>
Writers<lb/>
Work with direct sources and public<lb/>
record to insure integrity and objectivity<lb/>
of articles, while educating readers in the<lb/>
subject. English and Communications<lb/>
majors preferred, but solid writing ability<lb/>
will not be overlooked in other applicants.<lb/>
Copy Editors<lb/>
Correct articles and amend for both AP<lb/>
and house styles. Good editing and critical<lb/>
review ability necessary.<lb/>
All applicants must have 2.0 GPA and Macintosh<lb/>
experience is preferred.<lb/>
?<lb/>
m<lb/>
H ?<lb/>
?<lb/>
- ????<lb/>
<pb facs="00058468_0018"/><lb/>
Introducing Eastern North Carolina's Finest New Supermarket<lb/>
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Prices Good In The Following Location Only:<lb/>
609 South East Greenville Blvd<lb/>
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Prices Good Thru<lb/>
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?None To DealersWe Reserve The Right To Limit Quanities<lb/>
?Copyright 1994, Winn-Dixie Stores, Inc.<lb/>
Fantastic Grand'<lb/>
Opening Values<lb/>
Throughout The<lb/>
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WE'RE NOT JUST<lb/>
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?We're a FLORIST.<lb/>
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WD Brand U.S. Choice Aged Bone-In<lb/>
Whole Rib Eyes<lb/>
v<lb/>
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im<lb/>
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10.3-Oz. Size<lb/>
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i<lb/>
(Buy one at reg. price &amp; get second one FREE)<lb/>
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<pb facs="00058468_0019"/>
</div></body></text></TEI>