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<pb facs="00058472_0001"/>
HMMWMWliHMi<lb/>
. . . . ?<lb/>
Lifestyle<lb/>
Pirate Comics, squishy pellet!<lb/>
Everyone says goodbye or later. sjsf"<lb/>
Don't you feel like chump change S<lb/>
for not writing in to let us know how<lb/>
cool we are? Page 7 for all that.<lb/>
No Escape!<lb/>
Hendrix theatre will be<lb/>
previewing No Escape,<lb/>
an action-adventure film<lb/>
starring Ray Liotta, at<lb/>
8:00pm on Monday, April<lb/>
25. Story on page 13.<lb/>
The East Carolinian<lb/>
Vol.69Noj93<lb/>
Circulation 12,000<lb/>
Greenville, North Carolina<lb/>
Thursday,April21,1994<lb/>
16 Pages<lb/>
It's over! Eastman, Boswell win SGA run-off<lb/>
Results<lb/>
Box<lb/>
SGA Run-Off Election<lb/>
Results<lb/>
President<lb/>
Ian Eastman<lb/>
Brynn Thomas<lb/>
Unanswered<lb/>
Totals<lb/>
No.<lb/>
585<lb/>
512<lb/>
7<lb/>
3.8<lb/>
46.4<lb/>
.6<lb/>
1104 100<lb/>
Vice President<lb/>
Sheila Boswell<lb/>
Chris Munley<lb/>
Unanswered<lb/>
Totals<lb/>
No.<lb/>
587<lb/>
502<lb/>
15<lb/>
<lb/>
53.2<lb/>
45.5<lb/>
1.4<lb/>
1104 100<lb/>
Bv Stnhame Lassiter<lb/>
Assistant News Lditor<lb/>
Ian<lb/>
Photo by Cedric Van Buren<lb/>
Is this what they mean by stuffing the ballot box? Actually, in a run-off election not marred by the controversy<lb/>
that surrounded the original election, a fair number of students turned out to vote.<lb/>
And the winners are<lb/>
Eastman and Sheila Boswell.<lb/>
After two weeks of hard-<lb/>
fought campaigning , the races for<lb/>
SGA president ar.d vice president<lb/>
have finally come to an end. In the<lb/>
run-off for president, Eastman de-<lb/>
feated opponent Brvnn Thomas, 53.0<lb/>
percent to 46.4 percent.<lb/>
Thomas' running mate,<lb/>
Boswell, defeated Eastman's run-<lb/>
ning mate Chris Munley, 53.2 per-<lb/>
cent to 45.5 percent.<lb/>
"Wow, I can't believe it<lb/>
Eastman said. "And I'm glad it's<lb/>
over<lb/>
Eastman said he intends to<lb/>
follow through with the nine points<lb/>
of his platform, particularly the for-<lb/>
mation of a graduate student um-<lb/>
brella organization.<lb/>
"I will bring the bill to form<lb/>
such an organization in front of the<lb/>
Board of Trustees,becauseit'ssome-<lb/>
thing I strongly believe in Eastman<lb/>
said.<lb/>
The East Carolinian notified<lb/>
Thomas of the defeat.<lb/>
"I was kind of mad because<lb/>
all of our stuff (campaign posters)<lb/>
got torn down thenightbefore,but<lb/>
there was a pretty good turnout<lb/>
Thomas said.<lb/>
According to Elections Chair<lb/>
Dale Emery, the turnout of 1,104<lb/>
voters was excellent for a run-off<lb/>
election.<lb/>
"I think things ran very<lb/>
smoothly this time around Em-<lb/>
ery said. "There was great team-<lb/>
work with everyone involved<lb/>
After the polls closed at 8:00<lb/>
p.m Thomas and Boswell left the<lb/>
sight to await the vote count.<lb/>
Eastman remained with the elec-<lb/>
tions chair and members of the<lb/>
media. Munlevwasnotified shortly<lb/>
after the decision was announced.<lb/>
When asked what his plans<lb/>
for the future included, Munley<lb/>
expressed a strong interest in con-<lb/>
tinuing to work with the SGA.<lb/>
"I will definitely be getting<lb/>
involved in trying to make SGA a<lb/>
more pro-active organization<lb/>
Munlev said. "I would like to con-<lb/>
See SGA page 3<lb/>
Meal cards, student IDs soon to be combined<lb/>
8y Jeb Brookshire<lb/>
Staff Writer<lb/>
ECU has a very promising<lb/>
future ahead. Plans include an<lb/>
updated, sophisticated library<lb/>
and a one of a kind student rec-<lb/>
reation center. ECU will also<lb/>
step up to a one-card student<lb/>
IDmeal card.<lb/>
The new system is still in<lb/>
the works as committees work<lb/>
to find out the greatest needs<lb/>
that the new cards will address.<lb/>
"Right now, students use<lb/>
two cards; one for dining and a<lb/>
bookstore account, and the other<lb/>
for student activities, "said Frank<lb/>
Salamon, director of Dining Ser-<lb/>
vices. "We want to make life sim-<lb/>
pler for everyone by combining<lb/>
the cards into one<lb/>
Uses for the two cards will<lb/>
be combined into one card. For<lb/>
example, the new system will<lb/>
allow a key-less entry system for<lb/>
the dorms. Students will be able<lb/>
to vote, check-out books, obtain<lb/>
tickets to athletic events, and buy<lb/>
meals all with the convenience<lb/>
of one card.<lb/>
The changes are scheduled<lb/>
to be completed by the spring<lb/>
semester in 1996.<lb/>
"The process of converting<lb/>
our current system to the new<lb/>
one is a lengthy one Salamon<lb/>
said.<lb/>
The school's mainframe<lb/>
will have to be changed to handle<lb/>
the abilities of the new system.<lb/>
The cards will all work on a<lb/>
magnetic stripe principle simi-<lb/>
lar to the ones on credit cards.<lb/>
The staff will also have to be<lb/>
trained on how to use the sys-<lb/>
tem as well as the technology<lb/>
used to process the cards.<lb/>
The biggest delay is coming<lb/>
from the fact that there are no<lb/>
available phone lines for the sys-<lb/>
tem to use. Also, any department<lb/>
that currently uses one of the<lb/>
cards for anything will have to<lb/>
allocate money for card readers.<lb/>
The question that most<lb/>
people have regarding the new<lb/>
system is: "What if I lose my card<lb/>
and someone then has access to<lb/>
everything that I do There is a<lb/>
high degree of security with these<lb/>
new cards. Just like now, if a stu-<lb/>
dent loses their meal card, one<lb/>
phonecalltoDiningServiceswill<lb/>
put a block on that card, making<lb/>
it invalid. This will allow only<lb/>
students with up-to-date, valid<lb/>
IDs to partake of the services pro-<lb/>
vided by ECU.<lb/>
The goal of the system and<lb/>
its capabilities were best ex-<lb/>
pressed by Salamon when he<lb/>
said, "What we are trying to do is<lb/>
every thing convenient for every-<lb/>
one<lb/>
Sculpture<lb/>
removed<lb/>
By Mike Walker<lb/>
Staff Writer<lb/>
Batter<lb/>
up!<lb/>
The most<lb/>
famous<lb/>
Birmingham<lb/>
Baron lays<lb/>
down a bunt in<lb/>
batting<lb/>
practice.<lb/>
Michael Jordan<lb/>
went 5-11 in a<lb/>
recent series at<lb/>
Five County<lb/>
Stadium in<lb/>
Zebulon.<lb/>
Photo by Brian Olson<lb/>
ECU to celebrate Earth Day<lb/>
Jason Williams<lb/>
News Editor<lb/>
Twenty-four years. In that<lb/>
period of time, acres upon acres of<lb/>
trees have been chopped down.<lb/>
Miles of rivers and streams have<lb/>
been polluted, and the air over<lb/>
many cities has become unhealthy<lb/>
to breathe. Were it not for the first<lb/>
Earth Day, first celebrated 24 years<lb/>
ago tomorrow, who knows how<lb/>
much worse it could be?<lb/>
ECU'senvironmental health<lb/>
honorsociety probably knows, and<lb/>
that is why they will be celebrating<lb/>
the event by recognizing activists<lb/>
and health professionals for their<lb/>
dedication toa betterenvironment.<lb/>
Richard K. Rowe, James H.<lb/>
Mulligan and John Anema will be<lb/>
honored for their work in the envi-<lb/>
ronmental policy field in a cer-<lb/>
emony starting at 11 a.m. Friday at<lb/>
the Belk (Allied Health) Building.<lb/>
ECU's chapter of Epsilon Sigma<lb/>
Nu, the National Environmental<lb/>
Health Honor Society, will spon-<lb/>
sor the program.<lb/>
Rowe, of Raleigh, is the head<lb/>
of the Division of Environmental<lb/>
Health in the N.C Department of<lb/>
Environmental, Health and Natu-<lb/>
ral Resources (DEHNR). He is in<lb/>
charge of public water supplies,<lb/>
pest management, shellfish and<lb/>
milk sanitation, on-site water treat-<lb/>
ment and food protection for the<lb/>
state.<lb/>
Mulligan, a resident of<lb/>
See EARTH DAY page 3<lb/>
Nobody can define art.<lb/>
All people have different<lb/>
ideas about what is and what<lb/>
isn't art. And when pieces of<lb/>
art get displayed in public<lb/>
there is always some ques-<lb/>
tion over whether or not it is<lb/>
art and should be displayed.<lb/>
This was the case of five<lb/>
ECU art students who tried to<lb/>
present their sculpture to the<lb/>
public by placing it outside.<lb/>
After about one and half days,<lb/>
their piece of art became the<lb/>
victim of selfish acts of van-<lb/>
dalism.<lb/>
Stacey Crabill, Ashley<lb/>
Williams, Tanya Cahoon,<lb/>
Vanessa Daughtry, and<lb/>
Kasana Llfton are under-<lb/>
graduate art students. For a<lb/>
project in Design 2, they col-<lb/>
laborated and made a sculp-<lb/>
ture.<lb/>
The sculpture consisted<lb/>
of a real clothesline with<lb/>
working clothespins and real<lb/>
articles of clothing. The ar-<lb/>
ticles of clothing that the five<lb/>
students made were, a pair of<lb/>
jeans, a bra, a pair of boxers, a<lb/>
See ART page 4<lb/>
eople<lb/>
on time;<lb/>
Q. Should freshmen<lb/>
be allowed to have<lb/>
cars on campus?<lb/>
Photos by Leslie Petty<lb/>
r Mm  " Hfei-<lb/>
t ? ??<lb/>
<lb/>
Dana Green, junior: "No, until we<lb/>
are provided with more parking<lb/>
spaces so that everyone can park<lb/>
Carrie Shields, freshman: "Yes,<lb/>
because it would make it a lot<lb/>
easier on us. But if I was a senior<lb/>
and could not park and freshmen<lb/>
could, that would bother me<lb/>
Scott Anderson, junior: "No,<lb/>
because they need to earn their<lb/>
priveleges, a rite of passage<lb/>
through college social life which is<lb/>
necessary for their development<lb/>
Michael Edgerton, sophomore:<lb/>
"When I was a freshman, it was<lb/>
nice to have a car. But considering<lb/>
the parking problem, I do not think<lb/>
it would be a good idea to allow<lb/>
freshmen to have cars<lb/>
<pb facs="00058472_0002"/><lb/>
m$mmmm<lb/>
2 The East Carolinian<lb/>
April 21, 1994<lb/>
April 14<lb/>
Fleming Hall ? 3:00 p.m. Report of larceny of personal items.<lb/>
South of Tennis Courts-Ficklen ? 3:20 p.m. Damage to per-<lb/>
sonal property (vehicle).<lb/>
April 15<lb/>
Southeast of Cotten Hall ? 3:36 a.m. Student arrested for DWI.<lb/>
North of Christenbury?3:30 a.m. Damage to personal property<lb/>
(vehicle).<lb/>
Brody Building Auditorium ? 8:15 a.m. Larceny reported of a<lb/>
telephone.<lb/>
East of Greene Hall ?11:15 a.m. Larceny of bike parts.<lb/>
Founders Drive ? 6:09 p.m. Non-student arrested for Driving<lb/>
While their License is Revoked (DWLR).<lb/>
April 16<lb/>
Jones Hall?2:25 a.m. Report of affray (a noisy quarrel or brawl).<lb/>
South of Spillman ? 12:30 a.m. Damage to personal property<lb/>
(vehicle).<lb/>
Whichard Building ? 4:13 p.m. Damage to outside window.<lb/>
April 17<lb/>
Founder's Drive ? 1.37 p.m. Non-student arrested for D.W.L.R.<lb/>
McGinnis Auditorium &amp; Theatre Arts Center ? 10:37 a.m.<lb/>
Damage to personal property.<lb/>
Belk Hall ? 5:44 p.m. Domestic dispute and trespassing re-<lb/>
ported.<lb/>
Tyler Hall ? 7:45 p.m. Larceny of clothes.<lb/>
April 18<lb/>
Austin Building ? 6:05 p.m. Second degree trespassing re-<lb/>
ported.<lb/>
Jones Hall ? 8:45 p.m. Report of Harassing phone calls.<lb/>
South of Rawl ? 9:16 p.m. Larceny of bicycle.<lb/>
Compiled by Stephanie Lassiter. Taken from official ECU<lb/>
police reports.<lb/>
ABLE meets with Public Safety<lb/>
0 0 000000000000<lb/>
By Tammy Zion<lb/>
Staff Writer<lb/>
Last week's silent protest in<lb/>
front of ECU'S Public Safety build-<lb/>
ing by members of Aliied Blacks<lb/>
for Leadership and Equality<lb/>
(ABLE) may have been a similar<lb/>
plea as the one heard almost 30<lb/>
years ago.<lb/>
According to the account<lb/>
written in East Carolina University,<lb/>
the Formative Years by Dr. Mary Jo<lb/>
Jackson Bratton, professor of his-<lb/>
tory at ECU, in 1968 a group of 67<lb/>
African American students pre-<lb/>
sented a petition to President Leo<lb/>
Jenkins calling for an immediate<lb/>
improvement in racial practices.<lb/>
Similarly, members of ABLE<lb/>
marched in front of Public Safety<lb/>
last week with a list of grievances<lb/>
asking the department to alter the<lb/>
way African Americans are treated.<lb/>
In response, a meeting was sched-<lb/>
uled.<lb/>
Monday, at 5 p.m approxi-<lb/>
mately 10 ABLE representatives<lb/>
and students sat down with Teresa<lb/>
Crocker, director of Public Safety,<lb/>
in the basement of Mendenhall to<lb/>
discuss group concerns and pos-<lb/>
sible solutions to the proposed<lb/>
problems.<lb/>
The meeting began when<lb/>
Crocker briefly introduced herself,<lb/>
and then opened the discussion to<lb/>
those present. The questions and<lb/>
answers lasted for over an hour<lb/>
and a half, ending with the goal of<lb/>
establishing a potential public<lb/>
safety employment student review<lb/>
board.<lb/>
In her introduction, Crocker<lb/>
explained that she came to ECU<lb/>
last November and was a graduate<lb/>
of N.C. State. She went on to say<lb/>
tha t she is currently going to school<lb/>
at N.C. Central for a Master's de-<lb/>
gree in criminal justice.<lb/>
"I wan ted a different perspec-<lb/>
tive of criminal justice and felt that<lb/>
I could get that at a predominantly<lb/>
black school Crocker said.<lb/>
Crocker also said that she<lb/>
wants ECU's public safety serviceto<lb/>
become one of the best programs "<lb/>
in the country. She said that since ?<lb/>
coming to ECU, 10 employees are g<lb/>
no longer with public safety, and<lb/>
this signifies a definite time of "<lb/>
change for the department. t<lb/>
Demetrius Carter, spokesper-<lb/>
son for ABLE, asked Crocker if she-<lb/>
felt that a problem exists between i<lb/>
African Americans on campus and t<lb/>
Public Safety. Crocker said that<lb/>
there may have been a problem,<lb/>
but predicted a different future. (<lb/>
She said that no one deserves pref-<lb/>
erential treatment, but if there are<lb/>
problems she should be informed<lb/>
of them.<lb/>
"I ha ven't had students come<lb/>
to my office and complain that they<lb/>
have been treated differently<lb/>
Crocker said.<lb/>
This comment sparked reac-<lb/>
tions that some students may not<lb/>
know where to go when instances<lb/>
occur. Many students may not feel<lb/>
comfortable addressing the direc-<lb/>
tor of public safety.<lb/>
"If there 'sa problem withone<lb/>
of my officers, I have a right to<lb/>
know that Crocker said.<lb/>
One of the proposed griev-<lb/>
ances on the list given to Crocker<lb/>
last week was the need for public<lb/>
safety to employ African Ameri-<lb/>
can officers in proportion to the<lb/>
number of African American stu-<lb/>
dents on campus.<lb/>
When the subject was ad-<lb/>
dressed, Crocker responded that<lb/>
20 percent of public safety posi-<lb/>
tions were filled by African Ameri-<lb/>
cans, which outnumbers her inf or-<lb/>
mationthatbetweenlOand 12per-<lb/>
cent of ECU students are African<lb/>
American. She also said that she is<lb/>
hoping to fill half of the current ten<lb/>
openings with minorities.<lb/>
One student said it did not<lb/>
matter if public safety employed<lb/>
solely Caucasians, because the at-<lb/>
titudes of some of the officers<lb/>
needed "serious alterations Stu-<lb/>
? r<lb/>
El<lb/>
An "Extra Special Place" !<lb/>
'THE ORDINARY, THE EXTRAORDINARY,<lb/>
 THE UNUSUAL AND UNIQUE<lb/>
I HolusionrM Art Prints ? Tornado Lamps ? Sand Pictures<lb/>
Lava Lites1 ? Motion Waves ? Furry Animals ? 3-D Puzzles<lb/>
'i, And Much, Much More<lb/>
THE FUN PLACE TO SHOP!<lb/>
ESP plus Inc ? M-Sat 10-6<lb/>
Arlington Village ? 803 Red Banks Rd<lb/>
Greenville, NC 27858 ? (919) 321-3946<lb/>
cccccccccccccc<lb/>
THE LEO JENKINS<lb/>
MEMORIAL<lb/>
15<lb/>
24Wiours<lb/>
gaftnsi<lb/>
CANC<lb/>
T<lb/>
JOIN THE FIGHT<lb/>
APRIL 29-30<lb/>
Starting Time: 6 p.m.<lb/>
Registration begins at 4:30 p.m.<lb/>
at East Carolina University track<lb/>
Get your team of 8-10 people together to walk,<lb/>
run or jog against cancer.<lb/>
Team members run or jog in shifts for 24 hours.<lb/>
For more information call ?JZ1-Zo?5o<lb/>
FUN FOOD AND EXERCISE<lb/>
GUARANTEED FOR ALL!<lb/>
Sponsored by:<lb/>
Bud Light<lb/>
Eastern Carolina Coca-Cola<lb/>
GlaxoCerenex Pharmaceuticals<lb/>
Talk FM WZCI FM 98.3<lb/>
GlennonBitton<lb/>
Quixote Travels, Inc.<lb/>
HOSTED BY:<lb/>
Alpha Phi Omega<lb/>
American Cancer Society<lb/>
See ABLE page 4<lb/>
APPLICATION TO PARTICIPATE<lb/>
I will recruit a team - send me information<lb/>
I would like to be on a team<lb/>
Enclosed10 per person<lb/>
Mail to: American Cancer Society, PO Box 377<lb/>
Greenville, NC 27835<lb/>
The 12th Annual<lb/>
BAHAMA MAMA PAPTY!<lb/>
PRESENTED BY KAPPA SIGMA<lb/>
SATURDAY, APRIL 23, 1p.m. to 5p.m.<lb/>
Donations will go to:<lb/>
 kttrVS Cystic Fibrosis<lb/>
6ft ROUYGRAY&amp; &amp;<lb/>
sunrinc<lb/>
MOTHER<lb/>
NATURE<lb/>
B.Y.O.BUD OR<lb/>
BUSCH!<lb/>
NO BOTTLES<lb/>
PLEASE<lb/>
LOU'S BEACH<lb/>
B1MGO<lb/>
BIKINI CONTEST<lb/>
Location for the Bahama Mama?<lb/>
Kappa Sig House flk<lb/>
700 E. Tenth St.<lb/>
ATiTIC<lb/>
?<lb/>
(Bniido Darryl Rmlaurant)<lb/>
For ticket information call the Kappa Sig House<lb/>
757 1005 or752-5543<lb/>
jcfjrqs cer &amp;Winc<lb/>
o4<lb/>
IM1HHA1<lb/>
AppA<lb/>
Iqpfpiai ADVANCE SCREENING<lb/>
FRFF MOVIE POSTERS<lb/>
Monday, April 25<lb/>
8:00 PM<lb/>
Hendrix Theatre<lb/>
Passes Available At<lb/>
Mendenhall Info Desk &amp;<lb/>
ECU Student Store<lb/>
Presented By<lb/>
The Student Union<lb/>
Films Committee<lb/>
i I????'<lb/>
v .  ?<lb/>
<pb facs="00058472_0003"/><lb/>
April 21, 1994<lb/>
The East Carolinian 3<lb/>
SGA<lb/>
Continued from page 1<lb/>
TRIAD-AREA<lb/>
STUDENTS<lb/>
<lb/>
W <lb/>
H G<lb/>
EARN TRANSFERABLE<lb/>
COLLEGE CREDIT<lb/>
THROUGH CHALLENGING,<lb/>
STIMULATING COURSES<lb/>
DURING SUMMER SESSION<lb/>
gratulate Sheila on ,1 jt h well done. I<lb/>
thi'ik everyone worked extremeh<lb/>
hard and I would like to thank ev-<lb/>
eryone for coming out So, we re<lb/>
going toseew hatgoesonherenow<lb/>
East Carolinian could not<lb/>
reach Boswell for comments.<lb/>
Emery requested that a repre-<lb/>
EARTH DAY<lb/>
?<lb/>
K<lb/>
sentah v toi<lb/>
present durii<lb/>
i K'er.j urrentS( IA president, n<lb/>
sented rhomasand Boswell.<lb/>
' Eastman did a great job in<lb/>
the election, he won and hedesen es<lb/>
every right and respect oi being the thesemester,<lb/>
I am ' r tne<lb/>
studentsbei - eyl<lb/>
 oi e, i astman said<lb/>
Among his plans tor the up-<lb/>
coming war. Eastman hopes to ex-<lb/>
tend cl : p dates to the end ot<lb/>
asa plan w here<lb/>
during exams<lb/>
I would realh like to thank<lb/>
? pie who came out and<lb/>
supported me Eastman said. "I<lb/>
think people are ready to see it we<lb/>
can') moving more for the<lb/>
students and eetoutof all the nega-<lb/>
te !A president 1 )yersaid.<lb/>
the library will be open 24 hours bvity associated with SGA<lb/>
Continued from page 1<lb/>
T<lb/>
AT ELON<lb/>
COLLEGE<lb/>
CONVENIENT LOCATION<lb/>
FLEXIBLE SCHEDULING<lb/>
COURSES ARE OFFERED IN ALL DISCIPLINES.<lb/>
FOR EXAMPLE:<lb/>
Art 237<lb/>
Bus. Adm. 360<lb/>
Bus. Adm. 4! 9<lb/>
Economics 246<lb/>
English 2 i 7<lb/>
English 332<lb/>
English 362<lb/>
History 374<lb/>
jri-Comm. 367<lb/>
jri-Comm, 465<lb/>
Pol. Sci 329<lb/>
Religion 378<lb/>
Spanish I I I<lb/>
Theatre lOI<lb/>
Photography I &amp; I!<lb/>
Principles of Decision Science<lb/>
Sales Management<lb/>
Statistics for Economics and Business<lb/>
Women and Language<lb/>
Literature of the South<lb/>
Study of Film<lb/>
Germany: Unification to 1945<lb/>
Information Search<lb/>
Media Law<lb/>
Political Behavior<lb/>
Book of Revelation<lb/>
Elementary Spanish<lb/>
introduction to Theatre<lb/>
REGISTRATION JUNE I<lb/>
FOR MORE INFORMATION,<lb/>
OR A COMPLETE LIST OF COURSES,<lb/>
CALL THE OFFICE OF ADMISSIONS<lb/>
1-800-334-8448 OR 910-584-2370<lb/>
Greenville, is a regional supervisor<lb/>
at DF11R who is responsible for<lb/>
implementing the state's regula-<lb/>
tory program for air, surface water<lb/>
and ground water in eastern North<lb/>
Carolina. 1 he regional office is<lb/>
b ised in Washington, N.C.<lb/>
ohn Anema is the chair oi<lb/>
the local chapter of the Sierra Club,<lb/>
and is also active in the Pamlico-<lb/>
Tar River Foundation. Anema has<lb/>
organized educational programs<lb/>
on waste incineration and other<lb/>
regional environmental issues Re<lb/>
cently he appeared on a panel dis-<lb/>
cussion at a convention organized<lb/>
b ECU'sCollege Democrats<lb/>
Anema said that the first<lb/>
Earth Day grew out of the anti-war<lb/>
movementduringtheVi -mamera.<lb/>
I le said that some oi the enthusi-<lb/>
asm for environmentalism has<lb/>
waned since that time.<lb/>
"There is still a strong anti-<lb/>
em ironmental movement<lb/>
Anema said. 'The emironment<lb/>
sometimes gets overshadowed b<lb/>
iLies like the economy and crime<lb/>
"What we need is better plan-<lb/>
ning, especially on the regional<lb/>
level. We also need to reconstruct<lb/>
our thinking toward sustainable<lb/>
de elopment rather than growth<lb/>
Dr. Trenton Davis, professor<lb/>
oi environmental health, also un-<lb/>
derstands the significance oi Earth<lb/>
Day. He credits the environmental<lb/>
movement of the late 1960s and<lb/>
early 1970s with stimulating envi-<lb/>
ronmental legislation.<lb/>
"The first Earth Day led to<lb/>
the most important piece ot legis-<lb/>
lation we've ever had Davis said.<lb/>
The legislation was the National<lb/>
I nvironmental Polio Act of 1969<lb/>
iNI PA). Thislavi requires the fed<lb/>
era! government to consider the<lb/>
impact of an action on the en i-<lb/>
ronment. A government ageno<lb/>
must file an environmental impact<lb/>
statement that allows for publii<lb/>
comment before taking .k tion.<lb/>
Other significant legislation<lb/>
passed during this time was the<lb/>
t leanAir ctofl970andthe( lean<lb/>
Water Act oi 1972. ITiese laws es-<lb/>
tablished national standards for air<lb/>
and water, tor which state- must<lb/>
create a plan to meet Both laws<lb/>
ha e been amended se era! times,<lb/>
but are credited with improving<lb/>
air and water quality.<lb/>
Davis -aid that since the first<lb/>
Earth Day, much lias changed,<lb/>
"here is le? pollution, generally,<lb/>
and people appreciate natural ar-<lb/>
eas. Also, people are better in-<lb/>
formed about environmental is-<lb/>
sues.<lb/>
We come a long way as<lb/>
to educating the public about en-<lb/>
vironmental issues Davis said.<lb/>
' 1 can -ee this in our freshmen<lb/>
students, rhev are much more<lb/>
knowledgeable about the environ-<lb/>
ment<lb/>
Davis al-o -aid that people people<lb/>
should remember the environ<lb/>
mentaftt r I arth I )ayhaspassed.<lb/>
"We are still a long way trom<lb/>
controllingallol the environmen-<lb/>
tal issues that affect our health<lb/>
Bill Winchester, student<lb/>
president of Epsilon Sigma Nu,<lb/>
said he is looking forward to<lb/>
tomorrow - ceremony.<lb/>
"Every year we induct new<lb/>
members into the honors K iet<lb/>
he said. "We also choose people<lb/>
wiiii have shown outstanding<lb/>
service to the environment. For<lb/>
some oi the recipients, it might<lb/>
seem like a job, but these are<lb/>
who go above and be-<lb/>
yond<lb/>
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<pb facs="00058472_0004"/><lb/>
4 The East Carolinian<lb/>
April 21, 1994<lb/>
ART<lb/>
Continued from page 1<lb/>
bikini, a dress, a T-shirt, and socks.<lb/>
The only difference between the<lb/>
sculpture and a real clothesline<lb/>
vas that the sculpture was four<lb/>
limes as big as a normal clothes-<lb/>
line. "The jeans that hung on the<lb/>
clothesline were about 11 feet<lb/>
long Williams said.<lb/>
The project was originally<lb/>
designed to be site specific, and<lb/>
the site they picked to hang their<lb/>
sculpture up on the balconies be-<lb/>
tween Fleming and Cotten dorms.<lb/>
One of the aspects of their project<lb/>
jvas to secure the correct permis-<lb/>
sion to hang their piece. How-<lb/>
ever, when the five students<lb/>
started to hang their piece on<lb/>
Monday, April 11, they ran into<lb/>
some problems. According to<lb/>
yVilliams, they were told "very<lb/>
Explicitly" by the University<lb/>
Housing Director Emmanuele<lb/>
Amaro that they were not allowed<lb/>
to hang it there. Williams notes,<lb/>
they were under the impression<lb/>
that they had the permission.<lb/>
"As far as we knew, we had<lb/>
gone through sources and gotten<lb/>
permission Crabill said.<lb/>
However, according to<lb/>
Amaro, the five students did not<lb/>
get the correct authorization.<lb/>
"They did not have any permis-<lb/>
sion Amaro said. "They didn't<lb/>
even go through the Dean of Stu-<lb/>
dents or my office .<lb/>
According to Crabill, Amaro<lb/>
didn't even give them time to ex-<lb/>
plain and threatened to cut the<lb/>
sculpture down. "He said that if<lb/>
he let us hang it up without spe-<lb/>
cial reason, then at any point, any-<lb/>
one could hang a banner out of<lb/>
their window Crabill said.<lb/>
Williams said she under-<lb/>
stood he was just doing his job,<lb/>
but she feels that he treated them<lb/>
like children. "He threatened to<lb/>
vandalize our sculpture Will-<lb/>
iams said.<lb/>
Williams points out that<lb/>
their sculpture is not a banner. "I<lb/>
don't think what we worked so<lb/>
many hours on should be com-<lb/>
pared to an old sheet with spray<lb/>
paint on it that says, rush what-<lb/>
ever Williams said.<lb/>
"To us it's like someone<lb/>
else's research paper Crabill<lb/>
said.<lb/>
After the initial removal, the<lb/>
five students secured permission<lb/>
to put up their sculpture in front<lb/>
of the between the art building<lb/>
and Fifth Street. Williams notes<lb/>
ABLE<lb/>
however, that the Dean of the Art<lb/>
School, Michael Dorsey, had to<lb/>
spend a lot of time meeting with<lb/>
groundskeepers to get permission<lb/>
for the five students to hang their<lb/>
sculpture.<lb/>
" He spent a lot of his time in<lb/>
meetings fighting to keep the<lb/>
sculpture up Williams said. Ap-<lb/>
parently, Chancellor Eakin also ex-<lb/>
pressed support for-the students<lb/>
to hang up their sculpture.<lb/>
After a day and a half of<lb/>
hanging in front of the art build-<lb/>
ing, the sculpture started to get<lb/>
vandalized. According to Will-<lb/>
iams, first the bra was cut off at the<lb/>
straps and stolen. After that the<lb/>
bikini, boxers, and T-shirt were<lb/>
stolen and the dress was ruined.<lb/>
"It was like once we fought<lb/>
to get it up, we had to endure<lb/>
Continued from page 2<lb/>
vandalism Crabill said. The van-<lb/>
dalism was not reported to ECU<lb/>
Public Safety. "We just assumed<lb/>
that that would be something we<lb/>
couldn't recover Williams said.<lb/>
The group expressed anger<lb/>
over the vandalism because, now<lb/>
the public won't be able to see<lb/>
what thev wanted to share.<lb/>
"To us, it was something<lb/>
that we wanted to share for<lb/>
other people to view and then<lb/>
thoseare the people that didn't<lb/>
consider the time and effort<lb/>
that we put in something like<lb/>
that Williams said. "We felt<lb/>
like so many people were en-<lb/>
joying it Crabill said.<lb/>
dents felt that officers would stop<lb/>
them for no reason, or not give a<lb/>
reason, and that was not fair.<lb/>
Crocker agreed and said that in-<lb/>
forming suspects of police action<lb/>
was recommended, but could not<lb/>
become policy because prior noti-<lb/>
fication is not a good idea in all<lb/>
situations.<lb/>
"It's very difficult to hire<lb/>
young police officers Crocker<lb/>
said. "Every time they see some-<lb/>
one on TV they think its a drama,<lb/>
that you have to pull your weapon<lb/>
and that's not true<lb/>
Recruitment was cited by<lb/>
many as a major flaw of public<lb/>
safety. Crocker said there is a lack<lb/>
of African American officers ap-<lb/>
plying for positions and she has<lb/>
"put the word out" at predomi-<lb/>
nantly black institutions across the<lb/>
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state. One student said he had ap-<lb/>
plied for a position and never re-<lb/>
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to implement a recruitment team<lb/>
within the next two years which<lb/>
will at least confirm the receiving<lb/>
of applications.<lb/>
She said that ECU isa friendly<lb/>
environment where trouble does<lb/>
not occur often. She is trying to<lb/>
recruit students of ECU who would<lb/>
enjoy a campus situation.<lb/>
Unrest was present in the<lb/>
room as students felt the meeting<lb/>
would end, as previous meetings<lb/>
in January did, with no action.<lb/>
Crocker said these feelings were<lb/>
due to a lack of communication<lb/>
and that she has been available for<lb/>
discussion.<lb/>
When asked what actions<lb/>
Crocker has taken since January,<lb/>
she said she is recruiting some of<lb/>
the best diversity training avail-<lb/>
able in the country for annual in-<lb/>
struction. She has also informed<lb/>
supervisors to look for unneces-<lb/>
sary aggression in officers, as well<lb/>
as planning surveys for the stu-<lb/>
dent body. She said she is also in<lb/>
the process of updating the proce-<lb/>
dure manual to her philosophies,<lb/>
but all of these actions would take<lb/>
time.<lb/>
"They are not getting things<lb/>
done in the timely fashion that I<lb/>
would like Crocker said.<lb/>
Students from across the<lb/>
room said they would feel much<lb/>
more comfortable with a student<lb/>
screening board to help in select-<lb/>
ing potential employees of public<lb/>
safety.<lb/>
"I've thought about that an<lb/>
awful lot Crocker said. "I've also<lb/>
Attention<lb/>
Returning Students<lb/>
If yon plan to live off campus, you can eliminate at least one long line by arranging<lb/>
your utility service in advance. By planning ahead, you can save valuable time  and<lb/>
possibly money. The following options are available:<lb/>
Option A: No Deposit Required<lb/>
At your parents' request, your utility<lb/>
service may be put in their name. Just pick<lb/>
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tion from room 211 in the Off-Campus<lb/>
Housing Office, Whichard Building or at<lb/>
Greenville Utilities' main office, 200 W. 5th<lb/>
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Have your parents complete the<lb/>
application (which must be notarized) and<lb/>
mail it to GUC, P O Box !847, Greenville,<lb/>
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Rcmembcr to attach a "letter of<lb/>
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You can save lime by mailing the deposit<lb/>
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on and a phone number where we may reach you<lb/>
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Greenville ?S? Utilities<lb/>
made some phone calls. I still be-<lb/>
lieve it's not feasible to go through<lb/>
that process. 1 feel confident in my<lb/>
ability to choose<lb/>
After a lengthy debate and<lb/>
some compromising, Crocker<lb/>
agreed to begin the formation of a<lb/>
student review board by the end of<lb/>
April.<lb/>
"It will give you a feel for<lb/>
what the students want a mem-<lb/>
ber of ABLE said.<lb/>
When asked whether or not<lb/>
she believed the arrest of Allen<lb/>
Williams, on April 5 was made<lb/>
with unnecessary force Crocker<lb/>
commented that the incident is<lb/>
currently under investigation by<lb/>
ECU attorneys.<lb/>
ABLE will hold another meet-<lb/>
ing next Wednesday to begin<lb/>
implementing the ideas proposed.<lb/>
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<pb facs="00058472_0005"/><lb/>
The East Carolinian<lb/>
April 21, 1994<lb/>
Opinion<lb/>
Page 5<lb/>
The East Carolinian<lb/>
Gregory Dickens, General Manager<lb/>
Maureen A. Rich, Managing Editor<lb/>
Jason Williams, News Editor<lb/>
Stephanie Lassiter, Asst. 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/>
Jodi Connelly, Copy Editor<lb/>
Phebe Toler. Copy Editor<lb/>
Deborah Daniel, Secretary<lb/>
Tony Dunn, Business Manager<lb/>
Margie O'Shea, Circulation Manager<lb/>
Hurt 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 Ngyeun, Systems Manager<lb/>
Serving the ECU community since 1925. The East Carolinian publishes 12.000 copies every Tuesday and Thursday. The<lb/>
masthead 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 reserv es 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/>
"In wildness is the preservation of the world" j<lb/>
Friday is Earth Day. It is a day you either<lb/>
feel impassioned about, or one that seems to be<lb/>
the most worthless holiday in existence. Need-<lb/>
less to say, I view Earth Day as not only an<lb/>
important observation, but one that encour-<lb/>
ages people to remain faithful to part of their<lb/>
con tract with wha fever higher power to which<lb/>
they happen to answer.<lb/>
Twenty-four years ago, Earth Day began<lb/>
in a decade that was hell-bent on getting past<lb/>
and recovering from the Vietnam experience.<lb/>
It was before the monty-grubbing span of the<lb/>
'80s, and after the free love excesses of the Age<lb/>
of Aquarius. In other words, we had a lot to<lb/>
learn.<lb/>
So along comes a celebration of Mother<lb/>
Earth and the beginning of a movement that<lb/>
owed many of its traits to American Indian<lb/>
tradition and minimalist thinking. We real-<lb/>
ized that we needed to change or, in not so<lb/>
many years, the environment could face ulti-<lb/>
mate, irreparable destruction. In many ways,<lb/>
it has.<lb/>
Countless acres of precious rainforests all<lb/>
over the globe have disappeared, due to mass-<lb/>
grazing. The air was indelibily polluted by<lb/>
factories, automobiles, industrial chemicals<lb/>
and forest-reduction. The water was abused in<lb/>
much the same fashion. Thanks to illegal in-<lb/>
dustrial dumping and the increase of algae,<lb/>
our water systems became clogged and unus-<lb/>
able. We were destroying the ground we<lb/>
walked on, the air we breathed and the water<lb/>
we drink. In a roundabout way (to be totally<lb/>
existential), we were destroying ourselves.<lb/>
Earth Day certainly didn't solve these prob-<lb/>
lems, but it brought about the realization that<lb/>
change needed to occur. Enthusiasm to make a<lb/>
change stimulated environmental legislation?<lb/>
the most important of which was the National<lb/>
Environmental Policy Act of 1969 (NEPA). Sim-<lb/>
ply put, this law requires the federal govern-<lb/>
ment to think before they act. A huge step for<lb/>
humankind, so to speak.<lb/>
The Clean Air Act of 1970 and the Clean<lb/>
Water Act of 1972 were doubly significant, since<lb/>
they established national standards for air and<lb/>
water and improved the quality of both. Since<lb/>
then, many people have seen nature in a differ-<lb/>
ent light and have taken steps toward a cleaner<lb/>
planet. National parks saw an increase in visi-<lb/>
tors, the number of environmental periodicals<lb/>
reached an all-time high, and environmental<lb/>
education gained interest.<lb/>
The only problem with Earth Day is that<lb/>
many people forget to remember the environ-<lb/>
ment after the observance day is over. Keep in<lb/>
mind what is now an old adage: Rethink, reuse,<lb/>
recycle.<lb/>
And along a similar strain (in some alter-<lb/>
nate universe, maybe), Friday is the observance<lb/>
of Alexander Kerensky's birthday. Kerensky<lb/>
was the first democratic president of Russia, in<lb/>
power between the reign of Nicholas II and<lb/>
Lenin's Communist movement. Although his<lb/>
time in office was short-lived, it is still a signifi-<lb/>
cant contribution in the now-democratic coun-<lb/>
try. So, in his honor, toast Aleksei with a shot of<lb/>
Stolichnaya and whoop it up in celebration of<lb/>
the Earth'<lb/>
By Laura Wright<lb/>
Strippers reinforce idea of the body as merchandise<lb/>
Sure, we can pay our<lb/>
tuition with the money<lb/>
that we make from<lb/>
such endeavors, but<lb/>
participating in such<lb/>
lines of work sort of<lb/>
defeats the purpose of<lb/>
getting an education in<lb/>
the first place.<lb/>
It's the end of the se-<lb/>
mester and I am so glad.<lb/>
I have nothing creative<lb/>
left to say, and if I have to<lb/>
form one more rational<lb/>
thought I think that I'll turn<lb/>
into an avocado.<lb/>
I was going to do a re-<lb/>
cap of the year's events, but I<lb/>
can't re-<lb/>
ally re- ?????MHH<lb/>
member<lb/>
what has<lb/>
happened<lb/>
this year.<lb/>
No,<lb/>
seriously,<lb/>
I remem-<lb/>
ber the<lb/>
relevant<lb/>
stuff like mm<lb/>
Tonya<lb/>
Harding and Nancy Kerrigan,<lb/>
Lorena Bobbitt, the<lb/>
earthquake(s), etc.<lb/>
I say "etc because my<lb/>
brain is burned from grading<lb/>
journals and papers, from<lb/>
standing in line at the library<lb/>
to use the new computers,<lb/>
from searching for periodi-<lb/>
cals that simply don't exist<lb/>
no matter how often I'm told<lb/>
otherwise.<lb/>
I say "etc because I<lb/>
don't have the energy to<lb/>
search through my memory<lb/>
banks and retrieve old infor-<lb/>
mation.<lb/>
And I'm still in mourn-<lb/>
ing over Kurt Cobain. I know,<lb/>
I know. He's dead and there's<lb/>
plenty of other good music<lb/>
out there to listen to; but I<lb/>
have been pretty profoundly<lb/>
affected nonetheless.<lb/>
Well, I seem to be off on<lb/>
a tangent before I even be-<lb/>
gin. Back to what I started to<lb/>
say, I was going to do a year<lb/>
end recap, but I decided<lb/>
against that course of action.<lb/>
Besides, I've been sheltered<lb/>
by this non-world that we all<lb/>
refer to as East Carolina Uni-<lb/>
versity, so I haven't really had<lb/>
to deal with many real world<lb/>
events anyway.<lb/>
I sat down with last<lb/>
Thursday's edition of The East<lb/>
Carolinian and started to read an<lb/>
article on the front page about<lb/>
the women's<lb/>
???????i studies confer-<lb/>
ence that took<lb/>
place at ECU<lb/>
last weekend.<lb/>
Lillian<lb/>
Robinson, one<lb/>
of the speakers<lb/>
at the annual<lb/>
meeting of the<lb/>
Southeastern<lb/>
 Women's Stud-<lb/>
ies Association<lb/>
(SEWSA), discussed the debate<lb/>
over whether or not prostitu-<lb/>
tion serves to oppress women.<lb/>
Some feminists claim that<lb/>
prostitution and similar lines of<lb/>
"sex work such as stripping,<lb/>
are a woman's choice and<lb/>
women benefit monetarily from<lb/>
them. Robinson, however ar-<lb/>
gued that these sources of in-<lb/>
come are exploitive and result<lb/>
in sexual subjectivity.<lb/>
I was reading along, think-<lb/>
ing about all of the times I've<lb/>
heard women say things like,<lb/>
"Strippers make killer money.<lb/>
These stupid guys come in and<lb/>
drool and hand out their money<lb/>
like idiots while the women get<lb/>
rich I think that no matter how<lb/>
much money the women make,<lb/>
there's always the owner of the<lb/>
club who's making the real<lb/>
money ? and he's most likely a<lb/>
man.<lb/>
So, it doesn't really further<lb/>
the cause of women to dance in<lb/>
the nude or to act as escorts,<lb/>
etc.(there's that etc. again). It<lb/>
serves the cause of the people<lb/>
who own the clubs, the people<lb/>
who run the "escort services<lb/>
For women to buy into the<lb/>
idea that by taking money for<lb/>
these services they somehow<lb/>
beat the system, is untrue. By<lb/>
participating in the exchange of<lb/>
goods for currency, they actu-<lb/>
ally reinforce a system where<lb/>
women's bodies are merchan-<lb/>
dise.<lb/>
But I'm not trying to say<lb/>
that men should be held entirely<lb/>
responsible. They're the ones<lb/>
who benefit so why should we<lb/>
expect them to change? And, as<lb/>
a friend of mine said, women<lb/>
are allowed to make stupid<lb/>
choices if they want to. The op-<lb/>
portunities are wide open if you<lb/>
want to take off your clothes for<lb/>
money.<lb/>
As I continued to read and<lb/>
turned the pages, my senses<lb/>
were assaulted by advertise-<lb/>
ments for clubs where "danc-<lb/>
ers" are wanted and classifieds<lb/>
where female escorts can make<lb/>
so-called "big bucks Hope-<lb/>
fully, although I doubt it, these<lb/>
ads signify that there is a short-<lb/>
age of women who are willing<lb/>
to sell themselves.<lb/>
More likely, I'm afraid,<lb/>
these ads appear in a college<lb/>
newspaper because college<lb/>
women are likely to respond to<lb/>
them. It's really kind of ironic.<lb/>
Sure, we can pay our tuition with<lb/>
the money that we make from<lb/>
such endeavors, but participat-<lb/>
ing in such lines of work sort of<lb/>
defeats the purpose of getting<lb/>
an education in the first place.<lb/>
I'll leave you with these<lb/>
thoughts. Have a great summer,<lb/>
don't sell yourselves short, and<lb/>
always, always question the sys-<lb/>
tem.<lb/>
If you notice that some-<lb/>
thing about it appears a bit sus-<lb/>
pect, remember that you can al-<lb/>
ways refuse to take part in it.<lb/>
See ya.<lb/>
THINKS SHE'S<lb/>
SHE JUSTMAOB<lb/>
He? zent mis'my.<lb/>
ONLY fAY-S '<lb/>
MONey fop-<lb/>
we rnsst<lb/>
lcMTTrg.TleU<lb/>
I<lb/>
V,<lb/>
TH'S GEtJT JU5r<lb/>
ry??D5 TO Go n<lb/>
THC StTrt??oAA<lb/>
6f-r?'S mTUg?<lb/>
MATUTTIB- ST6f<lb/>
TH5 GUY'S SPAIN<lb/>
1 that vaoLK3 JUST<lb/>
5HUT ?OWA<lb/>
iSTr<lb/>
1<lb/>
tPl?M<lb/>
Letters to the Editor<lb/>
To the Editor:<lb/>
I am writing to express my thoughts of this<lb/>
whole Kurt Cobain situation.<lb/>
When I first heard of Cobain's suicide, my<lb/>
thoughts were that it was incredibly ignorant for<lb/>
anyone to feel any remorse or compassion for this<lb/>
self-absorbed and odious character who had been<lb/>
bitching and whining his way through the musi-<lb/>
cal scene for the past few years.<lb/>
I was always put off by Cobain's arrogant<lb/>
comments in interviews and his obnoxious, ego-<lb/>
centric attitude toward other musicians such as<lb/>
Eddie Vedder and Mike McCready, whom I felt<lb/>
were far superior musically (and still do).<lb/>
At the time of his death I held the position<lb/>
that his passing was just another self-made drama<lb/>
that Cobain wished to heap upon us.<lb/>
But after much thought and reflection, my<lb/>
position has changed. I remember how I felt on<lb/>
August 27, 1990; when I learned that my musical<lb/>
hero and vicarious guide, Stevie Ray Vaughn,<lb/>
had been tragically killed in a helicopter accident.<lb/>
My grief was palpable and overwhelming.<lb/>
Though I had never known the man person-<lb/>
ally, my loss and pain were truly real. It stands to<lb/>
reason that some Nirvana fans were equally struck<lb/>
by the loss of Kurt Cobain. For them my heart<lb/>
sincerely empathizes and grieves.<lb/>
Yet, still, the situations are not the same,<lb/>
Cobain took his own life, whereas Stevie died<lb/>
involuntarily. Stevie Ray had his own battles<lb/>
with addiction and depression, but in the last two<lb/>
years of his life had found peace from the de-<lb/>
mons that haunted him. I dare to think that<lb/>
Cobain could have discovered the same tran-<lb/>
quility had he just found a brief glimmer of<lb/>
light and hope in the dark periods of his final<lb/>
year. His young daughter will have to grow up<lb/>
knowing that her love was not enough to buoy<lb/>
her father in his bleakest hours.<lb/>
Author William Styron, in his brilliant<lb/>
book on depression, Darkness Visible, said that<lb/>
 the pain of severe depression is quite un-<lb/>
imaginable to those who have not suffered it,<lb/>
and it kills in many instances because its an-<lb/>
guish can no longer be borne<lb/>
I realize now that Cobain's pain was obvi-<lb/>
ously tremendous and he exercised what he<lb/>
thought was his only remaining option.<lb/>
As I said, my heart goes out to those who<lb/>
sincerely mourn the loss of Kurt Cobain. But his<lb/>
death is not a verdict, nor is it a thing to be<lb/>
immortalized, but an act of a desperate man; an<lb/>
act be pitied.<lb/>
Stevie Ray Vaughn's death came during the<lb/>
happiest, most triumphant days of his life. Kurt<lb/>
Cobain died under a cloud of misery and pain<lb/>
and self-loathing that none of us will ever truly<lb/>
understand. We shouldn't judge Cobain's final<lb/>
action or imitate it, but instead, hope that he has<lb/>
now found the peace that eluded him in life.<lb/>
Charles F. Grantham<lb/>
Graduate<lb/>
Geography<lb/>
To the Editor:<lb/>
It took me a while to decide whether or not<lb/>
to write this letter because I am usually a soft-<lb/>
spoken person who waits for someone else to<lb/>
speak up. I finally decided that I could not let Mr.<lb/>
Dyer's remarks go unnoticed.<lb/>
Anyone who listened to the SGA presiden-<lb/>
tial debate knows that it was very intense almost<lb/>
to the point of name-calling. I listened intently<lb/>
trying to get a feel for each candidates position on<lb/>
issues facing the ECU campus. I felt that each<lb/>
candidate did their best to answer the questions<lb/>
of the callers and of the hostess.<lb/>
However, when Mr. Dyer called he really<lb/>
upset me and the other people around me listen-<lb/>
ing to the debate.<lb/>
For those who didn't listen to the debate,<lb/>
Mr. Dyer attacked Ian Eastman right from the<lb/>
start. This did not bother me, because I feel that a<lb/>
candidate for the presidency ought to be able to<lb/>
handle any questions whether they are aimed<lb/>
directly at himher or not.<lb/>
It was just one simple issue that Mr. Eastman<lb/>
asked Mr. Dyer about, which was the student<lb/>
tuition payment program. Mr. Eastman explained<lb/>
that when he tried to propose this program it was<lb/>
brought to his attention that, to his astonishment,<lb/>
one had already existed for the past two years.<lb/>
Mr. Dyer's reason for the SGA not bringing<lb/>
this to the attention of the student body is<lb/>
because, and I quote  we don't want the<lb/>
middle class students of ECU to abuse this<lb/>
policy<lb/>
What I am a middle class student and<lb/>
when I told my parents, who by the way aren't<lb/>
paying for my schooling, they were pissed off!<lb/>
I can't believe Mr. Dyer, who supposedly rep-<lb/>
resents all the students of ECU, could have<lb/>
been elected. If my parents would have known<lb/>
about this payment policy I would not have to<lb/>
work sixty hours a week just to make ends<lb/>
meet. I would be able to concentrate on school<lb/>
alone.<lb/>
With tuition and fees increasing each year<lb/>
my parents can only afford to put clothes on<lb/>
my back and an occasional $20 check in the<lb/>
mail. (When a good month comes along) Grant<lb/>
it they aren't poor but anyone who pays out of<lb/>
state tuition will agree that it can put a strain on<lb/>
any middle class family.<lb/>
Without rambling on, I just want the<lb/>
middle class students of ECU to know how Mr.<lb/>
Dyer feels about them and that he is backing<lb/>
Mr. Brynn Thomas who, in all probability, feels<lb/>
the same way about this SGA policy.<lb/>
Sean Edmiston<lb/>
Sophomore<lb/>
Economics<lb/>
To the Editor<lb/>
As my third year at East Carolina comes to a close,<lb/>
I am becoming disgusted with people advocating pro-<lb/>
gun issues who (in all probability) have no first-hand<lb/>
knowledge of the violence guns are capable of commit-<lb/>
ting.<lb/>
Well, gather round 'cause here's something they<lb/>
won't teach you in an English class. About five years ago,<lb/>
Michael Charles Hayes ("not guilty by reason of insan-<lb/>
ity") went on a shooting spree in Winston-Salem, N.C.<lb/>
and killed four people, wounding five others (myself<lb/>
included).<lb/>
Later,itwas revealed thatjustthreedaysbefore the<lb/>
incident, Mr. Hayes had bought two new guns, one of<lb/>
which was a .22 rifle used in most of the shootings.<lb/>
Having suffered a gunshot wound to the chest, I have<lb/>
received some insight into the problems of guns and<lb/>
violence.<lb/>
Now chew on this. In 1988, handguns killed seven<lb/>
people in Great Britain, 19 in Sweden, 53 in Switzerland,<lb/>
25 in Israel, 13 in Australia, eight in Canada and 8,915 in<lb/>
the good 'ole U.S. of A. God bless America.<lb/>
Itdoesn'ttakeacoUegeeducation to realize people<lb/>
without first-hand knowledge of this kind of violence<lb/>
cannot appreciate the need for something so simple<lb/>
asa 10-day waiting period on purchase ofhandguns.<lb/>
Sure, Michael Hayes was an "honest citizen" claim-<lb/>
ing his right to bear arms, but did he actually need<lb/>
those guns "right now? Perhaps if it was necessary<lb/>
to wait the 10-day waiting period he could have<lb/>
solved his internal problems without needless vio-<lb/>
lence. Of course, this is not a solution, merely a<lb/>
beginning.<lb/>
In closing, government is not necessarily trying<lb/>
to implement centralized control over our lives. It is<lb/>
merely attempting toexercisesomecontrolover guns<lb/>
in the streets the only feasible way it knows how at<lb/>
this point. People should realize owning a gun is not<lb/>
a solution to social and political unrest. Instead, we<lb/>
should take an active stance in our government by<lb/>
voting, lobbying, writing to your senator and "ques-<lb/>
tioning authority The pen is mightier than the<lb/>
bullet.<lb/>
Greg Tirrell<lb/>
Senior<lb/>
Psychology<lb/>
-?. ?<lb/>
<pb facs="00058472_0006"/><lb/>
HHMva<lb/>
The East Carolinian<lb/>
Page 6<lb/>
Classifieds<lb/>
April 19, 1994<lb/>
For Rent<lb/>
For Rent<lb/>
For Rent<lb/>
RINGGOLD TOWERS<lb/>
Now Taking Leases for<lb/>
1 bedroom, 2 bedroom &amp;<lb/>
Efficiency Apartments.<lb/>
CALL 752-2865<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<lb/>
campus 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/>
' WALK TO CAMPUS! Available May<lb/>
1st. Young professional couple seeks<lb/>
responsible student to rent a room<lb/>
one house from campus! Includes<lb/>
cable, phone, utilities and private<lb/>
- entrance. Graduate student pre-<lb/>
. -ferred. References required. Call 758-<lb/>
, -9903.<lb/>
 SUBLEASE: 2 Bedroom apt. avail-<lb/>
I able May-Aug. Village Green Apts.<lb/>
$360 month- Cable included. Con-<lb/>
' tact Kelli at 758-8591.<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/>
EEMALE ROOMMATE NEEDED<lb/>
' for a large two-bedroom apartment,<lb/>
- pets allowed. Dishwasher, pool and<lb/>
: laundry facilities. $180 a month 1 <lb/>
2 utilities. Available anv time. Please<lb/>
call 756-5134.<lb/>
AVAILABLE FOR FALL SEMES-<lb/>
TER- 1 bedroom, in 2 bedroom apart-<lb/>
ment. Located in Tar River apart-<lb/>
ment complex. Mature, responsible<lb/>
female preferred. Deposit required.<lb/>
$240 monthly rent plus 1 2 bills. 830-<lb/>
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 13 bills. 756-8459<lb/>
(Sara).<lb/>
TO SHARE 3 bedroom 2 bath. $120 a<lb/>
month plus 1 3 utilities. Deposit re-<lb/>
quired, male or female, student or<lb/>
professional must be social. Call 758-<lb/>
1522 after 6:00pm or leave message.<lb/>
AVAILABLE FOR MAY. 1 bedroom<lb/>
apt. in Cherry Court. Rent $285, de-<lb/>
posit same as rent. Great location for<lb/>
the serious student call 752-8910 for<lb/>
info.<lb/>
ONE BEDROOM APTS. for rent<lb/>
Available June 1st. Walking distance<lb/>
to campus. $320 per month. Rent in-<lb/>
cludes water, cable, pool, laundry<lb/>
facilities. Please call 758-2628.<lb/>
AVAILABLE MAY 1ST 2 bedroom<lb/>
apt. insummerfield gardens. At $335<lb/>
a month it's a steal. Call (919)756-<lb/>
9784 for info.<lb/>
FEMALE ROOMMATE NEEDED to<lb/>
share 2 bedroom house over summer<lb/>
Lf 3 blocks from campus $200 a month<lb/>
2 12 utilities ask for Lisa 413-0015<lb/>
iTWO PERSONS needed to share a 3<lb/>
iedroom two bath townhouse near<lb/>
J-owe's. $200 per month, $200 de-<lb/>
posit. Call 321-4793<lb/>
ROOMMATES NEEDED 1 or 2 re-<lb/>
sponsible people to sublease apart-<lb/>
ment near campus for the summer.<lb/>
5130 per month and 13 utilities con-<lb/>
tact TJ at 758-3943<lb/>
AVAILABLE AUGUST! Two bed-<lb/>
 fQom one bath duplex. Located on<lb/>
1st Street $370 per month. Persons<lb/>
needed to take over lease, call 758-<lb/>
6692'<lb/>
FEMALE ROOMMATE NEEDED to<lb/>
share 2 bedroom 2 bath apt. win<lb/>
walking distance to campus. $225<lb/>
plus 12 utilities. Avail. Mav 9th-<lb/>
Aug. Call 752-6962<lb/>
FEMALE ROOMMATE NEEDED to<lb/>
move in for May or June. $113 rent<lb/>
and 13 utilities A block and a half<lb/>
from campus call Kim and Janni. 758-<lb/>
8431<lb/>
$165 FOR THIS 1 BEDROOM, loft<lb/>
apartment pet ok walk to campus or<lb/>
this 2 bedroom duplex $350 call us!<lb/>
752-1375 Homelocators fee<lb/>
DORM BLUES! 3 bedroom house<lb/>
$320 pets ok! Walk to campus or this<lb/>
4 bedroom house. $500 call us! 752-<lb/>
1375 Homelocators Fee<lb/>
AUGUST 1ST. 3 bedroom duplex<lb/>
S540 or 4 bedroom, 2 baths $800 both<lb/>
near East 5th street call us!<lb/>
Homelocators fee<lb/>
MAY OR JUNE! 1 bedroom duplex<lb/>
$250 or Huge 3 bed room duplex $425<lb/>
walk to campus! Call us! 752-1375<lb/>
Homelocators fee<lb/>
'2 BEDROOM DUPLEX $295 or 3<lb/>
bedroom house $390 walk to campus<lb/>
call us! 752-1375 Homelocators fee<lb/>
WEST GREENVILLE! Cheap 2 bed-<lb/>
room house $250 or huge 4 bedroom,<lb/>
2 baths house $410 call us! 752-1375<lb/>
Homelocators fee<lb/>
FEMALE ROOMMATE NEEDED,<lb/>
two bedroom, 1 12 bath apt.<lb/>
WasherDryer, cable, pool, tennis<lb/>
court. Avail. 5194. $215 per month<lb/>
 12 utilities, 1st month $115. Call<lb/>
Kimberly 919-872-6439 (wkends)<lb/>
321-8406 (wknights)<lb/>
FEMALE ROOMMATE WANTED<lb/>
to share 2 bedroom apartment. Close<lb/>
to campus Great location. Call<lb/>
Patricia 752-0009<lb/>
APARTMENT FOR RENT 1 bed-<lb/>
room, 1 bath, furnished 2 blocks from<lb/>
campus, window unit ac available<lb/>
May 1st $250 a month call 830-6615<lb/>
FEMALE NEEDED to share two bed-<lb/>
room apartment available in August.<lb/>
Close to campus. Rent $122.50 a<lb/>
month plus 14 utilities. Call Debbie<lb/>
at 931-7430.<lb/>
FEMALE ROOMMATE wanted for<lb/>
apartment 1 2 block from art build-<lb/>
ing, 3 blocks from downtown, 2<lb/>
blocks from supermarket. Starting<lb/>
in June call 757-1947<lb/>
SUBLEASE an efficiency apartment<lb/>
at Ringgold May- Aug. Perfect for<lb/>
summer school walk to class no<lb/>
parkig problems! Call 758-7882, leave<lb/>
message!<lb/>
WATERFRONT HOME for rent May<lb/>
20- Aug. 15. 35 minutes from cam-<lb/>
pus. No pets. References required.<lb/>
$500month plus utilities. 919-975-<lb/>
6709<lb/>
ROOMMATE NEEDED forsummer<lb/>
sessions or fall semester (or both)!<lb/>
Furnished, pool, 3 bd room, 2 12<lb/>
baths, washer and drver. $200<lb/>
month. 1 mile from campus at Twin<lb/>
Oaks. 757-1807<lb/>
AVAILABLE JUNE 1 spacious clean<lb/>
4 bedroom 2 12 bath, 1 block from<lb/>
campus safe of street parking cen-<lb/>
tral air wd hookup prefer non-<lb/>
smoking females no pets or<lb/>
wnterbeds after 5 758-7515<lb/>
FEMALE ROOMMATE NEEDED:<lb/>
non-smoker, laid back, for summer<lb/>
 fall. Forest Glen Apts, near hospi-<lb/>
tal. $117.50month includes cable <lb/>
water, 12 utilities. No pets al-<lb/>
lowed. Call Claudia 758-85,57<lb/>
NON-SMOKING PERSONS needed<lb/>
to sublease 4 bedrooms in five bed-<lb/>
room 4 bathroom house for summer.<lb/>
Newly remodeled! Close to campus!<lb/>
Pets ok! Call Amy at 830-1591.<lb/>
FEMALE ROOMMATE NEEDED<lb/>
for summer. Private furnishedun-<lb/>
furnished bedroom, shared bath, 1<lb/>
12 blocks from campus. Non-<lb/>
smoker. Rent includes water, sewer,<lb/>
AC, and cable. Call 758-3519<lb/>
MALE ROOMMATE NEEDED to<lb/>
share nice 2 bedroom, 112 bath<lb/>
townhouse. Close to campus and<lb/>
Mall $395 12 utilities. Call 752-<lb/>
2116<lb/>
NS FEMALE NEEDED to share 2<lb/>
bedroom townhouse. All appliances<lb/>
including wd $225 12 utilities.<lb/>
756-9953 Lori.<lb/>
ROOMMATE NEEDED FOR SUM-<lb/>
MER to share 2 bedroom, $185 a<lb/>
month, pool, big bedroom, personal<lb/>
bath, bus available. Call Randv at<lb/>
758-3313<lb/>
PLINKO RULES! 2 bedroom 1 12<lb/>
bath Oakmont Square Apt. to sub-<lb/>
lease. On site laundry facilities,<lb/>
maintenance, pool, volleyball. $410<lb/>
month call 355-3454<lb/>
AVAILABLE MAY 15TH- $178 1<lb/>
3 utility month, 7 min. walk from<lb/>
campus, washer drver, dogs ok.<lb/>
Prefer social mf, calf830-6703<lb/>
ROOMMATES TO SHARE OR<lb/>
TAKE OVER LEASE. 3 bedroom, 2<lb/>
bath house. 1 2 block from campus.<lb/>
WasheTdrver. $210 per mo. Call<lb/>
Rich 757-0896<lb/>
APARTMENTS WANTED: Law<lb/>
firm needs two fully furnished apart-<lb/>
ments suitable for married coupls<lb/>
during summer: June 24- Julv 30.<lb/>
Contact Bert Speicher, 355-3030.<lb/>
SUBLEASE FOR SUMMER 2 bed-<lb/>
room apt. 2 miles from campus. $400<lb/>
a month includes water and cable.<lb/>
Pool, volleyball, tennis<lb/>
accomodations. 321-6521<lb/>
THREE BEDROOM DUPLEX for<lb/>
rent for summer at Wyndham Circle.<lb/>
758-2559. Two bedroom apartment<lb/>
for rent for summer $380 neg. Call<lb/>
752-8655<lb/>
SUBLET FOR SUMMER 2 blocks<lb/>
from campus $150 util.<lb/>
washer,dryer, cable ac. call Brian<lb/>
758-2941<lb/>
FEMALE ROOMMATE NEEDED-<lb/>
anytime May through August 15th,<lb/>
$175 month, furnished, close tocam-<lb/>
pus, ac, water and utilities included.<lb/>
752-1492<lb/>
E Help Wanted<lb/>
$250 -$500week<lb/>
2 12 year old Marketing Firm<lb/>
needs 20-25 winners with<lb/>
wheels who can run their<lb/>
own show wherever they<lb/>
please -Full-Part-Interviews<lb/>
Holliday Inn<lb/>
5 - 9 P.M. Mon-Tues<lb/>
April 25-26<lb/>
S10-S400UP WEEKLY. Mailing<lb/>
Brochures! SpareFull-time. Set<lb/>
own hours! Rush stamped enve-<lb/>
lope: Publishers (Gl) 1821<lb/>
Hillandale Rd. 1 B-295 Durham, NC<lb/>
27705.<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/>
HELP WANTED modeling, danc-<lb/>
ing, adult conversation full or part-<lb/>
time. Will accomodate school<lb/>
schedule. $300-500 weekly call 746-<lb/>
6762<lb/>
ATTENTION HORSE LOVERS:<lb/>
Experienced English rider to help<lb/>
with barn choresfeeding in ex-<lb/>
change for pleasure riding. 355-<lb/>
6320 after 5pm<lb/>
IMMEDIATE OPENING for secre-<lb/>
tarytypist position apply between<lb/>
1:00-3:00 at SDF Computer Inc, 813<lb/>
South Evans st. Greenville (752-<lb/>
3694)<lb/>
ATTENTION LADIES earn $1,000<lb/>
plus a week escorting in the Green-<lb/>
ville area. Must be 18 yrs. old; have<lb/>
own phone and transportation. We<lb/>
are an established agency check out<lb/>
your yellow pages.<lb/>
CHILDCARE OPPORTUNITIES!<lb/>
Prescreened families looking for<lb/>
caring individuals to spend a year<lb/>
as a nanny. $175-$350week, room<lb/>
and board, car, airfare included.<lb/>
Call childcrest 1-800-574-8889.<lb/>
CHILDCARE GIVER for young<lb/>
school-aged children wanted for<lb/>
summer Responsible, loving, in-<lb/>
novative person with own car. Ex-<lb/>
perience and references required.<lb/>
Call 758-2106 after 6:30pm.<lb/>
BRODY'S and Brody's for Men is<lb/>
accepting applications for addi-<lb/>
tional Part-time Sales Associates.<lb/>
We seek individuals who have a<lb/>
genuine interest in helping others<lb/>
and would enjoy working with<lb/>
todays hottest fashions. Salary plus<lb/>
clothing discount. Interviews held<lb/>
each Monday and Thursday, l-4pm,<lb/>
Brodv's The Plaza.<lb/>
TIRE INSTALLERS NEEDED:<lb/>
Sears Automotive. Apply in per-<lb/>
son. Sears is an equal opportunity<lb/>
employer mf. Morning hours pre-<lb/>
ferred.<lb/>
FILIBUSTER'S: The Restaurant<lb/>
and Bar for every party is now tak-<lb/>
ing applications for experienced<lb/>
waitstaff, bus and dishwashers. Be-<lb/>
tween 2:00 and 2:30pm Monday<lb/>
thru Thursday located Downtown<lb/>
Greenville next door to CD-Alley.<lb/>
No phone calls please.<lb/>
YOUTH SPORT CAMPS: assistant<lb/>
director and instructors. Sponsored<lb/>
DO YOU ENJOY THE OUTDOORS?<lb/>
LINE UP A GREAT SUMMER JOB NOW<lb/>
College Students<lb/>
Positions in Pitt, Jones, Lenoir, Onslow, Greene, and Craven counties.<lb/>
SALARY $5.75 per hour PLUS MILEAGE<lb/>
Monitor Crops ! We Train!<lb/>
Mid May through August<lb/>
Must be reliable, in good shape, have good trasportation, and<lb/>
concientious.<lb/>
Just minutes from Greenville, Kinston and New Bern<lb/>
Mail or fax resume to:<lb/>
MCSI PO Box 370 Cove City, NC 28523 FAX (919) 637-2125<lb/>
? lifllliMfl I 4iffilTH'liHH!l Bin<lb/>
by ECU Recreational services.<lb/>
Camp to run June 13- July 1. Obtain<lb/>
applications in 204 Christenbury<lb/>
Gym.<lb/>
"EXPERIENCED WAITSTAFF.<lb/>
Must be outgoing, energetic, and<lb/>
willing to learn. Flexible hours. Ap-<lb/>
ply at Greenville Country Club<lb/>
Tuesday- Friday, 2:00-4:00 pm<lb/>
only<lb/>
"GREENVILLE COUNTRY CLUB<lb/>
is now accepting applications for<lb/>
an immediate, full-time line cook.<lb/>
Split shifts and weekends. Apply<lb/>
in person<lb/>
AGRICULTURAL RETAIL<lb/>
STORE: Has opening for part-time<lb/>
stocker and sales. Person needs to<lb/>
have stocking experience andor<lb/>
farm background. Must be able to<lb/>
work afternoons and every other<lb/>
Saturday consisting of approx. 30<lb/>
hours per week, pick up applicaiton<lb/>
at Agri Supply Company. No phone<lb/>
calls. EOE<lb/>
For Sale<lb/>
Sports Card Show<lb/>
Sat, April 23, 1994<lb/>
from 9-4. Adm is $1.<lb/>
Bring this ad for free<lb/>
door prize.<lb/>
Ramada Inn<lb/>
Greenville Blvd<lb/>
264 Bypass<lb/>
QUEEN SIZE WATERBED, frame,<lb/>
mattress, heater, padded rails $175 or<lb/>
obo. 757-9645<lb/>
ATTENTION WEIGHT LIFTERS<lb/>
AND WATCHERS: Warmer weather<lb/>
is approaching and you want to look<lb/>
your best! Sports supplements at ma-<lb/>
jor discount prices: Met-rx, OKG, Cre-<lb/>
atine, Cybergenics, Vanadyl Sulfate,<lb/>
Hot Stuff, Weight gain powders (all),<lb/>
Amino Acids, Super Chromoplex, Tri-<lb/>
Chromelene, Cybertrim, Quick Trim,<lb/>
Super Fat Burners, Herbs, Multi-Vita-<lb/>
mins, Super Golden Seal, and many<lb/>
more! Call Brad at 931-9097 for more<lb/>
info.<lb/>
KITCHEN TABLE w 4 chairs for $50<lb/>
plus a brand new dresser and night<lb/>
stand for $75 call anytime after noon,<lb/>
call 758-6458<lb/>
THREE PIECE LIVING ROOM SET.<lb/>
In excellent condition, $200 as set, ne-<lb/>
gotiable. Call 752-6229<lb/>
MATTRESS, box spring, frame nine<lb/>
months old, good condition, $55 call<lb/>
355-6017<lb/>
USED IBM XT COMPATABLE (ZE-<lb/>
NITH) COMPUTER, great for reports<lb/>
and word processing. Includes<lb/>
wordperfect, Dos, and other programs.<lb/>
$350 obo, printer $75 call 355-6333<lb/>
CONTEMPORARY LOVE SEAT for<lb/>
sale. Teal, Mauve and Peach. $120 neg.<lb/>
Call Carla 830-1569<lb/>
EUROPE THIS SUMMER? Fly-only<lb/>
$169! California- $129 ea. way! Now.<lb/>
Florida too. CaribbeanMexican Coast<lb/>
rt $189! No gimmicks- no hitches.<lb/>
Airtech 1-800-575-TECH.<lb/>
SINGLE LOFT FOR SALE- only $65,<lb/>
Dorm size refrigerator for sale- only<lb/>
$40 Available as soon as possible! Please<lb/>
call 931-8522.<lb/>
LOFT &amp; CARPET call Nicole 931 -8553,<lb/>
best offer, or come see 213 Jarvis Hall.<lb/>
GOLF SHOES new, lightweight, wa-<lb/>
ter proof and comfortable various col-<lb/>
ors and sizes available just $39.95 a<lb/>
pair call 830-9442<lb/>
AIRLINE TICKET: roundtrip Delta<lb/>
ticket good to anywhere in U.S. or<lb/>
Canada (except Hawaii). Valid until 3<lb/>
95. $275 Call 752-8308<lb/>
PING EYE GOLF IRONS (3-pw), sand<lb/>
wedge, putter, spaulding executive<lb/>
graphite shaft woods (1 -3-5), Ping Tour<lb/>
bag, new golf caddy, EXC. $525 obo.<lb/>
BCA Rocky mountain bike, gel seat,<lb/>
bear claw peddles, new tires and rims,<lb/>
plus many xtras. exc $150 obo. Call<lb/>
758-7615 "<lb/>
MICROWAVE FOR SALE.very good<lb/>
cond. compact family size, great for<lb/>
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ACCURATE, FAST, CONFIDEN-<lb/>
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disk, term papers,general typing Word<lb/>
perfect or Microsoft Word tor windows<lb/>
software. Call today (8a-5p?752-9959)<lb/>
(evenings- 527-9133)<lb/>
OLDER ECU STUDENT with family<lb/>
seeks position of groundskeeper in ex-<lb/>
change for living quarters. 11 years<lb/>
landscaping experience. Moving to<lb/>
Greenville in May. Please call Phil at<lb/>
(414)426-1409<lb/>
ZOJ<lb/>
Greek<lb/>
BEAUTIFUL GIRLS WANTED bikini<lb/>
contest for Kappa Sigma's Bahama<lb/>
Mama. No entry fees toenter call Preston<lb/>
at 830-0294 by April 22<lb/>
DELTA CHI would like to welcome our<lb/>
new brothers Marc Gainey, Tyler<lb/>
McAdams, Tommy Poole.<lb/>
DELTA CHI would like to congratulate<lb/>
Phi Tau and Delta Zeta for winning Mud -<lb/>
Football. Thanks for everyone partici-<lb/>
pating it was a huge success.<lb/>
PHI SIGMA PI: come and share the<lb/>
wonder, share the old and new. Cel-<lb/>
ebrate the sunshine, a child can bring to<lb/>
you. We'll see you tomorrow, 330 pm at<lb/>
The Agnes Fullilove Shelter.<lb/>
ALPHA PHI FORMAL was a weekend<lb/>
never to be forgotten. It started Friday,<lb/>
we grilled in the sun, we danced and<lb/>
played pool, it was preformal fun. Sat-<lb/>
urday dinner was the wildest of sights<lb/>
the table in the corner brought the room<lb/>
to new heights. Awards were given to<lb/>
outstanding Phis congratulations Kim<lb/>
Parker, Elizabeth Clifford, Angie Por-<lb/>
ter, Kristine Anderson, Amy Lassiter,<lb/>
and Stacev Klatskv. Sad, but true formal<lb/>
its all over but next year is coming be-<lb/>
fore we know it. Alpha Phi.<lb/>
COLETTE LOMBARDO- Thank you<lb/>
for such a great job with Dream Girl<lb/>
Formal! We had a great time! Congratu-<lb/>
lations to Christi Radoll for vour Dream<lb/>
Girl award, and to everyone else who<lb/>
received awards that night. Looking for-<lb/>
ward to next year<lb/>
TO THE NEW MEMBERS OF DELTA<lb/>
ZETA- Get excited about Lamplighting<lb/>
next week! We love you! Love, your<lb/>
sisters.<lb/>
CONGRATS TO DELTA ZETA soft-<lb/>
ball and indoor soccer teams for two<lb/>
undefeated seasons! You go girls! Love<lb/>
your sisters and new members.<lb/>
CONGRATULATIONS Ashley<lb/>
Hamilton and the rest of Panhellenic<lb/>
Exec, on vour initiation into Order of<lb/>
Omega. Love, thesistersand new mem-<lb/>
bers of Delta Zeta.<lb/>
CONGRATULATIONS to the broth-<lb/>
ers and new initiates of Sigma 'u on<lb/>
winning the annual "Greek Week"<lb/>
championship.<lb/>
SIGMA NU would like to congratu-<lb/>
late their new intiates Greg Rocchio,<lb/>
Donald Revnolds III, and Brandon<lb/>
"Snarf" Waddell.<lb/>
SIGMA NU would like to congratu-<lb/>
late three brothers on winning awards:<lb/>
Paul Kennedy- Man of the Year, Jason<lb/>
Linder- Brother of the Year, and Mike<lb/>
Collini- Athlete of the Year.<lb/>
THE BROTHERS AND NEW INI-<lb/>
TIATES OF SIGMA NU would like to<lb/>
thank Michael "Ratt" Luck on organiz-<lb/>
ing one of the best formal weekends<lb/>
ever at Nags Head.<lb/>
SIGMA COCKTAIL is Friday night<lb/>
we'll have a blast dancing throughout<lb/>
the night. What a fun way to end this<lb/>
fabulous year!<lb/>
ALPHA XI DELTA wants to give a<lb/>
belated congratulations to our Greek<lb/>
Goddesses! Holli, Mandy, Ali, and<lb/>
Stacie for winning third We are really<lb/>
proud of you guys!<lb/>
SIGMA PHI EPSILON, around the<lb/>
world in SO days? Not when the Sig<lb/>
Ep's and Alpha Xi Delta get together!<lb/>
Our journey began somewhere down<lb/>
in the Keys, then up to NYC for a visit<lb/>
with the Snoop-Dog! For the good<lb/>
world travelers, to heaven they did go,<lb/>
but the others, well god only knows!<lb/>
Our trip was soon over, oh how time<lb/>
flies we ended the evening with a toast<lb/>
to the skies! Thanks for a great night!<lb/>
Love, Alpha Xi Delta.<lb/>
AIRLINES<lb/>
NOW HIRING ENTRY<lb/>
LEVEL<lb/>
Customer ServiceBaggage<lb/>
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Now forming teams for spring<lb/>
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played on weekends. Limited<lb/>
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information,<lb/>
call 919-447-4939<lb/>
Kingston<lb/>
Place<lb/>
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Summer<lb/>
<pb facs="00058472_0007"/><lb/>
Adventures of Kemple Boy<lb/>
By Kemple Phoebe<lb/>
THURSDAY APRIL SLlE nine<lb/>
OCLOCK PM A 8Ai.MS m&amp;MT<lb/>
THE KtNO OF NI6HT MAKES A<lb/>
SODS CURL UP with A 80TTLE<lb/>
OF THUNDER8IRD AND A GOODJ<lb/>
PAL AND GWE THE WOR.P<lb/>
?COCkESED" NEW MEANING.<lb/>
Ime I WAD NO sviCh?UUSiow.s<lb/>
X WAS WRAPPING op A<lb/>
LONG TERM PROJECT AND<lb/>
HO NO TIME TO MUDDLE<lb/>
NINE - O -TWO. THE DOOR.<lb/>
SUMWEP OPEN, AND iM<lb/>
WALKED TYE LONGEST,<lb/>
TALLEST DRINK. OF U.ATER-<lb/>
I'D SEEN IN A PEC A DC.<lb/>
v?i<lb/>
-tW JUMP<lb/>
Cl'<lb/>
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nsiar<lb/>
SOMETHING ASCOT THE<lb/>
I LOOKS OF HiM MADE MS<lb/>
I ANKLES TURN To SAWDUST<lb/>
IN IAS SOOTS.<lb/>
PHOEBE.SOU<lb/>
&amp;OTTA HELP ME I<lb/>
KEEP To FND A<lb/>
wowftN. A?ouT<lb/>
THIS TALL, AND<lb/>
HH ?TTnuDE THAT<lb/>
(-00 LD cancel<lb/>
SOuR PLANS<lb/>
PIPE DOWN,TOOTS.SCO<lb/>
HAVE A PHOTO OF THIS<lb/>
6R0AD, OR ARE SOU GOING<lb/>
.ID DRAW ME A PICTURE'<lb/>
WANG TV<lb/>
By Ferguson &amp; Manning<lb/>
A:sft F"0?sS DlW-TOCTS<lb/>
K"tPSI?Ti06 COS (.frSTTTMf CW<lb/>
-f&amp;WrscW. 1HAT3 ?T T'5ft<lb/>
WRftP' SOOUBemfOF El fl(f X<lb/>
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OK<lb/>
RleH<lb/>
Fergi<lb/>
The characters 'Alex" and "Mis<lb/>
Whiggs" were drawn by Alex L.<lb/>
Ferguson, who also drew backgrounds<lb/>
ind cut his cuticles with exacto blades<lb/>
In the real world. Alex, having little<lb/>
knowledge of video production, pesfan<lb/>
to waich "Animaniacs" and build lnue,<lb/>
useless gadgets and pr"P thai worry<lb/>
hjs mother He owns a cat that he<lb/>
affectionately calls "Demon Spawn<lb/>
from Hell" and his main goal in life is<lb/>
to appear in People magazine<lb/>
<lb/>
ia'<lb/>
k Maiming is the one PCSpOR<lb/>
: the comical drawings Df "hoc<lb/>
av and "Camilla " He wu ttsc<lb/>
mi "t ic s&amp;tp'i pel<lb/>
at to<lb/>
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Manning<lb/>
be nob, Ala taadvfttmj laiemblei<lb/>
rJtal . f i paiied aimuiK' Erie s nii.n<lb/>
Battka are playing gunai refraining<lb/>
KflB shooting his dog. 1 averne. and<lb/>
grj-tuanng from the Commmial An<lb/>
den HUoal) desfecistDdQcanooatoa,<lb/>
fat absing. and he is praying that his<lb/>
p ?: son Jon't iea?) this<lb/>
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Niku, Paranormal Investigator<lb/>
HOW A DAf AT -UfE fldRK<lb/>
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ho-HAf. FiXil MORE! j<lb/>
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Fred's Corner<lb/>
By Parnell<lb/>
GiE.fcZ MtOi J- Sou LccX UkE W<lb/>
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EXcfcVT FoR TvL TOCT THftT IVWE<lb/>
HAVING CHECKED VJNDEK F<lb/>
FOR FEEDBACK FO? ?E'P<lb/>
LOCATION ANC -V'FOR VALI-<lb/>
DATION, r FOUND NO SUCM<lb/>
LAPN AND DECIDED TO CON -<lb/>
SULT LEFTS LEFTS u?0-0 KN-<lb/>
jjHATS THE U!ORP,<lb/>
LEFTS' REPLS H-AZS<lb/>
TRS AGAlN"LEFTS<lb/>
iEEM5 TO TWIN S0UI?.<lb/>
LADS LOCK IS OUT FOR,<lb/>
A STROLL CCME 6Ht.lt,<lb/>
LATER<lb/>
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SHOULD IT <lb/>
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Nick O'Time<lb/>
By Dickens<lb/>
V"? PRFriMfTniDTCWM! IfVECTHt .?raiAL<lb/>
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F0R6E1 IT. I QUIT THE Cccn SgbaO<lb/>
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wwtiwjwgffa<lb/>
This ain't the end for our<lb/>
not ??? Jearles .icro and<lb/>
those'who oppose him<lb/>
Nick returns this summer<lb/>
md,God willing, the fall<lb/>
with the answers to<lb/>
burning question ifcc<lb/>
What happened (bNick<lb/>
and the GoOOl<lb/>
Is Big Daddy O a few<lb/>
? (hofl oO salad '<lb/>
Wh,i do? errifshQld<lb/>
Whtfvt ChjiidFnf.ini.<lb/>
Supr Fiwt. and Pig Pig '<lb/>
?,?i, l.itly. am there any<lb/>
Nkk Nut outirvrc<lb/>
Murphy &amp; Davis' Final Presentation of Seigfreid and Barth<lb/>
Ct, pgo TLC? C.we.riTIC, C&amp;t Pu, SC'fa'it ??- ? 3 tFLT iZ?1.t i?t KOm?<lb/>
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SHOUIDU T ft l?J<lb/>
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tl?J6?lr?00?JST TBCUIL NEIZeS, SC'itvE?ID'F SlSTei<lb/>
CO?E LQPklAJfo FOR. HlH.l,<lb/>
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coco tHH.r . "V ?- -<lb/>
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Spare Time<lb/>
By Farkas Omega Quest<lb/>
By Childers<lb/>
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as a roLLou-uP<lb/>
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l?5 f'tittty CtfWEP<lb/>
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K<lb/>
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'5 tDMBSA:<lb/>
PREV'iW 2<lb/>
- <lb/>
i<lb/>
<pb facs="00058472_0008"/><lb/>
BAREFOOT '94<lb/>
BROUGHT TO YOU TODAY<lb/>
BY STUDENT UNION <lb/>
MOJO COLLINS<lb/>
BROUGHT TO YOU BY<lb/>
THE MINORITY ARTS COMMITTEE.<lb/>
i<lb/>
<lb/>
in<lb/>
f I m<lb/>
LOTSABLUESA TOUR<lb/>
MOJO COLLINS<lb/>
THE HEATERS<lb/>
Ul DAVE &amp; THE HOWLING BLUES BAND<lb/>
TERESA -B.S.&amp;M<lb/>
CONGRATUtATIONS TO POST hffiTAt SYNDROME,<lb/>
BATTLE OF THE BANDS 94 WINNER !H<lb/>
FORUM COMMITTEE<lb/>
PLEASE-<lb/>
NO ALCOHOLIC<lb/>
BEVERAGES<lb/>
OR COOLERS<lb/>
ALLOWED.<lb/>
THE VISUAL ARTS COMMITTEE BRINGS YOU<lb/>
Creation Fest<lb/>
bring75urown<lb/>
BRINGS YOU.<lb/>
SPEAKING<lb/>
BOOTH"<lb/>
something<lb/>
o-r<lb/>
ITHE MARKETING COMMITTEE BRINGS YOU<lb/>
CONTEST FOR<lb/>
OFFICIAL<lb/>
'94 T-SHIRTS<lb/>
BAREI<lb/>
'AV'NT<lb/>
FIND OUT<lb/>
WHAT YOU NEED TO DO<lb/>
IN ORDER TO<lb/>
GET ONE OF THESE<lb/>
COLLECTORS ITEMS<lb/>
ON YOUR BACK<lb/>
THURSDAY, APRIL 21st<lb/>
"Barefoot on the Mall<lb/>
12-6 p.m.<lb/>
"Rocky Horror Picture Show<lb/>
8-10 p.m.<lb/>
THE SPECIAL EVENTS COMMinEE<lb/>
BRINGS YOU<lb/>
NOYHTY<lb/>
ATTRACTIONS'<lb/>
<pb facs="00058472_0009"/><lb/>
mmmmmmmmmmmt<lb/>
1 ??<lb/>
The East Carolinian<lb/>
April 21, 1994<lb/>
Sports<lb/>
Page 9<lb/>
What's On Tap?<lb/>
Thursday, April 21<lb/>
Softball<lb/>
at UNC Wilmington<lb/>
Wilmington, N.C 6 p.m. (DH).<lb/>
Friday, April 22<lb/>
Golf<lb/>
at Palmetto Intercollegiate,<lb/>
Charleston National Country<lb/>
Club, Charleston, S.C.<lb/>
Saturday, April 23<lb/>
Baseball<lb/>
at James Madison,<lb/>
Harrisonburg, Va 1 p.m.<lb/>
(DH).<lb/>
Golf<lb/>
at Palmetto Intercollegiate,<lb/>
Charleston National Country<lb/>
Club, Charleston, S.C.<lb/>
W. Track<lb/>
at UNC Wilmington Quad<lb/>
Meet, Wilmington, N.C.<lb/>
Sunday, April 24<lb/>
Baseball<lb/>
at James Madison,<lb/>
Harrisonburg, Va 1 p.m.<lb/>
Golf<lb/>
at Palmetto Intercollegiate,<lb/>
Charleston National Country<lb/>
Club, Charleston, S.C.<lb/>
Hie 411<lb/>
Tuesday, April 19<lb/>
Baseball<lb/>
lost at N.C. State 3-9.<lb/>
Men's CAA Lenders<lb/>
(Through April 18)<lb/>
STANDINGS<lb/>
Team Conference GB<lb/>
ODU 14-4 .778 ?<lb/>
UNCW 8-7<lb/>
UR<lb/>
JMU<lb/>
ECU<lb/>
W&amp;M<lb/>
GMU<lb/>
8-7<lb/>
8-7<lb/>
6-6<lb/>
6-9<lb/>
1-11<lb/>
.533<lb/>
.533<lb/>
.533<lb/>
.500<lb/>
.400<lb/>
.083<lb/>
4.5<lb/>
4.5<lb/>
4.5<lb/>
5<lb/>
6.5<lb/>
10<lb/>
Overall<lb/>
32-7 .821<lb/>
24-21 .533<lb/>
23-16.590<lb/>
25-13.658<lb/>
28-11 .718<lb/>
21-16.568<lb/>
11-20-1.359<lb/>
INDIVIDUAL LEADERS<lb/>
aadMaa<lb/>
Average<lb/>
Kevin Gibbs, ODU<lb/>
Brian Yerys, ECU<lb/>
Juan Dorsey, JMU<lb/>
Tom Scoscia, UR<lb/>
Jason Trollo, JMU<lb/>
Triples<lb/>
Matt Quatraro, ODU<lb/>
Kevin Gibbs, ODU<lb/>
Brian Fiumara, ODU<lb/>
Maika Symmonds, ODU<lb/>
Donny Buries, JMU<lb/>
Home runs<lb/>
Jeff Dausch, ODU<lb/>
Sean Casey. UR<lb/>
Joe Higman, JMU<lb/>
Mike Ruberti, W&amp;M<lb/>
Chad Triplett, ECU<lb/>
Runs Batted In<lb/>
Jeff Dausch, UR<lb/>
Brian Yerys: ECU<lb/>
Mike Rubierti, W&amp;M<lb/>
Sean Casey, UR<lb/>
Matt Quatraro, ODU<lb/>
Stolen Bases (sbsba)<lb/>
Jamie Borel, ECU<lb/>
Kevin Gibbs, ODU<lb/>
Sfiawn Knight, W&amp;M<lb/>
Battle Hotiey, UNCW<lb/>
Jeff Kaufman, JMU<lb/>
.439<lb/>
.423<lb/>
.409<lb/>
.396<lb/>
.392<lb/>
7<lb/>
6<lb/>
5<lb/>
4<lb/>
4<lb/>
12<lb/>
11<lb/>
11<lb/>
11<lb/>
9<lb/>
49<lb/>
45<lb/>
45<lb/>
43<lb/>
41<lb/>
3448<lb/>
3235<lb/>
2124<lb/>
1315<lb/>
1111<lb/>
Ehsiiiita<lb/>
Wins<lb/>
John Smith, ODU8-1<lb/>
Brett Wheeler, ODU7-0<lb/>
Brian McNichol, JMU7-0<lb/>
Johnny Beck, ECU7-1<lb/>
Bobby St. Pierre, UR7-1<lb/>
Earned Run Average<lb/>
Brett Wheeler, ODU1.75<lb/>
Lyle Mangrove, ECU1.78<lb/>
John Smith, ODU2.49<lb/>
Anthony Eannacony, ODU2.51<lb/>
Richie Blackwell, ECU2.77<lb/>
Strikeouts<lb/>
Bobby St. Pierre. UR81<lb/>
John Smith, ODU73<lb/>
Scott Forster, JMU72<lb/>
Richie Blackwell, ECU64<lb/>
Brian Smith, UNCW64<lb/>
Saves<lb/>
Denis McLaughlin, ODU8<lb/>
John O'Reilly, ODU3<lb/>
Dixon Putnam, UNCW2<lb/>
Dalton Maine UR2<lb/>
TstfM Sii'Iailss<lb/>
Batting Average<lb/>
James Madison.342<lb/>
Old Dominion.336<lb/>
East Carolina.316<lb/>
Richmond.311<lb/>
William &amp; Mary.302<lb/>
UNC Wilmington.272<lb/>
George Mason.255<lb/>
Earned Run Average<lb/>
Old Dominion2.67<lb/>
East Carolina2.85<lb/>
UNC Wilmington3.82<lb/>
James Madison4.11<lb/>
William &amp; Mary4.72<lb/>
George Mason4.86<lb/>
Richmond5.52<lb/>
Compiled by Dave Pond<lb/>
Wolfpack defeats Pirates<lb/>
Box score<lb/>
(NC STATE SID)?N.C. State<lb/>
got home runs from PatClougherty,<lb/>
Andy Barkett and Rob Winkler as<lb/>
the Pack rolled to a 9-3 win over in-<lb/>
state rival ECU.<lb/>
NCSU scored five times in the<lb/>
first inning. Clougherty started the<lb/>
scoring with his fifth home run of<lb/>
the season, scoring Larry Edens<lb/>
ahead of him. Later in the inning,<lb/>
Andy Barkett had a run-scoring<lb/>
single and Ryan Ferby added a<lb/>
double, scoring two more Pack<lb/>
runs. State also added a single run<lb/>
in the second on a Clougherty<lb/>
single.<lb/>
The Pirates finally broke<lb/>
through Pack starter Matt Roupe<lb/>
for a run in the fifth inning on an<lb/>
RBI double from Chad Puckett to<lb/>
cut the lead to 6-1.<lb/>
Winkler (2) and Barkett (6) hit<lb/>
back-to-back solo home runs in the<lb/>
fifth, and Ryan Ferby scored on a<lb/>
wild pitch from Pirate reliever Ja-<lb/>
son Mills to close the Pack scoring.<lb/>
ECU managed two more runs<lb/>
off of Roupe in the seventh on a<lb/>
single from Brian Yerys, scoring<lb/>
Jamie Borel and Jason Head.<lb/>
Roupe (6-0) remains unde-<lb/>
feated for the season and State im-<lb/>
proves to 30-12-1.<lb/>
Richie Blackwell (4-1) lost for<lb/>
the first rime this season and the<lb/>
Pirates fell to 28-12.<lb/>
East Carolina000<lb/>
N.C. State510<lb/>
010 200-3<lb/>
030 00x-9<lb/>
East CarolinaabrhbL go a<lb/>
Borel. cf4100 4 0<lb/>
Head, 1b5110 6 0<lb/>
Britton, 3b5000 1 2<lb/>
Yerys. If4022 2 0<lb/>
Billingsley. dh3010 0 0<lb/>
Bermingham, dh0000 0 0<lb/>
Triplett, c3000 10 1<lb/>
Edwards, rf3010 0 0<lb/>
Clark, 2b3100 1 2<lb/>
Puckett. ss4021 0 2<lb/>
Total34373 24 7<lb/>
Batting:2b ? Yerys,Puckett,Head. Fielding:<lb/>
DP?1.E ?Britton.<lb/>
N.C. Stateabrhbii po a<lb/>
Sergio, 2b5000 3 0<lb/>
Tracey, 3b3010 1 0<lb/>
Edens, If2200 2 0<lb/>
Clougherty.dh4123 0 0<lb/>
Wells, rf3100 2 0<lb/>
Ross, rf0000 1 0<lb/>
Winkler, cf4221 6 0<lb/>
Barkett, 1b4222 5 2<lb/>
Ferby. ss4122 0 3<lb/>
Lawler, c3000 5 0<lb/>
Totals32998 27 5<lb/>
Batting ? 2B: Ferby. HR: Barkett, Winkler,<lb/>
Clougherty. Team LOB: 4.<lb/>
PiTCHiNG<lb/>
East. Carolina<lb/>
Blackwell (L 4-1)<lb/>
Rosenberger<lb/>
Mills<lb/>
Hartgrove<lb/>
N.C. State<lb/>
Roupe (W 6-0)<lb/>
Stutz<lb/>
Lee<lb/>
Ip h r er bb so<lb/>
6 6 5 2<lb/>
2 2 0 6<lb/>
10 0 1<lb/>
0 0 0 1<lb/>
1 4<lb/>
3.2 3<lb/>
2.1 2<lb/>
1 0<lb/>
ip<lb/>
hrer bb so<lb/>
6.2 6 3 3 4 4<lb/>
0 10 0 0 0<lb/>
2.1 0 0 0 1 0<lb/>
File Photo<lb/>
After beatingtwo other ACC opponents this year, Duke and UNC, the Pirates found it tough playing<lb/>
on an oppenents field. The Bucs take their, 6-6, CAA record to lames Madison this weekend.<lb/>
WP: Rosenberger, Mills.<lb/>
GAME DATA ? T: 2:23 A: 479<lb/>
UMPIRES ? HP: John Josey. 1B: Ron Powell,<lb/>
3B: Pete Bock. Compiled by Dave Pond<lb/>
Rugby team pulls victory<lb/>
Staff Reports<lb/>
File Photo<lb/>
The ECU rugby team play their alumni this<lb/>
Saturday at 1 p.m. on the Allied Health Field.<lb/>
The East Carolinian<lb/>
ECU's rugby team went to Richmond, Va and<lb/>
came away victors in the Richmond Collegiate Tour-<lb/>
nament. The Pirates scored at will in two games and<lb/>
created a narrow one-point loss in a match they could<lb/>
have won. They even got some help from the Univer-<lb/>
sity of North Carolinia to secure the win.<lb/>
In the first round, ECU lost a very close decision to<lb/>
James Madison, Virginia's champions, 11-10. The Pi-<lb/>
rates started slowly, possibly because of a three hour<lb/>
drive that started at six a.m.<lb/>
ECU scored when Joey " Dogboy " Meekins crossed<lb/>
over for a try which Rich Moss converted. Moss also<lb/>
had a penalty goal, but it was the difficult kick he<lb/>
missed with one minute left that made the difference.<lb/>
When JMU was penalized near the sideline, Moss<lb/>
lifted a kick into the twisting wind. The ball seemed to<lb/>
go between the uprights, but the referee waved it off<lb/>
and time ran out as the Pirates were driving into the<lb/>
Dukes' goal line one more time.<lb/>
Without leaving the field, the Pirates then faced<lb/>
Virginia Commonwealth University. The frustration<lb/>
from the previous jss led to an annihilation of VCU by<lb/>
a 43-3 score. The Pirates were led by Rick Snow and<lb/>
See RUGBY page 12<lb/>
Blackmon receives highest honor<lb/>
(SID)?Sophomore forward<lb/>
Tomekia Blackmon; from Snow<lb/>
Hill, N.C, was named the Most<lb/>
Valuable Player for the 1993-94<lb/>
ECU women's basketball team at<lb/>
the annual Lady Pirate Basket-<lb/>
ball awards banquet held Mon-<lb/>
day night in Greenville.<lb/>
Blackmon led the Lady Pi-<lb/>
rates in scoring and rebounding,<lb/>
averaging 14.2 points and 6.9 re-<lb/>
bounds a game. A seond-team<lb/>
All Colonial Athletic Association<lb/>
selection, Blackmon was seventh<lb/>
in the CAA in scoring and sixth<lb/>
in field goal percentage (.494) and<lb/>
sixth in rebounding.<lb/>
Blackmon was also the re-<lb/>
cipient of ECU's rebounding<lb/>
award.<lb/>
Senior guard LaShonda<lb/>
Baker from, Myrtle Beach, S.C,<lb/>
was the recipient of ECU's Best<lb/>
Defense Player Award after av-<lb/>
eraging 1.7 steals a game during<lb/>
the season.<lb/>
Sophomore LaTesha Sutton,<lb/>
Tomekia Blackmon<lb/>
from Waltsonburg, N.C, re-<lb/>
ceived the Most Improved<lb/>
Award after seeing action in all<lb/>
26 games this season. Sutton av-<lb/>
eraged 10.5 minutes a game and<lb/>
averaged 3.4 points a game.<lb/>
ECU's Coaches Award was<lb/>
presented to sophomore Belinda<lb/>
Cagle, from Trenton, Ga and<lb/>
the Scholar-Athlete Award was<lb/>
given to freshman Justine<lb/>
Allpress from, Staffordshire, En-<lb/>
gland.<lb/>
Sophomore Danielle<lb/>
Charlesworth from, Richmond<lb/>
Va received the Free-Throw Per-<lb/>
centage Award after shooting<lb/>
79.7 percent from the line this<lb/>
season. Senior Janet Rodgerson,<lb/>
a 68.8 percent free-throw shooter<lb/>
for the Lady Pirates, was given<lb/>
the 10,000 free-throw award for<lb/>
leading the Lady Pirates in prac-<lb/>
tice free-throws, with over 4,000<lb/>
made this season.<lb/>
Rodgerson and Baker re-<lb/>
ceived Team Captain Awards at<lb/>
the banquet in addition to their<lb/>
other honors.<lb/>
Rodgerson was named as a<lb/>
four-year letterwoman for ECU,<lb/>
while Baker, Blackmon, Cagle,<lb/>
Sutton and Angela James re-<lb/>
ceived two-year awards. Allpress<lb/>
and Charlesworth joined Tracey<lb/>
Kelley, Shay Hayes and Michaela<lb/>
Wallerstrom in receiving first-<lb/>
year letters.<lb/>
Curry rides away with third victory at Speedway<lb/>
(SPEEDWAY SID) ? Larry<lb/>
Curry, form Knightdale, N.C, led<lb/>
the entire 50-lap Pepsi Sportsman<lb/>
feature event to collect his third<lb/>
win of the year on Saturday. Steve<lb/>
Heath led the final seven laps of the<lb/>
Barbeque Lodge Mountain Dew<lb/>
Pure Stock 50-lap shoot-out to col-<lb/>
lect his third win of the season. In<lb/>
other actionat the EastCarolina Mo-<lb/>
tor Speedway, it was William<lb/>
Hardison winning his third 30-lap<lb/>
Winner Chevrolet Stock four cylin-<lb/>
der feature. John Wiley grabbed<lb/>
the win in the Budweiser Super<lb/>
Stock 40-lap main, and Hank<lb/>
Jarman won his second 50-lap<lb/>
Hardees Late Model Stock feature<lb/>
of the year.<lb/>
Larry Curry started the 50-lap<lb/>
Pepsi Sportsman fea ture even t from<lb/>
the outside of row one alongside<lb/>
Jeff Harrisof Greenville, N.C, When<lb/>
thegreenflagdroppeditwasCurry<lb/>
getting the jump with Harris slip-<lb/>
ping to second. Rusty Daniels of<lb/>
Alliance, N.C, was running third<lb/>
behind Curry and Harris before<lb/>
making an inside move to get by<lb/>
Harris for second.<lb/>
The 19th lap shoot-out saw<lb/>
See RACECAR page ' 1<lb/>
Lacrosse finishes<lb/>
winning season<lb/>
By Laura Jackman<lb/>
Staff Writer<lb/>
The ECU men's lacrosse club<lb/>
ended their season Sunday with<lb/>
a winning record of 7-4, despite<lb/>
the loss of a few key players.<lb/>
The team opened the sea-<lb/>
son on March 17 with a 17-0<lb/>
shutoutover NC- Wesleyan,but<lb/>
then lost their next two games to<lb/>
Duke and UNC-Wilmington.<lb/>
"After those two losses, we,<lb/>
as a team, decided to make some<lb/>
neccessary changes in order to<lb/>
have a winning season co-cap-<lb/>
tain Ward Taylor said.<lb/>
The team used newcomers<lb/>
Heath Harmon, Daniel Weidert<lb/>
and Stephen Padgett on<lb/>
midfield, TheronGoodson, Reid<lb/>
Tingle and Greg Daisey on de-<lb/>
fense, Dereck Janes on attack and<lb/>
Greg Mott in goal. This was<lb/>
done in order to fill those posi-<lb/>
tions left vacant by former<lb/>
players.<lb/>
Returning teammates in-<lb/>
cluded Kirk Katburg, Drew<lb/>
Bourque and Ward Taylor on<lb/>
atttack, Mike Marshall, Dave<lb/>
Nett and Rich Rollason on<lb/>
defense and Troy Plavec as<lb/>
the only veteran midfielder.<lb/>
However, the whole goal<lb/>
of the season wasnot just about<lb/>
winning, but about learning,<lb/>
also.<lb/>
"Many hours were spent<lb/>
working with the first-time<lb/>
players during practice to help<lb/>
them with basic fundamen-<lb/>
tals said another co-captain<lb/>
Mike Marshall.<lb/>
See LACROSSE page 12<lb/>
1994 Lacrosse Results<lb/>
NC-WesleyanWon 17-0<lb/>
DukeLost 14-12<lb/>
UNC-WLost 13-12<lb/>
NC StateWon 12-4<lb/>
UNC-GWon 13-2<lb/>
JMUWon 11-7<lb/>
ASUWon 10-4<lb/>
GMULost 8-5<lb/>
UNC-GWon 10-5<lb/>
W&amp;MWon 9-7<lb/>
VCULost 10-9<lb/>
Team Record<lb/>
7-4<lb/>
Graphic by Brian Olson<lb/>
?<lb/>
<pb facs="00058472_0010"/><lb/>
10 The East Carolinian<lb/>
April 21. 1994<lb/>
Magic soap opera has new act<lb/>
I i He - in I le'sout<lb/>
I e s pla ing. I le's not.<lb/>
Hc'sc oat hing H?<lb/>
If Magic Johnson isi<lb/>
up the del.<lb/>
worth ol l<lb/>
We ? ?<lb/>
.Hid v<lb/>
chasingallhisdreams,heshouldbe ment on him this latest epistxle<lb/>
sin hi Someotusarewobblvenough affected the loam. And chances are<lb/>
i ust trying to keep track of them he wouldn't say am thing bad about ol what<lb/>
Since leaving the NBA ir No Magii inan ? ise But taking into lessh K<lb/>
vember, 1991, soon aftei learning account the recent coaching fiasco, Sio<lb/>
(urn nut tob<lb/>
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he had contracted the UDSvirus, Magic has nov saddled him and gifted floor leader ever to play ba<lb/>
lohnson's Life has been .11 ing run- the I akersorganizatii mv ithnearh ketl<lb/>
ning series of been then that three years of detail work - all of tl Maj<lb/>
He has been a retired, unreHred essentially fornaughtandnonec I<lb/>
and re-retired player. I lehasbeena without- onsequcn ? u h<lb/>
part-time basketball broadcaster<lb/>
and barnstormer, businessman and<lb/>
AIDS education crusader. In just<lb/>
the last two weeks, he v ent from a<lb/>
recent hire to the I os Angeles 1 ak-<lb/>
ers lame-dui k i oa h.<lb/>
11 ir an athlete who never had a<lb/>
problem making the riht choice at<lb/>
the end of countless games o er a<lb/>
doen seasons, that is ,m awful lot<lb/>
ol indecision in a short time.<lb/>
l' e got to get out for a better<lb/>
person to come in here Johnson<lb/>
said late last week, confirming ru-<lb/>
mors hewas getting outofthecoach-<lb/>
Lng end of the business.<lb/>
As soon as somebod) turns on<lb/>
klieg lights and sticks a microphone<lb/>
m trout of him, ohnson iist can't<lb/>
s.i no. loanything<lb/>
I hree months after his first re-<lb/>
tirement in that rush ol adrenalin<lb/>
he felt after stealing the sin v at the<lb/>
NBA All -Star game, someone asked<lb/>
Johnson whether he'd ever return<lb/>
to the NBA. He said it was unlikely.<lb/>
I ater that summer, alter Barcelona<lb/>
and the Dream leametra aganza,<lb/>
it became maybe. A month later.<lb/>
justbeforethe 1992-93NB season<lb/>
it was definitek . A few days after<lb/>
that. Magic re-retired.<lb/>
As we know now. the ston<lb/>
didn't end even there. The follow-<lb/>
ing August, after scoring the game-<lb/>
winning basket in his ow n benefit<lb/>
game, "A Midsummer Night's<lb/>
Magic, he felt the same rush of<lb/>
adrenalinand fielded thesameques-<lb/>
tion about returning. This time<lb/>
Johnson replied "might'fora "halt-<lb/>
season, but left it up to 1 akers<lb/>
general manager lerrv West ti lean<lb/>
NFL players<lb/>
move around<lb/>
(AP) ? TheGreen Bay Packers<lb/>
have another sack specialist, the<lb/>
Washington Redskins have a new<lb/>
quarterback and the 1 os Angeles<lb/>
Raiders havea328-pound behemoth<lb/>
to protect Jeff HosteUer.<lb/>
(Yi the last day tor restricted<lb/>
tree agents to sign with new teams,<lb/>
those were thi .hree biggest moves<lb/>
Monday. The Packet - signed Sean<lb/>
Jones, the Redskins got John I reisz<lb/>
and I os Angeles picked up Kevin<lb/>
Gogan<lb/>
In other moves, quarterback<lb/>
Bobby I lebert re-signed with the At-<lb/>
lanta Falcons,cornerbackBenSmith<lb/>
was traded from Philadelphia to<lb/>
Denver, center im Sweeney re-<lb/>
signed with the New N ork lets and<lb/>
return specialist Vai Sikahema re-<lb/>
tired.<lb/>
?Previous<lb/>
EAST<lb/>
i CAROLINIAN<lb/>
.iiulmi.ei i ;lli<lb/>
Recycle The<lb/>
East Carolinian<lb/>
IVIASCOT TRYOUTS<lb/>
WHEN: APRIL 22-23, TRYOUTS APRIL 24, 1994<lb/>
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TIME: 5:00 PM<lb/>
? i<lb/>
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<pb facs="00058472_0011"/><lb/>
April 21. 1994<lb/>
The East Carolinian 11<lb/>
MAGIC<lb/>
Continued from page 10<lb/>
can deflect covereage off White.<lb/>
"It's a tremendous relief to me<lb/>
because it fills a hole that the Packers<lb/>
have a glaring need for ? a player<lb/>
opposite Reggie White thatcan cause<lb/>
concern for the offenses we play, par-<lb/>
ticularl v within our division Green<lb/>
Bay general manager Ron Wolf said.<lb/>
The team wouldn't release terms,<lb/>
but published reports said the con-<lb/>
tractwasworthS7.8millionover three<lb/>
vears, making Jones the Packers' sec-<lb/>
ond-highest paid defensive player<lb/>
behind White.<lb/>
Jones,31,is tied with the Vikings'<lb/>
Chris Doleman for ninth place on the<lb/>
career sacks list with 88 12 in 10<lb/>
seasons. He averaged 11 over the last<lb/>
four years.<lb/>
Friesz will give the Redskins a<lb/>
veteran to help groom the quarter-<lb/>
back Washington is expected to take<lb/>
with the third pick in the draft ?<lb/>
either Heath Shuler of Tennessee or<lb/>
Trent Dilfer of Fresno State.<lb/>
Friesz, the San Diego Chargers'<lb/>
one-time starter, signed a one-year,<lb/>
S900,000 deal. Last season's Wash-<lb/>
ington quarterback, Mark Rypien,<lb/>
was released last week.<lb/>
Gogan, 6-foot-7and 328 pounds,<lb/>
signed a three-year, $3.7 million deal<lb/>
with the Raiders after the Cowboys<lb/>
tried in vain to convince him to stay.<lb/>
Gogan said he talked Monday to<lb/>
Cowboys owner Jerry Jones. A Raid-<lb/>
ers official who requested anonymity<lb/>
said Gogan also was called by Dallas<lb/>
quarterback Troy Aikman and<lb/>
Aikman's agent Leigh Steinberg.<lb/>
"I appreciate what Jerry did<lb/>
Gogan told Dallas television station<lb/>
KDFW. "If 1 didn't agree to a deal, I<lb/>
would have loved to have come (to<lb/>
Dallas) in the last minute, but I didn't<lb/>
think that was fair. I gave the Raiders<lb/>
my word and that's my word<lb/>
To replace him, Dallas signed<lb/>
Derek Kennard of the New Orleans<lb/>
Saints, a 6-3,300-pound lineman.<lb/>
RACECAR<lb/>
Continued from pagelO<lb/>
ECU's Closest Beach<lb/>
WHKHfiRD'S BEACH<lb/>
Located on the Pamlico River in Washington<lb/>
?Sandy Beach<lb/>
?Conviently located Mini-Mart<lb/>
Beer. Snacks. Lotion &amp; Bathing Suits -<lb/>
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?S1.00 per person<lb/>
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??<lb/>
-jS- ,<lb/>
ECU<lb/>
10th Street<lb/>
Washington<lb/>
Whiciard's Beach Rd.<lb/>
Hwy33 <lb/>
??<lb/>
3 Q.<lb/>
O<lb/>
?o<lb/>
i5'<lb/>
zr<lb/>
Chocowinity<lb/>
946-0011<lb/>
Currv hold on for his third win of<lb/>
the year, while Harris settled for<lb/>
second. Tommy Beaman of<lb/>
Saratoga, N.C. finished third while<lb/>
Tonv Hawkins, from Tranton, N C<lb/>
and Ricky West, from Bethel N.C.<lb/>
rounded out the top five.<lb/>
Ronald Brown, from Kinston,<lb/>
N.C, started the Mountain Dew<lb/>
Pure Stock 50 lap feature from the<lb/>
pole with Walt Bedard, from<lb/>
Tranton N.C. on the outside. When<lb/>
the green flag dropped itwas Brown<lb/>
taking the points with third-place<lb/>
starter Heath taking second. Brown<lb/>
and Heath would play cat-and-<lb/>
mouse throughout the entire event<lb/>
until the race tightened up.<lb/>
William Hardison, from Stokes,<lb/>
N.C, started the 30-lap Winner<lb/>
Chevroletfour cylinder feature from<lb/>
the pole and he would never look<lb/>
back. Hardison would lead the en-<lb/>
tire 30-lap event, taking a three-<lb/>
second winover Lewis Everett, from<lb/>
Tarboro, N.C, Ronnie House, from<lb/>
Bethel, N.C, recovered from an<lb/>
early accident to take third while<lb/>
VirgilToler, from Washington, N.C.<lb/>
finished fourth.<lb/>
John Wiley, from Greenville,<lb/>
N.Cbattled with Ricky White, from<lb/>
Windsor. N.C, for the entire 40- lap<lb/>
distance in the Budweiser Super<lb/>
Stock main event. At the finish,<lb/>
though, was Wiley got the win over<lb/>
Ricky White.<lb/>
Hank Jarman, from Kinston,<lb/>
N C, and BobShreeves, from Chesa-<lb/>
peake, Vastarted the Hardees Late<lb/>
Model Stock Car feature from the<lb/>
front row. Jarman got the jump over<lb/>
Shreeves but the Virginia driver<lb/>
staved on the high side trying to<lb/>
regain the front spot. But it was<lb/>
Jarman taking control with Mike<lb/>
Conover,fromGreenville,N.C,fall-<lb/>
ing in line for second. Shreeves<lb/>
slipped to third, but then had me-<lb/>
chanical problems and would lose<lb/>
a lap in the pits.<lb/>
Itwas all Hank Jarman though<lb/>
as he would get his second win of<lb/>
the season. Conover trailed Jarman<lb/>
across thestripe by threecar lengths<lb/>
for second. Wayne Balch, from<lb/>
Chester, Va would take home a<lb/>
third place finish in just his second<lb/>
start at the East Carolina Motor<lb/>
Speedway.<lb/>
Olson's Trivia<lb/>
Q: What Natioanl<lb/>
League East team used<lb/>
to be called the Blue<lb/>
Jays?<lb/>
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Phi Tau<lb/>
ZTA<lb/>
lol MktUl<lb/>
FratSor Gold Frat Purple Ind. Gold<lb/>
Kappa Alplm A ThetaChiB Long Fellows<lb/>
FratSor Gold<lb/>
SigEp<lb/>
Delta Zeta<lb/>
Frat Purple<lb/>
ThetaChi<lb/>
FratSor Gold Frat Purple<lb/>
Phi Tau Sig Ep B<lb/>
ZTA<lb/>
Ind. Gold<lb/>
Cubbies<lb/>
AGL<lb/>
Ind. Gold<lb/>
Dolphins<lb/>
Garnma Sig<lb/>
Ind. Purple<lb/>
Graffix<lb/>
Ind. Purple<lb/>
Carriage<lb/>
Ind. Purple<lb/>
Pi Lambda<lb/>
Men:<lb/>
Women:<lb/>
Men:<lb/>
Women:<lb/>
Co-Rec:<lb/>
FratSor Gold<lb/>
Sig Ep A<lb/>
Alpha Phi<lb/>
All-Campus<lb/>
Pi Lambda Phi<lb/>
Silent Attack A<lb/>
Silent Attack A<lb/>
Frat Purple<lb/>
KAB<lb/>
Ind. Gold<lb/>
Tappa Kegs<lb/>
T)k Girls<lb/>
FratSor Gold Frat Purple<lb/>
TlKtttCM J; SigEpB<lb/>
Alpha Phi<lb/>
Ind. Purple<lb/>
Creatures of Leisure<lb/>
Ind. Gold<lb/>
Pi lambda Phi<lb/>
Silent Attack A<lb/>
Free Throws: W Temple &amp; Kristen Rosignolo<lb/>
3 pt. Shoot Out: Wes Creef &amp; Sandy Meadoxos<lb/>
Reebok Spot Shot: Gregory Collier &amp; Erin Casey<lb/>
Overall Winners: Orlando Whitaker &amp; Erin Casey<lb/>
$L V?Ji CoMt<lb/>
8 Foot Division:<lb/>
9 Foot Envision:<lb/>
10 Foot Division:<lb/>
Cedric White<lb/>
Carlos Blake<lb/>
Jerris McPhail<lb/>
? ?????????????????? 0tb 0ditohJ WWw<lb/>
?Basketball Invitational: Men: Total Package 'Big Splash Golf Bonanza: Guy Kemp ?<lb/>
Billiard: Scoff Hoivell -Bowling Singles Men: Wynn Whittingimm; Women: Sheila Provo<lb/>
?Co-Rec Flag Football: Thrills-N-Skills 'Flag Football Qualifier: Men: Super Ho's; Women:<lb/>
Alplw Delta Pi "Frisbee Golf Singles: Men: Keinn Gaskins; Women: Anne Tyler ?Golf<lb/>
Doubles: Jonathan Rucker &amp; Miclmel Durlmm ?Kickball: White Hall ?NCAAPick'Em: Men:<lb/>
Roy Knauf; Women: Lynda McCormick ?Putt-Putt: Men: Terry Honeycutt; Women: Kerry<lb/>
Lynch ? Racquetball: Men: Jeff Byars; Women: Brandi Dutcfter -Table Tennis: Till Hageman<lb/>
?Trivia Bowl: Three Men &amp; A Lady "Turkey Trot: Men: Mike Ford; Women: Vibeke Siainsen;<lb/>
Team: Phi Kappa Tau ?Co-Rec Volleyball: Gold: Team Americana; Purple Purple Haze<lb/>
?Whiffleball: PPE ?H-O-R-S-E: George Hendrix<lb/>
F:or additional information on now to get involved with Recreational Services<lb/>
Intramural Activities, Call 757-6387 or stop by 2Q4 Christenbury Gymnsium<lb/>
.<lb/>
<pb facs="00058472_0012"/><lb/>
12 I The East Carolinian<lb/>
1arch 24, 1994<lb/>
Balboa, U.S. vying for World Cup appearance<lb/>
i Al'i Marcelo Balboa was a<lb/>
defender on the 1990 United States<lb/>
socoa teamrhatrnaderustarvbvquali-<lb/>
fving tor the World Cup tournament<lb/>
h?r the tiit time in 4I ears<lb/>
"We were a buiiih of kids, he<lb/>
said after fuesday's practice for<lb/>
Wednesdays World Cup exhibition<lb/>
against Moldova at Davidson Col-<lb/>
leg i We want h i prcw e this year that<lb/>
we re a lot better than w e were in XW<lb/>
The 1990 L S. soccer team lost<lb/>
IhreestraightgarnesintheWorldCup<lb/>
LACROSSE<lb/>
in Italy, losing 5-1 to Czechoslovakia,<lb/>
1-0 to Italy,and 2-1 to Austria.<lb/>
Balboa is back on the 1994 team,<lb/>
which has just one win and seven tie<lb/>
in 10 games.<lb/>
Wednesday's Kneupwasmark-<lb/>
edlvdirferenttromtheonethatplaved<lb/>
Moldova toa 1-1 tie Saturday night at<lb/>
Jacksonville, Fla.<lb/>
With World Cup play just two<lb/>
months off, U.S. coaches w ant to get a<lb/>
ekser look at some other players K<lb/>
fore paring tlie M Nnan rosti x down U<lb/>
22 by the lime 3 deadline.<lb/>
In additu n, the top L' S. forwards<lb/>
and midfielders are either injured or<lb/>
w ith their dubs in Europe and won't<lb/>
be available for another month.<lb/>
"While our tirst prioritv tomor-<lb/>
row night is to win, we are facing a<lb/>
difficult decision over the next few<lb/>
weeks'assistantcoachSteveSampson<lb/>
said Tuesday following practice at<lb/>
Richardson I leld. ' We need to let a lot<lb/>
of players play their way on the team<lb/>
or off the team<lb/>
Continued from page 9<lb/>
These players include: Joe<lb/>
Camp, Eric Rothrock, Fred Rover,<lb/>
Craig Davcett, fhomas Gatouzis,<lb/>
Dan Dil eo. Steve Dirmars, Chris<lb/>
Odium ell and 1 es C arithers.<lb/>
With the changes made, the<lb/>
team was able to pull together and<lb/>
come back with tour consecutive<lb/>
wins over IMC State, UNC-Greens-<lb/>
RUGBY<lb/>
boro, lames Madison and Appala-<lb/>
chian State.<lb/>
Two weekends ago, the team<lb/>
traveled to Wilmington to partici-<lb/>
pate in the second annual Coastal<lb/>
Carolina Lacrosse Invitational, in<lb/>
which thev placed third out of It'<lb/>
teams. The only los in the tourna-<lb/>
ment was to champion George<lb/>
Mason.<lb/>
The season came to an end last<lb/>
weekend with a double header in<lb/>
Virginia. Although the team was<lb/>
lacking some manpower because<lb/>
of scheduleconflicts, thev were able<lb/>
to beat William and Marv7. but<lb/>
lost in double overtime to Virginia<lb/>
Commonwealth, 10-4<lb/>
Continued from page 9<lb/>
Clint Breed, both of whom scored<lb/>
two tries. Moss totaled 13 points.<lb/>
two penalty goals and a conver-<lb/>
sion.<lb/>
The score would have been<lb/>
worse, except most of the trys<lb/>
Were touched down in the cor-<lb/>
ners, faraway from the goal posts.<lb/>
In rugby, the conversion is taken<lb/>
from a point on the field in line<lb/>
with the touchdown. The side-<lb/>
line is not the place from wich to<lb/>
kick from on a windyday,and no<lb/>
kicker had much luck this week-<lb/>
end.<lb/>
The Pirates then got two<lb/>
breaks. First, thev had two hours<lb/>
off until their match with Caro-<lb/>
lina Second, the 1 leels upset JMU<lb/>
i 5-8.1 his meant an ECU win over<lb/>
Carolina would create a throe-<lb/>
wax tie tor tirst place with point<lb/>
differential deciding the issue.<lb/>
Given their rest period, the<lb/>
Pirates went after L'C with a<lb/>
vengeance. A well-balanced at-<lb/>
tack saw six players score tries as<lb/>
Snow , Patterson and Moss were<lb/>
joined by Jay Keller, Steve Flippen<lb/>
and Sean Miller as try scorers.<lb/>
Moss had live conversions and a<lb/>
penalty goal to lead the team with<lb/>
18 points.<lb/>
The final score of 43-3 was<lb/>
especially satisfying to the Pirates<lb/>
because Carolina beat ECU last<lb/>
fall. The Tarheels fell early in the<lb/>
state championships last week;<lb/>
so the Pirate ruggers did not get a<lb/>
shot at them on a weekend when<lb/>
thev shutout both N.C. State and<lb/>
Duke.<lb/>
The last match of the day saw<lb/>
1Mb beat up VCU, 34-0, but it<lb/>
made little difference. Given their<lb/>
tight matches and the low scores<lb/>
JMU had recorded, the Dukes had<lb/>
to win by more than 7S points to<lb/>
take tirst place. The Pirates took<lb/>
the trophy with a 79 point dif-<lb/>
ferential compared wit<lb/>
Madison's 30 Jnd Carolina's -<lb/>
50.<lb/>
ECU'S ruggers close out their<lb/>
season at 8-3. Each loss was by<lb/>
one score against a club consid-<lb/>
ered superior to the Pirates until<lb/>
this spring.<lb/>
All wins came with big scores<lb/>
as ECU showed it was ready to<lb/>
step up and play with the big<lb/>
bovs from the north. Even more<lb/>
heartening was the performance<lb/>
of the B-side which beat four A-<lb/>
teams over the course ot the the<lb/>
spring as they thoroughly domi-<lb/>
nated Division II colleges in N.C.<lb/>
and triumphed over a senior club<lb/>
side.<lb/>
SUMMER<lb/>
EMPLOYMENT<lb/>
North in Lines is nw<lb/>
,ic(ipnn applications from college<lb/>
students .mil stafi lot its Summei I (eel<lb/>
llll<lb/>
Summer i thebusv season inthemen<lb/>
ing industry and we need your help to<lb/>
handlethi load Wewill teach you to<lb/>
saieh oiierate an IK wheel rig and<lb/>
load household goods argo - at no<lb/>
cost. V ? - pay your r in and lmard<lb/>
while miii in training. Once you<lb/>
rn ivi- youtommen ial I )river s Li<lb/>
 ense we il pay you S4J pi . eek<lb/>
plu SI i "i week living expenses<lb/>
plu bonus.<lb/>
To iu.ilm you mu-t be 21 years old<lb/>
, good driving rei ord, and l?-<lb/>
available ior training in May (the end<lb/>
hi nl would lie even better!<lb/>
Take i break from die c lassroom and<lb/>
make the most oi ur summei with<lb/>
North AmetK an Van I ines We II<lb/>
promisi you an adverrtureyou II never<lb/>
HEAPJMG HOME<lb/>
THCSUMMER?<lb/>
Sizyi" i u-h U7 we EveRTt-? ?iw<lb/>
Buy a subscription to The East Carolinian for the summer -<lb/>
for only 20 bucks! Each week you will get the paper by mail.<lb/>
' Mail your check or money order to The East Carolinian. Student Pubs Bldg,<lb/>
 ECU, Greenville. NC 27858-4353.<lb/>
 Name ?<lb/>
I Address<lb/>
i City, Slate, Zipi<lb/>
ill 1 -WHl )4f<lb/>
4" Dept. U-8<lb/>
Kingston<lb/>
Place<lb/>
WE HAVE<lb/>
OPEMIXGS EOR STIJDEMT<lb/>
RENTALS FOR FAIL SEMESTER<lb/>
INTERESTED STUDENTS SHOULD<lb/>
CALL 758-5393<lb/>
One Less Worry During Exam WEEK<lb/>
Your Next School Years Living Space In A<lb/>
Student Village will be Guaranteed<lb/>
If You Apply Now!<lb/>
Fall<lb/>
VI A PRICK THAT WILL COMPETE WITH I HI, DORMS!<lb/>
SMOKED TURKEY, HONEY HAM, LOW SALT HAM OR<lb/>
COOKED HAM<lb/>
10OZ.<lb/>
LOW PRICES<lb/>
.1<lb/>
RED SEEDLESS 129<lb/>
GRAPES<lb/>
3CRISP<lb/>
CUCUMBERS<lb/>
,?1 CRISP<lb/>
CARABITES.cz<lb/>
CALIFORNIA<lb/>
STRAWBERRIES<lb/>
LOW PRICES<lb/>
HT<lb/>
ORANGE JUICE<lb/>
FIRST OF<lb/>
THE SEASON<lb/>
LIMIT 24<lb/>
PINTS<lb/>
PINT<lb/>
COCA-COLA<lb/>
2LTR.<lb/>
WEEKLY SPECIAL<lb/>
WEEKLY SPECIAL<lb/>
REGULAR OR FREE STAIN FIGHTING<lb/>
WISK DETERGENT<lb/>
42 OZ.<lb/>
REGULAR OR BUTTERMILK<lb/>
DOWNYFLAKE WAFFLES<lb/>
19 0Z.<lb/>
HARRIS TEETERTHE BEST IS WHAT WE'RE ALL ABOUT<lb/>
SHAMPOO &amp; CONDITIONER IN ONE<lb/>
PERT 472<lb/>
PLUS<lb/>
11-15<lb/>
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Quaker<lb/>
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12 0Z.<lb/>
BOX<lb/>
I<lb/>
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DANNON PLAIN<lb/>
NO FAT<lb/>
YOGURT<lb/>
16 0Z.<lb/>
.99<lb/>
SELECTED VARIETIES<lb/>
MENNEN<lb/>
SPEED STICK<lb/>
ANTI-PERSPIRANT<lb/>
OR DEODORANT -<lb/>
2.25<lb/>
OZ.<lb/>
1<lb/>
82<lb/>
SELECTED VARIETIES<lb/>
KEEBLER<lb/>
COOKIES<lb/>
BITE<lb/>
SIZE<lb/>
10<lb/>
OZ.<lb/>
I<lb/>
69<lb/>
IN THE DELI- BAKERY<lb/>
ANGEL FOOD<lb/>
CAKE<lb/>
EA.<lb/>
1<lb/>
89<lb/>
<pb facs="00058472_0013"/><lb/>
iii<lb/>
iimawn'i?imaH?i m?H?mn 1.1<lb/>
The East Carolinian<lb/>
April 21. 1994<lb/>
Lifestyle<lb/>
Page 13<lb/>
No Escape from prison in the future<lb/>
Photo Courtesy of Savoy Pictures<lb/>
Ray Liotta, as Marine Captain John Robbins, fights for his life in No Escape, a futuristic action-adventure set<lb/>
in the year 2022. The movie will be shown at Hendrix Theatre on April 25 at 8:00 p.m.<lb/>
By Gina Jones<lb/>
Assistant Lifestyle Editor<lb/>
Ready foranothersneakpreview?<lb/>
Well, the Student Union Films Com-<lb/>
mittee is,and- ready or not- it's com-<lb/>
ing. No, it's nota Tlireesome, but it's just<lb/>
as exciting.<lb/>
No Escape is a futuristic action<lb/>
thriller whichstarsRay Liotta asCapt.<lb/>
JohnT. Robbins,acriminalwhoissent<lb/>
to prison.<lb/>
The catch? The prison is a remote<lb/>
island called Absolom, where there is<lb/>
no escape and almost no chance of<lb/>
survival,andprisonersareabandoned<lb/>
and left to die.<lb/>
On Absolom, there is a primitive<lb/>
civilization divided into two groups;<lb/>
the Outsiders, anarchistic savages led<lb/>
by Marek (Stuart Wilson), and the<lb/>
Insiders, a group of peaceful colonists<lb/>
led by the Father (Lance Henriksen).<lb/>
The two groups are enemies and are<lb/>
constantly battlingeachother. But John<lb/>
Robbins has only one agenda: surviv-<lb/>
ing and escaping the island.<lb/>
Ray Liotta, who plays Robbins,<lb/>
has starred in many acclaimed<lb/>
"sleeper" movies. The role that made<lb/>
him famous was for gangster Henry<lb/>
Hill in Goodfcllas, for whichhe received<lb/>
an Oscar nomination.<lb/>
Lance Henriksen, who plays the<lb/>
Father, is well-known for his role as<lb/>
Bishop, the android in Aliens. He has<lb/>
also starred in Stone Cold, Tlie Termina-<lb/>
tor and fagged Edge.<lb/>
Kevin Dillon, brother of Matt<lb/>
Dillon, plays Casey, a fellow inmate.<lb/>
His other films include TJw Doors and<lb/>
Platoon.<lb/>
Ernie Hudson, who plays<lb/>
Hawkins, has starred in Qiostbusters,<lb/>
Ghostbusters and The Hand tlrnt Rocks<lb/>
the Cradle.<lb/>
No EscapealsostarsStuart Wilson<lb/>
(Marek), and Michael Lerner (the<lb/>
Warden).<lb/>
No Escape is based on Richard<lb/>
Herley's 1988 British sci-fi novel The<lb/>
Penal Colony. No Escape1 is a story of<lb/>
renewal and redemption, a testament<lb/>
to the idea that even in the worst of<lb/>
environments, said Lance Henriksen,<lb/>
one of the film's stars. "There will be<lb/>
men who seek a sense of belonging<lb/>
and association with each other. They<lb/>
are compelled to rebuild a society bet-<lb/>
ter and more justthantheonewhohas<lb/>
See NO ESCAPE page 14<lb/>
Kappa Sigma<lb/>
party commences<lb/>
By Laura Jackman<lb/>
Staff Writer<lb/>
1 he 12th annual Kappa Sigma<lb/>
Bahama MamaParty will takeplace<lb/>
on Saturday, April 23, and it is guar-<lb/>
anteed to be another success.<lb/>
For one day, the corner of<lb/>
Anderson and 10th street will turn<lb/>
into a block egBrej<lb/>
party ? com-<lb/>
plete withsand<lb/>
and milsic to<lb/>
make you feel<lb/>
like you are in<lb/>
the Bahamas.<lb/>
The party<lb/>
will begin at 1<lb/>
p.m. with the hhmhih<lb/>
band Mother Nature.Theywillplay<lb/>
until 2:30 p.m at which time the<lb/>
much-awaited bikini contest will<lb/>
takeplace. Cashandprizesarespon-<lb/>
sored jointly by Lori's Intimate Ap-<lb/>
parel, The Attic and the Kappa Sigs.<lb/>
Firstplace wins$150incash, second<lb/>
place gets $75, and $25 goes to the<lb/>
third-place winner. Giftcertificates,<lb/>
valued up to $75, will also be<lb/>
awarded.<lb/>
Then, at approximately 3:30<lb/>
p.m the band Roily Gray and<lb/>
Sunfire will begin their set. They<lb/>
will play until the party ends at 5:00<lb/>
p.m.<lb/>
Wegpt the idea to<lb/>
help the Cystic<lb/>
Fibrosis cause from a<lb/>
brother of ours. "<lb/>
Preston Aldridge<lb/>
Every year, the fraternity<lb/>
chooses a different organization to<lb/>
benefit, and this year's cause is the<lb/>
Cystic Fibrosis Foundation. This<lb/>
benefit is made possible beca use of<lb/>
such sponsors as Bud Light, The<lb/>
Attic, Lori'slntimate Apparel,Sun-<lb/>
shine Alternative Productions,<lb/>
UBE, Papa John's Pizza and Lou's<lb/>
BHHHB Beach<lb/>
Bingo.<lb/>
"We<lb/>
got the idea<lb/>
to help the<lb/>
Cystic Fi-<lb/>
brosis cause<lb/>
from a<lb/>
brother of<lb/>
?sBHS?BBaaiM?Bi ours said<lb/>
Preston Aldridge. His father is vice-<lb/>
presidentofmarketingfortheFoun-<lb/>
dation in Wilson, so it appealed to<lb/>
us. "We want to carry on the tradi-<lb/>
tionof the party, while alsobenefit-<lb/>
ing a good cause at the same time<lb/>
Tickets are $6 in advance and<lb/>
none will be sold at the door. They<lb/>
will be available in front of the<lb/>
Student Store on Thursday, from 9<lb/>
a.m. until 2 p.m or by calling 757-<lb/>
1005or 752-5543. Toenterthebikini<lb/>
contestcontact Preston Aldridgeat<lb/>
830-0294.<lb/>
The party isB.Y.O.B.Nobottles<lb/>
please.<lb/>
Lecture focuses on images of deities<lb/>
Staff Reports<lb/>
The East Carolinian<lb/>
Feminist images of deity in<lb/>
Buddhism will be the topic of an<lb/>
upcominglec ture given on thecam-<lb/>
pus of ECU.<lb/>
The lecture is the second an-<lb/>
nual Umesh and Usha Gulati lec-<lb/>
ture on World Religions. It is spon-<lb/>
sored by the ECU religious studies<lb/>
program and will be held Thurs-<lb/>
day, April 21, at 7:30 p.m. Admis-<lb/>
sion is free.<lb/>
The speaker, Dr. Karen Lang,<lb/>
teaches in the department of reli-<lb/>
gious studies at the University of<lb/>
Virginia at Charlottesville. A spe-<lb/>
cialist in Asian Languages and Lit-<lb/>
erature, she is the author of one<lb/>
book and numerous articles. Her<lb/>
lecture is titled "Tara and Prajna-<lb/>
Paramita: Images of Compassion<lb/>
and Wisdom in Mahayana<lb/>
Buddism<lb/>
The Gulati Lectureship is<lb/>
funded partially by contributions<lb/>
from Umesh and Usha Gulati of<lb/>
Greenville, N.C<lb/>
"While the primary thrust of<lb/>
the religious studies program is to<lb/>
provide an academic minor option<lb/>
for students, we also want to serve<lb/>
the public through quality programs<lb/>
on religious topics Dr. Calvin<lb/>
Mercer, Director of the program,<lb/>
explained. "We are most fortunate<lb/>
to have the services of someone<lb/>
withsuch deep knowledgeof Asian<lb/>
traditions to deliver this lecture<lb/>
Recent studies on religion and<lb/>
gender have raised questions about<lb/>
women's experience within reli-<lb/>
gious institutions. Lang believes the<lb/>
pattern of identifying women with<lb/>
sensual desire occurs with regular-<lb/>
ity throughout much of the<lb/>
androcentrieliteratureof early Bud-<lb/>
dhism.<lb/>
"Despite these negative images,<lb/>
the tradition records the presence<lb/>
of enlightened women who are ex-<lb/>
emplars of compassion and wis-<lb/>
dom she said. "The Mahayana<lb/>
tradition of Buddhism symbolizes<lb/>
the qualities of compassion and<lb/>
wisdom with the feminine images<lb/>
of Tara and Prajnaparamita. These<lb/>
images and the major texts of<lb/>
Mahayana encourage Buddhist<lb/>
practitioners to transcend limita-<lb/>
tionsof gendersteroetypesand gen-<lb/>
der roles in their meditational prac-<lb/>
tice and in their religious institu-<lb/>
tions<lb/>
The lecture will be held in the<lb/>
General Classroom Building in<lb/>
Room 1026. A reception will follow<lb/>
the lecture.<lb/>
Farmville hosts 1994 Dogwood Festival<lb/>
Sarah Wahlert<lb/>
Staff Writer<lb/>
The Farmville, N.C, area was<lb/>
settled in the 1760s in the midst of<lb/>
some of the most fertile farmland<lb/>
in the world. Incorporated in 1872,<lb/>
Farmville is home to folks who are<lb/>
proud of their community. The<lb/>
turn of the 20th century brought<lb/>
much prosperity to the village, as<lb/>
tobacco cultivation and the ad-<lb/>
vent of the East Carolina Railroad<lb/>
brought a business boom to the<lb/>
area. Today, the town continues<lb/>
to prosper and to strive for the<lb/>
best.<lb/>
April is the month that<lb/>
Farmville eel- r<lb/>
ebrates spring byc<lb/>
honoring North<lb/>
Carolina's state ,<lb/>
flower and<lb/>
southern favorite,<lb/>
the Dogwood. The<lb/>
festival will be held<lb/>
April 22-23. Performing at the i<lb/>
festival for the first time will be<lb/>
the Panama Steel Band. This latin<lb/>
steel drum band was formed in<lb/>
1988. The band creates a cruise<lb/>
ship atmosphere with arrange-<lb/>
ments of calypsos, popular tunes<lb/>
and other latin music. The fea-<lb/>
tured instrument of the band, the<lb/>
steel drum, originated in Trinidad.<lb/>
It is made from 55-gallon oil bar-<lb/>
rels. Panama Steel has previously<lb/>
opened for Jimmy Buffet concerts.<lb/>
Other band appearing at the<lb/>
festival include Cold Sweat,<lb/>
Middle Swamp, The Fabulous 4,<lb/>
and The Tar River Community<lb/>
See DOGWOOD page 15<lb/>
i<lb/>
5<lb/>
it<lb/>
CD Reviews CD Reviews CD Reviews<lb/>
Flanagan<lb/>
discusses<lb/>
dreams<lb/>
By Cindy Hawkins<lb/>
Staff Writer<lb/>
In his most recent book,<lb/>
Conciousness Reconsidered, Dr.<lb/>
Owen Flanagan asserts that,<lb/>
"Threeofthegreatestperplexi-<lb/>
ties are these: Why is there<lb/>
something rather than noth-<lb/>
ing? Howdidsomeof thestuff<lb/>
there is come to be alive? How<lb/>
did some of the living stuff<lb/>
come to be conscious?" For<lb/>
persons intersted in these and<lb/>
related ponderings, Dr.<lb/>
Flanagan,aprofessorof experi-<lb/>
mental psychology and phi-<lb/>
losophy at Duke University,<lb/>
will be presenting a lecture<lb/>
titled "Deconstructing Dreams<lb/>
: The Spandrels of Sleep<lb/>
Dr. Owen Flanagan is a<lb/>
highly respected and promi-<lb/>
nent figure in the fields of psy-<lb/>
chology and philosophy. He<lb/>
has published over thirty ar-<lb/>
ticles in magazinessuchasjour-<lb/>
nal of Philosophy, Ethics, and<lb/>
American Psychologist.<lb/>
He has held positions at<lb/>
BrandeisUniversity,Wellesley<lb/>
College, and at La Trobe Uni-<lb/>
versity in Melbourne, Austra-<lb/>
lia. He hasbeen the recipient of<lb/>
numerous awards and fellow-<lb/>
ships, and serves on the edito-<lb/>
rial board of the journals Con-<lb/>
sciousness, Cognition, and<lb/>
Psyche.<lb/>
Dr. Flanagan's merit as a<lb/>
philosopher is indirectly com-<lb/>
municated through his most<lb/>
notable accomplishments.<lb/>
What is most interesting is the<lb/>
content of his work, particu-<lb/>
larly mConcsioiisness Reconsid-<lb/>
ered. Inthiswork,hestatesthat,<lb/>
"We are conscious creatures.<lb/>
Perhaps we are information<lb/>
processors, but if we are, we<lb/>
areconcsiousinformationpro-<lb/>
cessors. Our mental life has a<lb/>
phenomenal side, a subjective<lb/>
side,thatuTemostsophisticated<lb/>
information processor might<lb/>
lack<lb/>
"Deconstructing<lb/>
Dreams: The Spandrals of<lb/>
Sleep" willbepresentedonFri-<lb/>
day, April 22, from 3:00p.m. to<lb/>
5:00p.m. inGeneralClassroom<lb/>
Building 1005, and promises to<lb/>
be stimulating and intellectu-<lb/>
ally provocative. In addition t6<lb/>
the open presentation, Dr.<lb/>
Flanagan will meet with all in-<lb/>
trigued persons withquipscon-<lb/>
cerning existence and con-<lb/>
sciousness for afternoon cof-<lb/>
fee. Anyone interested inmeet-<lb/>
ing with Dr. Flanagan should<lb/>
contact John Bickle in the de-<lb/>
partment of Philosophy.<lb/>
Where's The End of Vandalism?<lb/>
Don't Buy<lb/>
s'f Take Your Chances<lb/>
JyJ Worth A Try<lb/>
ssss<lb/>
i fd rJ fd 'Definite Purchase<lb/>
Syn<lb/>
Matter of Time<lb/>
Somethingcompelledmetograb<lb/>
the nearest dictionary and look up<lb/>
the definition of "jaded" as I listened<lb/>
to Mrt terofTimeby Syn. Asdefinedin<lb/>
the Merriam-Webster dictionary,<lb/>
jaded isanadjectivemeaning'dulled<lb/>
byanexcessiveindulgenceMybrain<lb/>
neurons immediately scrambled to<lb/>
push toward a connection between<lb/>
the guttural voice of frontman, Ray<lb/>
Lane, and the meaning of jaded.<lb/>
Lane's music is guitar-driven,<lb/>
which is not entirely unusual in the<lb/>
year in which Pearl Jam makes the<lb/>
cover of Newsweek. Yet, while it is<lb/>
powerful and brooding, the music<lb/>
tends to fall short in the most imagi-<lb/>
nativeand comical ways. Forinstance,<lb/>
the song "Hey John" is a<lb/>
comtemplativetributetoJohnLennon<lb/>
mat would be a really good song until<lb/>
Lane inserts "coo-coo-ca-choo" into<lb/>
the chorus, thuscrossingintotheever-<lb/>
mysterious realms of the Pillsbury<lb/>
Dough Boy theme song. The rest of<lb/>
the songs consist of love songs, alone<lb/>
songs,and 'screw italT songs?quite<lb/>
standard, really.<lb/>
Yet, there is a painful relation-<lb/>
ship portrayed on Matter of Time,<lb/>
though I'm not sure who it is be-<lb/>
tween At times, Lane accuses God.<lb/>
Atothertimes,heattackssocietyand,<lb/>
at other times, he attacks himself. In<lb/>
the song "Take it Back Lane la-<lb/>
ments, "All my life I'vebeen loosing <lb/>
A life that was never mine" to the<lb/>
See SYN page 15<lb/>
Hole<lb/>
Live Through This<lb/>
JJJ<lb/>
Believe it or not, I bought the new<lb/>
Hole album because I liked the first<lb/>
one. I didn't buy it out of morbid<lb/>
curiosity about Hole singer Courtney<lb/>
Love's marriage to the late KurtCobain.<lb/>
I didn'tbuy itbecauseof all the media<lb/>
hype, which included cover stories in<lb/>
every music magazine on Earth I<lb/>
didn't even buy it because Sphi maga-<lb/>
zine called it the best album so far this<lb/>
year. No, I just remember how good<lb/>
thatfirstalbumreallywas.Sometimes<lb/>
I think I may be the only one.<lb/>
It's been hard to avoid the hype<lb/>
on this one, it really has. Even before<lb/>
her husband's suicide, Love was a<lb/>
fixture in theentertainmentpress. Her<lb/>
heroin addiction and the attempts by<lb/>
social services to take away her baby<lb/>
were only the tip of her media iceberg.<lb/>
It was all quite sordid, and the really<lb/>
sad thing is,nobodywouldhavecared<lb/>
if she hadn't married Kurt Cobain.<lb/>
What'sevensadder,though,isrhefact<lb/>
that no one would care about Hole's<lb/>
music if it wasn't for Cobain, either.<lb/>
Their new album, whichhas the sadly<lb/>
ironic title Live Through Tftis, would<lb/>
most likely be widely ignored, and<lb/>
that's too bad. People as talented as<lb/>
Loveandherbandmatesdeservemore<lb/>
recognition than that.<lb/>
Perhaps that's why certain songs<lb/>
on this new album comment so bla-<lb/>
tantlyonall thehypethaf ssurrounded<lb/>
Love. In "Creditin theStraight World<lb/>
Love tells us how she had to become a<lb/>
See HOLE page 15<lb/>
DES MOLNES, Iowa (AP) ?<lb/>
Grouse County, which may or may<lb/>
not be in Iowa, exists in an "Ameri-<lb/>
can Gothic" world where vandals<lb/>
have thrown a rock through the<lb/>
pointed upstairs window of the little<lb/>
white house and bent the tines of<lb/>
the farmer's pitchfork into an excla-<lb/>
mation point.<lb/>
It's the world of Tom Drury's<lb/>
firstnovel, 77a? Endofrandalism. And<lb/>
it's a place where Grant Wood<lb/>
people walk through a Magritte<lb/>
landscape.<lb/>
"I've had people ask, 'What's<lb/>
your book called? said Drury, in-<lb/>
terviewed by telephone from his<lb/>
home in Litchfield, Conn. "And I<lb/>
say, "The End of Vandalism And<lb/>
they say, 'Is it a manual about stop-<lb/>
ping vandalism?' And I say, No,<lb/>
not at all<lb/>
Rather, Drury's book is a state-<lb/>
ment on life in Grouse County,<lb/>
where not a lot is as it seems at first<lb/>
glance.<lb/>
The land would seem to be<lb/>
Iowa, with people going to Des<lb/>
Moines to lobby the Legislature,<lb/>
buying tractor parts in Sioux City<lb/>
and going up north to a fishing<lb/>
camp in Minnesota. But Drury says<lb/>
it could be anywhere in rural<lb/>
America; it doesn't have to be Iowa.<lb/>
"It never comes right out and<lb/>
saysdirectly, This isexactly where<lb/>
we are he says.<lb/>
If s a story of babies aban-<lb/>
doned and babies lost, of divorce<lb/>
and dating, of families close-knit<lb/>
and families unraveling.<lb/>
The main characters are<lb/>
Louise Darling, a photographer's<lb/>
assistant, her ex-husband, Tiny, a<lb/>
thief and a vandal, and her cur-<lb/>
rent husband, Dan Norman, the<lb/>
county sheriff. Alistattheback of<lb/>
the book names 65 other charac<lb/>
ters, whose lives intersect those of<lb/>
Louise, Tiny and Dan in some<lb/>
way ? and in sometimes unex-<lb/>
pected ways.<lb/>
"It seems to me that the writ-<lb/>
ing in the book will be going along<lb/>
in a certain recognizably realistic<lb/>
way and then suddenly, or not so<lb/>
suddenly, it just will kind of lapse<lb/>
into a sort of surreal and funny<lb/>
image the writer said.<lb/>
The story is often driven for-<lb/>
ward by acts of vandalism ? like<lb/>
the time Louise and a friend break<lb/>
into the high school gym and spray<lb/>
paint "See the lonely boys out on<lb/>
the weekend" letter-by-letter on<lb/>
the football team's helmets.<lb/>
"Infact,I think the vandalism<lb/>
often comesoffina favorable light,<lb/>
See VANDALISM page 15<lb/>
f<lb/>
<pb facs="00058472_0014"/><lb/>
14 The East Carolinian<lb/>
April 21, 1994<lb/>
Roseanne claims abusive huband; files for divorce<lb/>
LOSANGEl ES(AP) ?They<lb/>
flashed their tattooed rear ends in<lb/>
public, posed for gross-out photos<lb/>
and squabbled with 1V networks.<lb/>
It wasn't pretty while it lasted, and<lb/>
now the union of Roseanne and<lb/>
Tom Arnold is coming to an ugly<lb/>
end.<lb/>
Mrs. Arnold tiled tor divorce<lb/>
Monday and got a restraining or-<lb/>
der against her husband and busi-<lb/>
ness partner, accusing him ot slap-<lb/>
ping her around.<lb/>
The 41-year-old star of one of<lb/>
TV's most popular shows fired her<lb/>
husband as executive producer of<lb/>
"Roseanne cutup his credit cards<lb/>
and dashed off to Europe for a<lb/>
three-month trip without him, a<lb/>
source close to the couple said.<lb/>
She also fired Kim Siva, the<lb/>
couple's assistant who had joined<lb/>
them in a mock, three-way mar-<lb/>
riage, said the source, who spoke<lb/>
on condition of anonymity.<lb/>
Mrs. Arnold said in court pa-<lb/>
pers that couple, who married Ian.<lb/>
20, 1990, officially separated Fri-<lb/>
day.<lb/>
"1 now realize that I have been<lb/>
a classic batteied and abused wife<lb/>
Mrs. Arnold said in court papers.<lb/>
"Throughout our marriage the re-<lb/>
spondent hit me, struck me, has<lb/>
thrown objects at me, pinched me<lb/>
and verbally abused me. He also<lb/>
has pushed me against walls, while<lb/>
he screams and shouts at me,<lb/>
drowning out any possible plea<lb/>
that I might take for him to stop<lb/>
PMK, the public relations firm<lb/>
representing the Arnolds, said<lb/>
there was no comment from Mrs.<lb/>
Arnold or her 35-year-old husband,<lb/>
a comic who is filming his own<lb/>
CBS series, the low-rated "Tom<lb/>
The caustic, corpulent couple<lb/>
began with a stormy courtship that<lb/>
overlapped with Mrs. Arnold's<lb/>
breakup from her first husband.<lb/>
The actress postponed their 1990<lb/>
wedding until her husband-to-be<lb/>
sought help for substance abuse.<lb/>
In her book "My Lives she<lb/>
sas she was sexually abused as a<lb/>
child, leading her to abuse drugs<lb/>
StuMht l)4O0AA4t<lb/>
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1 lie Arnolds made news to-<lb/>
gether by flashing their ample bot-<lb/>
toms ? each bearing a tattoo of the<lb/>
other's name ? at the lc89 World<lb/>
Series, mud wrestling in photo-<lb/>
graphs for Vanity Fair, recounting<lb/>
personal recollections of child abuse<lb/>
and squabbling with networks over<lb/>
their contracts.<lb/>
The divorce filing came three<lb/>
days after an argument erupted be-<lb/>
tween the Arnolds on the set of<lb/>
ABC's "Roseanne which has tra-<lb/>
ditionallv ranked in the top 10 each<lb/>
week<lb/>
Mrs. Arnold claimed her hus-<lb/>
band forced his way onto the set<lb/>
Friday ? past the four securitv<lb/>
guards she hired to prevent him ?<lb/>
and assaulted four people.<lb/>
That same day, she said, she<lb/>
called police after her husband<lb/>
charged into her Los Angeles home<lb/>
and threatened her three children<lb/>
from a previous marriage. She said<lb/>
NO ESCAPE<lb/>
in court papers that her husband<lb/>
had moved out six months ago<lb/>
In asking tor a restraining or-<lb/>
der, the comic declared: "1 have<lb/>
often been the subject of humiliat-<lb/>
ing stories in tabloid newspapers.<lb/>
However, 1 must make these rev-<lb/>
elations at this time because of the<lb/>
conclusion that I have reached that<lb/>
! cannot continue to live in a clas-<lb/>
sic battered wife syndrome men-<lb/>
tality<lb/>
An entertainment industry<lb/>
analyst said that the impact of the<lb/>
split remains uncertain but that<lb/>
Mrs. Arnold clearlv outweighs her<lb/>
husband in ratings clout.<lb/>
"If Roseanne Arnold left<lb/>
'Roseanne that would have an<lb/>
impact on Capital Cities-ABC and<lb/>
on Viacom, which syndicates the<lb/>
show said Jeffrey Longdon of<lb/>
the Seidler Cos. securities firm.<lb/>
"Tom Arnold is not someone who<lb/>
would impact the earnings per<lb/>
share of any company<lb/>
Continued from page 13<lb/>
abandoned mem, but thev never give<lb/>
up thei r dreams of freedom and justice<lb/>
in the world thev left behind No Es-<lb/>
cape, a Savoy picru res release, was wri t-<lb/>
ten bv Michael Gavlin and Joel Cross,<lb/>
produced by Gale Ann Hurd, and di-<lb/>
rected by Martin Campbell. It is sched-<lb/>
uled tor national release on April 29.<lb/>
If you're in the mcxd for science<lb/>
fiction mixed with high-energized<lb/>
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5 WINTER MOON by Dean Koontz<lb/>
6 THrtAtJSMAN OF" SHANNARA by Terry BrBots"<lb/>
7 THE TAO OF POOH by Benjamin Hoff<lb/>
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<pb facs="00058472_0015"/><lb/>
April 21. 1994<lb/>
The East Carolinian 15<lb/>
VANDALISM<lb/>
Continued from page 13<lb/>
depending on which act we're talk-<lb/>
ing about Drurv said. "It's a way<lb/>
of sort of rearranging reality to get<lb/>
vour point across.<lb/>
' And when you think about it,<lb/>
fiction writing is a way of doing the<lb/>
same thing<lb/>
Then there's the night Tiny in-<lb/>
vades the End of Vandalism Dance<lb/>
at the high school gym and vandal-<lb/>
izes the anti-vandalism collage.<lb/>
And the Saturday afternoon that<lb/>
Albert Robeshaw's rock band<lb/>
climbs the Pinville water tower and<lb/>
paints "Armageddon" and "Tina<lb/>
Rules" to wake up the folks of<lb/>
GrouseCountv and honor the Talk-<lb/>
ing Heads.<lb/>
"A lot of it is like political ex-<lb/>
pression Drurv said. "When<lb/>
Louise paints the Neil Young lyric<lb/>
on the football helmets, what she's<lb/>
doing is making her point in a very<lb/>
noticeable way that the school sys-<lb/>
tem is spending too much money<lb/>
on football.<lb/>
"So it's a way of getting a plat-<lb/>
form. Bevond that, I'd have to relv<lb/>
on vour interpretation of why there<lb/>
is so much vandalism<lb/>
Although he grew up in Iowa,<lb/>
in a rural setting much like Grouse<lb/>
County, Drurv denied that the<lb/>
scenes of vandalism are autobio-<lb/>
graphical "I'd sav there is no more<lb/>
vandalism in my past than there is<lb/>
in anv average Midwestern child-<lb/>
hood he said.<lb/>
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BREAK THE CYCLE: CHANGE YOUNG LIVES.<lb/>
DOGWOOD<lb/>
Continued from page 13<lb/>
Band. Spirituals will be performed<lb/>
by The Vines Family and country<lb/>
groups theTamsand Silver Wings<lb/>
top the list of the musical enter-<lb/>
tainment.<lb/>
New features added this year<lb/>
include an antique show and sale<lb/>
and gardeninglandscaping expo.<lb/>
Plant professionals will be happy<lb/>
to answer questions and provide<lb/>
suggestions for vour lawns and<lb/>
gardens.<lb/>
A unique performer called the<lb/>
Fairvtaler will be there to provide<lb/>
captivating adventure fantasy sto-<lb/>
ries that call for audience partici-<lb/>
SYN<lb/>
pation. She appears in glittery<lb/>
gowns, dancing and singing magi-<lb/>
cal melodies to enhance her sto-<lb/>
ries. The actress behind the<lb/>
Fairvtaler, Pauline Faneuf, has<lb/>
appeared on television in "Big<lb/>
Brother Jake" and "Unsolved Mys-<lb/>
teries Call vour friends and<lb/>
neighbors and socialize against a<lb/>
bac kd rop of flowers, music, enter-<lb/>
tainment and fun during the 7th<lb/>
Annual Farmville Dogwood Fes-<lb/>
tival.<lb/>
For a schedule of events, write<lb/>
P.O. Box 86, Farmville, NC 27828<lb/>
or call 919-733-5814.<lb/>
Continued from page 13<lb/>
soulful acoustic projections of his gui-<lb/>
tar. This would explain his comment<lb/>
that, "I didn't trust life or God and I<lb/>
wasn't gonna be his sucker anymore.<lb/>
That's when I picked up a guitar to<lb/>
scream out a few feelings<lb/>
Yet, theme after theme and riff<lb/>
after riff left me aching to call the<lb/>
cheapest 1-900-HELP line, even<lb/>
though I wasn't really moved. Lane<lb/>
succeeds in screaming out a few feel-<lb/>
ings, but the monotony of the music<lb/>
left me with the impression that this<lb/>
singersongwriter and liismusic were<lb/>
 well, jaded.<lb/>
? Cindy<lb/>
Hawkins<lb/>
Central Book &amp;<lb/>
IF YOU FIRST DON'T<lb/>
, YOU'RE<lb/>
ABOUT AVERAGE<lb/>
756-7177<lb/>
Mon-Fri 8:30-9:30 Sat &amp; Sun 9:00-9:30<lb/>
Greenville Square shopping Center (next to Kmart)<lb/>
HOLE<lb/>
Continued from page 13<lb/>
freaktobenotieed. "1 lost a leg and an<lb/>
eye she sings, "I've got credit in the<lb/>
straight world This isn't the kind of-<lb/>
notoriety she wants, but I, for one, am<lb/>
awfully glad she'susingittotellpeople<lb/>
off.<lb/>
The rest of the album seems a bit<lb/>
more like theolderHolestuff, but with<lb/>
what is perhaps a more mature twist.<lb/>
Songs from the first album, like "Teen-<lb/>
age Whore" and "Gixxl SisterBad<lb/>
Sister" explored the taboos of female<lb/>
sexuality indisrurbing terms andsnarl-<lb/>
ingrhvthmsthatreallygotinv'ourface<lb/>
On songs like "Miss World" and<lb/>
"Jennifer's Body the new album<lb/>
seems more interested in the expecta-<lb/>
tions of women and the disturbing<lb/>
reality. Sex is still a major topic, but it's<lb/>
not handled in as graphic a manner.<lb/>
Love still growls and screams, but it's<lb/>
not as brutal. Generally, Lizv Tliwit?li<lb/>
Tliis is just not as juicy as the first<lb/>
album; Hole isn't quite so sticky any-<lb/>
more.<lb/>
An unfortunate side effect of this<lb/>
new maturity, however, is a drop in<lb/>
the band's intensity. As guitarist Eric<lb/>
Frlandson said in one i t the numer-<lb/>
ous Holeinterviews(theonlvonel let<lb/>
myself read), the guitars sound<lb/>
wimpy on Live Tliwugli Tliis. Of<lb/>
courHconsidenngrhatSonic Youth's<lb/>
Kim Gordon produced the first al-<lb/>
bum and brought her noise guitar<lb/>
sound to it, 1 suppose any tiling short<lb/>
of an all-out assault would sound<lb/>
wimpy. But themusic here occasion-<lb/>
ally slips into something too stan-<lb/>
dard; even once in a while, Hole<lb/>
sounds like just another alternative<lb/>
band. And that's one tiling we really<lb/>
don't need anv more of, thanks.<lb/>
Butoveral 1, this Lsa gtxxl album.<lb/>
When Courtney Love screams, she<lb/>
screams effectively, and even- so of-<lb/>
ten Hole's punk roots show beauti-<lb/>
fully. So, never mind the hype, the<lb/>
controversy or the non-stop MTV<lb/>
exposure.Liv Tlirough Tliis deserves<lb/>
to be heard. Check it out.<lb/>
? Mark<lb/>
Brett<lb/>
TT1???????????????<lb/>
CONTEST<lb/>
Ladies. Show Off Your Tan. The Winner<lb/>
Will Advance To The Emerald Isle Beach<lb/>
M tsic Hot Tan Contest!<lb/>
? Kio preliminaries held Saturday,<lb/>
April 9th, 16th and 23rd.<lb/>
? FINALS ON SATURDAY. APRIL 30th.<lb/>
? Doors open at &amp; PM with FREE<lb/>
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Only $2,718.00.<lb/>
Giving people more value for their money has made Macintosh' the best-selling<lb/>
personal computer on campuses and across the coun-<lb/>
try for the past two years: And that's a trend that js<lb/>
likely to continue. Because there are Macintosh and PowerBook' models<lb/>
Affordable computers from Apple.<lb/>
available within your budget. Meaning you get it all. Power. Quality. And afford-<lb/>
ability. It's that simple. So, if that sounds like value<lb/>
to you, visit your Apple Campus ? . <lb/>
Reseller today. And leave your dictionary at home. lujplfe<lb/>
Student Stores<lb/>
Wright Building ? 757-6731<lb/>
Hours: M-rh 8-8, Fri 8-5, Sat 11-5<lb/>
'Ikuaqual. i'fH. (Slim Apkljmputer In Ail n$m named Apple, the Apple toijo, Macmtosi! Mu mtc A jimlra and rtmirft art registered Irademiirb oApfle Computer Inc .yplet.1) AppieColor andAuJwlvxm are trademarks of -ok Computer. Im<lb/>
  mm mmm iimi - -  n im m n i  .iuuiliiUm i i - ?  . <lb/>
<pb facs="00058472_0016"/><lb/>
? Introducing Eastern North Carolina's Finest New Supermarket ?'<lb/>
3rd<lb/>
Week!<lb/>
Prices Good In The Following Location Only:<lb/>
609 S.E. Greenville Blvd. (264 Alt)<lb/>
At Arlington Blvd Greenville, N.C.<lb/>
WE'RE NOT JUST<lb/>
A SUPERMARKET!<lb/>
?We're a FLORIST.<lb/>
?We're a PHARMACY.<lb/>
?We're a fresh SEAFOOD MARKET.<lb/>
?We're a BAKERY<lb/>
with custom cake decorating.<lb/>
?We're a PHOTO<lb/>
PROCESSING CENTER.<lb/>
?We're an INTERNATIONAL MARKET<lb/>
with produce, cheese and ethnic<lb/>
foods from around the world.<lb/>
We're the answer to your<lb/>
ONE-STOP SHOPPING NEEDS!<lb/>
2-Ltr. Btl. Diet Pepsi Or<lb/>
Pepsi<lb/>
pier<lb/>
EA<lb/>
nv<lb/>
W-D Brand U.S. Choice Bone-In Trimmed<lb/>
Whole N.Y. Strips<lb/>
SLICED FREE<lb/>
INTO STEAKS<lb/>
&amp; TRIMMINGS.<lb/>
12-PakSuperbrand<lb/>
ice Cream Sandwiches<lb/>
Bottom Round Roasts<lb/>
AGED FOR MORE<lb/>
TENDERNESS<lb/>
&amp; FLAVOR!<lb/>
1-Gallon Jug Reg. Scent<lb/>
Ciorox Bleach<lb/>
BUY-ONE-GET-ONE<lb/>
FREE<lb/>
12-0z. Pkg. Regular<lb/>
Oscar Mayer<lb/>
Bologna<lb/>
(Buy one at reg. price &amp; get second one FREE)<lb/>
IE<lb/>
l<lb/>
Store Hours;<lb/>
OPEN 24 HOURS<lb/>
(Close Midnight Sat<lb/>
Open 8 AM. Sun.)<lb/>
l<lb/>
Prices Good Wed<lb/>
April 20th Thru<lb/>
Tues April 26th!<lb/>
?None To DealersWe Reserve The Right To Limit<lb/>
Quantities ?Copyright 1994, Winn-Dixie Stores, Inc.<lb/>
<pb facs="00058472_0017"/>
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