<?xml version="1.0"?><TEI xmlns="http://www.tei-c.org/ns/1.0" xmlns:xsi="http://www.w3.org/2001/XMLSchema-instance" xsi:schemaLocation="http://www.tei-c.org/ns/1.0 http://digital.lib.ecu.edu/tei/xsd/tei_P5.xsd"><teiHeader><fileDesc><titleStmt><title></title><author></author><respStmt><resp>Text encoded by</resp><name>Digital Collections</name></respStmt></titleStmt><publicationStmt><distributor>East Carolina University. J. Y. Joyner Library</distributor><address><addrLine>Digital Collections</addrLine><addrLine>Joyner Library, East Carolina University</addrLine><addrLine>East Fifth Street, Greenville NC 27858-4353 USA</addrLine></address><date>2012</date></publicationStmt><sourceDesc><bibl></bibl></sourceDesc></fileDesc><encodingDesc><samplingDecl><p>All quotation marks retained as data.</p><p>All end-of-line hyphens have been removed, and the trailing part of a word has been joined to the preceding line.</p><p>All smart quotes have been converted into straight quotes.</p></samplingDecl><classDecl><taxonomy xml:id="LCSH"><bibl>Library of Congress Subject Headings</bibl></taxonomy></classDecl></encodingDesc><profileDesc><creation><date></date></creation><langUsage xml:lang="en-US"><language ident="en-US" usage="100">English</language></langUsage><textClass><keywords scheme="#LCSH"><list><item></item></list></keywords></textClass></profileDesc></teiHeader><text><body><div type="other">
<p rend="align(centerbold)">[This text is machine generated and may contain errors.]</p>
<pb facs="00058476_0001"/>
Sports<lb/>
Coach K. Stays<lb/>
After contemplating coaching jobs<lb/>
in the NBA, Mike Krzyzewski will<lb/>
remain the Duke head coach.<lb/>
Story on page 7.<lb/>
Lifestyle<lb/>
Hootie and the Blowfish<lb/>
Anxiously awaiting the<lb/>
release of their album<lb/>
'Cracked Rear View Hootie<lb/>
and the Blowfish will perform<lb/>
at the Attic Thursday night.<lb/>
Story on page 5.<lb/>
The East Carolinian<lb/>
Vol. 69 No. 29- ?32<lb/>
Circulation 5,000<lb/>
Greenville, North Carolina<lb/>
Wednesday, June 1,1994<lb/>
8 Pages<lb/>
Scandals<lb/>
receive<lb/>
attention<lb/>
Jason Williams<lb/>
News Editor<lb/>
The Washington press<lb/>
corps, along with much of the<lb/>
popular national media, is<lb/>
once again abuzz with talk of<lb/>
presidential scandal. Many<lb/>
say President Bill Clinton's<lb/>
accusers threaten his legisla-<lb/>
tive effectiveness and tarnish<lb/>
the image of the office itself.<lb/>
Will charges of sexual<lb/>
harass- <lb/>
Analysis<lb/>
m e n t<lb/>
while gov-<lb/>
ernor of -m???<lb/>
Arkansas,<lb/>
or even a lawsuit, bring dowr<lb/>
the Clinton presidency the<lb/>
way the Watergate break-in<lb/>
and subsequent cover-up<lb/>
ended Richard Nixon's politi-<lb/>
cal career? Given the history<lb/>
of such matters and today's<lb/>
political climate, the answer is<lb/>
probably not.<lb/>
Undoubtedly, Republi-<lb/>
cans and other political foes,<lb/>
most notably the Religious<lb/>
Right, are licking their chops<lb/>
at the prospects of the Paula<lb/>
Jones case actually going to<lb/>
trial. Even if Jones settles out<lb/>
of court, there is political hay<lb/>
to be made out of her ever<lb/>
having brought up the allega-<lb/>
tions in the first place.<lb/>
And beyond thecharges<lb/>
of womanizing, which the<lb/>
nation has heard, and re-<lb/>
sponded to at the polls, be-<lb/>
fore, there remains the specter<lb/>
of Congressional hearings on<lb/>
the Whitewater land deal.<lb/>
Despite House Speaker Tom<lb/>
Foley's thus far successful ef-<lb/>
forts to postpone them, Con-<lb/>
gress appears willing to con-<lb/>
tinue the investigation and<lb/>
may proceed with hearings as<lb/>
early as June.<lb/>
All of this may seem too<lb/>
much for one man, and his<lb/>
legislative agenda, to over-<lb/>
come. But Bill Clinton is the<lb/>
"comeback kid He showed<lb/>
that in the campaign, and<lb/>
again in his fights over his<lb/>
budget, NAFTA and gun con-<lb/>
trol. He may not win them<lb/>
all?witness gays in the mili-<lb/>
tary?but he is resilient none-<lb/>
theless.<lb/>
Though the critics will<lb/>
continue their calls for sanc-<lb/>
tions, punishment, impeach-<lb/>
ment, et cetera, Clinton should<lb/>
escape the Paula Jones affair<lb/>
unscathed, at least for the time<lb/>
being. The President hired one<lb/>
of the top D.C. lawyers, Rob-<lb/>
ert Bennett, whose specialty is<lb/>
keeping cases from going to<lb/>
court, and chances are he will<lb/>
do just that. If anything,<lb/>
Clinton may face a civil suit of<lb/>
some kind after he leaves of-<lb/>
fice, but that will be in 1996 at<lb/>
the earliest, and Jones may<lb/>
have lost her desire to fight by<lb/>
then.<lb/>
The public is fickle when<lb/>
it comes to the sex lives of<lb/>
politicians. Monkey Business<lb/>
and a mere Polaroid sunk Gary<lb/>
Hart's presidi ntial aspirations<lb/>
in 1988, while a national repu-<lb/>
tation for womanizing and<lb/>
even charges that he was re-<lb/>
S'ion ib'c for a young<lb/>
See ANALYSIS page 2<lb/>
Student fees on the rise<lb/>
eri Howell<lb/>
Staff Writer<lb/>
Watch out students, it's<lb/>
happening once again. Next<lb/>
year's student fees are climbing<lb/>
the never-ending ladder of infla-<lb/>
tion, and the costs appear to be<lb/>
soaring into the sky.<lb/>
On May 6, the ECU Board<lb/>
of Trustees approved a $97 rec-<lb/>
ommended increase in manda-<lb/>
tory student fees, said Jim<lb/>
Plummer, director of the Uni-<lb/>
versity Budget office. Plummer<lb/>
confirmed that these mandatory<lb/>
student fees include and sup-<lb/>
port those activities that are cov-<lb/>
ered by the state, such as inter-<lb/>
collegiate athletics, intramural<lb/>
and recreation, theStudentGov-<lb/>
ernment Association (SGA),stu-<lb/>
dent publications, health sen-ices<lb/>
and debt service for some of the<lb/>
buildings on campus.<lb/>
"It is not uncommon for<lb/>
any campus to raise some fees<lb/>
because of the lack of support<lb/>
from the legislature said Lay ton<lb/>
Getsinger, associate vice chancel-<lb/>
lor for business affairs. "We will<lb/>
never be a Harvard or Yale, but<lb/>
we need to be in competition with<lb/>
those universities such as UNC.<lb/>
Our job is to support the students,<lb/>
and make things good and af-<lb/>
fordable for them so they will want<lb/>
to come back as alumni<lb/>
These recently endorsed in-<lb/>
creases will be submitted to the<lb/>
University of North Carolina<lb/>
Board of Governors, Plummer<lb/>
said, whose approval is necessary<lb/>
before the fees can take effect. He<lb/>
explained what the fee increases<lb/>
would include and said they could<lb/>
begin to take effect after the Board<lb/>
of Governors holds its first meet-<lb/>
ing in June.<lb/>
"Of course, we hope that<lb/>
these increases will come into ef-<lb/>
fect soon Plummer said.<lb/>
Forty dollars of the fees will<lb/>
go toward the renovation and<lb/>
enlargement of Minges Coliseum.<lb/>
The debt service fees, which are<lb/>
paving for the enhancement of<lb/>
Minges, are also paying for the<lb/>
riew Student Recreational Center<lb/>
and the repairs that were finished<lb/>
last year on Dowdy-Ficklen Sta-<lb/>
dium. The increase for student<lb/>
fees will total $22, Plummer said,<lb/>
and will include $4 for transit fees<lb/>
(campusbusing),$l for Fine Arts,<lb/>
$16 for the new recreational<lb/>
center's staffing and programs,<lb/>
and $1 used to expand the Stu-<lb/>
dent Fund Accounting Office<lb/>
(SFAO) hours from 8 a.m. until 5<lb/>
p.m Plummer confirmed. The<lb/>
SFAO issues emergency loans and<lb/>
issues student payroll checks. The<lb/>
remaining $35 will be used for<lb/>
athletic fees.<lb/>
The current $696 student<lb/>
fees of 1993-94 will be raised to<lb/>
$793 for the upcoming 1994-95<lb/>
academic yearat ECU, confirmed<lb/>
Richard Brown, vice chancellor<lb/>
for business affairs. New facili-<lb/>
ties, such as the $11.4 million<lb/>
ongoing expansion of Minges<lb/>
Coliseum, will include the $40<lb/>
The<lb/>
Breakdown<lb/>
Minges Coliseum$40.00<lb/>
Athletic Programs35.00<lb/>
Rec Center Staffing &amp; Programs16.00<lb/>
Transit Services4.00<lb/>
Fine Arts1.00<lb/>
Student Fund Accting Office1.00<lb/>
Total fee?<lb/>
$97.00<lb/>
increase<lb/>
increase that has already been<lb/>
approved bv the Board of Gover-<lb/>
nors in Chapel Hill.<lb/>
Getsinger does not feel that<lb/>
ECU would lose many out-of-state<lb/>
students because of this tuition<lb/>
increase.<lb/>
"We want to keep educa-<lb/>
tion afloat so we can provide what<lb/>
we can and want for the stu-<lb/>
dents he said. "We are a<lb/>
business just like any other<lb/>
business, and, unfortunately,<lb/>
the cost of education will go<lb/>
up, and ECU is more of a value<lb/>
See FEES page 2<lb/>
More parking lots closing<lb/>
Jason Williams<lb/>
News Editor<lb/>
The west end of campus,<lb/>
beside Mendenhall and behind<lb/>
Jovner Library, is beginning to<lb/>
look more like a prison than a<lb/>
parking lot.<lb/>
Because-of construction on<lb/>
the Recreation Center and on the<lb/>
renovation of the library, Parking<lb/>
and Traffic Services fenced in part<lb/>
of the parking lot directly behind<lb/>
Joyner and closed Ninth Street<lb/>
past Lawrence Street and Glenn<lb/>
Way (the street that runs directly<lb/>
behind Jovner) to all thru-traffic.<lb/>
Two gravel lots, the corner<lb/>
lot close to the woods and the lot<lb/>
behind Public Safety, have been<lb/>
fenced in as well. The east end of<lb/>
the paved lot has been converted<lb/>
from "university registered" to<lb/>
"staff" parking. The remainder of<lb/>
the paved lot has been designated<lb/>
"commuter<lb/>
Pat Gertz, director of park-<lb/>
ing and traffic services, said con-<lb/>
struction on Joyner has already<lb/>
taken the small staff lot directly<lb/>
behind the library building. To<lb/>
compensate for this loss, the 60<lb/>
spaces directly south of that were<lb/>
designated as "staff<lb/>
The parking lots directly<lb/>
behind Jovner and beside<lb/>
Mendenhall that a re being fenced<lb/>
in now will not be re-opened. The<lb/>
gravel lot behind Public Safety<lb/>
will only be used to house con-<lb/>
Photo by Jason Mnmt<lb/>
Welcome to Mendenhall State Prison. Fences like this one have heen<lb/>
erected at other sites around campus, including behind the libraty.<lb/>
MiuUioi.LrailersduringtheJoyner construction traffic entei Hum<lb/>
renow.tion, however, and mav re- Tenth Street rather than through<lb/>
Fiber optics strung<lb/>
out across campus<lb/>
open after the project's comple-<lb/>
tion in about three years, Gertz<lb/>
said.<lb/>
Gertz also plans to create 12<lb/>
to 14 metered pa rking spaces near<lb/>
the Rec CenterMendenhall.<lb/>
These would replace the meters<lb/>
that were on the west side of<lb/>
Mendenhallpriortoconstruchon.<lb/>
In addition to the lots on the<lb/>
west end of campus, the staff park-<lb/>
ing lot beside Slay and Umstead<lb/>
residence halls has been closed<lb/>
becauseof construction. Gertz said<lb/>
that meant the loss of about 70<lb/>
spaces, which have not been re-<lb/>
placed at the current time.<lb/>
"I felt like it was better that<lb/>
the middle of campus she said.<lb/>
The renovations of Slay and<lb/>
Umstead residence halis are ex-<lb/>
pected to take approximately one<lb/>
 ear, Gertz said.<lb/>
Freshmen will be moved far-<lb/>
ther from campus, as well. The<lb/>
freshmen storage lot at Minges<lb/>
Coliseum has been moved to a<lb/>
newly created lot at the Allied<lb/>
Health (Belk) Building.<lb/>
Further construction will<lb/>
require additional changes in<lb/>
parking throughout the summer<lb/>
and into next fall. "Students<lb/>
should pav attention to the signs<lb/>
and be aware of changes in park-<lb/>
ing Gertz said.<lb/>
New program offers academic support<lb/>
Stephanie Lassiter<lb/>
Assistant News Editor<lb/>
When many students come<lb/>
to ECU, they have delusions of<lb/>
grandeur: late night parties,<lb/>
members of the opposite sex and<lb/>
no curfews. How quickly stu-<lb/>
dents learn that these fantasies<lb/>
can be wiped away and thev<lb/>
can be sent straight home.<lb/>
University officials from<lb/>
various departments created an<lb/>
academic support program for<lb/>
students who find themselves<lb/>
in academic trouble and need<lb/>
direction. Once students reach<lb/>
a minimal GPA, a letter will be<lb/>
sent to them referring them to<lb/>
their academic adviser. From<lb/>
there, they will be led in the<lb/>
right direction.<lb/>
"The Academic Support<lb/>
Program is designed to help stu-<lb/>
dents who get in academic dif-<lb/>
ficulties said Don Joyner, as-<lb/>
sociate director of intervention<lb/>
programs and director of the<lb/>
freshmen seminar course. "We<lb/>
do care about the students, and<lb/>
we want them to know we want<lb/>
to educate them in curriculum,<lb/>
but also in how to succeed and<lb/>
how to set goals<lb/>
The program is open to any<lb/>
student, regardless of classifi-<lb/>
cation, who gets into academic<lb/>
trouble. The students will be re-<lb/>
quired to attend presentations<lb/>
on campus dealing with time<lb/>
management, reading text-<lb/>
books, note taking and other<lb/>
topics related to good study<lb/>
habits. Joyner said students<lb/>
must be active participants in<lb/>
the adviseradvisee relation-<lb/>
ship.<lb/>
"We think it is important<lb/>
to teach students how to be an<lb/>
advisee Joyner said.<lb/>
Students who are referred<lb/>
to the program will be assigned<lb/>
a new adviser who will help the<lb/>
student to register for appro-<lb/>
priate courses, as well as to sug-<lb/>
gest presentations that would<lb/>
most benefit that particular stu-<lb/>
dent.<lb/>
The new center for the pro-<lb/>
gram will be located in Brewster<lb/>
B-103, and will be a computer<lb/>
See ADVANCEMENT page 2<lb/>
Stephanie Lassiter<lb/>
Assistant News Editor<lb/>
The orange flags and col-<lb/>
orful spray-painted lines which<lb/>
have recently appeared on the<lb/>
ECU grounds are not part of the<lb/>
campus beautification plan, but<lb/>
ra ther the ini tia 1 steps of the new<lb/>
fiber optics system being in-<lb/>
stalled.<lb/>
"We are upgrading and re-<lb/>
placing the old telecommunica-<lb/>
tions infrastructure on campus<lb/>
with new intelligent data hubs<lb/>
and new telephone switching<lb/>
POiiip' ent that utilizes a fiber<lb/>
opuc i vickbone said Tom Lamb,<lb/>
associate director of Computing<lb/>
and Information Systems (CIS).<lb/>
Fiber optics is a type of<lb/>
cable made from glass fibers<lb/>
which are smaller than human<lb/>
hair, but can carry enormous<lb/>
amountsof data, Lamb said. The<lb/>
new svstem will be much more<lb/>
reliable than the system now<lb/>
being used, and will upgrade<lb/>
the telephone network, as well<lb/>
as expand the computer capa-<lb/>
bilities.<lb/>
"The data component will<lb/>
greatlv enhance the capabilities<lb/>
of the data system over the old<lb/>
system Lamb said.<lb/>
The new data system will<lb/>
be a combination of the Ethernet<lb/>
svstem with an Asynchronous<lb/>
Transfer Mode (A TM) backbone.<lb/>
The ATM being used by the the<lb/>
fiber optics system is not related<lb/>
to the ATM machines used by<lb/>
financial institutions.<lb/>
The current telephone<lb/>
system only has room to allo-<lb/>
ca te a handful of new telephone<lb/>
numbers; therefore, an exten-<lb/>
sion is needed. The new sys-<lb/>
tem will house 10,000 phone<lb/>
numbers. On day one of the<lb/>
installation, approximately<lb/>
6,000numberswiilbe assigned.<lb/>
"Right now the tele-<lb/>
phone system has about five<lb/>
numbers left to assign said<lb/>
Jim Crain, director of telecom-<lb/>
munications services. "We just<lb/>
outgrew it<lb/>
The improved telephone<lb/>
system will be in effect in July,<lb/>
and customers will find much<lb/>
of the same service they are<lb/>
currently being offered. The<lb/>
new phone lines will be com-<lb/>
plete with call waiting, call for-<lb/>
warding, speed dialing and<lb/>
phone mail, which was not pre-<lb/>
viously offered without cost<lb/>
from the local phone company.<lb/>
"We will be able to pro-<lb/>
vide a modified version to meet<lb/>
their requirements Crain<lb/>
said.<lb/>
Crain said that the new<lb/>
svstem will tie the dorms and<lb/>
other campus facilities to-<lb/>
gether.<lb/>
"It basically pulls the<lb/>
dorms into our system Crain<lb/>
said. "The dorms will be pro-<lb/>
SeeFIBER page 2<lb/>
Phone prefixes to change<lb/>
Wendy Roundtree<lb/>
Staff Writer<lb/>
Many people have dif-<lb/>
ficulty figuring out which<lb/>
prefix to use, 757 or931, when<lb/>
dialing a campus telephone<lb/>
number, but no longer. On<lb/>
July 1, university telephone<lb/>
numbers, including dorms<lb/>
and academic departments,<lb/>
will replace their previous<lb/>
prefixes with a new 328 pre-<lb/>
fix.<lb/>
" The ECU campushas<lb/>
grown out of its present tele-<lb/>
communication system<lb/>
said Jim Crain, director of<lb/>
telecommunication services<lb/>
for ECU.<lb/>
Crain said that the<lb/>
university's telephone sys-<lb/>
tem is so saturated with 757<lb/>
and 931 numbers that no<lb/>
new combinations can be<lb/>
derived. Another three-<lb/>
digit prefix would have to<lb/>
be acquired, causing more<lb/>
complications to the already<lb/>
crowded system. Because of<lb/>
See PREFIX page 2<lb/>
<pb facs="00058476_0002"/><lb/>
2 The East Carolinian<lb/>
June 1, 1994<lb/>
ADVANCEMENT<lb/>
Continued from page 1<lb/>
Inmates learn the art of upholstery making<lb/>
Fifteen inmates at the North Carolina Correctional Institu-<lb/>
tion for Women are busy hammering, nailing, cutting and<lb/>
measuring, trying to beat an important deadline. They are<lb/>
working hard, putting the final touches on a project which goes<lb/>
on display at the prison next month. The women are students in<lb/>
a vocational upholstery class sponsored by Wake Technical<lb/>
Community College. The class, which lasts for six months,<lb/>
draws to a close June 3 with a "parade of rooms" including a<lb/>
formal living room, dining room, master bedroom, guest bed-<lb/>
room and family room. Inmates build or sew everything in the<lb/>
rooms. Furniture upholstered in the class was picked up from<lb/>
local trash sites. Inmates will explain how they turned the<lb/>
furniture from trash to treasure during the display. Since Janu-<lb/>
ary, inmates have been studying and perfecting upholstery<lb/>
skills. They've made everything from footstools and chairs to<lb/>
quilts and curtains. An intense seven-hour training class begins<lb/>
at the prison each weekday morning at 7:30. Inmates learn how<lb/>
each piece of furniture is manufactured and all the steps neces-<lb/>
sary to dismantle it and to remove and replace the old fabric,<lb/>
paddling and legs. In the third month of the class, the women<lb/>
begin working on their display project. Furniture made by the<lb/>
inmates will be sold to non-profit organizations for use by<lb/>
needy families.<lb/>
UNC doctor sentenced to service, counseling<lb/>
A former UNC Hospital pediatrics resident was found<lb/>
guilty last week of sexual assault against a patient who was<lb/>
recovering from a hysterectomy. Jose Genero Diaz of Chapel<lb/>
Hill, whq,pleaded no contest to a single count of misdemeanor<lb/>
assault, was sentenced May 12 to two years probation and 100<lb/>
hours of community service. An Orange County District Court<lb/>
judge also ordered Diaz to enroll in the state's Physicians'<lb/>
Health Assistance Program. The judge handed down a sus-<lb/>
pended sentence, which means Diaz's 90-day jail term was<lb/>
deferred for three years. If Diaz complies with the judge's<lb/>
orders, he will not have to serve the term. Diaz was charged wi th<lb/>
first-degree sexual assault Feb. 10 after Stephanie Brown of<lb/>
Asheboro told public safety officers he had fondled her breasts<lb/>
and tried to kiss her. Brown was in a fourth-floor room when a<lb/>
man came in and identified lumself as one of her doctors. She<lb/>
struggled away from the suspect after he started fondling her<lb/>
breasts when he claimed to be checking her breathing. When a<lb/>
nurse entered the room, the suspect fled and later was identified<lb/>
as Diaz, a second-year resident. He was fired March 1.<lb/>
Compiled by Stephanie Lassiter. Taken from CPS<lb/>
and other campus newspapers.<lb/>
center complete with word pro-<lb/>
cessing and a program called<lb/>
SIG1-PI.US which is a career ex-<lb/>
ploration computer program.<lb/>
Students will be able to find our<lb/>
what courses are applicable to<lb/>
particular professions.<lb/>
"It will allow the students<lb/>
to explore the careers they are<lb/>
interested in Joyner said.<lb/>
Education 1000 will also be<lb/>
taught in the center. The course<lb/>
deals with adjusting to college,<lb/>
career exploration, study skills,<lb/>
values clarification and<lb/>
multicultural education. Stu-<lb/>
dents whose GPAs fall below a<lb/>
1.5 will be required to take Edu-<lb/>
cation 1000.<lb/>
Last semester, the Supple-<lb/>
mental Instruction Program be-<lb/>
gan to offer students a tutorial<lb/>
program which differs from tra-<lb/>
ditional tutoring. An excep-<lb/>
tional student in a particular<lb/>
area, such as chemistry, is paid<lb/>
to audit a course which that stu-<lb/>
dent excelled in. The students<lb/>
in academic difficulty meet sev-<lb/>
eral times a week with the stu-<lb/>
dent leader to discuss the course.<lb/>
This type of tutorial helps the<lb/>
students to learn how to discuss<lb/>
course material and to imple-<lb/>
ment this into a learning pro-<lb/>
cess.<lb/>
Dorothy Muller, dean of<lb/>
undergraduate studies, said that<lb/>
while 1,900 students were on<lb/>
PREFIX<lb/>
the Chancellor's List, Dean's<lb/>
List or Honor Roll last semes-<lb/>
ter, about 1,200 students are in<lb/>
academic trouble per semes-<lb/>
ter.<lb/>
"This is a long time com-<lb/>
ing and I hope it's going to<lb/>
help Muller said. "When we<lb/>
get the center done, we will<lb/>
have access to student infor-<lb/>
mation. Academic support is<lb/>
not remedial. Students need the<lb/>
support that we can provide<lb/>
Continued from page 1<lb/>
Cool people write for<lb/>
TEC news dept. You<lb/>
can tool Stop by the<lb/>
Student Pubs Bldg.<lb/>
at 4p.m. today.<lb/>
Wendy &amp; Teri this<lb/>
means you too.<lb/>
FIBER<lb/>
Cont'd<lb/>
from<lb/>
page 1<lb/>
vided services through ECU. They<lb/>
will be able to dial four digits rather<lb/>
than seven<lb/>
While the phone services will<lb/>
be operating by July, other fiber<lb/>
optics construction probably will<lb/>
not be completed until spring of<lb/>
1995. Lamb said that in order to<lb/>
provide ECU with upgraded net-<lb/>
working, therewill be some disrup-<lb/>
tion on campus.<lb/>
"There will be some disrup-<lb/>
tions in people's lives, but we will<lb/>
try to make it as easy as possible<lb/>
Lamb said. "Bear with us<lb/>
!<lb/>
ATTIC<lb/>
752-7303<lb/>
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Greenville, NC<lb/>
The<lb/>
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Thanks For Voting Us<lb/>
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Only $4<lb/>
adm for<lb/>
members<lb/>
DERN PiLSPiHS<lb/>
wspeciai guest The Occupants<lb/>
$2.003207, Draft<lb/>
?<lb/>
4<lb/>
Saturday 4<lb/>
ROLLYGRAY<lb/>
AND SUNF1RE<lb/>
I<lb/>
Tuesday 7<lb/>
$2.0032oz. Draft<lb/>
FTM 14<lb/>
tfar?oi<lb/>
Mother Nature<lb/>
$1.50 Imports ? $1.50 Domestics ? $1.50 32oz Draft<lb/>
?<lb/>
4<lb/>
4<lb/>
?<lb/>
this situation, Odin made the fi-<lb/>
nal decision to switch the tele-<lb/>
phone numbers to a single, new<lb/>
prefix, leaving the last four digits<lb/>
of each person's number the same.<lb/>
"It took awhile to get used to<lb/>
the 757 and 931 numbers. This<lb/>
will be a .lot more convenient<lb/>
said Amy Zmistowski, a junior<lb/>
SLAP major.<lb/>
When people try to reach stu-<lb/>
dents by dialing the old phone<lb/>
number, they will be interrupted<lb/>
by a voice-intercept system. The<lb/>
system will tell the caller that the<lb/>
number they dialed has changed,<lb/>
and he or she will give the caller<lb/>
the new telephone number. This<lb/>
system will be in effect until Octo-<lb/>
ber, 1995.<lb/>
For academic department<lb/>
headquarters, permissive dialing<lb/>
wiil be used unui October 1. Per-<lb/>
missive dialing will allow people<lb/>
to reach professors and other fac-<lb/>
ulty members with the old tele-<lb/>
phone numbers. After October 1,<lb/>
there will be twelve months of<lb/>
voice-intercept connected to the<lb/>
system before the I - fer becomes<lb/>
permanent.<lb/>
"The single prefix will<lb/>
make it a lot easier for people to<lb/>
learn the numbers around cam-<lb/>
pus. It will probably be a lot easier<lb/>
to remember numbers said<lb/>
Joanna Stout, a sophomore politi-<lb/>
cal science major.<lb/>
During October, 1995, the<lb/>
757 and 931 telephone numbers<lb/>
will revert back to Carolina Tele-<lb/>
phone Company. Carolina Tele-<lb/>
phone will then use those num-<lb/>
bers for othr-r city locations.<lb/>
Continued from page 1<lb/>
than other North Carolina<lb/>
schools<lb/>
Plummer said the Athletics<lb/>
Department has requested the $35<lb/>
increase that would raise the ath-<lb/>
letic fee from $185 to $220. This<lb/>
has not yet been passed, but such<lb/>
persons as Earline Leggett, assis-<lb/>
tant athletic director for business,<lb/>
and Plummer are hopeful it will<lb/>
go through.<lb/>
"Thirty-five dollars has been<lb/>
approved by our Board of Gover-<lb/>
nors Leggett said. "We started<lb/>
this two years ago, and this sum is<lb/>
exactly what we are asking for.<lb/>
We need a say to finance the<lb/>
women's non-revenue athletics<lb/>
since we've lost ESPN<lb/>
Leggett explained what the<lb/>
$35 increase would include. Ap-<lb/>
proximately $12 would improve<lb/>
women's non-revenue athletics<lb/>
ANALYSIS<lb/>
woman's death in 1969 at<lb/>
Chappaquidick have not kept<lb/>
Edward Kennedy out of the Sen-<lb/>
ate.<lb/>
People seem to be in a for-<lb/>
giving mood as of late, or at least<lb/>
they do not seem as eager to kick<lb/>
a man while he is down. Nixon<lb/>
got to rest in peace as the nation<lb/>
mourned "a complex man rather<lb/>
than a fallen president, and former<lb/>
leaders Reagan and Bush were not<lb/>
hounded for their roles in Iran-<lb/>
Contra.<lb/>
That last point is what should<lb/>
allow Clinton to breathe a sigh of<lb/>
and $14 is required to replace lost<lb/>
television revenues from ESPN<lb/>
and others, that the department<lb/>
used at one time to enhance both<lb/>
women's and men's non-revenue<lb/>
sports. The remaining $9 of the<lb/>
total $35 increase will go towards<lb/>
mandatory and statutory in-<lb/>
creases, including grant aids and<lb/>
any kind of salary increases.<lb/>
"The increase is definitely<lb/>
essential if we want to meet cur-<lb/>
rent demands and continue to<lb/>
enhance the funding of all the<lb/>
women's athletic programs said<lb/>
Athletic Director, Dave Hart.<lb/>
Some other campus charges<lb/>
will also go up for the 1994-95<lb/>
academic year. Richard Brown<lb/>
noted that the charges for resi-<lb/>
dence halls with air-conditioning<lb/>
will rise by 5.7 percent from $1,750<lb/>
to $1,850, and those without air-<lb/>
conditioning will increase by 6<lb/>
percent from $1,500 to $1,590.<lb/>
Brown also said the tui tion<lb/>
costs will increase. The rates for<lb/>
full-rime North Carolina resident<lb/>
undergraduates for next year are<lb/>
expected to raise by 4.6 percent<lb/>
to $4,797, and out-of-state un-<lb/>
dergraduates should expect a 5.9<lb/>
increase to $11,291. Those costs<lb/>
for bo thin-state and out-of-state<lb/>
students include tuition, fees, a<lb/>
non air-conditioned room and a<lb/>
meal plan; however, books and<lb/>
personal expenses will not be<lb/>
covered by this sum.<lb/>
"These things that are a<lb/>
quality of life for the students,<lb/>
unfortunately, need to be funded<lb/>
by the studentsGetsinger said.<lb/>
"The more attractive ECU is, the<lb/>
more readily accepted a<lb/>
student's diploma will be<lb/>
Continued from page 1<lb/>
relief. Even during Reagan's De-<lb/>
partment of the Interior fiasco (re-<lb/>
member James Watt?), even dur-<lb/>
ing the Wedtech scandal involv-<lb/>
ing Reagan's Attorne'y General Ed<lb/>
Meese, even during the Iran-<lb/>
Contra hearings, the previous ad-<lb/>
ministrations were still able to<lb/>
function.<lb/>
So, if the President's men are<lb/>
tied up in nasty, televised hear-<lb/>
ings throughout much of the sum-<lb/>
mer, Clinton will still navigate his<lb/>
health care reform bill through<lb/>
Congress, right? Not so fast, say-<lb/>
opponents to reform, but no one<lb/>
says that Congress will do noth-<lb/>
ing.<lb/>
Sen. Bob Dole RKan Sen.<lb/>
Phil Gramm RTex. and other<lb/>
potential Republican candidates<lb/>
for President in '96 cannot af-<lb/>
ford not to pass some version of<lb/>
health care reform. Albeit the<lb/>
bill may belong to the current<lb/>
media darling, Sen. John Chaffee<lb/>
RR.IbutPresidentClintonwill<lb/>
still be able to claim a victory for<lb/>
himself. A similar situation ex-<lb/>
ists with welfare reform; every-<lb/>
one benefits if Congress does<lb/>
something.<lb/>
So while the media smell<lb/>
blood, it must be coming from<lb/>
Washington's murderous<lb/>
streets. President Clinton will<lb/>
survive this latest attempt to<lb/>
sidetrack his legislative initia-<lb/>
tives and pass a few domestic<lb/>
programs anyway. Then it will<lb/>
be up to the voters to decide if<lb/>
"the character question" really<lb/>
matters or not.<lb/>
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<pb facs="00058476_0003"/><lb/>
?. .<lb/>
June 1, 1994<lb/>
? The East Carolinian ?<lb/>
Opinion<lb/>
Page 3<lb/>
77ie Ztas Carolinian<lb/>
;SMfr! :<lb/>
t i<lb/>
Jason Williams, News Editor<lb/>
Stephanie Lassiter, Asst. News Editor<lb/>
Warren Sumner, Lifestyle Editor<lb/>
Mark Brett, Asst. Lifestyle Editor<lb/>
Brian Olson, Sports Editor<lb/>
Dave Pond. Asst Sports Editor<lb/>
W. Brian Hall, Opinion Page Editor<lb/>
Chris Kemple, Staff Illustrator<lb/>
Gregory Dickens, General Manager<lb/>
Maureen A. Rich, Managing Editor<lb/>
Tonya Heath, Advertising Director<lb/>
Jessica Stanley. Copy Editor<lb/>
Alexa Thompson. Copy Editor<lb/>
Marcia Sanders, Typesetter<lb/>
Lisa Sessoms. Typesetter<lb/>
Deborah Daniel, Secretary<lb/>
?W?k . <lb/>
recycled<lb/>
PP?<lb/>
XviS; WK<lb/>
Tony Dunn, Business Manager<lb/>
Margie O'Shea, Circulation Manager<lb/>
Burt Aycock, Layout Manager<lb/>
Patrick Hinson, Asst. Layout Manager<lb/>
Mike Ashley, Creative Director<lb/>
James B. Boggs, Asst. Creative Directoi<lb/>
Leslie Petty, Photo Editor<lb/>
Chinh Nguyen, Systems Manager<lb/>
W??K?P THKEE JOgS THIS<lb/>
jFcfc fall setfesrEf Sur THIS<lb/>
bufWisc iNa&amp;s? has rW?<lb/>
M? SHOrr.vOWf CAMT60J<lb/>
DEATH, UHeze. S THi STlNClt<lb/>
HA! 5Lt-YJ too<lb/>
rt-Kc youfc. eoucrov<lb/>
fS OA HtLL-ATUsHA!<lb/>
1.<lb/>
NyAH hiiHwu ae?<lb/>
i-<lb/>
ServinetheECUcommunity since 1925. r????C?r?m?? publishes IZ.OOOcopiesevery Tuesday and Thursday The<lb/>
mastheL dftonal in each edition is the opinion of the Edi.or.al Board. The East Carolinian welcomes e.ters limited to 250<lb/>
Letieri should be addressed to: Opinion Editor. The East Carolinian. Publical.ons Bldg ECU. Greenville. N.C 2788-4353.<lb/>
For more information, call (919) 757-6366.<lb/>
2 p<lb/>
Patch;<lb/>
Trie<lb/>
ecu<lb/>
<lb/>
i(<lb/>
it<lb/>
Zo<lb/>
Once again student fees will be<lb/>
increasing next year. If it seems as though<lb/>
this happens every year, there is a good<lb/>
reason ? it does. According to an ECU<lb/>
press release, mandatory student fees have<lb/>
increased by an average of 7.4 percent in the<lb/>
past five years. (The inflation rate for the<lb/>
same time period was only a little more<lb/>
than 4 percent.) Like everything else about<lb/>
ECU, except the amount of parking, the rate<lb/>
of increase is growing; this time student<lb/>
fees will be going up nearly 14 percent.<lb/>
Not only is this increase quite hefty, the<lb/>
timing of this action at the very least appears<lb/>
suspicious. The ECU Board of Governors<lb/>
approved and anrounced the rate increase<lb/>
on May 6th. This was the day after exams<lb/>
ended, and the day before graduation. By<lb/>
that time, most students had already headed<lb/>
out of town for the summer. Undoubtedly,<lb/>
the first that many will hear about this<lb/>
increase will be when they receive their<lb/>
school bill in the mail. If the intentions of the<lb/>
board were pure, if this action was not a<lb/>
deliberate attempt to sneak this past most<lb/>
students unawares, then surely the board<lb/>
should have notified the student body, or at<lb/>
least flw student media, rf the impending<lb/>
increase before May 6th.<lb/>
Leaving aside both the tremendous rate<lb/>
of this increase and the lack of warning, as<lb/>
difficult as that may be, most of the projects<lb/>
to be funded by this measure are deserving<lb/>
of our approval. The money which will be<lb/>
used to renovate Minges will be of benefit to<lb/>
both the school and to the students who<lb/>
attend events therein. Eventually, such<lb/>
expansion should even be self-financing. The<lb/>
increase in athletic fees, though more difficult<lb/>
to swallow, will continue to provide<lb/>
opportunities for participation in the non-<lb/>
revenue sports (everything except football<lb/>
and basketball). The money for the bus<lb/>
sendee is much needed, especially since<lb/>
much of the parking behind the library has<lb/>
now been lost to new construction.<lb/>
Most objectionable of all the requests is<lb/>
the increase for Recreational Services. This<lb/>
comes on top of the last increase, which<lb/>
began last semester, to pay for the new<lb/>
Student Rec Center. Even this is tolerable if<lb/>
it means no more intramural basketball<lb/>
games at 11 p.m.<lb/>
While individually these projects are<lb/>
fine, the priorities of the administration are<lb/>
clearly out of touch with those of the students.<lb/>
Other than the small increase for the bus<lb/>
service, there is no hint of help for the already<lb/>
dire parking shortage. The only plans seem<lb/>
to be to eliminate even more spaces. These<lb/>
increases present the appearance of forcing<lb/>
students to pay more for fewer spaces. If<lb/>
there is a plan to alleviate this major concern,<lb/>
now would be a good time to reveal it.<lb/>
ECU has grown dramatically in the past<lb/>
few years, and has plans to continue this<lb/>
growth. For us students, this means both<lb/>
benefits and drawbacks. We can only urge<lb/>
the administration to make these difficulties<lb/>
as easier to bear as possible.<lb/>
X<lb/>
<lb/>
oY)<lb/>
K&amp;eLe vi<lb/>
<lb/>
By Patrick Hinson<lb/>
World anxiously awaits American leadership<lb/>
By Laura Wright<lb/>
Leisure activities provide personal definition<lb/>
I guess it's all in the<lb/>
way you view the<lb/>
world. It's all about<lb/>
what gives you<lb/>
pleasure in your spare<lb/>
time.<lb/>
Wasn't this a great weekend?<lb/>
I wouldn't know; I spent the whole<lb/>
time working. It was a holiday<lb/>
weekend, wasn't it? That's what<lb/>
they tell me. I hope that everyone<lb/>
who didn't have to work spent<lb/>
this weekend outside somewhere,<lb/>
preferablv by a body of water.<lb/>
That's what I would've done, if I<lb/>
could have.<lb/>
In fact, I did HeHMflHHm<lb/>
spend<lb/>
Saturday<lb/>
afternoon<lb/>
(after work)<lb/>
in Bath, N.C.<lb/>
If you've<lb/>
never been<lb/>
there, you<lb/>
should go if<lb/>
vou get the <lb/>
chance. Bath<lb/>
is a really quaint waterside<lb/>
historical town about an hour from<lb/>
Greenville.<lb/>
I feel like I'm becoming an<lb/>
expert on nearby getaway<lb/>
locations.<lb/>
What really amazes me is why,<lb/>
when people get a weekend off,<lb/>
they spend it in a mall. I know that<lb/>
this is the case because I work in a<lb/>
mall. I could see the sunshine<lb/>
through the glass, I could dream<lb/>
about being out in it. I guess that's<lb/>
why I kept asking people what<lb/>
they were doing shopping on such<lb/>
a nice day, as were those of this<lb/>
past weekend. Okay, maybe I was<lb/>
just jealous. After all, shopping is<lb/>
the great American pastime.<lb/>
Holidays and consumerism go<lb/>
hand-in-hand even when it's 80<lb/>
degrees and sunny. Sometimes,<lb/>
you just gotta have that new pair<lb/>
of shoes and no nice day is going<lb/>
to stand in your way.<lb/>
I know what mv dad did this<lb/>
weekend. I can guarantee that for<lb/>
at least one day, he washed the<lb/>
cars. My dad does this every<lb/>
weekend. First he washes his car,<lb/>
then my mom's Then he washes<lb/>
my sister's car. On the unlikely<lb/>
chance that I am home, he washes<lb/>
my car. Washing cars makes less<lb/>
sense to me than shopping. Well,<lb/>
actually, they<lb/>
make about the<lb/>
same amount of<lb/>
sense. Sure,<lb/>
while you're<lb/>
washing your<lb/>
car you get to be<lb/>
outside when<lb/>
it's nice, but<lb/>
what is the<lb/>
point?<lb/>
Washing<lb/>
?? your car keeps<lb/>
it clean and shiny until the next<lb/>
time you drive it. The way I look at<lb/>
it, it rains often enough to dispense<lb/>
with car washing all together.<lb/>
I guess it's all in the way you<lb/>
view the world. It's all about what<lb/>
gives you pleasure in your spare<lb/>
time. About half the residents of<lb/>
my apartment complex get out<lb/>
and wash their cars, crank their<lb/>
car stereos and socialize. Maybe<lb/>
car washing makes sense if you<lb/>
get to hang out with like-minded<lb/>
people while you do it. I, however,<lb/>
am not like-minded. I would rather<lb/>
watch Beavis and Butthead than<lb/>
wash my car. I would rather eat<lb/>
pork rinds. Just an aside ? who<lb/>
decided that pork rinds were a<lb/>
good thing? To which food group<lb/>
do they belong? I've never been<lb/>
able to figure out the appeal of<lb/>
those things either.<lb/>
But as far as inane activities<lb/>
go, mowing the lawn ranks<lb/>
number one with me. Think about<lb/>
what a lawn is. It's nothing more<lb/>
than a plot of land with a specific<lb/>
kind of grass growing on it. The<lb/>
grass is neither edible nor<lb/>
smokable so it serves no purpose<lb/>
except to grow and look green. On<lb/>
hot dry days, people water their<lb/>
lawns so that the grass will grow.<lb/>
When the grass grows, they<lb/>
complain about how badly the<lb/>
yard needs mowing.<lb/>
Mowing the yard requires<lb/>
time and energy. My dad just<lb/>
about killed himself trying to take<lb/>
care of the yard at our old house.<lb/>
Every Saturday, he would get up<lb/>
and tackle the grass and the<lb/>
bushes. He pulled up weeds. He<lb/>
planted flowers. And for what, I<lb/>
ask you. So that people would<lb/>
drive by and say to themselves,<lb/>
"Nice yard<lb/>
Maybe we do things li ke mow<lb/>
the yard and wash the cars because<lb/>
such activities provide us with a<lb/>
sort of routine. In a country where<lb/>
people are often held to rigid work<lb/>
schedules, the thought of free time<lb/>
can be terrifying. Perhaps we need<lb/>
the security of an unending task to<lb/>
perform when we're at loose ends.<lb/>
I'm not criticizing my dad,<lb/>
either. If clean cars are important<lb/>
to him, then fine. If a well-<lb/>
manicured yard gives him a sense<lb/>
of accomplishment, more power<lb/>
to him. He always washed my car<lb/>
for me when I was in high school,<lb/>
so I can't complain too much. He<lb/>
did make me mow the lawn,<lb/>
though. We lived on one of the<lb/>
busiest streets in town and my<lb/>
dad made me drive a lawnmower<lb/>
the size of a small tractor around<lb/>
the front yard. I can't think of<lb/>
anything more socially<lb/>
devastating for a 15-year-old<lb/>
female.<lb/>
Each night on the news, we<lb/>
watch the Serbs systematically<lb/>
massacre Bosnian and Muslim<lb/>
men, women and children, day by<lb/>
day killing more people and<lb/>
destroying more towns. The<lb/>
European community awaits<lb/>
American action. Many people in<lb/>
America wait for it too, but will it<lb/>
ever happen? Probably not.<lb/>
America has no interests to defend<lb/>
in Bosnia, and the people here do<lb/>
not wish to send their sons and<lb/>
daughters to die in any more<lb/>
foreign countries.<lb/>
Each night, we watch the<lb/>
rebel factions in Rwanda<lb/>
hideously murder thousands of<lb/>
their own people ? totally<lb/>
innocent people. It's not a war<lb/>
there, it's a killing party, a frenzy,<lb/>
and the world community awaits<lb/>
American action. Will America<lb/>
make a move? That's left to be<lb/>
seen. We have no interests to<lb/>
defend in Rwanda either, and the<lb/>
ugly slap in the face from Somalia<lb/>
still stings. Mighty grateful people,<lb/>
those Somali's.<lb/>
The North Koreans refuse to<lb/>
show us their nuclear sites and<lb/>
their nuclear capability. Why?<lb/>
Because we have no business<lb/>
seeing them, they feel. However,<lb/>
it's obvious that they're pumping<lb/>
out nuclear warheads as fast as<lb/>
they can make them, while they<lb/>
stall for as much time as they can<lb/>
get, until someone finally gets up<lb/>
the guts to take action against<lb/>
them. They want nuclear<lb/>
capability for the same reason<lb/>
everyone else in the world wants<lb/>
it, as a bargaining power-chip, and<lb/>
to break out of the economic<lb/>
sanctions that the UN has placed<lb/>
against them for so long now.<lb/>
Meanwhile, everyone seems to<lb/>
await the American response. Will<lb/>
we actually do anything about it,<lb/>
or will President Clinton just keep<lb/>
talking tough forever?<lb/>
India's nuclear power plants<lb/>
are crumbling around their ankles,<lb/>
leaking God only knows how<lb/>
much radiation into the<lb/>
atmosphere around them (and<lb/>
maybe, soon, around us). The<lb/>
children born in towns near those<lb/>
plants are horribly deformed, and<lb/>
people are dropping dead of<lb/>
mysterious causes, yet when the<lb/>
nuclear community insists on<lb/>
inspecting the plants, the<lb/>
government of India, much like<lb/>
North Korea, tells us where to stick<lb/>
our inspection teams. Everyone<lb/>
feels America should do<lb/>
something.<lb/>
Why is it that anything that's<lb/>
going wrong in the world today<lb/>
automatically becomes the<lb/>
potential responsibility of the<lb/>
American government? Why<lb/>
doesn't one European country<lb/>
come to the aid of the people of the<lb/>
former Yugoslavia? How can those<lb/>
countries sit back on their laurels<lb/>
and call us cowards for not<lb/>
intervening? Why doesn't one<lb/>
other country in Africa come to<lb/>
the aid of the people in Rwanda?<lb/>
How can anyone sit back and<lb/>
watch that slaughter? Why hasn't<lb/>
China, Japan or Russia made any<lb/>
kind of move to stop the<lb/>
production of nuciear bombs in<lb/>
North Korea? Why don't those<lb/>
countries take some part in<lb/>
defending theirnational interests,<lb/>
not to mention their safety?<lb/>
There are, by far, too many<lb/>
nuclear warheads on this planet<lb/>
as it is. The current nuclear powers<lb/>
should work together to cease the<lb/>
production of any more. Yet, they<lb/>
all wait for the American response,<lb/>
and they'll be the first to criticize<lb/>
whatever that response will be,<lb/>
same as always.<lb/>
It just makes me wonder if<lb/>
there really is such thing as a world<lb/>
community. Communities work<lb/>
together for their common<lb/>
interests. They look out for each<lb/>
other, not just for themselves.<lb/>
Everyone hates America for not<lb/>
doing anything, and then they hate<lb/>
us for interfering where we don't<lb/>
belong. Everything is left up to us,<lb/>
and when we do something right<lb/>
we're expected to share the credit.<lb/>
People really don't seem to change<lb/>
that much as they get older. We're<lb/>
still guided by the same things we<lb/>
were as children: greed, power<lb/>
and control. We just seem to call<lb/>
them different things as adults.<lb/>
The world community, if there<lb/>
really is one, has their work cut<lb/>
out for them, and we've got a lot to<lb/>
learn about working together.<lb/>
America, as arrogant as we may<lb/>
be, cannot continue the trend of<lb/>
being the world's police officer.<lb/>
That is a job for a world<lb/>
community, not a single nation,<lb/>
regardless of how powerful that<lb/>
nation is. The Second World War<lb/>
(now almost a distant memory),<lb/>
and Viet Nam should, if any thing,<lb/>
have taught us that lesson.<lb/>
Letters to the Editor<lb/>
The Jews in Europe could not defend<lb/>
themselves from Hitler's genocide ? they were<lb/>
unarmed. East European nations behind the Iron<lb/>
Curtain attempted to rebel on numerous occasions<lb/>
but failed ? they were unarmed. The courageous<lb/>
1989 Tiananmen Square protesters in china were<lb/>
brutally suppressed. Can you guess why?<lb/>
Our Founding Fathers were aware that the<lb/>
most well-intentioned of governments could become<lb/>
tyrannical. To insure that the governed could alter or<lb/>
abolish the movement if it proved destructive of the<lb/>
ends for which it was created, the right to keep and<lb/>
bear arms was given a high place in our Bill of Rights.<lb/>
Indeed, while I disagree with most of the tenets of<lb/>
China's Chairman Mao, I concur with his belief that<lb/>
all power comes from the barrel of a gun. As horrible<lb/>
as that may sound to the more timid members of our<lb/>
societv, history attests to its validity. Benjamin<lb/>
Franklin asserted that those who would give up<lb/>
personal liberties for temporary safety deserved<lb/>
neither.<lb/>
While searching for a "magic pill" to the crime<lb/>
problem, Americans are doing exactly what Jefferson<lb/>
warned against. Our crime problem lies in people,<lb/>
not the weapons they choose. Legislation banning<lb/>
certain weapons will do nothing to alleviate crime,<lb/>
but it will infringe on our rights. The Constitution<lb/>
our political leaders swore to preserve is being<lb/>
destroyed.<lb/>
Steven A. Hill<lb/>
Junior<lb/>
EnglishHistory<lb/>
All letters, in order to be considered for publication, must be<lb/>
typed, under 250 words, and contain your name, class rank, major<lb/>
and a working daytime phone number. Send these to: Letters to the<lb/>
Editor, The East Carolinian, Publications Bldg ECU, Greenville,<lb/>
N.C, 27858-4353.<lb/>
Would you like to have your opinions read by thou-<lb/>
sands of newspaper readers? Exercise your constitutional<lb/>
right to free speech. Apply now to write for The East<lb/>
Carolinian this fall. Applications now being accepted for<lb/>
the opinion page and a planned weekly satire page. Pick up<lb/>
your application at the newspaper office, in the Student<lb/>
Pubs building.<lb/>
. ?<lb/>
<pb facs="00058476_0004"/><lb/>
-The East Caroliniair<lb/>
For Rent<lb/>
ROOMMATES NEEDED FOR<lb/>
FALL to share 3 bedroom house<lb/>
near Hospital. Must be serious stu-<lb/>
dent and non-smoker. Located in a<lb/>
quiet neighborhood with lots of fruit<lb/>
trees. Has garage for some storage.<lb/>
Rent of260.00 monthly. Includes<lb/>
utilities and washer dryer. Avail-<lb/>
ablejuly 15-August 15.Call Harold<lb/>
after 4:00 p.m. if interested.<lb/>
ROOMMATE WANTED: Female,<lb/>
upperclassman, non-smoker pre-<lb/>
ferred to share house with other<lb/>
females, rent150.00 and share<lb/>
utilitiesphone. Own room and<lb/>
bathroom, if interested, call 758-<lb/>
8126.<lb/>
ROOMMATE WANTED to share<lb/>
house 1 block from campus.150.00<lb/>
a month and split cable, phone and<lb/>
electric. Call 830-1765, ask for An-<lb/>
drew.<lb/>
ROOMMATE NEEDED to share<lb/>
i 2 bedroom and 2 bathroom mo-<lb/>
t-tile home at Grevstone Mobile<lb/>
Home Park. Can start renting May<lb/>
18, only S 175.00 and 1 ? utilities.<lb/>
Prefer non-smoking male student.<lb/>
Call Scott Tanner at 321-0404 if in-<lb/>
terested.<lb/>
NEED ROOMMATE FOR 2 BED-<lb/>
ROOM APT. 1 block from campus<lb/>
rents S 142.50 rent, deposit is the<lb/>
same as rent. 1 2 utilities, washer<lb/>
dryer included in rent. Call 757-<lb/>
2820, leave message.<lb/>
FEMALE ROOMMATE<lb/>
WANTED for apartment 1 2 block<lb/>
from Art Bldg 3 blocks from down-<lb/>
town, 2 blocks from Supermarket.<lb/>
Starting in June. Call 757-1947.<lb/>
ROOMMATES NEEDED to share<lb/>
a four bedroom apartment in Tar<lb/>
River. Needed June 1st and or July<lb/>
1st. Rent is $162.50. Call Nickie or<lb/>
Dawn at 758-4332.<lb/>
Classifieds<lb/>
June 1. 1994<lb/>
NEEDED AT ONCE Girls, Girls,<lb/>
Girls. Earn big summer cash. The<lb/>
best summer job around. Play-<lb/>
mates Adult Entertainment call for<lb/>
more info. 747-7686.<lb/>
INTERNSHIP AVAILABLE IN<lb/>
SALES. Earn good money with<lb/>
flexible hours and gain valuable<lb/>
business experience. Call Bonnie<lb/>
at 355-7700 for more information<lb/>
and possible interview.<lb/>
ENTHUSIASTIC SALES<lb/>
PEOPLE to operate cart in shop-<lb/>
ping mall in Greenville, Wilson or<lb/>
Rocky Mount. Call the<lb/>
Globetrotter in Raleigh (919) 782-<lb/>
5450, to arrange interview.<lb/>
CRUISE SHIPS HIRING- Earn<lb/>
up to S 2,000 mo. on Cruise Ships<lb/>
or Land-Tour companies, World<lb/>
travel. Summer &amp; Full-time em-<lb/>
ployment available, No experience<lb/>
necessary. For information, call 1-<lb/>
206-634-0468, ext. C5362.<lb/>
NATIONAL PARK SUMMER<lb/>
JOBS - Tour guide, dude ranch,<lb/>
host(ess), instructor, lifeguard,<lb/>
hotel staff, trail maintenance,<lb/>
firefighter, volunteer &amp; govern-<lb/>
ment positions available. Excel-<lb/>
lentbenefitsbonuses! Apply now<lb/>
for best positions. Call: 1-206-545-<lb/>
4804 ext. N5362.<lb/>
POSTAL JOBS AVAILABLE !<lb/>
Many positions. Great benefits.<lb/>
Call 1-800-436-4365,<lb/>
Ext. P-3712.<lb/>
RESIDENT COUNSELOR. Hu-<lb/>
man services background pre-<lb/>
ferred. Free room and stipend in<lb/>
exchange for hours worked on ro-<lb/>
tation. Contact Mary Smith, REAL<lb/>
CIRSISCENTER,600E. llthStreet,<lb/>
758-HELP.<lb/>
RESPONSIBLE PERSON to care<lb/>
for children in our home. Tuesday<lb/>
and Thursday, 7:30 a.m. to 5:00<lb/>
p.m.Call756-0417,before 9:00p.m.<lb/>
SITTERDRIVER NEEDED<lb/>
Need a female to come to my house<lb/>
Monday - Friday at 8:00 a.m. and<lb/>
take my daughters to activities at<lb/>
9:00. Requirements-be responsible<lb/>
and honest, have own transporta-<lb/>
tion, provide 2 credit references. If<lb/>
interested, call Bonita Edwards at<lb/>
321-4944. You may leave a mes-<lb/>
sage.<lb/>
For Sale<lb/>
For Sale<lb/>
For Sale<lb/>
FURNITURE: Couch and match-<lb/>
ing chair, $80.00 (set). Kitchen table<lb/>
wchairs,75.00. Tan lazy-boy, $<lb/>
40.00. 752-3552.<lb/>
GOVERNMENT SEIZED CARS,<lb/>
Trucks, Boats, 4-Wheelers,<lb/>
Motorhomes, by FBI, IRS, DEA.<lb/>
Nationwide auction listings avail-<lb/>
able now. Call 1 -800-436-4363, Ext.<lb/>
C-5999.<lb/>
MOPEDS, Honda PA 50, only 600<lb/>
miles, S 550.00. Puch, 2000 miles, $<lb/>
400.00, excellent condition, 100<lb/>
MPG, 30 MPH, No license re-<lb/>
quired. 756-9133.<lb/>
55 GAL. AQUARIUM with stand,<lb/>
under-gravel filter, heater, and<lb/>
decorations; complete fresh wa-<lb/>
ter set-up (fish optional). $225.00:<lb/>
also, 10 gal. Hex. with stand, $75.00.<lb/>
Call Clark, after 7:00 p.m 830-<lb/>
6035.<lb/>
FOR SALE: NOVARA MOUN-<lb/>
TAIN BIKE. 21" Frame. Shimano<lb/>
Deore DX components, hubs.<lb/>
Ritchey bars, tires. Mavic rims.<lb/>
Scott Unishock fork. No off-road<lb/>
use. $525.00. 752-8816.<lb/>
ATTENTION PARROTHEADS:<lb/>
For sale, 4 Grass-Passes to Satur-<lb/>
day night's show. Call 757-2821.<lb/>
BUY USED, QUALITY, NAME BRAND<lb/>
S2.00UP MEN'S SHIRTS, PANTS, SHOES, ETC.<lb/>
(TOMMY &amp;ALL BEST BRANDS)<lb/>
$29.00UP STEREO (AMPS, TUNERS, CD, SPKRS)<lb/>
529.00UP VIDEO (T.V VCR)<lb/>
S29.00UP MICROWAVE (SMALLLARGE)<lb/>
S5.00UP TELEPHONES AND ANS. MACHINES<lb/>
$15.00UP MISC. FURNITURE<lb/>
(CHEST OF DRAWERS, TABLES, DESKS, ETC.)<lb/>
EVERYTHING CLEAN, FRESH,QUALITY<lb/>
CHECKED AND READY TO GO<lb/>
Student Swap Shop<lb/>
(THE ESTATE SHOP)<lb/>
DOWNTOWN WALKING MALL<lb/>
411 EVANS ST. SUMMER HRS. THURSFRI 10-12<lb/>
1-5 &amp; SAT FROM 10-1<lb/>
SAVE $1 OFF EACH PIECE OF CLOTHING<lb/>
COME INTO THE CITY PARKING LOT IN FRONT OF<lb/>
WACHOVIA DOWNTOWN,DRIVE TO BACK DOOR &amp; RING BUZZER<lb/>
:zerJ<lb/>
EAST<lb/>
CAROLINIAN<lb/>
Classifieds<lb/>
25 words or less:<lb/>
Students $2.00<lb/>
Non-Students $3.00<lb/>
Each additional word $0.05<lb/>
?All ads must be pre-paid<lb/>
Deadline<lb/>
Monday at 4:00 p.m<lb/>
for Wednesday's<lb/>
Summer edition<lb/>
Announcements<lb/>
Any organization mey use the Announce-<lb/>
ments Section of The East Carolinian to list<lb/>
activities and events open to the pubic<lb/>
twotimes freeof charge. Due to the limited<lb/>
amount of space, The EastCardiniancannot<lb/>
guarantee the publication of announce-<lb/>
ments.<lb/>
Displayed<lb/>
$5.50 per inch:<lb/>
Displayed advertisements may<lb/>
be cancelled before 10 a.m. the<lb/>
day prior to publication<lb/>
however, no refunds will be<lb/>
given.<lb/>
For more information<lb/>
call 757-6366.<lb/>
Services Offered<lb/>
ACCURATE, FAST, CONFI-<lb/>
DENTIAL, PROFESSIONAL<lb/>
ResumeSecretarial work. Spe-<lb/>
cializing in Resume composition<lb/>
wcover-letters stored on disk,<lb/>
term papers, thesis, legal tran-<lb/>
scriptions, general typing and<lb/>
other secretarial duties. Word Per-<lb/>
fect or Microsoft Word for Win-<lb/>
dows software Call today (8A-<lb/>
5P-752-9959) (Evenings 527-9133).<lb/>
Announcement<lb/>
VOLUNTEERS SOUGHT<lb/>
FOR CHILDREN'S<lb/>
TELETHON.<lb/>
Volunteers are needed for the<lb/>
ninth annual telecast of the local<lb/>
Children's Miracle Network<lb/>
Telethon, which supports the<lb/>
Children's Hospital of Eastern<lb/>
North Carolina, a division of<lb/>
Pitt County Memorial Hospital.<lb/>
Sought are people who can as-<lb/>
sist for any period of time from<lb/>
9:00 p.m. Sat June 4, to 6:30<lb/>
p.m. Sun June 5, by perform-<lb/>
ing tasks that range from an-<lb/>
swering phones to providing<lb/>
hospitality for special guests.<lb/>
Airing on WTTN-7, the telethon<lb/>
will benefit the pediatric spe-<lb/>
cialty hospital whch serves 34<lb/>
counties in eastern North Caro-<lb/>
lina. Local segments originat-<lb/>
ing from the Brody Medical Sci-<lb/>
ences Building on the EastCaro-<lb/>
lina University School of Medi-<lb/>
cine campus will alternate with<lb/>
the national broadcast from<lb/>
Disneyland in Anaheim, Calif.<lb/>
Persons interested in joining the<lb/>
Children's 4iracle Network in<lb/>
a "Celebration of Life" should<lb/>
call the local telethon office at<lb/>
816-KIDS or 1-800-673-KIDS.<lb/>
MONSTER<lb/>
TRUCKS,<lb/>
WOMEN IN<lb/>
BIKINIS,<lb/>
WASHED UP<lb/>
TV<lb/>
PERSQiWJTIES,<lb/>
AND<lb/>
EVERYBODVS<lb/>
FAVORITE<lb/>
PIL GROUPIE<lb/>
HRIS KEMPL<lb/>
KOTttsntesi<lb/>
IN <lb/>
E<lb/>
it cami ntem mt senoou<lb/>
SCHEDULED DATES AND APPEARANCES:<lb/>
JUNE 8 GUNS AND BUNS CUSTOM AUTO SI IOW<lb/>
with SPECIAL GUESTS:<lb/>
Optimus Prime<lb/>
The Green and Red Rangers from "The Mighty Morphin' Power Rangers"<lb/>
Tawnee Hughes<lb/>
(the 1994 Field and Stream Calendar Centerfold of the Year)<lb/>
Adam West (TV's Batman)<lb/>
Jack Morkheimer (PBS's Starhustlen<lb/>
Wm&amp;ZllS! SVtSPSTKSZ!<lb/>
Upper<lb/>
Crust<lb/>
Bakery<lb/>
212 E.<lb/>
5th<lb/>
Street<lb/>
June 3-10<lb/>
??"<lb/>
<pb facs="00058476_0005"/><lb/>
aSHNI ? : mjimm<lb/>
WUSKHUKMHmmimJimuiSM<lb/>
JMium'imm?<lb/>
The East Carolinian<lb/>
Wednesday, June 1, 1994<lb/>
Lifestyle<lb/>
Page 5<lb/>
Hootie and the Blowfish return to Attic<lb/>
Photo Courtesy ot Flahco Management<lb/>
Hootie and the Blowf.sh return to the Attic this Thursday. The group is set to release their first major-label album, Cracked Rear View, on Atlantic<lb/>
records onjuly 5. This Thursday's performance could be a rare opportunity forCreenvillefansto see the band.<lb/>
By Warren Sumner<lb/>
Lifestyle Editor<lb/>
Greenville music fans have an<lb/>
opportunity to see a band that could<lb/>
be on the brink of national success<lb/>
this week, when the Columbia, S.C<lb/>
based group HootieandtheBlowfish<lb/>
returns to the Attic this Thursday.<lb/>
Thebard,anxiousryawaitingtheJuly<lb/>
5 release of its first major-label CD<lb/>
(Cracked Rear View on Atlantic<lb/>
Records), has solidified its status as a<lb/>
regional act and is prepared to re-<lb/>
ceive the national exposure that their<lb/>
album release should provide.<lb/>
According to lead singer Darius<lb/>
Rucker, the process of getting to the<lb/>
point that every musician dreams<lb/>
about has been less man a bed of<lb/>
roses.<lb/>
'Tthasn'tbeeneasy'Ruckersaid.<lb/>
"When you drive all me way to New<lb/>
York and play in front of five people<lb/>
it's pretty tough. But we've just stuck<lb/>
together and believed in ourselves,<lb/>
andnow thatwe'vecometothepoint<lb/>
where we are now, all the terrible<lb/>
nights have become worthwhile<lb/>
The group formed eight years<lb/>
agoascollegestudentsattheUniver-<lb/>
sity of South Carolina. Taking a "no<lb/>
philosophy, anti-image" approach<lb/>
which the group hasexpressed since<lb/>
its formation, the band hasbrokenall<lb/>
the rules of what is expected of up-<lb/>
and-coming acts. They have won the<lb/>
hearts of audiences all over the East-<lb/>
em seaboard with their danceable<lb/>
pop sound,and after recently spark-<lb/>
ing the interest of Atlantic Records,<lb/>
they are poised to move onto the<lb/>
Billboard charts.<lb/>
Rucker said thathequickly got<lb/>
over the initial excitement of re-<lb/>
cording the group's upcoming al-<lb/>
bum when the band got to Los<lb/>
Angelesand worked with industry<lb/>
producers.<lb/>
"When you're working late<lb/>
nightsand theproducerisyellingat<lb/>
you for singing flat it kind of hits<lb/>
youhesaidItwasquiteanexpe-<lb/>
rience and a lot of work<lb/>
Rucker saiddespitethe record-<lb/>
ing experience, the reality of the<lb/>
possible result of the Atlantic<lb/>
recording's release has not hit him<lb/>
yet<lb/>
"Wewanttobeexcited,butthe<lb/>
releasedateisstill fiveweeksaway<lb/>
he said. "Its going to take a while<lb/>
because we're playingso much, but<lb/>
as July 5 gets closer and closer, I'm<lb/>
sure ifll start to hit us<lb/>
Rucker said the strenuous<lb/>
schedule the band faces is hard,<lb/>
because they travel anywhere from<lb/>
Boston, Mass to Gainesville, Fla<lb/>
but most of the strain the band suf-<lb/>
fers from is self-inflicted.<lb/>
"Most of the pressure that we<lb/>
deal with we put on ourselves he<lb/>
said. "Since we play so much, we<lb/>
are concentrating on our perfor-<lb/>
mancesmore.Wewanteverynight<lb/>
See HOOTIE page 6<lb/>
Bad Girls another<lb/>
cowboy cliche<lb/>
By Ike Shibley<lb/>
Staff Writer<lb/>
As much as I liked Unforgiven,<lb/>
I almost rue its success because the<lb/>
film has now spawned a new gen-<lb/>
eration of Westerns churned outby<lb/>
a Hollywood system driven by<lb/>
greed. In the last year, Posse,<lb/>
Geronimo and Tombstone were re-<lb/>
leased, and mis summer Maverick<lb/>
and Wyatt Earp are already slated<lb/>
for wide release.<lb/>
The Hollywood Western, a<lb/>
genredominated almost entirely by<lb/>
males, has recently seen its inevi-<lb/>
table evolution bring females into<lb/>
the limelight. This year, The Ballad<lb/>
of Little )o and Bad Girls helped to<lb/>
drive the revitalizauon of the West-<lb/>
em. The latter of the two films is<lb/>
now playing in Greenville.<lb/>
Bad Girls tells the tale of four<lb/>
prostitutes who must run from the<lb/>
law because one of them killed a<lb/>
man. Eileen Spenser (Andie<lb/>
MacDowell), Anita Crown (Mary<lb/>
Stuart Masterson), Lily Laronette<lb/>
(Drew Barrymore) and Cody<lb/>
Zamora (Madeline Stowe) ride<lb/>
horses, shoot guns, and generally<lb/>
embody the cliches normally given<lb/>
to male.<lb/>
Though perhaps unintentional,<lb/>
Bad Girls plays as a high spirited B<lb/>
Movie. The filmmakers seem to<lb/>
know that they have absolutely<lb/>
nothing new to convey in Bad Girls,<lb/>
but that the fun of the film is in<lb/>
succumbing to every bad Western<lb/>
cliche. Bad Girls revels in its medi-<lb/>
ocrity which serves to make the<lb/>
film, if not a work of art, at least a lot<lb/>
of fun.<lb/>
From the very beginning, Bad<lb/>
Girls stakes its claim against a seri-<lb/>
ousinterpretation.Codykillsaman<lb/>
for harassing Anita.The man wants<lb/>
a birthday kiss and becomes deter-<lb/>
mined to get it from Anita. A short<lb/>
time later, Anita kneels at the site of<lb/>
her husband's grave and tells him<lb/>
that she still has not kissed another<lb/>
man in the three years since he has<lb/>
died. The viewer's eyes may blink a<lb/>
few times at the preposterousness<lb/>
of mis situation, men he or she is<lb/>
likely to settle back easily in the<lb/>
theater chair upon realizing that<lb/>
Bad Girls is not going to take itself<lb/>
seriously.<lb/>
Every one of the girls gets into<lb/>
trouble and must be rescued by the<lb/>
other three. Cody is about to be<lb/>
hung for murder when her friends<lb/>
stage a daring rescue. Lily gets kid-<lb/>
napped by some ruffians who ter-<lb/>
rorize the foursome for most of the<lb/>
film. Eileen has trouble mounting<lb/>
her horse, and because of this gets<lb/>
caught and is put in prison, thus<lb/>
prompting her friends to make a<lb/>
jailbreak. Anita is saved at the be-<lb/>
ginning before she has to kiss a<lb/>
man.<lb/>
Every one of the above situa-<lb/>
tions is so contrived as to be charm-<lb/>
ing. Not once does the viewer be-<lb/>
lieve that any of the girls are in real<lb/>
danger. Only men get killed in Bad<lb/>
Girls ? the females are accorded<lb/>
long life.<lb/>
The two actresses from whom<lb/>
one would expect the least, Andie<lb/>
MacDowell and Drew Barrymore,<lb/>
surprisingly turn in the most in-<lb/>
spired performances. MacDowell<lb/>
may have finally found an outlet for<lb/>
her limited acting talents. She may<lb/>
have been trying to be serious, but<lb/>
the little smirk on her face through-<lb/>
outthefilmindicatesotherwise.She<lb/>
sweetly tells men that she is a fine<lb/>
lady from New Orleans in her most<lb/>
Southern twang when she actually<lb/>
hails from a Texas scrub ranch. Her<lb/>
upbringing never gets played as a<lb/>
tragedy, but only as a way of adher-<lb/>
ing to the convention of the classic<lb/>
Western movie.<lb/>
Barrymore plays a tart with all<lb/>
the requisite spice. She isdearly the<lb/>
happiest of the four with her chosen<lb/>
profession. She views men with<lb/>
See BAD GIRLS page 6<lb/>
J Uh no.<lb/>
JV Take Your Chances<lb/>
JtJV Worth A Try<lb/>
JJJJ Highly Recommended<lb/>
Violent Femmes<lb/>
Hew Times<lb/>
?<lb/>
L<lb/>
Check out page 6 for<lb/>
upcoming concerts<lb/>
at Walnut Creek<lb/>
Amphitheatre this<lb/>
summer.<lb/>
When I first looked at my copy<lb/>
oiNewTimes, the latest album from<lb/>
the Violent Femmes, alarm bells<lb/>
went off in my head. The cover<lb/>
features some kind of lame art de-<lb/>
sign with a screw and a buzzsaw,<lb/>
and a scary "Hi, we're cool" band<lb/>
photo. This kind of packaging gen-<lb/>
erally signals uninspired music re-<lb/>
corded mainly to fulfill contractual<lb/>
obligations. These vaguely dissat-<lb/>
isfying albums tend to end up in the<lb/>
local "used" bins within a month,<lb/>
and sit there like hideous orphans<lb/>
waiting hopelessly for a new home.<lb/>
Thankfully, New Times<lb/>
shouldn't suffer that fate, even<lb/>
thoughitopens with five reallyflac-<lb/>
cid tunes that sound as if they were<lb/>
made to please single-hungry<lb/>
record executives. These songs, in-<lb/>
cluding the title track, are done in a<lb/>
heavy-handed, over-produced<lb/>
variation of the Femmes' trademark<lb/>
jangly style. Though well-played,<lb/>
they are uninspired and largely for-<lb/>
gettable.<lb/>
The sixth track, "Machine<lb/>
breaks that pattern. This one is a<lb/>
spoken word track, with Gordon<lb/>
Gano delivering an insane mono-<lb/>
logue that sounds like something<lb/>
from a King Missile album "I got a<lb/>
machine Gano rambles, "And I<lb/>
took over the world But nothing<lb/>
changed That wouldn't be fair<lb/>
Strung out over a military drum-<lb/>
beat, this track is a real departure<lb/>
for the band. Though it breaks the<lb/>
monotony, this track does lack the<lb/>
much-needed energy required to<lb/>
lift this album out of its rut.<lb/>
That energy arrives with the<lb/>
next track, "I'm Nothing Filled<lb/>
with nervous melodies, this song<lb/>
gives you the feeling that Gordon<lb/>
Gano is that weird kid nobody<lb/>
wanted to sit next to on the school<lb/>
bus. "Are you a republican or a<lb/>
democrat Gano wails in his best<lb/>
frustrated weird guy voice, "A lib-<lb/>
eral fascist full of crap I'm noth-<lb/>
ing Violently fast-paced, with<lb/>
Gano's familiar zero-distortion gui-<lb/>
tar whipped up to a fever-pitch,<lb/>
"I'm Nothing" is the Violent<lb/>
Femmes at their best.<lb/>
From this point, New Times<lb/>
picks up considerably. On the slow<lb/>
"When Everybody's Happy the<lb/>
Femmes give us their take on John<lb/>
Lennon's "Imagine with their<lb/>
usual twist of damaged isolation:<lb/>
"Can you imagine The world at<lb/>
See FEMMES page 6<lb/>
Tniffle<lb/>
nervous Laughter<lb/>
m<lb/>
The Merriam-Webster Dictio-<lb/>
nary defines truffle as "a Euro-<lb/>
pean underground fungus<lb/>
which is further described as con-<lb/>
taining an edible fruit often made<lb/>
into delectable candies. Could it<lb/>
be that this 1989 edition (inciden-<lb/>
tally the same year the band<lb/>
formed) derived its definition<lb/>
from the outrageously talented<lb/>
band Truffle? I say, definitely.<lb/>
Okay, maybe this is a difficult<lb/>
analogy to grasp; let me explain.<lb/>
There are over 60,000 identi-<lb/>
fied species in the kingdom fungi,<lb/>
only a couple of those species, in-<lb/>
cluding truffles, are edible. It may<lb/>
sound cynical, but the music in-<lb/>
dustry kingdom is becoming<lb/>
much the same; diversified and<lb/>
numerous with only a few bands<lb/>
that are edible. Truffle, with its<lb/>
fresh sound and poignant lyrics,<lb/>
is not only edible, but delicious.<lb/>
Nervous Laughter is the na-<lb/>
tional debut for this group of<lb/>
former University of New Hamp-<lb/>
shire students, originally Savoy<lb/>
Truffle, now shortened to just<lb/>
Truffle. Their sound is firmly<lb/>
rooted in rock-n-roll, however,<lb/>
they achieve a unique sound by<lb/>
infusing components of Country,<lb/>
R &amp; B and Reggae. In addition to<lb/>
the uniform guitar, bass and<lb/>
drums, the group has added the<lb/>
auditory pleasures of a mandolin<lb/>
and lap steel to help complete the<lb/>
uniquenessof their music. Added<lb/>
to this ensemble of instruments is<lb/>
a god-like voice and lyrics from<lb/>
the heart.<lb/>
The first track, "Trouble"<lb/>
opens the CD with a funky rock<lb/>
beat that fuels the curiosity for<lb/>
more. The second track, "Forty<lb/>
Winks Away  a simple rock song<lb/>
with Country influence about life<lb/>
and losing sleep gives way to "I<lb/>
Can't Shake It a jamming tune<lb/>
that features the guitar and bass<lb/>
talents of band members Ned<lb/>
Chase and David Bailey.<lb/>
The superior vocal quality and<lb/>
rangeof Truffle's lead singer, Dave<lb/>
Gerald, is most evident on the<lb/>
fourth track, "St. Mary's Glacier<lb/>
a song with dual meaning I could<lb/>
not quite grasp. The song is deliv-<lb/>
ered in a gruff, sexual murmur<lb/>
that is interrupted with a throaty<lb/>
whisper of, "We'll be over" and a<lb/>
primitive growl of, "I'm no d iffer-<lb/>
ent It is this distinctive voice that<lb/>
will become one of Truffle's trade-<lb/>
SeeHOOTiE page 6<lb/>
MM<lb/>
' ??.<lb/>
<pb facs="00058476_0006"/><lb/>
6 The East Carolinian<lb/>
June 1, 1994<lb/>
This Month at<lb/>
Hardens Walnut<lb/>
Creek<lb/>
Amphitheatre<lb/>
Bette Middler<lb/>
Thursday, June 2<lb/>
8:00 p.m.<lb/>
Jimmy Buffett<lb/>
&amp; the Iguanas<lb/>
Friday - Sunday<lb/>
June 3,4,5<lb/>
8:00 p.m.<lb/>
Phil Collins<lb/>
Tuesday, June 7<lb/>
Time: TBA<lb/>
Hank Williams, Jr.<lb/>
wColl in Raye &amp; the<lb/>
Kentucky Headhunters<lb/>
Saturday, June 11<lb/>
7:00 p.m.<lb/>
WRDU Earthbuddies<lb/>
Celebraton IV w Elvis<lb/>
Costello &amp; the<lb/>
Attractions wThe<lb/>
Crash Test Dummies<lb/>
Saturday, June 18<lb/>
8:00 p.m.<lb/>
Beach Boys w<lb/>
America<lb/>
Thursday, June 23<lb/>
8:00 p.m.<lb/>
Crosby, Stills, &amp; Nash<lb/>
25th Anniversary Tour<lb/>
Saturday, June 25<lb/>
7:30 p.m.<lb/>
Phlsh<lb/>
Wednesday, June 29<lb/>
7:30 p.m.<lb/>
On Sale Now<lb/>
$25.00$45.00$75.00<lb/>
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FREE PREGNANCY TEST<lb/>
while you wait<lb/>
Free &amp; Confidential<lb/>
Services &amp; Counseling<lb/>
Carolina Pregnancy Center<lb/>
209 S Evans St Hours:<lb/>
Pittman Building 757-0003 Monday - Friday<lb/>
Greenville NC 8:30-3:30<lb/>
PROPHECIES<lb/>
that are<lb/>
BEING FUIXFIUED<lb/>
A Slide Presentation of some<lb/>
Contemporary and Archaeological<lb/>
Evidence<lb/>
General Classroom Bldg Room 2004<lb/>
Wed. June 1 at 8:00 pm<lb/>
Apostolic Campus Ministry<lb/>
BAD GIRLS<lb/>
Continued from page 5<lb/>
much disdain and uses them as<lb/>
much as they use her. When cap-<lb/>
tured,she saucily defies her captors<lb/>
whenever she can and her spirit is<lb/>
never broken. Madeline Stowe and<lb/>
Mary Stuart Masterson never seem<lb/>
to realize that Bad Girfe isafilm with<lb/>
no artistic aspirations. They both<lb/>
play their roles too seriously for the<lb/>
mood of the film yet do not go<lb/>
overboard enough with their seri-<lb/>
ousness to parody their characters.<lb/>
Bad Girls is filled with little<lb/>
pleasures. Cody is set to be hung on<lb/>
a sign post which reads: "ECHO<lb/>
CTTYColorado'sFriendliestTown<lb/>
During moments of intense action<lb/>
(at least intense for mis film) silly<lb/>
slow-motion photography is used<lb/>
which accentuates the overblown<lb/>
melodramatic situation.<lb/>
Many of the Western conven-<lb/>
tions are adhered to in Bad Girk but<lb/>
reversed. For example, Eileen<lb/>
FEMMES<lb/>
meets a nice man who is very weak<lb/>
and whoeventu ally fallsforEileen.<lb/>
It is Eileen who decides to settle<lb/>
down with a man, thus making the<lb/>
female character the one with<lb/>
power.<lb/>
Bad G iris is the sort of film that<lb/>
encourages a large buttery pop-<lb/>
corn to be consumed during it.<lb/>
Bad Girls, much as the name im-<lb/>
plies, winks at the audience and<lb/>
lets the viewers know their junk<lb/>
food, for the body or mind, some-<lb/>
times provides a wonderful way<lb/>
to feel decadent without really<lb/>
being so. Like the buttered pop-<lb/>
corn, Bad Girls knows it has noth-<lb/>
ing but empty calories to offer the<lb/>
viewer, but it knowingly smiles<lb/>
on those viewers who care to par-<lb/>
take in its forbidden fruits with<lb/>
little guilt.<lb/>
On a scale of one to ten, Bad<lb/>
Girls rates a six.<lb/>
Continued from page 5<lb/>
peace When everybody's happy<lb/>
 But me?" They flirt with calypso<lb/>
on "This Island Life" and "Jesus of<lb/>
Rio The frantic "Agamemnon"<lb/>
deals with Gano's obsessions with<lb/>
women and poisoned relationships,<lb/>
as does the gen tl er "Mirror Mirror<lb/>
The final standout track on the<lb/>
albumis'TSawYouintheCrowd<lb/>
Simultaneously charming and<lb/>
creepy, this is the story of Gano<lb/>
spotting a girl in the crowd and<lb/>
wanting to invite her back to his<lb/>
hotel room after a show. Far from<lb/>
some kind of Aerosmith power fan-<lb/>
tasy, however, this song is a tale of<lb/>
unrequited love. The way thatGano<lb/>
is able to deal with such an uncom-<lb/>
TRUFFLE<lb/>
marks.<lb/>
The second half of the CD,<lb/>
starting with "Steerhoms only<lb/>
gets better. The seventh track,<lb/>
'Twisted Old Tree is probably<lb/>
one of the best songs on the CD,<lb/>
showcasing the band's talent as a<lb/>
group. DaveGerald'svocals, Ned<lb/>
Chase's mandolin and lap steel,<lb/>
David Bailey's bass and Brian<lb/>
Dionne's drums come together to<lb/>
deliver a song that is contagious<lb/>
to the listener.<lb/>
The mandolin's unique appeal<lb/>
appears in "The Wind in Me It<lb/>
gives the song an old time, blue<lb/>
grass influence that is bom mod-<lb/>
fortable subject in such a sensitive<lb/>
manner is nothing short of amaz-<lb/>
ing.<lb/>
Despite some standout tracks<lb/>
on the second half of the album,<lb/>
New Times feels a bit rushed. It<lb/>
does not stack up well next to the<lb/>
Violent Femmes' first album (re-<lb/>
leased an unbelievable fourteen<lb/>
years ago), or even their last effort,<lb/>
Why do Birds Sing? Still, it is good,<lb/>
and well-worth a listen.<lb/>
And lef s try to keep it out of<lb/>
those used bins, shall we? Nothi .ig<lb/>
is sadder than orphaned music.<lb/>
? Mar<lb/>
Brett<lb/>
Continued from page 5<lb/>
em and entertaining. The final<lb/>
track, "Storyman closes the CD<lb/>
with a slow, soulful, "hate to go"<lb/>
attitude. Once again, Dave<lb/>
Gerald, lead vocals, tears into the<lb/>
heartand the mind with a smooth,<lb/>
low tone and insightful lyrics.<lb/>
A band that is said to have an<lb/>
explosive live show seems to have<lb/>
transferred that same quality on<lb/>
to disk. If the old saying, "It only<lb/>
gets better with age is true than<lb/>
we're all in for a real treat.<lb/>
?Patricia<lb/>
Dally<lb/>
Lifestyle Writers-Please<lb/>
call me at home! I have<lb/>
stories for all of you! I love<lb/>
all of you and want you<lb/>
to be my<lb/>
literarylove<lb/>
slaves!<lb/>
Warren<lb/>
HOOTIE<lb/>
Continued from page 5<lb/>
to be as good as the night before<lb/>
The group has performed at the<lb/>
Attic for two years, playing their first<lb/>
dates to less-than-stellar audiences<lb/>
According to Joe Tronto, the club's<lb/>
cwnerandmanager,thebandseerned<lb/>
to take off in Greenville overnight<lb/>
"The first couple of times in they<lb/>
just plodded around Tronto said.<lb/>
"Then it seemed, all of a sudden, they<lb/>
just blasted off<lb/>
Trontosaid thatheisconfidentin<lb/>
the hand's chances for succeeding na-<lb/>
tionalfy,andgivesthegrouphishigh-<lb/>
est recommendation.<lb/>
"They are probably one of the<lb/>
mostdeservrngbandslhaveeverhad<lb/>
at the dub he said.<lb/>
Rucker said the band holds a<lb/>
warm feeling for its home market in<lb/>
Columbia, and has resisted the urges<lb/>
to move into bigger dues.<lb/>
"We love Columbia and are so<lb/>
grateful for all the support ithas given<lb/>
us he said. "All the pictures on the<lb/>
CD cover were taken in Columbia,<lb/>
and we won't forget where we came<lb/>
from. Thaf s why we've stayed put<lb/>
while so many other bands have de-<lb/>
rided to move to Atlanta, New York<lb/>
and LA"<lb/>
Rucker said the group hopes to<lb/>
pickuparioperiingslotonarnajortour<lb/>
when the CD is released. Should this<lb/>
be the case, it could prove to be the<lb/>
group's last performance at the Attic,<lb/>
as they will undoubtedly move into<lb/>
bigger venues. This could be a rare<lb/>
opportunity for Greenville music lov-<lb/>
erstosee,orrather listen to, the future.<lb/>
Kingston<lb/>
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Limit 4 persons per coupon. Must<lb/>
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Coupon expires June 15, 1994. Not<lb/>
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specials.<lb/>
Good at Greenville locations only.<lb/>
2903 E. 10th St.<lb/>
H<lb/>
Is<lb/>
?r<lb/>
2400 S. Memorial Dr. Greenville Buyers Market Greenville, NC 321-6960<lb/>
We axe celetkating. owe one yewt annwexdxvty<lb/>
Nancy Boone, Willie Boone, Michelle Rawles, Faye Joyner, and Carla Avery<lb/>
would like to say thank you for all your love and support!<lb/>
Michelle<lb/>
Nail technician<lb/>
Everybody is talking<lb/>
about Faye. She has over<lb/>
14 years of experience<lb/>
and a hairstyle just for<lb/>
you.<lb/>
Cet ready for summer<lb/>
with her new customer<lb/>
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Michelle says, "If your<lb/>
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Patrece says, "If your<lb/>
hair is not becoming to<lb/>
you, then you should be<lb/>
coming to Hair is<lb/>
Hair She will style<lb/>
your hair to bring out<lb/>
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Patrece<lb/>
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Carla is inviting new and<lb/>
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Haircuts 8.00<lb/>
Manicures 10.00<lb/>
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Carla<lb/>
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NEEDLE ON THEM AND SPIN 'EM, MUSIC COMES, GO FIGURE)<lb/>
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OUR MOTTO: IT IT AIN'T COT A HANDLE. IT AIN'T A MOG.<lb/>
Sunday<lb/>
Tuesday<lb/>
rLrkrkrkrkrkrkTLrkrk<lb/>
<pb facs="00058476_0007"/><lb/>
mmtmmmmmmmiimmmmm<lb/>
W?awiii i ?Mii?ir:<lb/>
The East Carolinian<lb/>
June 1. 1994<lb/>
Thoughts<lb/>
Hcdkey may not be the<lb/>
most popular sport in the<lb/>
South, buttheway this year's<lb/>
By N H L<lb/>
Brian Olson P?ffs<lb/>
 have un-<lb/>
Sports Editor , , , .<lb/>
folded<lb/>
would interest even the less<lb/>
than average sports fan.<lb/>
The Stanley Cup Finals,<lb/>
begun last night with game<lb/>
one between the New York<lb/>
Rangers and the Vancouver<lb/>
Canucks, will be another<lb/>
great series in these 1994<lb/>
playoffs.<lb/>
The two best teams are<lb/>
supposed to play in the<lb/>
Stanley Cup Finals, but they<lb/>
might have squared off in<lb/>
the Eastern Conference Fi-<lb/>
nalsover the past two weeks<lb/>
between the Rangersand the<lb/>
New Jersey Devils. The<lb/>
Rangers eliminated the Dev-<lb/>
ils in the final gameseven,2-<lb/>
1, in double overtime. The<lb/>
ghosts of 1940 can be laid to<lb/>
rest, but through much of<lb/>
the series it looked as if they<lb/>
would never disappear.<lb/>
New York was down 2-<lb/>
1 in the third period of Game<lb/>
Six and were facing elimina-<lb/>
tion on the Devils home ice<lb/>
at the Meadowlands. The<lb/>
stadium was full of energy<lb/>
and the impossible dreamof<lb/>
an upset was just 20 minutes<lb/>
away. With rookie<lb/>
goaltender Martin Brodeur<lb/>
stopping every puck that<lb/>
came his way, the Devils<lb/>
appeared headed to their<lb/>
first Stanley Cup.<lb/>
Enter playoff veteran<lb/>
Mark Messier.<lb/>
The quotes read "We'll<lb/>
win game six" on the front<lb/>
page of every New York<lb/>
newspaper. This mailman<lb/>
delivered.<lb/>
Messier would have a<lb/>
third period hat-trick en<lb/>
route to a 4-2 win to force<lb/>
game seven back at Madi-<lb/>
son Square Garden. His go-<lb/>
ahead goalbroughttheever-<lb/>
confident Devils to scratch<lb/>
their heads in disbelief.How<lb/>
could the league's No. 1 de-<lb/>
fense have such a let down,<lb/>
especially at home?<lb/>
Game seven was then<lb/>
anyone's to take. This long<lb/>
physical series would go to<lb/>
the team who wanted it the<lb/>
most and would go all outto<lb/>
do so.<lb/>
The teams battled<lb/>
through the first two peri-<lb/>
ods scoreless. The Rangers<lb/>
broke the ice and took a 1-0<lb/>
lead into the final seconds of<lb/>
regulation.<lb/>
The Devils were desper-<lb/>
ate and with about 15 sec-<lb/>
onds remaining, Brodeur<lb/>
went to the bench in favor of<lb/>
an extra skater. The Devils<lb/>
hung tough, forced a Ranger<lb/>
icing and capitalized on a<lb/>
face-off in the Ranger end.<lb/>
VaJery Zelepukinpicked up<lb/>
the loose puck and stuffed it<lb/>
by Mike Richter with seven<lb/>
seconds remaining. A pin<lb/>
cou'd have been dropped<lb/>
and heard in the Garden.<lb/>
The marathon series<lb/>
was not about to finish. The<lb/>
most exciting form of over-<lb/>
time, sudden death, would<lb/>
manufacture a champ.<lb/>
AfterascorelessfirstOT,<lb/>
Ranger Stephane Matteau<lb/>
wrapped around the game<lb/>
winner in double OT. Madi-<lb/>
son Square Garden was in<lb/>
an uproar and the ghosts<lb/>
were laid to rest.<lb/>
Ranger coach Mike<lb/>
Keenan, who constantly<lb/>
plays mind games, now<lb/>
makes his third trip to the<lb/>
Stanley Cup Finals with his<lb/>
third team (Philadelphia and<lb/>
Chicago were the others).<lb/>
The trip is well deserved be-<lb/>
cause N.Y. was also the best<lb/>
team during the regular sea-<lb/>
son.<lb/>
The Devils might have<lb/>
See OLSON page 8<lb/>
Sports<lb/>
Page<lb/>
Krzyzewski<lb/>
stays at home<lb/>
(AP) ? Duke coach Mike<lb/>
Krzyzewski said Tuesday he is<lb/>
happy there and will remain at the<lb/>
school.<lb/>
He has coached Duke to two<lb/>
national basketball titles and got-<lb/>
ten the Blue Devils into the NCAA<lb/>
Final Four seven times in nine years.<lb/>
Krzyzewski last week issued a<lb/>
terse statement confirming that he<lb/>
was exploring other job offers.<lb/>
However, some had warned<lb/>
Krzyzewski that learning to run a<lb/>
team the NBA way would be diffi-<lb/>
cult.<lb/>
"The game is different said<lb/>
fromer Portland coach-turned<lb/>
broadcaster Jack Ramsay in a tele-<lb/>
phone interview Monday. "The<lb/>
rules are different. It's almost a<lb/>
different sport. So, he's got to expe-<lb/>
rience that, and that's a huge ad-<lb/>
justment<lb/>
Kr7yzewski had some expo-<lb/>
iuje to the NBA as an assistant<lb/>
coach with the Dream Team that<lb/>
medal at the 1992 Barcelona Olym-<lb/>
pics.<lb/>
A major difference between the<lb/>
college and pro environments is<lb/>
the power a coach can apply to<lb/>
shape his team, Ramsay said.<lb/>
At Duke, Krzyzewski is able to<lb/>
mold a group of young adults into<lb/>
one unit. Making an impression on<lb/>
older men who receive huge sala-<lb/>
ries requires different coaching<lb/>
techniques.<lb/>
Ramsay said he never found a<lb/>
player who didn't want to learn<lb/>
how to play the game.<lb/>
"I found almost universally<lb/>
they all want to be taught hesaid.<lb/>
"But it'sa tough job, and it's gotten<lb/>
tougher because of the no-cut,<lb/>
highly lucrative player contracts,<lb/>
and the fact that management lev-<lb/>
els above the coach pretty much<lb/>
dictate who makes up the squad,<lb/>
and in some cases, who plays. I<lb/>
don't think you can coach if you<lb/>
don't have control f your players<lb/>
.?mi the men's basketball gold and have authority over them<lb/>
ECU earns respect<lb/>
(SID) ? ECU, along with 19<lb/>
other Division I-A football pro-<lb/>
grams, earned special recognition<lb/>
by the College Football Association<lb/>
in its yearly survey of graduation<lb/>
rates for football players, officials<lb/>
announced Tuesday.<lb/>
This year's survey is high-<lb/>
lighted by Duke University's 95.7<lb/>
percent graduation rate, earning the<lb/>
institution its sixth Academic<lb/>
Achievement Award.<lb/>
CFA ???????i<lb/>
u<lb/>
The<lb/>
Academic<lb/>
Acheivement<lb/>
Award was es-<lb/>
tablished in 1981<lb/>
and is presented<lb/>
annually by the<lb/>
Touchdown<lb/>
Club of Mem<lb/>
phis, Tenn. The<lb/>
award recog-<lb/>
nizes the CFA<lb/>
member with<lb/>
the highest<lb/>
graduation rate<lb/>
among mem- ?????????"<lb/>
bers of its football team.<lb/>
AlongwithECU,eighteen other<lb/>
CFA schools achieved honorable<lb/>
mention status for having gradua-<lb/>
tion rates of 70 percent or better.<lb/>
"Being among the universities<lb/>
L ing recognized for graduation<lb/>
rates of their football program is<lb/>
very satisfying said Dave Hart, Jr<lb/>
ECU Director of Athletics.<lb/>
"Colectively, we strive for academic<lb/>
achievement throughout our ath-<lb/>
letic program. We are honored and<lb/>
proud to be recognized in this fash-<lb/>
ion<lb/>
According to the CFA survey<lb/>
results, the overall graduation rate<lb/>
was 58 percent, a slight decrease<lb/>
from the 57 percent reported in 1992.<lb/>
The three CFA member classes<lb/>
recruited under Proposition 48<lb/>
?????????B (freshmen<lb/>
classes of 1986-<lb/>
88) have an av-<lb/>
erage gradua-<lb/>
tion rate of 58<lb/>
percent<lb/>
(graduated<lb/>
from 1991-93).<lb/>
This is an eight<lb/>
percent in-<lb/>
crease over the<lb/>
five-year pe-<lb/>
riod prior to<lb/>
Proposition 48<lb/>
(freshman<lb/>
classes of 1981-<lb/>
Being among the<lb/>
universities being<lb/>
recognized for<lb/>
graduation rates of<lb/>
their football<lb/>
program is very<lb/>
satisfying. 9<lb/>
Dave Hart, Jr.<lb/>
Director of Athletics<lb/>
85, graduated from 1986-90). The<lb/>
average graduation rate for the<lb/>
freshman class of 1976-80 was 45<lb/>
percent.<lb/>
TheCFAAcademic Achievement<lb/>
Award, and the honorable mention<lb/>
recipients, will be given plaques at the<lb/>
CFA'sannual meeting, which will take<lb/>
place June 3-5 in Dallas, Texas.<lb/>
Wilke hits academically<lb/>
(SID) ? Georgeann Wilke, a<lb/>
senior outfielder on the ECU soft-<lb/>
ball team, has been named to the<lb/>
1994 GTEAcademic All-<lb/>
America District III softball team,<lb/>
officials announced May 24.<lb/>
The Salem, N.J native has a<lb/>
3.45 cumulative grade point av-<lb/>
erage, while majoring in Thera-<lb/>
peutic Recreation at ECU.<lb/>
Wilke helped lead coach Sue<lb/>
Manahan's squad to a 40-24 over-<lb/>
all record in 1994 and a second<lb/>
straight berth in the ECAC<lb/>
Championships. Wilke hit .230<lb/>
this season with 18 RBI and 10<lb/>
stolen bases. She also commit<lb/>
ted only five errors in 126<lb/>
chances.<lb/>
Wilke has been named to the<lb/>
ECU Honor Roll and Dean's List<lb/>
and is a member of the Student-<lb/>
Athlete Advisory Council. In<lb/>
1993, she was the female winner<lb/>
of the Texasgulf Outstanding<lb/>
Scholar-Athlete Award.<lb/>
District III covers the states<lb/>
of Florida, Georgia, North Caro-<lb/>
lina, South Carolina and Virginia.<lb/>
Voting is done by the College-<lb/>
Sports Information Directors of<lb/>
America. Wilke will now be eli-<lb/>
gible for the All-America team,<lb/>
which will be announced June 9.<lb/>
Track teams shaping up<lb/>
Dava Rhodes<lb/>
Tara Rhodes<lb/>
Lady Pirates fare well at ECAC event<lb/>
(SID) ? The 1994 Lady Pi-<lb/>
rate Track team enjoyed its best<lb/>
season to date by claiming 14th<lb/>
place at the ECAC Outdoor<lb/>
Championshiplast weekend<lb/>
hosted by George Mason Uni-<lb/>
versity. ECU was led by the out-<lb/>
standing freshman duo of sisters<lb/>
Dava and Tara Rhodes. Dava<lb/>
was the first ever ECU female<lb/>
athlete to win an event at the<lb/>
ECAC Outdoor Championship.<lb/>
With the victory Dava also shat-<lb/>
tered ECU's 10,000M school<lb/>
record. Her ECAC time of 35.13.43<lb/>
broke the school record by more<lb/>
than one minute. Tara also had an<lb/>
excellent season which culminated<lb/>
in a fifth-place finish at the ECAC<lb/>
meet.<lb/>
The Lady Pirates scored a<lb/>
school-best, 16 overall points,<lb/>
which was one better than CAA<lb/>
foe James Madison. Freshman Lave<lb/>
Wilson had a good meet finishing<lb/>
13th overall in the triple jump with<lb/>
a distance of 387.75 The 4x100<lb/>
team consisting of Carla Powell,<lb/>
Amanda Johnson, Shantell<lb/>
Carter, and Nicole Crews also<lb/>
had an excellent meet finishing<lb/>
seventh overall with a time of<lb/>
47.22<lb/>
Coach Charles "Choo" Jus-<lb/>
tice was very pleased with the<lb/>
meet and said, "Dava's win takes<lb/>
us as a team to another level.<lb/>
This meet fields some of the best<lb/>
teams in the country, and with<lb/>
no seniors competing for us at<lb/>
EC AC's, we will be able to build<lb/>
and grow for the future<lb/>
i<lb/>
-<lb/>
Photo by Garret Killian<lb/>
ECU track members from left to right: Brian Johnson, Kareem Lamb, Lewis Harris and Dwight Henry.<lb/>
GMU<lb/>
(SID)?The ECU men's track<lb/>
program finished theirseason May<lb/>
21-22 after competing in the IC4A<lb/>
championships held at George<lb/>
Mason University. The Pirates'<lb/>
performance was highlighted by a<lb/>
championship run in the 4x400 re-<lb/>
lay. The ECU squad, consisting of<lb/>
Brian Johnson, Kareem Lamb,<lb/>
Lewis Harris, and Dwight Henry,<lb/>
finished nearly two seconds ahead<lb/>
of the rest of the field at 3.07.99. The<lb/>
victory was a grea t ending to a disap-<lb/>
pointingseason for coach Bill Carson.<lb/>
"It was a great win Carson<lb/>
said. "If we only had two more<lb/>
weeks, we could have qualified for<lb/>
nationals, but that's the way things<lb/>
go<lb/>
Pirate triple-jumper Chris<lb/>
McKinney alsocame through with a<lb/>
personal best jump to finish 5th.<lb/>
McKinney landed at 50-feet-00.75<lb/>
inches to score for the Pirates.<lb/>
Senior Charles Miles finished<lb/>
his career at ECU with a 10.81 sec-<lb/>
ond performance in the 100 meter<lb/>
dash, finishing seventh. Teammate<lb/>
Kareem Lamb finished sixth in the<lb/>
400 meter dash at 47.64.<lb/>
The 4x100 relay run was not as<lb/>
successful as the 4x400 squad, as<lb/>
runners Brian Johnsonand Charles<lb/>
Miles were victim to a faulty ex-<lb/>
change. The squad finished 8th at<lb/>
41.07<lb/>
this season with 18 RBI and 10 gible for the All-America ream, of the rest of the field at 3.07.99.1 he inches to score ror me i u?i?. ?? <lb/>
stolen bases. She also commit- which will be announced June 9. <lb/>
Russian Rocket set to explode during the 1994 Stanley Cup Finals<lb/>
  v.uv.?i,?,K,mhi? "Thev come out of an elitist Rangers goaltender Mike Rid<lb/>
(AP) ? Growing up in Russia,<lb/>
Pavel Bure never thought much<lb/>
about the Stanley Cup.<lb/>
Same thing for Sergei Zubov,<lb/>
another of the Russian players in<lb/>
the Stanley Cup finals.<lb/>
But one of them will make his-<lb/>
tory for his country in the series<lb/>
between the Vancouver Canucks<lb/>
and New York Rangers which<lb/>
started last night.<lb/>
For the first time, a Russian will<lb/>
havehisnameenscribedontheCup.<lb/>
"Yes, I know about that said<lb/>
Zubov, the defenseman who led<lb/>
the Rangers m scoring this season<lb/>
with 89 points. "I hope it's me.<lb/>
"I ha v e everything else, includ-<lb/>
ing a gold medal from the Olym-<lb/>
pics. But the Stanley Cup is bigger<lb/>
than the Olympics<lb/>
Bure, the Canucks' 60-goal<lb/>
scorer and a boyhood pal of Zubov<lb/>
from Moscow, has also made the<lb/>
Cup his holy grail.<lb/>
"Since I've come into the NHL<lb/>
he said, "I've wanted to win the<lb/>
Cup. I think I've been here long<lb/>
enough to know what it means<lb/>
Bure is on!v in his third year in<lb/>
the NHL but has established him-<lb/>
self as a powerful offensive force.<lb/>
Zubov has, too, although only in his<lb/>
second year.<lb/>
They are among a current crop<lb/>
of superb Russian players in the<lb/>
NHL who have made an impact.<lb/>
Along with Zubov, forwards Alexei<lb/>
Kovalev and Sergei Nemchinov and<lb/>
defenseman Alexander Karpov tsev<lb/>
have played important roles in the<lb/>
Rangers' charge to the finals.<lb/>
"It will be great for the series<lb/>
Ron Smith said, who, as a Rangers'<lb/>
coach for part of last season and a<lb/>
Canucks' assistant this year, has<lb/>
coached all of the Russians playing<lb/>
in the finals.<lb/>
"They come out of an elitist<lb/>
program, and they are all highly<lb/>
skilled players. They have just ac-<lb/>
celerated daily" since joining the<lb/>
NHL, he said. ,<lb/>
That's an apt description of the<lb/>
Russians currently in the NHL. Just<lb/>
about all of them are great skaters<lb/>
and have marvelous puck-handling<lb/>
skills.<lb/>
Bure is a case in point. He is<lb/>
nicknamed "The Russian Rocket"<lb/>
because of amazing speed which<lb/>
often sets up breakaway situations<lb/>
that put goaltenders at his mercy.<lb/>
"He's a complete player<lb/>
Rangers goaltender Mike Richter<lb/>
said. "He's very, very strong. He<lb/>
has a fantastic shot and he gets it<lb/>
off quickly.<lb/>
"He anticipates well. But his<lb/>
physical skillsare second to none<lb/>
Added Kovalev on his coun-<lb/>
trvman:<lb/>
"I watched him play against<lb/>
Toronto. Nobody can stop him.<lb/>
We need to skate to stop him<lb/>
Kovalev himself is no slouch<lb/>
in the speed department, nor are<lb/>
Zubv, Nemchinov or<lb/>
See NHL page 8<lb/>
<pb facs="00058476_0008"/><lb/>
8 The East Carolinian<lb/>
June 1. 1994<lb/>
Ward named player of year<lb/>
(SID)-ECU senior outfielder<lb/>
Michelle Ward has been named<lb/>
the 1994 ECAC (Eastern College<lb/>
Athletic Conference) Player of the<lb/>
Year while teammate Lisa<lb/>
Corprew joins Ward on the ECAC<lb/>
All-Stars First Team.<lb/>
Ward, who holds the NCAA<lb/>
national stolen base record for<lb/>
single season (80,1994) and career<lb/>
(193), played in 59 games for the<lb/>
Lady Pirates in 1994 and posted a<lb/>
.413 batting average with 17 runs<lb/>
batted in. In current NCAA statis-<lb/>
tics, Ward is third in the nation in<lb/>
stolen bases per games with an<lb/>
average of 1.311.<lb/>
The Virginia Beach, Va. na-<lb/>
tive and All-American candidate<lb/>
was a repeat performer on the<lb/>
All-State First team. She is the ECU<lb/>
career leader in batting with a .384<lb/>
average, runs scored (164), hits<lb/>
(229) as well as stolen bases (193).<lb/>
Joining Ward on the All-Star<lb/>
team is ECU senior catcher Lisa<lb/>
Corprew. Corprew also hails from<lb/>
Virginia Beach and was a high<lb/>
school teammate of Ward at<lb/>
Bayside High.<lb/>
Corprew batted .317 in 1994,<lb/>
drove in 30 runs as well has steal-<lb/>
ing 433 bases. Corprew hit six<lb/>
doubles and six triples in 1994<lb/>
and led the Lady Pirates with two<lb/>
home runs.<lb/>
ECU scareer home runs leader<lb/>
with 11 homers from 1191-94,<lb/>
Corprew is second on the all-time<lb/>
RBI list with 99 and third career<lb/>
stolen bases with 82. She also set a<lb/>
career record for games played<lb/>
with 211 and is the third all-time<lb/>
leader in runs (111) an hits (157).<lb/>
Corprew and Ward helped<lb/>
guide ECU to a 1411-79 overall<lb/>
record in the last four years (40-24<lb/>
in 1994) which included two 40<lb/>
win seasons and back-to-back<lb/>
berths to the ECAC Softball cham-<lb/>
pionship.<lb/>
The Sports<lb/>
Department<lb/>
needs<lb/>
Courier outlasts Sampras<lb/>
Summer<lb/>
and Fall!<lb/>
Blame Penske and his turbocharged engine<lb/>
(AP) ? Roger Penske won the<lb/>
Indy 500. He also ruined it.<lb/>
When the car owner with the<lb/>
deepest pockets shows up at the<lb/>
Brickyard with the most talented<lb/>
drivers and a turbocharged<lb/>
Mercedes V8 engine, set up by the<lb/>
world's best design team for just this<lb/>
one race, the only reason to run it is<lb/>
to find out which of his entries gets<lb/>
the victory lap.<lb/>
For the record, it was Al Unser<lb/>
Jr who led 48 of the 200 laps. But it<lb/>
just as easily could have been team-<lb/>
mate Emerson Fittipaldi, who led all<lb/>
but seven of the remaining 152 laps.<lb/>
Or even Paul Tracy, the tiiird mem-<lb/>
ber of Team Penske, whose day<lb/>
ended on lap 92 with a busted turbo-<lb/>
charger that gave the silver-haired<lb/>
maestro one of his few anxious mo-<lb/>
ments.<lb/>
"I didn't win this race 10 times,<lb/>
the people who work for me woi<lb/>
this race 10 times Penske said Sun-<lb/>
OLSON<lb/>
day.<lb/>
That, depending on your view,<lb/>
is either passing around the credit or<lb/>
the blame.<lb/>
What Penske did was fair How-<lb/>
ever, if he didn't violate the letter of<lb/>
Indy's laws, he certainly violated the<lb/>
spirit. Whether he gets the chance to<lb/>
claim an 1 lthsilver trophy as easily as<lb/>
he picked up No. 10 could well de-<lb/>
pend on how much smarter the<lb/>
rulemakers become in the next year.<lb/>
Penske madetheoutcomeaspre-<lb/>
dictable as it was monotonous. Unser<lb/>
began as the pole-sitter and Fittipaldi<lb/>
on the outside of the front row with<lb/>
Brazilian Raul Boesel sandwiched be-<lb/>
tween them. By fheend of the first lap,<lb/>
the two Penske Mercedes roared re-<lb/>
morselessly away from the starting<lb/>
grid and were 10 car-lengths clear of<lb/>
the underpowered field. Then, they<lb/>
began picking through the various<lb/>
mishaps, wrecks and debns toward<lb/>
what seemed like the pre-ordained<lb/>
Continued from page 7<lb/>
finish<lb/>
By lap 150, the two of them and<lb/>
pesky rookie Jacques Villeneuve were<lb/>
the only three drivers still on the lead<lb/>
lap. By lap 180, Unser and Fittipaldi<lb/>
had the track pretty much to them-<lb/>
selves. Evenso, Unser had the gnawing<lb/>
sense that the race was Firtipaldi's to<lb/>
lose.<lb/>
"But the race ain't over 'til the fat<lb/>
lady sings he said. "I've won several<lb/>
races on the very last lap and I've lost<lb/>
several races on the very last lap<lb/>
Other than Tracy's problem, the<lb/>
only other anxious moment Penske<lb/>
had to suffer through was when Unser<lb/>
and Fittipaldi tried to resolve their little<lb/>
"competition" problem without ruin-<lb/>
ing both cars.<lb/>
Coming out of Turn 4 with the<lb/>
lead, Fittipaldi drafted behind Unser<lb/>
and tried to slingshot pasthim. Instead,<lb/>
his car lost the downforce that makes it<lb/>
stick tothetrack,drifted to therightand<lb/>
into the wall justshortof thestart-finish<lb/>
line. The Brazilian wound up 17th<lb/>
"It's a real shame what hap-<lb/>
pened Fittipaldi said. "It's a shame<lb/>
it wasn't 1 and 2"<lb/>
That was almost certainly what<lb/>
Penske envisioned last November<lb/>
when, afterstudying the United States<lb/>
Auto Club rules for the 1994 race, he<lb/>
found a loophole that he could drive<lb/>
a Mercedes through<lb/>
Three yearsago, US AC hoped to<lb/>
shore up the poorest teams here and<lb/>
encourage American manufacturers<lb/>
to invest more in Indy-car racing by<lb/>
allowing stock-block engines an ad-<lb/>
ditional 10 pounds of turbocharger<lb/>
boost.<lb/>
What USAC had in mind was<lb/>
restoring the competitiveness of an<lb/>
aging Buick engine that has been in<lb/>
use here since 1987. Wha t they could<lb/>
not riave imagined was that Penske,<lb/>
as smart as he is rich, would devote<lb/>
his considerable resourcefulness to<lb/>
skewering their kindness.<lb/>
(AP) ? Jim Courier dashed<lb/>
archrival Pete Sampras' dream of a<lb/>
fourth straight Grand Slam title,<lb/>
outplaying the world No. 1 in four<lb/>
sets yesterday in the quarterfinals<lb/>
of the French Open.<lb/>
Courier, seeking to regain the<lb/>
crown he won in 1991 and 1992, had<lb/>
lost 10 of 12 matches to Sampras,<lb/>
including the last four in a row. But<lb/>
this was their first clash on clay, and<lb/>
the No. 7 seed showed why he likes<lb/>
the surface with a relentless 6-4,5-7,<lb/>
6-4,6-4 victory.<lb/>
Courier will seek revenge in<lb/>
Friday's semifinals against Sergi<lb/>
Bruguera, who dethroned him in<lb/>
last year's final. The Spaniard, yet to<lb/>
lose a set in five ma tches here, ousted<lb/>
fourth-seed Andrei Medvedev of<lb/>
Ukraine 6-3,6-2,7-5.<lb/>
At the net after match point,<lb/>
Courier said he apologized to<lb/>
Sampras for breaking the Grand<lb/>
NHL<lb/>
Slam streak.<lb/>
"You go out there and play<lb/>
the best you can Courier said,<lb/>
speaking French to a local TV net-<lb/>
work. "That's life<lb/>
In women's quarterfinals, top-<lb/>
seeded Steffi Graf and record-set-<lb/>
ting Mary Pierce each won deci-<lb/>
sively to set up a much-anticipated<lb/>
semifinal showdown Thursday.<lb/>
Pierce, the power-hitting No.<lb/>
12 seed, routed Austrian Petra<lb/>
Ritter 6-0, 6-2 to reach a Grand<lb/>
Slam semifinal for the first time. In<lb/>
her five matches through the<lb/>
quarterfinals, Pierce has lost only<lb/>
six games, the best showing ever<lb/>
in the tournament.<lb/>
Graf overcame 36th-ranked<lb/>
Ines Gorrochategui of Argentina,<lb/>
6-4, 6-1. She has reached at least<lb/>
the semifinals in every French<lb/>
Open since 1987, when she won<lb/>
the first of her three titles.<lb/>
Continued from page 7<lb/>
Karpovtsev.<lb/>
When the Rangers needed more<lb/>
neu tral-zone speed against the New<lb/>
Jersey Devils in the Eastern Confer-<lb/>
ence finals, coach Mike Keenan gave<lb/>
Nemchinov more ice time.<lb/>
When the Rangers needed<lb/>
some spark on their No. 1 line in the<lb/>
same series, Keenan put Kovalev<lb/>
on the wing with Mark Messier and<lb/>
Adam Graves.<lb/>
When the Rangers wanted to<lb/>
juice up their offense, they put<lb/>
Zubov on the back line with Brian<lb/>
Leetch, another offensive-minded<lb/>
defenseman.<lb/>
"The Russians have influ-<lb/>
enced us positively Canucks'<lb/>
general manager-coach PatQuinn<lb/>
said. "They have puck-handling<lb/>
and skating skills that the Cana-<lb/>
dian boys don't have<lb/>
Noted Trevor Linden, the<lb/>
Canucks' captain: "Their style is<lb/>
speed. It's certainly impacted on<lb/>
our hockey team. I'm sure it's im-<lb/>
pacted the Rangers). They have<lb/>
several Russian players; all have<lb/>
speed. The European influence has<lb/>
opened up the game<lb/>
ALFREDO'S<lb/>
New York PIZZA<lb/>
ALFREDO'S<lb/>
r<lb/>
lost the series, but in the hearts of<lb/>
many, are still champs. This under-<lb/>
dog team faced adversity all sea-<lb/>
son. Since the Devils came to East<lb/>
Rutherford, N.J in 1982 from Colo-<lb/>
rado, they have never gained re-<lb/>
spect beca use of the other local teams<lb/>
(Rangers, N.Y. Islanders). Now, af-<lb/>
ter this season, they have established<lb/>
their own identity.<lb/>
Devil veterans Bernie Nicholls<lb/>
and Bobby Carpenter would go on<lb/>
to say that this is the best team that<lb/>
they have ever played on. That is<lb/>
something to say when Nicholls<lb/>
has played with Edmonton when<lb/>
they were a destiny and Carpenter<lb/>
has played with some great Boston<lb/>
teams. The Devils might not have<lb/>
had the best individual stars, but<lb/>
their team make-up was extraordi-<lb/>
nary.<lb/>
The Devils had a hard time sell-<lb/>
ing seats during the regular season,<lb/>
and in the wars with N.Y half the<lb/>
fans were wearing the red, white<lb/>
and blue shirts of the Rangers. All of<lb/>
the media hoopla helped make the<lb/>
Devils a true and unforgettable ac-<lb/>
complished underdog.<lb/>
Thesportstalkradiostationsand<lb/>
the NY newspapers never gave the<lb/>
Devils a fair-shake, but maybe now<lb/>
they will get some deserved respect.<lb/>
Brand New For '94<lb/>
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<pb facs="00058476_0009"/>
</div></body></text></TEI>