<?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">
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<pb facs="00058479_0001"/>
<lb/>
?. ? ??: ??<lb/>
?<lb/>
Sports<lb/>
The Heat Is On!<lb/>
As first summer session winds<lb/>
down, so does intramural<lb/>
basketball and softball. See<lb/>
story on page 7.<lb/>
Lifestyle<lb/>
Kindread Soul to Phunk Attic<lb/>
Kindread Soul, one of<lb/>
Columbia, South Carolina's<lb/>
hottest new bands, will<lb/>
deliver their fusion of<lb/>
reggae and "phunk" at the<lb/>
Attic this Saturday. Page 5. j<lb/>
<lb/>
!<lb/>
Today<lb/>
Tomorrow<lb/>
<lb/>
The East Carolinian<lb/>
Vol. 69 No. 32333<lb/>
Circulation 5,000<lb/>
Greenville, North Carolina<lb/>
Wednesday, June 15,1994<lb/>
8 Pages<lb/>
NCSU beats ECU in fundraising<lb/>
Jason Williams<lb/>
News Editor<lb/>
While ECU students ante up<lb/>
$40 more in new student fees for<lb/>
the renovation of Minges Coli-<lb/>
seum, students at N.C. State will<lb/>
get a new basketball arena free of<lb/>
charge. The State of North Caro-<lb/>
lina, the City of RaleighWake<lb/>
Countvand the Student Aid Foun-<lb/>
dation are providing the funds<lb/>
for a 23,000 seat complex to be<lb/>
built near Carter-Finley Stadium.<lb/>
Seventv dollars out of the<lb/>
total of S793 in student fees will<lb/>
go toward the renovation of<lb/>
Minges, said Dave Bishop, comp-<lb/>
troller at ECU. The Board of Gov-<lb/>
ernors approved an increase of<lb/>
$97 in student fees, of which $40<lb/>
will go to Minges.<lb/>
Bishop said the project will<lb/>
cost SI 1.4 million in all, with S8.9<lb/>
million coming from student fees.<lb/>
The remaining $2.5 million will<lb/>
come from the state.<lb/>
"The $8.9 million will be<lb/>
funded by a bond sale that took<lb/>
place at the Board of Governors<lb/>
meeting last week Bishop said.<lb/>
"The money will be paid back<lb/>
over the period of 15 years to the<lb/>
tune of about $1 million a year.<lb/>
Through the work of our Board of<lb/>
Trustees, we were able to get the<lb/>
state to kick in some of the money<lb/>
NCSU's arena will cost an<lb/>
estimated $70 million and is part<lb/>
of a joint venture between the<lb/>
state, the city and the university,<lb/>
said Kenny Forrest, NCSU's fa-<lb/>
cilities director. "It's going to be a<lb/>
multipurpose facility along the<lb/>
same design as the Charlotte Coli-<lb/>
seum he said.<lb/>
Soldiers'<lb/>
crypt<lb/>
found<lb/>
By Stephanie Lassiter<lb/>
Assistant News Editor<lb/>
ECU faculty members re-<lb/>
cently joined a team of scientists<lb/>
and humanists who uncovered<lb/>
a crypt of Confederate soldiers.<lb/>
The crypt, located in New Bern,<lb/>
was opened bv Public Works on<lb/>
April 15.<lb/>
John Patterson, a mem-<lb/>
ber of the ECU Communication<lb/>
department, led the group.<lb/>
Eventually, the research from<lb/>
the investigations may be used<lb/>
in an article in theNorf; Carolina<lb/>
Literary Review (NCLR).<lb/>
"We are very interested in<lb/>
what's found out from it said<lb/>
Alex Albright, editor of NCLR.<lb/>
"It's an ongoing project<lb/>
The crypt is 60 feet long<lb/>
and contains bodies of soldiers<lb/>
who were killed in the Battle of<lb/>
New Bern, N.C. on March 14,<lb/>
1862. A stone monument was<lb/>
dedicated in 1885 to the Confed-<lb/>
erate dead. Four slate slabs, each<lb/>
weighing a ton, seal the tomb.<lb/>
Patsy Collier, a secretary<lb/>
in the English department, was<lb/>
a member of the team. Collier<lb/>
said the skeletons did not look<lb/>
like she had expected.<lb/>
"It was very interesting ?<lb/>
a little eerie at first when getting<lb/>
used to seeing the skeletons<lb/>
Collier said. "The skeletons were<lb/>
not white, they were a clay- look-<lb/>
ing color. We had to go down a<lb/>
12-foot ladder<lb/>
See DIG page 2<lb/>
Photo by Harold Wise<lb/>
This is a picture of Minges Coliseum in the middle of construction. If ECU had to rely on state funds for this<lb/>
construction project, what you see here is as far as it would get.<lb/>
"The city and the county<lb/>
have given us a third, the state<lb/>
will give us a third and the uni-<lb/>
versity will come up with a third<lb/>
Forrest said.<lb/>
He said as far as he knew,<lb/>
student fees were not going to<lb/>
fund the construction project.<lb/>
"The burden of coming up<lb/>
with our third will fall on the Stu-<lb/>
dent Aid Foundation Forrest<lb/>
said. "We are still waiting on the<lb/>
state to come up with their third,<lb/>
and I believe the city and county<lb/>
are getting a lot of their money<lb/>
from the hotelrestaurant tax<lb/>
The structure, which will<lb/>
replace Reynolds Coliseum as<lb/>
home to NCSU's basketball team,<lb/>
should be completed by mid-Oc-<lb/>
tober, Forrest said. State will also<lb/>
renovate Carter-FinJey Stadium<lb/>
at a later date.<lb/>
Charles Bloom, ECU'S<lb/>
Sports Information Director, said<lb/>
the Minges construction is on<lb/>
schedule and the renovation will<lb/>
improve the racility.<lb/>
"They're working on it ev-<lb/>
ery day Bloom said. "The build-<lb/>
ing is looking like a complete shell.<lb/>
They are taking everything out<lb/>
and putting all new stuff back in<lb/>
Bloom said the new coli-<lb/>
seum will gain 1,000 seats, for a<lb/>
total of 7,500 theater-type seats, a<lb/>
new scoreboard, new flooring,<lb/>
new locker rooms, a new conces-<lb/>
sion area, a new pressroom, addi-<lb/>
tional restrooms and air condi-<lb/>
tioning. "The entire building will<lb/>
take on a modern look<lb/>
Legislators to convene at ECU<lb/>
Wendy Rountree<lb/>
Staff Writer<lb/>
During the next four weeks,<lb/>
the ECU Rural Education Institute<lb/>
will operate the 1994 Eastern Leg-<lb/>
islators' School for Youth Leader-<lb/>
ship Development Program for 292<lb/>
junior and senior high school stu-<lb/>
dents.<lb/>
"Students from the eastern<lb/>
51 counties in North Carolina were<lb/>
invited to attend said Katee<lb/>
Tully, director of the ECU Legisla-<lb/>
tors' program, "and were nomi-<lb/>
nated by their school systems as<lb/>
students who demonstrated lead-<lb/>
ership potential<lb/>
Eighth and ninth grade stu-<lb/>
dents will attend the program for<lb/>
two weeks from June 19 to July 1.<lb/>
Rising tenth, eleventh, and twelfth<lb/>
grade students will attend the sec-<lb/>
ond session from July 3 to Julv 15.<lb/>
The students will reside in<lb/>
Greene Residence Hall and will<lb/>
have their workshop classes in the<lb/>
General Classroom Building. All<lb/>
of the students' expenses, except<lb/>
transportation to and from cam-<lb/>
pus, will be paid for by scholar-<lb/>
ships funded by the North Caro-<lb/>
lina General Assembly.<lb/>
Tully said in 1986 the leader-<lb/>
ship program was started by key<lb/>
eastern North Carolina legislators<lb/>
such as Ed Warren, who was a<lb/>
N.C. State Representative at the<lb/>
time and is now a N.C. State Sena-<lb/>
tor and Howard Chapin, now a<lb/>
retired N.C. State Representative.<lb/>
Locally CharlesCoble, ECU's dean<lb/>
of the School of Education, also<lb/>
pushed for the program. This will<lb/>
be the program's ninth year.<lb/>
The program was started be-<lb/>
cause "the feeling was that we<lb/>
needed to cultivate leadership in<lb/>
rural counties of North Carolina<lb/>
and we needed to start the process<lb/>
with young people Tully said.<lb/>
"The idea is that the students will<lb/>
return to their communities and<lb/>
schools as agents for change<lb/>
The program caters to rural<lb/>
students who do not have the op-<lb/>
portunities to be involved with the<lb/>
gifted and talented programs in<lb/>
their respective schools.<lb/>
"Confident and strong lead-<lb/>
ers are not necessarily tied into<lb/>
academic performance Tully<lb/>
said. "Rural students didn't have<lb/>
the opportunities. The idea is to do<lb/>
programming for them and make<lb/>
more broad based leadership de-<lb/>
velopment<lb/>
During the two-week ses-<lb/>
sions, students learn by using the<lb/>
fundamental strategies of coopera-<lb/>
tiveteam-oriented learning.<lb/>
"Thisyear'sprogram is based<lb/>
on the book by Stephen R. Covev,<lb/>
The 7 Habits of Highly Effective<lb/>
People Tully said. Among the<lb/>
seven habits are "Be pro active"<lb/>
and "Put First things First<lb/>
Tullv said that the program<lb/>
includes special events such as the<lb/>
See LEGISLATURE page 2<lb/>
First orientation<lb/>
began Sunday<lb/>
d Stephanie Lassiter<lb/>
Assistant News Editor<lb/>
Monday night, Dean of<lb/>
Students Ronald Speier and<lb/>
SGA President Ian Eastman<lb/>
addressed incoming fresh-<lb/>
men on similar issues, yet<lb/>
each took a different ap-<lb/>
proach warning the future<lb/>
students about the draw-<lb/>
backs of partying.<lb/>
The first of five orien-<lb/>
tation sessions opened Sun-<lb/>
day to a group of nearly 450<lb/>
students. The students spent<lb/>
Monday being tested in<lb/>
mathematics and English<lb/>
writing skills, and other op-<lb/>
tional subjects. Some of these<lb/>
students will place out of<lb/>
Algebra 1065, others will be<lb/>
required to take a math lab<lb/>
prior to taking Algebra.<lb/>
Later Monday night,<lb/>
the students gathered in<lb/>
Mendenhall for a welcom-<lb/>
ing address by Al Matthews,<lb/>
vice chancellor for student<lb/>
life.<lb/>
"This is an important<lb/>
meeting for you because we<lb/>
are going to talk about prior<lb/>
warnings Matthews said.<lb/>
"What this does is take away<lb/>
from the 1 did not know'<lb/>
when the time comes<lb/>
Matthews discussed<lb/>
civility in relation to the<lb/>
students. He said the new<lb/>
students have the right of<lb/>
access to the university,<lb/>
as well as responsibility<lb/>
to the university.<lb/>
"ECU has very little<lb/>
tolerance for the abuse of<lb/>
alcohol Matthews said.<lb/>
"Possession of weapons<lb/>
is not tolerated. Some of<lb/>
vou are sexually active. It<lb/>
is not the role of the uni-<lb/>
versity to judge<lb/>
Matthews also en-<lb/>
couraged men to be cau-<lb/>
tious of situations that<lb/>
could result in date rape<lb/>
accusations. He ended his<lb/>
speech by introducing<lb/>
SGA President Ian<lb/>
Eastman.<lb/>
Eastman also wel-<lb/>
comed the new students<lb/>
to ECU and spoke on the<lb/>
advantages and disad-<lb/>
vantages of partying.<lb/>
Eastman cited his own<lb/>
academic career as an ex-<lb/>
ample that excessive par-<lb/>
tying can lead to a quick<lb/>
declination of their GPAs.<lb/>
"Your main objec-<lb/>
tive when coming to ECU<lb/>
See ORIENTATION page 2<lb/>
Photo by Leslie Petty<lb/>
Incoming freshmen have descended on campus for the first<lb/>
of six orientations. Don't they look excited?<lb/>
Federal judge rules Exxon may be liable for damages in Valdez oil spill<lb/>
ANCHORAGE, Alaska<lb/>
(AP) ? A federal jury has opened<lb/>
the way for victims of the Exxon<lb/>
Valdez disaster to seek $15 billion<lb/>
in punitive damages from Exxon<lb/>
Corp. and skipper Joseph<lb/>
Hazel wood, ruling that their reck-<lb/>
lessness led to the nation's worst<lb/>
oil sl .11.<lb/>
he more than 10,000 fisher-<lb/>
men, Alaska natives and prop-<lb/>
erty owners who are suing claim<lb/>
that Hazelwood was drunk the<lb/>
night of the spill and that Exxon<lb/>
had known about his drinking for<lb/>
years and left him in command<lb/>
anyway.<lb/>
The jury deliberated for<lb/>
more than four davs before find-<lb/>
ing recklessness a necessary step<lb/>
in the plaintiffs' attempt to collect<lb/>
punitive damages for the 11-mil-<lb/>
lion-gallon spill that blackened<lb/>
Prince William Sound in 1989. The<lb/>
jury also said Monday that<lb/>
Hazelwood acted negligently.<lb/>
The 12 jurors will decide<lb/>
how much to award in damages<lb/>
during the next phase of the case,<lb/>
expected to begin next month.<lb/>
"It's my fervent hope the<lb/>
punitives are set at a level that<lb/>
wil'notbejustadropinthebucket<lb/>
for Exxon said Dome<lb/>
Hawxhurst, executive director of<lb/>
the 300-member Cordova District<lb/>
Fishermen United. "Exxon effec-<lb/>
tively ruined our community, and<lb/>
I don't want to see that happen to<lb/>
other communities<lb/>
Theplaintiffsareseeking$15<lb/>
billion in punitive damages and<lb/>
about $1.5 billion in compensa-<lb/>
tory damages. Punitive damages<lb/>
are meant to punish and deter<lb/>
wrongdoing. Compensatory<lb/>
damages cover actual losses.<lb/>
"Exxon still thinks it's above<lb/>
the law said Brian O'Neill, the<lb/>
plaintiffs' lawyer. "You need to<lb/>
take a substantial bite out of their<lb/>
b utt before you can change them<lb/>
He and his legal team swept<lb/>
each other up in a silent, tearful<lb/>
hug after hearing the verdict.<lb/>
Exxon stock fell $2,625 after<lb/>
the verdict, closing at $59.50.<lb/>
Hazelwood refused to an-<lb/>
swer questions. One of his law-<lb/>
yers, Thomas Russo, said the<lb/>
former tanker captain will keep<lb/>
trving to clear his name.<lb/>
At Exxon's Texas headquar-<lb/>
ters, Chairman Lee Raymond<lb/>
apologized to the victims and said<lb/>
the company has been punished<lb/>
enough. The compart) has said<lb/>
the spill has cost it more than $3<lb/>
billion.<lb/>
The plaintiffs contest that<lb/>
total, saying it includes legal, pub-<lb/>
lic relations and other expenses<lb/>
not directly tied to the cleanup.<lb/>
Defense lawyers admitted<lb/>
1 lazelwood had a tew drinks be-<lb/>
fore sailing, but said alcohol had<lb/>
nothing to do w ith the wreck. In<lb/>
1990, he was found innocent of<lb/>
operating his ship under the in-<lb/>
fluence of alcohol, but was con-<lb/>
victed of the negligent discharge<lb/>
of oil.<lb/>
The defense blamed the<lb/>
grounding on third mate Greg<lb/>
c ousins.savmg he railed tocarry<lb/>
out i simple turn Hazelwood<lb/>
ordered before leaving the<lb/>
tanker's bridge to tend to other<lb/>
business. Cousins was at a loss<lb/>
to explain why he failed to ex-<lb/>
ecute the turn.<lb/>
Russo and Exxon lawyer<lb/>
Patrick I ynch s.iui an appeal is<lb/>
possible, but it can't ho tiled until<lb/>
tiio entire trial i over.<lb/>
<lb/>
<pb facs="00058479_0002"/><lb/>
2 The East Carolinian<lb/>
June 15,1994<lb/>
June 6<lb/>
Willis Building ? A staff member reported damage to one of<lb/>
the north windows of the Willis Building.<lb/>
Christenbury Gym ? A student reported the attempted break-<lb/>
ing and entering of a locker in the men's locker room in<lb/>
Christenbury Gym.<lb/>
June 7<lb/>
Flanagan Sylvan Amphitheater ? An officer discovered an<lb/>
intoxicated subject passed out in the Flanagan Sylvan Amphi-<lb/>
theater. It was discovered that the Pitt County Sheriff's Depart-<lb/>
ment had warrants on this subject.<lb/>
Whichard ?A Housekeeping supervisor reported the acciden-<lb/>
tal breaking of a window in a door in the Whichard Building.<lb/>
Allied Health ?Officers responded to the area of Allied Health<lb/>
after a report of a woman screaming at Stratford Arms Apart-<lb/>
ments.<lb/>
June 8<lb/>
Outpatient Center ? An employee reported three potted<lb/>
plants on the west side of the Outpatient Center were creating<lb/>
a traffic hazard.<lb/>
Print Shop ? An officer responded to the Print Shop to assist<lb/>
with an injured employee.<lb/>
College Hill Drive ? A student reported the breaking and<lb/>
entering of his vehicle parked in the big commuter parking lot<lb/>
on College Hill Drive. A cassette recorder and headphones were<lb/>
taken from the vehicle.<lb/>
June 10<lb/>
Spilman ? A non-student was stopped east of Spilman for<lb/>
speeding. The non-student was arrested for being in possession<lb/>
of a loaded handgun.<lb/>
June 11<lb/>
Bunting Field ?An officer discovered damage to a post in the<lb/>
shot-put area of Bunting Field.<lb/>
June 12<lb/>
Eppes Middle School ?Students were selling T-shirts at Eppes<lb/>
Compiled by Stephanie Lasstter. Taken from official ECU<lb/>
Public Safety crime reports.<lb/>
U.S. gains support in Korean dispute<lb/>
SEOUL, South Korea (AP) ?<lb/>
The United States, South Korea and<lb/>
Japan ? the prime backers of sanc-<lb/>
tions against North Korea over its<lb/>
nuclear program?all voiced strong<lb/>
concern yesterday over the North's<lb/>
announcement it would pull out of<lb/>
the U.N. nuclear watchdog group.<lb/>
The North's plan to quit the<lb/>
International Atomic Energy<lb/>
Agencv, announced by the North's<lb/>
official news agency late Monday,<lb/>
would make it virtually impossible<lb/>
to check whether North Korea is<lb/>
complying with an international<lb/>
nuclear arms-control pact it signed<lb/>
in 1985.<lb/>
President Clinton told Japa-<lb/>
nese Prime Minister Tsutomu Hata<lb/>
DIG<lb/>
by telephone yesterday that the<lb/>
North's move, if confirmed, would<lb/>
make the situation much more seri-<lb/>
ous, Japan's foreign ministry said.<lb/>
The IAEA, based in Vienna,<lb/>
said yesterday that North Korea<lb/>
had not officially communicated its<lb/>
intention to withdraw from the 120-<lb/>
member organization.<lb/>
Agency spokesman David<lb/>
Kyd said the two IAEA inspectors<lb/>
at the North's main nuclear com-<lb/>
plex at Yongbyon had not been<lb/>
asked to leave.<lb/>
Top South Korean security of-<lb/>
ficials met in emergency session for<lb/>
two hours yesterday to discuss the<lb/>
North's announcement, which<lb/>
heightened tensions on the Korean<lb/>
Continued from page 1<lb/>
peninsula. The Koreas' 2 million<lb/>
troops are already on high alert.<lb/>
After the meeting, Deputy<lb/>
Prime Minister Lee Hong-koo said<lb/>
the North's move would only<lb/>
strengthen international resolve to<lb/>
seek U.N. sanctions, a process he<lb/>
predicted would take two or three<lb/>
weeks.<lb/>
South Korean Foreign Minis-<lb/>
ter Han Sung-joo said the prospects<lb/>
for dialogue with the North had<lb/>
diminished.<lb/>
"We have now run into a criti-<lb/>
cal juncture where decisive and firm<lb/>
measures are necessary he said.<lb/>
Did you know<lb/>
that<lb/>
Henuningway<lb/>
wrote for TEC?<lb/>
You can, too.<lb/>
Come down to<lb/>
the Student<lb/>
Pubs Bldg. and<lb/>
talk to Jason or<lb/>
Stephanie.<lb/>
Collier said the dig lasted from<lb/>
7:30a.m. until noon on April 15. She<lb/>
said a Tryon Palace historian who<lb/>
accompanied the group told the<lb/>
group tales about the time period<lb/>
and about the New Bern area.<lb/>
The crypt has been opened<lb/>
approximately once a year, since<lb/>
1975, to moderate conditions.<lb/>
Besides nearly 60 skeletons<lb/>
which lie in the tomb, there are also<lb/>
burtons, oyster shells, shoe parts,<lb/>
coffin handles and a child's marble.<lb/>
"Despite the obvious vandal-<lb/>
ism, the skeletons are in remark-<lb/>
ably good condition said David<lb/>
Phelps, an anthropologv professor<lb/>
at ECU.<lb/>
Other team members were<lb/>
John Byrd (Anthropology), Bertie<lb/>
Fearing and Seiina Pate (English),<lb/>
David Dennard (History) and Arts<lb/>
and Sciences Dean Keats Sparrow.<lb/>
A forensic pathologist, a physician<lb/>
and an Episcopal clergyman also<lb/>
joined the group.<lb/>
LEGISLATURE<lb/>
Continued from page 1<lb/>
Global Dinner, which allows stu-<lb/>
dents to encounter what people eat<lb/>
in the Third World. The students<lb/>
also promise to fast until the next<lb/>
day. Another event is the Chal-<lb/>
lenge Days, which are outdoor ac-<lb/>
tivities that will develop thinking<lb/>
and communication skills, team<lb/>
work building, and creativity.<lb/>
During the first week of the<lb/>
program, the students will leam<lb/>
and work on skills like the seven<lb/>
habits, then in the second week<lb/>
they will apply the skills to a group<lb/>
project. This year the group project<lb/>
topic will be "Designing Safe<lb/>
ORIENTATION<lb/>
School<lb/>
"I'm looking forward to<lb/>
having fun, meeting a lot of<lb/>
people, and enjoying myself<lb/>
said Sean Mode, a rising eighth<lb/>
grader at J.R. Whitfield.<lb/>
The program tries to de-<lb/>
velop diverse young people into<lb/>
future North Carolina leaders.<lb/>
"I think that leadership in<lb/>
North Carolina is important and<lb/>
we have such a large sector<lb/>
Tully said. "And if meaningful<lb/>
change is going to come to the<lb/>
state, it has to come from all di-<lb/>
mensions, urban and rural<lb/>
Continued from page 1<lb/>
is to get your degree and gradu-<lb/>
ate Eastman said.<lb/>
Eastman told the incom-<lb/>
ing freshmen to save partying<lb/>
for the weekend because their<lb/>
GPAs will reflect their social<lb/>
lives.<lb/>
Dean Speier also warned the<lb/>
new students about alcohol con-<lb/>
sumption. Speier said alcohol is<lb/>
the drug of choice on ECU's cam-<lb/>
pus. Some of the orientation stu-<lb/>
dents laughed, but Speier did not<lb/>
intend for the comment to be hu-<lb/>
morous.<lb/>
"Alcohol is the number one<lb/>
problem we confront on our cam-<lb/>
pus Speier said.<lb/>
He said students who abuse<lb/>
alcohol also abuse their room-<lb/>
mates, public safety officers and<lb/>
their residence halls. Other drunk<lb/>
students have found themselves<lb/>
passed out in the middle of Fifth<lb/>
Street.<lb/>
"Students who are problems<lb/>
tonight will be referred to my of-<lb/>
fice and registered for an alcohol<lb/>
awareness program Speier said.<lb/>
Speier said many parents of<lb/>
incoming freshmen have had<lb/>
questions concerning the safety of<lb/>
their sons and daughters.<lb/>
"I think orientation is<lb/>
handled real well said one par-<lb/>
ent. "It seems as though the ori-<lb/>
entation staff has anticipated all<lb/>
of our questions, and I appreciate<lb/>
people being there for other ques-<lb/>
tions<lb/>
Director of Orientation<lb/>
David Emmerling compared com-<lb/>
ing to college to an Oreo cookie.<lb/>
He described the cookie part of<lb/>
the Oreo as the transition from<lb/>
leaving home and the transition<lb/>
from leaving college to enter the<lb/>
work force. Emmerling said the<lb/>
creme filling represents the best<lb/>
years of our lives where we have<lb/>
the opportunity to grow academi-<lb/>
cally.<lb/>
Some new students eagerly<lb/>
anticipated their arrival as offi-<lb/>
cial ECU students in the fall.<lb/>
" I think ECU is a good place<lb/>
to be with a lot of things to do<lb/>
said Clevie Lancaster, a Green-<lb/>
ville resident and incoming resi-<lb/>
dent, "it is especially good for<lb/>
people coming from out of town<lb/>
and out of state. It is easy to<lb/>
adjust to<lb/>
Another incoming fresh-<lb/>
man, apparently exasperated<lb/>
from a long day of orientation<lb/>
activities, said: "I just want to go<lb/>
home<lb/>
Sports<lb/>
pat<lb/>
Sports Pad<lb/>
WEDNESDAY BAND NIGHT<lb/>
Tonight 111<lb/>
TREEHUQQERS<lb/>
FREE COVER TILL 10:00 PM<lb/>
18 &amp; OVER<lb/>
tc ?<lb/>
Sharky's<lb/>
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<pb facs="00058479_0003"/><lb/>
Jll?"<lb/>
The East Carolinian<lb/>
June 15, 1994<lb/>
Opinion<lb/>
Page 3<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, Staj'Illustrator<lb/>
The East Carolinian<lb/>
Gregory Dickens, General Manager<lb/>
Maureen A. Rich, Managing Editor<lb/>
Tonya Heath, Advertising Director<lb/>
 recycled is<lb/>
Jessica Stanley. Copy Editor<lb/>
Alexa Thompson. Copy Editor<lb/>
Marcia Sanders. Typesetter<lb/>
Lisa Sessoms. Typesetter<lb/>
Deborah Daniel, Sec re tan'<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 Director<lb/>
Leslie Petty, Photo Editor<lb/>
Chinh Nguyen, Systems Manager<lb/>
Serving the ECU communitysince 1925, The East Carolinian publishes !2.000copiesevery Tuesday and Thursday. The<lb/>
masthead editorial in each edition is the opinion of the Editorial Board. The East Carolinian welcomes letters, limited to 250<lb/>
words, which may be edited for decency or brevity. The East Carolinian reserves the right to edit or reject letters for publication.<lb/>
Letters should be addressed to: Opinion Editor. The East Carolinian. Publications Bldg ECU. Greenville. N.C 27858-4353.<lb/>
For more information, call (919) 757-6366.<lb/>
Flag day too often ignored, forgotten!<lb/>
Yesterday, America celebrated its third<lb/>
major patriotic holiday in as many weeks.<lb/>
However, this one received almost no<lb/>
coverage compared to both Memorial Day<lb/>
and the 50th anniversary of D-Day.<lb/>
We are speaking, of course, of Flag Day.<lb/>
Unfortunately, few are even aware of the<lb/>
existence of this holiday, and too often those<lb/>
who are aware, regard the day as some sort<lb/>
of joke.<lb/>
This attitude merely reflects the cur-<lb/>
rent societal trend to regard American insti-<lb/>
tutions with scorn, something which needs<lb/>
to be combated at all costs. This tendency,<lb/>
like the collective historical amnesia from<lb/>
which our generation suffers is causing<lb/>
many to hold cheap the freedoms which we<lb/>
all hold dear.<lb/>
America is not a perfect country. Just<lb/>
check this page every week and you will be<lb/>
told exactly what is wrong, and how it can<lb/>
be fixed. But all the faults do not detract<lb/>
from the fact that this is the greatest country<lb/>
on Earth.<lb/>
So before you say that Flag Day is just<lb/>
another stupid holiday, stop to consider just<lb/>
how important symbols and rituals are in<lb/>
providing cohesion for nations. One thing<lb/>
that we all share, regardless of race, etc is<lb/>
the flag and what it symbolizes.<lb/>
<lb/>
?<lb/>
wM&amp;dmUmmmMWMli<lb/>
'he dp's.anddon'tsofdisplaying the flag of the United States of America<lb/>
Never let the flag tdlich the ground;<lb/>
Never use the flag as a decoration or a tablecloth.<lb/>
Never hang the flag in a window or on a door.<lb/>
Fly the flag only during daylight hours.<lb/>
Always raise the flag as quickly as possible; lower itasslowiy as possible.<lb/>
When flying the flag with other flags remember:<lb/>
. The. flag must be as large as the-other flag(s).<lb/>
The flag must never be flown below the other flag(s).<lb/>
Tf not flown'above the other flagfs), then the flag<lb/>
should beat the head of the cohimn, or at its own extreme right.<lb/>
By Laura Wright<lb/>
On the job harassment hits too close to home<lb/>
Weekend before last, my sister<lb/>
graduated from high school. I went<lb/>
home to see her walk across the<lb/>
stage and get her diploma. Much<lb/>
to my surprise, I nearly cried. I<lb/>
guess that the combination of pride<lb/>
that I felt for her, the<lb/>
overwhelming sound of "Pomp<lb/>
and Circumstance" and the<lb/>
realization that I am older than I<lb/>
ever thought I would be, almost<lb/>
made me break down <lb/>
Then I got a grip.<lb/>
The night ??????<lb/>
before her<lb/>
graduation, my<lb/>
sister told me that<lb/>
she had quit her<lb/>
job. She had<lb/>
worked at a cookie<lb/>
shop for several<lb/>
months and had<lb/>
really liked it, so I<lb/>
was surprised that<lb/>
she had quit. She<lb/>
had planned to<lb/>
work there until mhmmmmm<lb/>
she goes away to college this fall.<lb/>
After she had been working<lb/>
for several months, her boss, whom<lb/>
we'll call Mr. Jerk (for reasons that<lb/>
I hope will become apparent),<lb/>
hired a new employee whom we'll<lb/>
call Beavis (need I say more?).<lb/>
Beavis, a 17-year-old high school<lb/>
drop out, made several passes at<lb/>
my sister, whom we'll call Lee<lb/>
Ann (because that's her name).<lb/>
Lee Ann was unresponsive, not<lb/>
because Beavis had a girlfriend,<lb/>
which he did, but because she<lb/>
simply wasn't interested, and also<lb/>
because she has some taste.<lb/>
Apparently, after it became<lb/>
obvious to Beavis that Lee Ann<lb/>
wasn't biting, so to speak, he<lb/>
became overtly hostile to her. She<lb/>
said she was uncomfortable<lb/>
around him and didn't want to<lb/>
work with him if no one else was<lb/>
in the shop. When his friends came<lb/>
by to visit, he made sexual<lb/>
comments about Lee Ann in order<lb/>
to intimidate her.<lb/>
Once, he had a friend call my<lb/>
sister and leave a frightening<lb/>
message on her answering<lb/>
machine. He threatened her with<lb/>
physical violence and called her<lb/>
names that she was too<lb/>
embarrassed to repeat to my<lb/>
 parents.<lb/>
I have always hated the<lb/>
attitude that it's easier<lb/>
to pretend that it didn't<lb/>
happen. Now I feel a<lb/>
little more<lb/>
thetic to that<lb/>
thinking.<lb/>
sympa-<lb/>
way of<lb/>
After<lb/>
this<lb/>
incident,<lb/>
Lee Ann<lb/>
told Mr. Jerk<lb/>
that she was<lb/>
quitting and<lb/>
she<lb/>
explained<lb/>
why. Mr.<lb/>
Jerk, in an<lb/>
attempt to<lb/>
 be fair,<lb/>
asked Lee<lb/>
Ann to come in and sit down with<lb/>
him and Beavis, to see if they<lb/>
couldn't work it out. Lee Ann,<lb/>
afraid at this point for her safety,<lb/>
refused, but sent the tape-recorded<lb/>
message to her boss so that he<lb/>
could hear it.<lb/>
Mr. Jerk spoke to Beavis about<lb/>
the incident, and my sister was<lb/>
not present to hear what was said.<lb/>
Afterwards, Mr. Jerk called her<lb/>
and told her that he was very sorry<lb/>
that Lee Ann felt that she had to<lb/>
quit, that Beavis was only kidding<lb/>
and that she was overreacting.<lb/>
So, I'm telling this story for<lb/>
Lee Ann and I'm telling it because<lb/>
it makes me furious. I guess that<lb/>
it's easy to form rational opinions<lb/>
aboutcontroverstal topics, it'seasy<lb/>
to defend your point of view, it's<lb/>
easy to be objective, as long as you<lb/>
are an outside observer. When<lb/>
something like such blatant<lb/>
harassment touches someone you<lb/>
know, objectivity goes out the<lb/>
window. Rational opinions<lb/>
become emotional responses. For<lb/>
example, I was alw ays against the<lb/>
death penalty until someone I<lb/>
knew was murdered.<lb/>
As for what happened to my<lb/>
sister, after she quit, she let the<lb/>
situation drop. My parents<lb/>
encouraged her to leave it alone-<lb/>
yes, she probably had a case if she<lb/>
wanted to pursue it, but who<lb/>
knows what this guy might do to<lb/>
her if she chose to press charges.<lb/>
Yes, she might have been able to<lb/>
get him fired, at least, but who<lb/>
knows how he might enact his<lb/>
revenge? My family's philosophy<lb/>
seemed to be that since she really<lb/>
didn't need the job anyway, and<lb/>
since she would have had to quit<lb/>
in August, it was easier just to<lb/>
leave the situation alone. Why stir<lb/>
up trouble?<lb/>
In the past, it has always made<lb/>
me angry when women don't try<lb/>
to defend themselves after they<lb/>
are threatened or attacked. I have<lb/>
always hated the attitude that it's<lb/>
easier to pretend that it didn't<lb/>
happen. Now that my sister is in<lb/>
this situation, I feel a little more<lb/>
sympathetic to that way of<lb/>
thinking ? but I'm all the more<lb/>
aware of how unfair things are.<lb/>
I don't care if Beavis needs his<lb/>
job to make a living, he doesn't<lb/>
deserve to have it after what he<lb/>
did. I don't care how<lb/>
unhumanitarian I may sound, but<lb/>
I've been dreaming up ways of<lb/>
getting even and most of them<lb/>
involve massive amounts of cookie<lb/>
dough and a very hot oven. Like I<lb/>
said, reason can easily be over<lb/>
taken by emotional irrationality.<lb/>
By Jason Williams<lb/>
Videotaping of executions should be allowed<lb/>
Barring a last minute stay of<lb/>
execution, the state of North<lb/>
Carolina will have executed<lb/>
convicted murderer David<lb/>
Lawson early this morning.<lb/>
Lawson was sentenced to death in<lb/>
1980 for killing Wayne Shinn of<lb/>
Concord during a break-in at<lb/>
Shinn's residence. Lawson will die<lb/>
in the gas chamber, the first North<lb/>
Carolinian to do so in 33 years.<lb/>
I don't like the death penalty.<lb/>
I think that it is barbaric and<lb/>
uncivilized. I think it is cruel and<lb/>
inhumane. I think that it is unfairly<lb/>
applied, i.e those who must rely<lb/>
on court-appointed attorneys, as<lb/>
well as blacks, are<lb/>
disproportionately sentenced to<lb/>
death. Finally, I think it doesn't<lb/>
work. Since reinstituting the<lb/>
penalty in the mid-1970s, the U.S.<lb/>
has experienced a virtually<lb/>
unchanged crime rate, and a slight<lb/>
rise in violent crime.<lb/>
Quite apart from how I feel<lb/>
about the death penalty, however,<lb/>
I think that the state should fulfill<lb/>
Lawson's request to have his<lb/>
execution videotaped. Originally,<lb/>
he wanted talk show host Phil<lb/>
Donahue to broadcast his<lb/>
execution on his television show;<lb/>
now Lawson said he would like<lb/>
for the Department of Corrections<lb/>
to tape the event to use as a<lb/>
deterrent.<lb/>
The case in favor of taping<lb/>
the execution is convincing, both<lb/>
for supporters and opponents of<lb/>
capital punishment. Supporters,<lb/>
who continue to believe that the<lb/>
penalty deters other violent<lb/>
crimes, say executions should be<lb/>
public in order to maximize the<lb/>
deterring effect. 'Hang 'em on the<lb/>
courthouse steps they say.<lb/>
Opponents say that citizens<lb/>
should see exactly what they are<lb/>
acquiescing to when thy go along<lb/>
with the death penalty. Viewing<lb/>
the brutality of the punishment,<lb/>
they reason, will cause people to<lb/>
change their minds about capital<lb/>
punishment.<lb/>
I don't particularly believe<lb/>
either of those arguments, but they<lb/>
make their points. I doubt the man<lb/>
who just caught his wife in bed<lb/>
with another guy is going to stop<lb/>
and think about the consequences<lb/>
of shooting the both of them (i.e<lb/>
being sentenced to death), even if<lb/>
he watched David Lawson die on<lb/>
T.V. the previous day, but the<lb/>
punishment is supposed to deter,<lb/>
and certainly it can't accomplish<lb/>
that if no one ever sees it.<lb/>
Likewise, I don't think North<lb/>
Carolinians, or Americans, would<lb/>
be repulsed enough to condemn<lb/>
capital punishment after viewing<lb/>
an actual execution. We have<lb/>
become desensitized to violence,<lb/>
and we have enough of the<lb/>
vigilantism ? the frontier code of<lb/>
justice ? left in us to approve of<lb/>
the "hang 'em high" mentality.<lb/>
But going back to the fairness<lb/>
issue, I think that it is only fair, if<lb/>
the state of North Carolina is going<lb/>
to kill someone, to allow me, as a<lb/>
tax-paying citizen of North<lb/>
Carolina, to see what I had a hand<lb/>
in doing. I think that I, or anyone<lb/>
else, ought to be able to witness an<lb/>
execution, regardless of whether<lb/>
the condemned wants me to or<lb/>
not.<lb/>
The arguments against<lb/>
televising the execution are weak.<lb/>
Some claim that children might<lb/>
see it, and that would somehow<lb/>
be harmful. If capital punishment<lb/>
is so abhorrent that we can't let<lb/>
our children watch it, should we,<lb/>
as supposedly rational adults, be<lb/>
participating in the activity at all?<lb/>
Others say televising the<lb/>
execution would cheapen it as a<lb/>
punishment, and accuse Donahue<lb/>
and others of trying to make a fast<lb/>
buck. Bull. A stationary camera<lb/>
positioned infrontof thechamber,<lb/>
without an announcer or similar<lb/>
theatrics, would capture the real-<lb/>
life (and death) image of capital<lb/>
punishment.<lb/>
I can watch my state<lb/>
legislature at work. I can tour the<lb/>
Governor's mansion, and I can<lb/>
even tour a prison. I think I have<lb/>
every right to at least look at the<lb/>
man that I am killing.<lb/>
By Patrick Hinson<lb/>
U.S. interests ill-served by current Haiti policy<lb/>
Hey, Bill, what are you doin'<lb/>
pal? What in the world are we<lb/>
doing in Haiti? I don't get it. I<lb/>
don't get a number of things. Why<lb/>
are we putting even more<lb/>
economic sanctions on Haiti, and<lb/>
why does it look more and more<lb/>
like we're going to make a military<lb/>
move on that place? What purpose<lb/>
will either of those things serve<lb/>
the U.S or us as U.S. citizens?<lb/>
Just what exactly are our<lb/>
motives in Haiti, and why? I don't<lb/>
know, but here's how it looks to<lb/>
me.<lb/>
Are we making this move<lb/>
because of the lack of human rights<lb/>
in that tiny country? For God's<lb/>
sake, if that is our motive then<lb/>
we'd better beef up our military,<lb/>
because we're either going to have<lb/>
to muscle-in on every country in<lb/>
the world that treats their subjects<lb/>
like trash (which is a lot of them),<lb/>
or we're going to look like a real<lb/>
tyrant to the rest of the world, only<lb/>
beating up on those countries that<lb/>
are (much) smaller than us, like<lb/>
Panama for instance. What about<lb/>
China, Bosnia, Rwanda, Somalia<lb/>
and wherever else people are being<lb/>
mistreated? Their human rights<lb/>
records aren't exactly glowing, but<lb/>
you don't see us getting all excited<lb/>
about going there. The military's<lb/>
excited about the possibility of<lb/>
going to Haiti because Haiti's an<lb/>
easy game.<lb/>
Are we pressing them now<lb/>
because they will not allow a<lb/>
democratic government? So what?<lb/>
What business is it of ours what<lb/>
kind of government they (or<lb/>
anyone else, for that matter) wish<lb/>
to allow? What business is it of<lb/>
ours how they wish to treat their<lb/>
people, or run their country?<lb/>
Haven't we got enough problems<lb/>
in our own country today, without<lb/>
having to think about spending<lb/>
more money just to run an exercise<lb/>
for our huge war machine? Now,<lb/>
that's really what it kind of looks<lb/>
like to me; the pentagon needs to<lb/>
run the war machine so that the<lb/>
government won't forget how<lb/>
important it is, and won't stop<lb/>
spending the billions of dollars<lb/>
that go into high level pockets and<lb/>
wasted bullets.<lb/>
I feel sorry for the people of<lb/>
Haiti. I feel sorry that so many of<lb/>
them feel that they have so little to<lb/>
lose that they take just the shirts<lb/>
on their backs and their children,<lb/>
pack them into little boats, and<lb/>
head for the open sea, toward<lb/>
America, some mythical land<lb/>
where it's said people can create<lb/>
their own futures, with just hard<lb/>
work and a dream. That must<lb/>
sound unbelievably tasty to people<lb/>
who are persecuted just for being<lb/>
poor, who can look forward to<lb/>
working hard all their lives, and<lb/>
having nothing to show for it but<lb/>
a tin shack and an empty stomach.<lb/>
I do feel sorry for those people,<lb/>
but we've got problems here, real<lb/>
problems. We've got serious<lb/>
crime, drugs, educational, welfare,<lb/>
poverty, unemployment and<lb/>
whatever else kinds of problems<lb/>
here. We need some serious<lb/>
reforms in this country. Some<lb/>
serious domestic problems are<lb/>
literally tearing thiscountry down.<lb/>
That is where our focus should be<lb/>
now, not on some Caribbean<lb/>
vacation spot that is being ruled<lb/>
by a greedy, cheap, third world<lb/>
military dictatorship.<lb/>
Who are the economic<lb/>
sanctions on Haiti really<lb/>
punishing? The evil little<lb/>
government that has all the money<lb/>
and power, holding the country in<lb/>
it's vise grip; or the already<lb/>
starving people, who have no<lb/>
power and no access to food? Will<lb/>
our starving them even more now<lb/>
really motivate them to overthrow<lb/>
their current leaders, and install<lb/>
the one we like? I find that<lb/>
doubtful. I care about them<lb/>
because, like everyone else, we<lb/>
should care and should extend<lb/>
aid to those who have less thnn we<lb/>
have. I just think that this is<lb/>
somewhat useless, that what we<lb/>
may be getting ready to do in Haiti<lb/>
is somewhat of a joke, but it won't<lb/>
be funny if even one American<lb/>
son or daughter catches a bullet<lb/>
over there, because it's not worth<lb/>
it. ;<lb/>
The huge, dark shadow of a<lb/>
distant empire looms over the<lb/>
small, obscure little country of<lb/>
Haiti right now, while its starving<lb/>
people take to canoes and rafts<lb/>
and risk their lives to make it to<lb/>
this country. Are we in danger of<lb/>
invasion from Haiti? Will they<lb/>
launch missiles at us any time<lb/>
soon? Is there any way they can<lb/>
make money off of us, other than<lb/>
from the drug trade? (Now, let's<lb/>
face it, if people in high places<lb/>
weren't making money off of the<lb/>
import of drugs to the U.S would<lb/>
we have as much of a problem?).<lb/>
No. We should leave Haiti alone<lb/>
and worry about our own<lb/>
business.<lb/>
r<lb/>
<pb facs="00058479_0004"/><lb/>
-The East Carolinian-<lb/>
Page 4<lb/>
Classifieds<lb/>
June 15, 1994<lb/>
For Rent<lb/>
ROOMMATE NEEDED to share<lb/>
2 bedroom, energy-efficient mobile<lb/>
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LARGE HOME, EXCELLENT<lb/>
NEIGHBORHOOD. Five bed-<lb/>
rooms- all large wplenty of<lb/>
closet space- 2 up 3 down. 3 full<lb/>
baths, formal living and dining.<lb/>
Family room and walk-in attic.<lb/>
Full basement w recreation<lb/>
room, second kitchen. Work-<lb/>
shop w fenced backyard,<lb/>
double carport. Near ECU and<lb/>
shopping. Utilities and taxes<lb/>
very reasonable.126,900. 321-<lb/>
2924.<lb/>
SCHWINN TRAVELER 18"<lb/>
road bike, Shimano SIS Drive<lb/>
Train, new tires. In Excellent<lb/>
Condition. Call 758-1479, ask for<lb/>
Jt ny.150.00.<lb/>
TREK 460, Shimano 105 Drive<lb/>
Train, two pairs of wheels- Ma-<lb/>
trix, Araaya, Shimano clipless<lb/>
pedals wshoes. Excellent con-<lb/>
dition,450.00 neg. Call<lb/>
Sheldon at 321-0695.<lb/>
For Sale<lb/>
low house on the right. Hours-<lb/>
Friday, 1:00 - 6:00, Saturday,<lb/>
7:00 a.m. - 6:00 p.m.<lb/>
1981 HONDA ACCORD, 2S, 5<lb/>
sp, ac.1050.00. Call 756-8930.<lb/>
COMMODORE 64 COM-<lb/>
PUTER, Monitor, Accessories,<lb/>
Modem, Software, and refer-<lb/>
ence books. Works as good as<lb/>
new.350.00. Call 756-8930.<lb/>
PENTAX CAMERA, K1000,<lb/>
plus 135 mm? 2.5 macro tele-<lb/>
photo lens, filters and close up<lb/>
lenses, auto 2x teleconverter,<lb/>
flash and tripod.230.00. Call<lb/>
756-8930.<lb/>
For Sale<lb/>
Heroes Are Here Too<lb/>
116 E. 5th Street<lb/>
757-0948<lb/>
Comics and Sportscards<lb/>
10 OFF w Coupon <lb/>
expires 8-31-94<lb/>
SURFBOARD, 64" Freestyle<lb/>
thruster, excellent condition.<lb/>
150.00 Call 830-3842. Leave mes-<lb/>
sage if not home.<lb/>
DO YOU NEED MONEY?<lb/>
We Will Pay You<lb/>
CASH $<lb/>
FOR YOUR USED,<lb/>
TOMMY H1LFIGER<lb/>
WE ALSO WANT:<lb/>
NICET SHOTS<lb/>
SHOOTS<lb/>
POL? <lb/>
y<lb/>
MUST SELL: 3 end tables, re-<lb/>
cliner, table with 4 chairs. Good<lb/>
condition. 830-2002.<lb/>
ECU STUDENT POTTERY &amp;<lb/>
CRAFT SALE, 210 South Pitt<lb/>
St downtown, take a left at Post<lb/>
Office onto Pitt St it's th- yel-<lb/>
Student Swap Shop<lb/>
(THE ESTATE SHOP) DOWNTOWN WALKING MALL<lb/>
411 EVANS ST.<lb/>
SUMMER HRS: THURS-FRI 10-12, 1-5 &amp; SAT FROM 10-1<lb/>
COME INTO THE CITY PARKING LOT IN FRONT OF WACHOVIA<lb/>
DOWNTOWN,DRIVE TO BACK DOOR &amp; RING BUZZER<lb/>
fcH 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) (Evenings527-9133).<lb/>
Announcements<lb/>
LOOKING FOR AN<lb/>
INTERESTING HU-<lb/>
MANITIES COURSE?<lb/>
Russian 2200, Russian lit-<lb/>
erature of the 19th cen-<lb/>
tury (Golden Age),<lb/>
taught in English, will be<lb/>
offered 2nd Summer Ses-<lb/>
sion at 9:35. Authors read<lb/>
and discussed are<lb/>
Dostoevsky, Tolstoy and<lb/>
others.<lb/>
NEWMAN CATHOLIC<lb/>
STUDENT CENTER:<lb/>
TheNewmanCatholicStudent<lb/>
Center invites thesummer stu-<lb/>
dents and guests to worship<lb/>
with them. Sunday Masses:<lb/>
Nick OTime<lb/>
11:30 a.m and 8:30 p.m (fol-<lb/>
lowed by refreshments) at the<lb/>
Newman Center, 953 E. 10th<lb/>
Street, right next to the East<lb/>
end of the campus. Joinus also<lb/>
on Wednesday evenings for<lb/>
Mass at5:30 p.m. followedby<lb/>
fellowship. For further infor-<lb/>
mation call Fr. Paul Vaeth,<lb/>
757-1991.<lb/>
THE EAST CAROLINIAN IS<lb/>
TAKING APPLICATIONS<lb/>
by Dickens<lb/>
Phoebe<lb/>
by Stephanie Smith<lb/>
Kemple-Boy Quiz<lb/>
The enigmatic Kemple-Boy is about to:<lb/>
There's only one answer, chump!<lb/>
C. Hit the road to the HeroesCon'94 in<lb/>
Charlotte.The three-day event will take<lb/>
place on the 17-19 of June at the<lb/>
Charlotte Int'l Trade Center.<lb/>
Guests include:<lb/>
Mike Allred, Mike Mignola, John<lb/>
Romita, Alex Ross and Kurt Busiek,<lb/>
and Pirate Comics alumni Jeff Parker<lb/>
and Chris Kemple.<lb/>
And tons, nay. HEAPS more!<lb/>
<pb facs="00058479_0005"/><lb/>
The East Carolinian<lb/>
June 15, 1994<lb/>
Lifestyle<lb/>
Page 5<lb/>
Rainbo Clothing<lb/>
starts production<lb/>
By Warren Sumner<lb/>
Lifestyle Editor<lb/>
ECU students with a de-<lb/>
sire to dress uniquely have a<lb/>
new fashion option to explore.<lb/>
Rainbo Clothing is the project<lb/>
of two college students in the<lb/>
Greenville area, Troy<lb/>
Yarborough and Suzanne<lb/>
Clark.<lb/>
The new fashion company<lb/>
is locally operated and spe-<lb/>
cializes in retro-style designs<lb/>
and original looks.<lb/>
Drawing from '70s influ-<lb/>
ences, the Rainbo line at-<lb/>
tempts to update past styles<lb/>
to fit into cur-<lb/>
She said prospective<lb/>
Rainbo buyers can be assured<lb/>
that the clothes they.buy from<lb/>
the company will not be mass-<lb/>
produced.<lb/>
"We really try to be origi-<lb/>
nal with every design Clark<lb/>
said. "We're only going to<lb/>
make a few of each design<lb/>
and a lot of different colors so<lb/>
we won't have to worry about<lb/>
people wearing the same<lb/>
thing<lb/>
Yarborough said that<lb/>
while the company is just now<lb/>
getting off the ground, it has<lb/>
already sparked interest in<lb/>
other parts of the state.<lb/>
"We've<lb/>
rent times by<lb/>
giving the<lb/>
'70s look a<lb/>
'90s twist.<lb/>
Yarborough,<lb/>
a Washing-<lb/>
ton, D.C na<lb/>
"There's no style<lb/>
around here ?<lb/>
everyone just<lb/>
sparked some<lb/>
interest in<lb/>
Greensboro<lb/>
and Charlotte<lb/>
already he<lb/>
said.<lb/>
Our<lb/>
livesaid'that kind OfVeCirS the clothes have<lb/>
an appeal in<lb/>
that people<lb/>
the inspira-<lb/>
tion to be-<lb/>
come a fash-<lb/>
ion designer<lb/>
was a result<lb/>
of his years<lb/>
living in<lb/>
Greenville.<lb/>
"I hate to<lb/>
sound bad or ????<lb/>
anything, but just being<lb/>
around Greenville made me<lb/>
want to do this he said.<lb/>
"There's no style around here<lb/>
? everyone just kind of wears<lb/>
the same things. We'd like to<lb/>
try to get away from that<lb/>
Clark, a Raleigh, N.C na-<lb/>
tive, is responsible for mak-<lb/>
ing the clothes and has a hand<lb/>
in their design.<lb/>
She said that after making<lb/>
clothes for six years, she has<lb/>
heard enough compliments on<lb/>
her work to interest her in her<lb/>
current venture.<lb/>
same things.<lb/>
We'd like to try<lb/>
to get away from<lb/>
that<lb/>
b9<lb/>
Troy Yarborough<lb/>
are able to get<lb/>
the fashions<lb/>
they see in<lb/>
magazines,<lb/>
whereas you<lb/>
can't get<lb/>
those any-<lb/>
???PPPP'W where else<lb/>
While Rainbo is primarily<lb/>
making T-shirts for the sum-<lb/>
mer, Yarborough said in the<lb/>
fall the line will expand to<lb/>
include sweaters, jackets and<lb/>
other types of clothing.<lb/>
The clothing is affordable,<lb/>
with no article selling for over<lb/>
$15, so it should fit well into a<lb/>
student budget. The clothing<lb/>
is also unisex, which should<lb/>
give it an even wider appeal.<lb/>
Samples and catalogs of<lb/>
Rainbo products can be ob-<lb/>
tained at BLT's in downtown<lb/>
Greenville.<lb/>
<lb/>
Columbians" to invade Attic<lb/>
By Warren Sumner<lb/>
Lifestyle Editor<lb/>
Greenville will receive its sec-<lb/>
ond import in less than a month<lb/>
from Columbia, S.C. 's music scene<lb/>
when the powerhouse "Phunk"<lb/>
and reggae of Kindread Soul in-<lb/>
vades the Attic this Saturday. Fel-<lb/>
low "Columbians" Hootie and the<lb/>
Blowfish already have performed<lb/>
at the club and the S.C. contingent<lb/>
of acts is becoming a force to be<lb/>
reckoned with at ECU.<lb/>
Kindread Soul, formed in its<lb/>
present lineup just a year-and-a-<lb/>
half ago, hasbecome one of South<lb/>
Carolina'sbiggest groups. A staple<lb/>
in the Five Points music scene (lo-<lb/>
cated just outside the University<lb/>
of South Carolina), the band has<lb/>
been on the promotion trail and by<lb/>
using sound business philoso-<lb/>
phies, has garnered enough inter-<lb/>
est and income to herald a CD<lb/>
recording. Keep the Faith, the band's<lb/>
debut release, already has sold<lb/>
thousands of copies and accord-<lb/>
ing to percussionist and manager<lb/>
Stacy Enter, the album has gained<lb/>
the interest of record labels.<lb/>
"The CD is doing much better<lb/>
than we expected he said. "We<lb/>
released it April 13, and have al-<lb/>
ready started to reorder more cop-<lb/>
ies. Our intention with the CD<lb/>
wasn't to make money or get air-<lb/>
play, we just wanted to give our<lb/>
fans something they could take<lb/>
home and listen to. Fortunately, a<lb/>
lot of extra benefits are coming<lb/>
from the CD<lb/>
Enter said that Kindread Soul,<lb/>
in its early days, did not follow the<lb/>
road of playing covers that a lot of<lb/>
bands take.<lb/>
"We have been original from<lb/>
the get-go he said. "We play<lb/>
maybe two or three covers now,<lb/>
and the rest of the songs are our<lb/>
own. Our fans just embraced our<lb/>
music and are now to the point<lb/>
where they know it by heart<lb/>
Photo by Leslie Petty<lb/>
Rainbo Clothing, owned and operated in Greenville, will soon<lb/>
provide ECU students with an alternative for their fashion choices<lb/>
ECU gets award<lb/>
in "Gray" area<lb/>
By Mark Brett<lb/>
Assistant Lifestyle Editor<lb/>
ECU's own Wellington B.<lb/>
Gray Gallery recently won a pres-<lb/>
tigious publications award. The<lb/>
Gray Gallery publication Minnie<lb/>
Evans: Artist received second<lb/>
prize in the category of Exhibi-<lb/>
tion Catalogue for institutions<lb/>
with budgets of $500,000 or less<lb/>
in the 1994 American Associa-<lb/>
tion of Museums 13th Annual<lb/>
Publications Design Competi-<lb/>
tion.<lb/>
The competition judges de-<lb/>
signs in museum publications,<lb/>
and is the only national competi-<lb/>
tion in this area of design.<lb/>
This year's competition drew<lb/>
1,257 entries,22 of whichrecei ved<lb/>
first prize honors, 28walked away<lb/>
with a second place finish, and 99<lb/>
were given honorable mentions.<lb/>
Winning entries were displayed<lb/>
at the American Association of<lb/>
Museums' annual meeting in Se-<lb/>
attle, Washingtion, from April 24<lb/>
to 28 of this year. In addition, the<lb/>
organization's magazine, Mu-<lb/>
seum News, will run a feature on<lb/>
the winners in its JulyAugust<lb/>
1994 issue.<lb/>
Contributors for the Minnie<lb/>
Evans: Artist catalogue are<lb/>
Charles Lovell, director of Gray<lb/>
Art Gallery and co-editor of the<lb/>
catalogue; Dr. Erwin Hester of<lb/>
the English Department, also co-<lb/>
editor; Eva Roberts of the ECU<lb/>
School of Art, who served as Art<lb/>
Director; Stanton Blakeslee, also<lb/>
of the Art School, who rendered<lb/>
Design Assistance, and Susan<lb/>
Nicholls of the Art School, the<lb/>
catalogue's Production Assis-<lb/>
tant. <lb/>
Photo Courtesy of KIS International Management<lb/>
Kindread Soul, the latest in a long line of South Carolina bands to play in Greenville, will play at the Attic<lb/>
this Saturday night. The band's unique sound has propelled them to become one of USC's favorite groups.<lb/>
Enter said the high energy<lb/>
"Phunk" intermingled with the<lb/>
reggae that Kindread Soul per-<lb/>
forms allows for an extremely en-<lb/>
ergetic show that isn't always<lb/>
found in reggae alone. Enter said<lb/>
the "Phunk" style was an example<lb/>
of "controlled mayhem" on stage<lb/>
designed to keep audiences atten-<lb/>
tive and moving.<lb/>
Other than the interesting<lb/>
music sounds in the club this week-<lb/>
end, music lovers might move into<lb/>
the Attic after hearing about the<lb/>
promise of free concert tickets.<lb/>
Joe Tronto, the manager of the<lb/>
popular club, said that he has re-<lb/>
ceived over 60 tickets for concerts<lb/>
at the Walnut Creek<lb/>
Amphitheatre this season and<lb/>
will be giving some away every<lb/>
night at the club. Tronto will fea-<lb/>
ture giveaways to see Melissa<lb/>
Etheridge, The Allman Brothers<lb/>
and Steve Miller. The Attic will<lb/>
kick off a "Phish" week Satur-<lb/>
day night.<lb/>
df Uh .no<lb/>
JJ Take Your Chances<lb/>
JtlV Worth A Try<lb/>
s s s s<lb/>
JVJVHighly Recommended<lb/>
Frank Black<lb/>
Teenager of the Year<lb/>
m<lb/>
"l hear surf on kazoo 11 march<lb/>
with the militia of the mime Mali-<lb/>
cious are the times<lb/>
No, these aren't the incoher-<lb/>
ent ramblings of some bizarre<lb/>
madman; they're the incoherent<lb/>
ramblings of Frank Black, taken<lb/>
from his latest album Teenager of<lb/>
the Year. Of course, in the end<lb/>
there might not be that much dif-<lb/>
ference. Frank has always been a<lb/>
bit on the strange side, going all<lb/>
the way back to his days as Black<lb/>
Francis, energetic frontman for<lb/>
the Pixies.<lb/>
Much more than his former<lb/>
bandmate Kim Deal (now sing-<lb/>
ing lead for the Breeders), Frank<lb/>
Black has retained the bizarre feel<lb/>
of the Pixies in his solo work, at<lb/>
least in the lyrics. Musically,<lb/>
Black's solo work sounds like<lb/>
nothing so much as pleasant<lb/>
beach music from the shores of<lb/>
Mars, but this pleasing sound<lb/>
only amplifies the utter weird-<lb/>
ness of his lyrics.<lb/>
That purposeful strangeness<lb/>
is perhaps best revealed in the<lb/>
album's first standout track, "(I<lb/>
Want to Live on an) Abstract<lb/>
Plain This is a song about liv-<lb/>
ing in a place where there is no<lb/>
up or down, North or South, East<lb/>
or West (or any other direction),<lb/>
See BLACK page 6<lb/>
<lb/>
Crystal Waters<lb/>
Crystal Waters<lb/>
Storyteller<lb/>
<lb/>
Three years ago an artist cap-<lb/>
tivated us with an energetic tune<lb/>
called "Gypsy Woman You re-<lb/>
member, the top ten pop hit about<lb/>
someone who's "just like you and<lb/>
me but she's homeless la DA<lb/>
dee, la DA dah<lb/>
Well, Crystal Waters is back<lb/>
with her second CD, Storyteller,<lb/>
which promises to be just as ener-<lb/>
getic and groovable as the first.<lb/>
Storyteller mixes housey dance<lb/>
tracks, pop-oriented refrains and<lb/>
melodies with soulful ballads<lb/>
that are rich in detail.<lb/>
It isn't too difficult to sur-<lb/>
mise why Waters titled her al-<lb/>
bum Storyteller. Her poignant<lb/>
lyrics reflect an eloquence that is<lb/>
largely unseen in today's music<lb/>
industry. Its easy to see why this<lb/>
DC. native who started out writ-<lb/>
ing poetry later became the<lb/>
voungest inductee into the<lb/>
American Poetry Society at age<lb/>
14.<lb/>
The first track, "100 Pure<lb/>
Love is definitely the most<lb/>
dance-oriented out of the eleven<lb/>
track CD. It has a house-music<lb/>
beat that acts like a rhythmic<lb/>
tractor beam pulling one onto<lb/>
the dance floor. The 5th track,<lb/>
"Relax and the 10th, "Daddy<lb/>
Do also have similar appeals.<lb/>
Much of the lyrical content<lb/>
has to do with social issues and<lb/>
See WATERS page6<lb/>
Hordee's Walnut Creek Amphitheatre<lb/>
WRDU 106 Earth buddies Celebration IV<lb/>
Elvis Costello &amp; the attractions<lb/>
w The Crash Test Dummies<lb/>
Saturday, June 18,8:00 p.m.<lb/>
$14.75$19.75$24.75<lb/>
Beach Boys w America<lb/>
Thursday, June 23,8:00 p.m.<lb/>
$10.75$15.75$23.75<lb/>
Crosby, Stills &amp; Nash<lb/>
25th Anniversary Tour<lb/>
Saturday, June 25,7:30 p.m.<lb/>
$15.75$20.75$29.75<lb/>
Phish<lb/>
Wednesday, June 29,7:30 p.m.<lb/>
All tickets $17.50<lb/>
? <lb/>
<pb facs="00058479_0006"/><lb/>
6 The East Carolinian<lb/>
June 15, 1994<lb/>
Louisiana pianist shares his blues<lb/>
NEW YORK (AP) ?Dr. John,<lb/>
"the musical embodiment of New<lb/>
Orleans chronicles some pretty<lb/>
wild doings in his autobiogra-<lb/>
phy, "Under a Hoodoo Moon<lb/>
But these days, he's some-<lb/>
what more tame and a lot more<lb/>
sober.<lb/>
"I hope somebody learns not<lb/>
to make some of the mistakes I<lb/>
made he said about writing the<lb/>
book, which carries the subtitle<lb/>
"The Life of the Night Tripper,<lb/>
Dr. John (Mac Rebennack)<lb/>
There's a lot Dr. John dis-<lb/>
cusses in the book that would<lb/>
raise an eyebrow or two on any<lb/>
parent. But he says his 85-year-<lb/>
old mother hasn't criticized him<lb/>
for "putting my business in the<lb/>
street<lb/>
Dr. John said he's been<lb/>
blessed with a great family and<lb/>
he didn't want to write anything<lb/>
that would hurt them.<lb/>
The book, written with Jack<lb/>
Rummel and published by St.<lb/>
Martin's, says Dr. John has a lot<lb/>
of children, but he won't say just<lb/>
how many.<lb/>
Dr. John also has a new re-<lb/>
cording released by GRP, "Tele-<lb/>
vision for which he wrote all<lb/>
but two of the songs. He calls it<lb/>
funky, fun, dance music. His last<lb/>
LP was blues and the one before<lb/>
that was devoted to jazz.<lb/>
Dr. John has an eight-piece<lb/>
band, sometimes adds three back-<lb/>
ground singers, and basically<lb/>
lives on the road. "If I ain't on the<lb/>
road, it means we ain't work-<lb/>
ing He and his band will be on<lb/>
a tour with B.B. King headlining<lb/>
from Aug. 9 to Oct. 2.<lb/>
The 52-year-old musician's<lb/>
first album was "Gris-Gris<lb/>
which combined Creole funk,<lb/>
West Coast hippie mysticism,<lb/>
jazz, psychedelic rock and pop. It<lb/>
came out 26 years ago.<lb/>
The Dr. John the Night Trip-<lb/>
per persona was the idea of record<lb/>
producer Harold Battiste. It was<lb/>
derived from a 19th-century New<lb/>
Orleans voodoo man. Wearing<lb/>
bones, beads, plumes and robes<lb/>
and scattering glitter to the crowd,<lb/>
the Night Tripper was an instant<lb/>
hit in psychedelic 1968.<lb/>
Dr. John also is on High Street<lb/>
Records' new "Crescent City<lb/>
Gold its players billed as "New<lb/>
Orleans rhythm 'n' blues greats<lb/>
That album was inspired by<lb/>
Cosimo Matassa's New Orleans<lb/>
recording studio in the 1950s,<lb/>
where Dr. John often played, pro-<lb/>
duced, arranged and composed<lb/>
for sessions. He is said to have<lb/>
played on more sessions than any<lb/>
other New Orleans musician. And<lb/>
a 39-track, two-CD retrospective,<lb/>
"Mos' Scocious: the Dr. John An-<lb/>
thology was issued last fall by<lb/>
Rhino Records.<lb/>
WATERS<lb/>
Con't<lb/>
from<lb/>
page5<lb/>
their realities, such as the plight<lb/>
of battered women described in<lb/>
the song "Daddy Do<lb/>
The tracks "Lover Lay Low"<lb/>
and "Is It For Me?" showcase a<lb/>
versatile, jazzy side of Waters'<lb/>
talents.<lb/>
Track 3, "Regardless is<lb/>
reminiscent of "Gypsy Woman<lb/>
or at least it has that similar<lb/>
rhythm. For most artists, that<lb/>
statement iseverything that they<lb/>
don't want to hear, considering<lb/>
all that is done by artists to en-<lb/>
sure originalitv from one CD to<lb/>
the next. With Crystal Waters'<lb/>
distinctive, raspy voice and po-<lb/>
etic lyrics, it's hard to completely<lb/>
separate that characterizing<lb/>
melody "la DA dee, la DA dah<lb/>
Overall, I think the CD will<lb/>
do well and is worthy of pur-<lb/>
chase or trade.<lb/>
? Martin<lb/>
FREE PREGNANCY TEST<lb/>
while you wait<lb/>
Free &amp; Confidential<lb/>
Services &amp; Counseling<lb/>
Carolina Pregnancy Center<lb/>
209 S Evans St Hours:<lb/>
Pittman Building 757-0003 Monday - Friday<lb/>
Greenville NC 8:00-4:00<lb/>
r?BUU.E1<lb/>
. Adult<lb/>
T Entertainment<lb/>
'Ai Jf Center<lb/>
"Greenville's<lb/>
ONLY<lb/>
Exotic<lb/>
Nightclub"<lb/>
BLACK<lb/>
Newton<lb/>
Continued from page 5<lb/>
and how neat tha would be.<lb/>
What can I say? Welcome to the<lb/>
unique world of Frank Black.<lb/>
Going into great detail about<lb/>
many of the 22 songs onTeenager<lb/>
of the Year would be a bit point-<lb/>
less, if not impossible. Frank<lb/>
Black's music comes from some-<lb/>
where deep in his head, and any<lb/>
complex explanation just<lb/>
wouldn't do it justice. "Calistan<lb/>
for example, simply defies any<lb/>
concise explanation, although<lb/>
Karoke is mentioned once or<lb/>
twice. Other songs are a little<lb/>
easier, but still defy all logic, like'<lb/>
"Speedy Marie which seems to<lb/>
be about making love to a work<lb/>
of art.<lb/>
Still other songs can only be<lb/>
defined in the simplest of terms.<lb/>
"Freedom Rock" is about the free-<lb/>
dom that music can offer when it<lb/>
doesn't allow itself to be pinned<lb/>
down to conventions or genres.<lb/>
"Ole Mulholland" is an elabo-<lb/>
rate pun set to music.<lb/>
"Pure Denizen of the Citi-<lb/>
zens Band" is about the last sur-<lb/>
viving member of the CB Radio<lb/>
Culture of the late Seventies. Any<lb/>
further explanation of these songs<lb/>
would only complicate matters.<lb/>
No, it's far easier to simply<lb/>
discuss Black's pet topics, the<lb/>
things he most likes to write songs<lb/>
about. For one thing, he likes<lb/>
UFOs and outer space stuff. Teen-<lb/>
ager of the Year only features a<lb/>
couple of songs in this area, like<lb/>
"Space is Gonna Do Me Good<lb/>
but it's an important thing to<lb/>
know if you want to understand<lb/>
Black's music. Another favorite<lb/>
of Black's is the names of places<lb/>
and their origins. "Ole<lb/>
Mullholland" is in this vein, the<lb/>
song's elaborate pun being based<lb/>
around the names of about half a<lb/>
dozen cities in the United States<lb/>
and Mexico.<lb/>
But, by far, the biggest obses-<lb/>
sion for Black is weirdos. He likes<lb/>
to craft tales of those strange guys<lb/>
you see mumbling to themselves<lb/>
in the back of the bus, the comic<lb/>
book geeks, the computer nerds,<lb/>
the lost and wayward children of<lb/>
American culture. Every other<lb/>
song on Teenager of the Year seems<lb/>
to deal with one of these nut cases,<lb/>
but Black always treats them with<lb/>
respect. After all, he is one of them.<lb/>
Teenager of the Year is pleasant<lb/>
to the ears and disturbing to the<lb/>
mind. I wish there were more al-<lb/>
bums like it, but this brand of<lb/>
weirdness seems to be the provi-<lb/>
dence of a handful of artists like<lb/>
Frank Black and his thematic cous-<lb/>
ins They Might Be Giants and King<lb/>
Missile. It's not as good as Black's<lb/>
ECU's Closest Beach<lb/>
WHKHflRD'S BEflCH<lb/>
Located on the Pamlico River in Washington<lb/>
?Sandy Beach<lb/>
?Conveniently located Mini-Man<lb/>
Beer, Snacks, Lotion &amp; Bathing Suits<lb/>
?Tube Rentals for "Good Times"<lb/>
?3 Flume Waterslide<lb/>
?$ 1.00 per person<lb/>
?$2.00 person on Weekends<lb/>
?Country Dance Every Saturday Night<lb/>
ALL SUMMER LONG!<lb/>
Washington<lb/>
Whic lard's Beach Rd.<lb/>
ECU<lb/>
Hwy33 I<lb/>
? I<lb/>
10th Street IcJ<lb/>
o Chocowinity<lb/>
(Q<lb/>
946-0011<lb/>
Attention<lb/>
Returning Students<lb/>
If you plan to live off campus, you can eliminate at least one long line by arranging<lb/>
your utility service in advance. By planning ahead, you can save valuable time ?- and<lb/>
possibly money. The following options are available:<lb/>
Option A: No Deposit Required<lb/>
At your parents' request, your utility<lb/>
service may be put in heir name. Just pick<lb/>
up a "Request for Utility Service" applica-<lb/>
tion from room 211 in the Off-Campus<lb/>
Housing Office, Whichard Building or at<lb/>
Greenville Utilities' main office, 200 W. 5lh<lb/>
Street<lb/>
Have your parents complete the<lb/>
application (which must be notarized) and<lb/>
mail it to GUC, P.O Box !847, Greenville,<lb/>
NC. 27835-1847, all: Customer Service.<lb/>
?Remember lo attach a "letier of<lb/>
credit" from your parent power cempany.<lb/>
Option B: Deposit Required<lb/>
If you wish to have the utility service put in<lb/>
your name, a deposit will be required. Deposits<lb/>
are as follows:<lb/>
with electric or<lb/>
gas ipace healing<lb/>
woul electric<lb/>
or g?i ipace healing<lb/>
Electric Only $100 $75<lb/>
Electric &amp; Water $100 S85<lb/>
Electric. Water &amp; Gas110 $85<lb/>
Electric Sl Gas $100 $75<lb/>
You can save time by mailing the deposit<lb/>
in advance. Be sure to include your name, where<lb/>
service will be required, when service is to be cut<lb/>
on and a phone number where we may reach you<lb/>
prior ;o your arrival at the service address.<lb/>
Greenville<lb/>
Utilities<lb/>
work with the Pixies, but at least<lb/>
it's more interesting than the<lb/>
Breeders. Check it out.<lb/>
? Mark<lb/>
Brett<lb/>
TUESDAYS<lb/>
Silver Bullet's Female "Exotic" Dancers<lb/>
WEDNESDAYS<lb/>
Amateur Night for Female Dancers 11pm<lb/>
CASH PRIZE<lb/>
"CotUef.vu need te cull &amp; register in advance. Mutt armc ly S:00.<lb/>
THURSDAYS - SATURDAYS<lb/>
Silver Bullet's Female "Exotic" Dancers<lb/>
$Dancers wanted$<lb/>
We do Birthdays, Bachelor Parties, Bridal Showers,<lb/>
Corporate Parties &amp; Divorces<lb/>
h?f<lb/>
ECU STUDENT SPECIAL<lb/>
$2.00 OFF Admission Any Night with this coupon<lb/>
Doors Open 7:30pm Stage Time 9:00pm<lb/>
Call 756-6278<lb/>
iEC"i<lb/>
v 5 miles west of Greenville on 264 Alt.<lb/>
 Dickinson Aye:<lb/>
(behind John's Convenient Mart)<lb/>
Valid N.C. I.D. Required<lb/>
I tor, I I "<lb/>
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MUGNITE CONTINUES<lb/>
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KNOCKED DOWN SMILIN (BI6 CD RELEASE PARTY)<lb/>
85? Molson Night<lb/>
A VERITABLE SMORGASBORG OF BEER<lb/>
5 GREAT SHOWS THIS MONTH<lb/>
THURS17 TRUFFLE (NOVEMBER RECORDING ARTIST)<lb/>
FRI 18 KNOCKED DOWN SMILIN (FIRST CO RELEASE PARTY)<lb/>
tues 2i JUPITER COYOTE (Atlantic recording artist) S4<lb/>
FRI 24 MICKI MILLS &amp; STEEL (SUMMER REGGAE)<lb/>
SAT 25 JACK-O-PIERCE (ARM RECORDING ARTIST) S3<lb/>
rLrtwrtwriKrLr.wriKrLrtwrk<lb/>
<pb facs="00058479_0007"/><lb/>
The East Carolinian<lb/>
June 15, 1994<lb/>
Sports<lb/>
Page 7<lb/>
By<lb/>
Mike<lb/>
Baumann<lb/>
Staff writer<lb/>
Baumann's<lb/>
Bits<lb/>
It is true that balls are fly-<lb/>
ing out of major league<lb/>
ballparks at record numbers<lb/>
and that pitchers' earned run<lb/>
averages are<lb/>
also exorbitant.<lb/>
But, are we re-<lb/>
ally supposed to<lb/>
believe that it is<lb/>
because the ball is being made<lb/>
differently than in past years?<lb/>
There must be other factors in-<lb/>
volved. One must only flip on<lb/>
the tube to see what the real<lb/>
explanations are.<lb/>
First of all, every hitter in<lb/>
the lineup has forearms that<lb/>
resemble Popeye's forearms.<lb/>
Even the 7th and 8th place hit-<lb/>
ters are incredibly well-built.<lb/>
Teams are purposely stacking<lb/>
their lineups with guys who<lb/>
can hitthe ball. Whocanblame<lb/>
them?<lb/>
Secondly, thepitchershave<lb/>
forgotten how to pitch inside.<lb/>
Gone are the days of the<lb/>
"knockdown" pitch. One main<lb/>
reason for its disappearance is<lb/>
the way hitters retaliate. For<lb/>
example, if you pitch inside,<lb/>
you are likely to have some<lb/>
guy running at you with spiked<lb/>
shoes and a bat. Pitchers who<lb/>
dare to "brush" the hitter off<lb/>
the plate are often libeled<lb/>
"headhunters<lb/>
Finally, and maybe most<lb/>
importantly,thepitchersdoriot<lb/>
understand the value of "con-<lb/>
trol" Control means keeping<lb/>
pitches down and on the cor-<lb/>
ners instead of up and out over<lb/>
the plate. Common sense says<lb/>
that if you keep letting the hit-<lb/>
ters get to a 3-0 count or 3-1<lb/>
count, you are flirting with a<lb/>
potential roof shot. Conversely,<lb/>
if you can get out in front of the<lb/>
hitter in the countyou will have<lb/>
more success. Greg Maddux,<lb/>
who is and has been one of the<lb/>
best pitchers in the game the<lb/>
last couple of years, relies onhis<lb/>
pinpoint control.<lb/>
At any rate, there are other<lb/>
factors involved. Itisnot simply<lb/>
that the baseball is juiced.<lb/>
Intramural playoffs start<lb/>
i<lb/>
(RS) ? As the first summer<lb/>
session winds to a close, the regu-<lb/>
lar season of most intramural<lb/>
sports activities is wrapping up<lb/>
and playoff action is set to begin.<lb/>
In five-on-five basketball, "Da<lb/>
Fat Katz" completed the regular<lb/>
season with a 4-0 record behind<lb/>
the steady leadership of-captain<lb/>
Todd Stephens and George<lb/>
Hendricks. However, the "Katz"<lb/>
barely escaped a furious rally from<lb/>
their biggest rival, "D's Nuts<lb/>
during a possible championship<lb/>
preview in capturing a 59-56 vic-<lb/>
tory after leading by as many as 20<lb/>
points. "D's Nuts" finished 3-1,<lb/>
taking their final regular season<lb/>
contest over "Solomon's<lb/>
Wisemen" 50-46 behind the of-<lb/>
fense of Scott Harrelson and Jeff<lb/>
Byrd.<lb/>
The "Wisemen" completed a<lb/>
disappointing regular season with<lb/>
several close losses and hope to<lb/>
make some noise in the tourna-<lb/>
ment with the blue-collar play of<lb/>
Kenny Muse and Mark Solomon.<lb/>
However, the big key to the<lb/>
"Wisemen" success is to keep<lb/>
Jamie Rowland, now the all-time<lb/>
intramural leader in ejections, in<lb/>
the game.<lb/>
Also in the playoff hunt is the<lb/>
"Crusties who spent most of the<lb/>
first week of the season trying to<lb/>
figure out whether they were ref-<lb/>
ereeing or playing. The "Crusties"<lb/>
have come on strong by adding<lb/>
Chris Loeffel and making full use<lb/>
of the ballhandling of Shannon<lb/>
Cowan.<lb/>
In softball, the weather domi-<lb/>
nated play in the final week of the<lb/>
regular season. In the men's divi-<lb/>
sion, the "Greenville Polecats" and<lb/>
Intramural<lb/>
standings<lb/>
File Photo<lb/>
Withalltheteamsmakingthe playoffs, championshipsareupforgrabs.lnthe post seasonanything can<lb/>
happen.Teams with better regular season records will have the higher seedsaccordinqlv.<lb/>
Have you ever sat through<lb/>
an entire Atlanta Braves tele-<lb/>
cast on television? If youarenot<lb/>
a Braves' fan, chances are you<lb/>
probably did not make it<lb/>
through the 3rd inning because<lb/>
of theirbiased announcers. Yes,<lb/>
Skip Carey, Ernie Johnson, and<lb/>
Don Sutton will devise any ex-<lb/>
cuse possible todefend a Braves'<lb/>
error. They will also exaggerate<lb/>
Braves' hits as "line shots" and<lb/>
"rockets" while referring to the<lb/>
other team's hits as "bloop"<lb/>
hits and "excuse me" hits. Their<lb/>
biased tones may not be recog-<lb/>
nizable to Braves' fans,but they<lb/>
are evident to other fans.<lb/>
The Braves and WTBS are<lb/>
bothowned by Ted Turner. Itis,<lb/>
therefore, understandable that<lb/>
the Braves' announcers want to<lb/>
projectafavorableimageof their<lb/>
players. But, whatever hap-<lb/>
pened to calling it the way it<lb/>
happens?<lb/>
Although SkipCarey is not<lb/>
asbad as DonSutton, who ironi-<lb/>
cally happens to be a former<lb/>
Dodger, Skip is nothing like his<lb/>
dad, who has been in the busi-<lb/>
ness of broadcasting since the<lb/>
1940s. Harry calls the shots the<lb/>
way they "Happen. Sure, he roots<lb/>
for hishome team. Heevensings<lb/>
with them. But he has refrained<lb/>
from using the tone that the<lb/>
Braves' announcers employ. He<lb/>
wants his team to win, but he<lb/>
does not let mat affect the way<lb/>
he calls the plays. At times, he<lb/>
even criticizesCubplayers. You<lb/>
will not catch Braves' announc-<lb/>
ers doing that. They leave their<lb/>
criticizing for the other teams.<lb/>
Maybe it has to do with<lb/>
winning. The Braves are con-<lb/>
stantly near the top while the<lb/>
Cubs often are mired near last<lb/>
place by season end. With win-<lb/>
ning comes a certain attitude<lb/>
and cockiness.<lb/>
So the Braves may be the<lb/>
best team in baseball, but the<lb/>
Cubs have the best announcer<lb/>
in baseball.<lb/>
"U Lose II" completed the season<lb/>
undefeated with their scheduled<lb/>
meeting being rained out. The<lb/>
"Polecats" rode the speed and of-<lb/>
fense of Rodney Young and the<lb/>
hitting of Romel Racosas to the<lb/>
top wldle "U Lose II" dominated<lb/>
opponents with a balanced lineup<lb/>
featuring Mike Kehoe, Stuart<lb/>
Sealey and David Parker.<lb/>
The "sleeper" in the draw ap-<lb/>
pears to be "Penthouse Revenge<lb/>
who exploded for 25 runs in the<lb/>
final regular season game with<lb/>
Larry "Big D" Stiscia and Dave<lb/>
Edgerton each scoring four times.<lb/>
In Co-Rec, the "Greenville 69ers"<lb/>
have quietly completed the regu-<lb/>
lar season undefeated with Rickie<lb/>
Lee and Carl Rouse leading the<lb/>
offense. "Summer's Finest" is one<lb/>
of the favorites in the division as<lb/>
well, due to the hitting of Claire<lb/>
Norman.<lb/>
In tennis, Greg Schehr and<lb/>
Mark Merring continue to hold<lb/>
court over the men's division<lb/>
while Debra Riffle and Kim<lb/>
Brewington are the top players in<lb/>
the women's division. Frisbee golf<lb/>
players braved the threats of rain<lb/>
to take on the ECU course with<lb/>
Benjamin Deeter carting a 46 for<lb/>
the top score. Other ranking play-<lb/>
ers include Hank Norwood, Mark<lb/>
Johnson, Scott McMahan, Donny<lb/>
Beriri and Jason McMickling.<lb/>
Upcoming activities leading<lb/>
off the second summer session in-<lb/>
clude softball and three-on-three<lb/>
basketball. Registration meetings<lb/>
will be held on Tuesday, June 28 at<lb/>
4 p.m. and 4:30 p.m. in Biology N-<lb/>
106. Call Recreational Services at<lb/>
757-6387 for details.<lb/>
Simpson suspect in murder case<lb/>
(AP) ? Police briefly hand-<lb/>
cuffedO.J.Simpsonandquestioned<lb/>
him for three hours after the blood-<lb/>
ied bodies of his ex-wife and an-<lb/>
other man were found outside her<lb/>
condominium.<lb/>
Simpson was not arrested in<lb/>
the deaths of Nicole Brown<lb/>
Simpson, 35, and Ronald Lyle<lb/>
Goldman, 25, butyesterday The Los<lb/>
Angeles Times quoted an unidenti-<lb/>
fied police source as saying the foot-<lb/>
ball Hall of Famer is under investi-<lb/>
gation.<lb/>
A passerby found Mrs.<lb/>
Simpson's body near a gate to the<lb/>
West Los Angeles condominium<lb/>
early Monday. Police found<lb/>
Goldman's body in shrubbery<lb/>
nearby. Police wouldn't say when<lb/>
the two died.<lb/>
A blood-soaked glove was<lb/>
found at Simpson's home, the Times<lb/>
and Tlie Daily News of Los Angeles<lb/>
reported, citing unidentified police<lb/>
sources. 77k Daily News reported<lb/>
that the giove matched one found<lb/>
near tlie bodies.<lb/>
"I know nothing Simpson<lb/>
said as he got into a patrol car Mon-<lb/>
day.<lb/>
Simpson flew to Chicago on<lb/>
business about 11 p.m. Sunday and<lb/>
returned around noon the next day,<lb/>
after police notified him of Mrs.<lb/>
Simpson's death, said his lawyer,<lb/>
Howard Weitzman.<lb/>
"Mr. Simpson is not being<lb/>
treated as a suspect Weitzman<lb/>
said. "He had nothing to do with<lb/>
this tragedy<lb/>
Police are not ruling anyone<lb/>
out as a suspect, Cmdr. David<lb/>
Gascon said.<lb/>
Autopsies were planned for<lb/>
today. Coroner's spokesman Scott<lb/>
Carrier said "sharp-force injuries<lb/>
which might include stabbing, con-<lb/>
tributed to the deaths. The Daily<lb/>
News said the victims' throats were<lb/>
slashed.<lb/>
Goldman was a waiter at the<lb/>
restaurant where Mrs. Simpson<lb/>
dined Sunday, but he didn't serve<lb/>
her, restaurant owner Karim Souki<lb/>
See O J page 8<lb/>
Struggling franchise looks to Lucas for help<lb/>
(AP) ? The Philadelphia 76ers<lb/>
are putting their future in trie handsof<lb/>
a man who knows as much about<lb/>
recover' as he does about basketball<lb/>
The 76ers planned to announce<lb/>
former San AntonioSpurscoachJohn<lb/>
Lucas as their coachand general man-<lb/>
eyesterdfoy,WiePfvadelphiaInqiiirer<lb/>
reported<lb/>
Lucas,40,reagnedlastweekfrom<lb/>
theSpursafter leading the team toa 94-<lb/>
49 record in less than two seasons in<lb/>
his first head coaching job.<lb/>
Lucas, who has also been con-<lb/>
tacted by the Portland Trail Blazers,<lb/>
was attracted to Philadelphia by the<lb/>
prospect of holding both positions,<lb/>
according to the Inquirer's sources.<lb/>
"The main reason he's coming is<lb/>
he wants to run the whole show and<lb/>
not answer to so many people an<lb/>
unidentified source told the paper.<lb/>
Lucas, a former cocaine addict,<lb/>
has never held a general manager's<lb/>
position Despite his success with the<lb/>
Spurs, he'c perhaps best known for<lb/>
working with other recovering ad-<lb/>
dicts.<lb/>
A former No. 1 draft pick whose<lb/>
10-year playing career was marred by<lb/>
drugabuse,LucaswentsoberinMarch<lb/>
1986 and then turned his efforts to<lb/>
hdpingotheratrUeteswimdrugprob-<lb/>
lems.<lb/>
Heoperatesadrugtreatmentand<lb/>
rehabilitation center in Houston, and<lb/>
also owns and has coached the Miami<lb/>
TropicsoftheUnitedStates Basketball<lb/>
League, a team whose roster is often<lb/>
dotted with recovering addicts.<lb/>
The team planned to introduce<lb/>
Lucas at a press conference sched-<lb/>
uledfor 1 p.m. Monday, one day after<lb/>
76ers owner Harold Katz met with<lb/>
Lucas in Philadelphia, the newspa-<lb/>
per said.<lb/>
The team told coach Fred Carter<lb/>
on Monday that his one-year con-<lb/>
tract, which expires in two weeks,<lb/>
will not be renewed, the Inquirer said.<lb/>
The 76ers have been without a<lb/>
general manager since Jim Lynam<lb/>
left last month to coach the Washing-<lb/>
ton Bullets.<lb/>
Carter, a former player and as-<lb/>
sistant coach in Philadelphia, led the<lb/>
team to a 32-71 record in 11 2 years.<lb/>
Sky<lb/>
High!<lb/>
Bill<lb/>
Romberger,<lb/>
surrounded<lb/>
by three<lb/>
oponents,<lb/>
jumps to<lb/>
make a catch<lb/>
in the<lb/>
Ultimate<lb/>
Frisbee<lb/>
Championships.<lb/>
The Irates<lb/>
finished as<lb/>
National<lb/>
Champions.<lb/>
Photo by<lb/>
Leslie Petty<lb/>
(Through end of<lb/>
regular season)<lb/>
5-on-5<lb/>
Basketball<lb/>
Da Fat Katz 4-0<lb/>
D's Nuts 3-1<lb/>
The Crusties 2-2<lb/>
Preseason 1-3<lb/>
Solomon's<lb/>
Wisemen 0-4<lb/>
Men's Softball<lb/>
Greenville<lb/>
Polecats 4-0<lb/>
ULoseH 4-0<lb/>
Penthouse<lb/>
Revenge 3-1<lb/>
Nine Guys<lb/>
&amp; A P'nut 2-2<lb/>
Preseason 1-3<lb/>
Chronics 0-4<lb/>
Co-Rec Softball<lb/>
Greenville<lb/>
69ers 4-0<lb/>
Summer's<lb/>
Finest 3-1<lb/>
Fun Team 3-1<lb/>
Economic<lb/>
Society 2-2<lb/>
Who Cares? 2-2<lb/>
UMffimaft? wrap imp<lb/>
Men's<lb/>
Ultimate<lb/>
Frisbee top<lb/>
Women's<lb/>
Ultimate<lb/>
Frisbee top<lb/>
11. East Carolina 14-11<lb/>
19-3<lb/>
13-3<lb/>
20-3<lb/>
8-4<lb/>
15-4<lb/>
21-4<lb/>
7-9<lb/>
7-3<lb/>
15-8<lb/>
O'O<lb/>
1 w<lb/>
11(1<lb/>
I<lb/>
?n I<lb/>
on<lb/>
rH-t<lb/>
M<lb/>
tyjj<lb/>
lb1<lb/>
? r<lb/>
1 1<lb/>
1UD<lb/>
1(11)<lb/>
inn<lb/>
i<lb/>
at i<lb/>
 1VJ<lb/>
HO.)<lb/>
?Irirt<lb/>
17-10<lb/>
16-18<lb/>
3-6<lb/>
0-6<lb/>
11-6<lb/>
5-5<lb/>
18-10<lb/>
0-6<lb/>
7-4<lb/>
2-4<lb/>
0-8<lb/>
1-4<lb/>
9-10<lb/>
6-12<lb/>
<pb facs="00058479_0008"/><lb/>
8 The East Carolinian<lb/>
June 15, 1994<lb/>
Baseball will miss Brock<lb/>
(AP)?.Arizona State head coach<lb/>
Jim Brock, one of college baseball's<lb/>
winningest coaches, died Sunday<lb/>
night after a long bout with cancer.<lb/>
He was 57.<lb/>
Brock compiled a 1,100-440<lb/>
record in 23 years with Arizona State.<lb/>
According to the Arizona State Sports<lb/>
Information Department, Brock died<lb/>
Sunday night of liver and colon can-<lb/>
cer.<lb/>
During Brock's tenure, the Sun<lb/>
DevilswontwoCollegeWorldSeries<lb/>
titles and finished second four times<lb/>
in 11 other trips to the national tour-<lb/>
nament.<lb/>
His illness attracted national at-<lb/>
tentionduringthisyear'sCWS. Brock<lb/>
sat out ASU's game against Okla-<lb/>
homa at Omaha, Neb on June 6<lb/>
because of a reaction to medication. It<lb/>
wasonly thesecondtimein61 games<lb/>
this season that Brock's dugout chair<lb/>
was empty.<lb/>
In an interview with Phoenix<lb/>
television station KSAZ before that<lb/>
game, Brock said he made the trip<lb/>
because he felt his presence boosted<lb/>
team morale.<lb/>
"I don't think it makes me any<lb/>
more well or any sicker, so this is<lb/>
where I want to be Brock said. "I'd<lb/>
be absolutely on pins and needles if I<lb/>
wasn't here<lb/>
The next day, he returned to<lb/>
Tempe on the advice of his family<lb/>
doctor and checked into Desert Sa-<lb/>
maritan Hospital in Mesa, where he<lb/>
remained until his death.<lb/>
His team was eliminated in a 13-<lb/>
5 loss to eventual champion Okla-<lb/>
homa on Thursday.<lb/>
Hisachievementsthisyearcame<lb/>
as he battled the cancer, which was<lb/>
diagnosed in July 1993.<lb/>
Later that month, doctors re-<lb/>
moved 80 percent of Brock's liver, 10<lb/>
inches of his colon and three lymph<lb/>
nodes. Then he underwent months<lb/>
of chemotherapy.<lb/>
OJ<lb/>
Continued from page 7<lb/>
said.<lb/>
"She had dinner here. She called<lb/>
la ter to see if we f ound her gla sses and<lb/>
we found them Souki said. He said<lb/>
Goldmanvolunteeredtoretumthem.<lb/>
Neighbor Beverly Newman told<lb/>
Tlte Daily Nobs that she had often<lb/>
seen Goldman playing with<lb/>
Simpson's children.<lb/>
The 5-year-old boy and 7-year-<lb/>
old girl were found sleeping, un-<lb/>
harmed, in their mother's condo-<lb/>
minium. They were turned over to<lb/>
relatives.<lb/>
TheSimpsons filed fordivorce in<lb/>
1992 but were said to be discussing a<lb/>
reconciliation.<lb/>
"The situation had seemed bet-<lb/>
ter neighbor Robert Gerard said.<lb/>
Weitzman said the two were of-<lb/>
ten together on family outings, and<lb/>
bothattended theirdaughter'sdance<lb/>
recital Sunday.<lb/>
Simpson pleaded no contest to<lb/>
wife beating in 1989, paid a $700 fine<lb/>
and served two years' probation. I le<lb/>
had been accused of screaming, "I'll<lb/>
kill you as he slapped and kicked<lb/>
his wife.<lb/>
Police questioned Simpson for<lb/>
about three hours Monda v, Gascon<lb/>
said. Afterward, Simpson returned<lb/>
home and police who had spent the<lb/>
day searching his $1.2 million<lb/>
Brentwood estate left. The house is<lb/>
about two miles from Mrs.<lb/>
Simpson's home.<lb/>
Bitsof cardboard markedsmall<lb/>
reddish stains leading up the d rive-<lb/>
way where Simpson's black Rolls-<lb/>
Royce was parked.<lb/>
Detective Tom Lange, chief in-<lb/>
spector at the site, refused to discuss<lb/>
what investigators found. As he left<lb/>
the house, he carried a pair of white<lb/>
tennis shoes.<lb/>
Simpson checked into the<lb/>
O'Hare Plaa Hotel on Monday<lb/>
morning and left in a hum' about<lb/>
two hours later, general manager<lb/>
Peter Phillips said. He had made his<lb/>
reservation a few davs earlier.<lb/>
Simpson said he was attend-<lb/>
ing a function for the Hertz car<lb/>
rental company, for which he<lb/>
made a popu lar series of TV com-<lb/>
mercials.<lb/>
The NBC-TV sports com-<lb/>
mentator has also appeared in<lb/>
several movies, including the<lb/>
three Naked Gun comedies. He<lb/>
plaved for the National Football<lb/>
League's Buffalo Bills, then the<lb/>
San Francisco 49ers. He retired in<lb/>
1979.<lb/>
The Sports Dept. is<lb/>
hiring writers for<lb/>
the summer and<lb/>
fall.<lb/>
Brand New For '94<lb/>
Parkview<lb/>
at Kingston Place<lb/>
"IT WAS<lb/>
THIS BIG<lb/>
<lb/>
rj<lb/>
?<lb/>
Mexican Restaurant<lb/>
THE HUNGRY PIRATE<lb/>
THE BICCEST BURRITO YOU'VE<lb/>
EVER SEEN!<lb/>
STUFFED WITH BEEF, RICE,<lb/>
LETTUCE, BEANS,<lb/>
TOMATOE BITS, SOUR CREAM, &amp;<lb/>
COVERED<lb/>
WITH OUR ENCHILADA SAUCE.<lb/>
ONLY $3.45!<lb/>
SERVED 2-5 WEEKDAYS<lb/>
11-5 ON WEEKENDS<lb/>
521 COTANCHE ST. DOWNTOWN GREENVILLE 757-1666<lb/>
r<lb/>
?0<lb/>
1 &amp; 2 BEDROOM2 BATH APARTMENTS AVAILABLE IN JULY<lb/>
POOL ? CLUBHOUSE ? PRIVATE LAUNDRY ? FREE CABLE AND<lb/>
WATER ? PRIVATE BALCONIES ? FULLY CARPETED ? CENTRAL<lb/>
AIR &amp; HEAT ? DISHWASHERS &amp; DISPOSALS ? BLINDS ?<lb/>
WASHERDRYER CONNECTIONS AND RENTALS ? ECU BUS .<lb/>
CALL 758-7575 OR VISIT OUR ONSITE OFFICE 2-5:00 P.M. MON-FRI<lb/>
LOCATED ON KINGSTON CIRCLE OFF GREENVILLE BLVD BETWEEN 10TH AND 14TH STREETS<lb/>
PROFESSIONALLY MANAGED BY PRO MANAGEMENT OF GREENVILLE<lb/>
ALFREDO'S<lb/>
New York PIZZA<lb/>
Daily<lb/>
Lunch Special<lb/>
ALFREDO'S<lb/>
3<lb/>
2 Slices 1<lb/>
Topping<lb/>
and Drink<lb/>
$1.99<lb/>
OPEN DAILY<lb/>
FOR LUNCH<lb/>
11AM2 PM<lb/>
7PM3AM<lb/>
OPEN 7 DAYS A WEEK<lb/>
752-0022<lb/>
Wed. Dollar<lb/>
NITE<lb/>
Thurs. 25 32oz<lb/>
BEER<lb/>
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u<lb/>
Z<lb/>
A<lb/>
<lb/>
SELL YOUR BOOKS<lb/>
We Buy All Books<lb/>
With Market Value<lb/>
ECU Student Stores<lb/>
Wright Building<lb/>
"Main Campus"<lb/>
Buying 8 AM - 5PM<lb/>
our Dottars Sup-port Student Scholars<lb/>
ATTIC<lb/>
752-7303 1 209 E. 5th St.<lb/>
Undefeated, Undisputed!<lb/>
Thanks For Voting Us<lb/>
The "Best Place To Hear Live Music"<lb/>
i Greenville, NC 198719881989-1990199119921993<lb/>
yV prCSCIltS GREENVILLE TIMES READERS' POLL<lb/>
O "A Summer at The CreeK<lb/>
Wednesday 8<lb/>
The<lb/>
 wHamburger c <lb/>
2mt? fc Kerry Awn bflE<lb/>
tm???f" Featuring Terry Yates<lb/>
$1.50 Highballs ? $1.50 Tallboys<lb/>
0<lb/>
$4 MEMBERS'4<lb/>
Every Wed. Free -<lb/>
'ass to the Comedy-<lb/>
Zone wpurchase<lb/>
' Chico's entr<lb/>
vv<lb/>
Thursday 9<lb/>
WKr-<lb/>
2T1xto<lb/>
. Atop? BfWn<lb/>
WJnut Creek<lb/>
Bruce Frye<lb/>
a The Lonely Rider Band<lb/>
99cHIGHBALLS 99c MEMBERSHIPS 99c32ozDRAFT<lb/>
Friday 10<lb/>
T<lb/>
Door Prize:<lb/>
2 Tb to<lb/>
MeMssa Ethertrfge<lb/>
Walnut Creek<lb/>
The Gibb Droll<lb/>
Band<lb/>
"Guitar Legend in the Making"<lb/>
$2.00 32m, Draft<lb/>
kHuJ<lb/>
Only S5<lb/>
adm for<lb/>
members,<lb/>
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Saturday 11<lb/>
Door Prize:<lb/>
2Tixto<lb/>
Phf?h<lb/>
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Kindred Soul<lb/>
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members,<lb/>
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$2.00 32oz Draft<lb/>
?<lb/>
EE?A-KOC(SE<lb/>
POSTPONED UNTIL THE FALL<lb/>
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