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<pb facs="00058508_0001"/>
<lb/>
THURSDAY<lb/>
Now or Never<lb/>
Pirates travel to Memphis to take on the<lb/>
Tigers, with the victor gaining a Liberty<lb/>
Bowl berth. See page 11.<lb/>
NVV?<lb/>
NWVV<lb/>
FRIDAY<lb/>
Interview With The Vampire<lb/>
Controversy surrounding Interview With<lb/>
theVampire is brought forth. See page 8.<lb/>
The East Carolinian<lb/>
Vol. 69 No. 59<lb/>
Circulation 12,000<lb/>
Thursday, November 17, 1994<lb/>
Greenville, NC<lb/>
14 pages<lb/>
Communication moves toward future<lb/>
Tambra Zion<lb/>
Assistant News Editor<lb/>
This article is the third in a three<lb/>
part series on the communication<lb/>
department split.<lb/>
As America's information<lb/>
highway develops, the separate<lb/>
bachelor of arts and bachelor of<lb/>
science communications pro-<lb/>
grams are planning to make in-<lb/>
teractive technology a reality for<lb/>
ECU graduates of the future.<lb/>
"It's an exciting time to be a<lb/>
communication major said Dr.<lb/>
Mary Anne Leon, B.A. profes-<lb/>
sor. "There are a lot of different<lb/>
jobs out there<lb/>
She said the B.A. program's<lb/>
future interests lie in field and<lb/>
multimedia learning.<lb/>
"Linking computers to visual<lb/>
communicating media Leon<lb/>
said. "We're talking about<lb/>
meshing text and graphics and<lb/>
digitized video images as well<lb/>
as capability for digitizing au-<lb/>
dio, but that technology is not as<lb/>
well advanced<lb/>
Leon said she would enjoy<lb/>
teaching these new technologies<lb/>
if she gets the chance, but until<lb/>
then will, "continue to teach pub-<lb/>
lic relations theory and commu-<lb/>
nication theory<lb/>
An article written by B.A. pro-<lb/>
gram Chair Dr. T. Harrell Allen<lb/>
confirms high hopes for the de-<lb/>
partment.<lb/>
"The rapidly converging tech-<lb/>
nologies of desktop publishing,<lb/>
cable broadcasting, compact disk<lb/>
storage, fiber optics, on-line data-<lb/>
bases and, of course, the personal<lb/>
computer are actually in the pro-<lb/>
cess of redefining the entire field<lb/>
of communication media Allen<lb/>
said. "Central to our curriculum<lb/>
is our media lab. Through private<lb/>
funding and university resources,<lb/>
our aim is to make it a state-of-<lb/>
the-art facility with every student<lb/>
extensively using a personal com-<lb/>
puter<lb/>
Allen wants to concentrate on<lb/>
giving journalism students access<lb/>
to on-line databases which can<lb/>
provide instant information and<lb/>
graphics for illustration.<lb/>
The department of communi-<lb/>
cation has added production<lb/>
classes for this spring and plans<lb/>
to implement documentary in-<lb/>
ternship opportunities for stu-<lb/>
dents in the future.<lb/>
A brochure distributed by the<lb/>
department emphasizes, "Stu-<lb/>
dents are taught to communicate<lb/>
by thinking critically, writing ef-<lb/>
fectively and speaking persua-<lb/>
sively. Then professional skills<lb/>
courses are added to train the stu-<lb/>
dent for particular careers in the<lb/>
communication industry<lb/>
The B.A. program lost most of<lb/>
its majors when the department<lb/>
split, and is actively recruiting<lb/>
students to the program.<lb/>
Allen said the B.A. program<lb/>
has no interest in television. That<lb/>
medium is more in line with the<lb/>
School of Education's B.S. com-<lb/>
munications program.<lb/>
The B.S. program emphasizes<lb/>
a more applied learning atmo-<lb/>
sphere.<lb/>
"Step back and look at what<lb/>
we have in this department said<lb/>
Dr. Larry Auld, chair of the de-<lb/>
partment of library studies and<lb/>
educational technology. "We<lb/>
have in the library science area ?<lb/>
information. In the industrial<lb/>
technology area, we have com-<lb/>
puters, and in the B.S. communi-<lb/>
cations program, we have deliv-<lb/>
ery, and that is a lovely three-<lb/>
legged stool.<lb/>
"They fit together very logi-<lb/>
cally, and as we watch technolo-<lb/>
gies change, you can see that these<lb/>
three areas are coming together<lb/>
in many interesting ways Auld<lb/>
said.<lb/>
B.S. professor Dr. Carlton Benz<lb/>
agrees. In a memo dated Oct. 4, to<lb/>
Dr. Charles Coble, dean of the<lb/>
School of Education, Benz de-<lb/>
scribed the B.S. program as fol-<lb/>
lows: "Our work in our produc-<lb/>
tion courses is not designed solely<lb/>
to provide entry into commercial<lb/>
television and radio stations. Our<lb/>
course work provides theory and<lb/>
practical skills in forming and<lb/>
communicating messages via<lb/>
video and audio components uti-<lb/>
lizing skills common to all medi-<lb/>
ums of communication including<lb/>
video<lb/>
The B.S. program is planning<lb/>
revisions with a target date for<lb/>
next May of 1995. Dr. Auld said<lb/>
he is working closely with the<lb/>
faculty in deciding the best cur-<lb/>
riculum for students.<lb/>
"I'm confident the new B.S.<lb/>
program will eventually be a<lb/>
model program for the entire<lb/>
state said B.S. professor Robert<lb/>
Caprio.<lb/>
Currently, ECU offers classes<lb/>
to other schools through video<lb/>
technology. Dr. Auld said stu-<lb/>
dents can send and receive video<lb/>
through the Internet. ECU also<lb/>
has educational programming as<lb/>
well as a television channel<lb/>
through which B.S. students pro-<lb/>
duce a show.<lb/>
"The world is looking for more<lb/>
education and more training and<lb/>
more knowledge to be dissemi-<lb/>
nated said Dr. Charles Coble,<lb/>
dean of the School of Educa-<lb/>
tion. "I think the communica-<lb/>
tions majors are going to be<lb/>
the people who make that hap-<lb/>
pen in concert with a team of<lb/>
other people. Some of them<lb/>
B.S. majors will actually be<lb/>
TV stars and will make TV<lb/>
stars out of some teachers<lb/>
Dr. Auld said the future of<lb/>
multimedia will increasingly<lb/>
dissolve media boundaries.<lb/>
"Home computers, video<lb/>
set receivers, can receive sig-<lb/>
nals coming from the air,<lb/>
through video cable or select<lb/>
messages to be received via<lb/>
the information highway<lb/>
Auld said. In the year 2000,<lb/>
B.S. studen ts should have their<lb/>
hands full. "It should be flour-<lb/>
ishing. We'll be adapting to<lb/>
new media, some of which we<lb/>
haven't even imagined. We'll<lb/>
be building on what we now<lb/>
have and evolving as tech-<lb/>
nologies evolve.<lb/>
See COMM page 4<lb/>
Mystery of 'GTP' license plate prefix solved<lb/>
Katy Newton<lb/>
Staff Writer<lb/>
Less than 30 miles away from<lb/>
ECU, Kinston Regional Jetport<lb/>
is the subject of plans that are<lb/>
expected to change the nature of<lb/>
international commerce?and<lb/>
eastern North Carolina?for-<lb/>
ever.<lb/>
Construction on the Global<lb/>
TransPark (GTP) is expected to<lb/>
begin within the next two years,<lb/>
and so far, there has been noth-<lb/>
ing but good news about it. The<lb/>
construction, itself, is going to<lb/>
create thousands of jobs for<lb/>
North Carolinians, and within<lb/>
20 years of completion, GTP is<lb/>
projected to directly employ<lb/>
23,400 people. In addition, 26,000<lb/>
more people will be employed<lb/>
as an indirect result of GTP.<lb/>
According to former Congress-<lb/>
man Martin Lancaster, "The<lb/>
TransPark is going to make east-<lb/>
ern North Carolina a true mecca<lb/>
for economic development. It will<lb/>
bring to this region the kind of<lb/>
good-paying jobs that will raise<lb/>
the standard of living for our<lb/>
people<lb/>
Occupying 15,300 acres, GTP<lb/>
will be a stronghold of manufac-<lb/>
turing, transportation, communi-<lb/>
cations and state-of-the-art tech-<lb/>
nology. It will initially include an<lb/>
11,500-foot-long runway for air<lb/>
cargo (with room to build an-<lb/>
other), as well as connections to<lb/>
Norfolk Southern and CSX rail<lb/>
lines, direct access to state and<lb/>
national hignway systems and<lb/>
close proximity to two major<lb/>
deepwater ports.<lb/>
The GTP master plan empha-<lb/>
sizes flexibility in order to accom-<lb/>
modate advancements and fluc-<lb/>
tuations in technology and mar-<lb/>
ket. It will be equipped with fi-<lb/>
ber-optic and satellite links, as<lb/>
well as tracking systems that will<lb/>
be able to globally monitor all<lb/>
materials that come into and go<lb/>
out of GTP.<lb/>
During a recent visit to ECU,<lb/>
GTP Authority Communications<lb/>
Assistant Lane Dunn said, "We're<lb/>
looking at speed and international<lb/>
trade, and it's going to be brought<lb/>
together by infrastructure and<lb/>
technology. That's what GTP is<lb/>
all about<lb/>
Dunn, an ECU graduate, be-<lb/>
lieves that GTP is analogous to<lb/>
Research Triangle Park, another<lb/>
state project that was the first of<lb/>
itskind. "Thestateof NorthCaro-<lb/>
lina has a tradition of innovation<lb/>
that produces a good atmosphere<lb/>
for business  and Global<lb/>
TransPark is just a continuation<lb/>
of that tradition Dunn said.<lb/>
GTP is supported and pro-<lb/>
pelled by three interdependent<lb/>
agencies: the GTP Authority, a<lb/>
state agency that is responsible<lb/>
for the environmental assessment<lb/>
of the impact of GTP on surround-<lb/>
ing areas as well as for the devel-<lb/>
opment of GTP's runway and in-<lb/>
frastructure; the GTP Foundation,<lb/>
a non-profit organization that has<lb/>
already raised $17 million in pri-<lb/>
vate pledges toward its ultimate<lb/>
goal of $30 million; and the GTP<lb/>
Development Commission, an or-<lb/>
ganization of 13 counties sur-<lb/>
rounding Kinston, which plans<lb/>
to raise $25 million to support<lb/>
regional development projects<lb/>
that relate to GTP.<lb/>
The GTP Development Com-<lb/>
mission is responsible for the new<lb/>
$5 license plate fee, as well as for<lb/>
the new North Carolina plates<lb/>
with GTP prefixes. According to<lb/>
a brochure released by the Com-<lb/>
mission, "The fee will help pro-<lb/>
vide a $20 million trust fund for<lb/>
infrastructure needs in the 13-<lb/>
county GTP Zone<lb/>
While the benefits of GTP will<lb/>
be numerous, it is going to take a<lb/>
very long time for GTP to fully<lb/>
develop to its full potential. Ini-<lb/>
tial construction can not even be-<lb/>
gin until the GTP Authority's En-<lb/>
vironmental Impact Statement is<lb/>
completed and approved. Since<lb/>
GTP is going to occupy such a<lb/>
large area, it has to integrate<lb/>
many environmental laws and<lb/>
considerations into its overall<lb/>
plan. Already, the GTP Au-<lb/>
thority has developed a Con-<lb/>
servation Plan which will in-<lb/>
clude protection and mitiga-<lb/>
tion of the on-site wetlands,<lb/>
which make up about 30 per-<lb/>
cent of GTP's total acreage.<lb/>
" The Conservation Plan is<lb/>
going to set aside 2,000 acres<lb/>
of our site Dunn said. "It's<lb/>
going to be greenways; it's<lb/>
going to be interconnected<lb/>
wildlife corridors and farm-<lb/>
land preservation that<lb/>
nobody's going to touch<lb/>
So far, the Conservation<lb/>
See GTP page 3<lb/>
Prof adds spice to dept.<lb/>
Kelly Sullivan<lb/>
Staff Writer<lb/>
Dr. Leo Zonn is the black sheep<lb/>
in his family. His grandfather and<lb/>
aunt were successful actors, his<lb/>
brother is a starving actorcarpen-<lb/>
ter, and his sister, "raises horses and<lb/>
marijuana The family joke says<lb/>
Leo is the failure?he had to go get<lb/>
aPh.D.<lb/>
The joke may start to wear thin<lb/>
after a while. As the chair of the<lb/>
geography department and a pub-<lb/>
lished author and editor, Zonn is a<lb/>
success. He is also a bit of a madman.<lb/>
Throughout the interview, Zonn<lb/>
leaps fromarediningposition,hands<lb/>
behind his head, one knee on his<lb/>
desk, to his book shelf or file cabinet,<lb/>
pointing to pictures or rustling<lb/>
through papers. His tie, patterned<lb/>
with a Tabasco bottle and macaroni,<lb/>
swings in the air.<lb/>
Zonn feels a passion for his work<lb/>
and is eager to share his knowledge.<lb/>
He puts a spin on geography most<lb/>
people do not consider.<lb/>
"I don't know a damn thing about<lb/>
continental drifts Zonn said.<lb/>
Zonn's latest book Place, Power,<lb/>
Situation and Spectacle: A Geograplry of<lb/>
Film which he co-authored and co-<lb/>
edited, explores the way the media<lb/>
portrays geography in different situ-<lb/>
ations.<lb/>
"Sometimes place is integral and<lb/>
See ZONN page 3<lb/>
Ambassadors wind down<lb/>
semester, senior program<lb/>
Laura Jackman<lb/>
Photo by STUART WILLIAMS<lb/>
Dr. Leo Zonn, chair of the geography department and published author and editor, adds spice<lb/>
to the department with his passion for the subject and his eagerness to share his knowledge.<lb/>
Staff Writer<lb/>
For anyone who is looking for<lb/>
something to munch on during the<lb/>
Thanksgiving-break drive, The ECU<lb/>
Ambassadors may just have the an-<lb/>
swer you are looking for.<lb/>
On Monday, Nov. 21, the Ambas-<lb/>
sadors along with the ECU Alumni<lb/>
Association, will sponsor the third,<lb/>
and final, Senior Program Event for<lb/>
this semester. The events theme is<lb/>
"Mugs and Hugs and it is available<lb/>
to all seniors with 96 or more credit<lb/>
hours. The Free item that will be<lb/>
given to all students with a purple<lb/>
Pirate Pass, is a glass mug with the<lb/>
senior logo on it, filled with Hershey's<lb/>
Hugs candy.<lb/>
The Purple Pirate Pass looks just<lb/>
like a credit card, but much better<lb/>
because everything you do with it is<lb/>
free and simple. In order to get your<lb/>
card, stop by the Student Store from<lb/>
10 a.m. until 3 p.m. on Monday, and<lb/>
register.<lb/>
"We have a printout of all the<lb/>
seniors names with the valid amount<lb/>
of hours needed to participate said<lb/>
April Surratt, ambassadors public<lb/>
relations coordinator. "All you have<lb/>
to do is come by the booth and check<lb/>
in with us<lb/>
The card is valid all school year<lb/>
long, until the last event at gradua-<lb/>
tion time in May. There isa total of six<lb/>
events for the school year, three this<lb/>
semester and threeduring thespring.<lb/>
The two previous events were very<lb/>
successful, which included a Senior<lb/>
Bar-B-Q during the Sept. 24, ECU vs.<lb/>
Syracuse football game, and a senior<lb/>
logo Frisbee giveaway, during which<lb/>
over 1,000 Frisbees were given out.<lb/>
In addition to the free gifts given<lb/>
away, therewere also grandprize<lb/>
raffles, given to one person who<lb/>
participated in that day's event.<lb/>
Already, a bike donated by the<lb/>
Cycle Center and a class ring<lb/>
donated by the Student Store,<lb/>
have been awarded.<lb/>
See PPP page 2<lb/>
Tender<lb/>
Moments!<lb/>
On a damp,<lb/>
cool<lb/>
November<lb/>
day, these two<lb/>
students take<lb/>
a stroll down<lb/>
what they'll<lb/>
one day call<lb/>
"Memory<lb/>
Lane The<lb/>
rain is<lb/>
expected to<lb/>
continue<lb/>
through<lb/>
tomorrow.<lb/>
Photo by<lb/>
STUART WILLIAMS<lb/>
"V-<lb/>
mrnKssmmmtrnKsmm<lb/>
WMIIIP1'll'l'JWMW<lb/>
- 4-<lb/>
<pb facs="00058508_0002"/><lb/>
2 The Easi Carolinian<lb/>
November 17. 1994<lb/>
PPP<lb/>
From p. 1<lb/>
November 9<lb/>
Harassing phone calls ?Two students reported receiving harassing<lb/>
phone calls in their room.<lb/>
Breaking and entering? A faculty member reported thebreaking and<lb/>
entering into his vehicle parked south of the building. The staff decal had<lb/>
been removed.<lb/>
Trespassing? A non-student who had been previously barred from<lb/>
campus was arrested for trespassing in Joyner Library. The man had<lb/>
attempted to take a book out of the library without checking it out.<lb/>
Weapon on campus ? A non-student was issued a state citation for<lb/>
misdemeanor possession of a .270 bolt-action rifle. An officer observed the<lb/>
weapon in his vehicle while parked north of Cotten Hall. The rifle and a<lb/>
knife were seized pending trial.<lb/>
November 11<lb/>
Larceny?Astaff member reported the theftof an orientation sign from<lb/>
north of Rawl Building<lb/>
Marijuana possession?A resident of Aycock hall was issued a state<lb/>
citation and campus appearance ticket for being in possession of mari-<lb/>
juana.<lb/>
Extinguished fire ? A resident advisor of Belk Hall reported he<lb/>
extinguished a fire found in a garbage can in the first floor men's room of<lb/>
Garrett Hall. The officer was unable to determine if the fire was set<lb/>
intentionally.<lb/>
November 12<lb/>
Assist and rescue ? An officer responded to a section in Dowdy-<lb/>
Ficklen stadium to assist a subject that had fainted after swallowing some<lb/>
chewing tobacco.<lb/>
November 14<lb/>
Larceny a staff member reported the larceny of a fire extinguisher<lb/>
from the first floor hallway in Ragsdale.<lb/>
November 15<lb/>
Monday's grand prize is a por-<lb/>
table Emerson CD stereo with .AM<lb/>
FM radio, cassette and detachable<lb/>
speakers, which will be given by the<lb/>
Ambassadors and the Alumni Asso-<lb/>
ciation. The drawing will be held at<lb/>
12:30 p.m. and you do not have to be<lb/>
present to win.<lb/>
For the spring semester, the Am-<lb/>
bassadors are planning even bigger<lb/>
events.<lb/>
"During February, we will spon-<lb/>
sor a 'Senior Sweets' theme and the<lb/>
free gift will be a box of chocolate<lb/>
said Senior Program Coordinator<lb/>
Wendy Jones. "The grand prize will<lb/>
be a dinner for two and hopefully a<lb/>
limousine ride as well<lb/>
Another event to be held before<lb/>
Spring Break will be "Fun in the<lb/>
Sun The free gifts will be sun-<lb/>
glasses, again with the senior logo on<lb/>
them, a strap for the glasses, suntan<lb/>
lotion and a plastic case to keep it all<lb/>
in. The grand prize for this event will<lb/>
be two round-trip rickets on US Air to<lb/>
anywhere in North America, includ-<lb/>
ing the Virgin Islands and Canada.<lb/>
The last event will be in May, and<lb/>
it will be called the "Grad Pack The<lb/>
FREE PREGNANCY TEST<lb/>
while you wait<lb/>
Free &amp; Confidential<lb/>
Services &amp; Counseling<lb/>
Carolina Pregnancy Center<lb/>
209 S Evans St.<lb/>
The Lee Building<lb/>
Greenville NC<lb/>
757-0003<lb/>
Hours:<lb/>
Monday - Friday<lb/>
8:00-4:00<lb/>
details for this event haven't been<lb/>
finalized vet, but the bee gifts will be<lb/>
"beneficial to the future graduate<lb/>
said Jones.<lb/>
If all of this sounds unfamiliar,<lb/>
that's because this is the first year<lb/>
Ambassadors, now celebrating their<lb/>
15th vear, have sponsored the Senior<lb/>
Program.<lb/>
"A lot of other schools do special<lb/>
things for their seniors, and we fig-<lb/>
ared that it's about time we did the<lb/>
same Surratt said.<lb/>
However, the Ambassadors are<lb/>
more than j ust a Senior Program spon-<lb/>
sor. Other activities include, coordi-<lb/>
nating events in the Chancellor's box<lb/>
during football games, ushering<lb/>
movies at Hendrix theater, working<lb/>
in the Wright Building Gi ft shop dur-<lb/>
ing performances, guiding tours for<lb/>
the ECU Fall Open Wou and<lb/>
handing out programs during<lb/>
graduation commencement cer-<lb/>
emonies.<lb/>
"We really are involved in a lot<lb/>
of activities no campus Surratt<lb/>
said.<lb/>
In order to be a part of the Am-<lb/>
bassadors, one must apply, sub-<lb/>
mit a written essay and then be<lb/>
interviewed for the position. It has<lb/>
not been decided yet if new appli-<lb/>
cants will be accepted in theSpring<lb/>
semester, but for further informa-<lb/>
tion, stop bv the .Ambassadors of-<lb/>
fice, which is located in room 313<lb/>
of the Erwin Building.<lb/>
For now though, the Ambassa-<lb/>
dors have one objective, "to get a<lb/>
pass ineverv seniors hand Surratt<lb/>
said.<lb/>
IDalk-lns Anytime 288BE.iBth.street<lb/>
?' ? a Eastgate Shopping Center<lb/>
? ELTORO<lb/>
O men's hsY?9 ??!?<lb/>
$ 6.00 $9.00 Regular Price<lb/>
ftai rent WITH E.C.U. 1J.<lb/>
Rcross from Highway Patrol<lb/>
Behind Car-Quest<lb/>
752-3318<lb/>
M0N-FRI. 9-6<lb/>
Worthless check summons? A summons was served on a student for<lb/>
passing a worthless check at Chico's restaurant.<lb/>
Compiled by Tambra Zion. Taken from official ECU crime<lb/>
reports.<lb/>
Expressions<lb/>
for earning<lb/>
Best in Show, Magazines<lb/>
and Rebel<lb/>
for earning<lb/>
Best of Show, 2nd Place,<lb/>
literary Magazines<lb/>
at the<lb/>
ACP Conference in<lb/>
New Orleans<lb/>
Sun Nov. 6, 1994.<lb/>
NOW OPEN<lb/>
Full Service Nail &amp; Tanning Salon<lb/>
?Wolff Beds<lb/>
?Body Waxing<lb/>
?Flint Skin Care Line<lb/>
?Pedicures<lb/>
?Eyelash Timing<lb/>
"Come Be Pampered In Paradise'<lb/>
Extended Prices Thru<lb/>
Sat Nov. 5th<lb/>
Specials:<lb/>
Susan l.esier<lb/>
Owner &amp; Operator<lb/>
I.i?.a Hand<lb/>
Licensed Manicurist<lb/>
16 Years Rpenencei<lb/>
758-6620<lb/>
Single Tanning Sessions "<lb/>
$2.75Session<lb/>
Month unlimited $35.00<lb/>
anicures $8.00<lb/>
Buy Now Use Later<lb/>
103 Eastbrook Dr.<lb/>
MonFri ft-7 5?i a<lb/>
COMetfi<lb/>
Wed 23rd<lb/>
Jeff Brannon &amp;<lb/>
Jeff Barrett<lb/>
Monday &amp;<lb/>
Tuesday<lb/>
Night<lb/>
Classic Night<lb/>
Penny drah of Coors light<lb/>
16.0 SEX on the Beach<lb/>
Only WO<lb/>
poors Open at 9pm<lb/>
Better drink some coffee firstIt's going to be a long night<lb/>
tut; pt nn ln its 25th ycar-<lb/>
1M.E. ELD- The Tradition Continues!<lb/>
THURSDAY<lb/>
COLLEGE<lb/>
NIGHT<lb/>
99c Domestic<lb/>
Bottle Beer<lb/>
99c 32oz Draft<lb/>
99c Highballs<lb/>
99c Member-<lb/>
ships<lb/>
live from Virginia Beach<lb/>
Free Admission for Ladies<lb/>
21 &amp; Over until 11pm<lb/>
Saturday 19th<lb/>
raz<lb/>
$200 32oz<lb/>
Diamon<lb/>
7D !<lb/>
Fr<lb/>
only<lb/>
tribute<lb/>
Tuesday 22nd<lb/>
Disco Dance Party<lb/>
2 adm for ladies<lb/>
m oxer Lin-til 11pm<lb/>
$3 Adm for Mem<lb/>
j?<lb/>
<pb facs="00058508_0003"/><lb/>
The has! CarolinianJ<lb/>
November 17. W4<lb/>
"CirtH'iivilleS (<lb/>
ONLY<lb/>
?<lb/>
P<lb/>
i?lil?lul?<lb/>
TUESDAYS<lb/>
Silver Bullet- Female "Exotic" Danceis ; i<lb/>
WEDNESDAYS fAiT TKjjH<lb/>
Amateur Night tor Female Dancers 11 pm-1 an 'i$p?i i&amp;zJg&amp;P<lb/>
CASH PRIZE<lb/>
THLRSDAYS- SATURDAYS<lb/>
Silver Bullets Female "Exotic" Dancers<lb/>
SDancers wantedS<lb/>
We do Birthdays. Bachelor Parties, Bridal Showers,<lb/>
Corporate Parties &amp; Divorce<lb/>
ECU STUDENT SPECIAI<lb/>
$2.00 OFF Admission Any Night with this coupon<lb/>
Doors Open 7:30pm Stage Time 9:00pm<lb/>
Call 756-6278<lb/>
5 miles ? esi of Green ille on 264 Alt<lb/>
ZONN From p. 1<lb/>
sometimes it is coincidentalZonn<lb/>
said. 'This discusses how the cin-<lb/>
ematic medium alters experiences<lb/>
to form new experiences. Real ge-<lb/>
ography versus reel' geography<lb/>
Movies seem to consume a part<lb/>
of Zonn. He discusses the geo-<lb/>
graphical impact ofRaising Arizona<lb/>
as well as he describes Deliverance.<lb/>
"Deliverance is man writing<lb/>
about man in a very masculine en-<lb/>
vironment. It is the geography of<lb/>
mind versus the geography of<lb/>
place? how men see their environ-<lb/>
ment, culture versus control, and<lb/>
how women see theirs, nature ver-<lb/>
GTPFromp. 1<lb/>
su nurture<lb/>
A gradui I<lb/>
University al N<lb/>
workandhispa:<lb/>
bineaftei hespentay tra-<lb/>
lia in the mid :<lb/>
"Ialways liked theater and i<lb/>
ies Zonn said. "And<lb/>
mv perceptions stat<lb/>
gether. I was work<lb/>
tograph) while I wa<lb/>
saw how Austr ilia ?<lb/>
and then experieru edhcN<lb/>
was<lb/>
"Tfiombirds was the m<lb/>
thetjc portrayal of Australi<lb/>
Zo. in's next project in a docu<lb/>
mentary, which he hopes will be<lb/>
 "H- slK 'sstul as a critique he once<lb/>
 M completed.Fourmonthsafterme<lb/>
 invasion of Iraq, Zonn critiqued<lb/>
the film TheYearofl ivingDanger-<lb/>
ind the documentary Roger<lb/>
.  I ?  He managed to tie the<lb/>
themes intoanessayon America's<lb/>
ivolvement in the Middle East.<lb/>
. a's presentation received a<lb/>
te standing ovation.<lb/>
'That was it Zonn said. "My<lb/>
ov nmgmoment.Afterthat.it's<lb/>
,ill downhill<lb/>
Plan has been well received by en-<lb/>
vironmentally-minded agencies,<lb/>
and no endangered plant or animal<lb/>
species have been found in the area.<lb/>
When completed, GTP will<lb/>
house many companies of various<lb/>
sizes and types. Once these tenants<lb/>
have become a part of GTP, they<lb/>
will have access to the most ad-<lb/>
vanced and convenient tra<lb/>
tion facility in the world tl<lb/>
data and communicatio<lb/>
sources, language translate<lb/>
vices, an aircraft maintenance I i<lb/>
itv, and on-site education for train-<lb/>
ing at all levels of industry, as well<lb/>
as for industry research.<lb/>
GTP also hopes to establish a<lb/>
mated Manliest sv-t '<lb/>
-<lb/>
date is Mountain V<lb/>
62-plane dquat<lb/>
ters in Ma<lb/>
 C Martin<lb/>
Be The Tir?t tc<lb/>
Apply!<lb/>
The East Carolinian<lb/>
is looking for an Advertising<lb/>
Representative for the spring semester<lb/>
Come down and fill out an<lb/>
application and give it to the<lb/>
secretary. Call Chris Warren<lb/>
for more Details. 328-6366<lb/>
The Varsity Sport of the Mind<lb/>
? Gatolina Halt 4 c?o?n?Etcu<lb/>
Starts Tomorrow<lb/>
Lancaster is also excited about<lb/>
the prospectof getting local mili-<lb/>
tary bases involved with GTP.<lb/>
I brought Admiral Ed Straw,<lb/>
who is head of Defense Logistics<lb/>
A gency now, and he has become<lb/>
so excited about this as a model<lb/>
for defense logistics that he has<lb/>
added twoof his staff totheplan-<lb/>
rang group because he wants<lb/>
the finished product to be one<lb/>
that will becompahble with what<lb/>
he sees the logistics needs of the<lb/>
military to be for the future<lb/>
.ancaster said.<lb/>
Dunn sees no need for large<lb/>
companies to be the only ones to<lb/>
benefit from GTP. "Small busi-<lb/>
nesses will have a real good op-<lb/>
portunity to use Global<lb/>
TransPark" he said. "We can<lb/>
envision many small businesses<lb/>
being able to pool their resources<lb/>
and take advantage especially of<lb/>
the transportation and techno-<lb/>
logical aspects of it<lb/>
Governor Jim Hunt, the<lb/>
Chairman of the Board of Direc-<lb/>
tors of theGTP Aumoriry, is tolly<lb/>
aware of the benefits that GTP<lb/>
will bring to almost every one of<lb/>
his constituents.<lb/>
"For business and industry,<lb/>
the TransPark is going to offer<lb/>
revolutionary solutions and will<lb/>
rewrite the book on manufac-<lb/>
turing and distribution Hunt<lb/>
said in the Spring 1994 issue of<lb/>
the GloM TransPark Update.<lb/>
"Also, it's going to open new<lb/>
markets for agricultural prod-<lb/>
ucts And it's going to offer ben-<lb/>
efits to the military forces that<lb/>
call North Carolina home. But<lb/>
the most important thing for<lb/>
manv people is what it will do to<lb/>
make life better for our children<lb/>
and grandchildren<lb/>
Dunn was able to bring things<lb/>
closer to home for the ECU stu-<lb/>
dents who attended his presen-<lb/>
tation when he said, "This re-<lb/>
gion is growing, anyway, and<lb/>
GTP is just going to accelerate<lb/>
it, and y'all are going to have<lb/>
jobs if vou want to stay here and<lb/>
be a part of this<lb/>
CAMPUS CHAMPIONSHIP<lb/>
ALL-CAMPUS TOUNAMENT<lb/>
WEDNESDAY, JANUARY 18,1995<lb/>
MENDENHAL STUDENT CENTER<lb/>
PICK LIP COLLEGE BOWL INFORMATION AND<lb/>
REGISTRATION PACKET FROM THE INFORM VTION<lb/>
DESK. MENDENHALL STUDENT CENTER.<lb/>
SPONSORED BY THE ECU STUDENT UNION SPECIAL EVENTS COMMITTEE<lb/>
First place learn member will receive $25.00 each and a College Bowl t-shirl.<lb/>
Second place team members will receive a College Bowl insulated mug.<lb/>
For mere information, contact the Student Activities Office. 210 Mendenhall, 328-4766747!<lb/>
Put your mind to it!<lb/>
is in Greenville!<lb/>
Volunteer Leaders<lb/>
interest meeting:<lb/>
Monday, November 21 6:00pm<lb/>
GC Building Room 3009<lb/>
Please Call 752-7644 For<lb/>
Additional Information<lb/>
i<lb/>
<pb facs="00058508_0004"/><lb/>
4 The East Carolinian<lb/>
November 17. 1994<lb/>
COMM From<lb/>
pi<lb/>
But can these optimistic 111 tures<lb/>
become reality? According to the<lb/>
Academic Affairs office, the de-<lb/>
partment of communication came<lb/>
in under budget last year. This<lb/>
semester, both programs have ap-<lb/>
plied for additional funding to<lb/>
purchase much-needed equip-<lb/>
ment.<lb/>
B.S. professor James Rees cor-<lb/>
rected an earlier statement toT7i?<lb/>
East Carolinian that some of the<lb/>
cameras B.S. students used were<lb/>
lOyearsold. Rees said some were<lb/>
actually 20 to 30 years old and<lb/>
had been put into storage and<lb/>
listed as obsolete.<lb/>
An Oct. 4 memo from profes-<lb/>
sor Benz to Dean Coble stressed a<lb/>
severe shortage of equipment for<lb/>
the B.S. program. The memo<lb/>
stated that the Joyner studio has<lb/>
no field camcorders or editing<lb/>
facilities available. Benz wrote<lb/>
that a vital component of the B.S.<lb/>
students work in video produc-<lb/>
tion is centered on camcorder use<lb/>
and basic video editing.<lb/>
The memo explained that 10<lb/>
cameras and video editing equip-<lb/>
ment that went to the B.A. pro-<lb/>
gram are not available to B.S. stu-<lb/>
dents and the department has<lb/>
only three cameras and two edit-<lb/>
ing stations to work with when<lb/>
producing field work.<lb/>
"I can understand them the<lb/>
B.A. program having some of<lb/>
the equipment but if you're shoot-<lb/>
ing B-roll for a studio production,<lb/>
you should have enough equip-<lb/>
ment to do it I think there should<lb/>
be a joint effort said Forrest<lb/>
Shelor, a communications senior.<lb/>
The B.A. program also has<lb/>
problems. Upgraded memory in<lb/>
the Edward's Media Lab still does<lb/>
not ensure proficient use of com-<lb/>
puters, and there is no word as to<lb/>
when these computers will be on-<lb/>
line with other information sys-<lb/>
tems.<lb/>
Two field cameras acquired in<lb/>
the division are inoperable, and<lb/>
Allen said he has no budget to re-<lb/>
pair them.<lb/>
jjitae department currently has<lb/>
ofMjors, seven of which are jour-<lb/>
nalism majors.<lb/>
Allen has concerns that the jour-<lb/>
nalism concentra tion has only seven<lb/>
majors and none of the<lb/>
department's current faculty are<lb/>
journalism teachers.<lb/>
" It's kind of scary to think about<lb/>
Allen said.<lb/>
The B.S. program may suffer a<lb/>
loss of students if the program is<lb/>
not marketed. Students may not<lb/>
know to look for a B.S. degree in<lb/>
communication under the depart-<lb/>
ment.of library studies and educa-<lb/>
tional technology.<lb/>
"We must let people know we're<lb/>
here Coble said. "If we don't do a<lb/>
good job of marketing it, the pro-<lb/>
gram will die<lb/>
Both programs are young and<lb/>
have high hopes for the future.<lb/>
Chancellor Richard Eakin said he<lb/>
plans to support both programs.<lb/>
"I intend to do anything I can do<lb/>
to help each of the programs thrive<lb/>
Eakin said. "From the moment I<lb/>
came to East Carolina, I have had a<lb/>
strong interest in having commu-<lb/>
nications in all of its aspects to be an<lb/>
important pa rt of the academic pro-<lb/>
gram of our university. CK'er the<lb/>
past seven and a half years, I have<lb/>
done what 1 could to provide addi-<lb/>
tional resources and to allow the<lb/>
program to grow and serve our<lb/>
students<lb/>
C7 e&amp;f4Mwit4ia Q2fo&amp; Qfeyieb<lb/>
a<lb/>
O'V&amp;m<lb/>
6e 18, 13M<lb/>
Han is Teeter<lb/>
MEANS LOW PRICES!<lb/>
HARRIS TEETER<lb/>
DANISH<lb/>
HAM<lb/>
2.99<lb/>
SLICED TO ORDER<lb/>
PR0V0L0NE a Aft<lb/>
CHEESE LB3.Ty<lb/>
16 0Z.<lb/>
CALIFORNIA<lb/>
LARGE<lb/>
CELERY<lb/>
.STALK<lb/>
.39<lb/>
Teatro de Danza espanola<lb/>
(Dance Theatre of Spain)<lb/>
8.OO1<lb/>
.m<lb/>
'1 I rt?icm,0<lb/>
Mt(M<lb/>
1-800-ECU-ARTS OR 919-328-4788<lb/>
TDD 91 9-328-4736<lb/>
East Carolina Playhouse<lb/>
presents<lb/>
ALL NATURAL<lb/>
HUNTER<lb/>
CREAM<lb/>
1 2 GAL.<lb/>
.o e am<lb/>
BL00O WEDDING<lb/>
November 17. IX. V).l and 22. 1994 at X.00 p.m.<lb/>
November 20. 1994 at 2:00 p.m.<lb/>
SARA LEE<lb/>
BAGELS.<lb/>
SELECTED VARIETIES<lb/>
,17 0Z.<lb/>
.79<lb/>
HARRIS TEETER<lb/>
CREAM CHEESE<lb/>
REGULAR<lb/>
.8 0Z.<lb/>
.79<lb/>
McGinnis Theatre<lb/>
East Carolina University C T ? fi tfQQ<lb/>
Main Campus V'xi.ljlj'jArOUO<lb/>
General Public: S7.50<lb/>
ECU Students: S4.50<lb/>
Children: $4.50<lb/>
12 Price<lb/>
Pitchers of Beer<lb/>
EVERY MONDAY! ONLY AT<lb/>
LOW PRICES<lb/>
GREAT VALUES<lb/>
MericanBestauiant fh<lb/>
12 PRICE<lb/>
APPETIZER<lb/>
SPECIALS<lb/>
SUN-THURS<lb/>
9PM-CLOSINC<lb/>
DINE IN ONLY<lb/>
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KEEBLER<lb/>
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SELECTED<lb/>
VARIETIES<lb/>
14-16 OZ.<lb/>
1.99<lb/>
DIET PEPSI<lb/>
LUNCH SPECIALS<lb/>
MON-FRI<lb/>
ALL ABC PERMITS<lb/>
OPEN 7 DAYS<lb/>
DOWNTOWNCREENVILLE 757-1666<lb/>
DEL MONTE SELECTED VARIET<lb/>
VEGETABLES??.<lb/>
2 LITER<lb/>
KELLOGG'S<lb/>
SW CORNFLAKES?159<lb/>
SURE selected varieties A A SHAMPOO &amp; CONDITIONER A A<lb/>
ANTI-PERSPIRANT 4ozl?99 PERT PLUST2.99<lb/>
PRICES IN THIS AD EFFECTIVE WEDNESDAY, NOVEMBER 16 THROUGH WEDNI SDAV NOVl MBI R 23. 1994 IN OUR GUI I N II II M( K1 s<lb/>
ONLY WE RESERVE THE RIGHT TO UMn-QUANTITIES NONE SOLD IO DEALERS WE GLADLY ACCEP1 FEDERA1 FOOD STAMPS<lb/>
K<lb/>
Harris Teeter<lb/>
<pb facs="00058508_0005"/><lb/>
November 17, 1994<lb/>
!? <lb/>
- The East Carolinian<lb/>
Classifieds<lb/>
The East Carolinian 5<lb/>
;<lb/>
r?L<lb/>
V<lb/>
?.?<lb/>
For Rent<lb/>
RINGGOLD TOWERS<lb/>
Now Taking Leases for<lb/>
1 bedroom, 2 bedroom &amp;<lb/>
Efficiency Apartments.<lb/>
CALL 752-2865<lb/>
?1 and 2 Bedrooms<lb/>
AZALEA CARDENS<lb/>
Clean and Quiet, one bedroom<lb/>
furnished apartments. $240 a<lb/>
month, 6 month lease.<lb/>
ALSO<lb/>
UNIVERSITY APARTMENTS<lb/>
2899-2901 East 5th Street<lb/>
?Located near ECU<lb/>
?ECU Bus Service<lb/>
?On-Site Laundry<lb/>
?FREE AUGUST RENT<lb/>
"Special Student Leases"<lb/>
also MOBILE HOME RENTALS<lb/>
IT. or Tommy Williams<lb/>
756-781 S7 58-7436<lb/>
FOR RENT one bedroom apartment<lb/>
$265month. Washerdryer hook<lb/>
up. Quiet area. Great location. Call<lb/>
355-7537<lb/>
FULLY FURNSIHED plush<lb/>
townhouse seeking roommate to<lb/>
share for 5215 part of utilities. Fire-<lb/>
place, washerdryer, cable, pool, and<lb/>
ac. Contact Jamie 321-8306 or leave<lb/>
message.<lb/>
ROOMMATE NEEDED for fur-<lb/>
nished 3 bedroom 2 12 bath<lb/>
townhouse- Quail Ridge. $250<lb/>
month- utilities &amp; cable included<lb/>
plus 13 phone. Contact David or JC<lb/>
756-7374 available in Dec. or Jan.<lb/>
HOUSE TO SHARE- Couplestu-<lb/>
dent (Black) Christian, non-drinker<lb/>
or drug user, clean excellent home-<lb/>
lOminutes from ECU- $150 month<lb/>
for 2- Call 321-7723 leave your<lb/>
number on ans. mac.<lb/>
ROOMMATEWANTED:for3bed-<lb/>
room, 212 bath townhouse in Twin<lb/>
Oaks. $150month plus 13 bills.<lb/>
Prefer female non-smoker- will con-<lb/>
sider otherwise. Call 830-0579<lb/>
NEEDED 2 ROOMMATES to share<lb/>
3br, 2 12 bath townhouse. $150<lb/>
per month. Available mid-Decem-<lb/>
ber. Call Julie @ 752-3848<lb/>
ROOMMATENEEDED:2bedroom<lb/>
apart near campus, ECU bus stop,<lb/>
furnished, laid back, $19712 utili-<lb/>
ties. Call evenings 752-1033<lb/>
QUARTERMASTERS RENTAL<lb/>
REFERRAL AGENCY has apart-<lb/>
ments, houses, condos, mobile<lb/>
homes. 1-4 bedrooms near campus<lb/>
or away. Pets, short leases, sublets<lb/>
call us! 758-0153<lb/>
FEMALE ROOMMATE NEEDED<lb/>
to share 2 bedroom apartment. Call<lb/>
752-9871 for more info.<lb/>
ROOMMATE N EEDED to share a 3<lb/>
bedroom apartment above BW3s.<lb/>
Awesome location, resonable rent<lb/>
and 14 utilities. Call 752-5353<lb/>
ROOMMATE WANTED: 2 bed-<lb/>
room furnished apartment, close to<lb/>
campus and on ECU bus route, re-<lb/>
laxed atmosphere, $197 12 utili-<lb/>
ties, move in immediately, call eve-<lb/>
nings 752-1033<lb/>
For Sale<lb/>
N?J CASHTTT<lb/>
We Boy CDS, Cuacttes, and Vinyl<lb/>
? MJ<lb/>
Downtown<lb/>
75M026<lb/>
SALE! SALE! SALE!? There only 2<lb/>
?months left to use the Gateway to<lb/>
Greenville Coupon Book. I have so<lb/>
many left and want to get rid of them<lb/>
for only $2. $! per month. If you use 1<lb/>
coupon you save double. Come and<lb/>
save on Food entertainment and<lb/>
many other things. Call 758-4459.<lb/>
O'NEILL FULLSUIT, Wavelength<lb/>
spring suit, &amp; 6'2" Diamond Glassing<lb/>
Surfboard for sale. All in perfect con-<lb/>
dition, call Iohn at 830-1853. Leave<lb/>
message if I'm not there.<lb/>
FOR SALE Super Nintendo, 2 con-<lb/>
trollers, 3 (6 game carrying cases),<lb/>
and 7 games: Mortal Kombat II, Su-<lb/>
per Streetfighter II, Streetfighter II,<lb/>
NBA Jam, Ken Griffey Jr. Baseball,<lb/>
NCAA Basketball and Mario World.<lb/>
Asking $250 (nego.) Call Brianat321-<lb/>
6381<lb/>
29 GAL. TANK with Salt Water set<lb/>
up and extras. $150 Call 758-1104<lb/>
ELECTRIC GUITAR- Fender Squier,<lb/>
Black w white pick guard, includes<lb/>
Tremelo, strap, case new strings<lb/>
$200, call Craig at 756-8854<lb/>
EXCELLENT BUY! Bahama cruise<lb/>
package for two. Must sell! Bought<lb/>
for $500, will sell for $300 neg. Un-<lb/>
able to go bc of work. Call Mark at<lb/>
830-0722<lb/>
Services Offered<lb/>
Wondering what to get for your<lb/>
mom, sister, or grtfriend?<lb/>
We have just produced a<lb/>
videotape on Personal Safety<lb/>
for Women An ideal gift for<lb/>
the woman in your life.<lb/>
Attitude, Awareness,<lb/>
Avoidance are stressed as well<lb/>
as simple techniques<lb/>
for self defense.<lb/>
Call 752-7283<lb/>
Services Offered<lb/>
TRANSCRIBING: Oral histories, in-<lb/>
terviews, conferences, meeting, etc.<lb/>
Please call 792-5463<lb/>
ATTENTION ALL STUDENTS! Ov<lb/>
er $5 billion in free financial aid is<lb/>
DO YOU NEED MONEY?<lb/>
We Will Pay You<lb/>
CASH<lb/>
FOR YOUR USED,<lb/>
TOMMY fflLFIGER<lb/>
NAUTICA<lb/>
POLO<lb/>
RUFF HEWN<lb/>
J. CREW<lb/>
ALEXANDER JULIAN<lb/>
GUESS<lb/>
levi<lb/>
ETC.<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/>
Help Wanted<lb/>
RBURCHIfORMATON<lb/>
Largest Library of information ir Uo -<lb/>
al subjects<lb/>
Order Catalog Today with Visa IMC or COD<lb/>
ES 800-351-0222<lb/>
EUlSU or (310 477-b226<lb/>
" Or rush $2 00 to Research Information<lb/>
1132Zldaho We 206 A. Los Angeles CA 90025<lb/>
ATTENTION JUNIORS, SENIORS,<lb/>
 GRAD STUDENTS Sales intern-<lb/>
ship available gain valuable work ex-<lb/>
perience call Sara at 355-7700 for a<lb/>
possible interview<lb/>
now available from private sector<lb/>
grants &amp; scholarships. All students<lb/>
are eligible regardless of grades, in-<lb/>
come, or parents income. Let us help<lb/>
you. for more info, call: 1-800-959-<lb/>
1605 ext F53621<lb/>
TYPING Reasonable rates re-<lb/>
sumes, term papers, thesis, other ser-<lb/>
vices. Call Glenda: 752-9959 (days);<lb/>
527-9133 (eves)<lb/>
TIRED OF PAYING HIGH PHONE<lb/>
BILLS? Interested in saving 50 on<lb/>
your phone calls? With Excel Service<lb/>
you can, and we pay to switch you<lb/>
back if not completely satisfied. Con-<lb/>
tact Mike Carey at 752-2879<lb/>
NEED PAPERS TYPEDWORD<lb/>
PROCESSED? Low rates include<lb/>
spell-check, grammatical corrections,<lb/>
guaranteed work. Campus secretary<lb/>
with 15 yrs. experience. Call 35?-3611<lb/>
after 5pm or leave message.<lb/>
ECU COLLEGIATE DATELINE:<lb/>
CA11 1-900-S84-1400 ext. 439, $2.95<lb/>
min. Must be 18 or older<lb/>
El Help Wanted<lb/>
$10-$400UP WEEKLY, Mailing Bro-<lb/>
chures! SpareFull-time. Set own<lb/>
hours! Rush self-addressed stamped<lb/>
envelope: Publishers (GI) 1821<lb/>
Hillandale Rd 1B-295, Durham, NC<lb/>
27705.<lb/>
SKI RESORT JOBS- hiring for win-<lb/>
ter quarter. Up to $2,000 in salary &amp;<lb/>
benefits. Skisnowboard instructors,<lb/>
lift operators, wait staff, chalet staff, <lb/>
other positions. Over 15,000 openings.<lb/>
For more info call: (206)634-0469 ext.<lb/>
V53622.<lb/>
INTERNATIONAL EMPLOY-<lb/>
MENT- Make up to $2,000-54,000 <lb/>
mo. teaching basic conversational<lb/>
English abroad. Japan, Taiwan, and S.<lb/>
Korea. Many employers provide room<lb/>
&amp; board other benefits. No teaching<lb/>
background or Asian languages re-<lb/>
quired. For more information call:<lb/>
(206) 632-1146 ext J53622<lb/>
CRUISE SHIPS NOW HIRING -Earn<lb/>
up to $2,000month working on<lb/>
Cruise Ships or Land-Tour compa-<lb/>
nies. World travel (Hawaii, Mexico,<lb/>
theCaribbean, etc.). Seasonal and Full-<lb/>
time employment available. No expe-<lb/>
rience necessary. For more informa-<lb/>
tion call 1-206-634-0468 ext. C53622.<lb/>
PLAYMATES NOW UNDER NEW<lb/>
MANAGEMENT: seeks ladies 18 and<lb/>
older. Earn Big Bucks while you leam.<lb/>
Full Time nights and Part-time any-<lb/>
time. Call for an appointment Play-<lb/>
mate massage (919) 747-7686.<lb/>
ATTENTION STUDENTS: Earn ex-<lb/>
tra cash stuffing envelopes at home.<lb/>
All materials provided. Send SASE to<lb/>
Central Distributors Po Box 10075,<lb/>
Olathe, KS 66051. Immediate re-<lb/>
sponse.<lb/>
Help Wanted<lb/>
BRODY'S is accepting applications,<lb/>
foradditionalpart-timesales assocT<lb/>
ates for the fashions you love to wear<lb/>
MissyJunior Sportswear, accesso-<lb/>
ries and Young Menswear. Flexible1'<lb/>
scheduling options to fit most need W<lb/>
10am-2pm, 12pm-9pm,or6pm-9prfKi<lb/>
Retail postions include weekend!<lb/>
Applications accepted Mon. and)<lb/>
Thurs l-3pm, Brody's The Plaza, j i<lb/>
ALASKA EMPLOYMENT- Stu- , (<lb/>
dentsneeded! Fishing industry. Earn<lb/>
up to $3,000- $6,000 per month.0'<lb/>
Room and board! Transportatiorr"<lb/>
Male or Female. No experience nec-<lb/>
essary. Call (206) 545-4155 ext A536fel<lb/>
THE GREENVILLE RECREATWN<lb/>
AND PARKS DEPARTMENTill<lb/>
beholding theirorganizationajmeet-<lb/>
ing for anyone interested in Officiat-<lb/>
ing in the men's winter basketball<lb/>
league on Thurs. Nov. 17, 1994 at<lb/>
7:00pm at the Elm Street Gym. All<lb/>
interested individuals should attend<lb/>
this meeting. For more information,<lb/>
please call Ben James or Michael Daly<lb/>
at 830-4550<lb/>
Greek Personals<lb/>
PART TIME SALES help needed.<lb/>
Apply in person at Paynes Jewelers<lb/>
684- C Arlington Blvd. (Facing<lb/>
Kroger's)<lb/>
ATTENTION LADIES: Earn up to<lb/>
$1000 plus a week escorting in the<lb/>
Greenville area with a liscensed<lb/>
agency. Must be 18, dependable and<lb/>
have own phone and transportation.<lb/>
Call Diamonds or Emerald City Es-<lb/>
corts at 758-0896 or 757-3477<lb/>
DISTRIBUTORS WANTED: Great<lb/>
idea for fundraiser. Earn extra money<lb/>
in your spare time. Work your own<lb/>
hours selling some of the hottest prod-<lb/>
ucts on the market today- self defense<lb/>
products. Contact Mike Carey at 830-<lb/>
5577<lb/>
$1500 WEEKLY POSSIBLE mailing<lb/>
our circulars! No experience required!<lb/>
Begin now! For info call 202-298-8935.<lb/>
A DEGREE IS GREAT but a degree<lb/>
with practical experience is better. On<lb/>
Linelnformation Services is currently<lb/>
taking applications for part-time tele-<lb/>
phone collectors. If interested please<lb/>
apply at 1206 Charles Blvd. Greenville<lb/>
Travel<lb/>
TRAVEL FREE EARN CASH<lb/>
Organize 15 students for<lb/>
Spring Break to Cancun, Nassau,<lb/>
or Jamaica!<lb/>
Call 1-800-4-SUN-Bound<lb/>
ATTENTION SPRING BREAKERS<lb/>
On-Campus Contact:<lb/>
Angel @ 328-9961<lb/>
Stephanie @ 758-8479<lb/>
Cancun from $359<lb/>
Jamaica from $399<lb/>
Florida from $129<lb/>
TUVU<lb/>
SIKV1CU<lb/>
120 N. AfooSt flhoca W14850<lb/>
lalfree 1 -800-648-4640<lb/>
1-607 272-6964fODt 1-607-272-6963<lb/>
Rate ar pr peraon ad occupancy Atr trarupofWwn via Mum Air<lb/>
AM $43 dspartuift tmi to- Jtm?ct and Cancun Sw tour parhopMrt tor<lb/>
eomptala tarrra and condrttont<lb/>
ROOK NOW<lb/>
I. CANCUNBAHAIUS $3?<lb/>
PANAMA CITY (111. DATONA 14<lb/>
ORGANIZE GROUPS. EARN CASH, A TRAVEL FREE.<lb/>
ENDLESS SUMMER)<lb/>
1-800-234-7007<lb/>
SPRING BREAK! Early sign-<lb/>
up specials! Bahamas Party<lb/>
cruise 6 days $279! Includes 12<lb/>
meals 6 parties! Cancun &amp; Ja-<lb/>
maica $399 with Air from Ra-<lb/>
leigh! 1-800-678-6386<lb/>
SPRING BREAK EARLY SPE-<lb/>
CIALS! Panama City Oceanview<lb/>
Room with Kitchen &amp; free bus<lb/>
to bars SI29! Daytona (Kitch-<lb/>
ens) $159! Cocoa Beach $159!<lb/>
Key West $229 1-800-678-<lb/>
6386<lb/>
TRAVEL FREE! SPRING<lb/>
BREAK ' 9 5! America's favor-<lb/>
ite spring break company! Guar-<lb/>
anteed lowest prices to Jamaica,<lb/>
Cancun, Bahamas, Florida,<lb/>
South Padre, Barbados. Book<lb/>
early and save $$$! Organize<lb/>
small group and travel free!<lb/>
Call for free info packet. Sun<lb/>
Splash Tours 1-800-426-7710<lb/>
PARTY! PARTY! PARTY!<lb/>
Spring Break- How about it in<lb/>
the Bahamas or Florida Keys.<lb/>
Where the Party never ends.<lb/>
Spend it on your own private<lb/>
yacht. One week only $385 per<lb/>
person. Including food and<lb/>
much more. Organizers may go<lb/>
for free! Easy sailing Yacht Char-<lb/>
ters 1-800-783-4001<lb/>
I<lb/>
Personals<lb/>
TO MY "HONEYBUCKETS'<lb/>
Happy Birthday! Hope its a<lb/>
great one. Love always and<lb/>
forever- Poo<lb/>
ALL GREEK DRINK-OUT will<lb/>
be held Mon Nov. 21 from 4-<lb/>
6pm at the bottom of College<lb/>
Hill. Volleyball, food and fun<lb/>
Sponsored by Alpha Phi. Pro-<lb/>
ceeds go to Alpha Phi Founda-<lb/>
tion. Call 758-1880 for details!<lb/>
PIKES: Cocktail is just 3 days<lb/>
away! Will Rodney ever be a<lb/>
man and ask anyone? Will Jer-<lb/>
em end up with Reid's date?<lb/>
Ken are you bringing the<lb/>
porkrinds? And how will we get<lb/>
by with Matt graduating? We'll<lb/>
find out Sat. night<lb/>
ADPI Thurs. night was a blast.<lb/>
Hope to get together again soon.<lb/>
Love, Delta Sig<lb/>
CHI OMEGA- Thanks for the<lb/>
pre-downtown the Thurs. before<lb/>
last. We had fun and can't wait<lb/>
till our next bash. Tke<lb/>
SIGMA- thanks for the tailgate<lb/>
for the football season finale.<lb/>
Can't wait to get together again<lb/>
soon. Tke<lb/>
TO THE NEW SISTERS OF<lb/>
ALPHA PHI Thank you littles<lb/>
for a wonderful night, Sat. you<lb/>
all had your big's in flight.<lb/>
Around the town singing songs,<lb/>
we weren't at one frat. house for<lb/>
too long. We ended up at Lambda<lb/>
Chi, wow what a huge surprise.<lb/>
The night was great, we love you<lb/>
all, look forward to you turn<lb/>
next fall. Love your Alpha Phi<lb/>
sisters<lb/>
LAMBDA CHI ALPHA thank<lb/>
you for showing us a great time<lb/>
last Sat. night. We hope to get<lb/>
together again soon. Love, the<lb/>
Alpha Phis<lb/>
KAPPA SIG-Thanks for an awe-<lb/>
some Thurs. night on the night<lb/>
train. We'll have to do it again<lb/>
sometime. Love the sisters and<lb/>
new members of Zeta Tau Alpha<lb/>
ZETAS- Grab-a-Date was awe-<lb/>
some on Sat. The fun started at<lb/>
the game and lasted all night<lb/>
with meat and potatos making it<lb/>
just right. Hope everyone is look-<lb/>
ing forward to Christmas cock-<lb/>
tail.<lb/>
Announcements<lb/>
ECNAQ<lb/>
The next Native Ameridan meeting<lb/>
will be 11-21-94 at Golden Corral at<lb/>
7:00pm - bring dues and can foods. If<lb/>
you need a ride call Belinda Jacobs<lb/>
830-6966 or Nikki Epps 328-7778.<lb/>
HAPPY THANKSGIVING.<lb/>
YQUNGUF5<lb/>
YOUNGUFE is in Greenville. For<lb/>
those interested in becoming Volun-<lb/>
teer Leaders please come to GC<lb/>
Building Room 309 Monday, No-<lb/>
vember 21 ? 6:00pm<lb/>
NFHC TALENT SHOW<lb/>
The National Pan Hellenic Council<lb/>
is looking for talented participants<lb/>
for their talent. If you want to par-<lb/>
ticipate in the Talent Show contact<lb/>
Jeff Watson at 328-8981. Auditions<lb/>
will be held Monday Nov 21st at<lb/>
5:00pm in the Ledonia Wright Cul-<lb/>
ture Center. All who are interested<lb/>
are welcome to come.<lb/>
INTRAMURAL SPORTS<lb/>
RACQUETBALL DOUBLES TOUR-<lb/>
NAMENT. Recreational Services<lb/>
will host a men's, women's and co-<lb/>
ed racquetball doubles tournament<lb/>
Saturday, November 19. This double<lb/>
elimination tournament will be held<lb/>
at Minges Coliseum. Entry fees are<lb/>
free for faculty, staff and students.<lb/>
To register, stop by room 204<lb/>
Christenbury Gymnasium by<lb/>
12:00pm Thursday November 17.<lb/>
Call Recreational Services at 328-<lb/>
6387 for more details.<lb/>
ATTFfsrnON ADULT STU-<lb/>
DENTS AND COMMUTERS!<lb/>
We need your help in preparing ar-<lb/>
ticles of interest to the adult student<lb/>
or commuter population. Contact<lb/>
Shelly Ratelle at 328-6881 or attend<lb/>
the next meeting on November 28 in<lb/>
GCB room 1001 at 4pm.<lb/>
NEW GENERATION CAMPUS<lb/>
MINISTRIES<lb/>
Will be hosting a North Carolina<lb/>
NGM rally on Saturday November<lb/>
19,1994 at Agnes Fullilove Commu-<lb/>
nity School located at 1615 Halifax<lb/>
St. Greenville NC starting at 8:00am<lb/>
Performing groups will include the<lb/>
ECU Gospel Choir, and PIC step<lb/>
team. For more information you may<lb/>
call Robin Wooten at 328-7706.<lb/>
Our organization is helping in a<lb/>
Thanksgiving canned food drive for<lb/>
the needy from Monday Nov 14 to<lb/>
Tuesday Nov 22. There will be a box<lb/>
at the downstairs door of the Air<lb/>
Force ROTC Detachment building,<lb/>
which is right next to the Wright<lb/>
Placeand Student Stores. Pleasecome<lb/>
out and donate a little to those who<lb/>
don't have a whole lot. Thank ou.<lb/>
UNIVERSITY FOLK &amp; COUNTY<lb/>
DANCE CLUB<lb/>
Last meeting Dance of the semester!<lb/>
Live old-time music by Elderberry<lb/>
Jam, 7:30pm, Friday, Nov 18, in<lb/>
Leodonia Wright Bldg. (Behind Stu-<lb/>
dent Health). Come alone or bring a<lb/>
friend. Free!<lb/>
ECU FOLKLORE ARCHIVE<lb/>
"Wart Cures &amp; What to do Till Your<lb/>
Water Breaks: Feminist &amp; Folkloric<lb/>
Analyses of Home Remedies and<lb/>
Health Beliefs" is the topic of a<lb/>
Women's Studies Alliance program<lb/>
to be held Thursday, November 17,<lb/>
1994,4pm, in theMulti-PurposeRoom<lb/>
on the first floor of Mendenhall Stu-<lb/>
dent Center. This presentation is the<lb/>
first in a 1994-95 series sponsored by<lb/>
the ECU Women's Studies Alliance<lb/>
and the Women's Studies Program.<lb/>
For more information contact Denise<lb/>
Sutton328-6389orKarenBaldwin328-<lb/>
6726. Everyone is Welcome.<lb/>
"THE FUTURE OF HEALTH<lb/>
REFORM"<lb/>
Monday, November2112:30-l:30pm,<lb/>
Brody 2W-50. James G. Jones, MD<lb/>
Executive Director North Carolina<lb/>
Health Planning Commission, Ra-<lb/>
leigh, NC. Sponsored by Deptartment<lb/>
of Medical Humanities 816-2797. The<lb/>
Public is invited to attend.<lb/>
WRITING REQUIREMENT FOR<lb/>
GRADUATION<lb/>
Remember that if you entered East<lb/>
Carolina University as a first-year stu-<lb/>
dent in or after Fall 1993, you need 12<lb/>
hours of writing-intensive courses to<lb/>
graduate. To meet the requirement,<lb/>
complete ENGL1100, ENGL1200, one<lb/>
3-hour writing-intensive course in<lb/>
your major, and any other 3-hour<lb/>
writing-intensive course. Check the<lb/>
Spring 1995 Schedule of Classes for<lb/>
writing-intensive courses or sections<lb/>
of courses in your major.<lb/>
ECU LACROSSEFALL BALL<lb/>
TOURNEY<lb/>
ECU LaCrosse will be hosting ifs 1st<lb/>
annual Fall Ball Tourney November<lb/>
19-20. Please come out and support<lb/>
Pirate LaCrosse.<lb/>
ECU SCHOOL OF MUSIC EVENTS<lb/>
EVENTSATAJFLETCHER RECITAL<lb/>
HALL (unless otherwise shown) and<lb/>
FREE<lb/>
THURS NOV 17?SENIOR RECITAL,<lb/>
Fran Parrish, soprano, andJUNIOR<lb/>
RECITAL, Eliazbeth Faucette, mezzo-<lb/>
soprano 7:00pm FRI NOV 18?SE-<lb/>
NIORRECITAL, Anna Kindley, trum-<lb/>
pet 7:00pm SENIOR RECITAL Anne<lb/>
Sorbera, clarinet and Rebecca<lb/>
Robertson, hor 9:00pm GRADUATE<lb/>
JAZZ COMBOS, "An Evening of El-<lb/>
egance and Classic Jazz Ballads<lb/>
Carroll V. Dashiell, Master of Cer-<lb/>
emonies (Location TBA 9:00pm SUN<lb/>
NOV 20?GUITAR ENSEMBLE<lb/>
Elliot Frank , DirectorfGreenville<lb/>
Museum of Art, 2:00pm EASTERN<lb/>
YOUTH ORCHESTRA, Christopher<lb/>
Kighten, Conductor 4:00pm<lb/>
GRADUATE RECITAL, Natalie<lb/>
Humphrey, soprano 7:00pm MON<lb/>
NOV 21?FACULTY RECITAL,<lb/>
Steven Laven, cello 8:00pm<lb/>
THE BLIND CENTERBEAU-<lb/>
FORT COUNTY<lb/>
The Blind Center is having a Soup<lb/>
and Sandwich Day at the center on<lb/>
Wednesday, December 7,1994, from<lb/>
11:00am to 1:15pm. A delicious sand-<lb/>
wich and vegetable soup for $4.00,<lb/>
dine in or take out. A beautiful porce<lb/>
lain doll will be raffled, $1.00 dona-1<lb/>
tion per chance. The Blind Center is<lb/>
located at 219 Harvey Street, Wash-<lb/>
ington, NC 27889 - (919) 946-6208.<lb/>
Please join us.<lb/>
BLIND CENTER CHRISTMAS<lb/>
SHOP<lb/>
The Blind Center Christmas Shop will<lb/>
open November 28th and remain open<lb/>
thru December 21,1994, Monday thru<lb/>
Friday, 9am to 4:30pm. A variety of<lb/>
Christmas items made by the blind<lb/>
and visually impaired will be for sale.<lb/>
The Blind Center is located at 219<lb/>
Harvey St. Washington, NC 27889 -<lb/>
(919) 946-6208. And remember, ycur<lb/>
donations are tax deductible.<lb/>
Classifieds<lb/>
25 words or less:<lb/>
Students<lb/>
$2.00<lb/>
Non-Students<lb/>
$3.00<lb/>
Displayed<lb/>
$5.50 per inch:<lb/>
Announcements<lb/>
Any organization may use the<lb/>
Announcements Section of The<lb/>
East Carolinian to list activities<lb/>
and events open to the public l<lb/>
two times free of charge. DueJ<lb/>
to the limited amount of space,<lb/>
The East Carolinian cannot<lb/>
guarantee the publication of<lb/>
announcements. <lb/>
.0<lb/>
Deadlines<lb/>
Friday 4 p.m. for Tuesday's edition.<lb/>
Tuesday 4 p.m. for Thursday's edition<lb/>
Displayed advertisements<lb/>
may be canceled before<lb/>
10a.m. the day prior to<lb/>
publication; however, no<lb/>
refunds will be given.<lb/>
For more<lb/>
information<lb/>
call 328-6366.<lb/>
<pb facs="00058508_0006"/><lb/>
November 17. 1994<lb/>
fiThe East Carolinian<lb/>
The East Carolinian<lb/>
Opinion<lb/>
JL<lb/>
??<lb/>
The East Carolinian<lb/>
Gregory Dickens, General Manager<lb/>
Maureen A. Rich, Managing Editor<lb/>
Cfiris Warren, Advertising Director<lb/>
Stephanie B. Lassiter, News Editor ' H<lb/>
Tambra Zion, Asst. News Editor <lb/>
Mark Brett, Lifestyle Editor<lb/>
Meredith Langley, Asst. Lifestyle Editor<lb/>
Dave Pond, Sports Editor<lb/>
Aaron Wilson. Asst. Sports Editor<lb/>
Steven A. Hill, Opinion Page Editot<lb/>
Stephanie Smith. Staff Illustrator<lb/>
Printed on<lb/>
-?? ? <lb/>
recycled<lb/>
paper<lb/>
Thomas Brobst. Copy Editor<lb/>
Jessica Stanley. Copy Editor<lb/>
Alexa Thompson, Copy Editor<lb/>
Jon Cawley. Typesetter<lb/>
Deborah Daniel, Secretary-<lb/>
Tony Dunn, Business Manager<lb/>
Mike O'Shea, Circulation Manager<lb/>
Celeste Wilson, Layout Manager<lb/>
Jon Cawley, Asst. Layout Manager<lb/>
Sean McLaughlin, Creative Director<lb/>
Randall Rozzell, Asst. Creative Director<lb/>
Leslie Petty, Photo Editor<lb/>
Chinh Nguyen, Systems Manager<lb/>
iiamv "?? ijj vJ -p.<lb/>
-S5SE?S<lb/>
words, wh.ch may be edited for decency or.brevity The East J J?J Gree.vi?e, N.C 27858-4353.<lb/>
Letters should be addressed to: Opinion Editor. The East Carohnwn. Publications Bldg hCU. uree.<lb/>
For more information, call (919) 328-6366??<lb/>
Pirates enjoy successful season<lb/>
The Pirates' true colors were displayed<lb/>
last weekend with a victory over<lb/>
nationally-ranked Central Florida.<lb/>
Because of the triumph, coach Steve Logan<lb/>
will be able to savor his first winning<lb/>
season since taking charge of the ECU<lb/>
football team. And thanks to the Memphis<lb/>
loss to Tennessee in Knoxville, the win<lb/>
brings us one step closer to appearing at<lb/>
the Liberty Bowl.<lb/>
Next on the chopping block is<lb/>
Memphis. A Pirate victory in the next<lb/>
game will ensure our participation in the<lb/>
Liberty Bowl and permit the Pirates to<lb/>
conclude the season with a hard earned<lb/>
7-4 record.<lb/>
TEC would like to offer<lb/>
congratulations to the Pirates and offer<lb/>
support for the next game. Although the<lb/>
team has been plagued by injuries to<lb/>
some of their most valuable players, they<lb/>
continued to drive on. Bravo!<lb/>
The team's tenacity has given us a<lb/>
winning crew and a football team we can<lb/>
be proud of. Thanks for all the hard work.<lb/>
Special recognition is in order for two<lb/>
players in particular: Senior Junior Smith<lb/>
and sophomore Marcus Crandell. Junior<lb/>
Smith broke ECU's all-time rushing record,<lb/>
gained an average of 113.1 yards per game<lb/>
and thus far has eight touchdowns to his<lb/>
credit.<lb/>
Marcus Crandell gave everyone a lesson<lb/>
in determination this season. Because of a<lb/>
debilitating injury that left him with a<lb/>
broken leg last year, Marcus played a total<lb/>
of only six quarters. But that did not stop<lb/>
him from coming back and leading the<lb/>
Pirates to an excellent season. Also worthy<lb/>
of note is that of all the eligible quarterbacks<lb/>
in the Liberty Bowl alliance, Crandell has<lb/>
accumulated the most yards in passing.<lb/>
It's too bad that the remaining games in<lb/>
the season are going to be played outside<lb/>
Greenville.<lb/>
Although fan support may be scarce in<lb/>
Memphis, remember Pirates ? we 're<lb/>
rooting for you in Greenville !<lb/>
4<lb/>
Homelessness still haunts American society<lb/>
By Angela McCullers<lb/>
Equality for women at Citadel inevitable<lb/>
by Patrick Hinson<lb/>
As most people know by<lb/>
now, there is a young lady by<lb/>
the name of Shannon Faulkner<lb/>
who for almost two years has<lb/>
been waging legal warfare<lb/>
against the Citadel military<lb/>
college in Charleston, S. C, to<lb/>
allow her to become a mem-<lb/>
ber of the corps of cadets there.<lb/>
The Citadel has been an<lb/>
all-male institution in Charles-<lb/>
ton since the early 1800s. It<lb/>
prides itself in its long history<lb/>
of service to the United States<lb/>
and to the different branches<lb/>
of the military.<lb/>
Well, I'm from Charles-<lb/>
ton, grew up there my whole<lb/>
life, and even though I am also<lb/>
on the side of keeping the Cita-<lb/>
del all-male, I'm still some-<lb/>
what torn over how I feel<lb/>
about it.<lb/>
Women can get into VMI,<lb/>
the Naval Academy and West<lb/>
Point, so why shouldn't they<lb/>
be allowed into the Citadel?<lb/>
Another strong argument on<lb/>
Faulkner's side is that the Cita-<lb/>
del is a state-supported col-<lb/>
lege; therefore, if the citizens<lb/>
of the state of South Carolina<lb/>
are going to support the col-<lb/>
lege with their tax dollars, then<lb/>
all the citizens, male and fe-<lb/>
male, should be allowed to<lb/>
attend the school.<lb/>
The Citadel answers this<lb/>
argument by saying that there<lb/>
are state supported, all-female<lb/>
colleges in South Carolina as<lb/>
well, and in most other states<lb/>
in the country. Is it entirely<lb/>
fair to force the Citadel to be-<lb/>
come coed while allowing all-<lb/>
female colleges in the same<lb/>
state to stay as they are?<lb/>
I can't help but feel that<lb/>
Faulkner is eventually going<lb/>
to win this court battle, al-<lb/>
though she may be a 40- year-<lb/>
old freshman by the time she<lb/>
does. She's already a day stu-<lb/>
dent at the Citadel, just not a<lb/>
member of the corps of cadets,<lb/>
as she wishes to be, but not<lb/>
allowed to wear the uniform,<lb/>
be recognized as a cadet, or to<lb/>
go through the rigorous re-<lb/>
gime that cadets must make it<lb/>
through during their first year.<lb/>
The heart of my argu-<lb/>
ment is mainly that she has<lb/>
already broken the most cov-<lb/>
eted and respected rule of the<lb/>
Citadel; that a cadet "will not<lb/>
lie, cheat, or steal, nor tolerate<lb/>
any cadet that does<lb/>
Faulkner did not fill in<lb/>
the blank on her application<lb/>
to the Citadel regarding her<lb/>
gender, knowing that if she<lb/>
did tell that she was a female,<lb/>
she would automatically be<lb/>
disqualified as an applicant.<lb/>
She was accepted to the col-<lb/>
lege before they realized she<lb/>
was a she. So, basically, she<lb/>
lied to get in, and now she's<lb/>
fighting like mad, or at least<lb/>
her legal team is (sensing that<lb/>
all-powerful potential for per-<lb/>
sonal fame if they win this) to<lb/>
stay in. Because of this, to me,<lb/>
even if she does win, it will be<lb/>
a tainted victory, because it<lb/>
was hot cleanly won.<lb/>
Despite what her vic-<lb/>
tory, if she does win, will do<lb/>
for the future of women's in-<lb/>
volvement in the Citadel, fu<lb/>
ture generations are always<lb/>
going to know that the first<lb/>
woman cheated her way into<lb/>
this school. I don't feel that<lb/>
women should be disqualified<lb/>
from any branch or area of the<lb/>
military, nor from any feder-<lb/>
ally supported academy. It just<lb/>
seems to be somewhat of a<lb/>
double standard that there can<lb/>
be all-female, but not all-male<lb/>
academies.<lb/>
What's fair for women is<lb/>
not fair for men, this seems to<lb/>
say. If the Citadel was a direct<lb/>
link to the military, with re-<lb/>
quired military service upon<lb/>
graduation, it might be differ-<lb/>
ent, but it is just a military<lb/>
college, post-graduation mili-<lb/>
tary service is not mandatory.<lb/>
Fight as the Citadel may,<lb/>
women will soon be making<lb/>
their way into the gray line<lb/>
before long. Although, I hope<lb/>
that Faulkner will not be the<lb/>
first.<lb/>
I think that almost ev-<lb/>
eryone, including myself, who<lb/>
opposes her entry into the<lb/>
Citadel would feel less zeal-<lb/>
ous in their opposition if she<lb/>
had taken a more honorable<lb/>
route into the college and if<lb/>
her motives for doing so were<lb/>
not so questionable.<lb/>
Do you really think<lb/>
Faulkner is going through all<lb/>
this because she wants to be a<lb/>
soldier or a cadet ?<lb/>
No ! I think she wants<lb/>
the bucks involved with the<lb/>
fame that this case will bring<lb/>
her.<lb/>
Every winter, dozens of<lb/>
Americans literally freeze to dea th<lb/>
on city streets. Every day, in cities<lb/>
and towns across the country, men,<lb/>
women and children dressed in<lb/>
rags walk the streets aimlessly,<lb/>
often begging for money.<lb/>
They are often carrying plas-<lb/>
tic bags or pushing shopping carts<lb/>
filled with their worldly posses-<lb/>
sions. They curi up on a bench or<lb/>
in a doorway under discarded<lb/>
newspaper or tattered jackets.<lb/>
In modern societies, a per-<lb/>
manent residence is regarded as<lb/>
normal and necessary. To be with-<lb/>
out a place called home is seen by<lb/>
most as one of the severest forms<lb/>
of human deprivation.<lb/>
There are many homeless<lb/>
people in the most affluent of soci-<lb/>
eties, and their numbers appear to<lb/>
be growing in America.<lb/>
Homelessness is nothing new, but<lb/>
it is also nothing less than a major<lb/>
tragedy ? and it is a tragedy that<lb/>
looms in our times.<lb/>
The widely held and seri-<lb/>
ously mistaken view is that the<lb/>
homeless are mainly derelicts, al-<lb/>
coholics, bag ladies, physically<lb/>
disabled and mentally ill. Bums,<lb/>
winos and crazies are out there,<lb/>
but they do not constitute the<lb/>
majority of those who have no<lb/>
place to call home. Homelessness<lb/>
is a direct result of poverty.<lb/>
Tens of millions of Ameri-<lb/>
cans live below the poverty line,<lb/>
and the members of this group are<lb/>
more likely than others to lose their<lb/>
housing. Suddenly the streets be-<lb/>
come an all-too-real possibility.<lb/>
Many middle-class people become<lb/>
homeless after one or more family<lb/>
members loses a job.<lb/>
If homelessness was largely<lb/>
the result of individuals'irrespon-<lb/>
sibility or incompetence ? if<lb/>
homeless people truly were sim-<lb/>
ply slackers and lackers ? the<lb/>
homeless population would be<lb/>
drawn from all economic classes.<lb/>
Instead, homeless people are<lb/>
mainly drawn from a much larger<lb/>
group who are already in a finan-<lb/>
cially precarious position, most<lb/>
frequently, but not always, in-<lb/>
cluding those who have been poor<lb/>
for extended periods of time.<lb/>
The homeless seem to be<lb/>
everywhere. Some are visibly<lb/>
homeless, like the bag ladies, the<lb/>
shopping-cart people, the dishev-<lb/>
eled who huddle in doorways and<lb/>
others who seem to wander in<lb/>
streets and alleys.<lb/>
There are the "invisible"<lb/>
ones, those who "pass On the<lb/>
surface many of these are indis-<lb/>
tinguishable from the rest of us.<lb/>
Some roam shopping malls<lb/>
or the hallways of universities<lb/>
during the day. At night they try<lb/>
to rest in rat-and-roach infested<lb/>
all-night movie theaters, lonely<lb/>
school yards, their cars, subways<lb/>
or cold rest rooms of public build-<lb/>
ings.<lb/>
The problem is not that we<lb/>
choose not to see the homelessj<lb/>
we pass them. Most of us try to<lb/>
avoid the homeless. If we en-<lb/>
counter them on the street, we<lb/>
move away; we may cross the<lb/>
street or change our direction<lb/>
We try to put them out of our<lb/>
minds because we may recog-<lb/>
nize our own vulnerability to.<lb/>
economic insecurity.<lb/>
Homelessness affects mil-<lb/>
lions, and the problem increases<lb/>
dramatically, week by week,<lb/>
month by month and year by<lb/>
year. To blame the victims and<lb/>
attribute their plight to personal.<lb/>
failure denies reality.<lb/>
Unless we overcome this,<lb/>
denial, the homeless will con-<lb/>
tinue to suffer lives of misery<lb/>
and desperation. Denial and in-<lb/>
difference to the truth about the<lb/>
homeless have already exagger-<lb/>
ated the divisions between the<lb/>
"haves" and the "have-nots" in<lb/>
our society.<lb/>
The problems of the home- <lb/>
less will not be resolved if we ;<lb/>
continue to give cadence to er<lb/>
roneous "blaming-the-victim" j<lb/>
explanations and to base social<lb/>
programs on such false perspec- j<lb/>
fives. ;<lb/>
Can you imagine what it<lb/>
would be like to have no roof<lb/>
over your head and no place to<lb/>
return to at night? For many<lb/>
Americans, they do not have to<lb/>
imagine; they live this way from<lb/>
day to day.<lb/>
Qu&amp;taBfe QpoUs<lb/>
"Reading is to the mind what exercise is to the body<lb/>
? Joseph Addison<lb/>
"We are faced with a choice between the work ethic that<lb/>
built this nation's character - and the welfare ethic that could<lb/>
cause the American character to weaken<lb/>
?Richard Nixon<lb/>
"I disapprove of what you say, but I will defend to the death<lb/>
your right to say it epitome of Voltaire<lb/>
"Prisons are built with stones of Law, Brothels with bricks<lb/>
? JZw ?William Blake<lb/>
of Religion.<lb/>
Letters to the Editor<lb/>
r<lb/>
i<lb/>
i<lb/>
i<lb/>
i<lb/>
i<lb/>
SUBSCRIBE TO<lb/>
The East Carolinian<lb/>
Support student-run media by<lb/>
isubscribing:<lb/>
J<lb/>
I<lb/>
I To receive The East Carolinian, check<lb/>
I the length of subscription desired, u<lb/>
 complete your name address, and send<lb/>
I a check or money order to Circulation<lb/>
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$55 for 1 year<lb/>
$30 for 6 months<lb/>
Name-<lb/>
Pubs Bldg ECU, Greenville, NC<lb/>
27858-4353<lb/>
I<lb/>
To the Editor:<lb/>
We have a number of thoughtless individuals<lb/>
who continue to smoke in the General Classroom<lb/>
Building (GCB) despite the fact that I have twice had<lb/>
a faculty member hospitalized from tobacco smoke<lb/>
in the GCB. The GCB recirculates the air. The smoke<lb/>
or any other air born Isic substances from any part<lb/>
of the building is redistributed in the building. The<lb/>
faculty member who was hospitalized has a tobacco<lb/>
smoke allergy which was severely increased during<lb/>
pregnancy. She went to the hospital twice during<lb/>
pregnancy because of tobacco smoke. This event<lb/>
took placebefore smoking in theCCB was prohibited.<lb/>
A number of faculty have health problems and<lb/>
because of the presence of tobacco smoke have been<lb/>
forced to install air filter machines in their offices.<lb/>
Despite these efforts many faculty and staff believe<lb/>
they are subject to headaches and breathing problems<lb/>
because of the presence of tobacco smoke. I cannot<lb/>
verify any cause and affect sic. Obviously the GCB<lb/>
is a uniquecase. 1 believe it is thoughtless to continue<lb/>
tosmokeand impose these problems on ECU faculty,<lb/>
staff, and students.<lb/>
I urge all who smoke in the GCB to stop now. I ,<lb/>
urge all those who see them both to ask them to stop<lb/>
and report them to University authorities. I urge<lb/>
anv University authorities who are aware of such .<lb/>
violations to take action and make violators stop. W<lb/>
the smoking habit cannot be stopped while in the<lb/>
GCB 'l urge the administration to move theof tenders<lb/>
to buildings where the air does not recirculate. I am<lb/>
saddened to report that my clear impression is that<lb/>
the faculty and staff members seem to be the worst<lb/>
offenders. If we cannot be better role models, 1 am<lb/>
not surprised at the lack of discipline and respect<lb/>
reflected by some of our students.<lb/>
Robert Schellenberger<lb/>
Department of Decision Sciences<lb/>
Chair<lb/>
<pb facs="00058508_0007"/><lb/>
c<lb/>
PHOEBE<lb/>
0  M<lb/>
BY STEPHANIE SMITH<lb/>
S<lb/>
BY GREGORY DICKENS<lb/>
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FOR THf SAME REASONS I RECAMe 4<lb/>
CoP.TOIAKE SURE EiEKYone's RIGHTS<lb/>
ARE RfrSPECTCOAwDNOONe HAIWS<lb/>
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IS3E<lb/>
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SPARE TIME<lb/>
BY ANDY FARKAS<lb/>
kW4f 5 7e 5? DtNE?<lb/>
FRED'S CORNER<lb/>
BY SEAN PARNELL LAKE IMP U.S.A<lb/>
BY JOHN MURPHY<lb/>
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MAGIC 101<lb/>
BY GWENDOLYN EAST<lb/>
MOjMPETS<lb/>
BY DAVID HISLE<lb/>
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<pb facs="00058508_0008"/><lb/>
1<lb/>
&amp;AThe East Carolinian<lb/>
November 17. T99<lb/>
 N .i<lb/>
??<lb/>
r?n<lb/>
? Vffc<lb/>
1 n.6<lb/>
The East Carolinian<lb/>
Lifestyle<lb/>
mmm<lb/>
qn<lb/>
COMING<lb/>
ABACTIONS<lb/>
Appearing soonforyour edification<lb/>
dand amusement:<lb/>
it,<lb/>
it i<lb/>
1r<lb/>
Thursday, Nov. 17<lb/>
Not So Dandelions<lb/>
and Schroeder<lb/>
at O'Rock's<lb/>
(alternative)<lb/>
Bruce Frye<lb/>
at the Attic<lb/>
"Blood Wedding"<lb/>
at McGinnis Theatre<lb/>
(tragedy)<lb/>
(Runs through Tuesday)<lb/>
Lindbergh's Historic Flight<lb/>
at Hendrix Theatre<lb/>
(travel film)<lb/>
Friday, Nov. 18<lb/>
Dillon Fence<lb/>
and Spider Monkey<lb/>
at the Attic<lb/>
(alternative)<lb/>
Henry Acrobat<lb/>
and Smackapple<lb/>
at O'Rock's<lb/>
(funkmetal)<lb/>
One Tribe Reggae<lb/>
at Peasant's Cafe<lb/>
Teatro De Danza Espanol<lb/>
at Wright Auditorium<lb/>
(Spanish dance)<lb/>
True Lies<lb/>
at Hendrix Theatre<lb/>
(action film)<lb/>
FREE!<lb/>
(Run through Saturday)<lb/>
Saturday, Nov. 19<lb/>
Fountain of Youth<lb/>
and Silly<lb/>
at O'Rock's<lb/>
(funkalternative)<lb/>
Crazy Diamond<lb/>
at the Attic<lb/>
(Pink Floyd tribute)<lb/>
The Other People .<lb/>
at Peasant's Cafe<lb/>
Sunday, Nov. 20<lb/>
Gallagher<lb/>
at Wright Auditorium<lb/>
7 p.m.<lb/>
(projectile comedy)<lb/>
Wednesday, Nov. 23<lb/>
Lyle Lovett and<lb/>
His Large Band<lb/>
at Memorial Auditorium<lb/>
in Raleigh<lb/>
(countryjazz)<lb/>
Danzig<lb/>
and Type O Negative<lb/>
at the Raleigh Civic Center<lb/>
(heavy metal)<lb/>
Nine Inch Nails,<lb/>
Jim Rose Circus Side Show<lb/>
and Marilyn Manson<lb/>
in Winston Salem<lb/>
(industrial punk freak show)<lb/>
III rH'M<lb/>
Vl?'in<lb/>
This box holds the key<lb/>
to understanding the<lb/>
devious ways of our CD<lb/>
reviewers. Enjoy!<lb/>
<lb/>
m<lb/>
Pathetic<lb/>
Lame<lb/>
Pretty<lb/>
Good<lb/>
Smashing fun explodes at Wright<lb/>
Brandon Waddell<lb/>
Stjaff Writer<lb/>
'Alright ECU, grab your urn-<lb/>
?brellas, windshield wipers and<lb/>
raincoats! Put on your goggles!<lb/>
Gallagher will be performing<lb/>
tfJTs Sunday night. The zany co-<lb/>
median will<lb/>
be shower-<lb/>
ing Wright<lb/>
Auditorium<lb/>
with bits of<lb/>
s m aftt e d<lb/>
vegetamles,<lb/>
fruit, Wig<lb/>
Macsanatell<lb/>
o t h e?tr<lb/>
"smashable'<lb/>
edibles. He<lb/>
will break<lb/>
out the<lb/>
Sledge-O-<lb/>
Matic and<lb/>
other famil-<lb/>
iar props,<lb/>
combined<lb/>
with some<lb/>
never seen<lb/>
before, to<lb/>
create an<lb/>
unforgettable performance.<lb/>
Throughout Gallagher's 15-<lb/>
year career, he has always been<lb/>
a successful attraction on the<lb/>
road. He doesn't charge a huge<lb/>
ticket price and he always gives<lb/>
his audience 100 percent. Flash<lb/>
cameras are also allowed in<lb/>
Gallagher's shows, because he<lb/>
wants audience members to be<lb/>
able to "take home a Gallagher<lb/>
memory He considers himself<lb/>
a sharp observer of nature.<lb/>
"My humor makes people<lb/>
think Gallagher says. "I want<lb/>
people to look more closely at<lb/>
this country and their lives to<lb/>
see the humor and absurdity in<lb/>
it all<lb/>
Though<lb/>
Gallagher<lb/>
is quite out-<lb/>
spoken in<lb/>
concert, he<lb/>
doesn't<lb/>
even ac-<lb/>
knowledge<lb/>
the media.<lb/>
"That's<lb/>
whv he<lb/>
hired me<lb/>
states Ruth<lb/>
Ann<lb/>
Propper,<lb/>
Gallagher's<lb/>
promoter.<lb/>
No one in<lb/>
the media<lb/>
can even<lb/>
? ?????????? 8et an 'nter"<lb/>
view with<lb/>
him. Gallagher feels too many<lb/>
reporters have misquoted him<lb/>
and ask "too many stupid ques-<lb/>
tions<lb/>
Propper is Gallagher's mouth-<lb/>
piece, promoter and manager.<lb/>
She promises Gallagher has<lb/>
never done two concerts exactly<lb/>
the same. "He researches the<lb/>
towns he will play, reads their<lb/>
Where: Wright<lb/>
Auditorium I<lb/>
When: Sunday, 7 p.m. ?<lb/>
Price: $18.50 general ?<lb/>
$16.50 for ECU I<lb/>
?<lb/>
students ;<lb/>
STANDING ROOM :<lb/>
ONLY! <lb/>
Don't forget your I<lb/>
PLASTIC RAIN !<lb/>
SUIT! i<lb/>
newspapers and if there's any<lb/>
dirt or hot rumors ? he'll know<lb/>
them by show time she said.<lb/>
His shows are never a set perfor-<lb/>
mance. He feeds off the energy<lb/>
from the audience to produce a<lb/>
show that Ruth Ann ensures will<lb/>
be "totally unforgettable; every-<lb/>
one in Greenville will be<lb/>
'Gallagherized' and will never<lb/>
look at life the same way again<lb/>
Though Gallagher performs<lb/>
over 120 shows annually, he<lb/>
rarely does college venues. He'll<lb/>
only do three shows this year on<lb/>
college campuses. Gallagher<lb/>
feels as though most college au-<lb/>
ditoriums are not run smoothly<lb/>
enough for his type of show.<lb/>
However, "this is not the case<lb/>
with ECU Ruth Ann stated.<lb/>
"We're laying down a lot of<lb/>
plastic claims J. Marshall, as-<lb/>
sistant director of student activi-<lb/>
ties. "He pays for the cleanup,<lb/>
students will love him and cam-<lb/>
eras are allowed Marshall has<lb/>
been a Gallagher fan for years<lb/>
and along with Gallagher's man-<lb/>
agement, they promise a show<lb/>
that ECU won't soon forget.<lb/>
All reserve seating tickets are<lb/>
sold out. However, some stand-<lb/>
ing room only tickets for the show<lb/>
are stiil available from the Cen-<lb/>
tral Ticket Office for $16.50 (ECU<lb/>
students) and $18.50 (general<lb/>
public) in Mendenhall Student<lb/>
Center. The performance will<lb/>
start promptly at 7 p.m so get<lb/>
to Wright Auditorium early.<lb/>
Photo Courtesy of ECU Student Activities<lb/>
Gallagher, in his Hell's Angel disguise, readies one of his<lb/>
precious watermelons for destruction via Sledge-O-Matic.<lb/>
Ugly truths are revealed in Mr. Punch<lb/>
Mark Brett<lb/>
Lifestyle Editor<lb/>
Once upon a time, the English<lb/>
considered a puppet show about a<lb/>
wife-beating child murderer<lb/>
proper entertainment for children.<lb/>
This is the central oddity of<lb/>
childhood explored by Neil<lb/>
Gaiman and Dave McKean in their<lb/>
latest book, Mr. Punch. The rest of<lb/>
the oddities we'll get to in a mo-<lb/>
ment. First, a little background is<lb/>
in order. Gaiman (the writer) and<lb/>
McKean (the artist) are two of the<lb/>
most innovative creators in mod-<lb/>
ern comic books. Yes, Mr. Punch is<lb/>
indeed a comic book (an oddity of<lb/>
childhood if ever there was one).<lb/>
I suppose the official term for<lb/>
Mr. Punch would be "graphic<lb/>
novel it's a sleek hardback with<lb/>
subject matter definitely not in-<lb/>
tended for children. But I've al-<lb/>
ways had a problem with that la-<lb/>
bel. It may be less misleading than<lb/>
the more traditional "comic book<lb/>
but it all sounds so pretentious.<lb/>
Besides, Mr. Punch is only 96 pages<lb/>
long, and that's hardly novel-<lb/>
length.<lb/>
So, casting all these semantics<lb/>
aside, I'll just call it a book and get<lb/>
on with the childhood oddities and<lb/>
other wonders that await readers<lb/>
within its pages.<lb/>
Mr. Punch is the story of a little<lb/>
boy (our narrator, who remains<lb/>
nameless) and his fascination with<lb/>
Punch and Judy shows (the vio-<lb/>
lent puppet shows I talked about<lb/>
earlier). In the typical Punch and<lb/>
Judy show, Punch throws his baby<lb/>
out the window then bea ts his wife<lb/>
to death with a stick. He then goes<lb/>
on a bit of a killing spree, beating<lb/>
various officials who investigate<lb/>
Judy's murder and finally killing<lb/>
the devil when he comes to take<lb/>
the villainous Punch to Hell. Yes,<lb/>
Mr. Punch gets away with it. What<lb/>
wholesome entertainment! Why<lb/>
Disney hasn't co-opted this one<lb/>
for a film, I don't know.<lb/>
At any rate, Mr. Punch deals<lb/>
with the horrific imagery of the<lb/>
play, and the effect it has on our<lb/>
narrator during a summer spent at<lb/>
the beach with his grandparents.<lb/>
In the course of the book, we see<lb/>
the various murders acted out over<lb/>
and over again, as the narrator<lb/>
becomes fascinated with the<lb/>
play. McKean has actually fash-<lb/>
ioned puppets for these se-<lb/>
quences, and the switch from<lb/>
his minimalist artwork to the<lb/>
richly-detailed photographs is<lb/>
quite jarring. In fact, it seems to<lb/>
suggest that we've entered an-<lb/>
other level of reality.<lb/>
Something magic happens<lb/>
when the puppets come to life<lb/>
in Mr. Punch. Not literally, mind<lb/>
you; the magic is metaphorical,<lb/>
and the puppets only mimic life<lb/>
as any puppet does when you<lb/>
put it on and move it around.<lb/>
The narrator is allowed to wear<lb/>
a crocodile puppet on his arm at<lb/>
one point, however, and doesn't<lb/>
want to give it up because of the<lb/>
power he suddenly wields. Not<lb/>
only does he control the puppet,<lb/>
but he can use it to frighten his<lb/>
enemies (girls, teachers and the<lb/>
like).<lb/>
Power seems to be the central<lb/>
theme in this book. Children, as<lb/>
we are frequently reminded,<lb/>
have no power in the adult<lb/>
See JUDY page 10<lb/>
Cruise, Pitt conduct bloody Interview<lb/>
Trent Giardino<lb/>
Staff Writer<lb/>
The controversy over the movie<lb/>
Intervierv With the Vampire has finally<lb/>
been brought to light. Why was there<lb/>
so much hype surrounding this<lb/>
movie? I have a pretty good idea that<lb/>
it has something to do with Tom<lb/>
Cruise playing the part of Lestat, a<lb/>
major character in the movie.<lb/>
Anyone who's read the book by<lb/>
thesamenamewouldagreethatTom<lb/>
Cruise would have been the last per-<lb/>
son picked to play this honored role.<lb/>
He just doesn't seem the type to play<lb/>
the part of a vampire, let alone Lestat.<lb/>
It might not have been a wise move<lb/>
for the people in charge of casting<lb/>
due to the fact that a large percentage<lb/>
of the population is used to seeing<lb/>
him in such roles as a wild bartender<lb/>
or clean-cut lawyer, not a fierce vam-<lb/>
pire. Many people were in for a big<lb/>
surprise when they decided to watch<lb/>
Interview With the Vampire.<lb/>
Loosely based on the wonderful<lb/>
novel by Anne Rice, the movie opens<lb/>
with the main character Louis, a 200-<lb/>
year-old vampire, and the inter-<lb/>
viewer in a small room above the city<lb/>
streets. The vampire Louis begins the<lb/>
tale of his l' fe to the nervous inter-<lb/>
viewer. Louis, played by Brad Pitt,<lb/>
fits and plays the role of the down<lb/>
to earth vampire perfectly. Hebe-<lb/>
gins by telling how he came into<lb/>
darkness after meeting a vampire<lb/>
See VAMP page 10<lb/>
mmm m Brilliant<lb/>
CD Reviews CD Reviews<lb/>
CD Reviews<lb/>
CD Reviews<lb/>
Cinderella<lb/>
Still Climbing<lb/>
One of my most vivid memo-<lb/>
ries is of coming home from<lb/>
middle school and turning on<lb/>
MTV's "Headbangers' Ball In<lb/>
that mire of smoke, makeup and<lb/>
leather-clad fake blondes, I would<lb/>
relish the kitsch of campy metal<lb/>
like Motley Crue, Quiet Riot,<lb/>
Twisted Sister, Warrant, Poison<lb/>
and Bulletboys. I'd escape the syn-<lb/>
thesized rythym of the Huey Le-<lb/>
wises, Princes, Janet and Michael<lb/>
Jacksons, and I would bask in re-<lb/>
ally horrible creaming imps<lb/>
dressed like flea market harle-<lb/>
quins and banging their multi-<lb/>
hued heads to some cartoon de-<lb/>
mon. It was my first excursion<lb/>
into theatre and, yes, it was ab-<lb/>
surd.<lb/>
But that was years ago. My dis-<lb/>
coveries of Cocteau Twins, Hafler<lb/>
Trio, Public Enemy and James<lb/>
have long since buried the relics<lb/>
of mid80s tripe like Bon Jovi and<lb/>
Gorky Park. So imagine the shock<lb/>
of repressed memories surfacing<lb/>
when I was handed the new CD<lb/>
by (yikes!) Cinderella.<lb/>
Yes, that Philadelphia bar band<lb/>
has returned from the nether re-<lb/>
gions with a fourthCD, Still Climb-<lb/>
ing, and whileitowesatraceofits<lb/>
sound to modern production tech-<lb/>
niques and chord progressions,<lb/>
it's just as purile as the last three.<lb/>
Shrieking singer Tom Keifer is still<lb/>
the main songsmith. This singu-<lb/>
lar wellspring of fluff is dry as a<lb/>
bone, and it didn't have more than<lb/>
a puddle's depth to begin with.<lb/>
Cinderella continues to make<lb/>
music that was popular around<lb/>
'86 for a '90s audience. In fact,<lb/>
nearly all the songs ring bells of<lb/>
recognition, particularly of bands<lb/>
from Cinderella's original period.<lb/>
"Bad Attitude Shuffle" is a re-<lb/>
tooled version of Ratt's "Way Cool<lb/>
Junior "Hard To Find the<lb/>
Words" is a Motley Crue "With-<lb/>
out You" rip-off. "Still Climbing"<lb/>
comes across exactly like vintage<lb/>
Scorpions, like, say, "The Rythym<lb/>
of Love "Freewheeling" swipes<lb/>
from the Crue's "Kickstart My<lb/>
Heart I swear "Through the<lb/>
Rain" sounds like (double<lb/>
yikes!) Air Supply's "Making<lb/>
Love Out of Nothing At All" in<lb/>
the soft piano work at the<lb/>
song's beginning. "Hot and<lb/>
Bothered" echoes Van Halen's<lb/>
"Round and Round "The<lb/>
Road sStill Long" isdamr near<lb/>
"18 and Life" from Skid Row<lb/>
lyrically, but it sounds like<lb/>
Winger. And Keifer himself<lb/>
comes too close to Steven Tyler,<lb/>
Brian Johnson and Axel Rose<lb/>
to offer anything new vocally<lb/>
to the limited scope of hard<lb/>
rock.<lb/>
The lyrics? Please. "All<lb/>
See CLIMB page 10<lb/>
<pb facs="00058508_0009"/><lb/>
Mm<lb/>
November 17, 1994<lb/>
The East-Carolinian JQ<lb/>
Pirate fan sings praises<lb/>
xy<lb/>
atalog<lb/>
mnection<lb/>
jvA<lb/>
Division of UBE<lb/>
210 E. 5th Street<lb/>
758-8612<lb/>
Shoes<lb/>
40 on<lb/>
Catalog Price<lb/>
Ladies<lb/>
Blazers<lb/>
50 oh<lb/>
Catalog Price<lb/>
Ladies &amp;<lb/>
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Daniel Willis<lb/>
Staff Writer<lb/>
Bill Ebison, the father of an ECU<lb/>
senior, has created a musical tribute<lb/>
to Pirate athletics. It's an R&amp;B tape<lb/>
titled Let's Rockand Roll, East Carolina.<lb/>
The release contains "Meet me at<lb/>
Ficklen "TaUgate Party Time "Get<lb/>
Loud Here Come the Pirates and<lb/>
the title track "Let's Rock and Roll<lb/>
East Carolina The songs are de<lb/>
signed to stimulate school spirit and<lb/>
to promote the football team. They<lb/>
contain simple lyrics such as "When<lb/>
we believed we took the peach We<lb/>
still believe This time we want the<lb/>
liberty It's not the most complex<lb/>
music you'll ever hear. But it sves a<lb/>
purpose. It would be well suu for<lb/>
the Steve Logan Show, or fori pep<lb/>
rally. Ebison definitely doesnWrite<lb/>
about anything negative.<lb/>
Ebison said he'd like to fgafsent<lb/>
this release to ECU organizations for<lb/>
feedback. He also wants to haw the<lb/>
tracks played on local radio stations<lb/>
to see what kind of response they'd<lb/>
get.<lb/>
"I've been a Pirate fan for close to<lb/>
Off<lb/>
Catalog Price<lb/>
Men's<lb/>
Khakis<lb/>
40-50 on<lb/>
Catalog Price<lb/>
WARNING: Dialing Zero to Call Your Family Collect<lb/>
Can Be Hazardous to Their Wealth.<lb/>
1-800-COLLECT<lb/>
Dial it instead of "0" and<lb/>
save them up to 44.<lb/>
i?<lb/>
10 years now Ebison said. "I've<lb/>
experimented making tribute<lb/>
songs for the basketball team, and<lb/>
for other Pirate football teams. But<lb/>
this is the first time I've ma0e<lb/>
Pirate tribute songs this profes-<lb/>
sionally. I compiled most of the<lb/>
music on a digital keyboard, aid<lb/>
later added Ronnie Daw's guifer<lb/>
I solos and John Jones' vocals ?<lb/>
Ebison has made tribute songs<lb/>
for organizations throughout the<lb/>
Eastern North Carolina region. "I<lb/>
started out doing comedy rou-<lb/>
tines throughoutthestate Ebison<lb/>
said. "Then it got to the point that<lb/>
everywhere I performed I had'a<lb/>
tribute song dedicated to a certain<lb/>
area. I performed at the Attic oie<lb/>
time and performed a song about<lb/>
ECU<lb/>
Ebison has been making music<lb/>
for the past 40 years and he hasn't<lb/>
restricted himself to making one<lb/>
certain style. "I've made country,<lb/>
blue grass, beach music and rock<lb/>
and roll Ebison said. "I play gui-<lb/>
tar, bass, piano and keyboards.<lb/>
I've always enjoyed making mii-<lb/>
sic<lb/>
i<lb/>
VAMPFromp.8<lb/>
named Lestat on the streets of<lb/>
New Orleans in the late 18th cerj-<lb/>
tury. Lestat gives Louis a choice<lb/>
mat Lestat never had: whether dr<lb/>
not to become a vampire. Frorh<lb/>
men on, the story as told by Louis<lb/>
depicts his life as a vampire.<lb/>
The scenes in which the van<lb/>
pires kill and dine on the blood of<lb/>
their victims are chillingly graphic<lb/>
and detailed. Excellent special ef-<lb/>
fects make for an evil account of<lb/>
whatit would really be like to be<lb/>
vampire. Louis, who at first is still<lb/>
in touch with his old mortal way<lb/>
oflife,refusestomakehumanshls<lb/>
victims. Instead he chooses to<lb/>
make rat blood his food of choice!<lb/>
Numerous rats are drained of,<lb/>
their blood in a gruesome man<lb/>
ner, much to the dismay of the;<lb/>
unsuspecting audience. However<lb/>
that's only the beginning of the<lb/>
movie. Lestat tries to persuade<lb/>
Louis that human blood is in fact<lb/>
delicious and between them they<lb/>
drain the life out of many unsus<lb/>
pecting victims. One of my favor<lb/>
ite scenes of this movie is when;<lb/>
Louis finally breaks down and;<lb/>
can't resist the urge for human!<lb/>
blood when he stumbles across a!<lb/>
little girl.<lb/>
Thegu-l'smomerhad died from'<lb/>
the plague, and Louis takes the<lb/>
girl and bites her neck. Lestat soon;<lb/>
enters the room and proceeds to <lb/>
makethegirl,Claudia,intoavam-<lb/>
pire by letting her drink his blood.<lb/>
After doingso,thearrogant Lestati<lb/>
begins to mock-dance with the<lb/>
corpse of the girl's mother. This<lb/>
scene is so intense that it gave me j<lb/>
shivers. Duringit,Iwitnessedsev<lb/>
eral people leaving. One person J<lb/>
didn't make it and threw up all<lb/>
over the floor. Surprise!<lb/>
I honestly do not think people !<lb/>
werereadyforamovieasgraphic !<lb/>
as this one was. Most did not i<lb/>
think Tom Cruise would partici- j<lb/>
pate in such an "evil" movie and j<lb/>
were very surprised by it. Cruise j<lb/>
did such a realistic interpretation <lb/>
that 1 didn't even see him. I saw !<lb/>
Lestat.<lb/>
Brad Pitt was perfect to play i<lb/>
the role of Louis and proved so i<lb/>
during the movie. Vampires are ?<lb/>
very beautiful people and that is ;<lb/>
what you can say about everyone<lb/>
in the movie. Armand, the oldest <lb/>
and most powerful vampire, '<lb/>
made a few women in the audi-<lb/>
ence faint. Brad Pitt and Tom<lb/>
Cruise are also considered some '<lb/>
of the most beautiful people in j<lb/>
the world.<lb/>
Intervieiu follows the story line m<lb/>
of the book, but it has undergone 2<lb/>
a few changes. One difference <lb/>
? between the book and movie is ?<lb/>
the ending, which almost ruined<lb/>
' the movie for me. To avoid spoil-<lb/>
ing it, I'll just say that it involves<lb/>
Lestat, and that in thebackground<lb/>
they have a revolting rendition of<lb/>
the Rolling Stones' "Sympathy<lb/>
for the Devil" performed by <lb/>
Axl Rose?<lb/>
Except for the ending, Inter-<lb/>
vieiv With the Vampire is very ex-<lb/>
citing and well-done. It's the best<lb/>
vampire movie since Dracula, and<lb/>
since the book has been a favorite<lb/>
of mine for a long time now, it<lb/>
made the movie that much more<lb/>
fun to watch.<lb/>
Oh a scale of one to ten, Inter-<lb/>
vieiv Withthe Vampire rates a nine-<lb/>
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to worry for yourself The rest<lb/>
either plummets into power bal-<lb/>
lad pap or tries pitifully to swag-<lb/>
ger. The blues sound that<lb/>
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too far from its origins to work,<lb/>
buried under yowls and bland<lb/>
brass. Just how is it that<lb/>
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and builds such good rock?<lb/>
Could it be, like, talent or some-<lb/>
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A band simply can't com-<lb/>
pete against funk and punk<lb/>
when their main weapons are<lb/>
stiff-back blues, sterile choruses<lb/>
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posing. And the insipid<lb/>
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ing off the dead horse of hard<lb/>
rock sentimentality and faux<lb/>
cowboy bravado that<lb/>
"Headbanger's Ball" doled out<lb/>
so long ago. It is long past mid-<lb/>
night for Cinderella; the ball is<lb/>
over, and the glass on their slip-<lb/>
pers is simply too transparent.<lb/>
However good this type of<lb/>
music may have sounded a de-<lb/>
cade ago, it rings of seventh<lb/>
grade tastes and good times<lb/>
long since past.<lb/>
?Gregory<lb/>
Dickens<lb/>
JUDY From p. 8<lb/>
world. "I lived in a land of gi-<lb/>
ants in those days the narrator<lb/>
tells us. "All children do<lb/>
Adults, being larger and smarter<lb/>
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playful lies and have secret con-<lb/>
versations that children aren't<lb/>
privy to. For our narrator, life is<lb/>
very much like watching a<lb/>
Punch and Judy show. The ac-<lb/>
tions of the larger-than-life fig-<lb/>
ures around him don't make<lb/>
much sense, justice is only a<lb/>
figment, and the only time he<lb/>
can see through the lies is when<lb/>
he parts the curtain to see the<lb/>
puppet master at work (which<lb/>
is never allowed).<lb/>
Is it significant, then, that all<lb/>
adult actions that don't directly<lb/>
pertain to children are depicted<lb/>
by McKean either in frighten-<lb/>
ing masks or in silhouette from<lb/>
behind various drapes? I'd say<lb/>
that's a safe bet.<lb/>
The Punch and Judy show is<lb/>
an ancient story, and like all<lb/>
ancient stories in Gaiman's<lb/>
work, it has deeper meaning. In<lb/>
this case, the meaning pertains<lb/>
to a dark and violent world<lb/>
where men and their wooden<lb/>
sticks hold power. The lessons<lb/>
of the play are brought home<lb/>
when the narrator accidentally<lb/>
oversees a real-life Punch and<lb/>
Judy play acted out before his<lb/>
eyes. And it's not funny at all.<lb/>
Mr. Punch is a remarkable<lb/>
piece of fiction, and of comics<lb/>
art. Neil Caiman weaves a dis-<lb/>
turbing tale that conveys the<lb/>
wonder and mystery of child-<lb/>
hood, and Dave McKean serves<lb/>
up some deceptively simple art-<lb/>
work that deepens the mood in<lb/>
subtle ways 1 wasn't fully aware<lb/>
of until a second reading. These<lb/>
two men are masters of comics<lb/>
storytelling, and it shows. This<lb/>
is a virtuoso performance on<lb/>
every level, and I highly recom-<lb/>
mend it. Ten out of ten stars.<lb/>
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v nearest you. J<lb/>
<pb facs="00058508_0011"/><lb/>
November 17, 1994<lb/>
The East Carolinian 1 -?<lb/>
The East Carolinian<lb/>
Sports<lb/>
a<lb/>
ECU tangles with Tigers for bowl berth<lb/>
Aaron Wilson<lb/>
Assistant Sports Editor<lb/>
This week ECU plays for the kind<lb/>
of opportunity that college football<lb/>
teams dream about: a one-game<lb/>
playoff-type atmosphere with the<lb/>
winner advancing to the Liberty<lb/>
Bowl. The victor in this game be-<lb/>
tween Memphis (6-4) and ECU (6-4)<lb/>
includes a bowl bid on New Year's<lb/>
Eve against a Top 25 at-large team,<lb/>
national television exposure on<lb/>
ESPN, and a definite edge in both<lb/>
recruiting and fundraising.<lb/>
Memphis and ECU are two very<lb/>
different ball clubs in terms of offen-<lb/>
sive and defensive philosophy. The<lb/>
Tigers run a very conservative ball-<lb/>
control offense whose success is<lb/>
based on making as few mistakes as<lb/>
possible. ECU, on the other hand,<lb/>
has a wide-openbalanced attack led<lb/>
by QB Marcus Crandell and TB Jun-<lb/>
ior Smith.<lb/>
Defensively, Memphis is a very<lb/>
aggressive, blitzing unit that brings<lb/>
six or seven men after the quarter-<lb/>
back every play.<lb/>
"They lineup in all kindof ways<lb/>
Steve Logan said. "There is a method<lb/>
to their madness. They are very simi-<lb/>
lar to Virginia Tech in terms of quick-<lb/>
ness and speed on defense<lb/>
The Pirate 'D' contains opponents<lb/>
well and does not surrender the big<lb/>
play. They have been up for every<lb/>
game so far this year. Forcing turn-<lb/>
overs against MU's basic toss-sweep<lb/>
offense will be the key for the ECU<lb/>
defense.<lb/>
"They have a great defense De-<lb/>
fensive coordinator Paul Jette said.<lb/>
"By looking at them on film and their<lb/>
scores and statistics, you can see that<lb/>
they are not going to lose the game on<lb/>
offense. They try to protect the ball<lb/>
and play sound fundamental foot-<lb/>
ball to give themselves a chance to<lb/>
win the ball game<lb/>
Offensive headliners for the Ti-<lb/>
gers include quarterback Joe Borich,<lb/>
a highly rated JUCO Ail-American<lb/>
who led Memphis in their victories<lb/>
over Cincinnati and Ole Miss. He<lb/>
possesses a strong arm and is an<lb/>
accurate passer, but he has not been<lb/>
called upon to throw much out of<lb/>
head coach Chuck Stobart's I-For-<lb/>
mation attack.<lb/>
Running backs Marcus Holliday<lb/>
and Frank Fletcher are both hard<lb/>
runners who get upheld in a hurry.<lb/>
"They have good running backs<lb/>
Logan said. "Not as impressive as<lb/>
Auburn's Steve Davis, but they do<lb/>
have good vision and hit the holes<lb/>
hard<lb/>
Holliday has 618 yards rushing,<lb/>
but has recently gave way to Hetcher<lb/>
who scored his first career TD last<lb/>
year versus ECU. Also, freshman<lb/>
tailback Derrickjonesranfor 71 yards<lb/>
on 20 carries and a touchdown ver-<lb/>
sus Tennessee last week.<lb/>
When Borich throws, he will go to<lb/>
Billy Rutledge and Ryan Roskelly.<lb/>
Roskelly, who doubles as a punt re-<lb/>
turner, has 36 catches for 511 yards<lb/>
and 3 touchdowns. He is a danger-<lb/>
ous return man who averages 11.7<lb/>
per return ,and ran one back 70 yards<lb/>
for a TD against Tulsa earlier this<lb/>
year. Rutledge hasn't seen the ball as<lb/>
much, but has made the most of his<lb/>
opportunities catching long passes<lb/>
versus Tulane and Louisville.<lb/>
The Memphis O-Line is a veteran<lb/>
See MU page 13<lb/>
Photo Courtesy of MU SID<lb/>
Chuck Stobert (headset) is in his sixth season as Memphis' head coach. He has an overall record<lb/>
of 29-35-1. His Tigers clash with ECU on Saturday, with the winner advancing to the Liberty Bowl.<lb/>
FASTFACTS<lb/>
Game Location: Memphis, TN<lb/>
Opponent: Memphis Tigers<lb/>
Game Site: Liberty Bowl<lb/>
Kickoff: 2 o.m.<lb/>
Head Coach: Chuck Stobart<lb/>
(6th year, 29-35-1 at MU)<lb/>
Key Players (1994 stats to date)<lb/>
QB Joe Borich<lb/>
(.318 comp. , 3 TDs, O ENTs)<lb/>
RB Marcus Holliday<lb/>
(618 rush yds 3 TDs)<lb/>
LB Jesse Allen<lb/>
(109 tackles, 1 sack, 1 INT)<lb/>
NG Brian Barnett<lb/>
(68 tackles, 9 sacks)<lb/>
Notes:<lb/>
? Tennessee's first-half 14<lb/>
points was the most scored<lb/>
against Memphis this season in<lb/>
a half.<lb/>
? PK Luis Tejeda has hit<lb/>
field goals from 50 yards in<lb/>
his last two games.<lb/>
? Memphis' defense ranks<lb/>
second in Div. I-A football, but<lb/>
their offense is ranked 104th.<lb/>
? Whoever wins Saturday's<lb/>
game will return to Memphis<lb/>
on Dec. 31 st to participate in<lb/>
the St. Jude's Liberty Bowl.<lb/>
Mattison returns to lineup in new role<lb/>
Aaron Wilson<lb/>
Assistant Sports Editor<lb/>
Perez Mattison is one of the of<lb/>
the most heralded quarterbacks to<lb/>
come out of the state of South<lb/>
Carolina in many years. At<lb/>
Anderson's WestsideHighSchool,<lb/>
he lettered four times, throwing<lb/>
for6,202yardsand 57 touchdowns,<lb/>
and completed 457 of 903 passes<lb/>
(50.4 percent) during his career.<lb/>
His completion total is an all-<lb/>
time state record. As a senior,<lb/>
Mattison was selected First team<lb/>
All-State after throwing for 2,432<lb/>
yards and 28 touchdowns with a<lb/>
77 percent completion percentage.<lb/>
As a true freshman last season,<lb/>
Mattison stepped up and started<lb/>
six games for injured starter<lb/>
Marcus Crandell. He showed<lb/>
flashes of brilliance as he drew<lb/>
comparisons to former Pirate star<lb/>
and current Cincinnati Bengal<lb/>
starting QB Jeff Blake. Mattison's<lb/>
arm strength, accuracy and mobil-<lb/>
ity all drew raves from ECU fans,<lb/>
even when he struggled at times<lb/>
due to an inconsistent supporting<lb/>
cast.<lb/>
With Crandell healthy and<lb/>
playing well after the spring,<lb/>
Mattison was relegated to a<lb/>
redshirt season in order to save a<lb/>
year of eligibility and eventually re-<lb/>
place Crandell.<lb/>
However, in Saturday's contest<lb/>
against Central Horida, this plan took<lb/>
a strange twist when, due to Mitchell<lb/>
Galloway's season-ending knee in-<lb/>
jury, Mattison moved to the wide out<lb/>
position and re-<lb/>
turned kicks.<lb/>
"Ihadalongtalk<lb/>
with Perez when<lb/>
Mitchell Galloway<lb/>
got hurt Steve<lb/>
Logan said. "I told<lb/>
him that his career<lb/>
comes first, and if<lb/>
he wants to try to<lb/>
unseat Marcus<lb/>
Crandell every<lb/>
year then that is fine<lb/>
with me. When<lb/>
you look back on<lb/>
your career as a col-<lb/>
lege football playerand what it means<lb/>
to you, it should be a positive experi-<lb/>
ence with a lot of playing time, not<lb/>
sitting on the sidelines. It's no fun to<lb/>
practice every day and not get to<lb/>
play. WR and KR is his home for<lb/>
now. He is one of the top two athletes<lb/>
on our team and is just a beautifully<lb/>
gifted athlete and nice young man<lb/>
The move still surprised many<lb/>
who don't know Mattison well and<lb/>
how he feels about this team and his<lb/>
football future.<lb/>
"Coach Logan talked to me like a<lb/>
man, not just as a scholarship ath-<lb/>
lete Mattisonsaid. "Heapproached<lb/>
me differently and put the decision<lb/>
on my shoulders. He didn't demand<lb/>
1 play quarterback or receiver. He<lb/>
just said if I<lb/>
learned two po-<lb/>
sitions it would<lb/>
give me a good<lb/>
shot for the pros.<lb/>
That made my<lb/>
decision a lot<lb/>
easier to make<lb/>
The strong<lb/>
play of starter<lb/>
Marcus Crandell<lb/>
had caused<lb/>
Mattison to con-<lb/>
sider his role and<lb/>
future in this pro-<lb/>
gram. Both are<lb/>
sophomores, and even with a redshirt<lb/>
still available to him, it would leave<lb/>
only one year of being a starter in all<lb/>
likelihood.<lb/>
"Basically, before he talked to me<lb/>
I was thinking if Marcus had sort of a<lb/>
mediocre season then I should stay at<lb/>
QB, but with the way he is playing<lb/>
now it would be really hard to unseat<lb/>
him Mattison said. "I felt like if I<lb/>
could play another position, then it<lb/>
would prove to the pro scouts that I<lb/>
am a versatile athlete. Havingexperi-<lb/>
ence atboth positions makes me more<lb/>
of a prospect<lb/>
His decision to play is the kind of<lb/>
unselfishness that is really refreshing<lb/>
to see at a time when many athletes<lb/>
are getting a bad reputation for being<lb/>
too self-absorbed and not focused on<lb/>
team goals.<lb/>
"lam really happy right now that<lb/>
I was able to contribute to the team at<lb/>
a crucial moment Mattison said.<lb/>
"Obviously, the coaches have enough<lb/>
confidence in my athletic ability that<lb/>
it would give the team an added<lb/>
dimension. Instead of me sitting on<lb/>
the sideline, I can help us go to the<lb/>
Liberty Bowl<lb/>
Mattison is one of the best athletes<lb/>
on the ECU squad, and runs a 4.4 40-<lb/>
yard dash, has a 36-inch vertical leap<lb/>
and bench presses 335 pounds. This<lb/>
athleticism made the transition to<lb/>
receiver a smooth one.<lb/>
"It is pretty easy for me to make<lb/>
this move Mattisonsaid. "I already<lb/>
know all of the routes. I have a lot to<lb/>
work with in terms of technique, like<lb/>
mv stance, shouldersover toes, knees<lb/>
bent, keep your eye on the ball ??-<lb/>
fundamentals that everyone else<lb/>
learned back in junior high that I<lb/>
have missed. Being a good athlete<lb/>
helps a lot. I see everything I saw at<lb/>
QB, just from a different vantage<lb/>
point<lb/>
Running back kicks and play-<lb/>
ing receiver are both very differ-<lb/>
ent roles for Mattison because he<lb/>
has always played quarterback.<lb/>
"That was the first time I have<lb/>
played anything but QB<lb/>
Mattison said. "I know I'm fast,<lb/>
but I found out on Saturday<lb/>
against UCF that you don't need<lb/>
to run a 4.2 to get a good return.<lb/>
It's all about how you read your<lb/>
blocks and hit the holes. I'm like a<lb/>
kid with a new toy. Catching the<lb/>
ball and trying to make some-<lb/>
thing happen is a very important<lb/>
role. I try to get Marcus and the<lb/>
offense good field position. It is<lb/>
just a matter of me catching the<lb/>
ball and letting my athletic ability<lb/>
take over from there<lb/>
Surprisingly, Mattison feels like<lb/>
receiver is a less physical position<lb/>
thanQB.<lb/>
"It is more physical at QB be-<lb/>
cause you get hit from the back-<lb/>
side Mattison said. "Once you<lb/>
get hit, you feel it for the whole<lb/>
game. You expect to get hit at<lb/>
receiver. I took more licks last year<lb/>
when I was the QB. You have to<lb/>
have your head on a swivel be-<lb/>
cause the defensive line will try to<lb/>
See PEREZ page 12<lb/>
SID NOTES<lb/>
CAA hoops prove competitive<lb/>
(SID)?The James Madison<lb/>
Dukes fought off a determined East<lb/>
Carolina squad to come away with<lb/>
a 2-1 victory in the first round of the<lb/>
ColonialAthleticAssociationMen's<lb/>
Soccer Tournament in<lb/>
Williamsburg, Va.<lb/>
What had been considered to be<lb/>
a cakewalk for the 12th-ranked<lb/>
Dukes was in reality nothing but.<lb/>
This was the same East Carolina<lb/>
squad that JMU pounded 5-1 in the<lb/>
season finale just four days before.<lb/>
Even though JMU outshot the Pi-<lb/>
rates 32 to 7, the Dukes needed a<lb/>
game-winning goal by Patrick<lb/>
McSorley in the second period,<lb/>
along ?vith some outstanding de-<lb/>
fense, to finally putthePiratesaway.<lb/>
James Madison got on the board<lb/>
first at the 12:45 mark when Brent<lb/>
Bennett stole a pass from the Pi-<lb/>
rates inside their own penalty box<lb/>
and drove a shot past ECU goalie<lb/>
Jay Davis that landed in the right<lb/>
comer.<lb/>
Justtwominuteslater,EastCaro-<lb/>
lina quickly answered with a shot<lb/>
of their own when junior Marc<lb/>
Mullin drilled a 25-yard free kick<lb/>
past JMU goalie Barry Purcell.<lb/>
From that point, the defenses<lb/>
took over as James Madison lim-<lb/>
ited the Pirates to just six more<lb/>
shots at the goal while Davis held<lb/>
JMU in check with a career and<lb/>
season-high 14 saves.<lb/>
The Dukes would break the<lb/>
stalemate at the 46:56 mark, when<lb/>
McSorley scored what would be<lb/>
the game winner.<lb/>
Juniors Marc Mullin and Drew<lb/>
Racine have been named to the sec-<lb/>
ond team All-Colonial Athletic As-<lb/>
sociation soccer squad<lb/>
Mullin,aproductof Jacksonville,<lb/>
N.C, finished fifth on the team in<lb/>
scoring with six assists. He was one<lb/>
of three Pirates to start in all 18<lb/>
games this season. It marks the first<lb/>
time he was selected for All-CAA<lb/>
honors.<lb/>
Radne'sselectionmarks his third<lb/>
time on an All-CAA squad. The<lb/>
native of Raleigh, NC became the<lb/>
first ECU soccer player to be named<lb/>
with back-to-back games for the<lb/>
Pirates, scoring one assist as a<lb/>
midfielder.<lb/>
This marks the third consecutive<lb/>
season that two Pirate players have<lb/>
garnered All-CAA honors. In 1993,<lb/>
Justin Finck was a second team se-<lb/>
lection, while Racine earned first<lb/>
team honors.<lb/>
In Pirate volleyball, junior Carrie<lb/>
Bme spearheaded the ECU offen-<lb/>
sive attack with a match-high 17<lb/>
kills, as the Lady Pirates defeated<lb/>
theUNC-W 16-14,8-15,15-10,15-10<lb/>
to close their regular-season in<lb/>
Greenville Friday evening.<lb/>
Two of the Lady Pirate seniors,<lb/>
playing their last collegiate home<lb/>
match for ECU, came up with big<lb/>
numbers and crucial plays. Staci<lb/>
See NOTES page 13<lb/>
Brad Oldham<lb/>
Staff Writer<lb/>
The CAA will be celebrating its<lb/>
10th anniversary this year with an<lb/>
upcoming basketball season that will<lb/>
surely be amongst the most competi-<lb/>
tive ever. As it hasbeen in the last few<lb/>
seasons in the CAA, it appears there<lb/>
will be another dog-fight from top to<lb/>
bottom of the league.<lb/>
Familiar faces return to the CAA<lb/>
as well as some bright, young new<lb/>
ones. Amongst the new faces coming<lb/>
into the league this season is the ad-<lb/>
dition of three brand new coaches.<lb/>
Jerry Wainwright takes over at<lb/>
UNC-Wilmington this season. He is<lb/>
stepping into the position after last<lb/>
year'sSeahawkcoachKevin Eastman<lb/>
moved to become head coach at<lb/>
WashingtonState. Eastman has given<lb/>
Wainwright a golden opportunity at<lb/>
Wilmington, leaving behind a team<lb/>
of talented, solid veterans and rising<lb/>
young stars.<lb/>
At Old Dominion, Jeff Capel will<lb/>
be replacing the departed Oliver<lb/>
Purnell. Capel has 10 letterman from<lb/>
last vear's team that advanced to the<lb/>
second round of the National Invita-<lb/>
tional Tournament. Among the 10<lb/>
letterman returning are two first-team<lb/>
All-CAA performers, and the<lb/>
league's Plaver of the Year in center<lb/>
Odell Hodge.<lb/>
Charlie Woolum begins his first<lb/>
season as head coach of William &amp;<lb/>
Mary this season. He will have all<lb/>
five of last year's starters back for this<lb/>
season as he tries to improve on last<lb/>
season's 4-23 record<lb/>
Seven out of the 10 players<lb/>
were honored last season for<lb/>
and Second<lb/>
Team honors<lb/>
are back.<lb/>
All eves will<lb/>
be on the junior<lb/>
Hodge at ODU,<lb/>
who has been a<lb/>
big stand-out in<lb/>
his first two sea-<lb/>
sons in the<lb/>
CAA, being<lb/>
named to the<lb/>
1993 Second<lb/>
Team as well as<lb/>
1993 Rookie of<lb/>
the Year his<lb/>
freshman season. Last year, as<lb/>
as being named Player of the<lb/>
and First Team All-CAA, he<lb/>
that named 1994 CAA Tournament<lb/>
First MVP.<lb/>
Hodge led the<lb/>
conference last sea-<lb/>
son with averages<lb/>
of 19.4 points and<lb/>
9.0 rebounds per<lb/>
game, along with<lb/>
73 blocked shots.<lb/>
At 6-9,250 pounds,<lb/>
it's no wonder that<lb/>
Hodge is by far the<lb/>
biggest threat to<lb/>
other teams in the<lb/>
CAA conference.<lb/>
Also returning<lb/>
for the Monarchs of<lb/>
ODU this season is<lb/>
well First Team All-CAA selection for<lb/>
Year <lb/>
ODU's Odell Hodge<lb/>
See CAA page 12<lb/>
moved to become head coach at season's 4-23 record. and First Team All-CAA, he was oee umm paye ?<lb/>
Green's track career races to an end<lb/>
Scott Batchelor<lb/>
Staff Writer<lb/>
Last Saturday, senior Stacy Green<lb/>
stepped on to the track in Greenville,<lb/>
S.C, for the last time as a member of<lb/>
the Lady PiratesCrossCountry team.<lb/>
Green put the finishing touch on a<lb/>
four-year running career with the Pi-<lb/>
rates as she crossed the finishing line<lb/>
seconds behind ECU standout Dava<lb/>
Rhodes, placing her 95th of 279 run-<lb/>
ners in the race.<lb/>
Green's time of 19:03 was five sec-<lb/>
onds better than her high mark a sea-<lb/>
son ago at the N.C. Championships.<lb/>
TheMechanicsville,Va.nativewas<lb/>
hindered last year<lb/>
by a hip injury that<lb/>
turned out to be a<lb/>
stress fracture. Af-<lb/>
tera disappointing<lb/>
junior year, a lot of<lb/>
hard work in the<lb/>
off season led to a<lb/>
stellar senior sea-<lb/>
son.<lb/>
"I couldn't train<lb/>
as hard last year<lb/>
because of the in-<lb/>
jury Green said. "But over the sum-<lb/>
mer, I lifted weights a lot. I did every-<lb/>
thing to go out with a good season<lb/>
Coming in to this<lb/>
season, her personal<lb/>
best time was 18:45.<lb/>
She shattered that<lb/>
mark twice thisyear,<lb/>
when it counted<lb/>
most ? at the N.C.<lb/>
and CAA Champi-<lb/>
onships.<lb/>
"I really wailed<lb/>
to place higher in the<lb/>
conference " Green<lb/>
said. "But it was my<lb/>
best season<lb/>
The senior runner also turned in<lb/>
two other sub-nine minute times<lb/>
this year. The first was in<lb/>
Charlottesville, Virginia at the UV A<lb/>
Invitational, where Green ran an<lb/>
18:52. One week later, she raced to<lb/>
an 18:49 at the Greensboro Invita-<lb/>
tional.<lb/>
Green arrived at ECU after<lb/>
graduating from Lee Davis High<lb/>
School, where she won the regional<lb/>
competition in theindoortwo-mile<lb/>
race.<lb/>
"I really felt like I would fit in<lb/>
here Green said. "I wanted to<lb/>
See GREEN page 12<lb/>
 ??<lb/>
<pb facs="00058508_0012"/><lb/>
1 2The East Carolinian<lb/>
November 17. 1994<lb/>
From p. 11<lb/>
take vou out. I took thi as a chal-<lb/>
lenge to see if I could doit. I was able<lb/>
to fight through traffic and get open<lb/>
Hopefully, I v. ill be able to get the<lb/>
ball in my hands soon<lb/>
Having two quarterbacks on the<lb/>
field gives the Pirates a unique ad-<lb/>
vantage oxer their opponents.<lb/>
Mattison will continue to practice at<lb/>
QB as well as receiver.<lb/>
"Coach Martin (VK coach) is a<lb/>
real considerate teaching guy<lb/>
Mattison said. "As a former QB we<lb/>
'can relate really well. He knows<lb/>
that I understand coverages, and he<lb/>
doesn't have to explain that much<lb/>
to me. I am lucky to have the benefit<lb/>
of plaing tor him and Coach Logan.<lb/>
Me and Marcus can communicate<lb/>
and I can tell him if I see a weakness<lb/>
in the defense, and we can analyze<lb/>
what we see in the different cover-<lb/>
ages to Coach Logan<lb/>
Mattison became discouraged at<lb/>
one point this season, because sit-<lb/>
ting on the bench was a new experi-<lb/>
ence for him. He has always been a<lb/>
starter and the center of attention.<lb/>
"I'm not going to lie to you<lb/>
Mattison said. "I thoughtabout leav-<lb/>
ing, but sitting on the bench really<lb/>
made me think about m self as a<lb/>
student and person not just a foot-<lb/>
ball player. I evaluated myself, and<lb/>
11 really think that it helped megrow<lb/>
up and mature a lot<lb/>
One of his big dislikes is people<lb/>
that only think of him as a fwtball<lb/>
player and ccaistanrly ask him about<lb/>
football instead of school.<lb/>
"I want people to know that we<lb/>
are very intelligent people, not just<lb/>
burlv and dumb Mattison said.<lb/>
" e all had to makeceitain require-<lb/>
ments to be here, people think we<lb/>
just squeezed in to school When I<lb/>
walk off the field, football is over. I<lb/>
'hate to talk about football. I would<lb/>
rather get to know people person-<lb/>
ally. What do vou like to do? What<lb/>
are you interested in? I feel like I<lb/>
am equal to everyone, it is just that<lb/>
(od blessed me with certain tal-<lb/>
fttfs.<lb/>
?Family is very important to<lb/>
'M.ittison, and hasbecomeeven more<lb/>
'?$3) how that he is living six hours<lb/>
? n vav from liis hometown of Ander-<lb/>
son,S.C<lb/>
' - ' My parents are the most impor-<lb/>
laYtt people in my life Mattison<lb/>
"Mid. "Me and my mom are closer<lb/>
than ever. She is studying to be a<lb/>
Ks From p. 11<lb/>
lawyer, and she is very authorita-<lb/>
tive. When I was going through my<lb/>
teenage years, it was hard for me to<lb/>
assert myself because we are both<lb/>
stubborn. Before I came to school,<lb/>
my older brother passed away and<lb/>
it is has brought the whole family<lb/>
closer together. I don't know if I will<lb/>
be here from one day to the next.<lb/>
You can't take life for granted at all<lb/>
Mattison will definiteiv become<lb/>
the pro prospect that he wants to be<lb/>
in time because of his speed, size<lb/>
and intelligence. More important<lb/>
though, is the type of person that he<lb/>
is, an unselfish one that has his pri-<lb/>
orities and values in the proper or-<lb/>
der. Family, school and then foot-<lb/>
ball are the way he has ordered his<lb/>
life, and he is definiteiv a positive<lb/>
role-model to follow for voung<lb/>
people.<lb/>
GREEN<lb/>
From p. 11<lb/>
havea well-rounded life, and not just<lb/>
run, run, run all the time. ECU has<lb/>
given me that. I love ECU<lb/>
Green first became interested in<lb/>
running at an early age. She found<lb/>
herself m front of everybody when<lb/>
in<lb/>
seve<lb/>
?it!<lb/>
i-grade<lb/>
running<lb/>
class.<lb/>
"My older sister Erin ran C Ireen<lb/>
said. "That helped me get started<lb/>
Gre mtinueher run-<lb/>
ning after graduation, and wants<lb/>
to compete in a triathlon.<lb/>
"I want to do a triathlon really<lb/>
badly (ireen said. "I also plai<lb/>
keep running in races and keep<lb/>
competing "<lb/>
It the results of those races re-<lb/>
semble her ECU results, Green -<lb/>
competition better watch out.<lb/>
the past two seasons, senior forward<lb/>
Petey Sessoms. Last year, Sessoms<lb/>
wasoneof the most dangerous three-<lb/>
point shooters in the conference, hit-<lb/>
ring a total of 90 treys on the season.<lb/>
Kent Culuko comes into his se-<lb/>
nior year at James Madison Univer-<lb/>
sir on cloud nine after hitting "the<lb/>
shot" last year that sent the Dukes to<lb/>
the NCAA tournament for the first<lb/>
time since 1983. Culuko was the fifth<lb/>
best free-throw shooter in the coun-<lb/>
try last season with a 92.1 average on<lb/>
the year.<lb/>
Also back for the Dukes this sea-<lb/>
son is senior forward Louis Rovve.<lb/>
He was an All-Colonial Second Team<lb/>
selection for JMU last year, averag-<lb/>
ing 14.2 points per game. He was the<lb/>
Dukes' top rebounder and shot-<lb/>
b locker last season, averaging five<lb/>
boards a game and blocking 39 shots<lb/>
on the year.<lb/>
.Among one of the biggest sur-<lb/>
p ri ses to the C.AA last season was the<lb/>
play of junior forward Tim Fudd,<lb/>
who won First Team All-CAA hon-<lb/>
ors with his 19 points per game aver-<lb/>
age at American University. He will<lb/>
be looked at bv his Eagle teammates<lb/>
to pull in a majority of the points and<lb/>
rebounds this season.<lb/>
UNO Wilmington has senior for-<lb/>
ward Corey Stewart back for his fina 1<lb/>
season. The Second Team All-CAA<lb/>
selection last season was the second<lb/>
leading scorer on the team with 13.9<lb/>
points per game and averaged about<lb/>
six rebounds per game. He was sec-<lb/>
ond in the conference in three-point<lb/>
shooting average, with 44.5 percent<lb/>
accuracy from the long range.<lb/>
Finally, senior guard Kass Weaver<lb/>
will be the lone returning starter for<lb/>
last year's CAA Coach of the Year,<lb/>
Bill Dooley. Weaver was awarded<lb/>
Second Team All-CAA honors, aver-<lb/>
aging 17.9 points in CAA games.<lb/>
So with new coaches and familiar<lb/>
players returning to the CAA, the<lb/>
task of trying to dethrone the Dukes<lb/>
of James Madison will be on<lb/>
everybody's mind going into the sea-<lb/>
son. Teams such as George Mason<lb/>
and East Carolina will be looking<lb/>
toward young players to step up big<lb/>
tliis season. With such a tight race<lb/>
going into this year's CAA season,<lb/>
the team that jumps ahead early and<lb/>
the teams that stay healthy might be<lb/>
in the driver's seat in the season to<lb/>
come.<lb/>
12 HOUR PHOTO<lb/>
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Citizen Discounts:<lb/>
Relaxer touch-up<lb/>
$35.00 (reg. $45.00)<lb/>
Curls &amp; Body Waves $55.00<lb/>
Hair is Hair would like to welcome Belinda<lb/>
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Want a new look? Come get it California<lb/>
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SENIORS!<lb/>
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Come by the<lb/>
Student Stores<lb/>
10 am - 3 pm Nov. 21 to get your free<lb/>
MUGS &amp; HUGS!<lb/>
Pick tip your Purple Pirate Pass there if you haven't already<lb/>
<pb facs="00058508_0013"/><lb/>
November 17, 1994<lb/>
The East Carolinian 13<lb/>
MARK A. WARD<lb/>
ATTORNEY AT LAW<lb/>
NC BAR CERTIFIED<lb/>
State Criminal Law Specialist<lb/>
24 Hour Message Service<lb/>
20$ Evans Street<lb/>
Adjacent to the Greenville Courthouse<lb/>
ja 752-7529 <lb/>
NOTES<lb/>
From p. 11<lb/>
Winters registered 11 kills, while<lb/>
setter Sarah Laurent dumped the<lb/>
final kill over the net as East Caro-<lb/>
lina defeated UNC-VV for the sec-<lb/>
ond time in five meetings this year.<lb/>
"Do we have to dig a hole to come<lb/>
back to win' said ECU Head Coach<lb/>
Gail Guttenburg? "We won and are<lb/>
now at .500. I'm happy for the team,<lb/>
but I know we can play better<lb/>
Trailing 8-0 in the third game of<lb/>
the match, ECU scored eight unan-<lb/>
swered points to tie the game. ECU<lb/>
went on to win gme three 15-10.<lb/>
ECU, now 16-16 on the season,<lb/>
needs one more victory to ensure<lb/>
the Lady Pirates of their first non-<lb/>
losing season, since a 16-15 record in<lb/>
1989.<lb/>
UNCW was led by Leslie<lb/>
Noukelak's 14 kills. Debby Taydus<lb/>
added 13, as the Lady Seahawks<lb/>
dropped to 19-13 overall and 0-5 in<lb/>
Colonial Athletic Association play.<lb/>
The Lady Pirates are preparing<lb/>
for the C AA Tournament, this week-<lb/>
end in Washington DC. ECU will<lb/>
face fourth-seeded James Madison<lb/>
in the first-round match-up. The<lb/>
Lady Dukes earlier defeated the<lb/>
Lady Pirates in five games in<lb/>
Harrisonburg.<lb/>
"We took them to five up there<lb/>
said Guttenberg after the UNC-W<lb/>
contest. "We have to play better than<lb/>
we played tonight. If we can play<lb/>
like we are capable of playing, we<lb/>
can beat them<lb/>
Brne became ECU's first-ever<lb/>
CAA player of the week after re-<lb/>
cording 50 kills in last week's<lb/>
matches. j<lb/>
East Carolina University's<lb/>
Women's cross, country teamnad<lb/>
an exceptional outing at the NCAA<lb/>
District III Championships on Sat-<lb/>
urday. ECU captured 26th place out<lb/>
of 37 Division I schools participat-<lb/>
B Z<lb/>
I P<lb/>
I L<lb/>
o n z<lb/>
n v x d<lb/>
G H L<lb/>
P G D<lb/>
CNF<lb/>
E<lb/>
dial<lb/>
ALWAYS COSTS LESS<lb/>
THAN 1-800-COLLECT.<lb/>
Hello? Want the lowest price for a collect call?<lb/>
Lower than that other number? Then dial this one.<lb/>
Because THE CODE always costs less than 1-800-COLLECT.<lb/>
burThiefoiee:<lb/>
?1994 AT&amp;T<lb/>
FOR ALL INTERSTATE CALLS.<lb/>
AT&amp;T<lb/>
ing. Last year, the Lady Pirates<lb/>
finished 28th out of 40 teams.<lb/>
ECU was led by sophomore<lb/>
Dava Rhodes, who finished 49th<lb/>
out of 279 runners with a time of<lb/>
18:28. Senior Stacy Green also had<lb/>
an excellent race, finishing 95th<lb/>
overall in a time of 19:03. Senior<lb/>
Jessica Montgomery set a personal<lb/>
best 5k mark of 19:33. Montgom-<lb/>
ery finished fourth on the team<lb/>
and 153rd overall.<lb/>
The men did not field a full<lb/>
team; however senior Sean<lb/>
Connolly had a team-best 69th<lb/>
place finish. He also recorded a<lb/>
personal best in the 10k distance<lb/>
with a time of 32:23. Sophomore<lb/>
Paul Gorman also ran a personal<lb/>
best finishing 207th out of 306 run-<lb/>
ners with a time of 34:27. Fresh-<lb/>
man Mike Marini also competed<lb/>
for the Pirates, finishing in a time<lb/>
of 35:59, good for 279th place.<lb/>
MU<lb/>
From p. 11<lb/>
unit that averages over 275 lbs per<lb/>
man. MU coaches had to replace<lb/>
several starters from last year, but<lb/>
did return five players who saw<lb/>
game action.<lb/>
Defensively, Memphis is<lb/>
ranked third in he nation in scor-<lb/>
ing defense, and gives up just 12.9<lb/>
points per game. The Tigers have<lb/>
a strong front four led by NG<lb/>
Brian Barnett(68 tackles, nine<lb/>
sacks). Rush end James Logan has<lb/>
added eight sacks and a safety on<lb/>
the year. He had two sacks last<lb/>
year in Memphis's 34-7 victory<lb/>
over the Pirates.<lb/>
At linebacker, Jesse Allen leads<lb/>
a hard-hitting group that has ex-<lb/>
cellent speed and depth. Allen<lb/>
leads the Tigers with 109 tackles in<lb/>
1994. Dan Bonner (70 tackles) and<lb/>
Duane Vandborg (79 tackles) are<lb/>
good complementary players to<lb/>
Allen.<lb/>
In the secondary, Memphis is<lb/>
led by PS Jerome Woods (84 tack-<lb/>
les). He is a smart, steady player<lb/>
who likes to come up and make<lb/>
tackles in run support. Ken Irvin,<lb/>
Barry Dillard, and Chris Smith<lb/>
complete a good Memphis sec-<lb/>
ondary that ranks third in the<lb/>
country in passing efficiency de-<lb/>
fense.<lb/>
"The main thing is to decipher<lb/>
what they are doing Offensive<lb/>
coordinatorTodd Berry said. "They<lb/>
blitz a lot, use a bunch of different<lb/>
fronts. They play a lot of man cov-<lb/>
erage. Memphis is not very big, but<lb/>
they have some really good ath-<lb/>
letes withexcellentspeed. They try<lb/>
to shoot the gaps and keep you off<lb/>
balance. Inherently, they are a de-<lb/>
fense that can give up the big play<lb/>
it is just a matter of us getting rid of<lb/>
the ball and upheld in a hurry<lb/>
Memphis's defense has not<lb/>
faced as an explosive a offense as<lb/>
ECU's this season. Their gambles<lb/>
should backfire when ECU goes to<lb/>
it's quick passing game or the run<lb/>
behind Junior Smith. Look for a<lb/>
strong performance by the Pirate<lb/>
'D against a average offense that<lb/>
runs very simple plays and strives<lb/>
for execution over innovation.<lb/>
If ECU can avoid the turnovers<lb/>
that plagued them in last year's<lb/>
mistake-filled game in Greenville,<lb/>
the Piratesshould come home win-<lb/>
ners and make a return trip to the<lb/>
Liberty Bowl on Dec. 31 to play a<lb/>
yet to be determined opponent.<lb/>
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MACARONI AU FROMAGE<lb/>
(EAT WITH GUSTO FOR ABOUT 5lg PER SERVING)<lb/>
2 cups macaroni (pinwheels are fun)<lb/>
1 cup sharp cheddar (grated)<lb/>
12 stick butter<lb/>
1 tsp Worcestershire (if you like)<lb/>
1 cup milk<lb/>
3 tbs flour<lb/>
1 tsp pepper<lb/>
1 tsp salt<lb/>
Cook macaroni in 5 cups salted, boiling water for 15<lb/>
minutes or until al dente. Drain. In a separate pot, melt<lb/>
butter and mix in flour over low heat. Then, stir in milk<lb/>
until smooth. Add cheese, salt, pepper and Worcestershire.<lb/>
Stir well. Smother macaroni. Serves 4.<lb/>
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</div></body></text></TEI>