<?xml version="1.0"?><TEI xmlns="http://www.tei-c.org/ns/1.0" xmlns:xsi="http://www.w3.org/2001/XMLSchema-instance" xsi:schemaLocation="http://www.tei-c.org/ns/1.0 http://digital.lib.ecu.edu/tei/xsd/tei_P5.xsd"><teiHeader><fileDesc><titleStmt><title></title><author></author><respStmt><resp>Text encoded by</resp><name>Digital Collections</name></respStmt></titleStmt><publicationStmt><distributor>East Carolina University. J. Y. Joyner Library</distributor><address><addrLine>Digital Collections</addrLine><addrLine>Joyner Library, East Carolina University</addrLine><addrLine>East Fifth Street, Greenville NC 27858-4353 USA</addrLine></address><date>2012</date></publicationStmt><sourceDesc><bibl></bibl></sourceDesc></fileDesc><encodingDesc><samplingDecl><p>All quotation marks retained as data.</p><p>All end-of-line hyphens have been removed, and the trailing part of a word has been joined to the preceding line.</p><p>All smart quotes have been converted into straight quotes.</p></samplingDecl><classDecl><taxonomy xml:id="LCSH"><bibl>Library of Congress Subject Headings</bibl></taxonomy></classDecl></encodingDesc><profileDesc><creation><date></date></creation><langUsage xml:lang="en-US"><language ident="en-US" usage="100">English</language></langUsage><textClass><keywords scheme="#LCSH"><list><item></item></list></keywords></textClass></profileDesc></teiHeader><text><body><div type="other">
<p rend="align(centerbold)">[This text is machine generated and may contain errors.]</p>
<pb facs="00058515_0001"/>
<lb/>
Pirates clip Redbird wings<lb/>
In neck-to-neck competition, the Pirates<lb/>
defeated the Illinois State RedBirds last night<lb/>
64-57. The Pirates record now stands at 8-4.<lb/>
THURSDAY<lb/>
( MSttiHut'l-M ?<lb/>
" Low 48 m<lb/>
? ?t&amp;iWiiiMMi m<lb/>
Low 45 <lb/>
WEEKEND<lb/>
LIFESTYLE<lb/>
The Top of the Heap<lb/>
Our critic ranks the 10 best films of<lb/>
1994. See page 9 for our top 10 list.<lb/>
&amp;<lb/>
The East Carolinian<lb/>
Vol. 69 No. 66<lb/>
Circulation 12,000<lb/>
Thurday, January 12, 1995<lb/>
Greenville, NC<lb/>
16 pages<lb/>
Student remembered for ethics, morals<lb/>
Tambra Zion<lb/>
Photo courtesy of Robert Bunger<lb/>
Detlev Bunger, the student killed in a bicycling accident<lb/>
Monday, will be remembered as a lover of the environment.<lb/>
Assistant News Editor<lb/>
A scholarship fund has been<lb/>
established in memorial of<lb/>
Detlev Bunger, an exceptional<lb/>
student and environmentalist<lb/>
who was planning to enter<lb/>
graduate school before his life<lb/>
suddenly ended last Monday in<lb/>
a collision on 10th Street.<lb/>
A memorial service will be<lb/>
held in the Howell Science Com-<lb/>
plex auditorium at 5:30 p.m. on<lb/>
Friday. Detlev's friends and<lb/>
family filled the west wing of<lb/>
Wilkerson funeral home on Fifth<lb/>
Street Wednesday afternoon for<lb/>
a visitation and viewing.<lb/>
"It's just inconceivable that<lb/>
he's gone' said Dr. Robert<lb/>
Bunger, Detlev's father and ECU<lb/>
anthropology professor since<lb/>
1971. "I know that life will go on<lb/>
somehow but it's very hard for<lb/>
me to conceive a life without<lb/>
him, he was part of our life for<lb/>
22 years<lb/>
Friends are asked to donate<lb/>
to the Detlev Bunger memorial<lb/>
scholarship fund, care of the<lb/>
ECU Biology department in<lb/>
ECU's Hovell Science Complex,<lb/>
rather than give flowers.<lb/>
"The last thing my stepson<lb/>
would have wanted would have<lb/>
been cutting down flowers to<lb/>
remember him by Mrs. Li<lb/>
Bunger, Detlev's stepmother,<lb/>
said.<lb/>
Dr. Bunger is hoping Detlev's<lb/>
menu y and the scholarship will<lb/>
be able to inspire a deserving<lb/>
biology student to excel as his<lb/>
son did.<lb/>
Detlev was riding his bicycle<lb/>
when struck by a Boy's and<lb/>
Girl's Club bus around 3 p.m. at<lb/>
the intersection of Forrest Hill<lb/>
Circle and 10th Street.<lb/>
Named after a 19th century<lb/>
German poet, Detlev had high<lb/>
aspirations.<lb/>
"We saw our child as being a<lb/>
creative person, his art projects<lb/>
for design were excellent  if I<lb/>
had seen it done by anybody I<lb/>
would have said they're excel-<lb/>
lent composi tions?he did grea t<lb/>
work said Dr. Bunger said. "He<lb/>
had it in him to be a creative<lb/>
artist but he wanted to be a sci-<lb/>
entist.<lb/>
To me he epitomized a so-<lb/>
cially conscious scientist, and I<lb/>
think he would have made a<lb/>
wonderful contribution ? he<lb/>
was a rare creation. He believed<lb/>
that through science he could<lb/>
really, genuinely make the<lb/>
world a better place to live Dr.<lb/>
Bunger said.<lb/>
Detlev excelled in biology<lb/>
and made straight A's in<lb/>
most classes.<lb/>
"He's an excellent student,<lb/>
he's at the top of all our stu-<lb/>
dents said Dr. Charles<lb/>
Bland, chair of the biology<lb/>
department. "He was fre-<lb/>
quently on the chancellor's<lb/>
list and one of our favorite<lb/>
around here<lb/>
He was president of Stu-<lb/>
dents for the Ethical Treat-<lb/>
ment of Animals (SETA), a<lb/>
member of GAIA, Beta Beta<lb/>
Beta ? a biology honor fra-<lb/>
ternity and recipient of a<lb/>
scholarship through U.B.E.<lb/>
See STUDENT page 4<lb/>
Multicultural<lb/>
Pet owners encouraged to leash-up even ts planned<lb/>
Andy Turner<lb/>
Staff Writer<lb/>
Attention pet owners ? do not<lb/>
let Fido or Spot run wild through-<lb/>
out campus, or the animal will be<lb/>
impounded and owners will have<lb/>
to pay to have it released.<lb/>
Pitt County has a 24-hour leash<lb/>
law that requires animals to be or<lb/>
a leash anywhere other than oi<lb/>
the owner's property. Owner<lb/>
must also be in direct control o<lb/>
their animals at all times.<lb/>
The first time an animal is im<lb/>
pounded there is a $20 pickup fe<lb/>
and $5 for each night the anima<lb/>
stays at the City Animal Shelter<lb/>
The second time an animal is im-<lb/>
pounded the owner will be<lb/>
charged $30 and $5 for each night<lb/>
the animal spends at the shelter.<lb/>
If no one picks up the animal<lb/>
after three days, animals with-<lb/>
out rabies or dog licenses will<lb/>
either be adopted or put to<lb/>
sleep. If animals have tags, then<lb/>
the animal shelter is required to<lb/>
send a registered letter to the<lb/>
owner and cannot do anything to<lb/>
the dog until the owner responds<lb/>
to the letter.<lb/>
Tom Pohlman, environmental<lb/>
health specialist with ECU Envi-<lb/>
ronmental Health and Safety, feels<lb/>
that there ate a large number of<lb/>
unrestrained and unattended ani-<lb/>
mals on campus and increased ob-<lb/>
servance of leash laws needs to<lb/>
occur.<lb/>
"On the campus it is getting to<lb/>
beaprettybigproblem Pohlman<lb/>
said. "I have been out there today<lb/>
and seen at least three different<lb/>
Hnac on ramniis<lb/>
each dog has<lb/>
necessarily bitten someone, but the<lb/>
potential is there.<lb/>
"It is just one of those things we<lb/>
need to try to get a control on<lb/>
before it gets too out of hand<lb/>
ECU Environmental Health and<lb/>
Safety will work with the<lb/>
Greenville Animal Shelter in try-<lb/>
ing to warn people to make sure to<lb/>
have there animals on leashes and<lb/>
restrained.<lb/>
Pohlman said that they are look-<lb/>
ing out not only for the safety of<lb/>
the public but for the animals as<lb/>
well. He said that animals not re-<lb/>
strained are the ones who get in<lb/>
the road and get hit.<lb/>
"Our role is<lb/>
looking after<lb/>
t h eover-<lb/>
a 1 1<lb/>
wel-<lb/>
f a r e<lb/>
and<lb/>
health<lb/>
and<lb/>
well<lb/>
being of<lb/>
the cam-<lb/>
pus and<lb/>
its commu-<lb/>
nity Pohlman said.<lb/>
"My main concern is con-<lb/>
trolling the diseases that<lb/>
animals carry and so our role<lb/>
is basically coordination and edu-<lb/>
cation. We are not trying to ban<lb/>
animals from campus, but we are<lb/>
trying to make sure animals are<lb/>
under the proper control<lb/>
Pohlman feels that it is inap-<lb/>
propriate for students to tie ani-<lb/>
mals up to poles or trees while<lb/>
they are in class, especially when<lb/>
conditions are especially hot or cold.<lb/>
He said that animals who are left<lb/>
tied up in extreme conditions could<lb/>
possibly be impounded and the<lb/>
owner could possibly be charged<lb/>
with cruelty to animals.<lb/>
"We're not in the business of try-<lb/>
ing to create hassles for people and<lb/>
especially students, we're here to<lb/>
protect them Pohlman said. "Ani-<lb/>
mal control is not just controlling<lb/>
animals, it is a proven disease-con-<lb/>
trol and disease-prevention<lb/>
method<lb/>
On campus this year there have<lb/>
been two reported cases of people<lb/>
bitten by animals and three reported<lb/>
cases of animals showing aggressive<lb/>
behavior towards people.<lb/>
No cases of rabies have been con-<lb/>
firmed in Pitt County, but in counties<lb/>
surrounding Pitt County various<lb/>
cases of rabies have been reported.<lb/>
"In countries that don't have the<lb/>
control of animals that we have liter-<lb/>
ally tens to hundreds to thousands of<lb/>
times more people are dying of dis-<lb/>
eases than we do, and I think that<lb/>
speaks very highly of animal control<lb/>
in this country Pohlman said.<lb/>
Pohlman thanks all students who<lb/>
See PET page 5<lb/>
Candlelight<lb/>
march<lb/>
kicks off<lb/>
celebration<lb/>
Warren Sumner<lb/>
Eppes purchase in voters' hands<lb/>
Negotiations are over, final call up to voters<lb/>
Wendy Rountree<lb/>
Staff Writer<lb/>
After almost eight years of ne-<lb/>
gotiating with Pitt County, ECU<lb/>
will finally acquire Eppes Middle<lb/>
School once voters pass a school<lb/>
bond referendum in March.<lb/>
"We feel very positive about<lb/>
it because this has been a pur-<lb/>
chase that has been in negotia-<lb/>
tion for probably eight years, nine<lb/>
years said Richard Brown, vice<lb/>
chancellor for business affairs.<lb/>
"We're just happy to get it to the<lb/>
point where the university will<lb/>
be acquiring the property for cer-<lb/>
tain in the foreseeable future<lb/>
The Pitt County commission-<lb/>
ers agreed to accept the<lb/>
university's final offer before the<lb/>
Dec. 10 deadline the university<lb/>
set, which was the date of the<lb/>
university board of trustees<lb/>
meeting.<lb/>
"The final agreed upon offer<lb/>
was $6 million for the purchase<lb/>
of the Eppes property, leasing the<lb/>
property back to the school sys-<lb/>
tem for six years at a $1 a year and<lb/>
the transfer of title of Wahl-Coates<lb/>
School from the university to<lb/>
school system Brown said.<lb/>
Brown said the university's of-<lb/>
fer was more appealing to the<lb/>
county after it was raised from the<lb/>
initial $5 million offer.<lb/>
"They felt the property was<lb/>
worth more than the $5 million<lb/>
that had been offered and that the<lb/>
extension of the offer of $1 mil-<lb/>
lion more plus the use of the<lb/>
school for six years was the turn-<lb/>
ing point Brown said. "It is a<lb/>
very good deal for the taxpayers<lb/>
of the county and a fair deal for<lb/>
the university<lb/>
However, the offer of accep-<lb/>
tance is subject to the passage of<lb/>
the $31.8 million Pitt County<lb/>
school system bond referendum.<lb/>
"The deal is contingent upon<lb/>
the approval of the bond sell<lb/>
Brown said. "It is completely con-<lb/>
nected. The total bond package<lb/>
recognizes $6 million of revenue<lb/>
coming from the sell of the school<lb/>
as part of the proceeds to do the<lb/>
repairs and renovations of the<lb/>
schools in Pitt County<lb/>
"If the bond package does not<lb/>
pass, then the school system is<lb/>
not in the position to give up that<lb/>
property so readily<lb/>
Brown said it is up to Pitt<lb/>
county voters to approve the ref-<lb/>
erendum and in the process final-<lb/>
ize the sale of Eppes to the uni-<lb/>
versity.<lb/>
"If the bond issue does not pass<lb/>
then we are back pretty much to<lb/>
square one on the purchase of<lb/>
Eppes, and we would have lost<lb/>
ground in the process Brown<lb/>
said. "We can't come right out<lb/>
and encourage people to vote one<lb/>
way or the other, but they need to<lb/>
understand the implications for<lb/>
the university<lb/>
"The passage of that bond is-<lb/>
sue is important to the acquisi-<lb/>
tion of that property for the uni-<lb/>
versity<lb/>
The university wants this prop-<lb/>
erty, located on Elm Street, be-<lb/>
cause it is adjacent to College Hill,<lb/>
and plans to use the building in<lb/>
the future to temporarily place<lb/>
departments andor administra-<lb/>
tive offices while their usual<lb/>
buildings are being repaired.<lb/>
Eppes is considered a long-term<lb/>
investment.<lb/>
"It would take probably two to<lb/>
three years, in any case, for us to<lb/>
get funding to do the studies and<lb/>
the repairs and the renovations<lb/>
that we would want to do on that<lb/>
building anyway Brown said.<lb/>
"We'll start that planning process<lb/>
in advance<lb/>
"In the meantime, we continue<lb/>
to use some of the buildings that<lb/>
are not part of the main structure,<lb/>
an automobile repair shop and<lb/>
several other small buildings that<lb/>
we use for facilities operations.<lb/>
So, we get some use out of it also<lb/>
Staff Writer<lb/>
The ECU Office of Minority<lb/>
Affairs, along with the Cultural<lb/>
Awareness Committee and the<lb/>
Department of University Unions,<lb/>
has a list of events planned to<lb/>
mark the celebration of the birth-<lb/>
day of Dr. Martin Luther King, Jr.<lb/>
From Jan. 16-18, a number of<lb/>
multicultural events will take<lb/>
place in remembrance of the slain<lb/>
civil rights leader and in celebra-<lb/>
tio. of his philosophy.<lb/>
The theme of this year's cel-<lb/>
ebration, "A Commitment to Hu-<lb/>
man Rights and World Peace<lb/>
will be reflected by the programs<lb/>
sponsored free of charge at the<lb/>
university. The program begins<lb/>
on Monday night with a candle-<lb/>
light march from Christenbury<lb/>
GymtoMendenhall StudentCen-<lb/>
ter and everyone is invited to par-<lb/>
ticipate.<lb/>
A performance of "My Chil-<lb/>
dren! My Af-<lb/>
ricawillbe pre-<lb/>
sented at<lb/>
Hendrix Theatre<lb/>
the next night.<lb/>
This stirring play<lb/>
focuses on the<lb/>
oppression and<lb/>
eventual libera-<lb/>
tion of the South<lb/>
African people<lb/>
and will begin at<lb/>
8 p.m.<lb/>
Dr. Crystal<lb/>
Kuykendall, the<lb/>
author of From Rage to Hope: Re-<lb/>
claiming Black and Hispanic Stu-<lb/>
dents, will hold a lecture in room<lb/>
1028 of the General Classroom<lb/>
Building at 12 p.m. on Jan. 18.<lb/>
This motivational speaker will<lb/>
speak about minority relations in<lb/>
today's society, particularly as<lb/>
they relate to the conditions in<lb/>
education.<lb/>
According to Dr. Mary Anne<lb/>
Rose, Equal Employment Officer,<lb/>
the scheduling of Dr.<lb/>
Kuykendall's lecture at 12 p.m.<lb/>
was implemented to encourage<lb/>
student attendance.<lb/>
"We put (Kuykendall) on at<lb/>
noon so thatwecouldgetas many<lb/>
students as possible to see her<lb/>
It is very<lb/>
important that<lb/>
(the university<lb/>
community)<lb/>
recognizes that<lb/>
Dr. King stood<lb/>
for everyone's<lb/>
civil rights<lb/>
r<lb/>
mmmmmmmmm.<lb/>
.<lb/>
Rose said. "We know thatonce<lb/>
a student leaves the campus,<lb/>
they are reluctant to return,<lb/>
and we hope that the schedul-<lb/>
ing will make it convenient<lb/>
for students to attend. She is a<lb/>
dynamite speaker, and we<lb/>
hope that students will go lis-<lb/>
ten to her<lb/>
Rose said that the celebra-<lb/>
tion is not merely devoted to<lb/>
remembering King's life but<lb/>
hopes that it will help to con-<lb/>
vey the principles helived un-<lb/>
der to the student community.<lb/>
"With this, in a way, we're<lb/>
looking<lb/>
backward<lb/>
she said.<lb/>
"But we're<lb/>
also looking<lb/>
to the future.<lb/>
We hope that<lb/>
this will help<lb/>
to highlight<lb/>
the prin-<lb/>
ciples of non-<lb/>
violence and<lb/>
unity that Dr.<lb/>
King lived<lb/>
by<lb/>
This sentiment isechoed by<lb/>
Dr. Brian Haynes, the director<lb/>
of the Office of Minority Stu-<lb/>
dent Affairs. Haynes said he<lb/>
hopes that students of all<lb/>
classes and ethnic back-<lb/>
grounds will take advantage<lb/>
of the celebration of King's<lb/>
life and work.<lb/>
"It is very important that<lb/>
(the university community)<lb/>
recognizes that Dr. King stood<lb/>
for everyone'scivil rights he<lb/>
said. "Of course, we think of<lb/>
him in terms of his being an<lb/>
African-American leader, but<lb/>
people need to know that he<lb/>
championed causes for every-<lb/>
one<lb/>
es<lb/>
<pb facs="00058515_0002"/><lb/>
2 The East Carolinian<lb/>
January 12. 1995<lb/>
January 4<lb/>
Assault on campus ? An ECL officer reported an assault<lb/>
inflicting serious injury occurred at the Sigma Phi Epsilon fraternity<lb/>
house at 3 a.m. The victim was a student and the accused is a non-<lb/>
student.<lb/>
January 5<lb/>
Pedestrianvehicle accident ?While crossing the street at Wright<lb/>
Circle, a student was struck bv another student. The pedestrian was<lb/>
transported to Pitt Memorial Hospital with injuries to her leg.<lb/>
Breaking and enteringlarceny ?A Scott Hall resident reported<lb/>
the breaking and entering of his room. Several compact discs were<lb/>
taken from the room.<lb/>
January 9<lb/>
Larceny ? A student reported the larcenv of his portable com-<lb/>
pact disc player from an unlocked studio in the Jenkins Art Build-<lb/>
ing.<lb/>
?<lb/>
Breaking and entering attempted larceny of motor vehicle ?<lb/>
Officers discovered a vehicle in the Third and Reade lot with the<lb/>
dash lights on, the ignition switch damaged and a door lock was<lb/>
damaged. The victim was notified and found nothing missing from<lb/>
the vehicle.<lb/>
Possession of stolen property ? A resident of Jones Hall was<lb/>
found in possession of a Department of Transportation stop sign in<lb/>
his room. The student was issued a state citation and a campus<lb/>
appearance ticket for possession of stolen property.<lb/>
January 10<lb/>
Weapon on campus ? A non-student was arrested for being in<lb/>
possession of a weapon (BB gun) on campus, no operator's license<lb/>
and exceeding the speed limit. The incident occurred on College<lb/>
Hill Drive.<lb/>
Compiled by Tambra Zion. Taken from offical ECU police<lb/>
reports.<lb/>
Model teaching<lb/>
program awarded<lb/>
for dedication<lb/>
It would be<lb/>
great if the<lb/>
whole state<lb/>
would recognize<lb/>
our program<lb/>
? Dr. Bettv Beacham<lb/>
Correction box<lb/>
The Shared Visions graph in Monday's paper was mislabeled.<lb/>
The figures represented the purpose of the campaign. Annual<lb/>
support will receive $8,147,425 of the total contributions.<lb/>
Also, Dr. Robert Bunger was improperly identified. He is an<lb/>
associate professor in the Anthropology Department.<lb/>
Marguerite Benjamin<lb/>
Staff Writer<lb/>
Once again ECL"s Model Clini-<lb/>
cal Teaching Program is saluted for<lb/>
its efforts to improve the teaching<lb/>
profession.<lb/>
The program, <lb/>
now entering its<lb/>
seventh vear, is<lb/>
already among<lb/>
the four special<lb/>
programs se-<lb/>
lected for the an-<lb/>
nual American<lb/>
Association of<lb/>
State Colleges<lb/>
and Universities<lb/>
Award.<lb/>
The Model <lb/>
Clinical Teach-<lb/>
ing Program<lb/>
takes a special approach to the edu-<lb/>
cation of perspective teachers<lb/>
"Our trainingl method places<lb/>
seniors majoring in education in in-<lb/>
ternships which last a full vear in-<lb/>
stead of the traditional 10 weeks<lb/>
said Dr. Betty Beacham, the<lb/>
program's director.<lb/>
During the year of training, train-<lb/>
ees alternate their campus studies<lb/>
with teaching practice in an elemen-<lb/>
tary school classnxm.<lb/>
"It would be great if the whole<lb/>
state would recognizeour program<lb/>
Beacham said. "I think it could be a<lb/>
model for our state and the nation<lb/>
Several organizatioas m ust agree<lb/>
with Beacham because the program<lb/>
received three awards in 1994 alone,<lb/>
the third award being the Christa<lb/>
McAuliffe Award named for the<lb/>
teacher killed in the Challenger di-<lb/>
saster.<lb/>
Chancellor Richard Eakin ac-<lb/>
cepted the Christa McAuliffe Show-<lb/>
case for Excellence Award on behalf<lb/>
The Varsity Sport of the Mind<lb/>
mum<lb/>
CAMPUS CHAMPIONSHIP<lb/>
ALL-CAMPUS TOURNAMENT<lb/>
WEDNESDAY, JANUARY 18, 1995<lb/>
MENDENHALL STUDENT CENTER<lb/>
PICK UP COLLEGE BOWL INFORMATION AND REGISTRATION<lb/>
PACKET FROM THE INFORMATION DESK.<lb/>
MENDENHALL STUDENT CENTER<lb/>
SPONSORED BY THE ECU STUDENT UNION EVENTS COMMITTEE<lb/>
First place team member will receive $25.00 each and a College Bowl t-shirt.<lb/>
Second place team members will receive a College Bowl insulated mug.<lb/>
For more information, contact the Student Activities Office. 210 Mendenhall,<lb/>
328-47664711<lb/>
tftT<lb/>
u<lb/>
<lb/>
Put your mind to it!<lb/>
ot EC U's teacher training program<lb/>
on Tuesday, o 22, in Boca Raton,<lb/>
Fl.<lb/>
The McAuliffe Award is reserved<lb/>
for those programs which strive to<lb/>
make a difference in the teaching<lb/>
profession, as<lb/>
 Christa McAuliffe<lb/>
herself strived to<lb/>
do before her.un-<lb/>
timely death.<lb/>
Beacham said the<lb/>
teaching program<lb/>
operated with<lb/>
Christa<lb/>
McAuIiffe's per-<lb/>
sonal motto, "I<lb/>
teach, therefore I<lb/>
touch the future "<lb/>
"We are proud<lb/>
to have received so<lb/>
See TEACH page 5<lb/>
y-ypyw????p<lb/>
Come Join Us Every<lb/>
Thursday Night<lb/>
at 7pm<lb/>
In trfe General Classroom Building<lb/>
Room 1031<lb/>
For more information calt<lb/>
Eddie Hilliard 321-6262<lb/>
???????????????????<lb/>
 If-Jr0 PLAYERS CLUB I '??<lb/>
FOUR BEDROOM FUN<lb/>
321-7613<lb/>
- ? ?<lb/>
Get<lb/>
V M<lb/>
('Papa's hot Delivery)<lb/>
When you've got pizza on your mind-<lb/>
get Papa on the phone. Papa John's<lb/>
will deliver your favorite pizza - hot<lb/>
and tresh. And. as always, we'll<lb/>
include our special garlic sauce and<lb/>
pepperoncinis, too - all at no extra<lb/>
cost! And if you're really hungry, ask<lb/>
about our cheesesticks and bread-<lb/>
sticks! They make the perfect pizza<lb/>
even better!<lb/>
Perfect Pizza. Perfect Price. Everyday.<lb/>
pAPAJOHKs<lb/>
lcciif-erift ! ne rerftcc.t Pizza?<lb/>
1322 East 10th xStreet<lb/>
Serving ECU Campus<lb/>
tk Eastern Greenville<lb/>
757-7700<lb/>
One Small Pizza<lb/>
with One Topping<lb/>
and One Free Coke<lb/>
Only S4.99 tax<lb/>
iPAJOftrs<lb/>
One Extra Large Pizza<lb/>
order ot Stix<lb/>
2 Drinks<lb/>
Only $11.98 tax<lb/>
PAPA JOHNS<lb/>
One Large Pizza<lb/>
a with One Topping<lb/>
Only S6.98 tax<lb/>
PAPA JOHNs<lb/>
M <lb/>
<pb facs="00058515_0003"/><lb/>
r<lb/>
January 12, 1995<lb/>
The East Carolinian 3<lb/>
On-campus injuries cost school<lb/>
Jeb Brrokshire<lb/>
i Staff writer<lb/>
I<lb/>
J Last year, there were 300 re-<lb/>
' ported work-related injuries on<lb/>
'ECU's campus. These reported<lb/>
cases were only the ones that re-<lb/>
quired first aid.<lb/>
" Most of the jobs on campus are<lb/>
indoors so the injuries are usually<lb/>
minor things likecut fingers,bruises<lb/>
and strained backs said the De-<lb/>
<lb/>
m<lb/>
?<lb/>
Meet singles of ALL TYPES!<lb/>
Straight, English, Spanish and<lb/>
Alternative Lifestyles.<lb/>
1-900-820-9669 ext 297 24hrs<lb/>
$2.00min 18 Ttone req'd<lb/>
Avalon Comm (305)525-0800<lb/>
partment of Environmental Health<lb/>
and Safety's acting director, Phil<lb/>
Lewis. "Most of the injuries occur<lb/>
in the higher risk occupations such<lb/>
as grounds keeping, housekeeping,<lb/>
maintenance and moving service<lb/>
These injuries cost ECU around<lb/>
$350,000 a year. This figure is up<lb/>
from $286,000 two years ago. The<lb/>
university is responsible for all of<lb/>
the expenses including medical and<lb/>
the regular pay that the employee<lb/>
would normally receive during the<lb/>
time that he or she is out of work.<lb/>
Last year, some of the most se-<lb/>
vere injuries were a file cabinet tip-<lb/>
ping over on an employee, an elec-<lb/>
trician who fell from a ladder and a<lb/>
lab research specialist who con-<lb/>
tacted 20 percent nitric acid while<lb/>
washing off glassware.<lb/>
To help prevent the severity of<lb/>
accidents, supervisors now have to<lb/>
keep a log of "near miss" incidents.<lb/>
sc,?i<lb/>
&amp;<lb/>
Clothing for Man and Woman<lb/>
OFF<lb/>
entire stock of man's and<lb/>
women's catalog clothing,<lb/>
3 DAYS ONLY !<lb/>
Thursday, Friday &amp; Saturday<lb/>
January 12th, 13th, &amp; 14th, Only<lb/>
All Safes Final<lb/>
We Accept.<lb/>
Cash<lb/>
Check<lb/>
Accept<lb/>
QBB KB Bi<lb/>
Hidden Closet, Inc.<lb/>
University Center<lb/>
(Nmxt to Harris Tmmlmr) 14th ? CharUt BW<lb/>
Greenville, N.C.<lb/>
758-1550<lb/>
Open Mon. - Fri.<lb/>
Sat. 1 -6 p.m. ?<lb/>
? Oo.in7p.m.<lb/>
Sun. 1-5 p.m.<lb/>
r-<lb/>
It's TOURNAMENT TIME<lb/>
at Mendenhall Student Center!<lb/>
You could represent ECU at Regional Competitions in<lb/>
BILLIARDS TABLE TENNIS<lb/>
BOWLING CHESS<lb/>
Tournament winners will be awarded trophies and the opportunity to represent ECU at regional<lb/>
competitions to be held at The University of Tennessee in Knoxville, TN, the weekend of<lb/>
February 24-26,1995. All expenses paid by the Department of University Unions.<lb/>
ARE YOU THE BEST?<lb/>
If you think you could be, we want to give you the opportunity to find out.<lb/>
All-Campus Men's and Women's Billiards (Pool) Tournament<lb/>
Tuesday, January 24<lb/>
6:00 p.m.<lb/>
Mendenhall Billiards Center<lb/>
M<lb/>
All-Campus Men's and Women's Table Tennis Tournament<lb/>
Wednesday, February 1<lb/>
6:00 p.m.<lb/>
Mendenhall Billiards Center<lb/>
All-Campus Co-Rec Bowling Tournament<lb/>
Thursday, January 26<lb/>
6:00 p.m.<lb/>
Mendenhall Bowling Center<lb/>
All-Campus Chess Tournament<lb/>
Thursday, February 2<lb/>
6:00 p.m.<lb/>
Mendenhall Student Center, Rooms 8 C-D-E<lb/>
All-Campus Spades Tournament<lb/>
Tuesday, February 7<lb/>
6:00 p.m.<lb/>
Mendenhall Student Center, Rooms 8 C-D-E<lb/>
There is $2.00 registration fee for each tournament. Registration forms are available at the<lb/>
Mendenhall Information Desk and in the Billiards and Bowling Centers located on the ground floor<lb/>
of Mendenhall Student Center. Call the Student Activities Office. 328-4766. for more information.<lb/>
y<lb/>
This report will help the supervi-<lb/>
sors to take the appropriate mea-<lb/>
sure to reduce the accidents in their<lb/>
work place.<lb/>
The Occupational Safety and<lb/>
Health Act (OSHA) of 1970 now<lb/>
requires supervisors to post a log of<lb/>
all the injuries of the past year. The<lb/>
OSHA 200 log is posted every Feb-<lb/>
ruary. This log shows all of the<lb/>
injuries and also helps the supervi-<lb/>
sors to prevent the recurrence of<lb/>
injuries. There are also accident in-<lb/>
vestigations that help to identify<lb/>
why the accident happened and<lb/>
what could have been done to pre-<lb/>
vent it from happening.<lb/>
"The key to preventing injuries<lb/>
is to inform the employees of haz-<lb/>
ards in the work place, offer the<lb/>
appropriate protective equipment<lb/>
and enforce the rules regarding the<lb/>
use of this safety equipment said<lb/>
Lewis.<lb/>
Whippets seen<lb/>
as choice dru<lb/>
(CPS) ? You may have seen<lb/>
those little metal pellets around<lb/>
campus. You might have even<lb/>
watched friends at concerts as they<lb/>
inhaled gas from balloons or plastic<lb/>
bags and then laughed their heads<lb/>
off. They were sniffing nitrous ox-<lb/>
ide ? known as "hippie crack" at<lb/>
some schools ? which is becoming<lb/>
an increasingly popular way for<lb/>
students to get high.<lb/>
It has become so pervasive be-<lb/>
cause it is cheap ? $1 gets you a<lb/>
whippet pellet ? and it is easy to<lb/>
get. Nitrous oxide is also called<lb/>
laughing gas, the same kind den-<lb/>
tists use, and it is most commonly<lb/>
used as a propellant for whipped<lb/>
cream cans.<lb/>
Nitrous oxide is especially<lb/>
popular on college campuses be-<lb/>
cause many students do it at<lb/>
raves and at concerts, particu-<lb/>
larly the Grateful Dead shows<lb/>
and other outdoor festivals<lb/>
where it is not unusual to see a<lb/>
guy carting around a tank of the<lb/>
gas and selling it for $5 a bal-<lb/>
loon-full, said Kayla Kirkpatrick,<lb/>
youth program coordinator for<lb/>
the International Institute on In-<lb/>
halant Abuse in Englewood,<lb/>
Colo.<lb/>
Whippets are sold by the case<lb/>
at gourmet stores for use in cake<lb/>
decorating and other food<lb/>
See CRACK page 4<lb/>
THE EAST CAROLINIAN<lb/>
IS CURRENTLY LOOKING FOR<lb/>
NEWS WRITERS<lb/>
Requirements:<lb/>
? 2.0 GPA (or above)<lb/>
? Some writing experience<lb/>
? Responsibility<lb/>
? Desire to find out the truth<lb/>
? The ability to tell the truth<lb/>
Wanna Cut<lb/>
Through the<lb/>
Red Tape and<lb/>
Find Out What's<lb/>
Really Going<lb/>
On?<lb/>
(and get paid for it)<lb/>
Stop by the Student Pubs Bldg.<lb/>
(across from the library)<lb/>
and fill out an application, or ask<lb/>
for Stephanie Lassiter.<lb/>
Questions? Call 328-6366<lb/>
SEXUALLY<lb/>
SPEAKING<lb/>
WITH<lb/>
DR. RUTH<lb/>
WESTHEIMER<lb/>
Wednesday, February 22,1995<lb/>
Wright Auditorium - 8:00 PM<lb/>
For Ticket Information,<lb/>
Contact the Central Ticket Office<lb/>
1-800-ECU-ARTS (328-2787)<lb/>
or Locally at 328-4788<lb/>
Sponsored By the Student Union Lecture Committee<lb/>
rf??<lb/>
?mmmermmmm<lb/>
<pb facs="00058515_0004"/><lb/>
January 12. 1995<lb/>
4 The East Carolinian<lb/>
CRACK<lb/>
from p. 3<lb/>
preparation, but they also can be<lb/>
bought at head and pomo shops. A<lb/>
few states, such as Ohio, have de-<lb/>
creed that nitrous oxide can only be<lb/>
sold for food and dental purposes,<lb/>
but it is legal in all 50 states. The<lb/>
Food and Drug Administration says<lb/>
N20 is neither a dangerous drug or<lb/>
food product.<lb/>
"Students think thatbecause they<lb/>
see whippets around all the time<lb/>
and because the dentists uses it, it<lb/>
must be okay Kirkpatrick said.<lb/>
"But the difference is that dentists<lb/>
are using nitrous oxide in a con-<lb/>
trolled environment and they've<lb/>
been trained to use it properly<lb/>
The laughing gas dentists use,<lb/>
Kirkpatrick said, is 80 percent oxy-<lb/>
gen as opposed to the 100 percent<lb/>
nitrous oxide inhaled in whippets<lb/>
or gas-filled balloons.<lb/>
People who sniff nitrous oxide<lb/>
get an immediate rush that often<lb/>
makes them laugh and fell dizzy<lb/>
and euphoric. Because the gas has<lb/>
replaced oxygen in the blood stream,<lb/>
it also makes the sniffers' hands and<lb/>
feet tingle and can cause them to<lb/>
lose their balance. The high, which<lb/>
produces a psychological addiction,<lb/>
lasts only a few minutes and com-<lb/>
pels users to inhale more and more<lb/>
to reach new levels of euphoria.<lb/>
Most people get hangover-like<lb/>
headaches the next day, but pro-<lb/>
longed users can damage their bone<lb/>
marrow, reproductive systems and<lb/>
brain. Sometimes it make; people<lb/>
pass out; some even die.<lb/>
The International Institute on In-<lb/>
halant Abuse (HIA) reports 34 deaths<lb/>
nationwide have been caused from<lb/>
nitrous oxide or other fumes. But<lb/>
Kirkpatrick emphasizes that there<lb/>
are no accurate U.S. death statistics,<lb/>
because inhalants often contribute<lb/>
to death but may not be the actual<lb/>
cause of it. Take, for example, the<lb/>
case of the 21-year-old suburban<lb/>
Chicago man who drowned in a<lb/>
pool after doing whippets. Inhaling<lb/>
the gas caused him to pass out and<lb/>
fall off a raft he was floating on. The<lb/>
coroner ruled his death was by<lb/>
drowning.<lb/>
In England, though, the IIIA esti-<lb/>
mated that one-fifth of all first-time<lb/>
sniffers died.<lb/>
NIDA estimates that 300,000<lb/>
people between the ages of 18 and<lb/>
25 used inhalants in 1991, and that<lb/>
as the trend has become more popu-<lb/>
lar, it is also become more widely<lb/>
accepted. Inhalants are considered<lb/>
the fourth most popular drug in<lb/>
America, behind alcohol, tobacco<lb/>
and marijuana, according to recent<lb/>
NIDA studies.<lb/>
Nitrous oxide tends to be the gas<lb/>
of choice on college campuses while<lb/>
abuse of other inhalants, such as<lb/>
gasoline, air fresheners and nail pol-<lb/>
ish, is being seen more and more<lb/>
among younger kids, some only in<lb/>
grade school, NIDA's Sargent said.<lb/>
r<lb/>
STUDENTW?<lb/>
RUSH<lb/>
I A E<lb/>
Sigma Alpha Epsilon<lb/>
"Fastest Growing<lb/>
Fraternity on Campus"<lb/>
311 South Woodlawn Dr. 5<lb/>
Next to AOn<lb/>
Call 752-1147 or 758-0998<lb/>
J<lb/>
"He was a pretty remarkable<lb/>
student said Dr. Vincent Bellis,<lb/>
a biologv professor. "I think he<lb/>
knew most of the biology faculty,<lb/>
we all knew he had a bright fu-<lb/>
ture  we were very proud that<lb/>
he was a member of our depart-<lb/>
ment<lb/>
Detlev worked as a proctor for<lb/>
the self-paced philosophy 1110<lb/>
for more than three years. He<lb/>
planned to study marine envi-<lb/>
ronmental ecology as a graduate<lb/>
student but had not yet decided<lb/>
on a school.<lb/>
"Typically, he wanted to read<lb/>
articles by the professors in the<lb/>
graduate school before he chose<lb/>
where to go said Dr. Greg Ross,<lb/>
ECU philosophy professor who<lb/>
had known Detlev for several<lb/>
years. "He was the most diligent<lb/>
and studious person I had ever<lb/>
met ? certain to succeed even in<lb/>
things he did not care for<lb/>
A native of Greenville, Detlev<lb/>
enjoyed his studies, skateboard-<lb/>
ing and riding his bicycle.<lb/>
"He used to skateboard for a<lb/>
couple of hours everyday, he was<lb/>
deeply into it in high school and<lb/>
the beginning of college Dr.<lb/>
Bunger said. "He loved that bi-<lb/>
cycle. The bicycle he was killed on<lb/>
was his most prized possession<lb/>
His ability to combine environ-<lb/>
mental issues and his skating<lb/>
punkness and slam dancing shows<lb/>
the mark of a very remarkable per-<lb/>
son, Ross said.<lb/>
"When he was a kid, he had<lb/>
some hard times, but he devel-<lb/>
oped out of that without changing<lb/>
his personality Ross said. He be-<lb/>
lieves Detlev was able to touch<lb/>
hundreds of lives just through the<lb/>
philosophy students he helped.<lb/>
Friends and colleagues said it<lb/>
was hard to believe Detlev is gone.<lb/>
"I ride a bike too, and I think<lb/>
about the thousands of times I've<lb/>
ridden the exact same track, it<lb/>
hasn't hit me said Keith Coon,<lb/>
friend and fellow colleague. "Un-<lb/>
believably, almost annoyingly<lb/>
dedicated to school a very dedi-<lb/>
cated punk rocker too. I know he<lb/>
was avid into skateboarding. He<lb/>
was very different type of person,<lb/>
very alternative<lb/>
Coon was one of the last people<lb/>
to see Detlev before the accident.<lb/>
"And to the last minute he was<lb/>
alive, he was being picked on and<lb/>
returning the favor Coon said.<lb/>
Coon said Detlev was a strong<lb/>
environmentalist and a vegetarian<lb/>
because Detlev thought eating<lb/>
meat was cruel.<lb/>
"Detlev didn't know the mean-<lb/>
ing of the word hate, I could truly<lb/>
say thathe was the kindest person<lb/>
I've ever known Dr. Bunger said.<lb/>
"He disliked injustice, and he saw<lb/>
a lot of injustice in the world, but<lb/>
he didn't hate.<lb/>
He was about as broad-minded<lb/>
and loving person as you could<lb/>
find. He was dedicated to saving<lb/>
the environment he believed the<lb/>
way to do this was through science<lb/>
and not through rabble-rousing or<lb/>
rioting  he believed the way to<lb/>
save the environment was to get<lb/>
out and prove what was going on<lb/>
and to prove it scientifically Dr.<lb/>
Bungersaid.<lb/>
Detlev had ideas for the future.<lb/>
"I didn't have a chance to know<lb/>
him long enough said major Irv-<lb/>
ing Hooper, president of GALA "He<lb/>
came to us with a lot of ideas, and<lb/>
he wasn't the type of person to take<lb/>
credit for those ideas; he just wanted<lb/>
to help other people be aware of<lb/>
what's going on around the world<lb/>
and how most people waste re-<lb/>
sources  and he wanted to help us<lb/>
make people aware of what we're<lb/>
doing<lb/>
Detlev enjoyed science fiction,<lb/>
Star Wars and Star Trek, Dr. Bunger<lb/>
said. He said Detlev thought of sci-<lb/>
ence fiction as a way of showing<lb/>
people what the world could be like.<lb/>
Expressions Magazine<lb/>
is looking for a few talented men and women<lb/>
for the following positions:<lb/>
Associate Editor<lb/>
Staff Writers (2)<lb/>
Typesetter<lb/>
Only those individuals who are committed<lb/>
to providing quality work and meeting<lb/>
deadlines need to apply If interested, please<lb/>
come by Expressions office on the 2nd floor of<lb/>
the publication building to fill out an application<lb/>
by January 16,1995.<lb/>
210 E. 5th Street<lb/>
atalog<lb/>
nnection<lb/>
<lb/>
? ra9ff<lb/>
Division of UBE<lb/>
758-8612<lb/>
FAMOUS CATALOG<lb/>
DRESSES<lb/>
Off Catalog Price<lb/>
HEAVY WINTER<lb/>
COATS<lb/>
Off Catalog Price<lb/>
CATALOG<lb/>
BRAS<lb/>
50<lb/>
Off Catalog Price<lb/>
SHOES<lb/>
BLAZERS<lb/>
Off Catalog Price<lb/>
MEN'S<lb/>
JEANS<lb/>
$Q95<lb/>
GENUINE LEATHER<lb/>
BELTS<lb/>
MonSat. 10-6<lb/>
LADIES<lb/>
SWEATERS<lb/>
ic-iDc parity<lb/>
Off Catalog Price<lb/>
SALE<lb/>
RACK<lb/>
LADIES SILK<lb/>
BLOUSES<lb/>
Off Catalog Price<lb/>
COMBAT<lb/>
BOOTS<lb/>
Regular '72.00<lb/>
1995<lb/>
75<lb/>
Group<lb/>
SKIRTS<lb/>
Hewas trying tochange things<lb/>
and make things better. He had great<lb/>
ideals and it doesn't make sense<lb/>
why it had to be someone who was<lb/>
trying to make a difference said<lb/>
Shannon Gay, a friend of Detlev's.<lb/>
Hooper said Detlev was the type<lb/>
of person who did things instead of<lb/>
talking about them.<lb/>
"Whenever I saw him outside of<lb/>
the club he was very open and<lb/>
warm to me and took the time to<lb/>
stop and talk to me. Even when he<lb/>
was studying for exams, he always<lb/>
took the time Hooper said.<lb/>
MEETING!<lb/>
GOLDEN KEY<lb/>
NATIONAL HONOR<lb/>
SOCIETY<lb/>
Agenda:<lb/>
?Spring Semester Kick off<lb/>
??Florida Regional Conference<lb/>
? New Member Reception<lb/>
?Campus Awareness<lb/>
?Other Activities<lb/>
FREE PIZZA &amp; DRINKS!<lb/>
THUR. JAN. 12TH 4:00PM GC 1012<lb/>
January at the Hbo<lb/>
ALL NEW EXPANDED DANCE FLOOR!<lb/>
Tuesday: ALL NEW TRIVIA TUESDAY! The Elbo is now connected to the<lb/>
national trivia network! Come in and win cash prizes for the Best scores!<lb/>
Games begin hourly, so come in and win! Pitchers are only $2.50 and cups of<lb/>
draft are 50c. Enjoy our $1.00 bottles of beer and house hi-balls!<lb/>
Wednesday: CLASSIC NIGHT! The best in classic rock &amp; dance for you to enjoy<lb/>
on our new dance floor! 1c Coors light draft, $1.25 domestics &amp; high balls<lb/>
PLUS $2.00 16oz. drink specials!<lb/>
1C Coors light draft. Admission $3.00 members $4.00 guests.<lb/>
Thursday: LADIES' NIGHT! Ladies' in free ali night long, guys who are members<lb/>
in for $1.00 $2.00 guests! 25c cups of draft and $1.00 bottle beer and house<lb/>
hi-balls. $2.00 Sex on the beach &amp; 50c jello shots &amp; champagne cocktails.<lb/>
Ladies' come in early and win cash prizes in our special ladies' trivia contest!<lb/>
9-11pm.<lb/>
FRIDAY: RUSH HOUR! $1.00 OFF ADMISSION FROM 8 TIL 10PLUS<lb/>
LADIES $1.00 OFF GUEST ADMISSION ALL NITE! $1.25 BOTTLE BEERS &amp;<lb/>
HIBALLS $2.00 TEAS AND SEX ON THE BEACH FEATURING ALL NEW<lb/>
10 CENT DRAFT!<lb/>
SATURDAY: DANCE PARTY! $3.00 PITCHERS &amp; 50c CUPS OF DRAFT ANY<lb/>
BRAND ALL NITE! LADIES $1.00 OFF THE GUEST ADMISSION! FEATUR-<lb/>
ING THE BEST IN 70s , 80S &amp; 90S DANCE MUSIC ALL NIGHT LONG.<lb/>
<pb facs="00058515_0005"/><lb/>
?<lb/>
January 12, 1995<lb/>
The East Carolinian 5<lb/>
Hattisfeeter<lb/>
MEANS LOW PRICES!<lb/>
7E4CH<lb/>
from p. 2<lb/>
Harris Teeter Brand Salel<lb/>
Celebrating the "Coming Out" of our New Labels<lb/>
Harris Teeter<lb/>
Sweet Peas,<lb/>
Corn or<lb/>
Green Beans<lb/>
many honors, but the important<lb/>
thing is, our program is making a<lb/>
difference Beacham said.<lb/>
ECU' Model Clinical Teaching<lb/>
Program was named "an exemplary<lb/>
teacher education program" last July<lb/>
by the National Education<lb/>
Association's National Center for<lb/>
Innovation. The program also has<lb/>
added to its credits recognition from<lb/>
the Distinguished Programs in<lb/>
Teacher Education Foundation.<lb/>
Beacham believed than in order<lb/>
to make a difference in the class-<lb/>
room, there must be a collaboration<lb/>
between avid book training and<lb/>
from p. 1<lb/>
quality first-hand experience in<lb/>
teaching.<lb/>
Evidently theprogram'sperspec-<lb/>
tive, techniques and procedures<lb/>
have been very successful, as only<lb/>
four other universities received the<lb/>
honor of the McAuliffe Award:<lb/>
Southeast Missouri State University,<lb/>
California State University, North-<lb/>
ern Texas and East Texas State Uni-<lb/>
versity.<lb/>
ECU's teacher education<lb/>
program's participants are as proud<lb/>
of their accomplishments as Christa<lb/>
McAuliffe was to make a difference<lb/>
in the teaching profession.<lb/>
walk their animals on leashes.<lb/>
"They are the ones who care<lb/>
about their animal Pohlman said.<lb/>
Anyone who needs to report an<lb/>
aggressive animal can contact ECU<lb/>
Environmental Health and Safety<lb/>
at 328-6166 or ECU Police at 328-<lb/>
6150.<lb/>
14.50-15.25 oz.<lb/>
Harris Teeter<lb/>
Heed<lb/>
Bacon<lb/>
A 'xXouch oi Cfiass<lb/>
"Greenville's<lb/>
ONLY<lb/>
Exotic<lb/>
Nightclub"<lb/>
TUESDAYS<lb/>
Silver Bullet's Female "Exotic" Dancers<lb/>
WEDNESDAYS<lb/>
Amateur Night for Female Danceis llpm-lan<lb/>
CASH PRIZE<lb/>
?Ccotetunu need to all A reiser In KlviDoe.<lb/>
Muu inive by 8:00<lb/>
THURSDAYS - SATURDAYS<lb/>
Silver Bullets Female "Exotic" Dancers<lb/>
$Dancers wanted$<lb/>
Have you got the<lb/>
winter blues,<lb/>
kids? Are you<lb/>
just plain tired of<lb/>
the same old<lb/>
same old? Well,<lb/>
hold on to your<lb/>
mittens, kittens,<lb/>
because TEC has<lb/>
a brand new<lb/>
game headed<lb/>
your way. Don't<lb/>
be a snoozer,<lb/>
pick up next<lb/>
Tuesdays<lb/>
edition to see<lb/>
our BRAND<lb/>
NEW, and much<lb/>
improved<lb/>
surprise. And get<lb/>
out your fountain<lb/>
pens, because<lb/>
you'll certainly<lb/>
want to write in<lb/>
and congratulate<lb/>
us. And if you do<lb/>
happen to miss<lb/>
out, don't panic.<lb/>
Were here to<lb/>
stay, much like<lb/>
the parking<lb/>
problem, only<lb/>
with a much<lb/>
more positive<lb/>
effect.<lb/>
Harris Teeter<lb/>
Grain<lb/>
Bread 24 oz.<lb/>
Harris Teeter Cranberry<lb/>
Cocktail Juice<lb/>
Pepsi Or Diet<lb/>
Pepsi<lb/>
Selected<lb/>
Varieties<lb/>
64 OZ.<lb/>
Harris Teeter<lb/>
Snack<lb/>
Crackers<lb/>
Harris Teeter<lb/>
Orange Concentrate<lb/>
2Ltr.<lb/>
Harris Teeter 4 Pk.<lb/>
Bath<lb/>
Tissue157.50 n.<lb/>
Harris Teeter<lb/>
Peanut c?aZyn?yr<lb/>
Butter 1<lb/>
.79<lb/>
f39<lb/>
Juice<lb/>
Prices Effective Through Jan. 17,1995<lb/>
PRICES IN Tins AD EFFECTIVE UU.Nt 'AY. JANUARY 11. IHROUGH JANUARY 17. 1995 IN OUR GREENV I.E STORES ONLY Wi:<lb/>
Tell everyone about your Valentine<lb/>
by putting a special<lb/>
Love Lines personal ad in our special<lb/>
Feb. 14 issue.<lb/>
Only $3 for 25 words or less;<lb/>
100 each for more than 25.<lb/>
Pick up a Love Lines form at the newspaper<lb/>
office, the Mendenhall information desk or<lb/>
Student Stores. Speak out before our Feb. 11<lb/>
deadline -<lb/>
or forever hold your peace.<lb/>
T ove Lined!<lb/>
 J ? m<lb/>
DTP TTH TV '<lb/>
?mi ii1"<lb/>
-W<lb/>
<pb facs="00058515_0006"/><lb/>
t 9<lb/>
677?e East Carolinian<lb/>
January 12. 1995<lb/>
The East Carolinian<lb/>
Classifieds<lb/>
mm<lb/>
For Rent<lb/>
FEMALE ROOMMATE NEEDED<lb/>
immediately. On campus, two<lb/>
rooms. $197 per a month and 12<lb/>
utilities. Call: 758-6457<lb/>
TAR RIVER ESTATES: Three male<lb/>
roommates needed. Located on river.<lb/>
$100 deposit, $169 rent, 14 utilities<lb/>
and phone. Call Kevin 758-6701<lb/>
ATTENTION STUDENTS: 3Br<lb/>
House at 206-A East 12th St. Rent<lb/>
$450 month 2Br House at 206-B East<lb/>
12th St. Rent $295 month. Also 2Br<lb/>
apartment at 810 Cotanche Rent $325<lb/>
month. Call 757-3191<lb/>
FEMALE ROOMMATE NEEDED<lb/>
Live in a beautiful 3 bedroom, 2.5<lb/>
bath townhouse just four miles from<lb/>
ECU. The rent is $200.00 a month,<lb/>
plus 13 utilities. On site benefits.<lb/>
FREE tanning beds, Jacuzzi, sauna,<lb/>
pool, 24-hour laundry, and weight<lb/>
room The deposit is $175.00.<lb/>
Available NOW. Call 321-8591. Bed<lb/>
furnished.<lb/>
WESLEY COMMONS 3 bedroom<lb/>
duplex: Room for rent, Available for<lb/>
Spring Semester, 6 blocks from ECU,<lb/>
WasherDryer. Big Screen T.V $220<lb/>
&amp; 13 utilities mo. Call Dave 830-<lb/>
4030.<lb/>
"EL ROLANDO" Elegant, spacious<lb/>
example fo Frank Lloyd Wright<lb/>
architecture. 3 bedrooms, 2<lb/>
bathrooms, large dining room,<lb/>
kitchen and living room with<lb/>
fireplace. New refrigerator, washer <lb/>
dryer, fenced backyard, nice<lb/>
shrubbery. Convenient to campus<lb/>
and hospital. $750.00mo. deposit.<lb/>
524-5790 day - 752-8079 night.<lb/>
WHAT A DEAL Apt. available for<lb/>
subleasing. Nd. a male or female to<lb/>
share apt. with present occupant.<lb/>
$205 plus 12 utilities. Great location<lb/>
&amp; may keep $50 of deposit returm in<lb/>
August. Call 321-3863<lb/>
ATTENTION STUDENTS: Two<lb/>
and one bedroom(s) apartments at<lb/>
Wesley Commons for rent Call 758-<lb/>
1921. Free Cable.<lb/>
ROOM AVAILABLE. Walking<lb/>
distance from campus. Private room;<lb/>
share both and kitchen. Call Mike<lb/>
Casey at 752-2879.<lb/>
FEMALE ROOMMATE NEEDED<lb/>
nonsmoker, honest, available now,<lb/>
rent 195.00,1 3 utilitiessand Deposit.<lb/>
Will have own room. Call 758-6068.<lb/>
Hl<lb/>
Personals<lb/>
Well, Mr. President - your<lb/>
first conquer as Rex. How was<lb/>
it? It's too bad that a night with<lb/>
Barbara is more important to<lb/>
you than our friendship. What<lb/>
happened to "I know you are<lb/>
that SPECIAL ONE, and to get<lb/>
that TRUST I've waited very long<lb/>
???" Whatever, BUDDY! Best<lb/>
Friends?? We used to be. SO<lb/>
LONG!<lb/>
For Rent<lb/>
FEMALE ROOMATE WANTED<lb/>
Kings Row Apts. S190.00 rent 12<lb/>
utilities. Basic Cable, pool and bus<lb/>
service included. Prefer serious, quiet<lb/>
grad. student Call 752-0845.<lb/>
ROOMMATE NEEDED<lb/>
, IMMEDIATELY to share Tar River<lb/>
Apartment. Own bedroom. Close to<lb/>
campus. Call Amy at 758-7542 for<lb/>
more info.<lb/>
ROOMMATE WANTED - 3<lb/>
Bedroom House Directly Across<lb/>
from Campus, $240.00 13 utilities.<lb/>
House has an alarm system and<lb/>
washer and dryer. MALE or<lb/>
FEMALE. CALL 752-7251.<lb/>
STUDIOUS AND SOCIAL<lb/>
FEMALE ROOMMATE to live in<lb/>
3Br 2 Bath apt. in Tar River. 13<lb/>
utilities and phone, 208 moonth. Call<lb/>
Tonya 752-5525<lb/>
DUPLEX FOR RENT 2 Bedroom 1<lb/>
12 bath 2 Blocks from Campus 2<lb/>
Blocks from Downtown Large<lb/>
Rooms, Closets, Balcony and Back<lb/>
Deck $500 per month 1 year lease &amp;<lb/>
Deposit 752-6833<lb/>
ROOMMATE NEEDED NOW One<lb/>
person needed to share a 3 br. apt.<lb/>
with den, dining room, living room,<lb/>
2 12 bath, pantry, patio, and will<lb/>
have your own bedroom. $163.00<lb/>
mon plus 1 4 ut $100 deposit, cable<lb/>
included. Located on 1st. St. in Tar<lb/>
River. Call 757-2684.<lb/>
For Sale<lb/>
PAY IN-STATE TUITION? Resi-<lb/>
dency Status and Tuition is the bro-<lb/>
chure by attorney Brad Lamb on hie<lb/>
in-state tuition residency application<lb/>
process. For sale: student stores,<lb/>
Wright Building.<lb/>
2ACOOUSTICRESPONSESPEAK-<lb/>
ERS, New in box, Oak, 12" woofers,<lb/>
frequency controls, circuit protectors,<lb/>
3yr warranty. Sold for $600 each, take<lb/>
$500 for both. 757-0345 leave mes-<lb/>
sage Brad.<lb/>
CANNONDALE 55cm RED ROAD<lb/>
BIKE - Shimano 600 - Time pedals -<lb/>
Mavic Tubular rims-Turbo Ti Saddle<lb/>
$450. Call Jeff at 752-1247.<lb/>
KING SIZE WATERBED, Excellent<lb/>
Condition, New Mattress and heater<lb/>
with drawers and mirror headboard.<lb/>
$175 obo leave message 757-0345<lb/>
Austin.<lb/>
Greek Personals<lb/>
ZETA TAU ALPHA - Congratu-<lb/>
lations to the newly installed<lb/>
Executive Council officers! Presi-<lb/>
dent- Edy Cline, VP-I-Julie Pearl,<lb/>
VP-II-Amy Williams, SecKrista<lb/>
Roth, TreasLisa Hetrick, Hist<lb/>
Audra Latham, Memb. Chair-<lb/>
Alicia Nisbet, Pan. RepSusan<lb/>
Goodell, Ritual Chair-Sheila<lb/>
Services Offered<lb/>
TYPING Reasonable rates" re-<lb/>
sumes, term papers, thesis, other ser-<lb/>
vices. Call Glenda: 752-9959 (days);<lb/>
527-9133 (eves)<lb/>
ECU COLLEGIATE DATELINE Call<lb/>
1-900-884-1400 ext 439 $2.95 min.<lb/>
must be 18 or older.<lb/>
FREE FINANCIAL AID! Over $6<lb/>
Billion in private sector grants &amp;<lb/>
scholarships is now available, all stu-<lb/>
dents are eligible regardless of grades,<lb/>
income, or parent's income. Let us<lb/>
help. Call Student Financial Services:<lb/>
1-800-263-6495 ext. F536223<lb/>
Become a CERTIFIED USSF SOC-<lb/>
CER REFEREE. Earn Extra $$. Clinic<lb/>
to be held on campus Jan. 20-22. Reg-<lb/>
istration fee of $40.00. For further info.<lb/>
Call Boyce Hudson 752-7914.<lb/>
TUTORING - Improve your English!<lb/>
Experienced teacher can tutor you in<lb/>
conversation, writing, and TOEFL.<lb/>
Will edit papers also. Call Pam at<lb/>
758-6952<lb/>
Help Wanted<lb/>
CRUISE SHIPS NOW HIRING<lb/>
Earn up to $2,000month working<lb/>
on Cruise Ships or Land-Tour com-<lb/>
panies. World travel (Hawaii,<lb/>
Mexico, theCaribbean, etc.).Seasonal<lb/>
and Full-timeemploymentavailable.<lb/>
No experience necessary. For more<lb/>
information call 1-206-634-0468 ext.<lb/>
C53622.<lb/>
ATTENTION STUDENTS: Earn<lb/>
extra cash stuffing envelopes at<lb/>
home. All materials provided. Send<lb/>
SASE to Central Distributors Po Box<lb/>
10075, Olathe, KS 66051. Immediate<lb/>
response.<lb/>
ALASKA SUMMER EMPLOY-<lb/>
MENT- Students needed! Fishing<lb/>
industry. Earn up to $3,000- $6,000 <lb/>
per month. Room and board! Trans-<lb/>
portation! Male or Female. No expe-<lb/>
rience necessary. Call (206) 545-4155<lb/>
ext A53622<lb/>
ATTENTION LADIES: Earn up to<lb/>
$1,000 plus a week escorting in the<lb/>
Greenville area with a licensed<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/>
TELEMARKETING- Davenport<lb/>
Exteriors Thermal Gard- $5 per hour<lb/>
plus bonus. Easy work, flexible hours<lb/>
start todav. Call 355-0210<lb/>
Greek Personals<lb/>
Elliot, House MgrRondaSortino<lb/>
and Program Council Members!<lb/>
Meadow Hensley, Vanessa<lb/>
Farmer, Taia Scott, Karen<lb/>
Jurgens, Catherine Singletary,<lb/>
Amy Bergner, Deana Cale, Sh-<lb/>
annon Jordan, Amanda Obi,<lb/>
Toni Daleo, Christy Hinton,<lb/>
Sabina Sehgal, Hillary Krimm,<lb/>
and Catherine Niles. Here's look-<lb/>
ing forward to a great semester!<lb/>
Greek Personals<lb/>
SIGMA SIGMA SIGMA wants<lb/>
to wish everyone a great spring<lb/>
semester and hopes your holi-<lb/>
days were a blast! WELCOME<lb/>
BACK!<lb/>
MISSING: Go greek sign. It is<lb/>
missed terribly. Reward offered.<lb/>
Love the Sigma's.<lb/>
A<lb/>
Help Wanted<lb/>
Help Wanted<lb/>
AFTER-SCHOOL SITTER needed<lb/>
M-F 2:30-5:30 for 4th &amp; 5th grader.<lb/>
Must be non-smoker with reliable<lb/>
transportation and good references.<lb/>
Requirements include picking up<lb/>
children from school &amp; transporting<lb/>
to special activities, helping w<lb/>
homework &amp; providing snack. Call<lb/>
321-6296 andor 413-1787<lb/>
EVENT STAFF ; STAFF ONE, the<lb/>
EVENTSTAFF; Provider for Walnut<lb/>
Creek Amp and N.C. ST Athletics<lb/>
and Concerts is Accepting Applica-<lb/>
tions for Ushers and Ticket Takers<lb/>
for ECU Basketball and Concerts, Call<lb/>
919-856-0800 Mon-Thur, 1pm - 5pm<lb/>
for More Info.<lb/>
EXPERIENCED BABYSITTER<lb/>
wanted to care for two young chil-<lb/>
dren in my home on Tuesdays from<lb/>
8:45-5:00. References required. Call<lb/>
756-0941.<lb/>
SZECHUAN GARDEN-909 S.Evans<lb/>
St. Experienced wait staff and cash-<lb/>
ier needed. No phone calls please.<lb/>
Apply in person between 2:00 pm<lb/>
and 6:00pm.<lb/>
A DEGREE IS GREAT, but a Degree<lb/>
with practicial experience is better.<lb/>
ONLINE INFORMATION SER-<lb/>
VICES is currently taking applica-<lb/>
tions for part-time telephone collec-<lb/>
tors. If interested please applv at 1206<lb/>
Charles Blvd. Greenville<lb/>
WANTED BABYSITTER to help<lb/>
share responsibility with another<lb/>
college student. This is for two boys<lb/>
ages 5 &amp; 7. This semester need some-<lb/>
one on Tuesday &amp; Thursday from 12<lb/>
to 6. Preferably a sophomore or jun-<lb/>
HELP WANTED!<lb/>
NOW ACCEPTING APPLICATIONS FOR<lb/>
ALL POSITIONS. APPLY IN PERSON<lb/>
2-4 M-F<lb/>
PLEASE NO CALLS<lb/>
1<lb/>
"LAW FIRM has openings for mail<lb/>
room messengers part-time 8:00am<lb/>
to 1:00pm five days per week. Active<lb/>
position involves errands, copies,<lb/>
FAX and general office functions.<lb/>
Apply in person 120 West Fire Tower<lb/>
Road. Ward and Smith, P.A<lb/>
PHOTOGRAPHERS WANTED:<lb/>
Bring your outgoing personality and<lb/>
reliable transportation and become<lb/>
one of our personnal photographers.<lb/>
Basic photography knowledge and<lb/>
35mm SLR.cajmera a plus, but not<lb/>
essential. Wetrain. Flexible PThours-<lb/>
$6.00 per hour. Call 1-800-722-7033<lb/>
ior. Summer is taken care of this year.<lb/>
Please call during the day at 756-8886<lb/>
or after five at 756-0684. $5.00 a Hour.<lb/>
HELP WANTED. Part-time worker<lb/>
wanted for Tried &amp; True Consign-<lb/>
ment Shop. Furniture deliveries and<lb/>
moving furniture. Approximately 10<lb/>
hours a week. Call 752-2139. Com-<lb/>
puter AssistantDelivery ii<lb/>
EXPERIENCED BABYSITTER<lb/>
needed for 21 2 year old on Monday<lb/>
and Friday mornings. No smoking,<lb/>
Transportation and references re-<lb/>
quired. 355-2088.<lb/>
U?<lb/>
Help Wanted<lb/>
PANAMA CITY BEACH, SPRINC<lb/>
BREAK 1995! 7 nights deluxe part;<lb/>
package $149.00 P.P. Campus Reps'<lb/>
Wanted. Earn Free Trips. Call Gatoi<lb/>
Rock (800) 410-2867.<lb/>
BASEBALL UMPIRES NEEDED!<lb/>
Anyone interested in umpiring youth<lb/>
baseball games (ages 9-18) tor the<lb/>
Spring and Summer Should contact<lb/>
The Greenville Recreation and Parks<lb/>
Department Athletic Office Immedi-<lb/>
ately! 15-20 Umpires needed Pay<lb/>
$15-$20 per game. For more infor-<lb/>
mation please call the Athletic Office<lb/>
at 830-4550 after 2pm.<lb/>
THE OFFICE OF STUDENT DE-<lb/>
VELOPMENT, DEPARTMENTOF<lb/>
ATHLETICS, is now accepting ap-<lb/>
plications for tutors. A minimVim 2.5<lb/>
GPA is required. Please call 3 $-4550<lb/>
for more information. !<lb/>
?<lb/>
RESPONSIBLE INDIVIDUAL to<lb/>
care for children after schooh Tues-<lb/>
day and Thursday, 2:30-5:30p,?n. Call<lb/>
Travel<lb/>
SPRING BREAK $5!<lb/>
Guaranteed lowest prices to USA<lb/>
rp Jamaica<lb/>
<lb/>
<lb/>
<lb/>
Baharjas<lb/>
Special Group Rales &amp; Free Tfevel!<lb/>
v San Splash Tour&amp; .<lb/>
T 1-800-426-7710 z?<lb/>
SPRING BREAK! Ba<lb/>
Party Cruise 6 Days<lb/>
Includes 12 Meals &amp;<lb/>
Parties! Great Beac<lb/>
Nightlife! A HUGE<lb/>
Cancun &amp; Jamaica 7<lb/>
Air &amp; Hotel From<lb/>
Spring Break Travel<lb/>
678-6386<lb/>
FLORIDA'S SPRING BfAK<lb/>
HOTSPOTS! Cocoa Beach flfcear<lb/>
Disney) - 27 Acre Deluxe<lb/>
Beachfront Resort 7 Nights<lb/>
$159! Key West $229! Daytona<lb/>
Beach Room With Kitchen From<lb/>
$129! 1-800-678-6386<lb/>
SPRING BREAK! Panama<lb/>
City! 8 Days Oceanview<lb/>
Room with a Kitchen $429!<lb/>
Walk To Best Bars! Includes<lb/>
Free Discount Card Which<lb/>
Will Save You SlOOon<lb/>
FoodDrinks! 1-800-678-<lb/>
6386<lb/>
Announcements<lb/>
GAIA<lb/>
ENVIRONMENTAL ACTION OR-<lb/>
GANIZATIONwould like to ex-<lb/>
press our deep sense of loss for one<lb/>
of our own who exemplified the<lb/>
goals of our organization. We will<lb/>
truly miss Detlev Bunger.<lb/>
GAIA<lb/>
(ENVIRONMENTAL ACTION OR-<lb/>
GANIZATION) Will meet Thurs-<lb/>
day at 5pm. Everyone is welcome to<lb/>
attend and participate. Please bring<lb/>
ideas for an improved environment<lb/>
or call 321-8699.<lb/>
SPECIAL OLYMPICS COACHES<lb/>
NEEDED<lb/>
The Greenville - Pitt Co. Special<lb/>
Olympics will be conducting a Track<lb/>
&amp; Field Coaches Training School on<lb/>
Sat Feb. 4 from 9:00 am-3:30 pm for<lb/>
all persons interested in becoming a<lb/>
certified volunteer track coach. We<lb/>
also need coaches for the following<lb/>
sports: equiestrain, bowling,<lb/>
powerlifting, volleyball, softball,<lb/>
swimming, rollerskating, &amp; gymnas-<lb/>
tics. NO EXPERIENCE IS NECES-<lb/>
SARY. For more information, con-<lb/>
tact Connie or Dwain at 830-4541 or<lb/>
830-4551.<lb/>
NON CREDIT EXCEL COURSE<lb/>
The Decision Sciences Department<lb/>
will offer a non-credit EXCEL course<lb/>
at no cost. Classes are 2-4 pm Fri-<lb/>
days from January 13-February 10,<lb/>
1995. Enrollment is limited; prefer-<lb/>
ence will be given to students that<lb/>
received transfer credit for DSCI<lb/>
2223 Introduction to Computers.<lb/>
Toregistercall(919)328-6893orstop<lb/>
by the Decision Sciences office (GCB<lb/>
3410) by January 12. EXCEL is the<lb/>
spreadsheet and graphics package<lb/>
used in business courses.<lb/>
COOPERATIVE EDUCATION<lb/>
IT'S ABOUT TIME? to begin the<lb/>
application process for 1995 summer<lb/>
employment. In fact, mid-January is<lb/>
the DEADLINE to apply for the much<lb/>
sought agyer state government in-<lb/>
ternship positions. Don't delay. Stop<lb/>
by the Co-op office today for infor-<lb/>
mation at 2300 General Classroom<lb/>
Building or call 328-6979.<lb/>
EMPLOYMENT OPPORTUNI-<lb/>
TIES<lb/>
Employment Opportunities a re avail-<lb/>
able to students who are interested in<lb/>
becoming PERSONAL CARE AT-<lb/>
TENDANTS to students in wheel-<lb/>
chairs, READERS, and TUTORS. Past<lb/>
experience is desired but not required.<lb/>
For an application contact: Office for<lb/>
Disability Su pport Services, Brewster<lb/>
A-l 16 orA-114, Telephone (919) 328-<lb/>
6799<lb/>
COUNSELING CENTER<lb/>
EATING DISORDER GROUP: A<lb/>
counseling group for women with<lb/>
anorexia and bulimia will be offered<lb/>
on campus this semester. The group<lb/>
will address self-esteern, stress man-<lb/>
agement, relationships and problem-<lb/>
solving skills. The group meets<lb/>
weekly beginning in January and is<lb/>
facilitated bv Susan Bower, MD, Stu-<lb/>
dent Health and Sara Shepherd, PhD,<lb/>
Counseling Center. Please call 328-<lb/>
6661 or 328-6795 for more informa-<lb/>
tion and to schedule an appointment<lb/>
to talk with a facilitator before the<lb/>
group begins.<lb/>
ECU SCHOOL OF MUSIC EVENTS<lb/>
THURS JAN 12?GRADUATE RE-<lb/>
CITAL, Lori Schaberg, violin(AJ<lb/>
Fletcher Recital Hall, 7:00pm, free)<lb/>
FR1 JAN 13?FACULTY RECITAL,<lb/>
Janette Fishell, organist, FANTASIES<lb/>
AND FIREWORKS (First Presbyte-<lb/>
rian Church, Kinston,<lb/>
NC 8:00pm free) SAT JAN 14?SE-<lb/>
NIOR RECITAL, David Archer, horn<lb/>
(AJ Fletcher Recital Hall, 7:00pm free)<lb/>
SNOW BOARDING ADVEN-<lb/>
TURE TRIP<lb/>
Recreational Services is offering<lb/>
Snowboarding is Virginia, a week-<lb/>
end of winter fun. Registration dead-<lb/>
line is Jan. 13th in 204 Christenbury<lb/>
Gym at 5:0 pm. There will be a pre-<lb/>
trip meeting on Jan. 23rd at 6:00 pm at<lb/>
117 Christenbury Gym. The cost of<lb/>
the trip is $115.00 per person, and it<lb/>
will be held January 27 29. Costs in-<lb/>
clude transportation, lodging, and<lb/>
rentals. Call 328-6387 for more de-<lb/>
tails.<lb/>
PAPA IQHN'S BASKETBALL<lb/>
INVITATIONAL<lb/>
Papa John's Pizza and ECU Recre-<lb/>
ational Services is hosting the first<lb/>
annual Intramural Basketball Invita-<lb/>
tional Tournament. Register by 5:00<lb/>
pm January 12 in 204 Christe.ibury<lb/>
Gymnassium. T-shirts, coupons, and<lb/>
pizzas will be provided by Papa<lb/>
John's Pizza. Call David at 328-6387<lb/>
for more details.<lb/>
5-ON-5 BASKETBALL MEETING<lb/>
Recreational Services will be holding<lb/>
a 5-on-5 Basketball Meeting on Tues-<lb/>
day. Ian. 17 in Biology Building Room<lb/>
103. Meeting is mandatory to regis-<lb/>
ter team. Call 328-6387 for more de-<lb/>
tails.<lb/>
FITNESS DROP-IN CLASSES<lb/>
Drop-In Fitness Classes offered<lb/>
through Recreational Services begin<lb/>
January 11 at 4:00pm in Garrett and<lb/>
5:00pm in Christenbury Gym. Classes<lb/>
will be held through the 19th begin-<lb/>
ning at 3:30 pm. Regular registration<lb/>
takes place January 9-20 in 204<lb/>
Christenbury Gym. Call 328-6387 for<lb/>
details.<lb/>
FITNESS CLASS REGISTRATION<lb/>
Register for Recrteational Services<lb/>
Aerobic Fitness Classes January 9-20<lb/>
in 204 Christenbury Gym. The cost is<lb/>
$10 per student for 12 classes and $20<lb/>
for faculty and staff. Over 12 differ-<lb/>
ent classes are offered. Call 328-6387<lb/>
for more details or pick up a class,<lb/>
schedule in 204 Christenbury Gym.<lb/>
TREASURE CHESTS AVAIL-<lb/>
ABLE<lb/>
The 1993-94 Treasure Chests. Be sure<lb/>
to pick up your FREE video year-<lb/>
book. Available at the Student Store,<lb/>
The East Carolinian, Joyner Library,<lb/>
Mendenhall and the Media Board<lb/>
office in the Student Publications<lb/>
Building.<lb/>
Classifieds<lb/>
25 words or less:<lb/>
Students$2.00<lb/>
Non-students$3.00<lb/>
Each Additional word$0.05<lb/>
Deadlines:<lb/>
Friday 4 p.m. for Tuesday's edition<lb/>
Tuesday 4 p.m. for Thursday's edition<lb/>
For more<lb/>
information call<lb/>
328-6366<lb/>
<lb/>
? ii wmw<lb/>
<pb facs="00058515_0007"/><lb/>
J<lb/>
January 12, 1995<lb/>
The East Carolinian 7<lb/>
I he Last Carolinian<lb/>
Opinion<lb/>
The East Carolinian<lb/>
Gregory Dickens, General Manager<lb/>
Maureen A. Rich, Managing Editor<lb/>
Chris Warren, Advertising Director<lb/>
Stephanie B. Lassiter, News Editor<lb/>
Tam bra Zion, test. News Editor<lb/>
Mark Brett, Lifestyle Editor<lb/>
Meredith Langley, test. Lifestyle Editor<lb/>
Dave Pond, Sports Editor<lb/>
Aaron Wilson, Asst. Sports Editor<lb/>
Steven A. Hill, Opinion Page Editor<lb/>
Stephanie Smith, Staff Illustrator<lb/>
Thomas Brobst, Copy Editor<lb/>
Alexa Thompson, Copy Editor<lb/>
Ashley Poplin, Typesetter<lb/>
Jennifer Coleman, Typesetter<lb/>
Darren Mygatt, Typesetter<lb/>
Deborah Daniel, Secretary<lb/>
Mike O'Shea, Circulation Manager<lb/>
Celeste Wilson, Layout Manager<lb/>
Jeremy Lee, Asst. Layout Manager<lb/>
Randall Rozzell, Creative Director<lb/>
Darryl Marsh, test. Creative Director<lb/>
Charles Pede, Systems Manager<lb/>
Serving the ECU community since 1925, 77m? East Carolinian publishes 12,000 copies every Tuesday and Thursday. The<lb/>
masthead editorial in each edition is the opinion of the Editorial Board. The East Carolinian welcomes letters, limited to 250<lb/>
words, which may be edited for decency or brevity. The East Carolinian reserves the right to edit or reject letters for publication.<lb/>
Letters should be addressed to: Opinion Editor, The East Carolinian, Publications Bldg ECU, Greenville, N.C 27858-4353.<lb/>
For more information, call (919) 328-6366.<lb/>
 Bicyclists and pedestrians in danger<lb/>
? <lb/>
<lb/>
It finally happened. An ECU student's<lb/>
life was tragically ended when his bike<lb/>
and a bus collided. Every semester we<lb/>
have several accidents that pit pedestrians<lb/>
and bicyclists against trucks and<lb/>
automobiles ? a lopsided contest to say<lb/>
the least.<lb/>
On campus and in most of the older<lb/>
parts of Greenville (downtown), there<lb/>
are plenty of sidewalks for pedestrian<lb/>
safety. But such niceties do not grace the<lb/>
main arteries that lead to campus.<lb/>
The newer parts of town, most notably<lb/>
the areas surrounding the Plaza Mall, do<lb/>
not have sidewalks or even clearly<lb/>
marked bike paths. Everything is geared<lb/>
towards the almighty auto. More needs<lb/>
to be done to ensure pedestrian and<lb/>
bicyclists' safety.<lb/>
If you have ever traversed the distance<lb/>
to the Belk building, by bike or foot, you<lb/>
know exactly what we are referring to.<lb/>
Sure there are some very nice signs on<lb/>
Charles Blvd. that ostensibly warn drivers<lb/>
to make room for bikers, but nothing<lb/>
more.<lb/>
If you mistakenly believe that the<lb/>
signs afford adequate safety for bikers<lb/>
and pedestrians, you obviously have not<lb/>
enjoyed the harrowing experience.<lb/>
Try crossing a street corner in<lb/>
Greenville. The stop lights are there for the<lb/>
automobiles, not the pedestrians?it's no-<lb/>
man's-land for those who dare leave the<lb/>
confines of the beloved auto.<lb/>
Given the lack of adequate parking<lb/>
spaces, many students and faculty have<lb/>
been left with no recourse but to walk or<lb/>
ride a bicycle to campus.<lb/>
Besides the ineffective signs on Charles<lb/>
Boulevard, have our community leaders<lb/>
taken any measures to rectify this problem?<lb/>
A total lack of planning has allowed<lb/>
the situation to come to this point. We have<lb/>
grown so dependent on the auto that those<lb/>
in charge of planning, if there is anyone in<lb/>
charge, must not have thought about thoge<lb/>
who may, out of necessity or desire, walk<lb/>
on and off campus or ride a bike.<lb/>
The staff at TEC would like to challenge<lb/>
ECU leaders to take more effective<lb/>
measures to assist in pedestrian and<lb/>
bicyclist's safety. If positive measures are<lb/>
not taken quickly, it is only a matter of time<lb/>
before someone else is injured or killed<lb/>
because of the pedestrian planning deficit.<lb/>
How many lives will have to be wasted<lb/>
before the local leadership finds the money<lb/>
to lay some paint down on the roads to<lb/>
mark bikes paths and some cement for<lb/>
sidewalks?<lb/>
Scourge of the roads:Drunk drivers<lb/>
by Angela McCullers<lb/>
Drinking and driving is still a<lb/>
.problem. During the holidays it<lb/>
gets worse. The largest amount of<lb/>
alcohol consumption occurs<lb/>
during this time. Thousands of<lb/>
-people die each year due to<lb/>
' alcohol-related accidents.<lb/>
Many of these people are<lb/>
innocent victims. An intoxicated<lb/>
individual with keys to an<lb/>
automobile is an enemy to<lb/>
everyone who are on the roads.<lb/>
iheie ever this enemy goes,<lb/>
struction, disability, grief, death<lb/>
ggjd pain lurks with them. Alcohol<lb/>
 tfrtoo often an agent of misery and<lb/>
tragedy.<lb/>
Alcohol is one of the major<lb/>
causes of highway deaths and<lb/>
injuries accounting for about half<lb/>
of all annual car accidents. Each<lb/>
year, drunk drivers are involved<lb/>
in crashes that take the lives of<lb/>
20,000-25,000 people.<lb/>
The shocking reality is that<lb/>
there are more alcohol-related<lb/>
traffic fatalities than there are<lb/>
riiurders. Drunk drivers maim<lb/>
more innocent victims than all<lb/>
violentstreet criminals combined.<lb/>
The lethal and often<lb/>
devastating consequences of<lb/>
rruxing drinking and driving<lb/>
should make drunk driving<lb/>
eligible for the inclusion in any list<lb/>
of serious and violent crimes.<lb/>
Society was reluctant to<lb/>
acknowledge that a drunk driving<lb/>
problem existed until the early<lb/>
1980s. The public found it all too<lb/>
easy to identify with the offenders<lb/>
and to view them as decent law-<lb/>
abiding citizens (rather than<lb/>
criminals) caught up in<lb/>
unfortunate circumstances which<lb/>
they "had no control over What<lb/>
about the real victims?<lb/>
No one trunks about them.<lb/>
They are the ones who had no<lb/>
control over their tragic death. A<lb/>
person who decides that they want<lb/>
to drink and drive should accept<lb/>
full responsibility for anything that<lb/>
happens after they get in the<lb/>
drivers seat of a car. The thousands<lb/>
of people who die each year did<lb/>
not have the opportunity to make<lb/>
that fatal decision.<lb/>
Many people do not realize<lb/>
how serious this problem is until<lb/>
someone close to them are killed<lb/>
or maimed because of a drunk<lb/>
driver.<lb/>
Every time we get into our<lb/>
cars we are t ng a chance of<lb/>
getting killed because of a bad<lb/>
decision on behalf of another<lb/>
person? their decision to drink<lb/>
and drive.<lb/>
Lowering the blood alcohol<lb/>
concentration last year to .08 was<lb/>
a step in the right direction. While<lb/>
new laws make it more difficult<lb/>
for drunk drivers to avoid<lb/>
conviction, they also harden<lb/>
public attitudes and stiffen drunk<lb/>
driving penalties But more still<lb/>
has to be done to solve this<lb/>
problem.<lb/>
In the past, the state penal<lb/>
codes emphasized releasing<lb/>
convicted drunk drivers with a<lb/>
warning, small fines, occasional<lb/>
license suspensions, probation,<lb/>
and treatment program<lb/>
sentences.<lb/>
Nationwide, as many as 70<lb/>
to 80 percent of the drivers<lb/>
whose licenses were suspended<lb/>
simply continued to drive<lb/>
without them or easily obtained<lb/>
a new license in other states.<lb/>
Letting drunk drivers off easy<lb/>
does not change their behavior.<lb/>
1 am glad that law makers<lb/>
have realized that. My heart<lb/>
goes out to all of the families<lb/>
who have lost their loved ones<lb/>
to the hands of drunk drivers.<lb/>
More has to be done to stop this<lb/>
problem. We, as young adults,<lb/>
can have a helping hand in<lb/>
stopping drunk driving.<lb/>
But first we have to start<lb/>
with ourselves before we can<lb/>
go any farther. Please do not<lb/>
drink and drive. The life you<lb/>
take could be your own.<lb/>
f<lb/>
SUBSCRIBE TO<lb/>
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;<lb/>
I Support student-run media by<lb/>
J subscribing:<lb/>
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Name<lb/>
Address.<lb/>
I<lb/>
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H<lb/>
FOUR VAY&amp; k KMQCRMIC CMIMMTC UN m Hft<lb/>
NUTlCfck CMtttt<lb/>
ACCEPT A WtlBt<lb/>
Q<lb/>
mmm mm m<lb/>
WWttTlQN WAN WCWMWATIHGPHOTO<lb/>
Crime not deterred by 911<lb/>
Murder and violent assault<lb/>
continues to haunt America. Each<lb/>
and every day we hear of, or see<lb/>
on television, violence in one<lb/>
form or another. Regretfully, the<lb/>
crime rate will probably do<lb/>
nothing but increase in the future.<lb/>
Is there any relief from this<lb/>
pestilence? Some Americans<lb/>
mistakenly believe that there<lb/>
exists some magical security<lb/>
blanket in the 911 Emergency<lb/>
system.<lb/>
In the Dec. 25th issue of The<lb/>
Daily Reflector, the-e was an<lb/>
article entitled "Answering the<lb/>
call: 911 operators a national<lb/>
lifeline<lb/>
The essay begins with an<lb/>
editors note: "It seems a month<lb/>
doesn't pass that without news<lb/>
of a 911 call going tragically<lb/>
wrong Indeed, while the 911<lb/>
operators perform a noble and<lb/>
necessary function, the 911<lb/>
national lifeline is not a panacea.<lb/>
Recently, it took over 40<lb/>
minutes for Philadelphia police<lb/>
to respond to a flood of 911 calls<lb/>
that reported a gang of baseball<lb/>
bat wielding youths attacking<lb/>
people. Because of the Fluggish<lb/>
response, one young man was<lb/>
killed?the911 system isattimes<lb/>
too slow to prevent a crime from<lb/>
a occurring.<lb/>
The 911 system has<lb/>
undoubtedly saved many lives,<lb/>
but Americans should not be<lb/>
misled ? nothing supersedes<lb/>
self-reliance. The 911 hot line<lb/>
should not be construed as the<lb/>
citizens first line of defense in<lb/>
potentially dangerous situations<lb/>
involving criminals.<lb/>
Of course, the ultimate form<lb/>
of self-reliance when dealing<lb/>
with violent criminals is a<lb/>
firearm. Some Americans feel<lb/>
uneasy about handling firearms<lb/>
because they inaccurately<lb/>
believe that the crime problem<lb/>
is due to an overabundance of<lb/>
guns on the streets.<lb/>
That is untrue. The problem<lb/>
is that the guns are in the wrong<lb/>
persons' hands. Allow me to<lb/>
flesh out my opinion with an<lb/>
example:<lb/>
Last year I recall watching<lb/>
CNN as they played the 911<lb/>
recording of a woman literally<lb/>
calling for her life. It seems that<lb/>
she called because her brother's<lb/>
business associates, drug<lb/>
dealers, had come to collect on a<lb/>
debt.<lb/>
Since the woman's brother<lb/>
was broke and his debt was<lb/>
outstanding, the druggies came<lb/>
to abduct his adult sister. While<lb/>
the 911 operator listened, the<lb/>
intruders kidnapped the young<lb/>
lady.<lb/>
CNN played the recording<lb/>
for a few days hoping to assist<lb/>
the police in their search efforts.<lb/>
When the police finally did<lb/>
locate the woman, she was face<lb/>
down in the gutter ? dead.<lb/>
I believe that her chances<lb/>
for survival would have been<lb/>
exponentially increased if she<lb/>
owned and knew how to<lb/>
properly handle a gun.<lb/>
One MTV commercial<lb/>
asserts that guns kill people.<lb/>
Since guns are lifeless objects,<lb/>
without human intervention,<lb/>
guns could not possibly kill any<lb/>
one. The problem with the<lb/>
Beavis and Butthead logic is that<lb/>
By Steven A. Hill<lb/>
it does not consider the other side<lb/>
of the argument. Guns work both<lb/>
ways ? they save lives as well as<lb/>
take them away. While the press is<lb/>
quick to report incidents where the<lb/>
victims of violent crime have their<lb/>
own unpreparedness and temerity<lb/>
to blame, we often do not hear of<lb/>
armed citizens defending<lb/>
themselves:<lb/>
Susan Kaleta's Californian<lb/>
home had been subjected to several<lb/>
robbery attempts. Wanting to<lb/>
preclude any further<lb/>
encroachments upon her property,<lb/>
or her life, she installed a burglar<lb/>
system that if activated would set<lb/>
off a loud screeching noise. One<lb/>
night she unmistakably heard<lb/>
someone trying to break into her<lb/>
home.<lb/>
Susan immediately activated<lb/>
the alarm system's alarm and was<lb/>
in her room calling 911 when the<lb/>
intruder tried to attack her.<lb/>
With the phone in one hand<lb/>
and a gun in the other, Susan ?<lb/>
with deadly accuracy ? shot the<lb/>
criminal twice as he attacked her.<lb/>
Afterwards, the police reported<lb/>
that the man had been responsible<lb/>
for the previous break-ins.<lb/>
It is indeed a pity that society<lb/>
has stooped to such a degenerate<lb/>
state. What is a law abiding citizen<lb/>
to do? There is no easy answer;<lb/>
however, total reliance on 911 and<lb/>
the MTV Beavis and Butthead logic<lb/>
is asinine.<lb/>
If a criminal has the guts to<lb/>
pull a gun on an individual and<lb/>
threaten that person with death ?<lb/>
we should have enough intestinal<lb/>
fortitude to promise the criminal<lb/>
with a bullet between the eyes in<lb/>
addition to a 911 phone call.<lb/>
JOIN THE CHAOS!<lb/>
If you are of sound and opinionated<lb/>
mind, please come write for us! We are<lb/>
looking for a student or a faculty member<lb/>
to author a weekly opinion column,<lb/>
much like what you see above. We want<lb/>
strong arguments with strong<lb/>
supporting evidence. A nice, crisp<lb/>
sarcastic sense of humor works well, too.<lb/>
Stop by our offices on the second floor of<lb/>
the Publications Bldg. across from<lb/>
Joyner library and fill out an application,<lb/>
and ask for Maureen. '<lb/>
?<lb/>
<pb facs="00058515_0008"/><lb/>
?<lb/>
NICK O'TIME<lb/>
BY GREGORY DICKENS<lb/>
BY STEPHANIE SMITH<lb/>
'SET a w?!<lb/>
wevcr <lb/>
rue ReAL I<lb/>
11 9gEq ?<lb/>
<lb/>
muim?IHIU I ??" ' II1?11U-IUI?<lb/>
<pb facs="00058515_0009"/><lb/>
aiuiarv<lb/>
1995<lb/>
The East Carolinian 9<lb/>
The East Carolinian<lb/>
Lifestyle<lb/>
Unsound make themselves heard<lb/>
Shannon Gay<lb/>
Staff Writer<lb/>
Sitting in a far-too-cluttered<lb/>
apartment, listening to Neurosis,<lb/>
it's easv to understand the guys<lb/>
from Unsound. I"hey are per-<lb/>
plexed, diverse and intrinsic.<lb/>
Each ot the tour members pro-<lb/>
vide their own t pe ot organized<lb/>
hv steria.<lb/>
Unsound is a conglomeration<lb/>
ot tour different -t les. <lb/>
(dd Paddock supplies the heav<lb/>
i dge h i ti one who rew up<lb/>
loving metal and Hall and Oat<lb/>
which must he the cause ot his<lb/>
i th nature He's<lb/>
simple to identify with and pos-<lb/>
sessesaneasv manner He writes<lb/>
the mam riffs tor the songs and<lb/>
provides the technical work.<lb/>
Singer and lyricist Mark<lb/>
Snyder, however is a complex<lb/>
stage.<lb/>
leaver no<lb/>
thim<lb/>
and<lb/>
I le s the<lb/>
?t<lb/>
w hose still waters run deep. He<lb/>
sat almost silent throughout the<lb/>
interview, vet when it comes time<lb/>
to hit the<lb/>
unsaid.<lb/>
Drummer Brian Simpson had<lb/>
much to sav; he wanted to maki it<lb/>
clear the importance of creating<lb/>
great music and the ef-<lb/>
fect it has on the au-<lb/>
dience as well as<lb/>
himself. He<lb/>
said lie pre-<lb/>
ferred play-<lb/>
ing his<lb/>
d rums<lb/>
heavv and<lb/>
slow to allow'<lb/>
creativity to<lb/>
flow between<lb/>
each hit ot the<lb/>
drums<lb/>
Basest c heec h believes thecom-<lb/>
bination between Simpson and<lb/>
himself provides the groove and<lb/>
even the sou! to Unsound.<lb/>
The band formed in late WL?2<lb/>
and their first gig was Halloween<lb/>
night at the now defunct bar New<lb/>
Deli. Singer Mark Snyder officially<lb/>
joined the band in April 1994 after<lb/>
tilling in tor their singer who fre-<lb/>
quently missed shows due to medi-<lb/>
cal problems. 1 he guys sav hi<lb/>
wasn't as dedicated .is the rest ot<lb/>
the hand Thev believe the tour-<lb/>
some the) h.n e now ; perl<lb/>
they click 1 he e id? i i<lb/>
in their song<lb/>
Cheech feels when<lb/>
they come together at<lb/>
prai tic e to wi ite a<lb/>
song it takes them a<lb/>
long ti me V e re<lb/>
portei tionists I at h<lb/>
new s(ing must be<lb/>
meaner than the last<lb/>
Cheechsaid. Thev write<lb/>
nigs ,i release, a way<lb/>
tor them to vent angst nd<lb/>
the traumas ot everyday lite.<lb/>
Simpson said, "When we write it's<lb/>
a way for us toe okeemotion,and<lb/>
when other people appreciate or<lb/>
understand that feeling, it's dou-<lb/>
bly fulfilling He calls this the<lb/>
double prong effect to relate to<lb/>
music in his own wav and tor oth-<lb/>
ers toconnec t with it as well. Lyri-<lb/>
cist Snvder writes the songs<lb/>
vagueh<lb/>
o the listener;<lb/>
pret vv hat the want from tin' mu-<lb/>
sk For me, it's just a release, but<lb/>
 oui songs are psychological<lb/>
Sn der said<lb/>
ITie guv s believe their music<lb/>
has made an impac t on the<lb/>
Greenville music scene and that<lb/>
thev e changed it and given it a<lb/>
heaviei edge. "Before us there<lb/>
wasn't aband with distort ion, now<lb/>
it seems to be morecommon here<lb/>
Paddock said. I hey feel their mu-<lb/>
sic relates to people because it's<lb/>
different and aggressive. An Un-<lb/>
sound show is ;i great forum to<lb/>
relinquish aggression. "We set<lb/>
aside one song per show tor the<lb/>
ladies tf mosh Paddock said.<lb/>
These guvs are politically correct'<lb/>
Unsound describes its sound as<lb/>
a power groove that's heavy and<lb/>
slow. "We're heavy but you can<lb/>
he-bop to it Simpson said. In the<lb/>
past thev have covered anything<lb/>
from Rage Against The Machine<lb/>
to Beastie Boys to Helmet to<lb/>
Sepultura I he are trying to break<lb/>
a wav from cover tunes and try to<lb/>
concentrate more on their original<lb/>
material<lb/>
I nsound has an upcoming<lb/>
-how tonight at the Brewery in<lb/>
Raleigh, with the local band<lb/>
Bloodstul opening up At the end<lb/>
of February thev will be headlin-<lb/>
ing at the Attic with Greenville's<lb/>
own Sex, I ove And Money. Ihev<lb/>
have also completed a three song<lb/>
demo recorded at Audio Arts here<lb/>
in Greenville. The demo will be<lb/>
available at local music stores and<lb/>
shows at the end of January.<lb/>
W MB is currently playing a song<lb/>
otf the demo titled "Raike" that<lb/>
was the first song Snyder wrote<lb/>
when he joined the band.<lb/>
The Unsound guys are comical<lb/>
and provide a lot of laughs, but<lb/>
when it comes to their music, they<lb/>
are very serious. The band has the<lb/>
potential to become very big in the<lb/>
future and as for their Greenville<lb/>
status, it is a band to be reckoned<lb/>
with.<lb/>
And the<lb/>
winner is<lb/>
Meiman gives Cheap Advice<lb/>
Con friends and neighbors! Live like a king!<lb/>
The Top<lb/>
Ten Films<lb/>
of 1994<lb/>
Ike Shibley<lb/>
Staff Writer<lb/>
This is part two of a two-part<lb/>
series on 144 in tilm. For our<lb/>
critic'sv iewson certain very good<lb/>
films not making it to Greenville,<lb/>
see part one from Tuesday. To-<lb/>
day, we otter the Top Ten films of<lb/>
the year.<lb/>
The top ten films of the year<lb/>
provide an eclectic trip down<lb/>
memory lane tor the year that was<lb/>
1444 Bear in mind that several<lb/>
films on other critics' ten best lists<lb/>
never opened in Greenville. Chief<lb/>
among the absentees are Quiz<lb/>
Show, Hoop Dreams, I our Weddings<lb/>
and a uneral, The Last Seduction,<lb/>
and Id Wood. This last film will be<lb/>
thankfullvon viewatMendenhall<lb/>
starting tonight, and all concerned<lb/>
film fans should show an out-<lb/>
pouring of support so that the<lb/>
tilm committee takes risks like this<lb/>
to bring artistic films to campus<lb/>
that were never shown in<lb/>
c Jreenville before<lb/>
The following list is in order<lb/>
with the grade in parentheses be-<lb/>
hind the title. Any tilm not open-<lb/>
ing in Greenville is marked with<lb/>
an asterisk ().<lb/>
I Quiz Slmu (10)<lb/>
A tilm for all time. Not only<lb/>
does it handle the disillusionment<lb/>
ot the American people with tele-<lb/>
vision (which did not last long),<lb/>
but it adroitly juggles the conflicts<lb/>
ot several main characters. In just<lb/>
over two hours, Robert Redtord<lb/>
tells ,i marvelously intertwined<lb/>
storv of greed, trust, misplaced<lb/>
devotion, and deception. John<lb/>
Turturro Ralph I mnes, and Paul<lb/>
Scofteld all deliver superb perfor-<lb/>
mances, but Redford's direction<lb/>
holds the story together and even-<lb/>
tually wraps its threads tightly to<lb/>
weave a cohesive masterwork.<lb/>
1 his is the best tilm of Redford's<lb/>
career and easilv the best tilm of<lb/>
the year.<lb/>
2. Pulp I it tion (9)<lb/>
: I . tion wasoneol the most<lb/>
talked about films ot the year.<lb/>
Director Quentin "arantino de-<lb/>
puts thieves, hitmen, drug ,ic<lb/>
di( tsand Mafia bosses with a fond-<lb/>
ness usually reserved tor parents<lb/>
and children. I he tilm uses dis-<lb/>
jointed tune to tell its storv. hut<lb/>
the jumps nev ei confusi thi<lb/>
view er I he stars in J<lb/>
all si iar h hn I ra muel !<lb/>
pher W'a I ken (my favori te) a 111 u rn<lb/>
in wildly wonderful portrayals of<lb/>
Tarantino's misfits. Of all the films<lb/>
on this list, this is the one I will<lb/>
watch more times than any other<lb/>
during the rest ot my life.<lb/>
3. Four Weddings and a Funeral<lb/>
This was the year of Hugh<lb/>
Grant and this was the film that<lb/>
outshone all others. Wickedly<lb/>
funny from beginning toend, this<lb/>
fi I m had one of the funn iest scenes<lb/>
o! the year when a priest per-<lb/>
forms his first wedding. Also hi-<lb/>
larious was a wedding in which<lb/>
the hero gets seated at a table with<lb/>
a gaggle of his ex-girlfriends. This<lb/>
one is already out on video and if<lb/>
you have not seen it vet, do your-<lb/>
self a favor and rent it.<lb/>
4. Natural Bom Killers (9)<lb/>
Though Quentin Tarantino<lb/>
now distances himself from the<lb/>
film, he retains credit for the origi-<lb/>
nal storv. But no mistake can be<lb/>
made that SBK is Oliver Stone's<lb/>
movie. Never one to use nuance<lb/>
or ambiguity, Stone surpasses<lb/>
even his own bludgeoning style<lb/>
of storv telling with this two-hour<lb/>
montage of violent images. BK<lb/>
was probablv the year's best ex-<lb/>
aiapleof alove-it-or-leave-itfilm:<lb/>
many viewers walked out.<lb/>
Though the story was only mildly<lb/>
original, the avant-garde style<lb/>
makes NBK something that will<lb/>
long be studied in film classes.<lb/>
5. Heavenly Creatures (4)<lb/>
A New Zealand film about two<lb/>
adolescent friends who conspire<lb/>
to kill one oi their mothers The<lb/>
tale is told to allow the v lewer to<lb/>
experience what might have been<lb/>
occurring inside the girls' heads.<lb/>
Figures in clay battle and occa-<lb/>
sionally the clay figures enter the<lb/>
girls' reality, as when thev see a<lb/>
principal killed by one oi their<lb/>
clay figures. The film is based on<lb/>
fact but the artistic licensee used<lb/>
by Peter Jackson solidities this<lb/>
sordid tale and elevates it to a<lb/>
marvelous artistic achievement.<lb/>
6. The Hudsucker Proxy (8)<lb/>
Probablv the least successful<lb/>
oftheC oenbrothers'work, which<lb/>
includes Raising Arizona and<lb/>
SAiller's Crossing, this film still tops<lb/>
most other filmmaker'sbest work.<lb/>
I got towatch lhclludsucker Proxy<lb/>
on the big screen in Pittsburgh<lb/>
but not until seeing the film again<lb/>
on video did I truly appreciate the<lb/>
genius ot the brothers C oen I he<lb/>
tilm crackles with imagination,<lb/>
with the shots ot people tailing<lb/>
from tall buildings being the most<lb/>
extraordinary.<lb/>
7 sV,(S)<lb/>
An inc rediblerollercoasterride<lb/>
i ! a mov le I his dim begins with<lb/>
an elevator hanging in its shaft by<lb/>
a thn ad readv to plummet thirtv<lb/>
SeeTopTfi 11<lb/>
Photo Courtesy of WARNER BOOKS<lb/>
David Letterman's favorite genetic mutation. Calvert DeForest (better-known as Larry "Bud"<lb/>
Meiman). poses for lots of funny pictures and hogs all the credit in his new book, Cheap Advice.<lb/>
Trent Giardino<lb/>
Staff Writer<lb/>
Who is this guy .nd where did<lb/>
he pop up from Is lie just some<lb/>
lucky guv thev found on the street<lb/>
picking daisies1 Where he came<lb/>
from nobody knows except the<lb/>
man himself, Calvert DeForest.<lb/>
DeForest, better known as Larry<lb/>
"Bud" Meiman (or maybe the "1-<lb/>
800-COLLECT" guv) has made<lb/>
appearances for years on the 1 )avid<lb/>
l.etterman Show as well as nu-<lb/>
merous television commercials.<lb/>
Playing on that tame, he figured<lb/>
he could make an easy buck and<lb/>
has w ritten Cheap Adint e: At tuide<lb/>
To hoivost I uxury. A perfect gift<lb/>
tor both the cheap and severely<lb/>
gullible people of this country<lb/>
When I sav gullible, I refer to<lb/>
the half-wits who might actually<lb/>
believe that this guv really has<lb/>
written a book bv himself. It savs<lb/>
that it was w ritten bv DeForest on<lb/>
the cover, but a look inside reveals<lb/>
sev eral other names listed as writ-<lb/>
ers In ,i wav, 1 sort ot feel sorry for<lb/>
thi- uuv I le- the cute little organ<lb/>
grinder monkev you see on the<lb/>
corner used as a plo to get money<lb/>
from people, thev put costumes<lb/>
on him, make him run around New<lb/>
, ork making an ass out ot himself,<lb/>
and prop him up tor a tew pic-<lb/>
tures Then some people write a<lb/>
book and use his face to sell it.<lb/>
I he book itselt, putting aside a<lb/>
few corny and out of date jokes, is<lb/>
really not bad. Calvert covers just<lb/>
about all aspects of living and re-<lb/>
veals his secrets on how to live a<lb/>
long happy lite as a con artist and<lb/>
professional tightwad. From get-<lb/>
ting rich quickly to cheap travel<lb/>
tips, this book has it all Cleverly<lb/>
laid out, Cheap Advice has a very<lb/>
entertaining style to it. Fven though<lb/>
the book may be less than stimu-<lb/>
lating, you still kind of want to<lb/>
read it anyway. It even includes a<lb/>
"flip-it cartoon" of DeForest; when<lb/>
you tlip the book's pages quickly,<lb/>
he laughs at you (funny stuff)<lb/>
Cheap Advice is not a practical<lb/>
book for tips on how to save money.<lb/>
It was meant to be a joke (or at least<lb/>
I hope so). Mv favorite part of the<lb/>
guide was Cal's Cheap Tips for<lb/>
Saving Money. Tip number 1: Steal<lb/>
everything, mooch off friends, and<lb/>
panhandle between classes. No<lb/>
kidding, it's just as simple as that<lb/>
Although it may be funny, hardly<lb/>
any of the stuff in this book can be<lb/>
used in real lite. However it is very<lb/>
See CHEAP page 11<lb/>
COMING<lb/>
AMCTIONS<lb/>
Couins; toon for your<lb/>
edification and amusement:<lb/>
Thursday, fan. 12<lb/>
Blue Miracle<lb/>
at the Attic<lb/>
td Wood<lb/>
at Hendrix Theatre<lb/>
(comedy-drama)<lb/>
8 p.m.<lb/>
FREE!<lb/>
Friday, fan. 13<lb/>
Bad Luck<lb/>
Everywhere<lb/>
(superstition)<lb/>
Sex Police<lb/>
at the Attic<lb/>
(rocky'jazzfunk)<lb/>
All Tore Up<lb/>
and After Forever<lb/>
at O' Rock's<lb/>
Forever Plaid<lb/>
at Wright Auditorium<lb/>
(doo-wop musical)<lb/>
Ed Wood<lb/>
at Hendrix Theatre<lb/>
(comedy-drama)<lb/>
8 p.m.<lb/>
FREE!<lb/>
Saturday, Jan. 14<lb/>
Priapism<lb/>
and Centaur<lb/>
at O'Rock's<lb/>
(heavy metal)<lb/>
Breakfast Club<lb/>
at the Attic<lb/>
(80s retro)<lb/>
Ed Wood<lb/>
at Hendrix Theatre<lb/>
(comedy-drama)<lb/>
8 p.m.<lb/>
FREE!<lb/>
Ray Maas<lb/>
at Carolina East Mall<lb/>
(Elvis illusionist)<lb/>
11 a.m. 2p.m. 7 p.m.<lb/>
Sunday, fan. 15<lb/>
One Step Beyond<lb/>
at the Attic<lb/>
Wednesday, Jan. 18<lb/>
Noon Day Tunes:<lb/>
Lightnin' Wells<lb/>
at Wright Soda Shop<lb/>
(blues)<lb/>
1:30 p.m.<lb/>
Pinkard and Bowden<lb/>
at the Attic<lb/>
(musical comedy)<lb/>
if<lb/>
?<lb/>
CD Reviews<lb/>
CD Reviews<lb/>
CD Reviews<lb/>
m<lb/>
Everclear<lb/>
World of Noise<lb/>
Three Sbrrs out of ten<lb/>
Prioi to putting thisDintomy<lb/>
stereo and mashing "play" 1 was<lb/>
thinking to myself that at last, te<lb/>
tiallv, the Seattle musk s. ene had<lb/>
buried its ugly head "Progressh e<lb/>
and alternative have become<lb/>
household words ,js iir- notions<lb/>
ia contemporai v ommen ial i<lb/>
sic I henew Pearljam 11 ?<lb/>
was released earlier last mtmth into<lb/>
shoppie. i rtss th<lb/>
and the new rnusii 1 that<lb/>
area had tmallv be<lb/>
the fly swattei ot,<lb/>
liation F.ntei Fvei ?<lb/>
man band from Portland,Oregon,<lb/>
with their debut release World of<lb/>
Noise 1 his band must have been<lb/>
freeze dried or doing hard time<lb/>
tor the last tew vears; this type of<lb/>
music has a I readv been exploited<lb/>
It it sounds like thev re trying to<lb/>
ride a w av e ot the musical splash<lb/>
Nirvana made sev eral years ago<lb/>
- ex.u tlv how I see it.<lb/>
I heir music sounds exactly as<lb/>
?ie implies NOIS1 c lu k<lb/>
i on the front cover<lb/>
hi idea In covering<lb/>
I ver? tear s musk is a<lb/>
ire ot the energy ot lu ifk<lb/>
I musu w ith hard Mink<lb/>
rock. The CD starts off strong<lb/>
with the opening track, "lour<lb/>
Genius f lands, but the tempo<lb/>
slows and the rest ot the songs<lb/>
all start sounding the same It<lb/>
on decide to pick up this disc<lb/>
don't turn the volume up too<lb/>
loud be. use all the amplifier<lb/>
feedback w ill make y ou deaf<lb/>
The release is a promising<lb/>
first one tor the trio ot musi-<lb/>
. tans, however it is hardlv<lb/>
worth themoncv you d pa)<lb/>
it A strong sound pre<lb/>
rhv thm guitai and sen<lb/>
See EVERCLEAR<lb/>
<pb facs="00058515_0010"/><lb/>
1 0 The East Carolinian<lb/>
CD Reviews<lb/>
January 12, 1995<lb/>
Jack Tempchin<lb/>
After the Rain<lb/>
Two out of ten stars<lb/>
Jack Tempchin never has been a<lb/>
household name, despite his long<lb/>
list of credentials in the music in-<lb/>
dustry. A three-decade veteran of<lb/>
the business, Tempchin has written<lb/>
aplethora of songs witha long list of<lb/>
reputable artists, most notably a<lb/>
little-known country-rock outfit<lb/>
named "the Eagles Tempchin<lb/>
helped pen some of the group's<lb/>
earliest hits and garnered a reputa-<lb/>
tion as a sought-after collaborator<lb/>
and producer.<lb/>
CD Reviews<lb/>
However, during the 1980s<lb/>
Tempchin began to wallow in the<lb/>
mire of Eagle Glenn Frey's hit pa-<lb/>
rade, helping the then-solo artist to<lb/>
produce such cheddar offerings as<lb/>
"The One That You Love" and<lb/>
"Smuggler's Blues<lb/>
With the release of After the Rain,<lb/>
Tempchin had an opportunity to<lb/>
thunder back into the teeth of the<lb/>
music industry with material pub-<lb/>
lished under his own name!<lb/>
Unfortunately for Tempchin, he<lb/>
got chewed up and spit out.<lb/>
A lot of phrases and descriptions<lb/>
could be used to draw a picture of<lb/>
After the Rain, but put simply, it just<lb/>
isn't very good. The song writing on<lb/>
the album is simple, which isn't an<lb/>
CD Reviews<lb/>
inherently bad thing, but it results in<lb/>
a cliche-a-thon which by the third<lb/>
song had this listener fighting waves<lb/>
of nausea.<lb/>
The opening song, "Blue<lb/>
Flame for example, is a wretched<lb/>
excuse for a piece of music.<lb/>
But it gets worse. Take this elo-<lb/>
quentchorusfrom"Slow Dancing<lb/>
the album's fifth trackAnd we're<lb/>
slow dancing, swaying to the music <lb/>
Slow dancing, just me and my girl<lb/>
(Urp!) Slow dancing, swaying to<lb/>
the music No one else on the whole<lb/>
wide world (OhGod, I'mgonna lose<lb/>
it!) In the whole wide world<lb/>
Excuse me while I retch.<lb/>
Perhaps the only redeeming song<lb/>
on the album is the one entitled "I'm<lb/>
CD Reviews<lb/>
Daddy Now an emotional testa-<lb/>
ment to the transfer of responsibility<lb/>
that a man faces when he has a child.<lb/>
This song is by no means a Grammy<lb/>
candidate, but it isn't bad either.<lb/>
Don't get me wrong, I love some<lb/>
of Tempchin's early work; you would<lb/>
be hard-pressed to find a bigger<lb/>
Eagles fan than I am. And I was<lb/>
initially excited to review this CD,<lb/>
because it featured nearly all the cur-<lb/>
rent Eagles lineup on background<lb/>
vocals and the song writing of Glenn<lb/>
Frey.<lb/>
Instead of being the Westem-rock<lb/>
gem I was hoping for, it serves as<lb/>
evidence that oohs and aahs can't<lb/>
make a record and iat without Don<lb/>
Henley, Frey could consider a job at<lb/>
CD Reviews<lb/>
Frito-Lay.<lb/>
In Tempchin's defense he liasbeen<lb/>
quoted as saying that After tlie Rain<lb/>
was merely an opportunity for a few<lb/>
friends to get together and have fun<lb/>
in the studio. If that is indeed thecase,<lb/>
then there is nothing wrong with this<lb/>
CD Reviews<lb/>
CD at all.<lb/>
But if taken in the context of<lb/>
serious artists producing serious<lb/>
work, it falls miserably short.<lb/>
?Warren<lb/>
Sumner<lb/>
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Wednesday<lb/>
Thursday<lb/>
Monday<lb/>
January 16<lb/>
January 17<lb/>
January 18<lb/>
January 19<lb/>
January 23<lb/>
7:00 p.m.<lb/>
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have been broken and the love<lb/>
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<pb facs="00058515_0011"/><lb/>
-?<lb/>
January 12. 1995<lb/>
The East Carolinian 1<lb/>
JANFEB<lb/>
1995<lb/>
ATTC<lb/>
JANFEB<lb/>
1995<lb/>
TUESDAYS<lb/>
70'S80'S<lb/>
DANCE NIGHT<lb/>
WSFL THURSDAY<lb/>
COLLEGE NITE<lb/>
99 Hiballs<lb/>
$1.00 Bottle Beer 1 99 Bottle Beer<lb/>
LadiesFREEtiMlpm I 1 9932oz.Draft<lb/>
Only $2.00 Adia for Members J FREE PIZZA<lb/>
752-7303<lb/>
EVERCLEAR<lb/>
from p. 9<lb/>
(definitely not singing) vocals are<lb/>
what World of Noise is all about.<lb/>
The best of the twelve tracks on<lb/>
the disc are certainly the opening<lb/>
one, "Your Genius Hands and,<lb/>
closer to the end, "Invisible But<lb/>
you have to listen to the entire<lb/>
thing to hear them. They should<lb/>
have released a single with just<lb/>
those two songs on it.<lb/>
The sound is definitely Grunge<lb/>
and the style is definitely played<lb/>
out. If you have the money arid<lb/>
want to buy a CD with if, I<lb/>
wouldn't get this one.<lb/>
- Brandon<lb/>
Waddell<lb/>
CHEAP<lb/>
from p. 9<lb/>
interesting to read some of the<lb/>
ideas they did come up with on<lb/>
how to work over someone, much<lb/>
like the way Bugs Bunny used to<lb/>
give Fudd the old switcheroo.<lb/>
Calvert gives ideas on how to<lb/>
turn a situation around so that<lb/>
instead of owing money, the<lb/>
money comes right back into your<lb/>
pocket.<lb/>
Calvert DeForest's Cheap Ad-<lb/>
vice is just that, cheap. Although<lb/>
it at times can be humorous, this<lb/>
book falls short of being a classic.<lb/>
It is filled with stupid pictures,<lb/>
crappy jokes, and an old man<lb/>
who makes a living being<lb/>
laughed at. In a way, DeForest<lb/>
is like a clown and perhaps he<lb/>
isn't so poor after all. I mean,<lb/>
let's face it. He did give me the<lb/>
works; after all, I bought the<lb/>
book. So I suppose I'm the real<lb/>
sucker of this story.<lb/>
TOP TEN<lb/>
from p. 9<lb/>
floors. Then it gets really exciting<lb/>
as a bomb on a bus is set to explode<lb/>
if the bus goes under 50 miles per<lb/>
hour. Speed has made mega-stars<lb/>
of Keanu Reeves and Sandra Bul-<lb/>
lock and deservedly earned a large<lb/>
portion of the summer's box-office<lb/>
revenue. This one is also on video,<lb/>
so rent it if you haven't. I guaran-<lb/>
tee you'll like it.<lb/>
8. Forrest Gump (8)<lb/>
I grudgingly put Forrest Gump<lb/>
on this list, not because I did not<lb/>
enjoy the film (I certainly did), but<lb/>
because of the embrace with which<lb/>
America accepted this film into<lb/>
their hearts. Tom Hanks gives a<lb/>
marvelous performance (though I<lb/>
hope he does not win an Oscar) as<lb/>
the slow-witted but good-hearted<lb/>
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Gump. The film presents the<lb/>
cliches of the last thirty years<lb/>
and views them through the<lb/>
eyes of the main character. This<lb/>
vantage point allows the viewer<lb/>
to accept the Vietnam War,<lb/>
Watergate and the sundry in-<lb/>
sults visited upon misfits with<lb/>
a calm acceptance of the way<lb/>
things are. I worry that Forrest<lb/>
Gump was popular for all the<lb/>
wrong reasons but I still thor-<lb/>
oughly enjoyed the film and<lb/>
thus included it here.<lb/>
9. Bitter Moon (8)<lb/>
Probably my most contro-<lb/>
versial choice for inclusion in<lb/>
this list. One friend sneered<lb/>
outright when I told him I liked<lb/>
Bitter Moon. The story occurs<lb/>
in flashback as told to an un-<lb/>
suspecting young man (Hugh<lb/>
Grant) by a bitter writer (the<lb/>
masterfully overacting Peter<lb/>
Coyote). The film is vintage<lb/>
Roman Polanski, filled with<lb/>
kinky sex and twisted emo-<lb/>
tions. The film packs a wallop<lb/>
but the theme is disagreeable.<lb/>
10. Little Women (8)<lb/>
I was among a small chorus<lb/>
who loved the 1933 version of<lb/>
Little Women so much that a<lb/>
remake seemed appalling. I<lb/>
was pleasantly surprised to<lb/>
be proven misguided in my<lb/>
fears. The new version is<lb/>
splendid. The leads are all<lb/>
superb, the scenery lovely,<lb/>
and the story as poignant as<lb/>
ever. The director, Gillian<lb/>
Armstrong, brings a female<lb/>
sensitivity and sensibility to<lb/>
Louisa May Alcott's timeless<lb/>
story. This film is a great treat<lb/>
for the entire family.<lb/>
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Tell everyone about your Valentine by putting a special<lb/>
Love Lines personal ad in our special Feb. 14 issue.<lb/>
Only $3 for 25 words or less; 100 each for more than 25<lb/>
Pick up a Love Lines form at the newspaper office,<lb/>
the Mendenhall information desk or the Student Stores.<lb/>
Speak out before our Feb. 11 deadline -<lb/>
Lor forever hold your peace.<lb/>
ove<lb/>
??<lb/>
? i<lb/>
? - -<lb/>
<pb facs="00058515_0012"/><lb/>
January 12. 1995<lb/>
1 2 The East Carolinian<lb/>
The East Carolinian<lb/>
 Sports<lb/>
VCU whips ECU 69-43<lb/>
Brian Paiz<lb/>
Staff Writer<lb/>
The Lady Pirate (3-6)<lb/>
hoopsters ran into a small prob-<lb/>
lem Tuesday night in Williams<lb/>
Arena. Make that a big prob-<lb/>
lem, of the "foreign nature The<lb/>
Lady Rams (11-2) of Virginia<lb/>
Commonwealth used their mas-<lb/>
sive height advantage and Eu-<lb/>
ropean stars to dominate ECU<lb/>
69-43.<lb/>
VCU center Svetlan "Spanky"<lb/>
Pankratova collected 19 points,<lb/>
8 rebounds and 4 blocked shots<lb/>
for the Lady Rams, leading her<lb/>
team on an early 19-2 run, from<lb/>
which they never looked back.<lb/>
The 6-foot-7 senior from St. Pe-<lb/>
tersburg, Russia was dominant<lb/>
in the paint and used her height<lb/>
advantage to help put away the<lb/>
Lady Pirates early.<lb/>
6-foot-4 senior Niamh Darcy<lb/>
added 17 points and 9 rebounds,<lb/>
while freshman guard Gabrielle<lb/>
Kylstedt scored 12 points, dished<lb/>
out 12 assists and had eight re-<lb/>
bounds for VCU. Darcy, who<lb/>
hails from Ireland, and Kylstedt,<lb/>
who calls Sweden home, made it<lb/>
a rough night for the ECU Lady<lb/>
Pirates as they also did for re-<lb/>
porters trying to spell and pro-<lb/>
nounce their names.<lb/>
Tomekia "Fruky" Blackmon<lb/>
led the Lady Pirates with 10 points<lb/>
in 22 minutes of play in her first<lb/>
game back from injury. Junior<lb/>
point guard Danielle<lb/>
Charlesworth scored seven points,<lb/>
while freshman Jennifer Westfort<lb/>
gave an impressive all-around<lb/>
performance, adding six points.<lb/>
"Our height advantage was<lb/>
definitely the main difference in<lb/>
tonights game Walvius said. "I<lb/>
was really impressed with<lb/>
Tomekia Blackmon and Danielle<lb/>
Charlesworth. They are both go-<lb/>
ing to be great players<lb/>
Coach Walvius was also im-<lb/>
pressed with the Lady Pirates as a<lb/>
team.<lb/>
"People better not overlook<lb/>
them she said. "We have plyed<lb/>
most of the teams in the Colonial,<lb/>
and ECU can hold their own with<lb/>
any of them<lb/>
The Lady Rams shot 56 percent<lb/>
from the floor, while ECU<lb/>
struggled all night, shooting just<lb/>
28 percent. VCU committed 16<lb/>
turnovers to ECU's 26.<lb/>
ECU starts their Colonial<lb/>
Athletic Association champion-<lb/>
ship run on Friday night, travel-<lb/>
ing to Harrisonburg, VA to face<lb/>
James Madison.<lb/>
'Super Ho's" win<lb/>
1st ECU Flag Football team to win<lb/>
playoff game at nationals<lb/>
Photo Courtesy of ECU SID<lb/>
Danielle Charlesworth has played big in her second<lb/>
year at ECU after transferring from U. of Richmond.<lb/>
(RS) ? The Super Ho's! men's<lb/>
flag football team and four officials<lb/>
from East Carolina University par-<lb/>
ticipated in the National Invitational<lb/>
Flag Football Championship in New<lb/>
Orleans, Louisiana form December<lb/>
28-31, 1994. The Super Ho's! quali-<lb/>
fied for the playoff bracket for the<lb/>
second consecutive year by winning<lb/>
their pool with victories over the<lb/>
University of South Alabama and<lb/>
Lee College (TX). They also became<lb/>
the first ECU team since 1987 to win<lb/>
a playoff game by defeating the Uni-<lb/>
versity of West Florida in the round<lb/>
of 32. Members of the Super Ho's!<lb/>
who participated included David<lb/>
Campbell, Brandon Taylor, Doug<lb/>
Talbert, Steve Marshburn, Daniel<lb/>
Finn, Scott Harrelson, Kevin<lb/>
Hollingsworth, Rodney Young,<lb/>
Jerrod Jenkins, and Chris Pressley.<lb/>
This marked the third time in the<lb/>
past four years that the Super Ho's!<lb/>
had qualified for this event. The<lb/>
NIFFC featured a record-total of 203<lb/>
teams participating in the Men's<lb/>
Collegiate, Women's Collegiate, Co-<lb/>
Rec Collegiate and Men's Open di-<lb/>
visions. The University of South<lb/>
Florida won the men's collegiate<lb/>
while the University of Florida cap-<lb/>
tured the women's collegiate and<lb/>
Louisiana State University-Baton<lb/>
Rouge won the co-rec collegiate.<lb/>
Manzella's All-Stars won the sec-<lb/>
ond Open championship.<lb/>
One hundred ten officials from<lb/>
46 schools were selected to work<lb/>
the tourney either through their<lb/>
performance on campus or in one<lb/>
of a number of state and regional<lb/>
tournaments throughout the na-<lb/>
tion. Representing ECU were<lb/>
Lynda McCormick (second year),<lb/>
George Hollen (second year),<lb/>
Kevin Hinnant, and Geouf Ander-<lb/>
son. McCormick was honored be<lb/>
her automatic invitation to return<lb/>
to next year's tourney. This year<lb/>
marks the first time since 1989 that<lb/>
ECU has not had at least one All-<lb/>
A.nerican official in the tourney.<lb/>
Current official Brian Weingartz<lb/>
was selected for this honor in 1992<lb/>
but did not officiate at the Nation-<lb/>
als this year. Congratulations to<lb/>
the Super Ho's! and the ECU offi-<lb/>
cials for their participation and<lb/>
achievements.<lb/>
Tribe scalps Pirate hoopsters 80-73<lb/>
Baseball team finds new assistant coach in former player<lb/>
Robinson<lb/>
plays with<lb/>
intensity<lb/>
and desire<lb/>
Brad Oldham<lb/>
Staff Writer<lb/>
Intensity. It's what drives se-<lb/>
nior forward Chuckie Robinson<lb/>
on the basketball court. It's what<lb/>
makes him the most physical<lb/>
player on this ECU basketball<lb/>
team this season, and it's what<lb/>
motivates his teammates around<lb/>
him.<lb/>
Last year, Robinson emerged<lb/>
into one of the most popular play-<lb/>
ers on the team at Minges Coli-<lb/>
seum. With his fist pumping in<lb/>
the air and his enthusiastic style<lb/>
of play, he brought the crowd to<lb/>
their feet numerous times last<lb/>
season ? and that was when he<lb/>
was coming off of the bench ev-<lb/>
ery game. This season, Robinson<lb/>
has found a spot in the starting<lb/>
lineup for Coach Payne, and the<lb/>
thrills will only increase.<lb/>
Robinson played two seasons<lb/>
at Howard County College be-<lb/>
fore entering ECU last year, and<lb/>
Division I basketball wasn't ex-<lb/>
actly what he expected it to be.<lb/>
"I thought that JUCO and Di-<lb/>
vision I were going to be similar,<lb/>
but it was very different<lb/>
Robinson said. "In Division I ball<lb/>
you have to come out prepared to<lb/>
play every game. It's a different<lb/>
style<lb/>
Robinson helped the Pirates<lb/>
achieve their best record in 14<lb/>
seasons, buthe and his teammates<lb/>
weren't exactly thrilled with last<lb/>
year's results.<lb/>
"We're never satisfied he<lb/>
said. "We always want to improve<lb/>
each and every season. We want<lb/>
more this year. Especially for me<lb/>
and Anton (Gill) ? we want to go<lb/>
See ROBINSON page 13<lb/>
(SID) ? Kurt Small scored 15<lb/>
points in- the second half as Will-<lb/>
iam &amp; Mary opened its CAA<lb/>
schedule with an 80-73 over East<lb/>
Carolina. Small finished with 23<lb/>
points to lead four W &amp; M players<lb/>
in double figures. The win was the<lb/>
second in a row for the Tribe after<lb/>
starting the season 0-7.<lb/>
After falling behind 48-41 early<lb/>
in the second half, W &amp; M came<lb/>
back to tie the score at 54 and 59<lb/>
before finally taking a 61-60 lead<lb/>
on two Matt Verkev free throws<lb/>
with 8:31 remaining. David Cox,<lb/>
Shaka Arnold, and Verkey all<lb/>
scored lay-ups in the next two<lb/>
minutes to give the Tribe a 67-62<lb/>
lead. W &amp; M never relinquished<lb/>
the lead and hit 8-of-l 1 free throws<lb/>
in the final four minutes.<lb/>
W &amp; M, shooting only 63 from<lb/>
the free throw line this season,<lb/>
knocked down 19 of 23 (83) from<lb/>
the charity stripe.<lb/>
W &amp; M led by as many as six<lb/>
points in the first half before ECU<lb/>
took a 38-37 halfHme lead. Tim<lb/>
Basham had 13 of his 16 points,<lb/>
including three treys, in the first<lb/>
half for East Caolina.<lb/>
Matt Verkey broke out of a scor-<lb/>
ing slump with 14 points off the<lb/>
bench for W &amp; M. David cox added<lb/>
14 points and four assists. Carl<lb/>
Parker contributed 13 points,<lb/>
seven boards, and three blocks.<lb/>
Arnold had a strong performance<lb/>
off the bench with a career-high<lb/>
nine points and five rebounds, all<lb/>
on the offensive end.<lb/>
Anton Gill hd the Pirates with<lb/>
21 points and 16 rebounds and<lb/>
tied and William &amp; Mary Hall<lb/>
record with 26 field goal attempts.<lb/>
Gill also holds the W &amp; M Hall<lb/>
record for points with 40, set last<lb/>
year. Chuckie Robinson scored 16<lb/>
for ECU and Skipp Schaefbauer<lb/>
added 14 before fouling out.<lb/>
"Verkev got back into his game<lb/>
tonight said W&amp;M head coach<lb/>
Charlie Woolum. "If we shoot and<lb/>
play as well as I think we can, we<lb/>
can be a very representative team<lb/>
"Physically we were not as ag-<lb/>
gressive as we need to be on the<lb/>
defensive end on and off the glass<lb/>
said ECU coach Eddie Payne. "The<lb/>
fundmental problem we had to-<lb/>
night was that we did not have any<lb/>
sustained defensive intensity<lb/>
East Carolina (7-4,0-1) will face<lb/>
Illinois State at home Wednesday<lb/>
in non-conference action.<lb/>
W&amp;M (2-7, 1-0) returnes to the<lb/>
floor Wednesday night at North<lb/>
Carolina State.<lb/>
Former ECU player, Charlie<lb/>
Smith has been named assistant<lb/>
baseball coach at East Carolina,<lb/>
replacing Roger Williams, it was<lb/>
announced Tuesday, by ECU head<lb/>
baseball coach Gary Overton.<lb/>
"Coach Smith brings a wealth<lb/>
of experience to our program hav-<lb/>
ing been in our system during his<lb/>
tenure as a player and as a gradu-<lb/>
ate assistant said Overton. "He is<lb/>
and excellent addiditon to our pro-<lb/>
gram<lb/>
Smith comes to Greenville from<lb/>
Havelock High School, where he<lb/>
served as head baseball coach for<lb/>
10 seasons. Under his guidance,<lb/>
the Rams recorded a 127-92 record,<lb/>
and seven winning seasons. Last<lb/>
year, Havelock registered a 12-9<lb/>
and a trip to the state play-offs.<lb/>
Smith guided the Rams to the<lb/>
Coastal 3A Conference Champi-<lb/>
onship with a 19-6 mark in the<lb/>
1990 season. He takes over for<lb/>
Williams, who left ECU for a simi-<lb/>
lar position at the University of<lb/>
North Carolina in October.<lb/>
"It has always been a dream of<lb/>
mine to get back to the collegiate<lb/>
level said Smith, who will as-<lb/>
sume the duties of handling a<lb/>
youthful pitching staff. "I'm<lb/>
thrilled about being back at East<lb/>
Carolina. I'm very fortunate to<lb/>
have the opportunity to return to<lb/>
my alma mater and coach at this<lb/>
level<lb/>
The 1983 graduate of East Caro-<lb/>
lina lettered three-years in base-<lb/>
ball under head coach Hal Baird,<lb/>
as well as then assistant coach<lb/>
Overton. Smith posted a 6-7 record<lb/>
with a 3.66 ERA in his career as a<lb/>
Pirate. In 1982 he garnered EC AC<lb/>
Player-of-the-Week accolades for<lb/>
pi tching a no-hitter against Atlan-<lb/>
tic Christiam.<lb/>
Smith earned a bachelor's of<lb/>
science in physical education in<lb/>
1983, and later earned a masters in<lb/>
physical education in 1984. He is<lb/>
married to the former Jody White.<lb/>
The couple has two children. Jena<lb/>
Delaine (7) and Charles Jr. (5).<lb/>
Photo Courtesy of ECU SID<lb/>
Senior Anton Gill, shown here against East Tennessee Sate,<lb/>
has been a key member of Eddie Payne's ECU basketball team<lb/>
Basham<lb/>
Photo courtesy of ECU SID<lb/>
Drew Goettman<lb/>
Staff Writer<lb/>
Youth does not always equate<lb/>
with inexperience, especially<lb/>
when you look at the Pirate start-<lb/>
ing small forward Tim Basham.<lb/>
The 6-foot-5 sophomore from<lb/>
Roanoke, Virginia represented<lb/>
ECU well on last year's CAA All-<lb/>
Rcokie team, having played in<lb/>
every Pirate game during the 1993-<lb/>
94 season. His average that year<lb/>
as a freshman was 6.4 points and<lb/>
3.3 rebounds, managing to sink at<lb/>
least one three-point field goal in<lb/>
22 games.<lb/>
ECU head basketball coach<lb/>
Eddie Payne knew that Basham<lb/>
was special by the high school for<lb/>
which Basham played his senior<lb/>
season.<lb/>
"Tim played in a very presti-<lb/>
gious and successful program, St.<lb/>
John's Prospect Hall Frederick,<lb/>
Maryland Payne said. "Stu<lb/>
Vedder is a very respected coach,<lb/>
and thev'vehad a lot of good play-<lb/>
ers: Curtis Staples, George Lynch<lb/>
Tim's cousin, a former UNC star<lb/>
who currently plays for the L.A.<lb/>
Lakers, Randolph<lb/>
Childressthey've had just a run<lb/>
of excellent players over the<lb/>
years<lb/>
"If you go all<lb/>
out in practice,<lb/>
it'll carry over<lb/>
into the game<lb/>
- ECU forward<lb/>
Tim Basham<lb/>
Basham led the team in re-<lb/>
bounds (9.4 average) to go with a<lb/>
10.2-point scoring average and 58<lb/>
percent shooting accuracy from<lb/>
the floor That year, the Vikings<lb/>
were 23-2, finishing eighth in the<lb/>
final polls of USA TODAY and<lb/>
ESPN's Scholastic Sports America.<lb/>
"Tim was one of those guys<lb/>
that didn't stand out in that pro-<lb/>
gram Payne explained. "He w?<lb/>
very solid, very fundamental, and<lb/>
did things well, and did 'em right.<lb/>
We were looking for ? and con-<lb/>
tinuing to look for ? players who<lb/>
came out of good programs that<lb/>
knew something about winning.<lb/>
Ones that knew how to do the<lb/>
little things, the dirty work' that<lb/>
needs to be done<lb/>
"Coach Vedder's program is<lb/>
similar to a college program, and<lb/>
was much similar to coach Payne's<lb/>
program, so I was able to catch on<lb/>
to it real quick Basham added.<lb/>
"He adapted, as did<lb/>
Schaefbauer last year as a fresh-<lb/>
man, better than most freshmen,<lb/>
and it was a reflection of the pro-<lb/>
grams they came out of Payne<lb/>
aid. It's also a reflection that<lb/>
physically, they were more ready<lb/>
toplay;thatpartofthegamedidn't<lb/>
overwhelm them, like it does a<lb/>
lot of freshmen<lb/>
During his freshman year at<lb/>
ECU, Basham was not expect-<lb/>
ing to play as much as he did.<lb/>
"I thought I would just come<lb/>
in and contribute,because I had<lb/>
a senior (Curly Young) ahead<lb/>
of me Basham said, "so I just<lb/>
thought I would help the team<lb/>
out in ways that they needed<lb/>
it<lb/>
By the end of his freshman<lb/>
season, Basham had started in<lb/>
four games, including the last<lb/>
three of the season. In the four<lb/>
games, he scored in double-<lb/>
figures.<lb/>
If you go all out in practice,<lb/>
it'll carrv over into the game,<lb/>
and Coach Payne really liked<lb/>
that in mo Basham said.<lb/>
That hustle earned Basham<lb/>
the starting position at small<lb/>
See PIRATE page 15<lb/>
<pb facs="00058515_0013"/><lb/>
 A<lb/>
r<lb/>
The hast Carolinianl3<lb/>
Januan 12. 1995<lb/>
Westhead's Pats off and running<lb/>
Brad Oldham<lb/>
Staff Writer<lb/>
Westhead<lb/>
position of<lb/>
When Paul<lb/>
stepped into thi<lb/>
head basketball coach at George<lb/>
Mason University, everybody<lb/>
throughout theCAAconference<lb/>
waited in anticipation to see<lb/>
what was going to happen.<lb/>
The high octane, run-and-<lb/>
gun style of offense that<lb/>
Vethead was famous for<lb/>
enstilling in LA. with the Lak-<lb/>
ers and at Loyola-Mary mount<lb/>
wa welcomed with open arms<lb/>
in Fairfax, Virginia, and it wasn't<lb/>
long before "Paul-Ball" became<lb/>
a part of CAA conference play.<lb/>
The results however, revealed<lb/>
to Westhead that his offense was<lb/>
still tar from achieving success.<lb/>
The Patriots ended up 10-17 on<lb/>
the season, 5-9 in conference<lb/>
play, and tied tor sixth place in<lb/>
the conference.<lb/>
One thing that Westhead did<lb/>
do last year was put points on<lb/>
the board. Mason ranked 10th in<lb/>
the nation in scoring with 88.3<lb/>
points per game. The Patriots<lb/>
had five players who averaged<lb/>
at least 11 points per game, in-<lb/>
cluding guard Donald Ross, who<lb/>
as a junior last season attempted<lb/>
more three-pointers than any<lb/>
other player in the CAA. Ross<lb/>
averaged 17.1 points per game<lb/>
last season, and was sixth in the<lb/>
nation in three-pointers made<lb/>
with 3.7 per game.<lb/>
Another player that will have<lb/>
to carry a majority of the weight<lb/>
as tar as "Paul-Ball" goes is<lb/>
sophomore point guard Curtis<lb/>
McCants. He won the CAA<lb/>
Rookie of the Year award last<lb/>
season, averaging 14.6 points per<lb/>
game, along with 124 assists. He<lb/>
is currently averaging 16.9 points<lb/>
per game tor the Patriots, along<lb/>
with a 9.7 assists.<lb/>
The forward positions will be<lb/>
filled by junior Kenwan Alford<lb/>
and senior Mark McGlone.<lb/>
Alford, a n-foot-h junior from<lb/>
Hopkins, S.C averaged 114<lb/>
points per game last season,<lb/>
along with seven rebounds.<lb/>
McGlone will be looked upon to<lb/>
pull in rebounds from the<lb/>
"shoot em' up" guards on the<lb/>
team.<lb/>
Westhead will likely run a<lb/>
three forward set-up this sea<lb/>
son instead ot playing a true<lb/>
center, which the Patriots lack<lb/>
anyway. Six new (aces enter<lb/>
the program this season, and t<lb/>
many could see playing time '<lb/>
See CAA page 14<lb/>
ROBINSON from p 12<lb/>
out in st le. We u ant a winning I ast season Robinson was sec-<lb/>
season We want to win theCAA ond on the team ,n rebounds with<lb/>
and then we want to go to the an average of 5.6 a game. More<lb/>
NCAA tournament Lmportanuy.hedevetoped intothe<lb/>
dAe dedWoM m Q7o?m<lb/>
a?t w ?? y.fi<lb/>
powerhouse player that was<lb/>
needed on the court for the Pirates<lb/>
last year. Coming into this year,<lb/>
the task of being the physical pres-<lb/>
ence that he is will be Robinson's<lb/>
biggest role on this team. It's a role<lb/>
Robinson can deal with.<lb/>
"1 feel pretty good with that<lb/>
role, because that's just me<lb/>
Robinson said. "1 like to have tun<lb/>
out there and 1'ma physical player<lb/>
They look to me to give them a lift<lb/>
of emotion, and that's what I do<lb/>
Not only does it bring his team-<lb/>
mates a lift, but Robinson's emo-<lb/>
tions frequently carried the home<lb/>
crowds at ECU last year, another<lb/>
weight that he is more than willing<lb/>
to carry.<lb/>
"The crowd Robinson said,<lb/>
with a smile that stretched from<lb/>
one end o his face to the other, "I<lb/>
TmHUWNlYWHlCM.Hn'<lb/>
IF YOU MISS OR MISSED<lb/>
THE '50S AND 60S<lb/>
DON'T MISS THIS<lb/>
BROADWAY COMEDY HIT<lb/>
WO.<lb/>
7 - r'?' rium<lb/>
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FLEECE THERMAL WARM-UPS ? DAN<lb/>
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? SPLIT SOLE BALLET &amp; JAZZ ? CAPEZI<lb/>
. NEW ITEMS ARRIVING DAILY<lb/>
At Carre<lb/>
fax eMty. daticu -<lb/>
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1-800-ECU-ARTS OR 919-328-4788 ?<lb/>
TDD 919-328-4736 ?"<lb/>
with this coupon.<lb/>
Expires 12195<lb/>
love the crowd. I like to get them<lb/>
into the game, and I just feed off<lb/>
the crowd. It's what gets the team<lb/>
excited, and that's what gets the<lb/>
fans excited<lb/>
His effect rubs off on his team-<lb/>
mates not only when Robinson is<lb/>
celebrating a thundering dunk or<lb/>
a blocked shot, but also when his<lb/>
younger teammates need a word<lb/>
of encouragement from an older<lb/>
teammate.<lb/>
' I tell them that I'm never going<lb/>
to let them down, and they believe<lb/>
me he said. "I'm playing hard<lb/>
and giving 110 percent, and it rubs<lb/>
off on them. They play 110 percent<lb/>
and have that extra confidence to<lb/>
carrv them into a game<lb/>
The taskof banging around with<lb/>
the big bovs of the CAA will be no<lb/>
small task for the likes of ECU<lb/>
plavers such as Robinson and Gill.<lb/>
With physical players such as<lb/>
ODU's Odell Hodge and<lb/>
American's Tim Fudd returning<lb/>
this season, Robinson feels that he<lb/>
and Gill are up tor the challenge.<lb/>
"Anton is one of the better plav-<lb/>
ers in the conference " he said. "We<lb/>
compliment each other very well.<lb/>
He can take vou inside or outside.<lb/>
Plaving with him makes my level<lb/>
go up a notch too<lb/>
One player that Robinson looks<lb/>
up to is Phoenix Suns' forward<lb/>
Charles Barklev. The comparisons<lb/>
of both players are obvious. A<lb/>
blend of raw emotion and physical<lb/>
play, spiced with the crowd pleas-<lb/>
ing capabilities of an entertainer, j<lb/>
the two plavers have a way of ,<lb/>
being noticed on the floor. ,<lb/>
"We show a lot of emotion<lb/>
Robinson said "Hedoesn't like<lb/>
to lose and 1 don't like to lose, so<lb/>
we go m there and give 110<lb/>
percent, and say whatever is on <lb/>
our mind. We're not scared to ,<lb/>
hold back c1<lb/>
While Robinson looks up to (1<lb/>
Barklev as a player, he doesn't<lb/>
totallv agree with Barkley's ,<lb/>
opinion of refusing to be a role <lb/>
model to kids.<lb/>
"I think I'm a role model he :<lb/>
said. "I have a daughter and I J<lb/>
want her to look up to me. I<lb/>
believe it gins with the terri- ,<lb/>
torv, because being an athlete ,<lb/>
everybody looks upon vou to <lb/>
be special and do the right .<lb/>
tnings. Other people have to i<lb/>
know, too, that we are human -<lb/>
beings and we will make mis- .?<lb/>
takes, so you got to look at it 6<lb/>
both ways. Sometimes I agree <lb/>
with Barklev. and sometimes I,j<lb/>
don't<lb/>
At 6-foot-S, it's no wonder;<lb/>
that even body looks up to a:<lb/>
guy like Robinson. But maybe-<lb/>
it's not his overwhelming size<lb/>
that draws people close to him.<lb/>
From students to teammates<lb/>
from kids and from generally<lb/>
everybody that he is around<lb/>
Chuckie Robinson is looked up ;<lb/>
tobecauseof who he really is. A <lb/>
leader both on and off the floor. ?<lb/>
?<lb/>
PLAYERS CLUB<lb/>
APARTMENTS<lb/>
THE PLACE TO<lb/>
PLAY AT ECU<lb/>
The ECU Student Union Visual Arts Committee Presents<lb/>
ILLUMINA'95<lb/>
January 31-February 23,1995<lb/>
Mendenhall Gallery<lb/>
Call for Entries<lb/>
Friday, January 27,1995<lb/>
1:00-8:00 PM<lb/>
Mendenhall 242<lb/>
$3.00 Fee Per Entry - Limit 3 Entries Per Person<lb/>
' Categories: Painting, Sculpture, Drawing, Ceramics,<lb/>
Textiles, Commercial Art, Foundations, Printmaking, Metals<lb/>
Cash Prizes Totaling $1,050 to be Awarded<lb/>
Reception<lb/>
ThursdayFebruary 16,1995<lb/>
7:00-9:00 PM<lb/>
Mendenhall Gallery<lb/>
Registration Packets Available at<lb/>
Mendenhall Information Desk and Gray Gallery<lb/>
For More Information, Call the Student Union Hotline at 328-6004.<lb/>
Leasing Begins<lb/>
Feb. 6.<lb/>
Wailing List<lb/>
Available.<lb/>
321-7613<lb/>
1526 Charles Blvd.<lb/>
-1 ? ? f A A A AA J3 A<lb/>
91'S M1AS9G MAN9 A<lb/>
MOfltfJt 04 DAJilAAMf!<lb/>
'Ok no- pieaAe it&amp;p- PexMiaati- km? casit taJm aMyrnxme, ??<lb/>
?F?o?W 5T9rawS ro9FLy&amp;-M<lb/>
TO &amp;BX 8?S5W 5W ?8 05f WU'RS'iWya<lb/>
mum RQSCOE<lb/>
(Homegrown Music)<lb/>
mmm FLYING MICE<lb/>
i i<lb/>
u<lb/>
Coming Next Week Tues. 17th Mugnite<lb/>
tJPPLIC:ATIOIV (only1.00 cover)<lb/>
This is going to be a Great show<lb/>
Thur. I 9th Col Bruce Hampton<lb/>
&amp; The fiji Mariner ui Keller William<lb/>
ADV. TIX @ Peasants on sale now.<lb/>
THE ONLY BAR WHERE YOU CAN PLAY TOILET TENNIS<lb/>
rkrkrkrrkrkrkrkrkP<lb/>
A<lb/>
<pb facs="00058515_0014"/><lb/>
January 12, 1995<lb/>
1 4 The East Carolinian<lb/>
CAA<lb/>
from p. 13<lb/>
soton'for coach Westhead.<lb/>
"We did a decent job of im-<lb/>
proving our team Westhead<lb/>
said.<lb/>
?And he literally traveled to<lb/>
the end of the world to do so.<lb/>
Bernard Wanjara hails from<lb/>
Kisumu, Kenya, and is an ath-<lb/>
letic 6-foot-8 player who can<lb/>
play either forward or center.<lb/>
He already has 11 blocked shots<lb/>
on the season.<lb/>
"He's going to be a real as-<lb/>
set to us Westhead said.<lb/>
Another new face arriving to<lb/>
Fairfax this season is 6-foot-6<lb/>
forward Pharoah Davis, from<lb/>
Palmdale, CA.<lb/>
"Someone said to me,<lb/>
'Coach, there's a player in the<lb/>
desert that you need to go see<lb/>
and I said, 'Yes, what's his name<lb/>
and they said 'Pharoah so I<lb/>
went out and saw tlvs young<lb/>
man play, and he's a nice player<lb/>
Guard Nate Langley could<lb/>
end up being one of the best<lb/>
players in the conference, and is<lb/>
currently leading the Patriots in<lb/>
scoring, averaging 17 points per<lb/>
game, along with 3.1 steals.<lb/>
"We'll play our six new play-<lb/>
ers as quickly as I can get them<lb/>
in, but they will be up and run-<lb/>
ning Westhead said.<lb/>
Running. What a concept.<lb/>
And so far, the Patriots love run-<lb/>
ning at home, because they are<lb/>
5-1 at the Patriot Center in<lb/>
Fairfax. The road, however, has<lb/>
not been as successful, as GMU<lb/>
stands 0-5 in away games.<lb/>
?i .<lb/>
m<lb/>
<lb/>
ECU Observes Dr. Martin Luther King, Jrs Birthday:<lb/>
A Commitment to Human<lb/>
Rights and World Peace<lb/>
N Monday, January 16<lb/>
7:00 p.m.<lb/>
Tuesday, January 17<lb/>
8:00 p.m.<lb/>
Wednesday, January 18<lb/>
12:00 noon<lb/>
Candlelight March<lb/>
Christenoury Gym to Mendenhall<lb/>
Student Center<lb/>
My Children! My Africa!<lb/>
Hendrix Theatre<lb/>
Dr. Crystal Kuykendall, Author<lb/>
From Rage to Hope: Reclaiming<lb/>
Black and Hispanic Students<lb/>
1028 General Classroom Building<lb/>
For imu'r intiirmaitiin. ptetot ctmtact thftffke '? Min<lb/>
I i;(m- o Equal tpponsniq Program. I28-6BW<lb/>
Studrru -V.i<lb/>
128-6495,<lb/>
Question<lb/>
Knowledg<lb/>
a NEW OEAL<lb/>
J<lb/>
0"<lb/>
JENNIFER CONNELLY ICE CUBE<lb/>
OMAR EPPS MICHAEL RAPAPDRT<lb/>
KRISTY SWANSDN<lb/>
HENCE FtSHBURNE<lb/>
"SSMflf CLARK<lb/>
nDWIGHT ALONZO<lb/>
JOHN SINGLETON and PAUL HALL<lb/>
WRIIIINANIi I<lb/>
lEClHttd<lb/>
:k un (Pin fjuuNfi i kAx! arj??r<lb/>
? ? kt g i COLUMBIAryi<lb/>
Ry?yaraar. pj.cture.sLJJ<lb/>
At Theat<lb/>
TONIGHT!<lb/>
EVERY THURSDAY<lb/>
BLOCK PfiRTY<lb/>
FREE COVER TILL 9PM<lb/>
Fri &amp; Sat: Welcome Back Students<lb/>
New Drink Specials! Splash &amp; Sharkys<lb/>
Mon Night! Splash<lb/>
Open Mic Night<lb/>
Live acoustic performances<lb/>
Hosted by Travis Proctor<lb/>
The Stage is Yours!<lb/>
Sound system provided<lb/>
Splash<lb/>
Thurs.<lb/>
Scott Mueller<lb/>
Fri.<lb/>
Jack Bowen<lb/>
Sat.<lb/>
Jack Bowen<lb/>
i immK"mmmm?mmv-<lb/>
.<lb/>
<pb facs="00058515_0015"/><lb/>
January 12, 1995<lb/>
The East Carolinian 15<lb/>
aiiiright Property Management<lb/>
I 756-6209 I<lb/>
109-B. E. Arlington Blvd. Greenville<lb/>
Many Locations Near Campus!<lb/>
Cannon Court ? Cedar Court ?<lb/>
English Village ? Park Village ?<lb/>
South Square ? Summer Field ?<lb/>
Shiloh Drive<lb/>
MANYAPARTMENTS AVAILABLE FOR RENT TODAY!<lb/>
PIRATE from p. 12<lb/>
forward this year, and he is al-<lb/>
ready working toward goals for<lb/>
this season.<lb/>
"I want to improve my points<lb/>
from last year, my field-goal per-<lb/>
centage, and three-point percent-<lb/>
age, and assists and all that<lb/>
Basham said, "just improve my<lb/>
whole game<lb/>
H&amp;'Trras<lb/>
WE'RE gLOSFR THAN YOU THINKt<lb/>
fm<lb/>
When asked if he had any hid-<lb/>
den talents which had not fully<lb/>
appeared on the court yet, Basham<lb/>
was quick to answer.<lb/>
"I can show my shooting abil-<lb/>
ity, my passing ability ? some<lb/>
people say I can't dunk, but I<lb/>
canso maybe if I get a<lb/>
breakaway and dunk, then I can<lb/>
show everybody I can do it<lb/>
Basham said.<lb/>
Coach Payne also commented<lb/>
on the differences in Basham's<lb/>
game between his freshman and<lb/>
sophomore years.<lb/>
"His role and how he performs<lb/>
on the court is very similar to<lb/>
last year, but his role in terms of<lb/>
the amount of minutes he plays<lb/>
are greater ? it's a more impor-<lb/>
tant role Payne said. "This year,<lb/>
he's in a position to start and play<lb/>
a lot of minutes<lb/>
"He played 36 minutes against<lb/>
Western Carolina on Dec. 10<lb/>
Payne continued. "I don't know<lb/>
that he's always going to play<lb/>
that many minutes, but we need<lb/>
a real solid production outof him.<lb/>
We need him to be very solid<lb/>
defensively, we need him to be<lb/>
able to take away penetration ?<lb/>
because a lot of the people he<lb/>
plays against are probably a little<lb/>
quicker, like a Louis Roland of<lb/>
James Madison, for example<lb/>
"He might match up with a<lb/>
guy who's a little bigger and taller<lb/>
than him .Corey Stewart at UNC-<lb/>
Wilmington Payne said. "He's<lb/>
a pivotal player in that regard in<lb/>
our defensive scheme, particu-<lb/>
larly man-to-man<lb/>
"Offensively, our team has<lb/>
evolved into more players simi-<lb/>
lar to Tim, in terms of their quick-<lb/>
ness and ability to do things off<lb/>
the dribble. That's not his<lb/>
strength, that's not necessarily<lb/>
our strength as a team ? our<lb/>
strength is playing together, be-<lb/>
ing good screeners, being able to<lb/>
knock down the open shot, being<lb/>
smart passers, making good<lb/>
decisionsthings that Tim<lb/>
demonstrated he did very well<lb/>
last year Payne added.<lb/>
Basham has another two<lb/>
years of Pirate basketball after<lb/>
this one, but already he's look-<lb/>
ing forward with his post-<lb/>
graduate plans.<lb/>
"My main goal is the NBA,<lb/>
or overseas basketball<lb/>
leagues .anything that comes<lb/>
up Basham said. "If that<lb/>
doesn't work out, I'll have my<lb/>
communications major to fall<lb/>
back on. Hopefully, my first<lb/>
personal goal will work out<lb/>
In the mean time, Basham is<lb/>
excited about this season as an<lb/>
opportunity to continue the<lb/>
unexpected growth he's expe-<lb/>
rienced thus far.<lb/>
"We've been waiting for the<lb/>
season to start for the longest<lb/>
time, waiting for the new Wil-<lb/>
liams Arena to open, and<lb/>
everybody's been excited<lb/>
about that Basham said.<lb/>
0"E NIGHT SPECIALS<lb/>
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everyday oftheweek<lb/>
downtown creenville<lb/>
(across from ube)757-1666  <lb/>
buywioieIcetoni buy one dinner, get one ;<lb/>
12 PRICE! ii 12 PRICE! ;<lb/>
? NOT VALID FRI AND SAT. NOT VALID FRI AND SAT. t<lb/>
2oir. ii 'N?S-?KlY <lb/>
rEX7RES 13195 ' BRINC AN AMK<lb/>
VAUDSUN THURS EC<lb/>
-U.<lb/>
1 EXPIRES 1J195 ' BRINC AN AMICO<lb/>
VAUDSUN THUtS EC<lb/>
HENDRIX<lb/>
FILMS<lb/>
All films start at 8:00 PM<lb/>
unless otherwise noted<lb/>
and are FREE to Students,<lb/>
Faculty, and Staff<lb/>
(one guest allowed)<lb/>
with valid ECU ID.<lb/>
o<lb/>
1<lb/>
Thursday, January 12 ? Friday, January 13 ? Saturday, January 14<lb/>
For More Information, Call the Student Union Hotline at 328-6004.<lb/>
SPECIAL<lb/>
RATES<lb/>
?Daily Classes<lb/>
?High &amp; Low Impact<lb/>
?Step Class<lb/>
?Abs Class<lb/>
Start Tanning For<lb/>
Spring Break<lb/>
WMonth<lb/>
Unlimited Special<lb/>
Spring Semester Special<lb/>
sWUtUU Females Only<lb/>
Full Gym Use With Aerobics<lb/>
Free Visit With This Coupon<lb/>
One Per Customer. Expires 3-1-95<lb/>
We Honor Any<lb/>
Competitor's Membership<lb/>
Price Or Coupon<lb/>
M-Th9-9:30<lb/>
F9-8<lb/>
Sat.10-6<lb/>
Sun2-6<lb/>
409 S. Evans Street<lb/>
752-3880<lb/>
?mmi i.iinwMiiii ii if ?iiiiffw?'<lb/>
l jmniiijf.iiiinfflfflw<lb/>
 a 1 ?  II I ?<lb/>
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-MMMHMMMi<lb/>
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<lb/>
z<lb/>
HOW TO KEEP PEOPLE'S<lb/>
HANDS OFF YOUR MONEY.<lb/>
O Carry only enough cash to last the day.<lb/>
Anyone who tries to borrow your last five spot<lb/>
isn't a friend, anyway.<lb/>
O Label your spare-change jar "beetle farm<lb/>
Then, put your beetle farm in a jar labeled<lb/>
"spare change<lb/>
O Mark up every space on checks.<lb/>
Don't leave room for someone to fill in their<lb/>
name and extra zeros.<lb/>
O Keep your wallet in your front pocket.<lb/>
It discourages pickpockets. So does wearing<lb/>
really tight pants.<lb/>
O Put your picture on your credit card.<lb/>
A Citibank Photocard is tough for anyone else<lb/>
to use, unless they look just like you.<lb/>
CITfBANCO<lb/>
cmaaw?<lb/>
WE'RE LOOKING OUT FOR YOU.<lb/>
To apply, call I-800-CITIBANK.<lb/>
<lb/>
@<lb/>
?- ?<lb/>
???.<lb/>
<pb facs="00058515_0017"/>
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