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<p rend="align(centerbold)">[This text is machine generated and may contain errors.]</p>
<pb facs="00058532_0001"/>
w<lb/>
TUEet<lb/>
March 21,1995<lb/>
Vol 69, No. 83<lb/>
The East Carolinian<lb/>
Circulation 12,000<lb/>
East Carolina University<lb/>
Greenville, N C<lb/>
14 pages<lb/>
Board of trustees passes SGA proposals<lb/>
Tambra Zion<lb/>
Assistant News Editor<lb/>
AROUND THE STATE<lb/>
(AP) - A high school football<lb/>
coach was arrested this morning and<lb/>
charged with possessing crack co-<lb/>
caine.<lb/>
Wayne Fletcher, head football<lb/>
coach at East Burke High School in<lb/>
Drexel, for the past 11 years, main-<lb/>
tained his innocence while police<lb/>
searched his car, the Morganton<lb/>
News Herald reported.<lb/>
Fletcher was released a few<lb/>
hours after his arrest on a $5,000<lb/>
bond. His first court appearance was<lb/>
scheduled for Tuesday.<lb/>
(AP) - A small plane crashed<lb/>
in northeastern Randolph County on<lb/>
Saturday, killing at least one person<lb/>
on board, authorities said.<lb/>
The single-engine Piper<lb/>
150, registered out of Greensboro,<lb/>
went down about 4:30 p.m. in a<lb/>
sparsely populated area of pastures<lb/>
and woods off of N.C. 49, according<lb/>
to Capt. Maynard Reid of the<lb/>
Randolph County Sheriff's Depart-<lb/>
ment.<lb/>
AROUND THE<lb/>
COUNTRY<lb/>
ECU'S board of trustees unani-<lb/>
mously voted in favor of SGA's proposed<lb/>
student fee increases last Friday, over the<lb/>
previously recommended administrative<lb/>
proposal, said SGA President Ian<lb/>
Eastman.<lb/>
He said the board of trustees com-<lb/>
mended SGA for their hard work in de-<lb/>
(AP) - People scrambled from<lb/>
their mangled cars and frantically<lb/>
tried to flag down approaching driv-<lb/>
ers as more than 100 cars and trucks<lb/>
crashed in a series of wrecks Mon-<lb/>
day on a foggy bridge over Mobile<lb/>
Bay in Mobile, Alabama.<lb/>
One person was killed, six were<lb/>
critically injured and at least 74 were<lb/>
taken to the hospital.<lb/>
Some three miles of the seven-<lb/>
mile bridge were strewn with black-<lb/>
ened heaps of wreckage, some of<lb/>
them consisting of dozens of cars.<lb/>
(AP) - Metal beams holding up<lb/>
a bank of lights collapsed today at<lb/>
the Olympic Stadium under con-<lb/>
struction downtown. One worker<lb/>
was killed and three others injured.<lb/>
Atlanta Fire Department<lb/>
spokesman Tim Szymanski con-<lb/>
firmed the death. The injured work-<lb/>
ers were trapped briefly, but were<lb/>
rescued and taken to Georgia Bap-<lb/>
tist Hospital, he said.<lb/>
The 50-foot beams that col-<lb/>
lapsed were holding up a bank of<lb/>
lights, said police Maj. D.M. Neery.<lb/>
AROUND THE<lb/>
WORLD<lb/>
(AP) - Passengers on a Tokyo<lb/>
subway fainted, vomited and went<lb/>
into convulsions after a lethal nerve<lb/>
gas spewed from packages planted<lb/>
today on one of the world's busiest<lb/>
subway systems. Six people died in<lb/>
the terrorist attack and 3,227 were<lb/>
treated in hospitals.<lb/>
(AP) - Soldiers in Bebron,<lb/>
West Bank, Israel enforced an<lb/>
around-the-clock curfew that kept all<lb/>
residents off the streets of Hebron<lb/>
today after an attack on a bus killed<lb/>
two Jewish settlers and wounded<lb/>
five.<lb/>
An Israeli military commander<lb/>
said Izzedine al-Qassam, the armed<lb/>
wing of the Muslim militant group<lb/>
Hamas, apparently was responsible<lb/>
for Sunday night's ambush in<lb/>
Hebron. Hamas is a leading oppo-<lb/>
nent of the Israel-PLO peace accord.<lb/>
Pirates<lb/>
on the<lb/>
Street<lb/>
"Do you<lb/>
have<lb/>
Spring<lb/>
Fever?"<lb/>
Stephanie Williams,<lb/>
sophomore<lb/>
"Yes, I want to sit outside<lb/>
all day and get some sun<lb/>
bating the fee increase.<lb/>
He addressed the legislative body<lb/>
during Monday's meeting saying, "I want<lb/>
to give you the praise for that in serving<lb/>
the student body well<lb/>
Time is running out for campus or-<lb/>
ganizations to receive funding from SGA<lb/>
Bryan Weeks, co-chair of the Appropria-<lb/>
tions Committee has made seeral an-<lb/>
nouncements that funding proposals<lb/>
must be submitted before next Monday<lb/>
in order to be considered.<lb/>
Weeks said he is establishing a set<lb/>
of guidelines organizations must follow<lb/>
in order to qualify for appropriations.<lb/>
After some questioa he said the list is a<lb/>
set of views SGA has alvNays followed but<lb/>
which have not previously been written.<lb/>
Eastman said 24-hour study halls<lb/>
for exam week are set to go into effect<lb/>
this semester. In a later interview,<lb/>
Eastman said the original plans are ex-<lb/>
panding.<lb/>
"During exam week, we have 24-<lb/>
hour study halls he said. "We are cur-<lb/>
rently working to be sure that the Wright<lb/>
Place is going to be open as well as 24-<lb/>
hour computer lab hours"<lb/>
Twelve new members have been<lb/>
inducted during the past two weeks and<lb/>
several more are needed. Screenings and<lb/>
Appointments Committee Chair Janet<lb/>
Stubbs said around 10 day representa-<lb/>
tives are needed, as well as representa-<lb/>
tives for Cotten. Fleming, Belk, Green,<lb/>
Jones and Scott halls.<lb/>
More than $4,000 has been appro-<lb/>
priated during the past two weeks.<lb/>
ECU'S Air Force Detachment re-<lb/>
ceived $1,900, most of which was for a<lb/>
computer. The Exercise and Sports Sci-<lb/>
ence Majors club received around $300,<lb/>
and the Panhellenic council received<lb/>
$1035.<lb/>
The Woman's Studies Alliance re-<lb/>
quest went unfunded because SGA does<lb/>
not provide funding for social action<lb/>
groups, said Harry Bray, chair of the<lb/>
Rules and Judiciary Committee.<lb/>
Pi Sigma Alpha, a national political<lb/>
science honor society received $700 in<lb/>
funds during Monday's meeting.<lb/>
Bray made a motion that any orga-<lb/>
nization asking for funding should have<lb/>
a representative present to answer any<lb/>
questions the legislative body might have;<lb/>
the motion passed.<lb/>
A resolution proposing SGA's dis-<lb/>
approval of funds being used to fill aca-<lb/>
demic requirements did not pass. The<lb/>
question of what constitutes personal<lb/>
See SGA page 4<lb/>
Kevin Evans, sophomore<lb/>
"Yes, I do. I enjoy setting<lb/>
on these steps watching<lb/>
pretty girls walk by<lb/>
Meningitis death<lb/>
heightens awareness<lb/>
Tambra Zion<lb/>
Assistant News Editor<lb/>
Wayne Clark, sophomore<lb/>
"Of course, I'm skipping<lb/>
class<lb/>
The East Carolinian does not<lb/>
condone such behavior, nor did<lb/>
we encourage this student to<lb/>
take these actions.<lb/>
Ashley Young, senior<lb/>
"Yes. I've got spring fever<lb/>
because I'm getting ready<lb/>
to graduate<lb/>
The death of a J. H. Rose High<lb/>
School student last week due to spi-<lb/>
nal meningitis shocked many and left<lb/>
students wondering if the young girl's<lb/>
death was only the beginning.<lb/>
Sarah Law died from a form of<lb/>
the virus known as meningococcus,<lb/>
which is rare, said<lb/>
Ester Langley, a<lb/>
nurse at Student<lb/>
Health Services.<lb/>
"For the most<lb/>
part it's extremely<lb/>
rare said Dr. Rob-<lb/>
ert Perry of<lb/>
Greenville's Family<lb/>
Medical Care prac-<lb/>
tice. "And unfortu-<lb/>
nately there's no<lb/>
warning for that<lb/>
type-<lb/>
Student Health Services has yet<lb/>
to see any cases of meningitis this<lb/>
year.<lb/>
"We've had some students come<lb/>
in with questions and concerns Lan-<lb/>
gley said. "We've not had anybody<lb/>
here diagnosed with meningitis that<lb/>
I'm aware of. The type that the stu-<lb/>
dent had, it acts real fast"<lb/>
When it comes to describing, di-<lb/>
agnosing and treating the disease,<lb/>
meningit is is a very complicated is-<lb/>
sue.<lb/>
"It is somewhat<lb/>
contagious, but<lb/>
not like a cold<lb/>
�<lb/>
���M '<lb/>
Perry said there are many types<lb/>
of variants of meningitis.<lb/>
"It breaks down into bacterial,<lb/>
viral and fungal Perry said. "Viral<lb/>
being the most common and benign,<lb/>
bacterial and fungai cause the most<lb/>
permanent types of damage<lb/>
"It's an infectious disease said<lb/>
Dr. Harry Adams with ECU's School<lb/>
of Medicine. "It's not rare, we see all<lb/>
kinds of meningitis and most cases<lb/>
are infectious<lb/>
J o 1 e n e<lb/>
Jernigan, director<lb/>
of nursing for stu-<lb/>
dent health ser-<lb/>
vices, said meningi-<lb/>
tis is passed<lb/>
through secre-<lb/>
tions.<lb/>
"It is some-<lb/>
what contagious,<lb/>
but not like a cold<lb/>
Jernigan said. "It's<lb/>
complex, we've had several people<lb/>
worried about it because they had a<lb/>
headache, but it's not on the same<lb/>
level as a routine headache<lb/>
She said there is little concern<lb/>
about Law having spread the disease<lb/>
before her death because enough time<lb/>
has elapsed without more cases be-<lb/>
ing seen.<lb/>
"If somebody was eating or drink-<lb/>
ing after her or kissing her, then they<lb/>
would be at risk Jernigan said.<lb/>
"There's not been any reported case,<lb/>
that tells us it's an isolated case<lb/>
� Jolene Jernigan<lb/>
director of Nursing<lb/>
Student Health Services<lb/>
When students are suspected of<lb/>
having meningitis at the infirmary,<lb/>
they are sent to the emergency room,<lb/>
Jemigan said. Actual diagnosing of the<lb/>
virus is done by performing a spinal<lb/>
tap.<lb/>
"For the most part with the vi-<lb/>
ral kinds, you don't treat you just<lb/>
watch and it goes away Perry said.<lb/>
"The classic picture, a headache, fe-<lb/>
ver and they're vomiting - that's the<lb/>
classic triad<lb/>
Jernigan said the virus is often<lb/>
mistaken because it comes with flu-<lb/>
like symptoms.<lb/>
"It can start like the flu - it feels<lb/>
like the flu with body aches and head-<lb/>
aches, fever and, as it progresses, the<lb/>
headache gets worse Jernigan said.<lb/>
"Students may have a stiff neck and<lb/>
develop nausea and vomiting<lb/>
Langley said spinal meningitis is<lb/>
usually detected when symptoms con-<lb/>
tinue to worsen, a key factor in diag-<lb/>
nosing the disease.<lb/>
Jernigan said the virus is not<lb/>
uncommon, but she has not seen any<lb/>
cases this year.<lb/>
"Before the hemophilus influ-<lb/>
enza vaccine which came out about<lb/>
10 years ago, we saw many more cases<lb/>
than we do today, thankfully Perry<lb/>
said.<lb/>
The vaccine is a shot infants re-<lb/>
ceive at two, four and six months. He<lb/>
said the vaccine has severely de-<lb/>
creased the number of meningitis<lb/>
cases since its introduction.<lb/>
Therapy students get hands-on experience<lb/>
Andi Powell Phillips<lb/>
Staff Writer<lb/>
For those students thinking<lb/>
about graduate school and interested<lb/>
in the helping professions, there is a<lb/>
relatively new program at ECU that<lb/>
could be the answer.<lb/>
The master of science degree<lb/>
program in marriage and family<lb/>
therapy is about six years old and its<lb/>
purpose is to train marriage and fam-<lb/>
ily therapists for clinical practice.<lb/>
"Marriage and family therapy is<lb/>
considered by some to be a technique<lb/>
or subset of other psychotherapy dis-<lb/>
ciplines said Dr. Michol Poison, as-<lb/>
sistant professor of marriage and fam-<lb/>
ily therapy. "But it is a legally recog-<lb/>
nized psychotherapy discipline itself.<lb/>
The five recognized disciplines are<lb/>
psychiatry, psychology, social work,<lb/>
psychiatric nursing and marriage and<lb/>
family therapy<lb/>
The difference between marriage<lb/>
and family therapy and individual<lb/>
therapy is the approach taken to help<lb/>
a client<lb/>
"It is an exciting field gaining<lb/>
more and more interest nationally as<lb/>
we move from the traditional ap-<lb/>
proach of an individual client coming<lb/>
to a therapist's office to the more non-<lb/>
traditional approaches of working<lb/>
with families and larger systems like<lb/>
the schools and courts, and going into<lb/>
client's homes said Dr. David A.<lb/>
Dosser, Jr director of the Marriage<lb/>
and Family Therapy Program.<lb/>
A good way to get some positive<lb/>
experience and see if marriage and<lb/>
family therapy is where a student's<lb/>
interest lies, is to do some volunteer<lb/>
work, according to Dosser.<lb/>
"Someone thinking of applying<lb/>
to the our program, or any other psy-<lb/>
chotherapy program for that matter,<lb/>
should consider volunteering at the<lb/>
Real Crisis Center or New Directions<lb/>
Battered Women's Shelter to find out<lb/>
if working with people in distress is<lb/>
what they really want to do Dosser<lb/>
said.<lb/>
Knowing what you want to do<lb/>
plays a tremendous part in your abil-<lb/>
ity to be accepted into the Marriage<lb/>
and Family Therapy Program, as well<lb/>
as your ability to do the work once<lb/>
you have been accepted. Early prepa-<lb/>
ration is the key.<lb/>
"To be accepted in this program,<lb/>
students must have a competitive<lb/>
GPA, an acceptable GRE or MAT score<lb/>
and they must show they have some<lb/>
experience working with people, par-<lb/>
ticularly people in crisis Poison said.<lb/>
"Applicants must have good letters<lb/>
of recommendation. Simply taking a<lb/>
class and then going up to a profes-<lb/>
sor to ask for a recommendation is<lb/>
not necessarily helpful. A person who<lb/>
recommends a student must demon-<lb/>
strate a relationship outside of just '1<lb/>
taught this person and they were<lb/>
bright in class Students should look<lb/>
for opportunities to establish relation-<lb/>
ships with faculty members<lb/>
According to Dosser, the ECU<lb/>
Marriage and Family Therapy Pro-<lb/>
gram is one of only two such programs<lb/>
in the state, and the only one accred-<lb/>
See THERAPY page 4<lb/>
Photo by SCOTT PHILLIPS<lb/>
(L-R) Bob Nyda, Michol Poison, Kirsten Tyson-Rawson and<lb/>
Judy Bohannon are all CDFR faculty members.<lb/>
i<lb/>
urttc<lb/>
Ituide<lb/>
Widespread Panic set to go shoelesspage<lb/>
O PI NI Q$e4�<lb/>
 -1,<lb/>
Bumper stickers cause occassional headaches, page O<lb/>
Things aren't "Rosie" in women's basketballpage C7<lb/>
lSlllJLllP?<lb/>
'ptvtec&amp;At<lb/>
Tuesday<lb/>
Rain<lb/>
High 68<lb/>
Low 45<lb/>
Wednesday<lb/>
Partly cloudy<lb/>
<lb/>
&amp;<lb/>
High 65<lb/>
Low 45<lb/>
Phone 328 - 6366 Fax 328 - 6558<lb/>
The East Carolinian<lb/>
Student Publication Bldg. 2nd floor<lb/>
Greenville, NC 27858<lb/>
Student Pubs Building;across from Jovner<lb/>
<pb facs="00058532_0002"/><lb/>
p<lb/>
Tuesday, March 21, 1995<lb/>
The East Carolinian<lb/>
Outstanding<lb/>
faculty<lb/>
Tambra Zion<lb/>
Assistant News Editor<lb/>
It's hard to believe that a man who has taught for almost<lb/>
30 years, published books and raised a family, has found the<lb/>
time to collect more than 1,000 old westerns and serials from<lb/>
days long gone. Interim Vice Chancellor for Academic Affairs<lb/>
Tinsley Yarbrough has done just that.<lb/>
"I videotape old westerns and cliff hanger serials of the '30s,<lb/>
'40s and early '50s, the kind of movies that kids went to see at<lb/>
the Saturday matinee back in those days Yarbrough said. "I<lb/>
also go to conventions devoted to this interest and I go out to<lb/>
California with friends and we hunt for ranches and other loca-<lb/>
tions that were used in making those movies, we videotape<lb/>
them and take photographs<lb/>
Yarbrough has held the position of interim vice chancellor<lb/>
for almost a year, and is looking forward to getting back to the<lb/>
classroom and his research.<lb/>
"I primarily write judicial biographies  later this year<lb/>
Oxford University Press will publish my biography of the first<lb/>
justice John Marshall Harlan Yarbrough said.<lb/>
While in college, he was torn between a career in the prac-<lb/>
tice of law or teaching.<lb/>
"I enjoy teaching very much, I think that teachers are privi-<lb/>
leged to teach - we don't always feel that way, but I feel that<lb/>
it's an honor to teach Yarbrough said. "It's a very important<lb/>
function and I think teachers have a tremendous impact on<lb/>
the lives of students<lb/>
With the exception of his temporary administrative posi-<lb/>
tion, Yarbrough has taught classes ranging from introduction<lb/>
courses in political science, constitutional law and the courts,<lb/>
to classes concerning civil liberties and constitutional powers.<lb/>
Yarbrough left ECU for two years in 1978 for a visiting profes-<lb/>
sorship at the University of Virginia, where his daughter now<lb/>
goes to school.<lb/>
Yarbrough and his wife Mary Alice moved to Greenville in<lb/>
1967. They met in a political science class at the University of<lb/>
Alabama where Yarbrough received his undergraduate, gradu-<lb/>
ate and doctorate degrees in political science.<lb/>
I think this was the only school I applied to Yarbrough<lb/>
said.<lb/>
Mrs. Yarbrough also held a political science teaching posi-<lb/>
tion for the first few years they lived in Greenville. She now<lb/>
works with the Pitt County School system coordinating pro-<lb/>
grams for academically gifted students.<lb/>
Spray paint not a sign of vandalism<lb/>
Andy Turner<lb/>
Staff Writer<lb/>
Wondering why there is white<lb/>
paint sprayed on the ground and<lb/>
on the grass all around capus? No,<lb/>
there is no mad vandal terrorizing<lb/>
the ECU campus, actually, it is part<lb/>
of an ongoing project being con-<lb/>
ducting by facility services.<lb/>
"We are in the process of do-<lb/>
ing a photo metric mapping of the<lb/>
campus as part of a utility infra-<lb/>
structure project said Dr. George<lb/>
Harrell, assistant vice chancellor of<lb/>
business affairs for facilities.<lb/>
On March 12, an aircraft fly-<lb/>
over of the campus was conducted<lb/>
and over 800 utility structures were<lb/>
identified throughout the campus.<lb/>
White paint was used to help make<lb/>
structures more visible from the<lb/>
sky. Letters were used to designate<lb/>
what the various structures were.<lb/>
Harrell said it took about a<lb/>
week to mark water valves, man-<lb/>
holes, switching gear and drainage<lb/>
systems throughout campus. Addi-<lb/>
tionally, the fly-over had been post-<lb/>
poned several times due to unco-<lb/>
operative weather.<lb/>
Harrell feels the fly-over was a<lb/>
success and the project will benefit<lb/>
ECU tremendously in the future.<lb/>
"We are very excited because<lb/>
ECU will go from almost no base<lb/>
maps to state of the art completely<lb/>
P)ofo by PATRICK IRELAN<lb/>
Is ECU attempting to communicate with UFOs? Or perhaps workers are secretly playing tic<lb/>
tac-toe across campus, in the hopes of frustrating administrators. Nah<lb/>
compatible base maps Harrell<lb/>
said.<lb/>
The project will also provide<lb/>
the university with a 400,000 high<lb/>
voltage upgrade in its high distri-<lb/>
bution system.<lb/>
Harrell said the current project<lb/>
will be completed within the next<lb/>
60 days and wjll help to support<lb/>
future utility projects conducted by<lb/>
the university.<lb/>
"It will help us in the long run.<lb/>
because there is a lot of utility in-<lb/>
frastructure work to be accomj<lb/>
plished over the next several years<lb/>
Harrell said the white paint is<lb/>
not permanent and will wash away,<lb/>
after a few rain showers. u<lb/>
Bikers encouraged on campus<lb/>
Andi Powell Phillips<lb/>
staff writer<lb/>
Last week, this story was mis-<lb/>
takenly cut. Here it runs in its en-<lb/>
tirety.<lb/>
The ECU Campus Police have a<lb/>
hidden agenda. Okay, it's not hidden,<lb/>
but it is an agenda. The Campus Po-<lb/>
lice in conjunction with other depart-<lb/>
ments including Facility Services,<lb/>
have formed a committee headed by<lb/>
Sgt Johnnie Umphlet to promote bi-<lb/>
cycle safety and encourage bike<lb/>
riding on campus.<lb/>
The committee intends to sub-<lb/>
mit a list of recommendations con-<lb/>
cerning bicycle traffic, safety, park-<lb/>
ing and storage to the Parking and<lb/>
Traffic Committee by April 20,1995.<lb/>
One of the concerns for bike rid-<lb/>
ers is where to ride. Bicycles are cur-<lb/>
rently not supposed to be ridden on<lb/>
the sidewalks, but most of the cam-<lb/>
pus streets are too narrow for cars<lb/>
to pass a bicyclist who obstructs traf-<lb/>
fic.<lb/>
"We are in the process of ad-<lb/>
dressing that issue Umphlet said.<lb/>
"Facility services is working hard on<lb/>
long-range goals to make sure all<lb/>
crosswalks are properly marked and<lb/>
hopefully making bike paths. The<lb/>
plan is for everything to be brought<lb/>
up to DOT (Department of Transpor-<lb/>
tation) standards. Possibly there will<lb/>
be signs to direct bikers where they<lb/>
can and can't go also<lb/>
Part of encouraging bicycles on<lb/>
campus is discouraging automobiles<lb/>
for safety reasons as well as curbing<lb/>
the parking problem.<lb/>
According to Officer Briari<lb/>
Powell, the best reason to ride a bikd<lb/>
to school is to avoid the' hassle of<lb/>
trying to find a parking space.<lb/>
"Parking is difficult and will get<lb/>
worse over the next year due to con-<lb/>
struction and landscaping said Oft<lb/>
SAVE LIKE<lb/>
NEVER<lb/>
BEFORE<lb/>
For the first time, The East Carolinian is<lb/>
sponsoring a day full of savings de-<lb/>
signed especially for the ECU community.<lb/>
Watch for the details and a list of ad-<lb/>
vertisers participating in this unique<lb/>
promotion in our upcoming issues.<lb/>
Stop right now and mark this day -<lb/>
Wednesday, April 5 - on your calendar.<lb/>
You won't believe the savings<lb/>
waiting for you on<lb/>
Be a Summer Tar Heel!<lb/>
Session 1: May 18-June 23,1995<lb/>
Session 2: June 27-August 1,1995<lb/>
Students from any college or university, teachers, rising high<lb/>
school seniors, and others who are not enrolled at UNC-CH<lb/>
may apply as Visiting Summer Students for first, second, or<lb/>
both sessions.<lb/>
UNC-CH offers, during two 512 week sessions, over 900<lb/>
courses in 45 disciplines. A typical course load per session<lb/>
is 6 semester hours.<lb/>
Some evening and night courses and three-week short courses<lb/>
are offered. Spaces still available in three-week Summer School<lb/>
Abroad programs.<lb/>
Approximate Cost per Session: tuition and fees of $125 PLUS<lb/>
$47 per credit hour for NC resident undergraduates or $341 per<lb/>
credit hour for nonresident undergraduates.<lb/>
When requesting a catalog and application, please mention<lb/>
seeing this ad in The East Carolinian for special attention.<lb/>
Summer School<lb/>
CB 3340, 200 Pettigrew Hall<lb/>
The University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill<lb/>
Chapel Hill, NC 27599-3340<lb/>
Phone: 919-962-1009<lb/>
Fax: 919-962-2752<lb/>
EEO Institution<lb/>
<pb facs="00058532_0003"/><lb/>
Tuesday, March 21, 1995<lb/>
The East Carolinian<lb/>
POWs provide cadets with valuable lesson<lb/>
Stephanie Lassiter<lb/>
News Editor<lb/>
Army ROTC cadets got a lesson<lb/>
no textbook could give when three<lb/>
former prisoners of war (POWs) v�s-<lb/>
ited ECU last Wednesday to speak on<lb/>
leadership! and survival skills.<lb/>
Major Hugh Cox (Ret.), a local<lb/>
attorney, introduced the group of<lb/>
POWs. Cox is a re-<lb/>
tired special forces<lb/>
officer and a Viet-<lb/>
nam veteran.<lb/>
"It's a very<lb/>
unique experience<lb/>
Cox said. "Those in-<lb/>
dividuals are very<lb/>
unique and very<lb/>
rare<lb/>
Cox told the ca-<lb/>
dets that becoming a<lb/>
POW is very unlikely<lb/>
for soldiers, but o<lb/>
ten it is inevitable.<lb/>
"Being captured<lb/>
is a chance happen-<lb/>
ing Cox said.<lb/>
"Sometimes capture<lb/>
is the only option<lb/>
Speaking to the group of cadets<lb/>
were Randolph M. Brantley, E.D.<lb/>
Winstead and Seth Jones. Brantley,<lb/>
when asked where he was 50 years<lb/>
ago, told the group he was in the 36th<lb/>
infantry division in Germany.<lb/>
Winstead, 50 years ago, was in a hos-<lb/>
pital in San Francisco after being held<lb/>
33 months by Japanese forces. Forty-<lb/>
three years ago, Jones, who served in<lb/>
the Korean War was in a Chinese<lb/>
POW camp where he was held 27<lb/>
months.<lb/>
Brantley, a WWII veteran, was<lb/>
captured Dec. 14, 1944 at the begin-<lb/>
ning of the Battle of the Bulge.<lb/>
Winstead. who now lives in Wilson,<lb/>
joined the Army in 1935 as a field<lb/>
artillery officer. In 1939, his wife and<lb/>
three month old baby were ordered<lb/>
to return to the United States by boat.<lb/>
In April 1942, Winstead was captured<lb/>
at Corregidor.<lb/>
Jones, who is now<lb/>
an insurance<lb/>
agent in<lb/>
Greenville, served<lb/>
in the 2nd divi-<lb/>
sion in Korea be-<lb/>
ginning in 1951.<lb/>
He was captured<lb/>
in Korea and held<lb/>
27 months by<lb/>
North Koreans<lb/>
and Chinese.<lb/>
Brantley told<lb/>
the group that he<lb/>
and the other<lb/>
POWs lived off a<lb/>
slice of bread a<lb/>
"POW in most<lb/>
cases is severe<lb/>
hardship. To<lb/>
survive you are<lb/>
very lucky and the<lb/>
treatment is<lb/>
usually cruel,<lb/>
inhumane and<lb/>
tion, but rather of the deportation of<lb/>
his wife and baby.<lb/>
"I still resent having interna-<lb/>
tional politics played with my fam-<lb/>
ily Winstead said.<lb/>
He told the group that surviv-<lb/>
ing was left up to each individual<lb/>
soldier.<lb/>
"We were corralled in a cement<lb/>
area he said. "The Japanese sup-<lb/>
plied absolutely nothing. We had<lb/>
what we could scrounge and what we<lb/>
had for 10 days<lb/>
Jones said that soldiers never<lb/>
think they stand the chance of be-<lb/>
coming POWs, but the possibly does<lb/>
exist.<lb/>
"The probability of you ever be-<lb/>
ing a POW is slim and none he said.<lb/>
"In the numbers you're strong. In<lb/>
two or three you are very weak<lb/>
He asked the cadets how they<lb/>
could walk for 40 days and survive<lb/>
on virtually no food.<lb/>
"I had faith that our men would<lb/>
come and redeem us one day Jones<lb/>
answered himself. He said he ate<lb/>
acorns, raw corn and sweet potatoes<lb/>
whenever necessary. Eventually he<lb/>
dropped down to 90 pounds, suffered<lb/>
severe stomach cramps, but he sur-<lb/>
vived.<lb/>
"POW in most cases is severe<lb/>
hardship. To survive you are very<lb/>
lucky and the treatment is usually<lb/>
cruel, inhumane and demoralizing<lb/>
Jones said. "If you are determined to<lb/>
live, you almost surely will<lb/>
Brantley agreed by telling the<lb/>
group they must work anyway to sur-<lb/>
vive. "I hope that you'll always re-<lb/>
member there is something you can<lb/>
do he said.<lb/>
Winstead said when in an unpre-<lb/>
dictable situation, the soldiers should<lb/>
step in another man's track and take<lb/>
every precaution they can.<lb/>
Cadet Battalion Commander<lb/>
Tom Earnhardt felt very fortunate to<lb/>
have the opportunity to hear from<lb/>
Brantley. Winstead and Jones.<lb/>
"These three men are legitimate<lb/>
American heroes Earnhardt said.<lb/>
"Their experiences are something<lb/>
that we can all learn from and learn<lb/>
to respect. I think the cadets appre-<lb/>
ciated their visit and learned a great<lb/>
deal more about their own response<lb/>
bilities and about the necessity for<lb/>
perseverance<lb/>
Earnhardt said in today's nature<lb/>
of warfare, prisoners of war are used<lb/>
as political hostages and they are.<lb/>
usually held for a shorter amount of<lb/>
time than the POWs of WWII, Korea;<lb/>
and Vietnam.<lb/>
"The performance of these men<lb/>
during WWII and the Korean War is.<lb/>
an excellent example of dedication'<lb/>
and whole heartedness Earnhardt<lb/>
said. "We feel extremely fortunate to<lb/>
have met great men<lb/>
Speaker focuses on evolution, religion<lb/>
Science and<lb/>
.�<lb/>
demoralizing<lb/>
� Seth Jones<lb/>
religion<lb/>
relationships<lb/>
examined<lb/>
I HHHMHI<lb/>
day and possible a<lb/>
cup of broth on Sundays. He said<lb/>
more men died of starvation and dis-<lb/>
ease than from physical abuse.<lb/>
"You wouldn't get any treatments<lb/>
or medical care Brantley said. "If you<lb/>
were sick of hurt you had to suffer<lb/>
with it Brantley said General<lb/>
Patton's 3rd Army eventually liberated<lb/>
his group during Patton's "blitz"<lb/>
across Germany.<lb/>
Winstead's worst thoughts of his<lb/>
imprisonment are not of his starva-<lb/>
Jim Cook<lb/>
Staff Writer<lb/>
757-1070<lb/>
LIVE ENTERTAINMENT<lb/>
Thursday:<lb/>
Poetry Reading 8:00pm<lb/>
Solomon Morris 9:30<lb/>
Jazz Guitar<lb/>
104 West 5th St.<lb/>
Sun-Thurs 7am-12am Fri-Sat 7am-1am<lb/>
The conflict between evolution-<lb/>
ary biology and creationism will be<lb/>
addressed by Dr. William P. Piovine<lb/>
in a public lecture entitled "Modern<lb/>
Biology, Free Will, and the Mean-<lb/>
ing Of Life<lb/>
Provine's lecture, at 7:30 p.m.<lb/>
on Wednesday Mar. 22, in the Great<lb/>
Room of the Mendenhall Student<lb/>
center, should give the audience "a<lb/>
better understanding of concepts<lb/>
and history of evolution said Dr.<lb/>
Stanley R. Riggs, professor of geol-<lb/>
ogy.<lb/>
"In his lecture Provine will ad-<lb/>
dress the highly visible conflict be-<lb/>
tween evolutionary' biology and cre-<lb/>
ationism which has stimulated much<lb/>
controversy about the relationship<lb/>
between science and religion Riggs<lb/>
said in a prepared press release.<lb/>
At Cornell University, Dr.<lb/>
Provine is a history professor, as well<lb/>
as the Charles A. Alexander Profes-<lb/>
sor of Biological Sciences. Riggs said<lb/>
he is a very good speaker, who has<lb/>
won numerous awards. Provine was<lb/>
named the Distinguished Teacher of<lb/>
Undergraduates in the College of<lb/>
Arts and Sciences at Cornell Univer-<lb/>
sity and was awarded a Guggenheim<lb/>
Fellowship and the Phi Beta Kappa<lb/>
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Visiting Lectureship.<lb/>
Dr. Provine received his B.S<lb/>
M.A. and Ph.D. degrees from the Uni-<lb/>
versity of Chicago, and has written<lb/>
five books on evolution.<lb/>
Riggs, the 1994 recipient of the<lb/>
ECU Distinguished Professor Award<lb/>
of the College of Arts and Sciences,<lb/>
helped choose who would speak in<lb/>
his honor. He said they were look-<lb/>
ing for someone who was cross-disci-<lb/>
plinary, had national visibility in their :<lb/>
field and that would discuss a rel-<lb/>
evant topic to science and society.<lb/>
The lecture - which is sponsored<lb/>
by ECU College of Arts and Sciences,<lb/>
with additional support from the Ge-<lb/>
ology Department and ECU's chap-<lb/>
ter of Sigma Xi, the scientific re-<lb/>
search society - will be followed by<lb/>
a discussion and an informal recep-<lb/>
tion.<lb/>
Leaders urged to improve<lb/>
educational system<lb/>
Wendy Rountree<lb/>
Staff Writer<lb/>
In recent months, some repub-<lb/>
licans in Congress have suggested<lb/>
the legislative abolishment of the<lb/>
U.S. Department of Education in-<lb/>
stead of making improvements in<lb/>
the existing educational system. Dr.<lb/>
Charles R. Coble, dean and profes-<lb/>
sor in the School of Education said<lb/>
he thinks this would be a mistake.<lb/>
"The reason 1 think it's a mis-<lb/>
take is because it sends a strong<lb/>
signal that education is not valued<lb/>
as much as the Department of De-<lb/>
fense, the Department of Labor and<lb/>
Commerce Coble said. "I think it<lb/>
is of equal, if not more, in value<lb/>
because I think it is so fundamen-<lb/>
tally integrated to the future of our<lb/>
nation<lb/>
Coble said President Clinton is<lb/>
more interested in creating new and<lb/>
improving programs within the cur-<lb/>
rent national education department<lb/>
than the congressional majority.<lb/>
"I think, probably, Clinton,<lb/>
himself, is aligned with that per-<lb/>
spective Coble said. "1 don't think<lb/>
he has a congress that is aligned<lb/>
with that perspective, so I think he<lb/>
is doing more than he will be able<lb/>
to do in the future, given the re-<lb/>
cent election<lb/>
One of the current departmen-<lb/>
tal programs that Clinton has ex-<lb/>
panded is Head Start, which has a<lb/>
high success rate.<lb/>
"The Head Start Program is re-<lb/>
ally a successful program Coble<lb/>
said. "The evidence is clear that if<lb/>
we invest in Head Start and the<lb/>
children that attend Head Start<lb/>
then they present themselves as<lb/>
COURTSIDE<lb/>
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8am - 5pm<lb/>
less problematic to the social ser-<lb/>
vice delivery system. It makes a<lb/>
great long-term investment for the<lb/>
nation<lb/>
Head Start is a program that<lb/>
helps young "at-risk" children.<lb/>
"These are children who live in<lb/>
poverty, who live with, maybe,<lb/>
single parents or have some evi-<lb/>
dence of developmental delay<lb/>
Coble said. "(They are put into<lb/>
programs that literally give them a<lb/>
head start. That is starting to teach<lb/>
them certain pre-school experi-<lb/>
ences that help them get ready to<lb/>
learn and learn more rapidly in the<lb/>
future<lb/>
During the last ten years, the<lb/>
idea of business and education part-<lb/>
nerships have become increasingly<lb/>
popular as a solution to some of<lb/>
the U.S. education system prob-<lb/>
lems.<lb/>
"Partnerships in education<lb/>
with business are probably going<lb/>
to be very much the wave of the<lb/>
future Coble said.<lb/>
Coble said that initially these<lb/>
partnerships have been used with<lb/>
businesses adopting-a-school or giv-<lb/>
ing a school low-level foundation<lb/>
support.<lb/>
"I don't think we have really<lb/>
grasped the potential yet for genu-<lb/>
ine partnership with business<lb/>
Coble said. "I think the partner-<lb/>
ships would focus more on school-<lb/>
to-work transitions, applying busi-<lb/>
ness principles to the management<lb/>
of schools, looking at leadership in<lb/>
organizations, team building and<lb/>
problem solving on real-life work.<lb/>
"Rather than having schools<lb/>
I that get ready for tests, we would<lb/>
I have schools that get ready for<lb/>
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"Wbw<lb/>
<pb facs="00058532_0004"/><lb/>
Tuesday, March 21, 1995<lb/>
The East Carolinian<lb/>
EDUCATION from page 3<lb/>
������MMHHnMHMnMHnMNN<lb/>
work and focusing in on more what<lb/>
the world wants not what the test-<lb/>
takers want<lb/>
Another plan to improve the<lb/>
education system includes more<lb/>
parent involvement in the schools.<lb/>
"One of the other trends is es-<lb/>
tablishing much better and differ-<lb/>
ent partnerships with parents<lb/>
Coble said. "So, they are not just<lb/>
there to volunteer and do our dirty<lb/>
work for us in the schools, but they<lb/>
are there to really be our partners<lb/>
in helping every child learn. Every<lb/>
child has got to succeed if your<lb/>
child and my child is going to suc-<lb/>
ceed, if we are all related<lb/>
Though a number of other<lb/>
countries separate students early<lb/>
during their education into groups<lb/>
that go to college and groups that<lb/>
join the work-force and a number<lb/>
of educators in the U.S. have sup-<lb/>
ported the idea for U.S. schools,<lb/>
Coble said he sees this as a "false<lb/>
dichotomy" and does not want the<lb/>
U.S. educational system to use this<lb/>
method.<lb/>
"I think we must produce<lb/>
knowledgeable workers Coble<lb/>
said. "Everybody has to be a knowl-<lb/>
edgeable worker in the future. So,<lb/>
if a person is going on to college,<lb/>
it is probably because he is look-<lb/>
ing for specialized training in a<lb/>
particular profession like medicine<lb/>
or teaching.<lb/>
"1 don't view the distinction be-<lb/>
tween vocational and academic in<lb/>
my head. Those distinctions no<lb/>
longer exist. Everyone is in voca-<lb/>
tional education. Everyone is going<lb/>
to go to work<lb/>
However. Coble said students<lb/>
and educators, as well as the gen-<lb/>
eral public, should see education<lb/>
as more than a means to a job.<lb/>
"We have to also look at our<lb/>
education and say how we are go-<lb/>
ing to help people prepare to live<lb/>
in a world that is safer, cleaner and<lb/>
more productive and efficient<lb/>
Coble said. "We need to recognize<lb/>
that the purposes of education are<lb/>
beyond the economic purposes and<lb/>
beyond just the academic purposes.<lb/>
They are designed to give you and<lb/>
me the skills to really build a na-<lb/>
tion we want to live in<lb/>
Coble said students going into<lb/>
the field of education have a good<lb/>
job outlook once they leave college<lb/>
but face possible low salaries, de-<lb/>
pending on the location of their job<lb/>
in the country.<lb/>
"The country greatly underval-<lb/>
ues the work of teachers Coble<lb/>
said. "That's why I think that if we<lb/>
looked at the job of a teacher as to<lb/>
build a nation we would start valu-<lb/>
ing that job more than we do now.<lb/>
Right now, we just think of it as<lb/>
just teaching kids as if that is some-<lb/>
how unrelated to where the nation<lb/>
goes, but it's very related.<lb/>
"Most nations on earth really<lb/>
value teachers much, much more<lb/>
than we do here in the United<lb/>
States, much to our peril<lb/>
Coble said that education ma-<lb/>
jors entering the profession should<lb/>
do so with their eyes open.<lb/>
"They have to have a little bit<lb/>
of missionary in them because the<lb/>
pay isn't right and the conditions<lb/>
aren't right and the nation's not<lb/>
right about how they view teach<lb/>
ers Coble said. "They have to be<lb/>
smart. They have to be committed<lb/>
and they have to have a lot of en<lb/>
ergy because it's a very demanding<lb/>
job.<lb/>
"It's stressful in the classroorr<lb/>
and so, you have to be able to with<lb/>
stand that stress<lb/>
CAMPUS from page 2<lb/>
page<lb/>
ficer David Syth. "Students should<lb/>
bring bikes when they come back<lb/>
next semester to cut down on traf-<lb/>
fic<lb/>
The Campus Police is practicing<lb/>
what they preach, too, by having four<lb/>
full-time bicycle officers on campus.<lb/>
These officers patrol just like the au-<lb/>
tomobile units and have the same<lb/>
authority with the additional advan-<lb/>
tage of being able to access the<lb/>
wooded and pedestrian areas on cam-<lb/>
pus.<lb/>
"We're approached more when<lb/>
we're on bikes Syth said. "We're<lb/>
able to interact with the student<lb/>
population on a daily basis much<lb/>
more than when we're in the cars<lb/>
Response times to service calls<lb/>
are often quicker for the bicycle of-<lb/>
ficers since they are not restricted<lb/>
to the streets. According to Officer<lb/>
Syth bicycle officers don't seem as<lb/>
threatening as the officers in patrol<lb/>
cars, and the bicycle officers are able<lb/>
to see and hear things that they<lb/>
might miss in a car.<lb/>
"The bicycle officers are good<lb/>
community relations Syth said.<lb/>
"We've even had a request to go to<lb/>
Elmhurst Elementary to give safety<lb/>
and riding tips<lb/>
Safety is a big concern on the<lb/>
ECU campus as well. Bicycles are le-<lb/>
gally considered vehicles and as such,<lb/>
bicyclists are required to follow the<lb/>
same traffic laws as automobiles. This<lb/>
includes stopping at stop signs and<lb/>
traffic lights, riding with the flow of<lb/>
traffic and giving proper hand sig-<lb/>
nals when turning.<lb/>
"A combination of things con-<lb/>
tribute to bicycling accidents<lb/>
Umphlet said. "Mainly riding on the<lb/>
wrong side of the road and also weav-<lb/>
ing in and out of traffic<lb/>
Another bicycle-related concern<lb/>
is. of course, theft. The campus po-<lb/>
lice require that all bicycles ridden<lb/>
on campus be registered with them<lb/>
so they can be identified in case they<lb/>
are stolen. If a bicycle is not regis-<lb/>
tered they suggest, at the very least,<lb/>
the owner should write down the<lb/>
serial number.<lb/>
"If a stolen bicycle is not regis-<lb/>
tered and the student does not have<lb/>
the serial number, basically our<lb/>
hands are tied Umphlet said. "All<lb/>
we can do is take a report, but it's<lb/>
THERAPY<lb/>
from page 1<lb/>
unlikely anything will come of it as<lb/>
the bicycle can't be positively identi-<lb/>
fied<lb/>
It doesn't cost anything to reg-<lb/>
ister your bicycle.<lb/>
"Just contact the ECU Police<lb/>
Department at 328-6787 or stop any<lb/>
officer on campus and ask Syth<lb/>
said. "We'll be more than glad to<lb/>
help<lb/>
To protect your bike Sergeant<lb/>
Umphlet and Officer Syth have sev-<lb/>
eral suggestions: First, use two U-<lb/>
bolts and secure both tires to the<lb/>
frame. Second, use the designated<lb/>
bike racks. Do not secure your bike<lb/>
to signs, posts, guardrails, and so<lb/>
forth. And, of course, register your<lb/>
bicycle.<lb/>
"Make sure you properly secure<lb/>
your bike to a bicycle rack rather<lb/>
than leaning it against a building oi<lb/>
something with the tire chained tc<lb/>
the frame Umphlet said. "Sure, the<lb/>
bike won't roll if you do that, but it<lb/>
can still be picked-up and carried-<lb/>
off. And be sure to use a sturdy<lb/>
lock<lb/>
According to Umphlet, more bi-<lb/>
cycle racks are in the process of be-<lb/>
ing installed to accommodate the ex-<lb/>
pected influx of bicycles as the park-<lb/>
ing problem worsens.<lb/>
ited by the American Association of<lb/>
Marriage and Family Therapy<lb/>
(AAMFT), the governing body of mar-<lb/>
riage and family therapy.<lb/>
"This provides the university<lb/>
with a distinction and provides much<lb/>
needed services to the community<lb/>
Dosser said.<lb/>
The East Carolina University<lb/>
Family Therapy Clinic, located on<lb/>
10th Street, next-door to the Kappa<lb/>
Sigma House, provides family therapy<lb/>
services to the general public on a<lb/>
sliding fee scale. The second-year stu-<lb/>
dents in the program provide the<lb/>
therapy with supervision from the<lb/>
program faculty, using the training in<lb/>
theory they receive throughout their<lb/>
first year.<lb/>
In addition to the clients the sec-<lb/>
ond-year students work with at the<lb/>
clinic, they also have a placement site<lb/>
in the community. This year's class<lb/>
has such diverse placements as a drug<lb/>
and alcohol treatment center, an army<lb/>
base, a mental health center and a<lb/>
family preservation program, which<lb/>
involves seeing clients in their homes,<lb/>
in their school settings and, if<lb/>
neccessary, in a courtroom setting. All<lb/>
of these are examples of the kinds of<lb/>
jobs available to graduates of the<lb/>
Marriage and Family Therapy Pro-<lb/>
gram.<lb/>
"Students in our program find<lb/>
employment in several settings, pri-<lb/>
marily within mental health centers<lb/>
Dr. Kirsten J. Tyson-Rawson, Assistant<lb/>
Professor said. "(They can do tradi-<lb/>
tional marriage and family therapy or<lb/>
family preservation. We have students<lb/>
working as mediators in the court<lb/>
system and working in the school sys-<lb/>
tem with teachers, and parents and<lb/>
students<lb/>
Two of the twelve second-year<lb/>
students are planning to attend Ph.D.<lb/>
programs at other universities.<lb/>
"I plan to attend the University<lb/>
of Minnesota in their Ph.D. Family<lb/>
Social Sciences Program said Joe<lb/>
Reid, second-year Marriage and Fam-<lb/>
ily Therapy student. "I want to tEach<lb/>
at a major university where I can also<lb/>
practice marriage and family therapy<lb/>
and do research in my field<lb/>
Other students preparing to<lb/>
graduate are planning to pursue a<lb/>
number of different options. David<lb/>
Handy, a second-year student who will<lb/>
graduate in May is aiming ultimately<lb/>
to enter private practice.<lb/>
"I think the program has pre-<lb/>
pared me very well and I plan to work<lb/>
in a home-based program like family<lb/>
preservation said Michele Collins, a<lb/>
second-year student who will gradu-<lb/>
ate in May.<lb/>
JtAH'S MASS<lb/>
LISA HAND<lb/>
- LICENSED MANICURIST<lb/>
7 YEARS EXPERIENCE<lb/>
MANICURES � PEDICURES �<lb/>
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Located inside<lb/>
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2010 10th St.<lb/>
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Expires 3-31-95<lb/>
Reg. $35.00<lb/>
 vf A from page 1<lb/>
gain was heavily debated during the<lb/>
last two SGA sessions. Rudolph<lb/>
Alexander, director of University<lb/>
Unions asked that the resolution be<lb/>
held until members are able to gain a<lb/>
clear understanding of what guidelines<lb/>
should be set in order to uphold the<lb/>
resolution.<lb/>
Bill Gheen, senior class president<lb/>
proposed a bill Monday to fund $920<lb/>
for the plaques given to for the Out-<lb/>
standing Senior Awards that are given<lb/>
each year.<lb/>
He asked for a suspension of the<lb/>
rules which passed and several mem-<lb/>
bers including Vice President Sheila<lb/>
' Boswell endorsed the bill. Weeks stood<lb/>
in opposition of the bill saying that<lb/>
'� funding the award, "has been a double<lb/>
. standard for the past 15 years<lb/>
 Weeks said the award falls under<lb/>
' the much debated category of personal<lb/>
 gain.<lb/>
"It the award) doesn't go back to<lb/>
- the school, it stays with you  the de-<lb/>
� partments should be doing this, not<lb/>
us<lb/>
Weeks said he did not necessarily<lb/>
oppose the idea, but other awards<lb/>
which have previously been denied<lb/>
funding should also be approved.<lb/>
Luke Sanders pointed out that the<lb/>
senior class does not represent or fall<lb/>
into the category of an organization<lb/>
and should therefore be considered.<lb/>
The bill passed after two rounds<lb/>
of positive and negative debate.<lb/>
David Reid was nominated and ac-<lb/>
cepted to hold the position of elections<lb/>
chair during the March 13 meeting.<lb/>
Maureen McKenna stood to make<lb/>
a motion that volunteers working<lb/>
through ECU be required to register<lb/>
with Volunteer Services in order to re-<lb/>
ceive free liability insurance.<lb/>
Boswell said two members are<lb/>
needed to join faculty senate positions<lb/>
which have recently become available.<lb/>
During the March 13 meeting, one<lb/>
representative said SGA shoulcf get in-<lb/>
volved with activities to improve group<lb/>
cohesion among SGA members.<lb/>
A representative from Recreation<lb/>
Services stood and spoke about team<lb/>
games and activities SGA members<lb/>
might want to consider participating<lb/>
in.<lb/>
FREE PREGNANCY TEST<lb/>
while you wait<lb/>
Free &amp; Confidential<lb/>
Services &amp; Counseling<lb/>
Carolina Pregnancy Center<lb/>
209-B S.Evans St<lb/>
Pittman Building<lb/>
Greenville NC<lb/>
757-0003<lb/>
IgjIIBigjgMaBfBJBiaBIrMIBB<lb/>
CLASSES GOT YOU DOWN?<lb/>
NEED TO LET LOOSE?<lb/>
WELL HERE'S THE REMEDY<lb/>
DELTA SIGMA PHI<lb/>
presents<lb/>
TUNNEL PARTY III<lb/>
featuring<lb/>
Greenville's favorite party band<lb/>
to<lb/>
i<lb/>
CAPTAIN COOK<lb/>
and the<lb/>
COCONUTZ<lb/>
6:00 pm Saturday March 25<lb/>
all tickets in advance<lb/>
for more info call 757-1817<lb/>
SF3MmmjQI�fi2mS&amp;fflSM&amp;fflQiej&amp;BM2<lb/>
'Last year I had an opportunity to live on campus and be a<lb/>
winner. But instead I chose to live off campuswhat a mistake. I got<lb/>
stuck with utility, phone and cable bills. I had to eat my own'cooklng<lb/>
and then wash all the messy dishes. I don't have time to meet new<lb/>
friends because I have to spend so much time cleaning my apartment<lb/>
Now, it looks like I will have to find someone to sublet my apartment<lb/>
because I won't be here during the summer.<lb/>
But hey, it's not too late for next year-I can still be a winner!<lb/>
I'll sign up to Uve on campus during March 20 through 24 in Jones '<lb/>
Cafeteria. I hear that Slay and Umstead are really going to be nice!<lb/>
See you there<lb/>
ffi<lb/>
L<lb/>
University Housing And Campus Dining Services<lb/>
nfe<lb/>
wmmamtamms<lb/>
<pb facs="00058532_0005"/><lb/>
Tuesday, March 21, 1995<lb/>
The East Carolinian<lb/>
n<lb/>
4<lb/>
Our View<lb/>
This year's<lb/>
Barefoot on the<lb/>
Mall is expected<lb/>
to be as<lb/>
entertaining as<lb/>
ever. But who<lb/>
decided what<lb/>
music should be<lb/>
omitted, and<lb/>
why?<lb/>
� �<lb/>
First of all, we would like to applaud the efforts of<lb/>
those organizing Barefoot on the Mall for including more<lb/>
culturally diverse bands. However, the way these bands<lb/>
were chosen leaves much to be desired.<lb/>
For years, the Battle of the Bands competition has<lb/>
been used to give local bands a chance to get more expo-<lb/>
sure. This year, J. Marshall, assistant director of student<lb/>
activities, said the organization is trying to stay away from<lb/>
the local bands that play downtown. This statement in<lb/>
itself is strikingly poignant considering that Green Bone<lb/>
Dance and Blood Stul (now Stul) have both played area<lb/>
clubs in the last few weeks.<lb/>
Also competing this year at the Battle of the Bands is<lb/>
last year's winner PMS (Post Metal Syndrome). Is it really<lb/>
fair to the other local bands who are trying to get estab-<lb/>
lished that a formei champion gets to return and bump<lb/>
another promising act? Gee, and we thought that people<lb/>
were supposed to get a taste of the new music around<lb/>
Greenville when watching Battle of the Bands.<lb/>
Then there is the band Full Stop. This band was added<lb/>
because of pressure put on by certain campus organiza-<lb/>
tions about there not being enough culturally diverse bands<lb/>
playing at Barefoot on the Mall.<lb/>
Yes, cultural diversity is great, and people should be<lb/>
exposed to as many different types of music as they can,<lb/>
but why wait so late in the planning progress to add this<lb/>
band? Were they chosen in the same manner that the other<lb/>
bands were for Barefoot, or were they just randomly picked<lb/>
out of a hat?<lb/>
Are the Student Union Special Events Committee mem-<lb/>
bers aware that Full Stop just played a show downtown<lb/>
and has two more performances scheduled before Bare-<lb/>
foot even takes place? And just for the sake of a good<lb/>
argument, did anyone out there notice that there are no<lb/>
women playing in any of these bands?<lb/>
Barefoot on the Mall is an event that people look for-<lb/>
ward to every year. All of the food, games and music draw<lb/>
thousands. It is one of the signs that spring and good<lb/>
times have arrived.<lb/>
The students deserve more of an opportunity to pick<lb/>
the music that they want to hear. Maybe the Student Union<lb/>
Special Events Committee will give us a chance next year.<lb/>
All of us at TEC hope that it will be successful, and in the<lb/>
future, not so political.<lb/>
Was George Washington<lb/>
unconstitutional?<lb/>
Most Americans firmly believe<lb/>
that the separation of church and<lb/>
state is an established part of our<lb/>
heritage - an edict laid out in the<lb/>
very bedrock of our nation. Of<lb/>
course, they would be hard pressed<lb/>
to find the words (or the concept of)<lb/>
"separation of church and state" any-<lb/>
where in the Constitution or the Bill<lb/>
of Rights.<lb/>
This notion of separation is usu-<lb/>
ally credited to the First Amendment,<lb/>
but it simply states that "Congress<lb/>
shall make no law respecting an es-<lb/>
tablishment of religion, or prohibit-<lb/>
ing the free exercise thereof As<lb/>
plainly read, it is to keep government<lb/>
off the back of religion. The amend-<lb/>
ment contains - no separation, no<lb/>
church, no state.<lb/>
The idea of separation of church<lb/>
and state originates not from the<lb/>
Constitution or any other founda-<lb/>
tional documents of our country, but<lb/>
from a personal letter from Thomas<lb/>
Jefferson to the Danbury, CT, Bap-<lb/>
tist Association in 1802. Jefferson<lb/>
was responding to their concern that<lb/>
U.S. government might sponsor one<lb/>
particular denomination and create<lb/>
the "Church of the United States" -<lb/>
like the Anglican church became the<lb/>
church of England. In the letter he<lb/>
used the phrase "separation of<lb/>
church and state" to signify the state<lb/>
would not engage in any influence<lb/>
over the church in America (not the<lb/>
other way around).<lb/>
As a matter of fact, it was not<lb/>
until the 1947, when an activist Su-<lb/>
preme Court used eight words of<lb/>
Jefferson's letter, taken out of con-<lb/>
text, to redefine the initial intent of<lb/>
the first amendment. This decision<lb/>
Shane Deike<lb/>
Opinion Columnist<lb/>
"Separation of<lb/>
church and<lb/>
state" is not in<lb/>
the Constitution<lb/>
or the Bill of<lb/>
Rights <lb/>
was a radical new philosophy for the<lb/>
court and the shift came without any<lb/>
historical or legal precedent.<lb/>
Actually, the very concept of<lb/>
God, the Bible and Church being<lb/>
separate from influencing our gov-<lb/>
ernment would have been considered<lb/>
ludicrous by the men who formed the<lb/>
documents for our country. The<lb/>
book they most often quoted to for-<lb/>
mulate these documents is the Bible<lb/>
(over 13 of these documents con-<lb/>
sist of direct quotes from the Bible).<lb/>
This is hardly the actions of men who<lb/>
like religion to be separate.<lb/>
In recent years many have<lb/>
claimed that our founding fathers<lb/>
were atheists, agnostics or deists, and<lb/>
more non religious than religious.<lb/>
Nothing could be further from the<lb/>
truth. Of the 55 men who signed<lb/>
the Declaration of Independence,<lb/>
there are, at most, three who may be<lb/>
called deists - and even among these<lb/>
three, it is not a clear cut issue.<lb/>
The most acciaimed deist, Ben<lb/>
Franklin, is the very man who insti-<lb/>
gated the idea of prayer before each<lb/>
session of congress.<lb/>
Many others would concur that<lb/>
separation was never to be the issue.<lb/>
John Adams said, 'Our constitution<lb/>
was made only for a moral and reli-<lb/>
gious people. It is wholly inadequate<lb/>
for the government of any other<lb/>
George Washington said that no<lb/>
one could claim to be a true Ameri-<lb/>
can or the tribute of American pa-<lb/>
triotism if they ever attempt to re-<lb/>
move religion from politics. In his<lb/>
own words, "It is impossible to gov-<lb/>
ern rightly without God and the<lb/>
Bible<lb/>
Daniel Webster said. "Whatever<lb/>
makes men good Christians, makes<lb/>
them good citizens These are foun-<lb/>
dational sentiments of the men who<lb/>
formed our great nation.<lb/>
John Jay, the first Chief Justice<lb/>
of the Supreme Court, said, "Provi-<lb/>
dence has given to our people the<lb/>
choice of their rulers, and it is the<lb/>
duty, as well as the privilege and in-<lb/>
terest, of a Christian nation to select<lb/>
and prefer Christians for its rulers<lb/>
According to him, true religion has<lb/>
everything to do with politics.<lb/>
As a point of irony, the Supreme<lb/>
Court, the very organization which<lb/>
took prayer out of school in 1947,<lb/>
has the Ten Commandments listed<lb/>
in their court room. Somebody smell<lb/>
the coffee (or check the writing on<lb/>
the wall).<lb/>
We were founded as a moral and<lb/>
religious nation. It was built into the<lb/>
system and the system will fail with-<lb/>
out it. That we were founded reli-<lb/>
giously and therefore morally is not<lb/>
really a matter of opinion, it is only a<lb/>
simple matter of history.<lb/>
The East Carolinian<lb/>
Gregory Dickens, General Manager<lb/>
Maureen A. Rich, Managing Editor<lb/>
Chris Warren, Advertising Director<lb/>
Printed on<lb/>
10<lb/>
recycled<lb/>
Stephanie B. Lassiter, News Editor<lb/>
Tambra Zion, Assistant News Editor<lb/>
Mark Brett, Lifestyle Editor<lb/>
Meredith Langley, Assistant Lifestyle Editor<lb/>
Dave Pond, Sports Editor<lb/>
Eric Bartels, Assistant Sports Editor<lb/>
Stephanie Smith, Staff Illustrator<lb/>
Celeste Wilson, Layout Manager<lb/>
Jeremy Lee, Assistant Layout Manager<lb/>
Randall Roziell, Creative Director<lb/>
Darryl Marsh, Ass't Creative Director<lb/>
Mike O'Shea, Circulation Manager<lb/>
Thomas Brobst, Copy Editor<lb/>
Alexa Thompson, Copy Editor<lb/>
Charles Peele, Systems Manager<lb/>
Paul D. Wright, Media Adviser<lb/>
Janet Respess, Media Accountant<lb/>
Deborah Daniel,Secretary<lb/>
Serving the ECU community since 1925,The East Carolinian publishes 12,000 copies every Tuesday and Thursday. The lead<lb/>
editorial in each edition is the opinion of the Editorial Board.The East Carolinian welcomes letters to the editor, limited to<lb/>
250 words, which may be edited for decency or brevity. The East Carolinian reserves the right to edit or reject letters for<lb/>
publication. All letters must be signed. Letters should be addressed to Opinion Editor,The East Carolinian, Publications<lb/>
Building. ECU, Greenville, NC 278584353. For information, call (919) 328-6366.<lb/>
Don't drive in front of me!<lb/>
The opinion page may be an odd<lb/>
place to make a case for people keeping<lb/>
their opinions to themselves, W that's<lb/>
what I'm doing Specifically I'm referring<lb/>
to those ob: oxious and often crude<lb/>
bumper stickers that I see on cars every-<lb/>
where I go.<lb/>
These glib, pseudo-clever stickers<lb/>
tackle every subject imaginable from<lb/>
abortion to animal rights to gun control<lb/>
in a way that can be irritating or even<lb/>
down-right offensive. A speech, a discus-<lb/>
sion among friends (or enemies) or even<lb/>
a column on the opinion page of your<lb/>
local newspaper is the time or place to<lb/>
air your views.<lb/>
in these cases the person being sub-<lb/>
jected to your personal opinion (and no<lb/>
matter how sure you are that you're right<lb/>
it is only your opinion) can get up and<lb/>
leave or stop reading or choose to hear<lb/>
you out<lb/>
When you practice guerrilla opin-<lb/>
Andi Powell Phillips<lb/>
Opinion Columnist<lb/>
Bumper stickers<lb/>
force opinions<lb/>
(often crude and<lb/>
obnoxious ones)<lb/>
on people <lb/>
ion giving however, by plastering con-<lb/>
troversial bumper stickers all over your<lb/>
car, you force your opinion on the driv-<lb/>
ers around you without giving them a<lb/>
chance to respond This can on increase<lb/>
the hostility between opposing sides of<lb/>
an issue. You aren't scoring any points.<lb/>
Personally, I see these bumper stick-<lb/>
ers aimed at angering other people as<lb/>
cowardly. People who are not confident<lb/>
enough in their convictions, or at least<lb/>
in their ability to speak intelligently and<lb/>
persuasively in defense of them, hide<lb/>
behind the self-righteous slogans they<lb/>
slap on their cars.<lb/>
If you feel strongly enough about a<lb/>
particular subject that you are tempted<lb/>
to buy one of these bumper stickers mat<lb/>
reduce a complex issue to a bad pun or<lb/>
an offensive statement don't Instead find<lb/>
out enough about the subject to feel com-<lb/>
fortable giving your opinion when ifs<lb/>
wanted or when you feel ifs needed, but<lb/>
please stop assaulting those of us who<lb/>
have to share the road with you with your<lb/>
unsolicited and unwanted opinions. You<lb/>
don'twin over anyone to your way of think-<lb/>
ing this way, you only show your lack of<lb/>
consideration for others.<lb/>
WM Letters to the Editor<lb/>
To the Editor.<lb/>
I am currently a member of the<lb/>
Student Government Association. I<lb/>
have been involved in Student Govern-<lb/>
ment as well as the N.C. General As-<lb/>
sembly (Finance Asst). I would like to<lb/>
share some information to my fellow<lb/>
students about a member of the S.GA,<lb/>
currently serving the position of<lb/>
Sophomore Class President. She vas<lb/>
elected Freshmen Class President her<lb/>
first year at this university and she has<lb/>
served on the Rules &amp; Judiciary Com-<lb/>
mittee and the Student Welfare Com-<lb/>
mittee. She is genuinely concerned<lb/>
about the welfare of the student body<lb/>
and of the proper appropriation of stu-<lb/>
dents' fees. She has expressed concern<lb/>
in areas such as student satisfaction<lb/>
in campus dining transit system, stu-<lb/>
dent fees and tuition, among other is-<lb/>
sues. She has also expressed concern<lb/>
in better communication and relations<lb/>
among the members of S.G.A She is<lb/>
currently organizing a day of group<lb/>
activities involving communication and<lb/>
leadership. Ms. Nix has spoken to cam-<lb/>
pus organizations and students about<lb/>
Student Government and some of the<lb/>
issues we have worked on. She con-<lb/>
stantly encourages students to take<lb/>
advantage of the resources available by<lb/>
S.GA because every student has al-<lb/>
ready paid their share of student fees<lb/>
and deserves to know about and be a<lb/>
part of, the appropriations.<lb/>
I support Angie Nix for the posi-<lb/>
tion of Tresurer. She has already<lb/>
proven leadership and responsibility<lb/>
and would make an important asset to<lb/>
the Executive Board of the Student<lb/>
Government Association. When listen-<lb/>
ing to the issues, be sure to elect a<lb/>
student body representative that has<lb/>
the genuine interest of the students.<lb/>
Melissa Godwin<lb/>
Belk Residence Hall Rep.<lb/>
Former N.C. General Assembk-<lb/>
Finance Asst<lb/>
Freshman<lb/>
Undeclared<lb/>
To the Editor:<lb/>
At the bottom of the official East<lb/>
Carolina stationary, in small print it<lb/>
states:<lb/>
East Carolina is a constituent<lb/>
of The University of North Carolina.<lb/>
An Equal OpportunityAffirmative<lb/>
Action Employer.<lb/>
This statement struck me as be-<lb/>
ing contradictory. How could any or-<lb/>
ganization be both an Equal Oppor-<lb/>
tunity Employer and at the same time<lb/>
an Affirmative Action Employer?<lb/>
By definition Equal Opportunity<lb/>
gives everyone qualified an Equal<lb/>
chance at a job, regardless of sex,<lb/>
race, religion, handicap or now sexual<lb/>
orientation (depending if they have<lb/>
voted to accept sexual orientation to<lb/>
this list). Affirmative Action on the<lb/>
other hand gives SPECIAL consid-<lb/>
eration to an applicant on the basis<lb/>
of sex, race, religion, handicap or<lb/>
possibly sexual orientation (again<lb/>
depending where you are).<lb/>
I am not trying to get into the<lb/>
political correctness of the issue. I<lb/>
just want to point out it is impos-<lb/>
sible for an organization to give<lb/>
SPECIAL consideration to an appli-<lb/>
cant and at the same time call them-<lb/>
selves an EQUAL OPPORTUNITY<lb/>
employer.<lb/>
Thank You,<lb/>
Gregory M. Parks<lb/>
Senior, Criminal Justice<lb/>
To the Editor:<lb/>
I am writing in response to the<lb/>
article on the traffic problems writ-<lb/>
ten by Andi Powell Phillips. As an out<lb/>
of state student, I have driven in many<lb/>
different conditions which include<lb/>
center city Philadelphia, and New<lb/>
York city to name a few. When I<lb/>
started driving in the city of<lb/>
Greenville, one of the first things that<lb/>
I noticed was how slow everyone<lb/>
drove. Being from New Jersey, I have<lb/>
u letish to speed. The fact that people<lb/>
can drive below the posted limit is<lb/>
beyond me. I'm glad that someone else<lb/>
has noticed this strange occurance. I<lb/>
find that when people pause when the<lb/>
light turns green, it is best to give<lb/>
them a friendly tap on the horn to<lb/>
get them going. Maybe if everyone just<lb/>
pushed people a little bit then maybe<lb/>
we wouldn't have this problem of un-<lb/>
dershooting the speed light<lb/>
Don't get me wrong, I don't think<lb/>
that all North Carolina drivers are bad,<lb/>
because I've met a few who aren't but<lb/>
I do feel that below normal speed driv-<lb/>
ing can cause accidents and can be<lb/>
an irritating factor for the people who<lb/>
are stuck behind them. Accidents<lb/>
could happen if someone tries to pass<lb/>
another person in a dangerous situa-<lb/>
tion because the person in front of<lb/>
them is driving to slow. I know I don't<lb/>
want that to happen, and I'm sure no<lb/>
one else does either so Greenville driv-<lb/>
ers, do us a favor and speed up.<lb/>
Jason Smith<lb/>
Freshman<lb/>
To the Editor:<lb/>
It is with great sadness and disap-<lb/>
pointment that I bid adieu to my favor-<lb/>
ite strip Magic 101. The fuzzy and not-<lb/>
so-fuzzy denizens that burst into col-<lb/>
legiate life delighted me with their dairy<lb/>
trials, tribulations, and triumphs as<lb/>
they interacted with pithy humans.<lb/>
Since it was the only strip that caught<lb/>
my eye of TECs comics page, I simply<lb/>
skip it now, because for me, without<lb/>
Magic 101, it is but a dearth of mirth.<lb/>
Melody D. Edwards<lb/>
B.M. Univ of SC<lb/>
Music Graduate student<lb/>
i�p.iim� i u<lb/>
mnRMn<lb/>
���� �. -�<lb/>
<pb facs="00058532_0006"/><lb/>
Tuesday, March 21, 1995<lb/>
The East Carolinian<lb/>
H I mmwm<lb/>
Teofawiattt evceoA<lb/>
Sweetheart's offers<lb/>
dining alternative <lb/>
Mark Brett<lb/>
Lifestyle Editor<lb/>
Bucket<lb/>
"A Drop in the Bucket" is just<lb/>
what it claims to be: a very tiny<lb/>
drop in the great screaming bucket<lb/>
of American media opinion. Take<lb/>
it as you will.<lb/>
Ah, spring! The temperature's<lb/>
rising, the first brave sunbathers<lb/>
are out and everyone's returned<lb/>
from spring break sporting new<lb/>
tans and new warm-weather ward-<lb/>
robes from 20 years in the past.<lb/>
That's right, the 70s look is no<lb/>
longer the sole property of a hand-<lb/>
ful of rave kids. It seems that now,<lb/>
everyone's getting in on the fun.<lb/>
You can't swing a dead cat around<lb/>
here without smacking some<lb/>
Marcia-Brady-wannabe upside the<lb/>
head.<lb/>
There is a good side to this, I<lb/>
suppose. Now that all the fad-wor-<lb/>
shipping pseudo-hipsters have<lb/>
found something to replace the<lb/>
grunge look in their shallow hearts<lb/>
(and deep closets), those of us who<lb/>
have been wearing flannel shirts<lb/>
and Chuck Taylor All-Stars since<lb/>
junior high can walk down the<lb/>
See BUCKET page 8<lb/>
Jennifer Coleman<lb/>
Staff Writer<lb/>
Most students at ECU would<lb/>
agree that hot dogs and grilled<lb/>
cheese sandwiches get old rather<lb/>
quickly.<lb/>
That's why 1 was surprised that<lb/>
my friends and I were the only stu-<lb/>
dent patrons of Sweetheart's in<lb/>
Todd Dining Hall last Friday. I was<lb/>
even more surprised as the meal<lb/>
progressed.<lb/>
Folks, Sweetheart's is fantas-<lb/>
tic! It's set up like a "real" restau-<lb/>
rant (except at Sweetheart's, you<lb/>
get better service.) As I entered, the<lb/>
first thing I noticed was the decor.<lb/>
Sweetheart's is decorated in a<lb/>
lovely burgundy and green color<lb/>
scheme that is really quite classy.<lb/>
All of the tables have tablecloths<lb/>
and (can you believe it?) clean sil-<lb/>
verware!<lb/>
We hadn't been sitting for long<lb/>
at all when our waitress came out<lb/>
to take our urink order. Now, I have<lb/>
to say something about this.<lb/>
Throughout our entire meal, none<lb/>
of our glasses ever got empty. I've<lb/>
been in restaurants where I've tried<lb/>
to get a refill for 15 minutes or so;<lb/>
but our waitress at Sweetheart's! <lb/>
made sure our drinks were full at I<lb/>
all times.<lb/>
While we were deciding what<lb/>
to order, our waitress brought out<lb/>
our drinks and some of<lb/>
Sweetheart's fresh baked bread:<lb/>
Wow! Talk about delicious! The<lb/>
bread was orange-raspberry, and it<lb/>
came with a hazelnut spread, both<lb/>
See SWEET page 8<lb/>
Widespread Panic sets in at Barefoot<lb/>
Brandon Waddeil<lb/>
Staff Writer<lb/>
Start today. Start praying for a clear,<lb/>
warm day at ECU on April 20th, at least<lb/>
between 11 a.m. and 6 p.m. This is the<lb/>
one day when many students are actually<lb/>
looking forward to coming to campus. Not<lb/>
necessarily going to class, but certainly<lb/>
to attend Student Union's 16th annual<lb/>
Barefoot on the Mall.<lb/>
Musical events should begin at noon<lb/>
and both local and national acts have been<lb/>
booked to play for us. The opening act<lb/>
for this year's event will be the winner of<lb/>
the Battle of the Bands competition on<lb/>
April 6th. The bands competing are Post<lb/>
Metal Syndrome (last year's winner),<lb/>
Greenbone Dance, Stul (formerly Blood<lb/>
Stul), The Reflectors and Fallen Angel.<lb/>
Following the opening act will be Full Stop<lb/>
and their self-proclaimed musical style of<lb/>
"Funky-Reggae-Rap-Rock-Crunch After<lb/>
Full Stop leaves the stage, the next act will<lb/>
be Raleigh's own Dag.<lb/>
Setting all rumors aside, the final mu-<lb/>
sical act will be headliners Widespread<lb/>
Panic. For the past eight years, Widespread<lb/>
has become one of the most promising rock<lb/>
bands on the East Coast, with a reputa-<lb/>
tion of being one of the greatest live acts.<lb/>
The band has honed their live perfor-<lb/>
mances by playing as headliners and by<lb/>
sharing the bill with other bands as in their<lb/>
part of the critically acclaimed H.O.R.D.E.<lb/>
Fest where they supported acts such as<lb/>
Blues Traveler and Dave Matthews Band.<lb/>
The sextet hailing from humble roots in<lb/>
their native Athens, Ga. are currently sup-<lb/>
porting their fourth album, Ain't Life<lb/>
Grand . "We play a lot of our songs in<lb/>
concert before we record them - a baptism<lb/>
by fire. We can try out different approaches<lb/>
to see how they work and get the<lb/>
audience's reaction stated Widespread's<lb/>
bassist Dave Schools. Therefore, it is quite<lb/>
possible that Widespread Panic will not<lb/>
only be coming to Barefoot to reconfirm<lb/>
their reputation as a popular live act, but<lb/>
also to try out some new material.<lb/>
Many new attractions, as well as fa-<lb/>
vorites from years gone by will be featured<lb/>
at ECU's favorite outdoor festival. Among<lb/>
the returning attractions are Recreational<lb/>
Services' Sumo Wrestling and Student<lb/>
Union's (Special Events Committee) Velcro<lb/>
Olympics. The Velcro game has been up-<lb/>
graded from the one students remember<lb/>
from years past. Last year, the velcro at-<lb/>
traction was simply someone in a velcro<lb/>
body suit jumping and sticking against a<lb/>
wall. This yearlan entire velcro obstacle<lb/>
course has been created, pitting student<lb/>
against student in an American Gladiator<lb/>
type of footrace.<lb/>
The most promising attraction at this<lb/>
year's event, however, seems to be the<lb/>
"Trampoline Thing a combination of tram-<lb/>
poline and bungee cord jumping where stu-<lb/>
dents will be propelled onward and upward<lb/>
into the Greenville sky. Other novelty at-<lb/>
tractions include R.H.As Gladiator Pole<lb/>
Joust and Bouncy Boxing. Food and drinks<lb/>
Photos courtesy ECU Student Union<lb/>
j This fine collection of young men will be playing at this year's Barefoot<lb/>
! on the Mall. They are: downtown regulars Full Stop (above), Raleigh's<lb/>
Dag (left) and Barefoot headliners Widespread Panic (above left).<lb/>
(nonalcoholic) will be for sale by several<lb/>
student organizations who will have<lb/>
booths set up around the mall through-<lb/>
out the day. Students are reminded that<lb/>
no coolers or backpacks will be allowed<lb/>
at this event and security will be doubled<lb/>
from years past to ensure the safety and<lb/>
security of everyone involved.<lb/>
Barefoot is one of the best events held<lb/>
at ECU and has been this way for several<lb/>
years. Many people are putting hundreds<lb/>
of hours of work to ensure that everything<lb/>
goes well. One thing to keep in mind is<lb/>
that Barefoot on the Mall is a student fi-<lb/>
nanced campus event. ECU students pay<lb/>
for it, and it is closed to the public.<lb/>
Registered student organizations who<lb/>
want to be involved in the Barefoot activi-<lb/>
ties as a fundraiser or to increase aware-<lb/>
ness of their organization shoukThave re-<lb/>
ceived a registration package-frorri Student<lb/>
Union. Registration forms must be turned<lb/>
into Central Ticket Office at Mendenhall<lb/>
by 4 p.m. on March 31st to get a 10 feet<lb/>
by 10 feet space on the mall. Organiza-<lb/>
tions who need further information on reg-<lb/>
istration can contact Amy Zmistowski,<lb/>
special events chair, at 328-4715.<lb/>
LI<lb/>
f<lb/>
??tMAie evieui<lb/>
wmmmKmmaaaami<lb/>
CD. Reviews<lb/>
All-star cast can't stop Outbreak<lb/>
Ike Shibley<lb/>
Staff Writer<lb/>
That a virus could cause the<lb/>
downfall of mankind's dominance on<lb/>
planet Earth justifiably scares many<lb/>
people. The AIDS epidemic has<lb/>
heightened public awareness of the<lb/>
seriousness of viral infections. The<lb/>
film and book And the Band Played<lb/>
On vividly depicted the real- life cri-<lb/>
sis occurring on a global scale, and<lb/>
the nonfiction best seller The Hot<lb/>
Zone has many wondering if a virus<lb/>
will destroy the human race.<lb/>
Stephen King's The Stand explored<lb/>
the rebirth of the world after 99<lb/>
percent of the population suc-<lb/>
cumbed to a virus.<lb/>
A new film called Outbreak tells<lb/>
the fictional, but nominally plau-<lb/>
sible, tale of a viral outbreak in the<lb/>
United States that causes death<lb/>
within 24 hours. The film joins the<lb/>
legions of other films based on a<lb/>
scientific dilemma and like those<lb/>
films resorts to contrived histrion-<lb/>
ics to try to sell the film. Outbreak<lb/>
presents an alternate vision of The<lb/>
Stand, a vision that still believes<lb/>
viral infections can be stopped.<lb/>
Outbreak begins in 1967 in an<lb/>
African village where many men lie<lb/>
dying from an unknown cause. The<lb/>
U.S. government's solution to the<lb/>
problem entails<lb/>
dropping a bomb to<lb/>
eliminate the un-<lb/>
known microscopic<lb/>
invader before it<lb/>
spreads.<lb/>
The film then<lb/>
jumps to the<lb/>
present day when<lb/>
an eerie sequence<lb/>
of events threaten<lb/>
to release the virus<lb/>
onto an unsuspect-<lb/>
ing world. An in-<lb/>
fected monkey from<lb/>
the Motaba River<lb/>
Valley, where the<lb/>
original viral outbreak occurred,<lb/>
gets captured for transport to an<lb/>
American pet store. The monkey<lb/>
comes in contact with a crew mem-<lb/>
ber aboard the freighter carrying<lb/>
the animal and then with a ware-<lb/>
house worker who smuggles the<lb/>
m<lb/>
monkey to the pet store owner.<lb/>
Eventually the monkey gets released<lb/>
to the wilderness where a little girl<lb/>
befriends him, unaware of the im-<lb/>
minent danger she puts herself in.<lb/>
The Motaba virus, as it gets<lb/>
named, spreads<lb/>
in the town of<lb/>
Cedar Creek,<lb/>
California from<lb/>
the pet store<lb/>
owner who was<lb/>
scratched by the<lb/>
monkey. Origi-<lb/>
nally a<lb/>
waterborne virus,<lb/>
the Motaba mu-<lb/>
tates and be-<lb/>
comes airborne<lb/>
in Cedar Creek,<lb/>
infecting the en-<lb/>
tire town.<lb/>
Colonel Sam<lb/>
Daniels (Dustin Hoffman in fine<lb/>
form), a veteran Army virologist, and<lb/>
his ex-wife Robby (Rene Russo in a<lb/>
believable performance), a virologist<lb/>
who now works for the Center for<lb/>
Disease Control (CDC), arrive in<lb/>
Cedar Creek to do battle with the<lb/>
The unsettling<lb/>
feelings that<lb/>
pervade Outbreak<lb/>
get trampled<lb/>
beneath the<lb/>
Hollwood ending<lb/>
concoted by the<lb/>
filmmakers.<lb/>
virus. They quickly realize that un-<lb/>
less they find the host of the virus<lb/>
they have no chance of stopping the<lb/>
epidemic.<lb/>
Compounding the problems of<lb/>
the virus are two Army generals,<lb/>
Ford (Morgan Freeman) and<lb/>
McLintock (Donald Southerland),<lb/>
who have decided to handle the<lb/>
town of Cedar Creek the way they<lb/>
handled the remote African village<lb/>
- eliminate the town.<lb/>
Presented in the context of the<lb/>
story, the generals' decision seems<lb/>
sound, though unpleasant. However,<lb/>
the film quickly makes these com-<lb/>
plex men one dimensional by hav-<lb/>
ing them ignore further develop-<lb/>
ments on the virus. Sam and Robby<lb/>
eventually locate the host from<lb/>
which they feel certain they can cre-<lb/>
ate antibodies, but McLintock can<lb/>
think of nothing but following<lb/>
through on his decision to bomb the<lb/>
town. Had McLintock been shown<lb/>
agonizing over his decisions in pri-<lb/>
vate (a military man must always<lb/>
appear certain of his decisions when<lb/>
See OUTBREAK page 7<lb/>
<lb/>
'4it�iii .�'� ���� �<lb/>
Sonic Youth<lb/>
Made in USA<lb/>
Kris Hoffler<lb/>
Staff Writer<lb/>
Sonic Youth, who are still sonic but<lb/>
not in their youth, has just released their<lb/>
one and only soundtrack. Back in 1986.<lb/>
just after their now famous Evol LP,<lb/>
Sonic Youth was approached by Ken<lb/>
Friedman to do a soundtrack for his new<lb/>
movie Made In The U.S.A The result<lb/>
was a mostly instrumental album that<lb/>
the band's Thurston Moore describes as<lb/>
"an odd compromise between New York<lb/>
City Avant-gardsters and Hollywood hit<lb/>
men<lb/>
Like everything else they have done,<lb/>
this is weird and edgy, full of strange<lb/>
twists in sound and distortion. Being<lb/>
recorded in mono also helps to give the<lb/>
recording an empty, almost hollow sound.<lb/>
The producers and movie representatives<lb/>
inflicted some damage on the final re-<lb/>
sult, but we are still left with Sonic<lb/>
Youth's signature sound. This album was<lb/>
done about two years before the master-<lb/>
ful baroque noises of Daydream Nation,<lb/>
an album that many fans say is the height<lb/>
of their career.<lb/>
It is really hard to make comments<lb/>
about this music because it's mostly in-<lb/>
strumental, and few of the 23 tracks on<lb/>
the album last longer than two minutes.<lb/>
Often they are twisted soundscapes with<lb/>
long droning bass lines and sparingly<lb/>
plucked guitars warped by distortion,<lb/>
echo and reverb. Sometimes they sound<lb/>
like they are under water, and at others<lb/>
they sound like factory noises slowed<lb/>
down to a haunting grind.<lb/>
"Smoke Blisters 1 &amp; 2" and its coun-<lb/>
See SONIC page 7<lb/>
wmmmmmmmmffm<lb/>
<pb facs="00058532_0007"/><lb/>
Tuesday, March 21, 1995<lb/>
The East Carolinian<lb/>
Health F. Y. I.<lb/>
Felicia D. Hussey<lb/>
ECU School of Medicine<lb/>
Have you seen the new nutrition<lb/>
labels on most foods in the grocery<lb/>
store? If you haven't, take a look the<lb/>
next time you go shopping. These new<lb/>
labels can help you make smart and<lb/>
healthy choices for vou and your fam-<lb/>
ily.<lb/>
The new labels answer the ques-<lb/>
tion "What is a serving size?" For ex-<lb/>
ample: the old label on a bag of pret-<lb/>
zels listed a serving by the number of<lb/>
ounces. It's much easier to count out<lb/>
23 pretzels and know you are getting<lb/>
the correct serving size. No more<lb/>
STUDENTSTEACHERS<lb/>
Earn $$ This Summer! ineed dependable transportation.)<lb/>
Monitoring Cotton Fields MAIL RESUME TO: MCSI<lb/>
May to Sept. P.O. Box 370<lb/>
5.75 per hour Cove City, NC 28523<lb/>
C25 per mile Or Fax: (919)637-2125<lb/>
LOCATED JUST MINUTES FROM<lb/>
Greenville, Kinston, New Bern<lb/>
guessing! The new labels also make it<lb/>
easv to figure out the percentage of<lb/>
calories from fat in a serving size. It<lb/>
is best if the foods and drinks you<lb/>
choose, at least over several days, have<lb/>
less than 30 percent of total calories<lb/>
from fat<lb/>
The new labels give you the total<lb/>
number of calories per serving size<lb/>
and the number of calories just from<lb/>
fat. To find the total calories from fat.<lb/>
just divide the total number of calo-<lb/>
ries in a serving size into the number<lb/>
of calories from fat If the number you<lb/>
get is less than 0.30. that food is a<lb/>
good choice if you are looking for a<lb/>
lower-fat food. For example, if the to-<lb/>
tal number of calories per serving is<lb/>
50 and the number of calories from<lb/>
fat if five, you would divide five by 50<lb/>
and get 0.10. So 10 percent of the<lb/>
calories in this serving are from fat<lb/>
Remember, read the new food<lb/>
labels and use them to eat well!<lb/>
'Simply the Best Burgers"<lb/>
HOME OF THE HAMBURGER<lb/>
STEAK SANDWICH<lb/>
Try our phone in Express service. Just call ahead with your<lb/>
order and we'll have it waiting for you when you come in<lb/>
315 E. 10th St.<lb/>
830-0304<lb/>
CHAR-GRILL<lb/>
14lb Hamburger Steak<lb/>
Sandwich Jr French Fries &amp;<lb/>
Medium Drink<lb/>
$3.15<lb/>
Limit one per coupon<lb/>
Expires 4-2-95<lb/>
CHAfwUlmt<lb/>
CHAR-GRILL<lb/>
CHAR-GRILL<lb/>
14lb Grilled Chicken Breast! 14 lb Hamburger Steak <lb/>
Sandwich. French Fries &amp; ' Sandwich Jr, French Fries &amp; '<lb/>
Medium Drink Medium Drink J<lb/>
12 lb Hamburger Steak<lb/>
Sandwich. French Fries &amp;<lb/>
Medium Drink<lb/>
Limit one per coupon<lb/>
Expires 4-2-95<lb/>
$3.99 i $3.15 i $4.19<lb/>
Limit one per coupon<lb/>
Expires 4-2-95<lb/>
Limit one per coupon<lb/>
Expires 4-2-95<lb/>
�J: The,<lb/>
CoMedY<lb/>
ATiTIC<lb/>
Barr) Martin<lb/>
Wed. 22nd<lb/>
AStewGdder<lb/>
752-7303<lb/>
209 E. 5th Street<lb/>
Greenville, NC<lb/>
N.C's<lb/>
Legendary-<lb/>
Rock n' Roll<lb/>
Nightclub<lb/>
Now In Its<lb/>
23rd Year<lb/>
TONIGHT<lb/>
DILLON FENCE<lb/>
Just Back from Tour w Black Crowes<lb/>
Special Guest Queen Sarah Saturday<lb/>
THURSDAY MAR. 23<lb/>
Free<lb/>
Papa John's<lb/>
Pizza When<lb/>
Doors Open at<lb/>
9:30<lb/>
WSFL COLLEGE NIGHT<lb/>
and<lb/>
Uncle Mingo<lb/>
99c Membership ,99g Hi Balls .99e 32oz. Draft .99c Bottle Beer<lb/>
FRIDAY MAR. 24<lb/>
Rasia<lb/>
ij<lb/>
aen<lb/>
SATURDAY MAR. 25<lb/>
$5 Adm.<lb/>
For Members<lb/>
BACKDOORS <lb/>
The Shocking Reincarnation of Jim Morrison &amp; The Doors<lb/>
vItIIv- from page 6<lb/>
terpart "Smoke Blisters 3 &amp; 4" aa- un-<lb/>
der water tunes. Kirr, Cordon's bass lays<lb/>
down the steady low pitched drone, while<lb/>
Moore and Lee Ranald i pluck and scrape<lb/>
their guitars ever so slightly. It's really<lb/>
weird and dreamy. "The Velvet Plug"<lb/>
comes under the factory noises category.<lb/>
It sounds at the beginning like a machine<lb/>
slowly grinding to a halt and then builds<lb/>
to a guitar being struck. Then suddenly<lb/>
a creepy piano chord progression comes<lb/>
in, plugged into Cod knows what kind<lb/>
of distortion device, and the final result<lb/>
is downright spooky.<lb/>
"Secret Girl" was taken off of the<lb/>
�� �?' �����<lb/>
Erol LP and is the one of three tracks<lb/>
on the album with vocals. Gordon whis-<lb/>
pers over a bizarre piano loop, "Come<lb/>
and touch me, the advertisements say<lb/>
the pleasure is ever lasting This song is<lb/>
the reason they were called to do the<lb/>
soundtrack in the first place.<lb/>
Most of the songs are soundscapes.<lb/>
"Coughing Up Tweed Tre-Poured<lb/>
Wood" and "Hair Piece Lullaby 1 &amp; 2"<lb/>
are some of the better ones. It's almost<lb/>
as if they were just one segment of a<lb/>
very long song. "Lincoln's Gout" is one<lb/>
of the real standout tracks if only because<lb/>
it is acoustic. It's sort of like Neil Young<lb/>
Very different for SY, but good.<lb/>
I am one of those Sonic Youth fans,<lb/>
so I may like this more than the average<lb/>
listener. It was really cool of Rhino<lb/>
records to take the time to release this; 1<lb/>
for one had never heard of it and was<lb/>
thrilled to see it on the shelves. It's not<lb/>
really party music or power guitar rock;<lb/>
it's better suited for a guiet night at home<lb/>
or fsetting a strange mood for yourself.<lb/>
Made In the LSA. is simple music. Don't<lb/>
expect elaborate construction; that's not<lb/>
the idea here. This is antirock music in<lb/>
grand Sonic Youth style, deconstruction<lb/>
in action.<lb/>
OUTBREAK<lb/>
in public). Outbreak could have<lb/>
avoided the melodramatic trap of<lb/>
having an easily definable bad guy.<lb/>
The unsettling feelings that per-<lb/>
vade Outbreak get trampled beneath<lb/>
the Hollywood ending concocted by<lb/>
the filmmakers. One of the final se-<lb/>
quences of the film is a ridiculous<lb/>
aerial sequence involving a plane<lb/>
and a helicopter, replete with a<lb/>
grand-standing speech by Sam in<lb/>
midair.<lb/>
Wolfgang Petersen. who scored<lb/>
big last summer with In the Line of<lb/>
Fire, works well in Outbreak to con-<lb/>
vey the confusion of the situation.<lb/>
His restless camera prowls hallways<lb/>
and jungles with nervous energy. He<lb/>
cuts from one scene to another<lb/>
quickly, rarely giving the viewer<lb/>
enough time to completely absorb<lb/>
the situation. His fervent style ef-<lb/>
fectively involves the viewer in the<lb/>
crisis occurring onscreen.<lb/>
But Petersen succumbs to the<lb/>
Hollywood mentality of more being<lb/>
from page 6<lb/>
better. Why have a simple virus film<lb/>
when you can also include a mad-<lb/>
man, several chase scenes and an<lb/>
ending patently designed to manipu-<lb/>
late the audience into cheering? A<lb/>
film like Outbreak tells a story in<lb/>
which no cheering could occur.<lb/>
Even when a crisis ends (like the<lb/>
AIDS epidemic hopefully will some-<lb/>
day), any celebration would be tem-<lb/>
pered by the sobering facts that<lb/>
many people died before a cure was<lb/>
ever found.<lb/>
Before the complete ruin of<lb/>
Outbreak by Hollywood melodrama,<lb/>
several powerful scenes occur. The<lb/>
most notable scene has a sick<lb/>
woman leaving her family to be<lb/>
transported to the hospital for quar-<lb/>
antine. Because of the infection she<lb/>
cannot even hug her husband or her<lb/>
children good-bye. She leaves with<lb/>
the GIs knowing that she will prob-<lb/>
ably never see her family again.<lb/>
Instead of following up on this<lb/>
woman's plight, Petersen decides to<lb/>
focus on the overblown battle of<lb/>
wills between Sam and McLintock.<lb/>
The climatic struggle between<lb/>
McLintock and Sam rings hope-<lb/>
lessly false. McLintock's motives<lb/>
get reduced to him wanting to pro-<lb/>
tect the biological weaponry the<lb/>
virus represents. The good guybad<lb/>
guy situation is unnecessary since<lb/>
the virus in the film represents the<lb/>
bad guy.<lb/>
By focusing on the battle be-<lb/>
tween Sam and General McLintock,<lb/>
Outbreak prostitutes itself to the<lb/>
studio heads in the hopes of mak-<lb/>
ing more money. By ratcheting up<lb/>
the melodrama, the film hopes to<lb/>
reach a wider audience, but in do-<lb/>
ing so infects itself with the Holly-<lb/>
wood virus that ruins many poten-<lb/>
tially-great films. Finding a cause<lb/>
for this Hollywood virus would be<lb/>
almost as great a miracle as find-<lb/>
ing a cure for AIDS.<lb/>
On a scale of one to ten. Out-<lb/>
break rates a six.<lb/>
i�Ar<lb/>
Natural life I<lb/>
The sun is strongest between 11 a.m. and 3 p.m minimize<lb/>
exposure to the sun during these hours.<lb/>
-The Skin Cancer Foundation<lb/>
This message has been brought to you by Recreational Services and Housing Services.<lb/>
Ililli?<lb/>
All films start o18:00 PM<lb/>
unless otherwise noted<lb/>
and ore FREE to<lb/>
Students, Faculty, and Staff<lb/>
(one guest ailowed)<lb/>
with valid ECU D.<lb/>
SnVN TffSKKL<lb/>
2<lb/>
Thursday, March 23 � Friday, March 24 � Saturday, March 25<lb/>
THE DREW KLEEBERG BAND<lb/>
Wednesday, March 22 �1:30- 3:00 PM � In Front of Mendetihall<lb/>
Co-Sponsored By ECU Dining Services and ARAMARX<lb/>
JH�nd�np&amp; Exhibit<lb/>
X �� Friday, March 24- Friday; April U<lb/>
c LTI&amp; Mendenfcall GaHery<lb/>
UeCOfld teuton<lb/>
Saturday, March 25<lb/>
1:00 -2:00 PM<lb/>
�� a�<lb/>
lulensuusrv<lb/>
mi AT H1CHI<lb/>
Carroll Dasniell and Students<lb/>
from tke Sckool of Music<lb/>
Wednesday, Marck 29, 1995 at 8:00 PM<lb/>
Room 244 � Mendenkall Student Center<lb/>
FREEH!<lb/>
Sponsored ky tke Special Events Committee<lb/>
and ECU Sckool of Music<lb/>
t&amp;WL?<lb/>
For More Information,<lb/>
Call the<lb/>
Student Union Hotline<lb/>
at 328-6004.<lb/>
<pb facs="00058532_0008"/><lb/>
8<lb/>
Tuesday, March 21, 1995<lb/>
The East Carolinian<lb/>
SWEET from page 6<lb/>
made at Sweetheart's. I've never<lb/>
tasted anything so good.<lb/>
There was a good selection of<lb/>
foods. A customer can choose be-<lb/>
tween salads, soup and sandwiches.<lb/>
I ordered the Smokehouse Chicken<lb/>
Sandwich, and my friends ordered<lb/>
roast beef sandwiches. Both entrees<lb/>
came with fries or pasta salad. I<lb/>
couldn't believe what they brought<lb/>
out. My sandwich came on an on-<lb/>
ion roll, and it had a tangy barbe-<lb/>
cue sauce with lettuce, bacon and<lb/>
cheese. The chicken was completely<lb/>
cooked (a surprise for those of us<lb/>
who are used to eating pink chicken<lb/>
at other establishments). The fries<lb/>
were rather spicy, but delicious.<lb/>
The sandwiches were really<lb/>
good, but nothing can hold a candle<lb/>
to Sweetheart's desserts. I ordered<lb/>
a slice of lemon cheesecake, and my<lb/>
friends split a slice of six-layer<lb/>
chocolate cake. First of all, neither<lb/>
of the desserts were stale. As I'm<lb/>
sure many of you know, that's a<lb/>
rarity in campus dining. Secondly,<lb/>
they were both wonderful! The<lb/>
cheesecake was to die for, and the<lb/>
chocolate cake was unbelievably<lb/>
rich.<lb/>
As far as atmosphere goes, I<lb/>
have one thing to say about<lb/>
Sweetheart's - it's quiet. My friends<lb/>
and I had a conversation, and I<lb/>
could hear everything they said. At<lb/>
first, we were the only customers<lb/>
there, but soon a few others showed<lb/>
up. But still, it was remarkably<lb/>
peaceful.<lb/>
I think the only drawback to<lb/>
Sweetheart's is that they don't take<lb/>
mea! equivalancies. However, they<lb/>
will take cash, check or your cam-<lb/>
pus meal card declining balance.<lb/>
The prices are reasonable for what<lb/>
you get. An entree ranges from 5<lb/>
to 6 dollars, and all desserts are<lb/>
$2.25. A drink is about 90 cents,<lb/>
and you get free refills.<lb/>
All in all, dining at<lb/>
Sweetheart's was a pleasant expe-<lb/>
rience. It's definitely worth the trip<lb/>
to Todd for those of us who live at<lb/>
the other end of campus.<lb/>
Sweetheart's is open Monday<lb/>
through Friday from 11 a.m. to 2<lb/>
p.m. when classes meet. Go by and<lb/>
check it out - you won't be disap-<lb/>
pointed, and your stomach will<lb/>
thank you for it.<lb/>
Out of 10 stars, Sweetheart's<lb/>
rates an eight.<lb/>
TZememSet, m&amp;te&amp;:<lb/>
4:30 m<lb/>
ISUvlvEl from page 6<lb/>
street without the danger of being<lb/>
lumped in with all the trendoids.<lb/>
But something about this 70s<lb/>
thing still bugs me. Why is it that<lb/>
we've picked such a useless and<lb/>
meaningless decade to relive? The<lb/>
only good thing about the 70s that<lb/>
1 can see is the hedonism. The "sex,<lb/>
drugs and rock &amp; roll" lifestyle was<lb/>
perfected sometime around 1975 I<lb/>
think, and nobody outside of<lb/>
Caligula had better orgies than the<lb/>
70s crowd.<lb/>
But other than those dubious<lb/>
honors, what else does the 70s<lb/>
have to offer the new generation?<lb/>
Well, there's arena rock (who will<lb/>
be the next Jethro Tull? Who would<lb/>
want to be?), blaxploitation movies<lb/>
(Wesley Snipes IS Shaft!), variety<lb/>
shows (Michael Bolton: the Mike<lb/>
Douglas of the '90s) and political<lb/>
scandal (Gingrichgate?). Or how<lb/>
about the slow decay and eventual<lb/>
sellout of a once-vital youth cul-<lb/>
ture? Will today's animal rights ac-<lb/>
tivists be tomorrow's hippy burn-<lb/>
outs?<lb/>
But what I'm really waiting for<lb/>
is the '90s nostalgia for the 70s<lb/>
nostalgia for the '50s. Yeah, that's<lb/>
right, I'm talking about Happj<lb/>
Days: the Moviel Johnny Depp as<lb/>
the Fonz! Drew Barrymore as Pinky<lb/>
Tuscadero! And, in a suprise twist,<lb/>
Fresh Prince Will Smith as Richie<lb/>
Cunningham! Hoo-ha!<lb/>
Or, even worse, they could do<lb/>
"Happy Days for the '90s" and fol-<lb/>
low the adventures of a madcap<lb/>
group of pals in the innocent, care-<lb/>
free days of the 70s. Imagine the<lb/>
laughs when Ralph OD's on smack!<lb/>
The Fonz (dressed in leisure suit<lb/>
and medallion) gets a bad case of<lb/>
gonorrhea! Potsie comes home<lb/>
from Vietnam and shoots up the<lb/>
neighborhood! Later in the series,<lb/>
Joanie could bring home her les-<lb/>
bian lover, Chachi! The fun would<lb/>
never stop!<lb/>
Let's face it. As decades go, the<lb/>
70s is not one of our culture's high<lb/>
water marks. The 70s nostalgia<lb/>
wave was funny when a handful of<lb/>
hipsters started it as a collossal<lb/>
joke a few years ago. But that whole<lb/>
wink-wink, nudge-nudge, "Hey-<lb/>
weren't-the70s-the-ginchiest?"<lb/>
thing ceased to be a gag months<lb/>
ago. Some marketing genius got<lb/>
hold of it, gave it to MTV and now<lb/>
every brainless fashion victim in<lb/>
town looks like they walked out of<lb/>
a Dirty Harry movie.<lb/>
What decade should we emu-<lb/>
late, you ask? How about the '90s?<lb/>
Do something original! Wear under-<lb/>
wear on your heads! Anything is<lb/>
better than bellbottoms.<lb/>
I don't think I can say it better<lb/>
than former punk Mike Watt and<lb/>
Pearl Jam frontman Eddie Vedder<lb/>
on their song "Against the 70s<lb/>
"The kids of today should defend<lb/>
themselves against the 70s It's<lb/>
not reality Just someone else's<lb/>
sentimentality<lb/>
That's right, kiddies. Even<lb/>
Eddie Vedder hates the 70s. So<lb/>
stop reliving your parents' pasts and<lb/>
find your own future. Just don't go<lb/>
back to flannel.<lb/>
Looking for a new<lb/>
living space for 1)9!?<lb/>
Cheek with the Methodist Student<lb/>
Center. 501 East fifth Street.<lb/>
Call our office between 8:30-<lb/>
12:00 noon.<lb/>
MACARONI AU FROMACF<lb/>
(EAT WITH GUSTO FOR ABOUT 5k PER SERVING.)<lb/>
2 cups macaroni (pinwheels are fun) 1 cup milk<lb/>
1 cup sharp cheddar (grated) 3 ths flour<lb/>
12 stick butter x tsp pepper<lb/>
1 tsp Worcestershire (if you like) 1 tsp salt<lb/>
Cook macaroni in 5 cups salted, boiling water for<lb/>
15 minutes or until al dente. Drain. In a separate<lb/>
pot, melt butter and mix in flour over low heat.<lb/>
Then, stir in milk until smooth. Add cheese, salt,<lb/>
pepper and Worcestershire. Stir well. Smother<lb/>
macaroni. Serves 4.<lb/>
Note: For-your nutritional convenience,<lb/>
Citibank Classic cards are accepted at<lb/>
over 12 million locations, including<lb/>
grocery stores.<lb/>
WE Hf LOOKING OUT FOR YOU<lb/>
Official ECU Ring Week<lb/>
IRTCARVED<lb/>
�fcc; i ?r;r JFwt lrv<lb/>
March 20-24<lb/>
Monday - Friday<lb/>
9:30 am - 4:00pm<lb/>
$25.00 Deposit<lb/>
"Officially Licensed East Carolina Ring Dealer"<lb/>
Student Stores<lb/>
Special Payment Plans Available<lb/>
1RTQ1IWED<lb/>
J-<lb/>
<lb/>
9mmmmmmmmmmm�<lb/>
<pb facs="00058532_0009"/><lb/>
m<lb/>
� mi<lb/>
Tuesday, March 21, 1995<lb/>
The East Carolinian<lb/>
Thompson resigns as<lb/>
women's hoops coach<lb/>
Blue 92, set Hike!<lb/>
Rosie Thompson<lb/>
Dave Pond<lb/>
Sports Editor<lb/>
"Rosie is a candidate for the po-<lb/>
sition, and we hope that she will stay<lb/>
at East Carolina for many.many years<lb/>
VanSant said. "She has been a gieat<lb/>
representative of East Carolina Uni-<lb/>
versity for many years and is a very<lb/>
capable and skilled person<lb/>
Thompson is ECU basketball's<lb/>
leading points scorer (2,352),<lb/>
rebounder (1,183) and free-throw<lb/>
shooter (74 percent) for both the<lb/>
men's and women's program. She<lb/>
starred for the Lady Pirates from<lb/>
1975-80, and wore the only women's<lb/>
jersey to be retired at the university.<lb/>
Thompson's best season came in<lb/>
1979, when she poured in 24.9 points<lb/>
and 12.3 rebounds per game, earning<lb/>
NCAIAW Player of the Year honors.<lb/>
After graduation, Thompson played<lb/>
one year of professional basketball for<lb/>
the St Louis Streaks, before return-<lb/>
ing to East Carolina as Assistant Di-<lb/>
rector of Admissions in 1984, until<lb/>
joining the Lady Pirate coaching staff<lb/>
in 1987.<lb/>
� She was inducted into the East<lb/>
Carolina Athletic Hall of Fame in<lb/>
1990, and upon Pierson's departure,<lb/>
Thompson was promoted to the head<lb/>
See ECU page 11<lb/>
Photo Courtesy of ECU SID<lb/>
Quarterback Marcus Crandell barks the signals during spring practices. He and the<lb/>
Pirates will showcase their talent April 8 at the annual PurpleGold Pigskin party.<lb/>
� Lady Pirate head basketball<lb/>
fcoach Rosie Thompson has stepped<lb/>
Sown from the head coaching posi-<lb/>
tion at the school, citing an opportu-<lb/>
nity to fill an vacant administrative<lb/>
jple at the university. Thompson told<lb/>
feer players Sunday evening of her<lb/>
decision.<lb/>
t "She's a great person, and I'll feel<lb/>
feer not being there Lady Pirate for-<lb/>
ward Cachelle Curtis said. "I'm a walk-<lb/>
pi, and she gave me a chance to play<lb/>
ollege basketball. Everything hap-<lb/>
pens for a reason, but it'll definitely<lb/>
much different next season<lb/>
"We are in the process of form-<lb/>
a search committee to begin an<lb/>
mediate nationwide search for a<lb/>
new coach ECU Interim Director of<lb/>
Athletics Henry VanSant said. "We<lb/>
fcill be looking for someone who has<lb/>
iuccessfui collegiate coaching expe-<lb/>
dience<lb/>
I Thompson is seeking the position<lb/>
fcf senior women's administratorcom-<lb/>
lliance assistant at the university, a<lb/>
ipsition that would have her oversee-<lb/>
tog ECU's women's athletic programs<lb/>
$nd their recruiting. She will also rep-<lb/>
esent ECU at NCAA, CAA and gen-<lb/>
der equity meetings.<lb/>
Spartans win Lady Pirate Classic<lb/>
Pirates fall to MSU<lb/>
In semifinals; Rost<lb/>
&amp; Ford honored<lb/>
Aaron Wilson<lb/>
Staff Writer<lb/>
The Lady Pirate Softball team<lb/>
finished third in the 1995 Lady Pi-<lb/>
rate Classic Softball Tournament los-<lb/>
ing to eventual champion Michigan<lb/>
State 3-1 in the semifinals. North<lb/>
Carolina finished as the runners-up.<lb/>
Making the Ali-Toumament team for<lb/>
East Carolina were third baseman<lb/>
Rhonda Rost and pitcher Teryn<lb/>
Ford.<lb/>
"This tournament has gotten<lb/>
tougher and tougher each year<lb/>
head coach Sue Manahan said. "Ob-<lb/>
viously, we are dissapointed with a<lb/>
loss but Michigan State is a fine team<lb/>
and to beat them twice would be ask-<lb/>
ing a lot from such a young team.<lb/>
We had runners in scoring position<lb/>
several times but we just didn't capi-<lb/>
talize on our opportunites<lb/>
East Carolina defeated Michigan<lb/>
State, 6-1, in their first game of the<lb/>
tournament. Jami Bendle recorded<lb/>
the win as Tonya<lb/>
Oxendine scored<lb/>
two runs and had<lb/>
one RBI. Mary<lb/>
Dunlap and Dawn<lb/>
Conrad shined<lb/>
from the plate as<lb/>
well.<lb/>
In their sec-<lb/>
ond game of the<lb/>
day the Lady Pi-<lb/>
rates defeated<lb/>
Monmouth, 3-2 be-<lb/>
hind the strong<lb/>
pitching of All-<lb/>
Tournament selec-<lb/>
tion Teryn Ford.<lb/>
John Eckman had<lb/>
a impressive game with two hits, an<lb/>
RBI and a stolen base.<lb/>
On Saturday they defeated<lb/>
Cleveland State and suffered a loss<lb/>
to Bucknell. In the win over Cleve-<lb/>
"We faced some<lb/>
very tough<lb/>
competition this<lb/>
weekend and I am<lb/>
really pleased with<lb/>
how my team<lb/>
responded and<lb/>
played out there<lb/>
� Sue Manahan<lb/>
�J! ��v � '�<lb/>
land State. Rhonda Rost hit a triple<lb/>
and batted in two runners. Dawn<lb/>
Conrad stole two bases to help<lb/>
pitcher Jamie Bendle record her sec-<lb/>
ond win of the tournament.<lb/>
In the final<lb/>
day of action it was<lb/>
single game elimi-<lb/>
nation and, the<lb/>
Lady Pirates were<lb/>
eliminated by the<lb/>
eventual champion<lb/>
Lady Spartans.<lb/>
East Carolina did<lb/>
pick up a win over<lb/>
Colgate, 3-2, to run<lb/>
their overall record<lb/>
to. 19-6. Rhonda<lb/>
Rost was 2-3 with<lb/>
another triple help-<lb/>
ing Tracie<lb/>
Podratsky to the<lb/>
win.<lb/>
"If you had told me back in Feb-<lb/>
ruary that we would be 19-6 right<lb/>
now I would have been very happy<lb/>
Coach Manahan said. "We faced<lb/>
some very tough competition this<lb/>
weekend and I am really pleased with<lb/>
how my team responded and played<lb/>
out there<lb/>
Manahan recently celebrated her<lb/>
400th career win and feels that set-<lb/>
ting goals and working hard are the<lb/>
keys to her success here at ECU.<lb/>
"The sport of softball has been<lb/>
very good to me over the years<lb/>
Manahan said. "It has given me the<lb/>
opportunity to give back and teach<lb/>
young people about the game. I am<lb/>
a very goal-oriented person. My next<lb/>
goal is my 500th win<lb/>
She is most proud of the per-<lb/>
sonal success and records that her<lb/>
players have experienced in her ten-<lb/>
ure as head coach. The Lady Pirates<lb/>
have a record holder in stolen bases<lb/>
with Michelle Ward and have had<lb/>
several Academic Ail-Americans.<lb/>
"I think we have a tremendous<lb/>
reputation for success beyond the<lb/>
playing field Manahan said. "We<lb/>
have established a tradition here for<lb/>
winning both on the field and in the<lb/>
classroom. I am very proud of what<lb/>
we have accomplished here<lb/>
Tuesday. Mar. 21<lb/>
adies tie season record<lb/>
Photo Courtesy of ECU SID<lb/>
Sophomore Hollyn Gordon has contributed to the Lady<lb/>
irates attack as they focus on a record-breaking season.<lb/>
for most wins in a season after defeat-<lb/>
Iric Bartels<lb/>
slstant Sports Editor<lb/>
� An impressive record has the<lb/>
feady Pirate's tennis team striving for<lb/>
more this season. The women have<lb/>
notched an 11-1 mark, tying a record<lb/>
ing conference rival George Mason<lb/>
and UNC-Greensboro on Saturday.<lb/>
"Going into the George Mason<lb/>
match, we needed to get a great start<lb/>
in conference play women's tennis<lb/>
coach Allen Farfour said. "Because<lb/>
the match with UNC-Greensboro<lb/>
would be a real dog-fight.<lb/>
An outstanding performance in<lb/>
both matches by freshman Rachel<lb/>
Cohen, proved vital to the Lady<lb/>
Pirate's attack. Beating George<lb/>
Mason's Lori Robinson in straight sets<lb/>
(6-1, 6-0) and defeating Greensboro's<lb/>
Maggie Berger also in straight sets (6-<lb/>
3, 6-2), Cohen has come on strong as<lb/>
ECU's fourth-position tennis player.<lb/>
Two other tennis players have<lb/>
proved very important in coach<lb/>
Farfour's attack. Senior leader Elke<lb/>
Garten and junior Lisa Hadelman<lb/>
matched Cohen's performance by also<lb/>
taking two victories this weekend.<lb/>
Hadelman, at the fifth position,<lb/>
easily defeated GMU's Lauren<lb/>
Boettcher 6-1, 6-0 and survived three<lb/>
tough sets with UNC-G's Rachel<lb/>
Matlin before she was able to break<lb/>
her confidence, 6-3, 1-6, 64.<lb/>
Garten, a four-year threat for<lb/>
ECU, anchored the sixth position and<lb/>
upped her season record to 10-2. She<lb/>
swept the Patriots' Marie Veldhuyzen<lb/>
6-1, 6-1, and had a difficult time with<lb/>
the Spartans' Kimberly Ledbetter<lb/>
before she got by the first set (7-5)<lb/>
and cruised in the second set (6-1).<lb/>
See TENNIS page 11<lb/>
Spring football<lb/>
brings new faces<lb/>
Softball vs. Bucknell (DH),<lb/>
2 p.m.<lb/>
Wednesday. Mar. 22<lb/>
Baseball vs. UNC,<lb/>
Kinston, N.C. 3 p.m.<lb/>
M. Tennis vs. UNC-<lb/>
Wilmington, 2:30 p.m.<lb/>
Thursday. Mar. 23<lb/>
M. Swimming @ NCAA<lb/>
Championships,<lb/>
Indianapolis, IN<lb/>
Friday. Mar. 24<lb/>
'MF makes his return<lb/>
Eric Bartels<lb/>
Assistant Sports Editor<lb/>
"It's gotta be the shoes<lb/>
'No Mars' it's the number.<lb/>
For all of the Chicago Bulls fans<lb/>
on Sunday, the 'Air Apparent' looked<lb/>
like a grounded B-52 as North<lb/>
Carolina's own made his first appear-<lb/>
ance in eighteen months with the<lb/>
brand new No. 45.<lb/>
Everyone is saying that Jordan<lb/>
needs a little time to get back into<lb/>
the game, well after looking like a<lb/>
grounded jet in O'Hare Field, Jordan<lb/>
will need to pick up the pace and hit<lb/>
the Bulls' practice courts a little<lb/>
harder.<lb/>
Even though Chicago forced an<lb/>
extra period, Jordan's appearance in<lb/>
a Bulls uniform was untimely, as the<lb/>
Central Division leading Indiana Pac-<lb/>
ers stormed Market Square Arena.<lb/>
Jordan will need to find the range<lb/>
(and quick), even though he will have<lb/>
five weeks to prove that the Bulls and<lb/>
the NBAs human highlight film are<lb/>
contenders-not pretenders.<lb/>
After taking 28 shots from the<lb/>
field. Jordan only tallied 19-points.<lb/>
six rebounds, three steals and a fin-<lb/>
ger roll reminiscent of his illustrious<lb/>
career.<lb/>
In a demonstration of acrobat-<lb/>
ics, Jordan knocked out Indiana's<lb/>
sharp shooter, Reggie Miller, as he<lb/>
tried to fight around a screen. His<lb/>
ability to move around picks and<lb/>
screens as quick as he once did eigh-<lb/>
teen months ago, only signifies the<lb/>
lack of Jordan's basketball playing<lb/>
time, and as soon as Jordan does a<lb/>
little 'running of the Bulls' he will<lb/>
be back in top shape.<lb/>
Still many questions will remain<lb/>
to be answered. Will the NBAs all-<lb/>
time 'Mr. Everything' hang up the<lb/>
Nikes as soon as the baseball talks<lb/>
See MI page 11<lb/>
Photo Courtesy of ECU SID<lb/>
Voted Most Improved Player in 1994, WR Jason Nichols will<lb/>
be one of Marcus Crandell's deep threats for ECU in 1995.<lb/>
Aaron Wilson<lb/>
Staff Writer<lb/>
Pirate fans got a glimpse of what<lb/>
Steve Logan's 1995 squad will bring<lb/>
to the field, and every indication from<lb/>
Saturday's scrimmage points to an-<lb/>
other winning season.<lb/>
Logan was definitely pleased with<lb/>
his team's performance in their first<lb/>
scrimmage of the spring. The team<lb/>
completed winter conditioning and<lb/>
off-season testing prior to Spring<lb/>
Break.<lb/>
"I thought it went pretty well,<lb/>
considering it was the first scrimmage<lb/>
of the spring said Logan. "We made<lb/>
some mistakes, but we also had some<lb/>
great plays. You'll see that early, but I<lb/>
feel confident the mistakes will get<lb/>
corrected.<lb/>
On offense the first team returns<lb/>
several starters, but there were a few<lb/>
new faces and position changes. Jun-<lb/>
ior Lamont Burns has cracked the<lb/>
starting lineup at right guard.<lb/>
Burns has played several posi-<lb/>
tions since coming to ECU, including<lb/>
linebacker, defensive end and tight<lb/>
end, before settling down on the of-<lb/>
fensive line. Burns bench presses 385<lb/>
See FOOTBALL page 11<lb/>
Softball @ Winthrop, Rock<lb/>
Hill, SC<lb/>
Golf @ Furman<lb/>
Intercollegiate, Furman<lb/>
Univ. Course, Greenville,<lb/>
SC<lb/>
M. Outdoor Track @<lb/>
Florida Relays, Gainesvile,<lb/>
FL<lb/>
W. Outdoor Track @<lb/>
Raleigh Relays, Raleigh,<lb/>
NC<lb/>
M. Swimming @ NCAA<lb/>
Championships,<lb/>
Indianapolis, IN<lb/>
Saturday. Mar. 25<lb/>
Baseball vs Richmond<lb/>
(DH), 2p.m.<lb/>
Softball @ Winthrop, Rock<lb/>
Hill, SC<lb/>
W. Tennis vs. James<lb/>
Madison, Norfolk, VA, 9<lb/>
a.m.<lb/>
W. Tennis vs. Rutgers,<lb/>
Norfolk, VA, 2 p.m.<lb/>
Golf@ Furman Inter<lb/>
Furman Univ. Course,<lb/>
Greenville, SC<lb/>
M. Outdoor Track @<lb/>
Florida Relays,<lb/>
Gainesville, FL<lb/>
W. Outdoor Track @<lb/>
Raleigh Relays, Raleigh,<lb/>
NC<lb/>
Sunday. Mar. 26<lb/>
Baseball vs Richmond, 2<lb/>
p.m.<lb/>
Softball vs Winthrop, Rock<lb/>
Hill, SC<lb/>
W. Tennis @ Old<lb/>
Dominion. Norfolk, VA, 9<lb/>
p.m.<lb/>
Golf@ Furman Inter<lb/>
Furman Univ. Course<lb/>
Greenville, SC<lb/>
Monday. Mar. 27<lb/>
Baseball vs. Kent, 3 p.m.<lb/>
. �� � -<lb/>
<pb facs="00058532_0010"/><lb/>
gjapi - i i,<lb/>
I<lb/>
10<lb/>
ECU's<lb/>
SPORTS INFORMATION<lb/>
k:<lb/>
DEPARTMENT<lb/>
(SID) - The men's tennis team<lb/>
came up a few matches short Sunday<lb/>
at the Minges Tennis Complex, as they<lb/>
lost to CAA power Richmond by a 5-2<lb/>
score.<lb/>
The Pirates had a chance to take<lb/>
a 1-0 lead after doubles, but<lb/>
Richmond's No. 2 doubles team came<lb/>
back from a 6-2 deficit to win the match<lb/>
in a tiebreak. The no. 3 doubles Tal<lb/>
FrydamJosh Campbell continued<lb/>
their domination, by notching a 806<lb/>
win.<lb/>
ECU was only able to get two wins<lb/>
during singles, but played tough<lb/>
throughout the line-up. No. 4 Jaime<lb/>
Holt jumped out to an early lead and<lb/>
came away victorious, 6-1, 7-6. Fresh-<lb/>
man Josh Campbell battled from the<lb/>
baseline against Richmond's Mark<lb/>
Cohen and took every opportunity to<lb/>
utilize his powerful forehand en route<lb/>
to a 7-6, 6-1 win at No. 6 singles.<lb/>
The Pirates, now 7-5 (0-1 in the<lb/>
CAA) play host to UNC-Wilmington on<lb/>
Wednesday at 2:30 p.m.<lb/>
The ECU men's tennis team had<lb/>
to depend on its freshmen to come<lb/>
through as ECU notched a 4-3 win Sat-<lb/>
urday at the Minges Tennis Complex.<lb/>
The Pirates needed a win at No. 6<lb/>
singles, after playing to a 3-3 tie. Fresh-<lb/>
man Josh Campbell, whose match was<lb/>
delayed because of a women's doubles<lb/>
match, captured a 6-3, 6-2 win to give<lb/>
the Pirates their seventh straight win.<lb/>
The other Pirate freshman, Kris<lb/>
Hutton, needed three sets to seal his<lb/>
victory at No. 5 singles. Huton was a<lb/>
winner by a 1-6, 6-3, 6-1 score. Tal<lb/>
Frydman, whose parents were visiting<lb/>
from Connecticut, was the other Pirate<lb/>
singles winner.<lb/>
The men netters started the<lb/>
singles play after taking a 1-0 lead af-<lb/>
ter doubles, where HuttonJamie Holt<lb/>
and FrydmanCampbell came away as<lb/>
winners.<lb/>
The Pirates, now 74 on the sea-<lb/>
son, host Richmond Sunday at 11 a.m<lb/>
as they open the CAA season.<lb/>
Virginia Commonwealth shot a fi-<lb/>
nal round, team total 290 to clinch the<lb/>
win for the Rams at the Sixth Annual<lb/>
ECU-Emerald Intercollegiate Golf Tour-<lb/>
nament here in New Bern, NC on Sun-<lb/>
day afternoon.<lb/>
The final round performers gave<lb/>
VCU a weekend total of 876 to break<lb/>
the tournament record of 877, which<lb/>
was set by Virginia in 1993. The Rams<lb/>
completely dominated the field, never<lb/>
trailing in the team standings during<lb/>
the three-day event<lb/>
In addition to the team title, VCU<lb/>
head coach Jack Bell saw Senior Mike<lb/>
Benner take the individual title in a<lb/>
sudden death playoff with Miami of<lb/>
Ohio's Maarten Van Den Berg. The<lb/>
Laurel, Maryland native fired a 71 to<lb/>
tie Van Den Berg who had held the<lb/>
lead after the first and second rounds.<lb/>
Benner won the playoff with a Birdie<lb/>
on the second hole while Van Den Berg<lb/>
pulled a Bogey.<lb/>
Duke University, the defending<lb/>
champion, finished in 12th place, while<lb/>
host ECU struggled to finish at 18.<lb/>
The ECU Men's Track squad, led<lb/>
by junior Steve King, opened up their<lb/>
indooor season at the UNC Four Team<lb/>
Meet Saturday afternoon here in<lb/>
Chapel Hill.<lb/>
King, a junior college transfer<lb/>
from Dudley, NC had the best perfor-<lb/>
mance of the meet, taking first place<lb/>
in the 100-meter dash with a time of<lb/>
10.72.<lb/>
In the 400-meter dash, sophomore<lb/>
stand-out Brian Johnson placed second<lb/>
See SID page 11<lb/>
Mondays:<lb/>
9 oz. Prime<lb/>
(includes choice of starch and salad) only $9.95<lb/>
Pargo Size Draft-Domestic Variety (33oz.) only $2.50<lb/>
Pargo Size Imports only $3.50<lb/>
Wednesday: "Restaurant Appreciation Night"<lb/>
2 for 2 until 2<lb/>
($2.00-2oz. rail highballs until 2 AM)<lb/>
Staying open longer for your business!<lb/>
Sundays: "12 price appetizers" - 9 PM until close<lb/>
Every Night: "Pargo Goes Progressive"<lb/>
(Today's college selections after 9PM)<lb/>
"We serve full Menu until the minute we close"<lb/>
(M-TH 12 AM, Fri &amp; Sat 1 AM, Sun 11 PM)<lb/>
LIMIT ONE COUPON PER PERSON<lb/>
EXPIRES MARCH 26TH<lb/>
210 E. 5THST.<lb/>
I<lb/>
I<lb/>
bnnection I<lb/>
I<lb/>
Division of UBE<lb/>
DOWNTOWN<lb/>
758-8612<lb/>
Tuesday, March 21, 1995<lb/>
The East Carolinian<lb/>
Winn-Dixie Presents<lb/>
Student - Faculty<lb/>
Appreciation Day!<lb/>
Thursday, March 23,1995<lb/>
9<lb/>
FREE<lb/>
6-Pak Cans Cokes<lb/>
with $5.00 Purchase and ECU I.D. Card!<lb/>
All Day Thursday, March 23,1995<lb/>
Plus, Register To Win A Pair Of<lb/>
Tickets To The Following Concerts:<lb/>
Vince Gill Tom Petty<lb/>
April 1st At The Dean Smith Center April 12th At Walnut Creek<lb/>
Courtesy Of WRNS FM Courtesy Of WSFL FM<lb/>
 LOWEST PRICES ON<lb/>
Beer, Wine And Soft Drinks!<lb/>
10 OFF Bag Chips &amp; Snacks!<lb/>
Winn-Dixie<lb/>
s<lb/>
whetplace<lb/>
TM<lb/>
609 S.E. Greenville Blvd (264 ALT.)<lb/>
At Arlington Blvd Greenville, N.C.<lb/>
Minmi jiuim.iiim. .1 m.ii<lb/>
<pb facs="00058532_0011"/><lb/>
r<lb/>
iii �!<lb/>
- .<lb/>
11<lb/>
Tuesday, March 21, 1995<lb/>
The East Carolinian<lb/>
SID<lb/>
from page 10<lb/>
with a mark of 48.07 behind UNC's<lb/>
John McCaskill (47.78). Another Pirate<lb/>
with a good performance was Chris<lb/>
McKinney who placed second in the<lb/>
Triple Jump and third in the Long<lb/>
Jump.<lb/>
However, things were not com-<lb/>
pletely rosie for the Pirates who saw<lb/>
both Artee' Franklin and Keith Barker<lb/>
go down to hamstring injuries. "Artee s<lb/>
was pretty bad said head coach Bill<lb/>
Carson. "He was trying to catch up with<lb/>
a real good kid from Carolina, and it<lb/>
just came out from under him<lb/>
The injury to Barker could hurt the<lb/>
Pirates in upcoming relay events where<lb/>
; he has played an integral role.<lb/>
ECU will return to action this week-<lb/>
end at the Florida Relays in Gainsville.<lb/>
The ECU Women's Track team<lb/>
opened up the 1995 outdoor season<lb/>
with an exceptional all-around perfor-<lb/>
mance including two first places, two<lb/>
school records, and eight personal bests.<lb/>
ECU defeated Mount St Mary's 77-<lb/>
with a score of 82-54. UNC defeated the<lb/>
Lady Pirates 8844.<lb/>
ECU freshman Michelle Clayton<lb/>
placed first in the shot put with a throw<lb/>
of 41-07.25, a personal best for her.<lb/>
The Lady Pirates 4x100m relay<lb/>
team also placed first with a time of<lb/>
47.31. Carla Powell, Shantell Carter,<lb/>
Amanda Johnson and Saundra Teel<lb/>
made up the winning relay team.<lb/>
East Carolina freshman Saudra<lb/>
Teel broke ECU's outdoor record in the<lb/>
100HH with a time of 14.90, and Lady<lb/>
Pirate Cameron Bader broke the ECU<lb/>
outdoor record in the 400IH with a time<lb/>
of 1:04.67.<lb/>
"We looked the best we ever have<lb/>
coming out of the first meet of the sea-<lb/>
son said Coach Justice. "We beat two<lb/>
very good teams and held our own<lb/>
against UNC<lb/>
The Lady Pirates will return to ac-<lb/>
tion on March 24-25 as they compete<lb/>
in the Raleigh Relays. Coach Justice says<lb/>
the team plans to focus on relays and<lb/>
field events in next weekend's meet<lb/>
46 and outperformed Appalachian State<lb/>
Step int�.�<lb/>
a<lb/>
<lb/>
-rRlBAL HO,<lb/>
V �� Urrt<lb/>
A� The Beat of<lb/>
Trance, Home, � Tribal<lb/>
�TDWiJIB<lb/>
With Special Guest DJ Randy<lb/>
$1 admission $1 Drinks<lb/>
Country side also open pahins the<lb/>
best in country couple dancing from<lb/>
0:00-9:00.<lb/>
Doors open at 6:00.<lb/>
Thursday, March 23rd<lb/>
flUiW<lb/>
�St ft SSf H. Orttr. St, OrccmiBc<lb/>
Across the Brio's<lb/>
ITBASSrtP � nXAM-ST� � tTBOmW �?TSCASJ-STtl' � TtXA�-fftr � �mSf9AV�<lb/>
ti<lb/>
ft<lb/>
JVLj from page 9<lb/>
reveal a new season beginning? Or<lb/>
will his sure love for basketball, Scot-<lb/>
tie Pippen and Phil Jackson keep him<lb/>
in wrapped up in the city that made<lb/>
polish sausage and 'da Bears' fa-<lb/>
mous? Who knows?<lb/>
One thing that the fans know is<lb/>
that Jordan's return will inflate ticket<lb/>
prices, raise revenue for the NBA and<lb/>
maybe even give Shaq an admirable<lb/>
opponent- sorry Patrick Ewing, you<lb/>
don't count.<lb/>
Speaking of Shaquille O'Neal<lb/>
and the Magic, Jordan and his merry<lb/>
band of disciples will play host to the<lb/>
Magic in maybe Jordan's first true<lb/>
test after coming out of retirement.<lb/>
Stay tuned, because the No. 45 will<lb/>
have to get hot soon or Phil Jackson<lb/>
may find a great bargain in selling<lb/>
all of Jordan's stock to the Clippers.<lb/>
TENNIS from page 9<lb/>
"We have a squad with experi-<lb/>
ence, and that experience is showing<lb/>
coach Farfour said.<lb/>
And it sure did. The deciding fac-<lb/>
tor in a close UNCC match came down<lb/>
to the play of the Lady Pirates'<lb/>
doubles teams.<lb/>
With a freshman and sophomore<lb/>
combination of Cohen and Courtney<lb/>
Hargett, the Lady Pirates are winning<lb/>
a majority of their matches at the top<lb/>
position. On Saturday, the tandem<lb/>
blew by the Spartans' Natalie Teague<lb/>
and Jen Wisinski 8-1.<lb/>
For the other ECU doubles team<lb/>
of Garten and sophomore Hollyn Gor-<lb/>
don, the victory was not so easy. The<lb/>
Spartans' duo of freshman Emily<lb/>
Berger and senior Rachel Matlin took<lb/>
the Lady Pirates to the limit before<lb/>
succumbing to the great net play of<lb/>
Garten and Gordon 9-8.<lb/>
"Winning is contagious and it<lb/>
rubs off on everybody coach Farfour<lb/>
said.<lb/>
The winning contagion remains<lb/>
with the upstart Lady Pirates, who will<lb/>
be looking to break the record for<lb/>
most wins in a season (12) this week-<lb/>
end as they will face James Madison,<lb/>
Rutgers and Old Dominion in Norfolk,<lb/>
VA.<lb/>
FOOTBALL frompage9<lb/>
pounds and brings the same defen-<lb/>
sive mentality that right tackle<lb/>
Charles Boothe brought to the other<lb/>
side of the ball since making the same<lb/>
transition.<lb/>
Ronnie Suddith, selected as the<lb/>
Pirates' best offensive lineman at<lb/>
Friday's football banquet anchors the<lb/>
left side along with returning starter<lb/>
Jamie Gray. Kevin Wiggins returns at<lb/>
center after a strong showing in 1994.<lb/>
Jerris McPhail was impressive in<lb/>
his new role as starting tailback. Al-<lb/>
though he did not break free for any<lb/>
long runs, he made several first<lb/>
downs, showing a blend of power and<lb/>
speed.<lb/>
Backups Scott Harley and Daryl<lb/>
Jones showed flashes of promise in<lb/>
their first collegiate action, but it was<lb/>
another freshman running back who<lb/>
stole the show. Reminiscent of Junior<lb/>
Smith is Raymond Mabry, who has the<lb/>
similar size and running style of the<lb/>
all-time ECU ground gainer.<lb/>
Mabry 5-8,175, from nearby West<lb/>
Craven HS in fonceboro made several<lb/>
long runs changing direction well and<lb/>
picking up extra yards by cutting back<lb/>
and making defenders miss. Mabry<lb/>
rushed for 1,250 yards and 21 touch-<lb/>
downs to earn All-State honors last<lb/>
year in high school.<lb/>
At wide receiver the Pirates have<lb/>
a plethora of talent with Jason Nichols<lb/>
(Most Improved Player, Most Valuable<lb/>
Offensive Player in Liberty Bowl),<lb/>
Larry Shannon and Mitchell Galloway<lb/>
returning. All three made important<lb/>
contributions Saturday, with Nichols<lb/>
and Shannon both catching long<lb/>
touchdowns. Linwood Debrew also<lb/>
appeared to be fully recovered from<lb/>
his injury problems from last season.<lb/>
Perez Mattison made a leaping<lb/>
grab in the end zone to score his first<lb/>
touchdown at wide out since making<lb/>
the transition from quarterback. He<lb/>
also returned punts. Mattison should<lb/>
see plenty of action in '95 because of<lb/>
the way Steve Logan rotates his re-<lb/>
ceivers and spreads the ball around.<lb/>
Redshirt freshman Mike Sellers<lb/>
and Allan Williams are both out with<lb/>
injuries. Sellers hurt his shoulder but<lb/>
�<lb/>
AST Ol HO I IN1 NllIHSITV<lb/>
'jRIENTATI<lb/>
ONJ<lb/>
SSISTANTS<lb/>
Orientation &amp; The irst-Fear Experience � 203 �rwin � 328-4173<lb/>
The Office of Orientation &amp; the First- Year Experience proudly announces the 1995-96 Orientation<lb/>
Assistant Staff:<lb/>
David Batts<lb/>
Brian Broush<lb/>
Angela Bryant<lb/>
Katherine Budrow<lb/>
Heather Cox<lb/>
Mark Denning<lb/>
Terrance Dove<lb/>
Kayse Fields<lb/>
Amy Keehner<lb/>
John Lynch<lb/>
Deana McLeod<lb/>
Jason Nichols<lb/>
Carla Powell<lb/>
Tamara Shields<lb/>
Melissa Sparks<lb/>
Alexa Thompson<lb/>
Greg Rodden<lb/>
Carolyn Weakland<lb/>
Angel Whitley<lb/>
Dawn Woodard<lb/>
Congratulations &amp; Good Zucktt<lb/>
�<lb/>
EXPLORE<lb/>
OTHER CULTURES &amp; OIHER PLACES<lb/>
Department of Anthropology<lb/>
Fall 1995<lb/>
ANTH 1000 General Anthropology<lb/>
ANTH 2000 Archaeology Around the World<lb/>
ANTH 2010 Societies Around the World<lb/>
ANTH 2020 Contemporary Human Problems &amp; Global Issues<lb/>
ANTH 2025 Sexual Behavior from an Anthropological Perspective<lb/>
ANTH 3002 Cultures of East Asia<lb/>
ANTH 3112 Archaeology of Mexico &amp; Guatemala<lb/>
ANTH 4025 Theory in Anthropology<lb/>
ANTH 4050 Psychology Anthropology<lb/>
ANTH 4054 Anthropology of Religion<lb/>
ANTH 4260 Culture Ecology<lb/>
ANTH 6101 Core Course: Archaeology<lb/>
ANTH 6102 Core Course: Cultural Anthropology<lb/>
Department of Anthropology<lb/>
Brewster A215<lb/>
is expected to be back in the lineup<lb/>
soon. Williams may be out of action<lb/>
for a while with a recurring lower arm<lb/>
injury that has bothered him for some<lb/>
time.<lb/>
At fullback or 'H' senior Eric<lb/>
Blanton and sophomore John Peacock<lb/>
are competing for the starting role.<lb/>
On Saturday, Blanton ran effectively<lb/>
in short yardage situations scoring<lb/>
two touchdowns. Peacock blocked<lb/>
well, but did not gt as many attempts<lb/>
to run from scrimmage.<lb/>
Senior Dwight Linville is push-<lb/>
ing returning starter Sean Richardson<lb/>
at tight end catching a touchdown<lb/>
from backup QB Dan Gonzalez.<lb/>
Richardson will be hard to unseat af-<lb/>
ter an impressive 1994 season.<lb/>
Marcus Crandell showed off his<lb/>
usual form, but it was the backups<lb/>
Dan Gonzalez and freshman Ernest<lb/>
Tinnen who impressed head coach<lb/>
Steve Logan the most on Saturday.<lb/>
"I thought our two backup quar-<lb/>
terbacks- Ernest Tinnen and Dan<lb/>
Gonzalez- played real well Logan<lb/>
said. "They made some fine plays<lb/>
Gonzalez threw three touch-<lb/>
downs checking off well and using his<lb/>
reads to find his receivers. Tinnen, a<lb/>
left hander, made a few mistakes, and<lb/>
showed off the strong arm that earned<lb/>
him State Player of the Year honors<lb/>
in 1993 at Burlington Cummings. He<lb/>
threw for 10,834 yards and 102 touch-<lb/>
downs in his career there breaking the<lb/>
school's records.<lb/>
On defense there were a few<lb/>
changes as well. Alphonso "Buck"<lb/>
Collins is the new starter at nose<lb/>
tackle, replacing 1994 Defensive MVP<lb/>
John Krawczyk. Aaron Black is start-<lb/>
ing at Leo in place of Dan Russ, who<lb/>
is playing behind Collins in the middle<lb/>
of the Pirate defense. Walter Scott and<lb/>
Lorenzo West return as starters.<lb/>
Second-teamers Travis Darden<lb/>
(freshman) and Jermaine Smith, a<lb/>
JUCO transfer from NE Oklahoma<lb/>
A&amp;M outshined the two starting de-<lb/>
fensive ends. Darden is very similar<lb/>
in size and playing style to Willie<lb/>
Brookins. He needs refining in his<lb/>
techniques, but he is a very aggres-<lb/>
sive player. He knocked down several<lb/>
passes and was constantly in the of-<lb/>
fensive backfield Saturday.<lb/>
Smith is a physical specimen who<lb/>
bench presses 415 pounds and runs<lb/>
a 4.57 40 yard dash. He was<lb/>
unblockable Saturday recording three<lb/>
sacks. Smith was very highly recruited<lb/>
out of junior college, and could have<lb/>
a impact in his senior season with the<lb/>
Pirates.<lb/>
At linebacker, starters Mark<lb/>
Libiano and B.J. Crane return with<lb/>
former starter Marvin Burke pushing<lb/>
them hard for playing time. Libiano<lb/>
was always around the ball Saturday,<lb/>
making several tackles at or behind<lb/>
the line of scrimmage. Outside line-<lb/>
backer Morris Foreman just missed<lb/>
scoring a touchdown when he<lb/>
dropped a interceptable ball. Foreman<lb/>
and Libiano should provide a lot of<lb/>
senior leadership for this team.<lb/>
In the defensive backfield, ECU<lb/>
is short-handed temporarily, with<lb/>
starters Dwight Henry and Hank Coo-<lb/>
per out with injuries. New secondary<lb/>
coach Jim Fleming (coached outside<lb/>
linebackers last year) opened with<lb/>
Daren and David Hart and Emmanuel<lb/>
McDaniel. The only new starter was<lb/>
redshirt freshman Bernard Lackey,<lb/>
who made a big impression when he<lb/>
made a bone-jarring tackle on wide<lb/>
receiver Travis Newkirk. Lackey<lb/>
brings a lot of speed and athleticism<lb/>
to the secondary, running a 4.45 40-<lb/>
yard dash. He could see plying time<lb/>
at bench comer this season.<lb/>
Redshirt freshman Brian Bentley<lb/>
(1 INT), Kelvin Suggs and Tavares<lb/>
Taylor all made strong impressions on<lb/>
the coaching staff with their play in<lb/>
this scrimmage, as the ECU coaching<lb/>
staff played several of their reserves.<lb/>
"We were able to get a lot of<lb/>
people some reps said Logan. "We<lb/>
have so much experience coming back<lb/>
from last year's team, we'll need to<lb/>
take a look at everyone<lb/>
ECU will continue practice this<lb/>
week with spring ball coming to a<lb/>
close in the Purple-Gold scrimmage<lb/>
April 8 at 2 p.m. in Dowdy Ficklen<lb/>
Stadium.<lb/>
CiCU from page 9<lb/>
coaching position in 1992, and<lb/>
notched a 16-12 record in her maiden<lb/>
season, giving ECU their 20th win-<lb/>
ning season in 24 years.<lb/>
Graduation hit hard, however, as<lb/>
Thompson's squads would manage to<lb/>
capture just 10 victories against 43<lb/>
losses over the next two seasons of<lb/>
rebuilding.<lb/>
"I'm kind of disappointed, but I<lb/>
think that it was a good decision, be-<lb/>
cause both the team and the coach-<lb/>
ing staff were both frustrated about<lb/>
having a losing season freshman for-<lb/>
ward Takesha Holly said. "She is a<lb/>
very nice person, and is so sweet. In<lb/>
the long run, everything will work<lb/>
out"<lb/>
Thompson was the fifth head<lb/>
coach in the Lady Pirate program's<lb/>
history, and her sudden departure al-<lb/>
most certainly will damage ECU re-<lb/>
cruiting for next season.<lb/>
"It certainly won't help recruit-<lb/>
ing, but we hope to get someone in<lb/>
here before the signing deadline in<lb/>
mid-April VanSant said. "We may be<lb/>
able to salvage something<lb/>
Thompson was unavailable for<lb/>
comment<lb/>
Recreational Services Adventure Proarams presents<lb/>
WINDSURFING<lb/>
April 8 - 9<lb/>
Outer Bonks, N.C.<lb/>
ftetttster by March 14 in 104 Christeafcvrf<lb/>
Cojow o uiificty water weekeftd atone kh� calm waters of the<lb/>
TTawi�i�9�r rifiab�a, wtd saHlna teefcoiavas wH aa to<lb/>
C��t SM,M tato4�s treNrtHit, ��or, 9�4, mm<lb/>
Coll 328-6387 for more informofcion.<lb/>
ONCERT<lb/>
DAVID WnEBEAD<lb/>
David is a contemporary Christian<lb/>
songwriter &amp; guitarist.<lb/>
If you like acoustic guitars,<lb/>
you'll love Dave!<lb/>
Don't miss it!<lb/>
Thursday, March 23rd<lb/>
7:00pm<lb/>
General Classroom<lb/>
Bldg.<lb/>
Room 1031<lb/>
�Y-��<lb/>
<pb facs="00058532_0012"/><lb/>
�� <lb/>
MMMMMHaiMli<lb/>
Tuesday, March 21, 1995<lb/>
The East Carolinian<lb/>
LIFEGUARDS: Spring. Summer.<lb/>
Greenville. Goldsboro. Smithfield. Tarboro.<lb/>
Call Bob 758-1088<lb/>
CRUISE SHIPS NOW HIRING Earn up<lb/>
to $2,000 month working on Cruise<lb/>
Ships or Land-Tour companies. World<lb/>
travel (Hawaii. Mexico, the Caribbean,<lb/>
etc.). Seasonal and Full-time employment<lb/>
available. No experience necessary. For<lb/>
more information call 1-206-634-0468 ext<lb/>
C53624<lb/>
ATTENTION STUDENTS: Earn extra<lb/>
cash stuffing envelopes at home. All ma-<lb/>
terials provided. Send SASE to Central<lb/>
Distributors Po Box 10075. Olathe. KS<lb/>
66051. Immediate response.<lb/>
HELP WANTED IMMEDIATELY Clean,<lb/>
High volume Adult Club needs YOU now.<lb/>
Confidential employment Daily pay Top<lb/>
Commissions. Some to no experience. If<lb/>
you've called before call again. Playmates<lb/>
Massage Snow Hill. N.C. 919-747-7686<lb/>
S10-S400UP WEEKLY. Mailing Bro-<lb/>
chures! Sparefull-time. Set own hours!<lb/>
RUSH Self-addressed stamped envelope:<lb/>
Publishers (Gil 1821 Hillandale Rd. 1B-<lb/>
295 Durham NC 27705<lb/>
$1750 weekly possible mailing our<lb/>
circulars. No experience required. Begin<lb/>
now. For info call 202-298-8952.<lb/>
SUMMER POSITIONS AVAILABLE<lb/>
:Gain Career Experience and Save<lb/>
$4,000.00. Please call 1-800-2514000 ext<lb/>
1576. Leave Name, School Now Attend-<lb/>
ing and Phone Number.<lb/>
TRAVEL ABROAD AND WORK. Make<lb/>
up to $2,000-$4,000mo. teaching basic<lb/>
conversational English in Japan. Taiwan,<lb/>
or S. Korea. No teaching background or<lb/>
Asian languages required. For information<lb/>
call: (206) 632-1146 ext J53623.<lb/>
DISTRIBUTORS NEEDED: Earn<lb/>
SlOOO's Weekly working at home mailing<lb/>
our circulars. Free details. Send SASE:<lb/>
R&amp;B Distributors. Box 20354. Greenville<lb/>
NC 27858<lb/>
SUMMER EMPLOYMENT - Camp Caro-<lb/>
lina for Boys in the heart of the Blue Ridge<lb/>
Mountains needs enthusiastic Cabin Coun-<lb/>
selors interested in setting a good example<lb/>
for Boys. High Adventure Staff, and Sports<lb/>
Instructor from Swimming to Lacrosse to<lb/>
Crafts to Rugby. Campus Interviews, for<lb/>
more info call 1-800-551-9136.<lb/>
ATTENTION: EARN MONEY READING<lb/>
BOOKS! Up to $500 weekly. Choose sub-<lb/>
ject matter. For more details call: l-(206)-<lb/>
362-4304 ext E0073.<lb/>
EXPERIENCED SERVERS NEEDED<lb/>
for lunch shifts in Full-Service Restaurant<lb/>
Call 355-1111 ONLY between 3:00-<lb/>
5:00pm.<lb/>
NATIONAL PARKS HIRING - Seasonal<lb/>
&amp; full-time employment available at Na-<lb/>
tional Parks, Forests &amp; Wildlife Preserves.<lb/>
Benefitsbonuses! Call 1-206-545-4804<lb/>
ext. N53621.<lb/>
BRODY'S IS ACCEPTING APPLICA-<lb/>
TIONS for additional Part-time Sales As-<lb/>
sociates for Cosmetics, Junior Spor tswear,<lb/>
and Young Men's Departments. Earn ex-<lb/>
tra spending money and a merchandise<lb/>
discount -just in time for your new spring<lb/>
wardrobe. Flexible scheduling options to<lb/>
accomdate your busy schedule: 10am-2pm,<lb/>
12-9pm. or 6-9pm. All retail positions in-<lb/>
clude weekends. Applications accepted<lb/>
each Monday and Thursday. l-3pm,<lb/>
Brody's. The Plaza.<lb/>
YOUTH SPORTS CAMP COUNSELORS<lb/>
wanted to teach: basketball, soccer, soft-<lb/>
ball, volleyball and flag football skills. The<lb/>
dates of camp are June 12-30. Applicants<lb/>
should call Kari Duncan at ECU Recre-<lb/>
ational Services 328-6387.<lb/>
WILLING TO TRADE FREE HORSE<lb/>
BACK RIDING in exchage for stable help.<lb/>
Experienced riders only. Private Quarter<lb/>
Horse Barn near Winterville. Call 756-<lb/>
5784 after 6 pm.<lb/>
BROKE AFTER SPRING BREAK? Earn<lb/>
the quick cash you need stuffing enve-<lb/>
lopes. Send SASE and $1 to Carolina<lb/>
Enterprises. P.O. Box 3251, Greenville. NC<lb/>
27836-1251. The sooner you act the<lb/>
sooner you start making $<lb/>
TIRED OF HAVING TO CHOOSE be-<lb/>
tween S and EXPERIENCE for summer<lb/>
work? Why not go for both? Make $1880<lb/>
Mo. Call 1-800-242-3958 ext. 2761.<lb/>
ARTIST WANTED to paint scenic back-<lb/>
ground on canvas for photographer. I'll<lb/>
supply convas. Call 757-0770.<lb/>
NEEDED: Someone to work part-time in<lb/>
a local pool and supply store office start-<lb/>
ing now and lasting through the summer.<lb/>
Call 758-7531.<lb/>
GRAPHIC DESIGN MARKETING STU-<lb/>
DENT with Macintosh experience<lb/>
(QuarkXPress, Adobe Illustrator) to work<lb/>
part-time on designmarketing needs in<lb/>
growing medical practice. Call Susan 758-<lb/>
5800.<lb/>
SEINE BEACH part-time - Flexible hours<lb/>
- Tan while working. Located 12 miles<lb/>
outside Greenville. 21 or older. Serious<lb/>
calls only. (919)975-2265<lb/>
REC SERVICES FITNESS INSTRUC-<lb/>
TORS - Try-outs for ECU students inter-<lb/>
ested in becoming fitness instructors for<lb/>
'95 - '96 will be held March 25-26. You<lb/>
must register by Wednesday, March 22 in<lb/>
204 Christenbury Gym. Call 328-6387 for<lb/>
more details.<lb/>
SUMMER CAMP COUNSELORS<lb/>
SmithfieldGoldsboro area � Mid-June to<lb/>
Mid-August Half days, M-F. Call Bob 758-<lb/>
1088<lb/>
A DECREE IS GREAT, but a degree and<lb/>
practical experience is better! We are ac-<lb/>
cepting applications for part-time mort-<lb/>
gage reporting processors. A professional<lb/>
attitude and good telephone skills are re-<lb/>
quired. Flexible hours. If int erested, please<lb/>
mail your resume to: Online Mortgage<lb/>
Services, PO Box 8048, Greenville. NC<lb/>
27835. NO CALLS PLEASE.<lb/>
PART-TIME SALES POSITION: ME-<lb/>
LANGE. Contemporary Women's Cloth-<lb/>
ing &amp; Accessories. Lynndale Shoppes. Call<lb/>
355-8771<lb/>
TELEMARKETING - Davenport Exteri-<lb/>
ors Thermal Card � $5.00 per hour plus<lb/>
bonus. Easy work. Flexible hours start to-<lb/>
day. Call 355-0210<lb/>
SZECHUAN GARDEN - 909 S. Evans St.<lb/>
Experienced wait staff needed. No phone<lb/>
calls please. Apply in person between 2:00<lb/>
pm and 6:00 pm.<lb/>
RESORT JOBS - Theme Pa. ks, Hotel &amp;<lb/>
Spas, MountainOutdoor Resorts, more!<lb/>
Earn to $12hr. tips. For more informa-<lb/>
tion, call (206) 632-0150 ext R53621<lb/>
SALES GIRLS NEEDED to sell Perfumes<lb/>
on Campus. Make an extra $200 a week<lb/>
part-time. Only 2 positions available, call<lb/>
Today 752-7294.<lb/>
CAMPPINEWOOD<lb/>
Summer Camp Staff<lb/>
COUNSELORS, INSTROCTORS, a<lb/>
OTHER POSITIONS for westerr.<lb/>
North Carolina's finest Co-ed<lb/>
8 week youth summer recreational<lb/>
sports camp. Over 25 activities,<lb/>
including water ski, heated<lb/>
pool, tennis, horseback, art<lb/>
Cool Mountain Climate, good pay<lb/>
and great fun! Non-smokers.<lb/>
For applicationbrochure:<lb/>
704-692-6239 or Camp Pinewcod,<lb/>
Hendersonville, NC 26792.<lb/>
SPACIOUS 3 bedroom. 2 bath, newly re-<lb/>
modeled home, washer, dryer, ceiling fans<lb/>
throughout, fenced backyard, campus<lb/>
area. 750.00 per month 1 year lease. 524-<lb/>
5790 or 752-8079.<lb/>
TAKE OVER MY LEASE MAY 1-AUG.<lb/>
31. 1 bedroom apartment close to cam-<lb/>
pus. 295month utilitiies included. Call<lb/>
758-5419 Please leave a message.<lb/>
FEMALE ROOMMATE NEEDED to<lb/>
move in May. 3 bedroom duplex on cor-<lb/>
ner of 1st and Meade St. Own bedroom.<lb/>
$160.00 per month plus 13 ut ilities. Call<lb/>
758-6692<lb/>
EASY-GOING, SEMI-NEAT FEMALE(S)<lb/>
to share a 2 bedroom Georgetown Apt.<lb/>
Needed after graduation. Price negotiable.<lb/>
Call Jennifer at 752-0009<lb/>
GRADUATE MEDICAL STUDENT<lb/>
wanted to share nice townhouse in<lb/>
Courtney Square. Female preferred. $220<lb/>
mo plus 12 utilities. Please call 321-8779<lb/>
or leave message. Laid back, serious stu-<lb/>
dent no pets.<lb/>
AVAILABLE FOR SUBLEASE: May-July<lb/>
- one bedroom furnished apartment off<lb/>
Contanche St. Perfect for summer school.<lb/>
Call Amy - 752-8924, leave message.<lb/>
OCEANFRONT SUMMER RENTALS<lb/>
1,2, &amp; 3 bedroom cottages at mp 9 in Kill<lb/>
Devil Hills NC. 4 month student leases<lb/>
avail. Near restaurants &amp; nightclubs. Con-<lb/>
tact: Elizabeth Newman 919-261-3844<lb/>
NEED MALE ROOMMATE beginning<lb/>
summer. Nonsmoker. nondrinker. Call Ri-<lb/>
chard 328-7891<lb/>
ROOMMATE NEEDED: Female, non<lb/>
smoker to share a 2-Br townhouse.<lb/>
$190.0012 utilities per month. Must<lb/>
love cats. Available May 1st. Call Staci 758-<lb/>
4781.<lb/>
FEMALE ROOMMATE NEEDED to<lb/>
share a two bedroom apartment in Tar<lb/>
River Estates for the summer months. Call<lb/>
758-1818.<lb/>
TAR RIVER ESTATES one male room-<lb/>
mate needed, located on Riv er. $172 rent<lb/>
14 utilities and phone. Call Kevin at 758-<lb/>
6701<lb/>
NON-SMOKING ROOMMATE WANTED<lb/>
- Rent negotiable. Call 752-3876<lb/>
APARTMENT FOR SUBLEASING: Fully<lb/>
furnished efficiency apartment at<lb/>
Ringgold Towers. New carpet couch, and<lb/>
refrigerator. Water included. Available first<lb/>
week in May. Call 757-0926.<lb/>
FEMALE ROOMMATE NEEDED to take<lb/>
over my lease June 1. Two bedroom, two<lb/>
bath, cable &amp; water included. Pool,<lb/>
clubhous. and ECU bus service available.<lb/>
$225.00 a month. Call Wendy or Emily at<lb/>
757-0793.<lb/>
ROOMMATE NEEDED IMMEDIATELY<lb/>
to share 2 bedroom apt. with 2 others<lb/>
$133 rent and 13 utilities � deposit lo-<lb/>
cated 1 12 blocks from campus 752-6181<lb/>
ROOMMATE NEEDED before April.<lb/>
$197.50 rent and 12 utilities, cable, and<lb/>
water included. Near campus with bus<lb/>
access. Call 551-6941<lb/>
NEW 1 BEDROOM APT. Dishwasher, w<lb/>
d hookups. $325month 1 month de-<lb/>
posit Available May 1st. Please call 355-<lb/>
6883<lb/>
tS? Services Offered<lb/>
TYPING REASONABLE RATES<lb/>
Resumes - Quick &amp; Professional. Term<lb/>
Papers, Thesis, other services. Call Glenda:<lb/>
752-9959Days): 527-9133(Eves)<lb/>
FREE FINANCIAL AID! Over $6 Billion<lb/>
in private sector grants &amp; scholarships is<lb/>
now available. All students are eligible<lb/>
regardless of grades, income, or parent's<lb/>
income. Let us help. Call Student Finan-<lb/>
cial Services: 1-800-263-6495 ext F53623<lb/>
RESEARCH INFORMATION,<lb/>
Largest Library of information in U.S. -<lb/>
all subjects<lb/>
rderCalBgTociv�i3v�j MCorCOC<lb/>
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Or. rush S2 00 to Research inlormition<lb/>
 �.r. � -nr . in- rneioc ra Q�-)<lb/>
RINGGOLD TOWERS<lb/>
Now Taking Leases for<lb/>
1 bedroom, 2 bedroom &amp;<lb/>
Efficiency Apartments.<lb/>
CALL 752-2865<lb/>
GREEKS! DON'T FORGET MMP! Mo<lb/>
bile Music Productions is the premier Disc<lb/>
Jockey service for your cocktail, social, and<lb/>
formal needs. The most variety and expe-<lb/>
rience of any Disc Jockey service in the<lb/>
area. Specializing in ECU Greeks. Spring<lb/>
dates booking fast. Call early, 7584644<lb/>
ask for Lee.<lb/>
CAN'T FIND THE DISHES? Lost the<lb/>
phone for good? Call to have your house,<lb/>
apt or room cleaned and skip the hassle,<lb/>
REASONABLE RATES! Call 758-1338<lb/>
House &amp; pet sitting also.<lb/>
�1 and 2 Bedrooms<lb/>
AZALEA CARDENS<lb/>
Clean and Quiet, one bedroom<lb/>
furnished apartments. $250 per<lb/>
month, 6 month lease.<lb/>
ALSO<lb/>
UNIVERSITY APARTMENTS<lb/>
2899-2901 East 5th Street<lb/>
�Located near ECU<lb/>
�ECU Bus Service<lb/>
�On-Site Laundry<lb/>
"Special Student Leases"<lb/>
also MOBILE HOME RENTALS<lb/>
IT. or Tommy Williams<lb/>
756-781 5758-7436<lb/>
Lost and Found<lb/>
LOST - Half LabRot Black, male dog.<lb/>
has tail clipped. 8 months old. Last seen<lb/>
at Townes Common (Downtown) Saturday.<lb/>
March 11th. If any info. Please call 752-<lb/>
1373 - leave message REWARD if found.<lb/>
Having trouble finding where to drop off<lb/>
Classifieds and Announcements?<lb/>
Well look no more!<lb/>
Forms for Classifieds and Announcements<lb/>
can be picked up in Mendenhall and<lb/>
dropped off in the Student Pubs building<lb/>
Joyner<lb/>
Library<lb/>
here<lb/>
Student Pubs<lb/>
Building,<lb/>
2nd floor<lb/>
Classifieds<lb/>
25 words or less:<lb/>
Students $2.00<lb/>
Non-Students $3.00<lb/>
Each additional word <lb/>
$0.05 -<lb/>
Display Classifieds<lb/>
$5.50 per column inch<lb/>
Displayed<lb/>
advertisements may be<lb/>
canceled before 10<lb/>
a.m. the day prior to<lb/>
publication. However,<lb/>
no refunds will be given.<lb/>
Deadlines<lb/>
Friday 4 p.m. for<lb/>
Tuesday's edition<lb/>
Tuesday 4 p.m. for<lb/>
Thursday's edition<lb/>
�All ads must b<lb/>
pre-paid<lb/>
For more information,<lb/>
call ECU-6366.<lb/>
i<lb/>
For Sale<lb/>
HEY MVX MASTERS! Sony Stereo with<lb/>
turn table, cassette, tuner, and big speak-<lb/>
ts$40.00 OBO. Also. Big black trunk<lb/>
(can use as storage andor table) win-<lb/>
ner shelf$ 15.00 OBO. Also. Room size<lb/>
wool rug. Call 758-1338 for det: Is.<lb/>
PING EYE 2 GOLF CLUBS 3-Sw<lb/>
$275.00, Also boys bike $60.00. Both in<lb/>
good condition. Ask for Jason, 758-8207.<lb/>
BIKES AND LASER DISC VIDEO for<lb/>
low prices. Free movies with the video.<lb/>
Call 830-2658<lb/>
SCHW1NN MOUNTAIN BIKE, 21 inch<lb/>
Aluminum. Frame. Upgraded Shimano<lb/>
Components, Aluminm Bar Ends, Univer-<lb/>
sity Registered, A Serious Ride! Kevin 328-<lb/>
8143. $475 negotiable<lb/>
GUITAR AND AMPLIFIER Washburn<lb/>
Electric. Blue Crackel Finish, Floyd Rose<lb/>
Tremlo. Gorilla 35 watt amp, a good, small<lb/>
powerful amp $350 for both! Kevin 328-<lb/>
8143<lb/>
BIKEGOLF CLUBS Trek 700 with<lb/>
Manitue II shock, bar ends, 2 wb cages,<lb/>
seatpack. U-lock 550.00 Ping zing copy<lb/>
clubs with graphite shaft 3-Sw 150.00.<lb/>
Brian 321-7805<lb/>
MO- PED. excellent condit ion. Low miles,<lb/>
fast and quiet No registration or license<lb/>
required $300 756-9133<lb/>
FOR SALE: 2 Grateful Dead tickets for<lb/>
Friday's Show in Charlotte. Call 830-2168<lb/>
BULLDOG PUPPY FOR SALE. Very<lb/>
friendly, includes all shots, 5 months old, <lb/>
female. For more information call 757-<lb/>
8746.<lb/>
FOR SALE: Queen-size wooden frame .<lb/>
futon and mattress: $100; Brown leather <lb/>
Barcalounger recliner $60; 4 white<lb/>
wooden chairs $90 752-0820 leave mes- �<lb/>
sage.<lb/>
SMITH-CORONA MOD. PWPD350 '<lb/>
WordprocessorTypewriter wdetached �<lb/>
monitor, spread sheet capability, stores<lb/>
text on 3.5" discs, converts to ASCII For- -<lb/>
mat (optional), extra print wheels and rib- <lb/>
bons, still under warranty. $225.00 OBO. <lb/>
758-7207<lb/>
PL<lb/>
' tjtmm i<lb/>
Greek Personals<lb/>
Travel<lb/>
SIUDEOT FARES!<lb/>
SUMMER ROUND TRIP FARES<lb/>
FOR STUDENTS. TAXES EXTRA.<lb/>
MANY OTHER CITIES<lb/>
AVAILABLE.<lb/>
N.YLONDON409<lb/>
WASH. - PARIS489<lb/>
RDV - AMSTERDAM639<lb/>
(919) 510-5550<lb/>
TRAVEL SOIJJIIONS<lb/>
FAX(919)510-5551<lb/>
PI DELTA will be sponsoring a "Ronald<lb/>
Run" 5K run and walk. Saturday, April 1,<lb/>
1995. All proceeds will benf it the Ronald<lb/>
McDonald House of Eastern North Caro-<lb/>
lina. For more information contact Honor<lb/>
Nebiker at 758-0598 or Christy Lentz at<lb/>
328-9728.<lb/>
Personals<lb/>
COME HAVE A BALL at the 16th An-<lb/>
nual BAREFOOT ON THE MALL, April<lb/>
20. Be there or be square.<lb/>
LAMBDA CHI ALPHA Thank You for<lb/>
the social, Hope you all had a nice St-<lb/>
Patricks Day. Love Alpha Delta Pi<lb/>
ALPHA PHI Congrats Wendy Ballard"<lb/>
on getting in PT school and to Young O<lb/>
for getting the job at Disney World. We"<lb/>
are very proud of you. Love your Alpha<lb/>
Phi sisters.<lb/>
TAU KAPPA EPSILON Thanks for the;<lb/>
pre-downtown. We all had such a blast!<lb/>
Love-Chi Omega<lb/>
LAMBDA CHI ALPHA invites everyone;<lb/>
to see Knocked Down Smilin Friday.<lb/>
March 24. For info call 758-8435.<lb/>
<pb facs="00058532_0013"/><lb/>
s<lb/>
p<lb/>
13<lb/>
Tuesday, March 21, 1995<lb/>
The East Carolinian<lb/>
ANNOU<lb/>
Announcements<lb/>
Any organization may use the Announcements section of The<lb/>
East Carolinian to list activities and events open to the public<lb/>
two times free of charge. Due to the limited amount of space,<lb/>
The East Carolinian cannot guarantee the publication of<lb/>
announcements.<lb/>
SPECIAL OLYMPICS<lb/>
The 1995 Greenville-Pitt Co. Special 01 ym-<lb/>
pics Spring Games will be held on April<lb/>
12th at Rose High School Stadium in<lb/>
Greenville (rain date: April 13th). Volun-<lb/>
teers are needed to help serve as buddies<lb/>
chaperones for the Special Olympians. Vol-<lb/>
unteers must be able to work all day-from<lb/>
9am-2pm (The First ones t here will be as-<lb/>
signed a position). A required orientation<lb/>
meeting will be held on April 10th (Mon-<lb/>
day) 5:00-6:00 in Old Joyner Library, room<lb/>
221. Free lunches and volunteer t-shirts will<lb/>
be provided the day of the games to all<lb/>
volunteers who have attended the orienta-<lb/>
tion session. For more information contact<lb/>
Lisa Ihly at 8304551.<lb/>
ATTENTION HISTORY MAJORS<lb/>
There will be an impor tant preregistration<lb/>
meeting for History Majors on Wednesday.<lb/>
March 22, at 5:30pm in BB-102<lb/>
SPRING HEALTH FAIR<lb/>
Various ECU departmetns will be hosting<lb/>
the Spring Health Fair on Thursday, March<lb/>
30, from 10am-2pm in the Multipurpose<lb/>
Room at Mendenhall Student Cent er. There<lb/>
will be snacks, prizes, live entertainment<lb/>
and plenty of information on achieving a<lb/>
healthy lifestyle. For more information, call<lb/>
the Office of Health Promotion and Well-<lb/>
being at 328-6793.<lb/>
PERSPECTIVES: A NOON TIME<lb/>
LECTURE SERIES<lb/>
MONDAY MARCH 27: A day with Richard<lb/>
Selzer, MD Author of Letters to a Young<lb/>
Doctor, and Confessions of a Knife, and<lb/>
other books. 12:30-2:00pm Brody Blue<lb/>
Auditorium: Readings and Remarks. 4:00-<lb/>
5:00pm; ECU Gen Clsr m Bldg. Room 1021;<lb/>
Readings and Remarks. 7:00pm Brody Blue<lb/>
Auditorium: Readers' Theater Performance<lb/>
of Dr. Selzer's Raising the Dead. For fur-<lb/>
ther information call 816-2797 DepL of<lb/>
Medical Humanities ECU School of Medi-<lb/>
cine. The Public is Invited to Attend.<lb/>
FESTIVAL OF ART AND PEACE<lb/>
Saturday. March 25. 1995 ECU ALL<lb/>
EVENTS OPEN TO PUBLIC. Concert:<lb/>
Opening: Mayor Nancy Jenkins Wright<lb/>
Auditorium 6:00pm Country Music Star<lb/>
Dan Seals with Special Guest Global Mu-<lb/>
sic Children's Peace Choral Wahl-Coates<lb/>
School. Mike Bramwell: Art Exhibition<lb/>
Mendenhall. March 25. April 12 Reception<lb/>
and Gallery Talk, March 25. l-2pm Cospon-<lb/>
sor: Student Union Visual Arts Committee.<lb/>
Children's International Art Exhibition on<lb/>
Peace(Pitt &amp; Edgecomb C. Ukraine. Tur-<lb/>
key) General Classroom Building. March 20-<lb/>
31 Gallery Talk, March 25, 4-5pm Cospon-<lb/>
sor. School of Art CE-lnternational Prog<lb/>
For more information Call 3284260 School<lb/>
of Education<lb/>
SELF-EXPLORATION WORKSHOP<lb/>
Do you know who you are? Are you un-<lb/>
clear of your identity? This four-part work-<lb/>
shop will help you explore, focus on. and<lb/>
affirm your self and personality character-<lb/>
istics through group discussion, awareness<lb/>
exercises, and other creative activities.<lb/>
Wednesdays. 2pm-3pm. beginning March<lb/>
29. Counseling Center. Call 328-6661 to<lb/>
register.<lb/>
ACADEMIC SURVIVAL SKILLS<lb/>
Academic Motivation-Overcoming Procras-<lb/>
tination: 327. 3:30-5:0()pm. Note Taking<lb/>
&amp; Study Strategies: 3 29, lpm-2pm. Exam<lb/>
Preparation: 328. Kiam-llam. Exam<lb/>
Strategies: 327. 2pm-3pm. Counseling<lb/>
Center. Call 328-6661 to register.<lb/>
THE ANGER RESPONSE<lb/>
Anger is an emotion t hat occurs regularly<lb/>
for everyone. This worshop will identify the<lb/>
proper recognition, understanding, accep-<lb/>
tance, and channeling of anger to make life<lb/>
more comfortable, productive, and exciting.<lb/>
329. 2:00pm-3:30pm. Counseling Cent er.<lb/>
Call 328-6661 to register.<lb/>
ECU SCHOOL OF MUSIC EVENT S<lb/>
- March 21 through March 27: All events at<lb/>
A. J. Fletcher Recital Hall and FREE, un-<lb/>
less otherwise noted:<lb/>
THURS-SAT-MARCH 23-25 (8:00pm) and<lb/>
SUN-MARCH 26 (2:00pm) OPER A THE-<lb/>
ATRE PRODUCTION. JOHANN<lb/>
STRAUSS'S FLEDERMAUS. Dr. Clyde<lb/>
Hiss, Director. FOR TICKET INFORMA-<lb/>
TION, Call 3284788 or 1-800-ECU-ART S.<lb/>
SAT-MARCH 25-JUNIOR RECITAL,<lb/>
Suzanne Snyder. Bassoon (4:00pm).<lb/>
GRADUATE RECITAL. LindaJones. organ<lb/>
(First Presbyterian Church. Kinston. NC<lb/>
4:00pm). SUN-MARCH 26-TUESDAY<lb/>
THURSDAY JAZZ ENSEMBLE, Peter Mills,<lb/>
Director (8:00pm). MON-MARCH 27-CON-<lb/>
TEMPORARY JAZZ ENSEMBLE, Paul<lb/>
Tardif. Director (8:00pm). For additional in-<lb/>
formation, call ECU 6851 or the 24-hour<lb/>
hotline at ECU 4370. f<lb/>
ECU STUDENT BLOOD DRIVE<lb/>
Miracles happen. Work one today. ECU<lb/>
Student Blood Drive. Mendenhall Student<lb/>
Center. Monday March 27. 1995 12:00-<lb/>
6:00pm. Give the "Gift of Life" Give Blood!<lb/>
American Red Cross.<lb/>
ECU INVESTMENTS CLUB<lb/>
Why should I worry about insurance?<lb/>
When should I purchase my first insurance<lb/>
policy? What type of policy should I<lb/>
choose? If you are interested in finding the<lb/>
answers to these questions, please join us<lb/>
in CCB 3007 on Thursday March 23,1995<lb/>
at 5:00pm .<lb/>
ELEMENTARY EDUCATION CLUB<lb/>
We will have a meeting Wednesday. March<lb/>
22, in Speight Room 129 at 4:30pm. Ev-<lb/>
eryone is encouraged to join us. We will be<lb/>
electing new officers for the 1995-1996<lb/>
school year and any member may run for<lb/>
an office if you are at the meeting. Our<lb/>
speaker will be Dr. Handron who will be<lb/>
speaking on self-esteem.<lb/>
GAMMA BETA PHI<lb/>
Tickets for the Semi-formal will be on sale<lb/>
in front of the Student Store Wednesday<lb/>
and Thursday. Maps and information on<lb/>
the Induction Ceremony and Founder's<lb/>
Day Celebration will also be available.<lb/>
INTERVIEW SKILLS WORKSHOP<lb/>
Learn how to prepare, package and present<lb/>
your product - YOURSELF - in an employ-<lb/>
ment interview. This workshop covers deal-<lb/>
ing with difficult or inappropriate ques-<lb/>
tions, what the employer looks for, and to<lb/>
follow-up for positive results. Sponsored by<lb/>
Career Services, the workshop is scheduled<lb/>
for Thur. March 23 at 3:00pm and Tue Apr il<lb/>
4 at 4:00pm in the Career Services Center,<lb/>
701 E. Fifth St<lb/>
RESUME WRITING WORKSHOP<lb/>
A workshop on writing a professional re-<lb/>
sume for employment will be held in the<lb/>
Career Services Center, 701 E. Fifth St on<lb/>
Wed March 22 at 5:00pm and Thur March<lb/>
27 at 3:00pm. Seniors who will soon enter<lb/>
the job market or students seeking intern-<lb/>
ships or co-op experiences are invited to<lb/>
attend. The program will include informa-<lb/>
tion on the content format, and reproduc-<lb/>
tion of the resume.<lb/>
Saturday, March<lb/>
Commuter Lot on College Hill Or<lb/>
Lot opens at 10 am<lb/>
Judging begins at<lb/>
$3<lb/>
register early before March<lb/>
register late fafter March 23)<lb/>
Proceeds go to the Ronald Mcdonald House<lb/>
To register call 328-6935<lb/>
And Leave A Message<lb/>
Sponsored by Aycock Hall Council.<lb/>
Work on Campus<lb/>
University Housing Services will soon be hiring students for<lb/>
parttime employment for the 199S96 School Year.<lb/>
Candidates should be fulkime students and must be in<lb/>
good academic and judicial standing with the univetsity.<lb/>
Customer service skills are extremdy important few these<lb/>
positions. Priority will be given to students who live in the<lb/>
residence halls.<lb/>
1witions available include: communfty service desk<lb/>
representatives; front desk assistants; and game room<lb/>
assistants. To apply, drop by 214 wTaehard Buikiing and fill<lb/>
out an application form The deadline to submit<lb/>
applications is Friday, March 31.<lb/>
If you have questions, call<lb/>
University Housing Services at 32&amp;6450.<lb/>
bTw ������������!<lb/>
� ������������a<lb/>
INTENDED CSDI MAJORS<lb/>
All Ceneral College students who intend<lb/>
to major in Communication Sciences and<lb/>
have Mr. Robert Muzzarelli or Mrs. Meta<lb/>
Downes as their adviser are to meet on<lb/>
Wednesday, March 22 at 5:00pm in<lb/>
Brewster C-103. Advising for early regis-<lb/>
tration will take place at that time. Please<lb/>
prepare a tentative class schedule before<lb/>
the meeting.<lb/>
CHARITY BALL SPONSORED BY<lb/>
TYLER HALL COUNCIL<lb/>
Proceeds will go to THE RONALD<lb/>
MCDONALD HOUSE. Where: Social Room<lb/>
(Mendenhall) Date: April 1, 1995. Time:<lb/>
8:30-12:00. Dress: Guys-shirt and ties, Cirls-<lb/>
Formals(or nice dress). Tickets from Hall<lb/>
Council President or in front of Student<lb/>
Stores on March 23 and 30. If you have<lb/>
questions or need tickets call 328-9377.<lb/>
Tickets $3.00<lb/>
OMICRON DELTA KAPPA<lb/>
MEMBERS AND TAPPEES!<lb/>
The Initiation Ceremony will be at 2pm,<lb/>
March 26, 1995 at the ECU Ampitheatre.<lb/>
Arrive at 109 MSC at 1pm to line up.<lb/>
Rainsite will be the Great Rooms in MSC.<lb/>
You will need a graduat ion gown. If you<lb/>
have difficulty finding one, contact Tho-<lb/>
mas Marcinowski at 758-6587.<lb/>
ECU WATER SKI CLUB<lb/>
Do you like to Water Ski or want to learn<lb/>
how? Join the ECU Co�d Water Ski Club.<lb/>
Meetings are held every Wed. night at 9:15<lb/>
in Mendenhall room 14. For more info, call<lb/>
Thomas at 758-8215 or Hope at 328-7018.<lb/>
NC POLK ARTS &amp; ARTISTS SERIES<lb/>
1995<lb/>
Wednesday, March 22, 7:30rm in General<lb/>
Classroom Building 2021, on the ECU<lb/>
Campus: Thomas McGowan has toured the<lb/>
state from Boone to Buxton, from<lb/>
Murph(e)y to Manteo, photographing the<lb/>
signs and symbols of Tar Heel to wn names.<lb/>
Place names, their legend sources, their<lb/>
presentation on signs to symbolize com-<lb/>
munity values and meaning are the sub-<lb/>
ject of Professor McGowan's profusely il-<lb/>
lustrated visual tour of the state's place<lb/>
name heritage.<lb/>
ENGLISH DARTS<lb/>
If you would be interested in playing some<lb/>
serious darts (301, 501, etc) please con-<lb/>
tact Anthony at 321-0676. Leave a message<lb/>
if no one answers.<lb/>
DEAN OF STUDENTS (ECU<lb/>
JUDICIAL BOARD)<lb/>
Applications for Student Attorney General<lb/>
and Public Defender are available now at<lb/>
210 Whichard or the SGA Offices,2nd floor<lb/>
MSC. Applications due by 5:00pm, Fr iday<lb/>
March 24. For more info contact Karen<lb/>
Boyd at 328-6824.<lb/>
STUDENT FOODSERVICE<lb/>
ADVISORY COMMITTEE<lb/>
The next Student Foodservice Advisory<lb/>
Committee meeting will be Wednesday,<lb/>
March 22, 1995 at 4:00pm in MSC room<lb/>
14. AH students are invited to come and<lb/>
share their questions and comments with<lb/>
the Campus Dining Services management<lb/>
Refreshments will be provided. Questions?<lb/>
Call David Bailey at 757-2414. A11 ECU stu-<lb/>
dents are invited!<lb/>
STRESS MANAGEMENT-<lb/>
RELAXATION TRAINING<lb/>
This five-session workshop will explore the<lb/>
causes of stress and the effects it can have<lb/>
on you. Experience various relaxation tech-<lb/>
niques in order to cope with stress more<lb/>
effectively. Mondays, 3:30pm-5:00pm, begin-<lb/>
ning 327. Counseling Center. Call 328-<lb/>
6661 to register.<lb/>
PRE-OCCUPATIONAL THERAPY<lb/>
STUDENTS ADVISING<lb/>
Early registration for summer and fall ses-<lb/>
sions will be Tuesday March 21 and<lb/>
Wednesday March 22nd from 5:30-7:30 in<lb/>
room 203 of the Belk Building. If you are<lb/>
unable to attend either of these times<lb/>
please call the OT office for other advising<lb/>
hours 3284441.<lb/>
FIRST ANNUAL HAMSTRING<lb/>
HUSTLE 5K<lb/>
The School of Medicine of East Carolina<lb/>
University will host the first Annual Ham-<lb/>
string Hustle 5K road race in downtown<lb/>
Greenville March 26, 1995. The race will<lb/>
begin at 2:00pm on First St reet Registra-<lb/>
tion begins at 12:30pm the day of the race<lb/>
in the Willis Building on t he corner of First<lb/>
and Reade Streets. Free Blood Pressure<lb/>
screening will be offered. Prizes awarded<lb/>
to the top finishers in each age group and<lb/>
T-shirts to all entrants desiring one. Run-<lb/>
ners and Walkers of all skill levels encour-<lb/>
aged to participate. Race Applications<lb/>
available by writing Ward Aycock. 330 Lind-<lb/>
say Dr. G-8, Greenville, NC 27834 or call-<lb/>
ing 321-4916.<lb/>
TREASURE CHESTS AVAILABLE<lb/>
The 1993-94 Treasure Chests. Be sure to<lb/>
pick up your FREE video yearbook. Avail-<lb/>
able at the Student Store. The East Caro-<lb/>
linian, Joyner Library. Mendenhall and the<lb/>
Media Board office in the Student Publica-<lb/>
tions Building.<lb/>
�.�W�Wi<lb/>
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14<lb/>
Tuesday, March 21, 1995<lb/>
The East Carolinian<lb/>
Now that you're going to<lb/>
graduate school, how<lb/>
do you plan to pay for H?<lb/>
Ask iis.<lb/>
No matter what<lb/>
you study or where you cur-<lb/>
rently bank, you can count<lb/>
on Citibank, the nation's<lb/>
number one originator of<lb/>
student loans, to help finance<lb/>
your education.<lb/>
For Medical Students<lb/>
(pursuing allopathic and<lb/>
osteopathic medicine) The<lb/>
CitiMedical Loan Program<lb/>
offers Federal Stafford<lb/>
Loans and our exclusive<lb/>
MedicalAssist Loan.<lb/>
For MBA Students<lb/>
The CitiMBA Loan<lb/>
Program offers Federal<lb/>
Stafford Loans and our<lb/>
exclusive MBAAssist Loan.<lb/>
For(<lb/>
(pursuing all types of advanced<lb/>
degrees such as law, engineering,<lb/>
nursing etc.) The Citi-<lb/>
Graduate Loan Program<lb/>
offers Federal Stafford Loans<lb/>
and our exclusive Grad-<lb/>
Assist Loan.<lb/>
And, all of the Citibank Grad-<lb/>
uate Loan Programs offer.<lb/>
� easy repayment,<lb/>
� low interest rates,<lb/>
� no application tees,<lb/>
� an easy application process,<lb/>
� fast approvals,<lb/>
� and one toll-free number<lb/>
to call for answers to all<lb/>
your questions.<lb/>
For more information<lb/>
and an application for a<lb/>
Citibank Graduate Loan,<lb/>
PHI-800 6928200,<lb/>
and ask for Operator 256.<lb/>
CITIBANK<lb/>
Call 1-800-692-8200, ext. 256<lb/>
��S! I want more information<lb/>
and an application for the following<lb/>
Citibank Graduate Loans:<lb/>
All Federal Stafford Loan<lb/>
G Citibank MedicalAssist Loan<lb/>
(for students of allopathic and<lb/>
osteopathic medicine)<lb/>
C Citibank MBAAssist Loan<lb/>
(for business students!<lb/>
? Citibank GradAssist Loan<lb/>
(for graduate students)<lb/>
Mail this coupon to:<lb/>
Citibank Student Loans<lb/>
P.O. Box 22948<lb/>
Rochester, NY 14692-2948<lb/>
Citibank New York-Stair)<lb/>
Name of Student.<lb/>
Address<lb/>
Apt<lb/>
City.<lb/>
State<lb/>
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Telephone<lb/>
Student's Social Security � <lb/>
i Fur britfr MfMBA bt ��rr M fill it in Social Security Sumber obm-e.)<lb/>
Student is currently in College Graduate School<lb/>
Year of GraduationField of Study<lb/>
Name of CollegeGraduate School<lb/>
Are you a previous student loan borrower? O Yes Q No<lb/>
Or lor faster service,<lb/>
call 1 -800-6924200, <lb/>
�-�,� CIT1BANKO<lb/>
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