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<pb facs="00058552_0001"/>
day<lb/>
Ausust 22,1995<lb/>
Vol 71, No. 01<lb/>
The East Carolinian<lb/>
Circulation 12,000<lb/>
East Carolina University<lb/>
Greenville, N C<lb/>
40 pases<lb/>
Photos by KEN CLARK<lb/>
(Top) ECU students are welcomed to the Emerald City by<lb/>
various means. This water tower located near WalMart is a<lb/>
sign of Pirate Pride. (Right), It won't be long before students<lb/>
are gathered around this electronic sign on the corner of<lb/>
Greenville Blvd. and Charles Bled, to celebrate home football<lb/>
matchups. (Bottom), ECU student Jennifer Hart swelters in<lb/>
the summer heat while moving into her new abode.<lb/>
ttteitOxtf<lb/>
Between the resignation of<lb/>
Assistant Police Chief John Taylor<lb/>
and the alleged SGAElbo scandal,<lb/>
ECU'S suffered a wild and crazy<lb/>
summer. Check out the<lb/>
details<lb/>
page L<lb/>
tote&amp;cUuf<lb/>
TEC opinion columnist give some advice<lb/>
on how to survive your college years. Will<lb/>
you burnout, turn into a hippie or hit the<lb/>
books? It's up to<lb/>
you<lb/>
ztcfte<lb/>
Downtown will be packed this weekend, so<lb/>
why not head to the movies. Find our what<lb/>
the TEC reviewer thinks is hip on the bid<lb/>
screen. Also, don't miss out on Super-<lb/>
Obscure Trivia<lb/>
tueidatf<lb/>
page<lb/>
15<lb/>
21<lb/>
The countdown to Pirate football<lb/>
begins. What are the chances against<lb/>
such powerhouses as Tennessee and<lb/>
Illinois? See what Chancellor Eakin has<lb/>
to say about the future of Pirate<lb/>
athletics<lb/>
32<lb/>
<pb facs="00058552_0002"/><lb/>
m.  ?<lb/>
<lb/>
MMMMWb<lb/>
Tuesday, Ausust 22, 1995<lb/>
The East Carolinian<lb/>
ECU sizzles with<lb/>
hot summer news<lb/>
Staff Report<lb/>
Summer in review<lb/>
May 17 - TEC reported that<lb/>
2,100 students graduated during the<lb/>
May 6 commencement exercises.<lb/>
Two students were injured in an<lb/>
auto accident that occurred on 10th.<lb/>
Street The accident happened on May<lb/>
31, when the driver struck an open<lb/>
manhole and plowed into a wall in<lb/>
front of the new Slay and Umstead<lb/>
residence halls.<lb/>
 May 24 - A fire at Ringold Tow-<lb/>
ers caused residents to evacuate the<lb/>
building for more than an hour while<lb/>
firefighters extinguished flames on<lb/>
the Fifth floor. The fire was started<lb/>
4y food left unattended, minor dam-<lb/>
age occurred and no injuries were re-<lb/>
ported.<lb/>
? May 31 ? A three part series<lb/>
-explored the new technological<lb/>
growth ECU is experiencing. Part of<lb/>
Jhe campus's new capabilities include<lb/>
2i fiber optic network which ill allow<lb/>
;lhe university to be its own phone<lb/>
: company with a 10,000 line switch-<lb/>
" ing system. The network allows video<lb/>
? transmissions and is linked with a new<lb/>
.student database to help with faster<lb/>
; jecord retrievals. Kiosk information<lb/>
access machines will also begin to<lb/>
appear around campus this fall.<lb/>
The ECU Police Department re-<lb/>
covered two bicycles stolen from their<lb/>
front steps after an intensive investi-<lb/>
gation which reached as far as Cali-<lb/>
fornia.<lb/>
June 7 - A new entrance is in<lb/>
the works for campus. Two projects<lb/>
were approved to begin construction<lb/>
on an extension of College Hill next<lb/>
year and to construct a road between<lb/>
:he ECU police Department and the<lb/>
Slay and Umstead residence halls. The<lb/>
lew road will be named Library Drive<lb/>
uid will make the library more acces-<lb/>
sible than it is at present<lb/>
June 14 - A non-student transit<lb/>
passenger was arrested for harassing<lb/>
a female driver. Two other passengers<lb/>
were banned from campus.<lb/>
A pay change for student employ-<lb/>
ees went into effect Students were<lb/>
being paid on the 15th of every month<lb/>
and will now be paid on the 31st<lb/>
June 21 - ECU Police began to<lb/>
investigate an alleged break-in of the<lb/>
Student Government Association<lb/>
(SGA) office. A list of freshmen mail-<lb/>
ing labels in the office were later<lb/>
found reproduced in a mailing sent<lb/>
out by a The Elbo Room, a down-<lb/>
town club. The investigation was<lb/>
later concluded with no charges filed.<lb/>
June 28 - A new Kidney Cen-<lb/>
ter is planned for the medical school.<lb/>
The facility will be built in conjunc-<lb/>
tion with a private health care com-<lb/>
pany and will assist treatment and<lb/>
educating patience about kidney dis-<lb/>
ease.<lb/>
ECU tracked a link to the OJ.<lb/>
Simpson trial through a former alum-<lb/>
nus. Shoe expert William Bodziak<lb/>
graduated from ECU with a biology<lb/>
degree in 1976. He is now a special<lb/>
agent for the FBI.<lb/>
July 5 - SGA turned up the heat<lb/>
with a call for the publication of fac-<lb/>
ulty evaluation results. The evalua-<lb/>
tions help determine such factors as<lb/>
promotions, raises and tenure for pro-<lb/>
fessors. SGA President Ian Eastman<lb/>
said he would work with the faculty<lb/>
senate in trying to publish the evalu-<lb/>
ations for student use.<lb/>
July 12 ? Minority scholarships<lb/>
went under the magnifying glass for<lb/>
evaluation following a supreme court<lb/>
decision that ruled against race-based<lb/>
scholarships. Administrators are<lb/>
working to reorganize any programs<lb/>
the decision may have affected.<lb/>
ECU Police Department's Assis-<lb/>
tant Police Chief John Taylor re-<lb/>
signed follow alleged sexual incidents<lb/>
within the police department.<lb/>
July 19 - Lott Constructors In-<lb/>
corporated, the contractor hired to<lb/>
build ECU's $17.9 million recreation<lb/>
center, went out-of-business. The<lb/>
project is ensured and ECU's facili-<lb/>
ties planning is currently working to<lb/>
find a new contractor.<lb/>
A cable channel will broadcast<lb/>
medical news to the community<lb/>
through a project between the ECU<lb/>
School of Medicine and Multimedia<lb/>
Cable vision. The programming will<lb/>
include rehabilitation and care pro-<lb/>
cedures and may not be available to<lb/>
the genera public.<lb/>
July 26 - A three-year-long in-<lb/>
vestment fraud was uncovered by the<lb/>
Common Fund, one of the invest-<lb/>
ment groups that manages ECU's<lb/>
money. The scandal cost ECU noth-<lb/>
ing, but the university will receive a<lb/>
lower return on a $2.5 million invest-<lb/>
ment than expected.<lb/>
Burroughs Wellcome, one of<lb/>
Greenville's largest industries, an-<lb/>
nounced they will be closing their<lb/>
doors within the next two years as a<lb/>
result of a merger with Glaxo, a ma-<lb/>
jor pharmaceutical company.<lb/>
Phone bandit rings alarm<lb/>
Foreign messages<lb/>
linked to Jersey<lb/>
penetentiary<lb/>
Tambra Zion<lb/>
News Editor<lb/>
A phone bandit rang alarm<lb/>
across campus last week, prompt-<lb/>
ing computing and information sys-<lb/>
tems employees to send out a cam-<lb/>
pus-wide message via E-mail.<lb/>
"We have an individual who<lb/>
has been calling several depart-<lb/>
ments on campus and identifying<lb/>
himself as an AT&amp;T technician and<lb/>
asking to be transfer) ed to an of-<lb/>
fice campus operator the message<lb/>
stated. "This person has also been<lb/>
using an AT&amp;T announcement re-<lb/>
corded in Spanish as a lead in as<lb/>
well. At the end of this announce-<lb/>
We're back!<lb/>
Photo by KEN CLARK<lb/>
Long lines outside financial aid, the book stores and the<lb/>
cashier's office can only mean one thing: a new semester.<lb/>
ment, you are asked to push 1 on<lb/>
your phone.<lb/>
"The announcement is actually<lb/>
stating that by pushing 1, you are<lb/>
accepting a collect call<lb/>
ECU's telecommunications de-<lb/>
partment spent a week working<lb/>
with Carolina Telephone and'<lb/>
AT&amp;T's security divisions tracing<lb/>
the call to a penetentiary in New<lb/>
Jersey.<lb/>
"We've been able to stop it<lb/>
said Thorn Lamb, associate direc-<lb/>
tor of systems and communications.<lb/>
"We've spent a lot of time and ef-<lb/>
fort in tracking the individual it<lb/>
cost us in time and productivity<lb/>
The pay phone located in the<lb/>
penitentiary will no longer be able<lb/>
to make collect calls to the 919 area<lb/>
code.<lb/>
"We had to go through some<lb/>
legal and policy issues in New Jer-<lb/>
sey to get their telephone company<lb/>
to actually block calls from that<lb/>
prison<lb/>
Lamb said that prison pay<lb/>
phones are not regulated, so track-<lb/>
ing the calls to an individual per-<lb/>
son was not possible.<lb/>
. "What would they do, put him<lb/>
in jail?" Lamb asked. "This indi-<lb/>
vidual, I'd say he's pretty intelli-<lb/>
gent<lb/>
Lamb said it is common for<lb/>
penetentiaries to have automated<lb/>
bilingual phone systems. He said<lb/>
the phone calls should no longer<lb/>
be a problem for ECU.<lb/>
Lamb said he does not remem-<lb/>
ber anything like this happening at<lb/>
ECU before, but believes it has hap-<lb/>
pened at other universities.<lb/>
Appalachan University experi-<lb/>
enced similar problems around<lb/>
three years ago, when an inmate<lb/>
from central prison called with the<lb/>
same fraud. Officials at the school<lb/>
were also able to stop the caller<lb/>
within a matter of days.<lb/>
Lazy days<lb/>
Photo by KEN CLARK<lb/>
Summer days can make anyone lazy, but is this the<lb/>
reason library construction is a month behind schedule?<lb/>
Telemedicine<lb/>
saves money<lb/>
ECU School of<lb/>
Medicine reaches<lb/>
rural areas, prisons<lb/>
Stewart King<lb/>
Staff Writer<lb/>
Frequent visits to the doctor<lb/>
caused by unknown ailments may<lb/>
soon be a thing of the past due to<lb/>
recent leaps in medical technology.<lb/>
Prison populations and many<lb/>
rural areas are already benefiting<lb/>
from a new telemedicine program<lb/>
implemented by <lb/>
the Center of<lb/>
Health and Com-<lb/>
munication right<lb/>
here at ECU.<lb/>
The North<lb/>
Carolina Depart-<lb/>
ment of Correc-<lb/>
tions first ap-<lb/>
proached UNC<lb/>
Chapel Hill with<lb/>
the concept of<lb/>
medical screening<lb/>
for potentially<lb/>
dangerous in-<lb/>
mates using mod-<lb/>
ern telecommuni-<lb/>
cations.<lb/>
"They didn't want to do it said<lb/>
David Balch, director for the Center<lb/>
of Health and Communications. "And<lb/>
I'm happy that we did do it because<lb/>
it gave us the experience to build the<lb/>
program<lb/>
The consultations are done over<lb/>
a high speed phone line called a T-l<lb/>
which is the equivalent of 24 regular<lb/>
phone lines combined. The equip-<lb/>
ment is costly, so don't hurt your eyes<lb/>
looking for it too soon.<lb/>
"There are economics of scale<lb/>
Balch said. "And as more and more<lb/>
people are doing telemedicine, the<lb/>
tools will get smaller, more developed<lb/>
and cheaper, and yes - I think one<lb/>
day, in the future, that a lot of people<lb/>
will have links in their home<lb/>
Small town family practitioners<lb/>
need not worry about loss of revenue.<lb/>
Tele-links will make their jobs easier<lb/>
as well as more efficient People in<lb/>
rural areas will be able to consult<lb/>
with ECU, determining whether the<lb/>
need of a lengthy and costly trip to<lb/>
Greenville is actually necessary,<lb/>
Balch said.<lb/>
Balch admitted he was worried<lb/>
about how patients would react at<lb/>
first to the relatively impersonal na-<lb/>
ture of the system, which includes<lb/>
simultaneous audio and video links.<lb/>
In other words, patients are sur-<lb/>
rounded by electronic equipment<lb/>
during their examinations.<lb/>
"We were surprised to find<lb/>
people like it, out of 500 patients,<lb/>
only one has not liked it they're<lb/>
getting the phy-<lb/>
"It's much more<lb/>
than a prison<lb/>
project, it's turning<lb/>
into a rural<lb/>
telemedicine<lb/>
project<lb/>
David Balch ? director of<lb/>
the Center for Health and<lb/>
Communications<lb/>
sicians undi-<lb/>
vided attention,<lb/>
they like being<lb/>
on TV<lb/>
ECU is cur-<lb/>
rently linked to<lb/>
hospitals in<lb/>
Williamston and<lb/>
Ahoskie, and<lb/>
will have links<lb/>
in Belhaven,<lb/>
Edenton and<lb/>
Faison within<lb/>
the month.<lb/>
Balch<lb/>
stressed that<lb/>
the system,<lb/>
"does not fit for all medical situa-<lb/>
tions but they are working on new<lb/>
applications for the technology, in-<lb/>
cluding psychiatry.<lb/>
During its inception in 1991,<lb/>
the project was strictly a prison op-<lb/>
eration. The cost of transporting an<lb/>
inmate to see a doctor is approxi-<lb/>
mately $700 compared to $75 for a<lb/>
telemedicine consultation, saving<lb/>
the state (and taxpayers) a consid-<lb/>
erable sum.<lb/>
In the past four years, expan-<lb/>
sion has changed the face of the pro-<lb/>
gram.<lb/>
"It's much more than a prison<lb/>
project, it's turning into a rural<lb/>
telemedicine project Balch said.<lb/>
Beyond the exploitation of new<lb/>
technology, Balch said, the real im-<lb/>
portance lies in, "making the deliv-<lb/>
ery of health care more efficient"<lb/>
Business fanfare<lb/>
Photo by KEN CLARK<lb/>
Layton Getsinger (R) presents Charles Harris (L) with a<lb/>
door prize at the business services kick-off rally on Aug. 16.<lb/>
-?<lb/>
Around the State<lb/>
(AP) - There was some-<lb/>
thing feline about Hurricane<lb/>
Felix, and it wasn't just the<lb/>
name. Like a housecat, it went<lb/>
its own way, dawdled when it<lb/>
felt like it and toyed with those<lb/>
it cornered.<lb/>
What it never did was<lb/>
pounce.<lb/>
Felix stalked the Outer<lb/>
Banks of North Carolina for the<lb/>
better part of the week, hover-<lb/>
ing menacingly offshore and<lb/>
spinning off vicious waves and<lb/>
sultry winds. Forecasters on<lb/>
Friday gave it only a six percent<lb/>
chance of hitting Cape Hatteras<lb/>
through the weekend.<lb/>
(AP) - Two instructors ac-<lb/>
cused of sexual misconduct<lb/>
with their students have re-<lb/>
signed from the N.C. School of<lb/>
the Arts.<lb/>
Richard Kuch and Richard<lb/>
Gain stepped down Thursday<lb/>
just days before a faculty com-<lb/>
mittee was scheduled to hear<lb/>
evidence against them. On<lb/>
Wednesday, the head of the<lb/>
UNC Board of Governors said<lb/>
he would appoint a special com-<lb/>
mission to investigate allega-<lb/>
tions of misconduct at the<lb/>
school.<lb/>
Around the Country<lb/>
(AP) - Although Shannon<lb/>
Faulkner is no longer in the<lb/>
fray, the battle continues over<lb/>
women in the all-male corps of<lb/>
cadets at The Citadel.<lb/>
Ms. Faulkner announced<lb/>
Friday she was withdrawing as<lb/>
the first female cadet in the<lb/>
military college's 152-year his-<lb/>
tory because of the stress of her<lb/>
2 12-year court fight to get in,<lb/>
and her isolation as the only<lb/>
woman among 2,000 male ca-<lb/>
dets. But as John Banzhaf, a<lb/>
law professor at George Wash-<lb/>
ington University, pointed out<lb/>
She did get in.<lb/>
(AP) - A moderate college<lb/>
president who called on<lb/>
Lutherans to be active in a<lb/>
world starved on "spiritual junk<lb/>
food" was elected Saturday to<lb/>
lead the nation's fifth-largest<lb/>
Protestant denomination.<lb/>
The Rev. H. George Ander-<lb/>
son, president of Luther Col-<lb/>
lege in Decorah, Iowa, received<lb/>
698 votes to become only the<lb/>
second presiding bishop in the<lb/>
short history of the Evangeli-<lb/>
cal Lutheran Church in<lb/>
America.<lb/>
He defeated Wisconsin<lb/>
Bishop April Ulring Larson, the<lb/>
denomination's first woman<lb/>
prelate. She received 334 votes<lb/>
at the church's biennial assem-<lb/>
bly.<lb/>
Around the World<lb/>
(AP) - Three top U.S. dip-<lb/>
lomats heading to peace talks<lb/>
in Sarajevo, Bosnia-<lb/>
Herzegovina were killed Satur-<lb/>
day when their armored vehicle<lb/>
plunged 100 yards off a muddy<lb/>
road, hit two land mines and<lb/>
exploded.<lb/>
A French peacekeeper was<lb/>
also killed in the accident, and<lb/>
five people were injured: three<lb/>
Americans and two French<lb/>
peacekeepers.<lb/>
(AP) - Computer hackers<lb/>
broke the security on a<lb/>
Citibank cash management sys-<lb/>
tem and stole nearly $400,000<lb/>
before being detected, the<lb/>
bank said Friday.<lb/>
The hackers, including a<lb/>
Russian math graduate, then<lb/>
attempted to transfer another<lb/>
$2.8 million out of Citibank<lb/>
accounts into other banks.<lb/>
MBBB8<lb/>
<pb facs="00058552_0003"/><lb/>
The East Carolinian<lb/>
Tuesday, Ausust 22, 1995<lb/>
hatting<lb/>
hancellor<lb/>
On the upcoming football season <lb/>
"I look forward to the season and I believe that we will have one<lb/>
of the best teams we have had in a number of years. They will face a<lb/>
very difficult set of teams in September that will be quite a trial for<lb/>
them to play four teams that are ranked in the top 30, but 1 hope that<lb/>
the tans will give them their support. Steve Logan and his staff have<lb/>
assembled a very fine team<lb/>
On the resumed rivalries with NC State and UNC-Chapel Hill <lb/>
"That is of course something that has brought a new sense of<lb/>
enthusiasm to our athletics program generally but clearly to<lb/>
ball program.<lb/>
On the newly compiled Board of Visitors <lb/>
"The Board of Trustees clearly represent the public and they bring<lb/>
to us that public perceptions. They have a governance rule. The board<lb/>
of visitors play a very similar role, albeit they do not havi<lb/>
nance role. It gives us a much broader spectrum of tlu . i<lb/>
lie<lb/>
On the Shared Visions campaign <lb/>
The campaign will continue through 1995. Thus far the campaign<lb/>
has surpassed its goal of $50 million. Today, nearly $60 million has<lb/>
been raised.<lb/>
"After $50 million our plan was to get funding for things that<lb/>
had not been funded fully or had not been funded at all. Mfe continue<lb/>
in that effort; however, people, when they give their money to the<lb/>
university many times will have an objective that may not match<lb/>
of those additional programs<lb/>
On the library construction <lb/>
"The library is about five weeks behind schedule, although 1 was<lb/>
told the contractor believes he can make up that time. There is rea-<lb/>
son to be encouraged by that ascertion tha.t he can make up the time<lb/>
because, at an earlier time in the process, they fell way behind and<lb/>
made it up. If they did make up the time then the addition would be<lb/>
finished in December. That would be greatly to our advantage be-<lb/>
cause that would allow us to transfer materials as students! are at<lb/>
home celebrating the holidays<lb/>
On the new fiberoptic network <lb/>
"As with any complicated system like this, it's like bringing up a<lb/>
telephone system for a town or city, so with any of those kind of<lb/>
situations we've had some problems - we've been overcoming them.<lb/>
We may have some more as students arrive in their residence halls<lb/>
and as faculty come back to their offices. There may be another week<lb/>
or two of correcting. We had some difficulties when we brought up<lb/>
the new mainframe computer in terms of response time. We have re-<lb/>
sponded to that by increasing the size of the central processing unit<lb/>
rs<lb/>
Alumnus runs<lb/>
for city council<lb/>
j. Miles Layton<lb/>
Staff Writer<lb/>
ECU graduate and lormer se-<lb/>
nior class president Bill Gheen is<lb/>
running in a tou<lb/>
sent Creel<lb/>
council<lb/>
If elected ' i will rep-<lb/>
resent the I which in-<lb/>
clude most t campus and I<lb/>
;it ,ind faculty popula-<lb/>
tion.<lb/>
Cheen plans to better promote<lb/>
the neighborho ?<lb/>
ing more of ' it ma-<lb/>
jority of<lb/>
residents . ho feel left oul<lb/>
litical process.<lb/>
We need i representative that<lb/>
will speak out for the entire<lb/>
munity Gheen said. "City go rn<lb/>
Bill Gheen ment cannot continue to ignore the<lb/>
needs of our citizens who feel no<lb/>
one is listening to them<lb/>
Gheen plans to have his door<lb/>
pen to evervon ,1IV or night if<lb/>
See ALUMNUS page 18<lb/>
Lindsay<lb/>
Insurance Agency<lb/>
We "Major" In Medical Insurance<lb/>
GREENVILLE'S SOURCE FOR STUDENT<lb/>
MAJOR<lb/>
MEDICAL &amp; <lb/>
LIFE INSURANCE I<lb/>
Council for<lb/>
Affordable Health<lb/>
Insurance<lb/>
For Prices<lb/>
756-9496 <lb/>
1612 SULGRAVE ROAD GREENVILLE, NC 27858<lb/>
Call This Number<lb/>
757-7700<lb/>
OP<lb/>
&amp;<lb/>
,?<lb/>
W<lb/>
EVERYDAY<lb/>
One Large One Topping<lb/>
Pay This Price<lb/>
 TAX<lb/>
Call This Number<lb/>
757-7700<lb/>
1322 E. Tenth St.<lb/>
<pb facs="00058552_0004"/><lb/>
"<lb/>
ii 1111 ii 1111rf?wwTTiiuiuiiiunni<lb/>
g<lb/>
LECTURE<lb/>
BARRY WILLIAMS<lb/>
Growing Up Brady: I Was a Teenage Greg ? Hendrix Theatre ? 8:00 PM<lb/>
A Multi-Media Presentation by Barry Williams ? Books and Book Signing<lb/>
in Hendrix Theatre Lobby<lb/>
CHEW ON THIS<lb/>
North Carolina to Nova Scotia-23 Days by Motorcycle ? Monday, September 25<lb/>
J. Marshall, Assistant Director of Student Activities<lb/>
How to Get a Great Date ? Monday, October 30 <lb/>
Carol Woodruff, Director of Marketing, Dept. of University Unions NJ<lb/>
Love My Heart, Love Myself ? Monday, November 27 QJ<lb/>
Laura Hartung, Nutritionist, ARAMARK<lb/>
VISUAL ARTS<lb/>
Exhibition<lb/>
TRI-State Cultural Exhibit ? October 5-28<lb/>
Reception TBA<lb/>
OBNr<lb/>
11:30 AM - MSC Underground<lb/>
Bring Your Own Lunch - Free Refreshments &amp; Desserts<lb/>
POPULAR ENTERTAINMENT<lb/>
NOON DAY TUNES<lb/>
Wednesday, August 23<lb/>
Wednesday, September 6<lb/>
Wednesday, September 20<lb/>
Wednesday, October 11<lb/>
Wednesday, October 18<lb/>
Wednesday, November 1<lb/>
Wednesday, November 8<lb/>
Location: MSC Brickyard<lb/>
Rain-site: The Wright Place<lb/>
All Programs at 1:30 PM - 3:00 Pm<lb/>
HI<lb/>
VICTOR HUDSON<lb/>
MICHAEL MULVANEY<lb/>
P.J.&amp; KELLY<lb/>
STANLEY CREENTHAL<lb/>
KELLER WILLIAMS<lb/>
VICKY PRATT KEATING<lb/>
COSY SHERIDAN<lb/>
For More Information, Call the<lb/>
Student Union Hotline at 328-6004<lb/>
CULTURAL AWARENESS<lb/>
CUbTUftAb AWAKEMESS WEEK<lb/>
October 2-6 ? Events to be Announced<lb/>
AN EVENING WITH<lb/>
Don McLean ? Tuesday, September 19 at 8:00 PM ? Wright Auditorium<lb/>
The Second City ? Tuesday, November 7 at 8:00 PM ? Wright Auditorium<lb/>
For Ticket Information, Call 1-800-ECU-ARTS (328-2787)<lb/>
Monday-Friday from 8:30 AM - 6:00 PM. We Accept MasterCard and Visa.<lb/>
4th Annual Saber Slash Sun Splash Concert ? Friday, September 15 ? 8:00 pm<lb/>
Risse, Mother Nature, Bottom of College Hill<lb/>
HENDRIX FILMS<lb/>
FALL '95 FILMS SCHEDULE<lb/>
August24-26 LEGENDS OF THE FALL<lb/>
September7-9 THE BRADY BUNCH MOVIE<lb/>
September 14-16 TOMMY BOY<lb/>
September21-23 THE BASKETBALL DIARIES<lb/>
September28-30 BAD BOYS<lb/>
OUTBREAK<lb/>
JURY DUTY<lb/>
DON JUAN DE MARCO<lb/>
CONGO<lb/>
THE CURE<lb/>
BATMAN FOREVER<lb/>
APOLLO 13<lb/>
October 5-7<lb/>
October 12-14<lb/>
October 19-21<lb/>
November 2-4<lb/>
November 9-11<lb/>
Nov. 30 - Dec. 2<lb/>
December 7-9<lb/>
R<lb/>
PC-13<lb/>
?c-n<lb/>
R<lb/>
R<lb/>
R<lb/>
P6-13<lb/>
PC-13<lb/>
R<lb/>
PC-13<lb/>
PG-13<lb/>
PO-13<lb/>
AHfilms are free to students, faculty, staff, and one guest<lb/>
with valid ECU ID.<lb/>
SPECIAL EVENTS j<lb/>
CKAIG KAKGES: HWNOTIST X<lb/>
Wednesday, September 13th ? Hendrix Theatre 8:00<lb/>
JAZZ JIT NKJIM<lb/>
Friday, October 6th ? MSC Great Room ? 8:00 PM<lb/>
ALL CAMPUS COLLEGE BOWL TOURNAMENT i<lb/>
Wednesday, November 1 ? Room 244 - MSC ? 4:00 PM<lb/>
ALL CAMPUS COLLEGE BOWL TOURNAMENT n<lb/>
Wednesday, November 8 ? Room 244 - MSC ? 4:00 PM<lb/>
ALL CAMPUS COLLEGE BOWL TOURNAMENT tn<lb/>
Wednesday, November 15 ? Room 244 - MSC ? 7:00 PM<lb/>
Seasonal &amp;ee6ration<lb/>
Thursday, December 7 ? MSC Gallery ? 4:00 PM<lb/>
<pb facs="00058552_0005"/><lb/>
The East Carolinian<lb/>
ECU<lb/>
Tuesday, Ausust 22,1995<lb/>
transit<lb/>
c5<lb/>
HjWi<lb/>
ICOASTALCASUAPCITHINO.COMPANYI<lb/>
(400 9TG&amp;m4m ?j8v.<lb/>
ShotyM'tn Getite"<lb/>
The Gold Line departs:<lb/>
Mendenhall 20 after 10 till<lb/>
lQth &amp; Coll. Hill 23 after 7 till<lb/>
Top College Hill 25 after 5 till<lb/>
Minges Col.<lb/>
Stratford Arms<lb/>
Allied Health<lb/>
Greenville Sq.<lb/>
Plaza Mall<lb/>
Green. Athletic<lb/>
30 afterhour<lb/>
29 till 1 after<lb/>
28 till 2 after<lb/>
25 till 5 after<lb/>
24 till 6 after<lb/>
20 till 10 after<lb/>
The Silver Line<lb/>
Christenbury<lb/>
Dogwood Hollow<lb/>
Woodcliff Apts.<lb/>
10th &amp; Heath<lb/>
Cedar Ln. &amp;10th<lb/>
Eastern Elementary<lb/>
University Cond.<lb/>
Breckenridge Suare.<lb/>
Laura Ln. &amp; David Dr.<lb/>
Twin Oaks<lb/>
Oakmont Square<lb/>
departs:<lb/>
30 after hour<lb/>
29 till 1 after<lb/>
28 till 2 after<lb/>
27 till3 after<lb/>
26 till 4 after<lb/>
25 till 5 after<lb/>
25 till 5 after<lb/>
23 till 7 after<lb/>
23 till 7 after<lb/>
22 till 8 after<lb/>
18 till 12 after<lb/>
Routes begin at 7:20 &amp; 7:30 a.m and end at 10 p.m.<lb/>
A11 transit service ends at 5 p.m. on Fridays<lb/>
The Purple<lb/>
Mendenhall<lb/>
Speight<lb/>
Village Gr. 5th<lb/>
University Apts.<lb/>
Cannon Court<lb/>
Eastbrook<lb/>
Pinebrook<lb/>
Kings Row<lb/>
Village Gr. 10th<lb/>
College View<lb/>
Cypress Card.<lb/>
Christenbury<lb/>
Umstead Hall<lb/>
Line departs:<lb/>
22 after 8 till<lb/>
30 after hour<lb/>
28 till 2 after<lb/>
27 till 3 after<lb/>
25 till 3 after<lb/>
20 till 10 after<lb/>
17 till 13 after<lb/>
17 till 13 after<lb/>
15 till 15 after<lb/>
15 till 15 after<lb/>
14 till 16 after<lb/>
12 till 18 after<lb/>
11 till 19 after<lb/>
The Brown Line departs:<lb/>
Mendenhall 20 after 10 till<lb/>
Speight<lb/>
Ash &amp; 3rd<lb/>
3rd &amp; Forr. Hill<lb/>
Wesley Comm.<lb/>
Wyndham Ct<lb/>
Willow &amp; Ash<lb/>
Ash &amp; 1st<lb/>
Oak &amp; 1st<lb/>
Oak &amp; Willow<lb/>
Oak &amp; River<lb/>
Elm &amp; Willow<lb/>
1st &amp; Holly<lb/>
Cotanche &amp; 1st<lb/>
30 after hour<lb/>
28 till 2 after<lb/>
27 till 3 after<lb/>
26 till 4 after<lb/>
25 till 5 after<lb/>
25 till 5 after<lb/>
24 till 6 after<lb/>
24 till 6 after<lb/>
23 till 7 after<lb/>
22 till 8 after<lb/>
21 till 9 after<lb/>
19 till 11 after<lb/>
17 till 13 after<lb/>
L<lb/>
WjJJjani<lb/>
Lowe<lb/>
"alpine<lb/>
and Sign cl(f xFm<lb/>
facati'on" (fiHttwNj<lb/>
New Services:<lb/>
The Red Line departs:<lb/>
Mendenhall<lb/>
5th &amp; Elizabeth W<lb/>
Brody PCMH<lb/>
5th &amp; Elizabeth E<lb/>
Speight<lb/>
Christenbury Gym<lb/>
Monday<lb/>
30 after hour<lb/>
27 till 3 after<lb/>
20 till 10 after<lb/>
15 till 15 after<lb/>
10 till 20 after<lb/>
8 till 22 after<lb/>
Friday 7:30 a.m. - 6 p.m.<lb/>
Gold Weekends departs:<lb/>
Mendenhall ? 20 after 10 till<lb/>
College Hill &amp; 10th<lb/>
Top College Hill<lb/>
Greenville Square<lb/>
Plaza Mall<lb/>
East Carolina Bowl<lb/>
Red Banks Rd. (Overton)<lb/>
Wal-Mart<lb/>
23 after 7 till<lb/>
25 after 5 till<lb/>
1 till 29 after<lb/>
29 till 1 after<lb/>
27 till 3 after<lb/>
25 till 5 after<lb/>
20 till 10 after<lb/>
Sat. 9:20 a.m. - 6 p.m. Sun. 12:50 p.m. - 6 p.m.<lb/>
ount Down<lb/>
Dance and Active wear<lb/>
Greenville's Choice Fob<lb/>
Quality Dancewear<lb/>
At Affordable Prices<lb/>
10 Discount vi-t-h<lb/>
ECU Student l.D.<lb/>
Open 7 Days A Week<lb/>
Mon-Sat 10-9<lb/>
Sun 1-6<lb/>
Photo by RYLAND WALTERS<lb/>
Info, booths will be at the bottom of College Hill, in front of Spilman and in the Ficklin parking<lb/>
lot Wed Aug. 23 and Friday, Aug. 25. Bus maps, schedules will be available in Mendenhall.<lb/>
The Plaza Mall<lb/>
321-1585<lb/>
f<lb/>
Serious About<lb/>
Working Out?<lb/>
at East Carolina $owl 700 mnus Koad<lb/>
. , . (919)355-5510<lb/>
We want to wecome bock all<lb/>
ECU students by offering a new<lb/>
Student Collegiate<lb/>
Bowling League<lb/>
Tuesdays @ 4:00 p.m.<lb/>
$5 per person (shoes included; 3 people per learn) , pSHEjs5fiI KII.D.<lb/>
rEcu night<lb/>
 on the lanes <lb/>
l Mondays J<lb/>
I 8:30-12 m?nigh<lb/>
$1.79 per game j<lb/>
SEE OUR AD ON PACE 36 OF THIS ISSUE FOR INFORMATION ABOUT A FREE BOWLING PARTY<lb/>
Special<lb/>
Fall<lb/>
Rates For<lb/>
Students<lb/>
We Honor Any<lb/>
Competitor's<lb/>
Price Or<lb/>
Coupon On<lb/>
Qym<lb/>
Membership<lb/>
Stairmasters<lb/>
Lifecycles<lb/>
Treadmills<lb/>
7-Wolff Tanning<lb/>
Beds<lb/>
Aerobics<lb/>
? 5 Days Weekly<lb/>
? High &amp; Low Impact<lb/>
? Step Classes<lb/>
AbsToning<lb/>
? Circuit Training<lb/>
FULL LINE<lb/>
OF YORK<lb/>
FREE<lb/>
WEIGHTS<lb/>
AND<lb/>
NAUTILUS<lb/>
INCLUDING<lb/>
OVER 6,500<lb/>
LBS.<lb/>
OF DUMBELLS<lb/>
OVER 9,500<lb/>
LBS. OF FREE<lb/>
WEIGHTS<lb/>
We are looking for ambitious, hardworking individuals for<lb/>
the following position for the year 95-96:<lb/>
Advertising Director (1)<lb/>
Advertising Representative (2)<lb/>
Illustrator (1)<lb/>
If you want to gain some valuable expereince while in<lb/>
scholol plus earn some extra cash, please come by the<lb/>
Expressions office to fill out an Application. Applications<lb/>
will be taken untill August 31st.<lb/>
Expressions is Located on the 2nd floor across from the<lb/>
East Carolinian in the Publication Bldg.<lb/>
and our Phone is 328-6927<lb/>
r<lb/>
409 S. Evans St.<lb/>
752-3880<lb/>
(Across from The Elbo Room)<lb/>
r-<lb/>
i<lb/>
i<lb/>
i<lb/>
i<lb/>
i<lb/>
i<lb/>
i<lb/>
i<lb/>
i<lb/>
u<lb/>
Entire Week FREE<lb/>
August 21-27<lb/>
Free Workout ? Free Tanning<lb/>
WSFL Live Remote Friday August 25<lb/>
Prizes Given Away!<lb/>
Come Join Today<lb/>
J<lb/>
Ominous Seapods<lb/>
sat<lb/>
<lb/>
<pb facs="00058552_0006"/><lb/>
?ill"iiiiiiii liifliWiiHi<lb/>
lfl"riII Tf<lb/>
mmasmsmBmrnm<lb/>
Tuesday, August 22, 1995<lb/>
The East Carolinian<lb/>
rot ?7yio k<lb/>
" James Alward Van Fleet has<lb/>
been named director of International<lb/>
Programs and special assistant to the<lb/>
vfce chancellor for academic affairs.<lb/>
Hfe was formerly director of the Cen-<lb/>
ter for International Studies and Pro-<lb/>
grams at the University of Toledo. Van<lb/>
fleet will hold a faculty appointment<lb/>
in the department of political science<lb/>
afid has printed 29 articles in various<lb/>
journals. He received his bachelor's<lb/>
degree from the University of<lb/>
Scranton and his master's and doc-<lb/>
torate from Syracuse University.<lb/>
Sports Writers<lb/>
Needed<lb/>
Would you like to<lb/>
write for The East<lb/>
Carolinian? If so<lb/>
then make sure<lb/>
you meet tbe<lb/>
following<lb/>
requirements:<lb/>
? ECU student<lb/>
? 2.0 GPA<lb/>
Then stop by our<lb/>
office and fill out<lb/>
an application.<lb/>
The East Caxolinain is<lb/>
located In front of Joyner<lb/>
'library, on the second floor<lb/>
of the Student Publication<lb/>
Building.<lb/>
in<lb/>
?<lb/>
Cynthia E. Johnson, associate<lb/>
professor for the department of child<lb/>
development and family relations, has<lb/>
been named chair of the department.<lb/>
She has previously worked at North<lb/>
Carolina State and North Carolina<lb/>
Central universities. She has pub-<lb/>
lished several works, received her<lb/>
bachelor's from North Carolina Cen-<lb/>
tral, her master's from ECU and her<lb/>
doctorate from Ohio State University.<lb/>
Thomas L. Feldbush has been<lb/>
named vice chancellor for research and<lb/>
dean of the graduate school, he was<lb/>
formerly an associate dean for research<lb/>
at Northwestern University's Medical<lb/>
School. He has also been appointed as<lb/>
a professor of microbiology. Feldbush<lb/>
is the first person to hold the newly<lb/>
created position of vice chancellor for<lb/>
research. He has previously worked at<lb/>
the University of Missouri-Columbia and<lb/>
Harry S. Truman VA Hospital, as well<lb/>
as the University of Iowa and Rutgers<lb/>
University. Feldbush received his<lb/>
bachelor's degree from Mount Union<lb/>
College in Ohio, and his Master's and<lb/>
doctorate degrees from Ohio State<lb/>
University. Feldbush is the author of<lb/>
more than 50 scientific papers.<lb/>
The Printmaking Guild of the<lb/>
School of Art presents<lb/>
Mendenhall Student Center<lb/>
Mendeiih.all Gallery<lb/>
East Carolina University<lb/>
August 27 - September 30<lb/>
This show is in coordination<lb/>
with Marcia Sanders,<lb/>
BFA in Printmaking, of<lb/>
Underpressure Studio.<lb/>
L<lb/>
underpressure<lb/>
?<lb/>
True<lb/>
???<lb/>
False<lb/>
?<lb/>
Entrance Exam<lb/>
Fabricate Too has great brands like<lb/>
Putumayo, PA, Flax, Blue Fish, Citron.<lb/>
 Fabricate Too carries a full line of<lb/>
Naot and Aurora Shoes.<lb/>
j Fabricate Too has faddish,<lb/>
uncomfortable clothing.<lb/>
; Fabricate Too has wonderful<lb/>
handcrafted jewelry.<lb/>
Fabricate Too has great accessories-<lb/>
Hobo purses, Woven 'Sacs tights,<lb/>
socks.<lb/>
919 Red Banks Rd<lb/>
Arlington Village<lb/>
Greenville<lb/>
Mon. -Sat. 10-6<lb/>
Thurs. 10-8<lb/>
756-1058<lb/>
TOO!<lb/>
COMICS ? CARDS<lb/>
SUBSCRIPTIONS<lb/>
10 OFF ALL NEW<lb/>
COMICS<lb/>
HEROES ARE HERE TOO!<lb/>
116 E.5TH STREET<lb/>
GREENVILLE, NC 27858<lb/>
(919) 757-0948<lb/>
THE Airport Shuttle Service<lb/>
? FLYING FROM RALEIGH?<lb/>
? NEED A RIDE TO OR FROM THE RALEIGH AIRPORT?<lb/>
? CALL US AT 754-2RDU (2738)<lb/>
? Avoid the driving, the parking, the walking or overnight hotel<lb/>
? Avoid the commuter flights<lb/>
? Help with your luggage<lb/>
? Make much better use of your driving time<lb/>
? It's much less expensive when considering the overall cost of driving your<lb/>
own vehicle and you pay no parking fees<lb/>
? Take ADVANTAGE of cheaper airfares from Raleigh-Durham<lb/>
So whether it's business or pleasure, we are here to make your air travel easier and<lb/>
more convenient<lb/>
? Round trip Greenville-RDU<lb/>
is $50; children half price<lb/>
? Groups of four or more 20<lb/>
discount<lb/>
I<lb/>
 Leave G'viiig<lb/>
6:00 a.m.<lb/>
10:00 a.m.<lb/>
11:20 p.m.<lb/>
.4:30 p.m.<lb/>
5 Daily weekday shuttles and 2 Jas p.m.<lb/>
shuttles on weekends departing 6:00 a m<lb/>
from the Holiday Inn here in 111:45 a.m.<lb/>
Shuttle Schedule<lb/>
Monday - Friday<lb/>
Arrive RDU Leave RDU<lb/>
Arrive G'ville<lb/>
8:30 a.m.<lb/>
12:15 p.ir.<lb/>
3:30 p.m.<lb/>
6:40 p.m.<lb/>
10:15 p.m.<lb/>
10:30 a.m.<lb/>
2:00 p.m.<lb/>
5:00 p.m.<lb/>
8:00 p.m.<lb/>
10:30 p.m.<lb/>
Greenville<lb/>
I<lb/>
11:00 a.m.<lb/>
.4:00 p.m.<lb/>
Saturday<lb/>
8:10 a.m. 10:30 a.m.<lb/>
1:55 p.m. 5:30 p.m.<lb/>
Sunday<lb/>
1:00 p.m. 5:30 p.m.<lb/>
6:00 p.m. 10:30 p.m.<lb/>
12:30 p.m.<lb/>
4:00p.m.<lb/>
8:00 p.m.<lb/>
10:00 p.m.<lb/>
12:30 a.m.<lb/>
12:40 p.m.<lb/>
7:30 p.m.<lb/>
7:30 p.m.<lb/>
12:30 a.m.<lb/>
Division of UBE<lb/>
Announces<lb/>
New Store Hours<lb/>
(beg. Aug. 20)<lb/>
"Are you being served?"<lb/>
Episcopal Student<lb/>
Fellowship<lb/>
Invites You to Join Us Each Week for<lb/>
Ready For A Miracle? Take A Leap of Faith!<lb/>
Wednesday Night Sanity Break From Campus!<lb/>
?5:30pm Student Eucharist Campus Minister:<lb/>
?Supper Provided after service Fr. Tom Cure<lb/>
?ProgramConversation after supper Home 752-1583 Work 752-3482<lb/>
?Add new friends to your life St. Paul's Episcopal Church ?401<lb/>
?Bring a friend with you! . East 5th Street 752-3482<lb/>
?Be a part of a faith community<lb/>
Cross 5th St. in front of Garrett Hall, walk down<lb/>
Holly St. and you are here<lb/>
Quality Discount Clothing For<lb/>
Men and Women<lb/>
Bring This Ad For<lb/>
25 Off<lb/>
OFF ANY ONE<lb/>
REGULAR<lb/>
PRICED ITEM!<lb/>
210 E. 5111 ST.<lb/>
DOWNTOWN<lb/>
758-8612<lb/>
<pb facs="00058552_0007"/><lb/>
Overton<lb/>
YOUR COMPLETE SPORTS STORE<lb/>
FRIDAY HOURS<lb/>
9:00 AM TO 8:00 PM<lb/>
ffi 2 DAYS ONLY o<lb/>
FRIDAY AND SATURDAY AUGUST 25? AND 26<lb/>
SATURDAY HOURS<lb/>
9:00 AM TO 7:00 PM<lb/>
ATHLETIC FOOTWARE<lb/>
FOR MEN AND WOMEN<lb/>
50 TO 70 OFF<lb/>
REGULAR RETAIL PRICE<lb/>
Reebok<lb/>
adidas<lb/>
new balance i<lb/>
? ????<lb/>
ATHLETIC APPAREL<lb/>
FOR MEN AND WOMEN<lb/>
SHORTS TEES SWEATS<lb/>
50 TO 75 OFF<lb/>
REGULAR RETAIL PRICE<lb/>
SHIRTS JACKETS TANKS<lb/>
SANDALS<lb/>
50 OFF<lb/>
REGULAR RETAIL<lb/>
MERRELL LA PAZ 59.95 NOW $30.00<lb/>
NIKE WASATCH 64.95 NOW $32.00<lb/>
T-SHIRTS<lb/>
BY FAMOUS MAKERS<lb/>
7.??,<lb/>
EACH OR<lb/>
2 J10.00<lb/>
ASSORTED COLORS AND SIZES<lb/>
RUSSELL ATHLETIC<lb/>
SWEATSHIRTS and PANTS<lb/>
$9.95 EACH<lb/>
?<lb/>
CLOSEOUT COLORS ONLY - SIZES VARY<lb/>
REEF<lb/>
SANDALS<lb/>
M9.95<lb/>
REGULAR 39.95<lb/>
OCEAN<lb/>
PACIFIC<lb/>
SANDALS<lb/>
9.95<lb/>
REGULAR 29.95<lb/>
T-SHIRTS<lb/>
BY RUSSELL ATHLETIC AND CHAMPION<lb/>
ATHLETIC CAPS<lb/>
3<lb/>
50 OFF<lb/>
AS LOW<lb/>
AS<lb/>
$5.00<lb/>
EACH<lb/>
REGULAR RETAIL PRICE<lb/>
CLOSE-OUT COLORS AND STYLES ONLY - SIZES VARY<lb/>
ASSORTED STYLES AND COLORS - SIZES VARY<lb/>
MLB NCAA NFL NBA NHL<lb/>
Columbia<lb/>
SPORTSWEAR<lb/>
SHORTS T-SHIRTS<lb/>
WOVEN SHIRTS<lb/>
50 OFF<lb/>
IN-LINE SKATES<lb/>
FROM BAUER<lb/>
F-4 FITNESS SKATE F-4 FITNESS SKATE<lb/>
REGULAR 149.95 REGULAR 189.95<lb/>
now 4995 now 79?95<lb/>
1994 STYLES ONLY - SIZES LIMITED - NO RETURNS I<lb/>
FOR MEN &amp; WOMEN<lb/>
3 PACKS<lb/>
$4.95<lb/>
PK<lb/>
REG. 6.95 PACK<lb/>
ONE RACK OF CLOSEOUT STYLES<lb/>
WOMEN'S SWIMWEAR<lb/>
$10.00EACH<lb/>
ONE AND TWO PIECE STYLES AVAILABLE<lb/>
SIZES AND STYLES VARY<lb/>
WATERS PORTS<lb/>
WET-SUITS AND VESTS<lb/>
SPRING SUITS - REG. 79.95 TO 99.95 SALE $49.95<lb/>
FULL SUITS - REG. 99.95 TO 149.95 SALE $69.95<lb/>
BAREFOOT SUITS - reg. 179.95 to 249.95 SALE140.00<lb/>
NEO-VESTS - REG. 99.95 TO 149.95 SALE $75.00<lb/>
BASEBALLSOFTBALL GLOVES<lb/>
50 OFF<lb/>
RAWUNGS<lb/>
WILSON<lb/>
LOUISVILLE SLUGGER<lb/>
ZETT MIZUNO<lb/>
BATTING GLOVES<lb/>
3<lb/>
00<lb/>
ONLY W? EACH<lb/>
ASSORTED STYLES AND SIZES<lb/>
PERSONAL COOLERS<lb/>
FROM RUBBERMAID<lb/>
24 QT. COOLER reg. 19.95 SALE14.95<lb/>
SALE $9.95<lb/>
SALE $6.95<lb/>
FISHING<lb/>
10QT. COOLER REG. 12.95<lb/>
5 QT. COOLER reg. 9.95<lb/>
RAWLINGS RLS<lb/>
INEXXROUTDOOR<lb/>
BASKETBALL<lb/>
 "5 $12.95<lb/>
SALE<lb/>
MIKASA<lb/>
SUMMER CLASSIC VOLLEYBALL<lb/>
REG. 19.95<lb/>
SALE<lb/>
9.95<lb/>
POWER AB BOARDS<lb/>
ENDORSED BY FABIO<lb/>
64.95 SALE<lb/>
$19.95<lb/>
54557<lb/>
GOLF ACCESSORIES<lb/>
GRAPHITE PUTTERS 1 1 PIECE SET<lb/>
DRIVERS<lb/>
$49.95 $9.95 159.95<lb/>
REG. 149.95 REG. 24.95 REG 249.95<lb/>
? ALL STAR FISHING RODS<lb/>
REG. PRICE 69.95 TO 119.95<lb/>
? CASTAWAY FISHING RODS<lb/>
REG. PRICE 79.95 TO 104.95<lb/>
25 OFF<lb/>
25OFF<lb/>
? TEAM DAIWA FISHING RODS 20 OFF<lb/>
REG. PRICE 79,95 TO 99.95<lb/>
? PINNACLE FISHING RODS &amp; REELS 25 OFF<lb/>
REG PRICE 39.95 TO 69.95<lb/>
? SALTWATER ROD &amp; REEL COMBOS 25 OFF<lb/>
BY MASTER &amp; SILSTAR REG. 39.95<lb/>
? FISHING LOGO CAPS SALE $7.?? EACH<lb/>
REGUIAR 12.95<lb/>
STORE HOURS<lb/>
MONDAY - FRIDAY<lb/>
9:00 AM-8:00 PM<lb/>
SATURDAYS<lb/>
9:00 AM - 7:00 PM<lb/>
Overtoil's<lb/>
111 RED BANKS RD. GREEMVILLE<lb/>
919-355-57383<lb/>
tSALE APPUES TO TENT SALE MERCHANDISE<lb/>
ONLY - NO SPECIAL ORDERS OR RETURNS.<lb/>
SALE PRICES NOT GOOD ON PREVIOUSLY<lb/>
PURCHASED ITEMS.<lb/>
-<lb/>
<pb facs="00058552_0008"/><lb/>
. m ilni. il<lb/>
8<lb/>
Tuesday, August 22, 1995<lb/>
f?e fast Carolinian<lb/>
Upperclassmen lend a hand<lb/>
Miriam Brooks<lb/>
Staff Writer<lb/>
Incoming freshmen were wel-<lb/>
comed to campus this week by 500<lb/>
juniors and seniors who volun-<lb/>
teered to show them the ropes<lb/>
through ECU's new Safety Net<lb/>
Mentor Program.<lb/>
The Safety<lb/>
Net Mentor Pro-<lb/>
gram is a newly de-<lb/>
veloped plan de-<lb/>
signed to help<lb/>
freshmen adjust to<lb/>
campus life during<lb/>
the first six weeks<lb/>
of school.<lb/>
Dean of Un-<lb/>
dergraduate Stud-<lb/>
ies Dorothy Muiler<lb/>
said these first<lb/>
weeks are often<lb/>
the most difficult<lb/>
transitional period<lb/>
for freshmen. Of<lb/>
the 2,500 incom-<lb/>
ing freshmen who were given the<lb/>
opportunity to participate in this<lb/>
program, 800 have chosen to be<lb/>
mentees.<lb/>
The National Leadership<lb/>
Honor Society Omicron Delta<lb/>
Kappa, undergraduate studies and<lb/>
Freshmen Year Experience teamed<lb/>
together to make the program a<lb/>
reality.<lb/>
Freshmen were randomly<lb/>
matched with juniors and seniors.<lb/>
The original plan was to pair fresh-<lb/>
men with mentors based on simi-<lb/>
lar interests, however there are only<lb/>
500 mentors for 800 freshmen so a<lb/>
number of mentors will have more<lb/>
than one mentee.<lb/>
The program's purpose is to<lb/>
provide freshmen with role models<lb/>
who encourage academic success,<lb/>
Muiler said. In<lb/>
addition, men-<lb/>
tors will help<lb/>
freshmen ad-<lb/>
just to their<lb/>
first taste of<lb/>
life at ECU.<lb/>
Depending on<lb/>
the interests of<lb/>
the mentee,<lb/>
mentors will<lb/>
also give them<lb/>
an introduc-<lb/>
tion to the va-<lb/>
riety of cam-<lb/>
pus activities,<lb/>
organizations<lb/>
and programs<lb/>
ECU has to offer.<lb/>
"We are asking the mentors to<lb/>
contact the mentees in early August<lb/>
and to send them a letter welcom-<lb/>
ing them to campus said Lisa<lb/>
Shibley, director of Student Lead-<lb/>
ership Development. "In the first<lb/>
few days, the mentors are expected<lb/>
to check on freshmen to see how<lb/>
they are getting settled in, and pos-<lb/>
sibly show them where their classes<lb/>
"Nationally, I<lb/>
think there is a<lb/>
concern about<lb/>
retention and<lb/>
graduation rates"<lb/>
? Dorothy Muiler, deaji of<lb/>
undergraduate studies<lb/>
might be or go to the bookstore and<lb/>
help them figure out how to pick<lb/>
out books<lb/>
Mentors should stay in touch<lb/>
with mentees for the first few weeks<lb/>
of school in order to answer any<lb/>
questions the mentee may have or<lb/>
refer them to appropriate re-<lb/>
sources. Mentors underwent a<lb/>
training program designed to pre-<lb/>
pare them to guide freshmen and<lb/>
ensure that all information given<lb/>
to the newcomers is correct.<lb/>
Muiler emphasized that while<lb/>
academics is a top priority of the<lb/>
program, getting students involved<lb/>
in non-academic university activi-<lb/>
ties is important as well.<lb/>
"The idea is that if you are not<lb/>
only participating in the academic<lb/>
program, but also belong to an or-<lb/>
ganization or engage in some rec-<lb/>
reational activity, it helps you with<lb/>
your identity at this institution and<lb/>
gives you more direction Muiler<lb/>
said.<lb/>
The impetus for this program<lb/>
came from a variety of sources.<lb/>
"Nationally, I think there is a<lb/>
concern about retention and gradu-<lb/>
ation rates Muiler said. "There is<lb/>
also a need to get students to fo-<lb/>
cus early on so that they don't get<lb/>
behind<lb/>
In addition, students them-<lb/>
selves have voiced the opinion that<lb/>
there should have been more sup-<lb/>
port available to them when they<lb/>
entered the university as freshmen.<lb/>
Free Tannin<lb/>
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Mastercard, Visa, Discover, &amp; Personal Check Accepted<lb/>
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LEARN.<lb/>
We've made it a lot easier<lb/>
Your biggest concern as a student should be your studies ? not the cost of a checking<lb/>
account. East Carolina Bank has taken care of that expense for you.<lb/>
With our University Club Checking account, any full-time student is eligible for a<lb/>
checking account which provides unlimited 24-hour banking at any automatic teller machine at<lb/>
no extra charge, no-fee traveler's checks and a free order of 50 checks.<lb/>
If you maintain a $100 minimum balance in the account, there are no service charges<lb/>
We also don't limit your checkwriting or ATM withdrawals.<lb/>
Make life easier. Try University Club Checking.<lb/>
The<lb/>
East Carolina Bank<lb/>
Red Banks Road Office<lb/>
1001 Red Banks Road<lb/>
Greenville, NC 27858<lb/>
919-355-8200<lb/>
University Medical Center Office<lb/>
2400 Stantonsburg Road<lb/>
Greenville, NC 27834<lb/>
919-752-6609<lb/>
' Minimum balance required is i 100 or average balance of $300. If balance requirement is not<lb/>
met, tees assessed are. $5 per month and $.35 per debit.<lb/>
Member FDIC<lb/>
Several ECU graduates are climb-<lb/>
ing the corporate ladder for BB&amp;T, a<lb/>
banking corporation based in North<lb/>
Carolina.<lb/>
W. Pete Edmundson is a business<lb/>
services officer for Goldsboro and<lb/>
Wayne County, and was recently pro-<lb/>
moted to vice president Edmundson<lb/>
graduated from ECU in 1984 and<lb/>
holds an MBA and a bachelor's de-<lb/>
gree in business administration.<lb/>
Cathy K. Kauffman holds and<lb/>
MBA and bachelor's degree in busi-<lb/>
ness administration from the univer-<lb/>
sity and is a current member of the<lb/>
ECU Commerce Club. She was pro-<lb/>
moted to vice president for BB&amp;T's<lb/>
Wilson branch in July, and is the com-<lb/>
munity reinvestment market manager<lb/>
in the CRAcommunity development<lb/>
department.<lb/>
Ted E. Whitehurst was promoted<lb/>
to assistant vice president in Tarboro<lb/>
late in July. He graduated from ECU<lb/>
with a bachelor's degree in finance<lb/>
and was a member of Gamma Beta<lb/>
Phi.<lb/>
Confucius sap:<lb/>
flews writers meeting<lb/>
UJeo. 4 p.m.<lb/>
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'<lb/>
<pb facs="00058552_0009"/><lb/>
jL<lb/>
wmmmmmtmatmmmemmmmmm<lb/>
The East Carolinian<lb/>
Tuesday, August 22, 1995<lb/>
Tattooing &amp;<lb/>
Body Piercing"<lb/>
(919)756-0600<lb/>
Autoclave Sterilization<lb/>
516-A- Hwy 264-A Greenville, NC<lb/>
History made with<lb/>
three-time winner<lb/>
ITS THE<lb/>
2ND ANNUAL<lb/>
A<lb/>
PARTY FEATURING ?<lb/>
PANAMA STEEL C<lb/>
5:00-10:00 RAIN OR SHINE<lb/>
IN THE COURTYARD &amp; POOLSIDE<lb/>
ENJOY TROPICAL DRINKS AND<lb/>
SPECIAL FOOD ITEMS FROM THE<lb/>
 tin<lb/>
? $3 COVER<lb/>
AUGUST 24<lb/>
W Crwnrille<lb/>
rf&amp;ty7J??stfpolmvetherest.<lb/>
W.INN 207SWGREE<lb/>
' CRECNVIILt BlVD ? 355-5000<lb/>
Stephanie Lassiter<lb/>
Editor-in-Chief<lb/>
ECU is making history this year<lb/>
since it reached the Shared Visions<lb/>
goal, added the millionth volume to<lb/>
the Joyner Library collection and has<lb/>
now named a single professor the re-<lb/>
cipient of three distinguished awards.<lb/>
Dr. Lester A. Zeager, an associ-<lb/>
ate professor of economics, was rec-<lb/>
ognized yesterday by winning two of<lb/>
the university's top awards, as well as<lb/>
one of the highest awards bestowed<lb/>
by the University of North Carolina<lb/>
Board of Governors.<lb/>
"How wonderful that one profes-<lb/>
sor would be honored in three sepa-<lb/>
rate occasions said Chancellor Rich-<lb/>
ard R. Eakin. "That is a real tribute<lb/>
to his fine performance and something<lb/>
that is virtually unheard of<lb/>
Zeager, who began his teaching<lb/>
stint at ECU in 1986, was awarded the<lb/>
ECU Alumni Teaching Excellence<lb/>
Award and a College of Arts and Sci-<lb/>
ences College Research Award. He was<lb/>
further awarded the Board of Gover-<lb/>
nors Award for Excellence in Teach-<lb/>
ing.<lb/>
"To have won one award in an<lb/>
honor; to have won two awards on the<lb/>
same day is almost unheard of; but to<lb/>
have won three awards .on the same<lb/>
day is unparalleled in tne history of<lb/>
East Carolina University said Dr.<lb/>
Carolyn Hampton, associate dean of<lb/>
the College of Arts and Sciences.<lb/>
Zeager, who received his Ph.D. in<lb/>
1987 from the University of Pitts-<lb/>
burgh, credits his success to the pres-<lb/>
ence of others who demonstrate teach-<lb/>
ing excellence like Dr. Marjorie<lb/>
Baldwin, who also won the Alumni<lb/>
Teaching Excellence Award.<lb/>
Zeager's interests include labor<lb/>
economics, development economics,<lb/>
public finance, poverty comparisons,<lb/>
labor migration and work disabilities.<lb/>
He regularly publishes in refereed<lb/>
journals.<lb/>
"The comments of referees send<lb/>
me to new sources he said. "Often 1<lb/>
have an initial fear about learning<lb/>
something new - and this is some-<lb/>
thing students face when confronted<lb/>
with something new. 1 show them by<lb/>
example that if I can do it, they can<lb/>
do it, too<lb/>
Zeager focuses his teaching con-<lb/>
tent on preparing his students for life<lb/>
after school.<lb/>
"Everyone here - faculty, staff,<lb/>
students - has benefited from this<lb/>
unique and gifted teacher and<lb/>
scholar Hampton said.<lb/>
ECU administrator<lb/>
honored for teaching<lb/>
Looking For<lb/>
A Place To<lb/>
Live??<lb/>
Pay il Vef4it<lb/>
Stephanie Lassiter<lb/>
Editor in-Chief<lb/>
Tinsley Yarbrough<lb/>
OvUHy tAt tati i "71U and TVome ' 'faineant,<lb/>
SculfUuned $d xiU and lanKi.<lb/>
Tanning Package Prices<lb/>
5 visits - $15<lb/>
10 visits - $25<lb/>
20 visits - $45<lb/>
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Nexxus ? Paul MM ? Bidlage<lb/>
There must be a great love for<lb/>
teaching when one steps down from<lb/>
an administrative position to get back<lb/>
into the classroom. If the faculty and<lb/>
students of ECU didn't recognize his<lb/>
dedication to his students, they will<lb/>
now that Dr. Tinsley Eugene<lb/>
Yarbrough has been named the East<lb/>
Carolina University Arts and Sciences<lb/>
Distinguished Professor.<lb/>
Yarbrough, a political science<lb/>
professor, who is currently serving as<lb/>
interim vice chancellor for academic<lb/>
affairs, was presented the award yes-<lb/>
terday during the College of Arts and<lb/>
Sciences Fall Convocation. Dr. W.<lb/>
Keats Sparrow, dean of the College<lb/>
of Arts and Sciences, said the award<lb/>
is "well deserved<lb/>
"He's a gifted teacher, an ener-<lb/>
getic and caretul researcher, a highly<lb/>
capable writer and a dedicated servant<lb/>
of the university and his profession<lb/>
Sparrow said.<lb/>
Sparrow said the award recog-<lb/>
nizes a full professor in the College<lb/>
of Arts and Sciences who has shown<lb/>
remarkable commitment to academ-<lb/>
ics, "demonstrated by outstanding<lb/>
teaching and advising, research and<lb/>
creative productivity and professional<lb/>
service<lb/>
A plaque in the office of the Col-<lb/>
lege of Arts and Sciences will bear<lb/>
Yarbrough's name along with that of<lb/>
Dr. Stan Riggs of the geology depart-<lb/>
ment, the first recipient of the award.<lb/>
A public lecture will be given in<lb/>
Yarbrough's honor on Oct 23, fol-<lb/>
lowed by a reception hosted by the<lb/>
College Office and Phi Beta Kappa.<lb/>
See HONOR page 13<lb/>
Why Just Eat Lunch When You Can "Po" It?<lb/>
The place to "do lunch" at East Carolina University is Sweetheart's,<lb/>
Campus Dining's table service restaurant on College HilL<lb/>
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SPECIALS<lb/>
Everyday we<lb/>
www?)??w?wl<lb/>
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SWEETS WITH<lb/>
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?? complement to<lb/>
attentive waitstaff<lb/>
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Located in Todd Dining Hall's private dining room.<lb/>
Open every day classes are held Monday - Friday fcom 11:30AM-2:00PM<lb/>
Declining balance, cash, and checks accepted.<lb/>
Providing Adult &amp; Pediatric Care ? Women's Health ?X-Rays and Lab ? Physicals<lb/>
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All Major Credit Cards and Personal Checks Accepted<lb/>
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4<lb/>
<pb facs="00058552_0010"/><lb/>
10<lb/>
Tuesday, August 22, 1995<lb/>
The East Carolinian<lb/>
Police move into '90s<lb/>
Joseph Horst<lb/>
Guest Writer<lb/>
In the past ve,u the East Caro<lb/>
lina Police Department has taken<lb/>
Steps to make itsell one of the top<lb/>
university police departments in the<lb/>
state. Ranging from a state-of-the-art<lb/>
compute) aided dispatch system to<lb/>
new equipment in patrol vehicles,<lb/>
ECU police have made the jump into<lb/>
the new information age.<lb/>
According to Teresa Crocker.<lb/>
chief of police, possibly the biggest ad-<lb/>
dition to the department was the<lb/>
implementation o( the CAD 911 sys-<lb/>
tem CAD stands foi Computer Aided<lb/>
Dispatch, a system that allows dis-<lb/>
patchers aeeess to more up-to-date<lb/>
information, an on line callback sys<lb/>
tern and instructions for officers re-<lb/>
lating to specific calls. Ciockei said<lb/>
that CAD was donated to the depart-<lb/>
ment by Visions Software in<lb/>
Wilmington, whose two administra<lb/>
tors are ECU graduates.<lb/>
"I have known botli<lb/>
tor several years and this<lb/>
donation was a major<lb/>
contribution to our de-<lb/>
partment and ECU<lb/>
Crocker said. The<lb/>
CAD 911 interface al-<lb/>
lows us to take informa-<lb/>
tion from the 911 call<lb/>
and. with the stroke ot<lb/>
a key. put that informa-<lb/>
tion directly into the<lb/>
CA11<lb/>
Along with CAD<lb/>
911. all dispatchers have<lb/>
recently been trained in<lb/>
a nationally certified<lb/>
class to become Emer<lb/>
gency Medical Dispatchers. With this<lb/>
training, dispatchers can uc Rive out<lb/>
potentially life-saving information to<lb/>
emergency callers.<lb/>
"We are not only tlu sole agency<lb/>
in Pitt<lb/>
County<lb/>
with this<lb/>
specialized<lb/>
training,<lb/>
but also<lb/>
the only<lb/>
c a m p u s<lb/>
a ? e n c y<lb/>
state-wide<lb/>
C r o c k e i<lb/>
said.<lb/>
With a<lb/>
system o(<lb/>
cards with<lb/>
step-by step<lb/>
i n s t r u c<lb/>
tions rang-<lb/>
ing from<lb/>
king to childbirth, dispatchers can<lb/>
V I<lb/>
The Ea.st Carolinian is looking for sports<lb/>
writers, news writers, ad representives,<lb/>
opinion columnists, and artists. If you are<lb/>
intrested stop by our offices to fill out an<lb/>
application or call us at ECU-6366.<lb/>
"We are not only<lb/>
the sole agency in<lb/>
Pitt County with<lb/>
this specialized<lb/>
training, but the<lb/>
only campus<lb/>
agency state-<lb/>
wide<lb/>
? Teresa Crocket<lb/>
chief of police<lb/>
See POLICE page 13<lb/>
New systems save time<lb/>
Jon Beckert<lb/>
Staff Writer<lb/>
The ECU Police Department has<lb/>
a new edge in their service to cam-<lb/>
pus.<lb/>
The most significant part ot this<lb/>
edge is the police department's new<lb/>
enhanced 911 system Installed four<lb/>
weeks ago by ECU Telecommunica-<lb/>
tions, the new system has been fully<lb/>
online tor over thiee weeks.<lb/>
Mary Patterson. a<lb/>
telecommunicator with ECU Police.<lb/>
recalls how the old system worked.<lb/>
"We always had access to the<lb/>
county's 911 database, but with the<lb/>
liber optics change that just went on<lb/>
a tew weeks ago. we became the an-<lb/>
swering point tor 9 1 Patterson said.<lb/>
Previously, when you dialed 911. it<lb/>
went through the Pitt County com<lb/>
munications, which is at the court<lb/>
house, and there was some delay while<lb/>
they tried to screen the call, and find<lb/>
out what area the call was from, and<lb/>
who they needed to route it to. and<lb/>
then they call the agency that was<lb/>
supposed to receive the call, and<lb/>
you're wasting minutes. Also, you can<lb/>
lose the person during the transfer.<lb/>
See 911 page 12<lb/>
Do Your Part for a<lb/>
Better Environment<lb/>
SAVE ENERGY<lb/>
Protecting die environmt nt and conserving our natural<lb/>
resources hentits us all Efficient use of energy in our every day lives<lb/>
can make a real deference The key is to change energy-wasting<lb/>
habits into energy-saving ones Every one can do their part<lb/>
Tor some Ion -cost, no-cost em rgy saving tips. lliU Gl"s<lb/>
Energy Services Office at 551-1523<lb/>
Greenville<lb/>
Utilities<lb/>
WANDSWORTH COMMONS<lb/>
CONVLNTLNT CENTRAL PCX ATION<lb/>
Close to Intersection of Arlington A: Evans<lb/>
One and Two Bedroom units available for $300 &amp;<lb/>
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Heal &amp; Air ? Security Guard on Site<lb/>
Qfihl<lb/>
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WOODCLIFF<lb/>
APARTMENTS<lb/>
LOCATED ON EAST IOth St.<lb/>
Walking Distance to ECU<lb/>
One and Two bedroom units available<lb/>
Por VMs &amp; yWOMonth<lb/>
Washer Dryer hookups ? Basic Cable ? Water and Sewer<lb/>
INCLUDED!<lb/>
The Realty Group<lb/>
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What Make More Cenh Than<lb/>
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MORE PLUS A GOOD SELECTION<lb/>
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OWNED BV ECU GRADUATES <lb/>
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Tanning with<lb/>
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1 mo. $35.00<lb/>
2 mo. $65.00<lb/>
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400 W. 10th Street<lb/>
 Blocks west from Krisps Kreme Donuts<lb/>
N<lb/>
;<lb/>
MINORITY MAGAZINE<lb/>
Expressions<lb/>
Pick us up four times during the<lb/>
Fall and spring terms for discus-<lb/>
sion of the problems and issues<lb/>
facing ECU's minorities.<lb/>
LITERARY ARTS MAGAZINE<lb/>
Rebel<lb/>
Pick us up annually in the Spring<lb/>
to view a showcase of campus<lb/>
literary and artistic creations.<lb/>
ANNUAL VIDEO YEARBOOK<lb/>
Treasure Chest<lb/>
Pick us up in the Spring beginning<lb/>
at Barefoot on the Mall for a<lb/>
visual review of the past year.<lb/>
TWICE WEEKLY NEWSPAPER<lb/>
The East Carolinian<lb/>
Pick us up Tuesdays and Thurs-<lb/>
days for news and information<lb/>
about campus issues and activi-<lb/>
ties.<lb/>
STUDENT RADIO STATION<lb/>
WZMB<lb/>
91.3 FM<lb/>
Pick us up 24-hours a day for a<lb/>
wide variety of music including<lb/>
alternative, jazz, metal, rap and<lb/>
more.<lb/>
EAST CAROLINA UNIVERSITY<lb/>
STUDENT<lb/>
MEDIA <lb/>
;v,v . cau 328-6Q09<lb/>
fOR ADDITIONAL<lb/>
<pb facs="00058552_0011"/><lb/>
??"?<lb/>
The East Carolinian<lb/>
TTCTTTTTi iW<lb/>
Tuesday, Ausust 22, 1995<lb/>
11<lb/>
Old halls get a new look<lb/>
Joann Reed<lb/>
Staff Writer<lb/>
After two years of extensive reno-<lb/>
vations. Slay and Umstead residence<lb/>
halls are open for business this fall.<lb/>
The renovation of the two dorms,<lb/>
funded solely by the university hous-<lb/>
ing department, cost a little over $6<lb/>
million to complete, and another<lb/>
$700,000 was spent buying furniture for<lb/>
the buildings.<lb/>
According to Manny Amaro, direc-<lb/>
tor of ECU's housing department, both<lb/>
Slay and Umstead residence halls were<lb/>
badly in need of renovation. That<lb/>
coupled with the presence of asbestos<lb/>
in both dorms, caused the housing de-<lb/>
partment to choose those buildings for<lb/>
renovation.<lb/>
"We basically gutted both buildings<lb/>
and totally rebuilt the insides Amaro<lb/>
said. "All asbestos was removed from<lb/>
both dorms before demolition on the<lb/>
buildings even started<lb/>
Both Slay and Umstead are double<lb/>
occupancy, coed dorms. All rooms have<lb/>
individually controlled air-conditioning<lb/>
units.<lb/>
"These air-conditioning units,<lb/>
along with room furniture that is not<lb/>
bolted to the floor, give the residence<lb/>
more control over their living environ-<lb/>
ment Amaro said. "They will be able<lb/>
to rearrange their rooms and keep them<lb/>
at whatever temperature they like.<lb/>
Along with the new furnishings,<lb/>
Umstead has a fully equipped, staffed<lb/>
computer lab for the residents of the<lb/>
two dorms.<lb/>
"The computer lab has 8 Mac's, 8<lb/>
IBM's, and will be fully staffed so that<lb/>
students can get help if they have any<lb/>
problems with anything or need any<lb/>
questions answered Amaro said.<lb/>
In addition to the renovations on<lb/>
Slay and Umstead, university housing<lb/>
has been busy making improvements<lb/>
all over campus. They have remodeled<lb/>
and plan to open all three community<lb/>
service desks on campus.<lb/>
"These desks provide a center<lb/>
where students can do room changes,<lb/>
get keys if they are locked out and re-<lb/>
ceive packages without having to come<lb/>
all the way to the housing office Amaro<lb/>
Welcome<lb/>
Students<lb/>
THE ORDINARY<lb/>
THE EXTRAORDINARY<lb/>
r<lb/>
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AND UNIQUE<lb/>
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Lava Lites?, Motion Waves, Tornado Lamps, &amp; Spiral Lamps<lb/>
Laser Balls, Light Doodlers, Holograms, Puzzles Se Games<lb/>
From Fine Gifts to Unusual Items<lb/>
From Iris Arc Crystal to Medieval Swords<lb/>
COLLECTIBLE CARD GAMES: Magic the Gathering, Jyhad,<lb/>
Rage, Illuminati, Star Trek, Dixie &amp; Redemption<lb/>
ESP PLUS in Arlington Village<lb/>
803A Red Banks Ret Greenvflle<lb/>
(919) 321-3946<lb/>
WELCOME<lb/>
FRESHMEN<lb/>
Old-fashioned<lb/>
Homemade<lb/>
Ice Cream,<lb/>
Yogurt &amp;<lb/>
Sorbet<lb/>
Hank's Homemade Ice Cream<lb/>
31B East 10th Street<lb/>
within walking distance from ECU.<lb/>
758-0000<lb/>
bu "dwiPsefoNE<lb/>
1 Item Blend-In<lb/>
Coupon expires , 91595<lb/>
said.<lb/>
According to Amaro, university<lb/>
housing would like to recognize the<lb/>
three neighborhoods on campus. The<lb/>
college hill committee will be repre-<lb/>
sented by the service desk in Aycock.<lb/>
West campus has its community service<lb/>
desk in Fletcher, and central campus,<lb/>
including Slay and Umstead. has a ser-<lb/>
vice desk in Cotten.<lb/>
Dining serves<lb/>
healthy food<lb/>
Amy Roberts<lb/>
Staff Writer<lb/>
ECU Dining Services is starting the<lb/>
new school year focused on nutrition and<lb/>
improvements for students.<lb/>
New programs will include a new<lb/>
19 meal plan that will work the same<lb/>
wav as the 9 and 14 meal plans.<lb/>
Along with the new plan is a new<lb/>
increased equivalency plan, for students<lb/>
with meal plans who want to use a meal<lb/>
when eating at places such as The Wright<lb/>
Place, Croatan or The Spot Each of<lb/>
these places will offer a variety of value<lb/>
meals that the student can choose from.<lb/>
Meals have been priced specifically to<lb/>
meet the $2 breakfast equivalent and the<lb/>
$3 lunch equivalent<lb/>
Over at Todd and Mendenhall din-<lb/>
ing halls, students can look forward to<lb/>
new weekly specials.<lb/>
"Specials will include items not<lb/>
found on the regular menu that will not<lb/>
be repeated during the semester said<lb/>
Frank Salamon, director of Dining Ser-<lb/>
vices.<lb/>
Special programs such as premium<lb/>
night and candlelight dining will con-<lb/>
tinue, along with a new buffet style night<lb/>
Dining Services Registered Dietitian<lb/>
Laura Hartung will continue the Treat<lb/>
Yourself Right Program by offering work-<lb/>
shops on food preparation and tech-<lb/>
niques. Foods with the Treat Yourself<lb/>
Right label meet American Heart Asso-<lb/>
ciation Guidelines for healthy eating.<lb/>
"Our goal is to see Treat Yourself<lb/>
Right items available in all locations at<lb/>
all times Salamon said.<lb/>
Last year, Dining Services had an<lb/>
exciting change with the opening of Todd<lb/>
Dining Hall. Their next big project is the<lb/>
expansion of the Wright Place. Construc-<lb/>
tion will begin at the end of the spring<lb/>
semester. Seating will be increased and<lb/>
the serving area will be modified for more<lb/>
convenience, Salamon said.<lb/>
Dining Services is interested in stu-<lb/>
dent feedback<lb/>
"We encourage students as often<lb/>
as possible to let us know how we are<lb/>
doing Salamon said.<lb/>
Students should feel free to talk to<lb/>
the managers and fill out the comment<lb/>
cards.<lb/>
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<pb facs="00058552_0012"/><lb/>
??"<lb/>
??Sr.<lb/>
12<lb/>
Tuesday, August 22,1995<lb/>
The East Carolinian<lb/>
Jobs only a phone call away<lb/>
Catrese G.<lb/>
Staff Writer<lb/>
Richardson<lb/>
In the new era of government cut-<lb/>
backs, college students may find them-<lb/>
selves without sufficient spending cash.<lb/>
In fact, most students will have to be<lb/>
plunged into the job market<lb/>
Luckily, at ECU, there are many<lb/>
avenues students may explore in order<lb/>
to find employment<lb/>
"Begin doing some career plan-<lb/>
ning as early as possible in your col-<lb/>
lege career said Margie Swartout,<lb/>
assistant director of Career Services.<lb/>
She also recommends that students get<lb/>
involved in school activities and keep<lb/>
academic performance at an acceptable<lb/>
level.<lb/>
The Cooperative Education Pro-<lb/>
gram could be the ideal way for many<lb/>
students to find the perfect job oppor-<lb/>
tunity. The co-op program is offered<lb/>
by the university, and it places students<lb/>
in certain areas of employment using<lb/>
the student's major as a guide.<lb/>
If a student wishes to acquire a<lb/>
position through coop, he or she must<lb/>
first attend one of many co-op semi-<lb/>
nars offered throughout the regular<lb/>
school year and during the summer.<lb/>
911<lb/>
from page 10<lb/>
"Now when you dial 911, it comes<lb/>
directly to the police department, if<lb/>
you're on campus<lb/>
Patterson said this is an en-<lb/>
hanced 911 system, with several at-<lb/>
tractive features built into it Two of<lb/>
these features are ANI (automatic<lb/>
number identifier) and ALI (automatic<lb/>
location identifier).<lb/>
"Now when a person calls 911, it<lb/>
automatically displays the location<lb/>
and the phone number they're call-<lb/>
ing from Patterson said. "Before,<lb/>
that didn't happen, and you had to<lb/>
screen the call to find where they<lb/>
were<lb/>
The new system works well with<lb/>
CAD (Computer Aided Dispatching),<lb/>
a computer system that was installed<lb/>
on June 12 by Visions Software staff.<lb/>
CAD is a system of databases provid-<lb/>
ing a wide range of information, from<lb/>
medical histories of callers, to the lo-<lb/>
cations of hazardous waste materials<lb/>
around campus. Patterson gave an<lb/>
example of how the enhanced 911 and<lb/>
CAD are used in conjunction.<lb/>
"If we got a call at a certain num-<lb/>
ber, you're able to interface and bring<lb/>
in that 911 call on the computer<lb/>
Patterson said. "If we have medical<lb/>
information on someone at that loca-<lb/>
tion, it will flash on the screen an "M"<lb/>
for medical, and we can pull up what<lb/>
it is, like if this is a diabetic, or they're<lb/>
allergic to certain medicines. We can<lb/>
then give that information to the re-<lb/>
sponders<lb/>
The entire system is manned by<lb/>
Patterson and four other full-time<lb/>
telecommunicators, as well as one<lb/>
part-time telecommunicator. During<lb/>
the summer, they answer an average<lb/>
of 53 calls a day. In the fall, that num-<lb/>
ber is expected to jump to 200.<lb/>
Patterson said they also have an<lb/>
additional edge - all of the<lb/>
telecommunicators became Emer-<lb/>
gency Medical Dispatch certified early<lb/>
in May. According to Patterson, they<lb/>
are the only EMD certified communi-<lb/>
cations department in Pitt County.<lb/>
Patterson explained what this means.<lb/>
"If you called me, and you said<lb/>
that a person had stopped breathing,<lb/>
I can talk you through CPR, or<lb/>
whatever's necessary ? delivering a<lb/>
baby, any number of medical emergen-<lb/>
cies Patterson said. "We car. now<lb/>
give you the instructions of what to<lb/>
do with that person on the phone,<lb/>
where before, that person would lay<lb/>
there not breathing until rescue got<lb/>
there<lb/>
One aspect of the new system<lb/>
remains incomplete, the CAD medical<lb/>
database. Patterson said that all stu-<lb/>
dents and faculty should provide any<lb/>
useful medical information that they<lb/>
can to the police department.<lb/>
"It's real important for students<lb/>
to know that if they're hearing im-<lb/>
paired, diabetic or have any other<lb/>
medical conditions, allergies, that it's<lb/>
likely we might have a rescue call with<lb/>
them Patterson said. "We really need<lb/>
their medical information in order to<lb/>
be able to serve them better. It's vol-<lb/>
untary, it's not released to the pub-<lb/>
lic<lb/>
People wishing to provide medi-<lb/>
cal information can direct it to Mary<lb/>
Patterson through campus mail. Any<lb/>
questions regarding this can be di-<lb/>
rected to Mary Patterson at 328-6787.<lb/>
The seminar allows the person seek-<lb/>
ing employment to become more in-<lb/>
formed about how co-op works and<lb/>
how he or she should go about find-<lb/>
ing employment After the student has<lb/>
found an interesting position, a coop<lb/>
coordinator will help the student for-<lb/>
mally apply for the position. A formal<lb/>
resume is needed and an interview may<lb/>
be required.<lb/>
There are three types of co-op<lb/>
employment students will have to<lb/>
choose from according to his or her<lb/>
personal preference. Alternating is the<lb/>
first choice. If a student chooses alter-<lb/>
nating, the student will be a fuil-time<lb/>
student for one semester and the next,<lb/>
he or she will work at his assigned<lb/>
position full-time.<lb/>
Parallel is the second choice and<lb/>
it allows the student to go to school<lb/>
full-time and work part-time at his or<lb/>
her assigned job. The last choice is<lb/>
summer only in which the student only<lb/>
works during the summer.<lb/>
If there are no positions available<lb/>
for a student in the Greenville area, he<lb/>
or she may be placed in another<lb/>
county, a neighboring state or clear<lb/>
across the country. Salaries can range<lb/>
anywhere from minimum wage to a<lb/>
whopping $18 per hour.<lb/>
Career Services, located on the<lb/>
comer of Jarvis and Fifth street, could<lb/>
Pair Electronics<lb/>
107 Trade St. 756-2291<lb/>
Patclt Cables Available For<lb/>
Data Network lit Your Dorm<lb/>
Room Available At<lb/>
Electronics<lb/>
(Beside Golden Corral)<lb/>
also help students find jobs, especially<lb/>
seniors. Career Services sponsors work-<lb/>
shops on information such as inteview<lb/>
skills and effective resume writing. The<lb/>
program also sponsors three career<lb/>
days each year where students may talk<lb/>
with potential employers.<lb/>
To go even further, Career Ser-<lb/>
vices puts seniors in touch with em-<lb/>
ployers and sets up interviews for the<lb/>
students on campus.<lb/>
Seniors should register for Career<lb/>
Services as early as possible during<lb/>
their senior year. Students register by<lb/>
attending a Career Services orienta-<lb/>
tion, the first three of which will be<lb/>
held on Aug. 24 at 4 p.m. and 5:15<lb/>
p.m and Aug. 25 at 4 p.m. The orien-<lb/>
tation ceremonies will be held in the<lb/>
Jenkins Auditorium.<lb/>
If neither co-op nor Career Ser-<lb/>
vices is the answer for the student he<lb/>
or she can still check out the job op-<lb/>
portunities boards in Brewster and the<lb/>
Financial Aid office. Most of the jobs<lb/>
listed on the boards are jobs that can<lb/>
be found on campus. Newspapers nury<lb/>
also be a successful route to finding<lb/>
employment<lb/>
Parkviezu Kingston Place<lb/>
is now<lb/>
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CONDOMINIUMS<lb/>
New Look - New Management<lb/>
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whereyagonnaGO<lb/>
where are you gonna go this year? to get 1he kind of helpful service<lb/>
you deserve and how much are you gonna pay for that service well<lb/>
if you need drafting supplies and dont want to pay<lb/>
behind the<lb/>
rivergate east<lb/>
at 758-3195 to<lb/>
an arm and a leg you<lb/>
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the drive to<lb/>
east 10th<lb/>
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meritaat<lb/>
us a r ing<lb/>
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types of drafting media like vellum and<lb/>
and rapidographs and templates<lb/>
just about anything else that<lb/>
need we also do blueprints<lb/>
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-??<lb/>
<pb facs="00058552_0013"/><lb/>
??-<lb/>
The East Carolinian<lb/>
Tuesday, August 22, 1995<lb/>
13<lb/>
POLICE from page 10<lb/>
eliminate those vital seconds between<lb/>
life and death before rescue vehicles<lb/>
arrive on the scene.<lb/>
Another effort to improve the<lb/>
safety of officers and the students they<lb/>
deal with resulted in the purchase of<lb/>
equipment to prevent the transmis-<lb/>
sion of blood-borne pathogens. New<lb/>
security cages, screens and plastic<lb/>
seats in most of the patrol vehicles<lb/>
provide the most visible signs of this<lb/>
new effort.<lb/>
"We have spent thousands of<lb/>
dollars getting equipment that is cru-<lb/>
cial in officer safety Crocker said.<lb/>
"Without this equipment, we could<lb/>
face stiff fines if found in violation<lb/>
According to Crocker, another<lb/>
major step toward providing better<lb/>
service to the campus has occurred<lb/>
with the increase of hours spent in<lb/>
working events for different groups<lb/>
on campus and training.<lb/>
"This increase is important be-<lb/>
ECU STUDENT SPECIAL<lb/>
ECU<lb/>
ECU<lb/>
ECU<lb/>
ECU<lb/>
ECU<lb/>
ECU<lb/>
ECU<lb/>
ECU<lb/>
CTiiriiriiT cniri1<lb/>
:ial<lb/>
:ial<lb/>
pIAL<lb/>
:ial<lb/>
diuutm siftCIAL<lb/>
STUDENT SPECIAL<lb/>
ATRIANGLE<lb/>
cause it tells people that we're here<lb/>
not only 12 hours a day, 40 hours a<lb/>
week Crocker said. "It shows we're<lb/>
doing other things as well<lb/>
According to statistics provided<lb/>
by the department, officers have spent<lb/>
3,682 hours in training, 3.639 hours<lb/>
working special events and have pro-<lb/>
vided 57 Crime Prevention programs<lb/>
to the residence halls in the past year.<lb/>
With the advent of the fall semes-<lb/>
ter, students will also see an increase<lb/>
in the amount of bicycle officers on<lb/>
patrol. Since last spring, four new bi-<lb/>
cycles have been purchased and two<lb/>
new bicycle officers will be added<lb/>
when current vacancies are filled.<lb/>
"The bicycle patrol allows stu-<lb/>
dents easy access to an officer Lt.<lb/>
Johnny Umphlet said. "Officers are<lb/>
able to interact with students on a<lb/>
more frequent basis<lb/>
Bicycle officers also work sepa-<lb/>
rate shift hours from officers in ve-<lb/>
hicles which allow them to be on cam-<lb/>
pus during peak times of the day and<lb/>
night.<lb/>
"hough the department has ac-<lb/>
cc ipiished much this past year, it is<lb/>
looking towards the future as well.<lb/>
Crocker said the officer liaison pro-<lb/>
gram that was started last year has<lb/>
progressed and expanded to provide<lb/>
better services. This will be most ap-<lb/>
parent in the Operation ID program<lb/>
and bicycle registration that will oc-<lb/>
cur during move-in to the residence<lb/>
halls.<lb/>
"Our goal is to register 8,000 bi-<lb/>
cycles and I.D. at least 50 percent of<lb/>
property in the residence halls<lb/>
Crocker said.<lb/>
One last major goal in the future<lb/>
will be the renovation of the existing<lb/>
Police Department building, which<lb/>
will affect the upgrading of the tele-<lb/>
communications division. Crocker said<lb/>
that with the move of the division to<lb/>
another part of the building, individu-<lb/>
als will have easier access and the di-<lb/>
vision itself will become more cus-<lb/>
tomer-oriented.<lb/>
"I want to bring telecommunica-<lb/>
tions into the "90s Crocker said.<lb/>
"Before, we were somewhere in the<lb/>
'50s<lb/>
The ECU police have made, and<lb/>
continue to make, large and small<lb/>
steps to improve life for the students<lb/>
on campus. Following the new slogan<lb/>
of Business Affairs, "Whatever it<lb/>
Takes ECU police strive to provide<lb/>
greater protection and enhance the<lb/>
quality of life for all people on cam-<lb/>
pus.<lb/>
WANTED:<lb/>
Advertising<lb/>
Representives<lb/>
The East Carolinian is caking<lb/>
applications for advertising<lb/>
representatives. The job<lb/>
involves selling ads to local<lb/>
businesses. Applicants must<lb/>
have a 2.0 gpa, and be an<lb/>
ECU student. Stop by the<lb/>
Student Pubs. bldg. for an<lb/>
application.<lb/>
a Minimum opening deposit of100.<lb/>
a Checking with no minimum balance<lb/>
for a low monthly fee of $4.<lb/>
? Unlimited free withdrawals at Triangle<lb/>
Bank ATMs in Greenville.<lb/>
? Use other Triangle Bank ATMs across<lb/>
North Carolina at no charge.<lb/>
a Write 10 checks each month<lb/>
at no charge.<lb/>
a Order special checks<lb/>
featuring the East<lb/>
Carolina Pirate.<lb/>
 Keep tabs on your account with Voiceunk.<lb/>
The 800 that allows you to check<lb/>
your balance, confirm deposits and<lb/>
review checks that have cleared<lb/>
the bank.<lb/>
a Apply for a Triangle Bank VISA?<lb/>
CheckCard and use it as an ATM card.<lb/>
Purchases will come directly from<lb/>
 your Triangle Bank<lb/>
ATRIANGLE 2Sfchecking<lb/>
felkBANK<lb/>
2310 Charles Street, Greenville, NC 27858 ? (919) 756-7344 ? FAX (919) 756-1608<lb/>
Greenville ATMs ? Triangle Bank, 2310 Charles Street ? Plaza Mall<lb/>
" On the Student Government Bus Line Member FDIC usNoai<lb/>
HONOR from page 9<lb/>
Association of Pitt County. Once back<lb/>
in the classroom, Yarbrough will open<lb/>
his doors to visitors and colleagues,<lb/>
as well as serving as a mentor to other<lb/>
faculty and giving periodical U ctures.<lb/>
"I am so pleased to Ieam that Dr.<lb/>
Yarbrough will be honored in this<lb/>
way said Dr. Richard R. Eakin. chan-<lb/>
cellor. "He represents the finest quali-<lb/>
ties that one could possibly have as a<lb/>
faculty member. He is a challenging<lb/>
and productive teacher. He is a<lb/>
scholar of not only national but inter-<lb/>
national note, and he is committed to<lb/>
the advancement of the university in<lb/>
a variety of service dimensions'<lb/>
Yarbrough. who came to ECU in<lb/>
1967and became a professor in 1976.<lb/>
served as chair of the political science<lb/>
department for five years. His col-<lb/>
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cellence in teaching, as well as numer-<lb/>
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1988, Yarbrough won the University<lb/>
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Yarbrough dedicated much of his<lb/>
time to his research, for which the<lb/>
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He has published five single-authored<lb/>
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<pb facs="00058552_0014"/><lb/>
I hiiiNii nf niifci<lb/>
14<lb/>
Tuesday, Ausust 22, 1995<lb/>
The East Carolinian<lb/>
As You Besiti the New Year, Check Out the Student Stores for all your Academic Needs!<lb/>
We're everythins you could want<lb/>
in a college bookstore<lb/>
and more!<lb/>
????<lb/>
???<lb/>
You'll find a complete selection of new and used text-<lb/>
books, art supplies, computers, school supplies, room<lb/>
decor, and official ECU apparel.<lb/>
If you need it for a class, we have it, or we'll get it<lb/>
hasstocHco<lb/>
$34 W1U10M<lb/>
frfCflcfetf<lb/>
 tor<lb/>
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Extra resfecrs<lb/>
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Helpful,<lb/>
Co?wteou$<lb/>
staff<lb/>
Open Extended Hours for Fall Book Rush<lb/>
Tuesday, Ausust 22: 8:00 a.m. to 8:00 p.m.<lb/>
DON'T MISS THE NEW YEAR'S EVE SALE, Tuesday: 5 p.m. to 8 p.m.<lb/>
Wednesday, Ausust 23: 8:00 a.m. to 8:00 p.m.<lb/>
Regular Hours begin August Q3:<lb/>
Monday - Thursday: 8:00 a.m. to 8:00 p.m.<lb/>
Friday: 8:00 a.m. to 5:00 p.m.<lb/>
Saturday: 11:00 a.m. to 5:00 p.m.<lb/>
Cash, check, Visa, Discover &amp; MasterCard accepted.<lb/>
ECU Student Stores; Wright Building: 328-6731<lb/>
Medical Bookstore: Brody Building: 816-3450<lb/>
We're more than just booksyour dollars support student scholars!<lb/>
Don't miss our<lb/>
New Year's Eve Sale<lb/>
Tuesday, Ausust 22<lb/>
5 pm to 8 pm<lb/>
WIN! WIN! WIN! WIN!<lb/>
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 Sony AMFM Walkman<lb/>
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Visit our booth at the "Happy New<lb/>
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Student Center, 4pm to 7 pm,<lb/>
Tuesday, August 22nd. Pick up your<lb/>
entry form to register for GREAT<lb/>
door prizes. Drop off<lb/>
your entry inside<lb/>
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<pb facs="00058552_0015"/><lb/>
J<lb/>
15<lb/>
Tuesday, Ausust 22,1995<lb/>
The East Carolinian<lb/>
Our View<lb/>
While you're<lb/>
home sleeping<lb/>
or downtown<lb/>
partying, the<lb/>
staff of The<lb/>
East<lb/>
Carolinian is<lb/>
hard at work<lb/>
producing a<lb/>
paper full of<lb/>
the latest in<lb/>
news,<lb/>
ifestyles,<lb/>
sports and<lb/>
commentary.<lb/>
Pick us up!<lb/>
We're<lb/>
available<lb/>
every Tuesday<lb/>
and Thursday.<lb/>
By the students and for the students - The East Carolin-<lb/>
ian.<lb/>
The student paper celebrates its 70th year of publication<lb/>
this fall, and thanks to students, we're still going strong. We<lb/>
give thanks to not only the students who read TEC, but to the<lb/>
students who spend endless hours running it.<lb/>
We stay late and rise early to make sure this publication is<lb/>
the best it can be, and yes, we make mistakes - that goes along<lb/>
with the learning experience we gain by working for the news-<lb/>
paper. We have exams and parties to attend just like anyone<lb/>
else, but TEC gives us an extra identity with campus. We al-<lb/>
ways look forward to seeing new faces and you never know,<lb/>
you could be next<lb/>
TEC News always aims to get the scoop (sometimes suc-<lb/>
ceeding and other times not). The news section features every-<lb/>
thing from the latest hard news to students faculty profiles<lb/>
and the never-ending construction projects. If anything inter-<lb/>
esting happens, we'll tell you. And if YOU see anything hap-<lb/>
pening that students should know about please call us any-<lb/>
time (we have voice-mail).<lb/>
Lifestyles is so cool, it might as well be an ice cube. The<lb/>
Lifestyles section can tell you anything from what the local<lb/>
sound sounds like, to what free movies are playing at Hendrix<lb/>
Theater. Not only do they write restaurant, CD and book re-<lb/>
views, Lifestyles gives you the extra twist you may need to<lb/>
stay hip with college life.<lb/>
The sports department is currently in transition, but will<lb/>
always be a favorite to any Pirate fan. Our football tabloid is<lb/>
better than others because our writers are students, just like<lb/>
our athletes. You'll find our Sports' writers on the gridiron,<lb/>
the track, the diamond, the Frisbee golf field or anywhere else<lb/>
athletics may be occurring. Look for the tabloid in TEC before<lb/>
any home football game.<lb/>
Once upon a time, someone suggested doing away with<lb/>
Pirate Comics - we think not Local artists pour their hearts<lb/>
into these sillies and will continue to do so every Thursday.<lb/>
Our comics are sure to make eyes roll if nothing else, and<lb/>
some will certainly be sucked in by the complex and mysteri-<lb/>
ous storylines. Don't miss any editions or you may not be able<lb/>
to catch up.<lb/>
Advertising holds the place together, along with our secre-<lb/>
tary Deborah. Our ad reps worked through the sweltering heat<lb/>
for weeks in order to find the great deals our Back-to-School<lb/>
issue offers. TECs ad department is currently under construc-<lb/>
tion (like the rest of our building), and now boasts beepers in<lb/>
addition to their new fiber optic phone system.<lb/>
Without our production manager, there would be no TEC.<lb/>
She takes everything we give her and fits it all together like a<lb/>
great big puzzle.<lb/>
Don't forget to check out our classifieds and announce-<lb/>
ments section. If you need a roommate, have something to sell<lb/>
or want to send your sweetie a personal, TEC Classifieds is<lb/>
the place to advertise. We're not free, but we're cheap.<lb/>
Enough patting ourselves on the back, TEC employees will<lb/>
continue to work for students for the next 70 years and hope-<lb/>
fully, longer. We don't try to compete with other publications<lb/>
because we don't need to. The students are our audience and<lb/>
as long as we're in print we'll cater to you - that's our job.<lb/>
If you'd like to learn more about TEC give us a call at 328-<lb/>
6366 or stop by the Student Publications building (acrbss from<lb/>
Joyner Library). We are always in the need of more employees<lb/>
(we pay). And hey - how else can you get a chance to meet the<lb/>
chancellor?<lb/>
Letters to the Editor<lb/>
To the Editor:<lb/>
To all new students, welcome. I<lb/>
hope you find ECU to be an enjoy-<lb/>
able place to further your education.<lb/>
Many projects are currently under-<lb/>
way to enhance our fine university<lb/>
aad the rewards of this hard work<lb/>
are becoming more visible with each<lb/>
passing day. The soon to be com-<lb/>
pleted Student Recreation Center<lb/>
and expansions of Joyner Library<lb/>
and Ficklen Stadium will undoubt-<lb/>
edly have a great deal of positive<lb/>
impact<lb/>
One of the most exciting recent<lb/>
accomplishments is the commitment<lb/>
of ECU, NCSU and UNC-Chapel Hill<lb/>
to engage in an ongoing football se-<lb/>
ries. We can also look forward to<lb/>
recognition for research performed<lb/>
at the soon to be construction heart<lb/>
and cancer research center at Uni-<lb/>
versity Medical Center. As a gradu-<lb/>
ate student, I have had ample op-<lb/>
portunity to notice that all of these<lb/>
accomplishments and many more<lb/>
have something in common, Sena-<lb/>
tor Ed Warren.<lb/>
Senator Warren has continually<lb/>
fought against tuition increases and<lb/>
has striven to gain and retain much<lb/>
threatened university funding. Since<lb/>
the current legislative climate has<lb/>
proven very detrimental to all 16<lb/>
campuses in the North Carolina uni-<lb/>
versity system, it remains even more<lb/>
imperative that ECU maintain zeal-<lb/>
ous representation in the North<lb/>
Carolina legislature. Senator Warren<lb/>
has served as a long-standing driv-<lb/>
ing force for the advancement of<lb/>
ECU in every realm. From funding<lb/>
for new academic facilities that en-<lb/>
hance the academic reputation of<lb/>
ECU to being an ardent supporter<lb/>
of the athletic program creating ever<lb/>
widening national exposure, Sena-<lb/>
tor Warren deserves a salute as a<lb/>
champion of progress for ECU.<lb/>
Scarlette Gardner<lb/>
Graduate Student<lb/>
Business Administration<lb/>
1995 Senior Class Secretary<lb/>
Treasurer<lb/>
?OFfio<lb/>
The East Carolinian<lb/>
Stephanie Lassiter, Editor-in-Chief<lb/>
Crissy Parker, Advertising Director<lb/>
Printed on<lb/>
100<lb/>
recycled<lb/>
papei<lb/>
Tambra Zion, News Editor<lb/>
Wendy Rountree, Assistant News Editor<lb/>
Mark Brett, Lifestyle Editor<lb/>
Brandon Waddell, Assistant Lifestyle Editor<lb/>
Celeste Wilson, Production Manager<lb/>
Darryl Marsh, Production Assistant<lb/>
Jeremy Lee, Production Assistant<lb/>
Ken Clark, Photographer<lb/>
Xlall Yang, Systems Manager<lb/>
Jason Allen, Copy Editor<lb/>
Paul Hagwood, Staff Illustrator<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 editorial in each<lb/>
edition is the opinion of the Editorial Board. The East Carolinian welcomes letters to the editor, limited to 250 words, which may be edited<lb/>
for decency or brevity. The East Carolinian reserves the right to edit or reject letters for publication. All letters must be signed. Letters should<lb/>
be addressed to Opinion Editor, The East Carolinian, Publications Building, ECU, Greenville, NC 27858-4353. For information call (919)<lb/>
328-6366.<lb/>
Party school image<lb/>
no laughing matter<lb/>
The chances are at least once you<lb/>
have probably heard of East Carolina<lb/>
being called the "party school I can't<lb/>
tell you how many times I've told<lb/>
friends from home or other places<lb/>
where I was going to college only to<lb/>
have them immediately smile and say<lb/>
All right! ECU! Party<lb/>
People obviously have this men-<lb/>
tal picture in their minds of ECU be-<lb/>
ing something like the baths of an-<lb/>
cient Rome, where all of the students<lb/>
here are either engaged in constant<lb/>
pornographic debauchery or dancing<lb/>
and stumbling through the streets,<lb/>
day and night, in a drunken revelry.<lb/>
Of all other schools in this state<lb/>
and in the southeast, for that matter,<lb/>
people have an image of ECU as just<lb/>
being a party school, a place to go for<lb/>
a few years to just blow off life and<lb/>
waste your time in college in a<lb/>
drunken, drug-induced haze. And you<lb/>
know really that should make you very<lb/>
mad. even the freshmen, because it is<lb/>
a false image, and it hurts all of us,<lb/>
each one of us. from graduating se-<lb/>
niors and graduate students to the<lb/>
incoming freshmen. All you have to<lb/>
do is think about it for a second and<lb/>
you'll understand why.<lb/>
Walk around ECU's campus by<lb/>
day and you see a bustling, busy uni-<lb/>
versity like any other. Talk to ECU<lb/>
students and you will hear from<lb/>
people who are serious about what<lb/>
they're doing, who are either looking<lb/>
for some course or direction in life or<lb/>
who are working very hard to excel<lb/>
Patrick Hinson<lb/>
Opinion Columnist<lb/>
It's up to you<lb/>
now. No one's<lb/>
going to do<lb/>
anything for you<lb/>
around here.<lb/>
here and get the things out of life that<lb/>
they want. Talk to any professor here<lb/>
and you will no doubt meet someone<lb/>
who is genuinely interested in help-<lb/>
ing you with your work, in listening<lb/>
to your questions and your ideas, and<lb/>
in helping you to find the direction<lb/>
you're looking for.<lb/>
One thing that I think is unique<lb/>
about East Carolina is that this is a<lb/>
big school that often feels like a small<lb/>
one, because you can get to know your<lb/>
faculty here and the other students<lb/>
around you, and you can easily get in-<lb/>
volved in many different things here,<lb/>
both in the university and the commu-<lb/>
nity. But you need to keep one thing<lb/>
in mind: it's up to you now. No one's<lb/>
going to do anything for you around<lb/>
here. This is what college is all about<lb/>
learning to take your life into your own<lb/>
hands and do something with it You've<lb/>
got the ball; it's time to run with it<lb/>
This is a university that has been<lb/>
working hard for many years to im-<lb/>
prove itself, and you can see that ev-<lb/>
ery day and in many ways. The party<lb/>
school image is an anachronism, and<lb/>
it's perpetuated by the same biased<lb/>
idiots who write us up continuously in<lb/>
The News and Observer and other<lb/>
newspapers trying to make ECU sound<lb/>
like a bunch of lurching Neanderthals<lb/>
compared to the other colleges in<lb/>
North Carolina.<lb/>
All I'm saying is just look around.<lb/>
Look at our students, our faculty, our<lb/>
programs, departments and schools, at<lb/>
our hospital and medical school, just<lb/>
take a look at ECU in 1995 and decide<lb/>
for yourself if the party thing is a myth<lb/>
or not That's something that maybe<lb/>
went on in the 70s and early '80s<lb/>
people, but it's a thing of the past<lb/>
Go to any other college in North<lb/>
Carolina, or any college anywhere, for<lb/>
that matter, and you'll see they all party<lb/>
just as much, just as hard, and they<lb/>
get in trouble about as often and for<lb/>
the same things. We need to do away<lb/>
with this crippling, false image of our<lb/>
university. It's going to put you behind<lb/>
other college graduates someday when<lb/>
you're out of here and desperate for a<lb/>
job. You don't want your interviewer<lb/>
to laugh at you and say "All right! ECU!<lb/>
Whooo and flash the surfer "hang<lb/>
loose" sign at you while he gives your<lb/>
job to some pompous preppie from<lb/>
Chapel Hill. It may be funny now, but<lb/>
it won't he later.<lb/>
Letters to the Editor<lb/>
To the Editor:<lb/>
This is a response to "An eye<lb/>
for a eye for Susan Smith printed<lb/>
July, 19, 1995. I believe in capitol<lb/>
sic punishment. However, it is al-<lb/>
most offensive to read an article in<lb/>
which the main point is to question<lb/>
the necessity of a trial. Heath's opin-<lb/>
ion is that it would have been a good<lb/>
thing, "a favor to throw Susan<lb/>
Smith to a group of protesters hop-<lb/>
ing that they would have taken care<lb/>
of her. Is this a joke? Does J.D.<lb/>
Heath expect people to rationalize<lb/>
a lynch mob? Well, think again.<lb/>
It is also comforting to know<lb/>
that we (readers who are also adults)<lb/>
are respected enough that sentences<lb/>
like: "She admitted to seat belting<lb/>
both of her God given children into<lb/>
their so-called child safety seats are<lb/>
used to explain facts. Don't forget<lb/>
that we are not stupid zomhies. We<lb/>
can tell that "God given" and so-<lb/>
called" are used to sway the reader.<lb/>
Have we also forgotten that people<lb/>
who describe children as God given<lb/>
are not supposed to support things<lb/>
like blood thirsty murder marchers?<lb/>
Of course there should be a<lb/>
trial! I understand that a crime of<lb/>
this nature can cause a lot of anger,<lb/>
but I also understand that it is pretty<lb/>
hard to be a naive as to think: 1)<lb/>
that anyone appalled by this trag-<lb/>
edy would condone leaving their<lb/>
homes in an attempt to hunt Susan<lb/>
Smith down and kill her, Would you<lb/>
 really?, 2) that the readers of this<lb/>
opinion section would let go an ar-<lb/>
gument as poorly constructed as<lb/>
yours.<lb/>
Patrick Ware<lb/>
Junior<lb/>
English<lb/>
"Blessed is the man who, having nothing to say, abstains from<lb/>
giving us wordy evidence of the fact<lb/>
? George Eliot, author, 1879.<lb/>
.<lb/>
<pb facs="00058552_0016"/><lb/>
16<lb/>
Tuesday, August 22, 1995<lb/>
The East Carolinian<lb/>
Seize the day ? there<lb/>
may be no tomorrow<lb/>
Carpe Diem! Seize the day be-<lb/>
cause the time is now. We are free<lb/>
from horrendous third shift summer<lb/>
jobs and parental restraint It is time<lb/>
to sit back, grab a cold one and watch<lb/>
Beavis and Butthead.<lb/>
Let's look at Beavis and Butthead<lb/>
though. They are clearly not college<lb/>
material. All they do is sit in front of<lb/>
the tube, eat junkfood and rot away.<lb/>
If they can ever hold on to a job it<lb/>
will be the same drudgery day after<lb/>
day making their special fries at<lb/>
Burger World living from paycheck to<lb/>
paycheck with bodies sculpted by<lb/>
Budweiser the Great<lb/>
Despite an occasional sadistic,<lb/>
nihilistic impulse, Beavis and<lb/>
Butthead will never think great<lb/>
thoughts. They will never appreciate<lb/>
what a joy thinking is. Beavis and<lb/>
Butthead are merely living on the<lb/>
world not in it<lb/>
Education is a privilege not a<lb/>
right Not everybody is or should be<lb/>
entitled to it Their must be a hunger<lb/>
and a discipline to attain it Dr. Simon<lb/>
or Dr. Detroit can not just give knowl-<lb/>
edge to anyone who is not in class.<lb/>
Those that search and conquer new<lb/>
ideas should be entitled an education.<lb/>
Those that don't should make room<lb/>
for someone who wants that chal-<lb/>
lenge.<lb/>
At the university, we have a<lb/>
chance to rise up out of the muck of<lb/>
ignorance and poverty and create new<lb/>
worlds for ourselves and others. With-<lb/>
out a degree, contemplate working<lb/>
with Beavis and Butthead and in 10<lb/>
years hoping to run a Quickie Mart<lb/>
or taco stand.<lb/>
Once I held this university in ut-<lb/>
ter contempt for its blatant stupidity,<lb/>
f waged a total war against the sys-<lb/>
J. Miles Layton<lb/>
Opinion Columnist<lb/>
To those that seize<lb/>
the knowledge the<lb/>
university offers, a<lb/>
world of ideas is<lb/>
there for the<lb/>
taking.<lb/>
tern. I lost my shot at an education.<lb/>
For the past few years I have bagged<lb/>
tons of groceries, waited on a million<lb/>
tables and even worked as a third shift<lb/>
furniture mover. All the while, I ex-<lb/>
pected the world owed me something.<lb/>
I thought I should be a foreman or<lb/>
manager but was denied. Denied be-<lb/>
cause I lived in the fantasy land that<lb/>
a degree is a worthless piece of pa-<lb/>
per.<lb/>
It is not<lb/>
A degree opens doors but it so<lb/>
much more. To those that seize the<lb/>
knowledge the university offers, a<lb/>
world of ideas is there for the taking.<lb/>
Ideas are powerful things because<lb/>
nothing is more important than an<lb/>
idea whose time has come. The time<lb/>
is now. We live in a vastly different<lb/>
world than we did 10 years ago. The<lb/>
Berlin Wall is gone. There is a Repub-<lb/>
lican Congress led by a renegade with<lb/>
a few ideas of his own. Michael Jack-<lb/>
son married Lisa Marie Presley and<lb/>
the list goes on and on.<lb/>
Armed with a piece of paper, an<lb/>
ability to think and a powerful idea, a<lb/>
college graduate is a formidable force.<lb/>
Seize it for it is there for the taking.<lb/>
Wage war against the real enemies of<lb/>
the world, not financial aid. Dean<lb/>
Speier, student government, the fac-<lb/>
ulty or the Greeks.<lb/>
While a degree does entitle cer-<lb/>
tain privileges, it is worthless unless<lb/>
it is backed up by something. People<lb/>
that sit around watching MTV and<lb/>
making the bare minimum to get di-<lb/>
plomas are just as cheated. Not only<lb/>
have they wasted thousands of dol-<lb/>
lars, but their time as well. With the<lb/>
time these couch potatoes spent in<lb/>
college, they could have been using<lb/>
those four years productively and be<lb/>
assistant manager at a Quickie Mart<lb/>
by now. Yes, even with a degree a per-<lb/>
son can make special fries. I used to<lb/>
wait tables with a lot of college gradu-<lb/>
ates. A degree created without any<lb/>
original thought or ability to commu-<lb/>
nicate any idea is worthless. So seize<lb/>
the knowledge.<lb/>
This kind of degree loses its lus-<lb/>
ter because so many are being pumped<lb/>
out year by year by Chapel Hill, State<lb/>
and other less noteworthy institutions.<lb/>
In order for a degree to mean some-<lb/>
thing, the person on that piece of pa-<lb/>
per must be worth something. Each<lb/>
person that gets a diploma sets an ex-<lb/>
ample for the rest of the world. When<lb/>
employers see an ECU graduate, they<lb/>
must think sharp, hard working and<lb/>
alert versus an animal house mental-<lb/>
ity of fat dumb and stupid.<lb/>
By the grace of God, I got a sec-<lb/>
ond chance. Second chances are rarer<lb/>
than a million dollar lottery ticket With<lb/>
a fresh new year ahead, new opportu-<lb/>
nities are at hand. A chance for a good<lb/>
education is not something to be taken<lb/>
lightly.<lb/>
Reflections of the Dead<lb/>
Where were you when one of<lb/>
America's living legends and acid rock<lb/>
icons died? Where were you when the<lb/>
spirit of the 1960s all but ended for<lb/>
thousands of Americans? Will you be<lb/>
one of those thousand that will have<lb/>
to get a job now because you can not<lb/>
live the 'Jack Kerouac lifestyle' in pur-<lb/>
suit of following the Grateful Dead?<lb/>
Or will you just find solace in living<lb/>
in a commune out West or perhaps<lb/>
touring the United States with Phish,<lb/>
the Dead's illegitmate offspring?<lb/>
It was inevitable, wasn't it? How<lb/>
much longer could the Dead tour any-<lb/>
way? Jerry Garcia fought hard to keep<lb/>
his weight and drug addictions at a<lb/>
reasonable level, and at the same time<lb/>
the band had been touring the world<lb/>
as often as Garcia would light up a<lb/>
joint in the early '60s. Wow, "What a<lb/>
long strange trip it has been?"<lb/>
Did you happen to see this weeks'<lb/>
Newsweek (21 August 1995) where in<lb/>
the clcanO opinion section (the very<lb/>
last page) George F. Will, political<lb/>
analyst and baseball freak, tried to<lb/>
blame the Dead and the '60s cultural<lb/>
revolution for the actions of two dead-<lb/>
beat parents who neglected their chil-<lb/>
dren so that they could pursue their<lb/>
own endeavors? You have to be kid-<lb/>
ding me, George?<lb/>
Clearly these two people are truly<lb/>
unfit and unhealthy for their children,<lb/>
but to blame a society for the actions<lb/>
of just two people is ludicrous. These<lb/>
two people are cruel for neglecting<lb/>
their children, but pinning the Dead<lb/>
and a society where chaos and the<lb/>
eternal search for happiness were the<lb/>
dominant characteristics of a compli-<lb/>
cated world is like blaming<lb/>
Reaganomics for the Gulf War.<lb/>
I remember just two short years<lb/>
ago planning a trip to a Dead show in<lb/>
Buffalo, NY with a group of friends.<lb/>
(For those nostalgic Deadheads, it was<lb/>
the tour where the Steve Miller Band<lb/>
opened). We had a big plan of going<lb/>
to the show to live the 'Deadhead<lb/>
Experience We didn't have tickets.<lb/>
We did not carry any illicit drugs. All<lb/>
we had was a cooler full of frosty bev-<lb/>
erages (fill in your favorite beer here),<lb/>
and the willingness to live by the<lb/>
Deadhead code: free. All we wanted<lb/>
was to become 'tantalized' like the<lb/>
Eric Bartels<lb/>
Opnlon Columnist<lb/>
The remaining<lb/>
core members of<lb/>
the Dead are left<lb/>
contemplating<lb/>
their own<lb/>
futures.<lb/>
Jead's dancing bear.<lb/>
Unfortunately-our plans fell<lb/>
threw another friend and I were un-<lb/>
able to go because we had to work.<lb/>
Ever since, we all planned on taking<lb/>
our intended trip, but it seems that<lb/>
fate took its course.<lb/>
Likewise, Garcia and the Dead<lb/>
toured the world with reckless aban-<lb/>
don which started as early as 1965.<lb/>
Their career epitomized a tumultuous<lb/>
time in both rock n' roll and in life.<lb/>
The whole '60s decade was marred by<lb/>
revolution (Civil Rights and the anti-<lb/>
Vietnam Peace Protests), disorder (the<lb/>
Vietnam conflict, the assassination of<lb/>
John F. Kennedy and Martin Luther<lb/>
King, Jr.) and the yearning for free-<lb/>
dom from an established (the draft<lb/>
and the Vietnam conflict) society. The<lb/>
Grateful Dead survived this era and<lb/>
were fortunate enough to share their<lb/>
music and their livelihood with oth-<lb/>
ers.<lb/>
By rocking into the '90s. the<lb/>
Dead reached out to a newer, younger<lb/>
audience. In the time of preserving<lb/>
"peace, love and dope" at there con-<lb/>
certs, Dead shows became a haven for<lb/>
free-thinkers and those in search of<lb/>
escape from the cruelties of the out-<lb/>
side world. Not only did they open<lb/>
their minds, they opened their mics.<lb/>
Their mics? The Dead were one of the<lb/>
only bands that would let you 'boot-<lb/>
leg' their shows. How cool is that?<lb/>
A saga that was created in the<lb/>
minds of Garcia, Bob Weir and long-<lb/>
time member Ron (Pigpen) McKeman.<lb/>
who died in 1973 from liver compli-<lb/>
cations, formed the Grateful Dead and<lb/>
Everyone off the bus<lb/>
named themselves after a British bal-<lb/>
lad in which a human helps a ghost<lb/>
find peace. After thriving for nearly<lb/>
three decades, the remaining core<lb/>
members of the Dead are left contem-<lb/>
plating their own futures.<lb/>
However, maybe it is time for the<lb/>
Dead to be buried, besides their mu-<lb/>
sic has touched several of today's pre-<lb/>
mier bands. Just look at the Dead's<lb/>
influence on bands like the school of<lb/>
Phish (Phish), a Boston based band;<lb/>
Rusted Root, (Pittsburgh natives);<lb/>
Dave Matthews Band; Big Head Todd<lb/>
&amp; the Monsters or anyone that has<lb/>
appeared on the H.O.R.D.E. (Horizons<lb/>
Of Rock Developing Everywhere) tour.<lb/>
Just listen to Dave Matthews Band's<lb/>
violin playing, the drumbeats in some<lb/>
of Rusted Root's songs, or even the<lb/>
funky grooves that have made Phish<lb/>
famous.<lb/>
Have you ever stopped and won-<lb/>
dered that the Grateful Dead may have<lb/>
been one of America's earliest alter-<lb/>
native bands? Not only because they<lb/>
rarely had a chart topping single<lb/>
("Touch of Grey" only went to num-<lb/>
ber nine), but because they reached<lb/>
audiences in different ways. They<lb/>
didn't attack the popradio culture by<lb/>
getting their music aired as frequently<lb/>
as Hootie &amp; the Blowfish or Live, but<lb/>
they did tour.<lb/>
"Truckin" all over the world and<lb/>
all through the United States, the<lb/>
Dead made their home not only on<lb/>
Haight-Ashbury in San Francisco but<lb/>
all over the world. The nostalgic<lb/>
Volkswagen buses tie-dyed and<lb/>
painted in psychedelic greens and reds<lb/>
traveling all over the interstates of the<lb/>
United States will remain an Ameri-<lb/>
can phenomenon.<lb/>
In hippie realms and for thou-<lb/>
sands of Grateful Dead fans, August<lb/>
9,1995 will be an unforgettable date,<lb/>
similar to August 16, 1977 (the pass-<lb/>
ing of the King). Unfortunately, for<lb/>
those of us who missed the '60s and<lb/>
the culture that engulfed over two<lb/>
generations we may never have the<lb/>
true experience that these generations<lb/>
have witnessed and been a part of. The<lb/>
mystique of the era with everyone liv-<lb/>
ing in eternal bliss will always be<lb/>
sought by those of us who yearn for<lb/>
happiness and peace with our peers.<lb/>
"Hey, man my friend Casey said<lb/>
to me over drinks last week, "what<lb/>
did the Deadhead say when he ran<lb/>
out of pot?"<lb/>
I didn't bother putting down my<lb/>
bottle of beer before I smacked him<lb/>
one in the ear - hard. He howled and<lb/>
clutched at his boxed member as the<lb/>
amber liquid soaked into his shirt<lb/>
"What was that for?" he de-<lb/>
manded, his eyes misting up.<lb/>
I started to answer, then gritted<lb/>
my teeth and went on popping him<lb/>
over the head. It just felt so ugly and<lb/>
futile trying to explain things to him,<lb/>
as if the only way he would ever have<lb/>
an open mind would be if his skull<lb/>
was cracked open and his brain<lb/>
plopped out onto the countertop<lb/>
We were sequestered away in<lb/>
Casey's tiny kitchen, watching the late<lb/>
news, which was still brimming with<lb/>
details on the life and death of Jerry<lb/>
Garcia. Casey had been exponentially<lb/>
upping the count on Dead jokes with<lb/>
each beer, and my nerves had worn<lb/>
painfully thin.<lb/>
Actually, he looked more per-<lb/>
plexed than offended by my assault<lb/>
"This is about respect for the<lb/>
dead, right?" he wanted to know, then<lb/>
chuckled at his unintentional pun.<lb/>
I waggled another bottle at him<lb/>
to shut him up. What I couldn't con-<lb/>
vey to Casey, and what a lot of people<lb/>
don't seem to have realized yet is that<lb/>
a lot more than just another member<lb/>
of a popular band. When Garcia<lb/>
checked out, that closed the book on<lb/>
the '60s.<lb/>
I had never liked the Grateful<lb/>
Dead, and, from the interviews I read,<lb/>
really disliked Garcia himself, but like<lb/>
Brian Wright<lb/>
Opinion Columnist<lb/>
When Garcia<lb/>
checked out,<lb/>
that closed the<lb/>
book on the<lb/>
'60s.<lb/>
him or not, most expected him to be<lb/>
around forever, or at least for another<lb/>
30 years or so.<lb/>
We have framed the 1960s and<lb/>
recognize them as a golden period of<lb/>
revolutionary thoughts and deeds. For<lb/>
a while, it seemed like the shine from<lb/>
that decade would never go away.<lb/>
Then, one by one, the personal-<lb/>
ity icons of the '60s counterculture<lb/>
began to fall by the roadside, some<lb/>
into obscurity, some to the only<lb/>
slightly kinder condition of death.<lb/>
Warhol, Hendrix, Joplin, Morrison.<lb/>
Hoffman-all gone, some suddenly,<lb/>
some claimed by a predictable end<lb/>
that anyone could see coming a mile<lb/>
off.<lb/>
Those that remain have been re-<lb/>
duced to much the same status as the<lb/>
idols from the '50s, shambling, soul-<lb/>
less mockeries of their former glory,<lb/>
all of whom seem destined to one day<lb/>
end up on a commemorative plate on<lb/>
the Home Shopping Network.<lb/>
Loyal devotees insist that many of<lb/>
the greats are still around, yet falter<lb/>
when asked when was the last time<lb/>
anything great was done.<lb/>
Time Leary is still popular. Of<lb/>
course he is. Any higher-consciousness<lb/>
salesman with the tongue of a hipster<lb/>
and the heart of a pimp who only man-<lb/>
ages to keep harvesting a new crop of<lb/>
followers every 10 years by giving the<lb/>
green light on unlimited psychedelic<lb/>
drug use will always be hanging on<lb/>
thousands of dorm room walls.<lb/>
Even a musical giant like Bob<lb/>
Dylan is viewed like some odd curios-<lb/>
ity from an antique shop. Sadly, no<lb/>
one's listened to anything he's had to<lb/>
say since some time around 1978 and<lb/>
has long since been swept into the<lb/>
nostalgia bin.<lb/>
As for others such as Peter, Paul;<lb/>
and Mary, Crosby, Stills, and Nash and<lb/>
Santana, they're still alive only in the<lb/>
loosest sejise of the word.<lb/>
But then there was the Dead, the<lb/>
eternal passengers on Ken Kesey's day-<lb/>
glo bus, migrating back and forth<lb/>
across the country, with a trail of fans<lb/>
following in their wake like goslings. I<lb/>
felt certain that the Dead would be<lb/>
around until the end of time, still tour-<lb/>
ing long after their bodies had given<lb/>
up the ghost but then there's never<lb/>
enough money for you to pay off the<lb/>
reality check when it comes.<lb/>
I only hope we don't 20 or 30<lb/>
years down the road, choose to find a<lb/>
new god, a new time to glorify, and<lb/>
move on to the next available decade,<lb/>
the 70s, because that means that even-<lb/>
tually, the decade to sit upon the<lb/>
throne will be the '80s, and our na-<lb/>
tional anthem will be replaced by a<lb/>
Huey Lewis song.<lb/>
Welcome to camp ECU<lb/>
Welcome campers! For all fresh-<lb/>
man, transfer students, and newcom-<lb/>
ers to Greenville this article will act<lb/>
as your survival guide for the next few<lb/>
weeks. The information was collected<lb/>
painstakingly by veterans of ECU life.<lb/>
Camp rules and regulations: The<lb/>
first thing to know about living among<lb/>
the ECU faithful is that almost every-<lb/>
thing you must do will require an<lb/>
undetermined number of signatures.<lb/>
These signatures will be required from<lb/>
four to six people, three of which will<lb/>
be out of the country or most certainly<lb/>
unattainable by any means of commu-<lb/>
nication.<lb/>
Because of this, all of your en-<lb/>
deavors will likely take 12 hours<lb/>
longer than initially planned, so pack<lb/>
a lunch. If you attempt to speed this,<lb/>
or any process up, you could extend<lb/>
your stay here for one to two years<lb/>
and there's a good possibility that<lb/>
you'll miss the sing along at the end<lb/>
of the year.<lb/>
Transportation onCamp<lb/>
grounds: If you have a car, give it<lb/>
away. This may sound strange, but<lb/>
once the first parking ticket is writ-<lb/>
ten, and the first 45 minute wait in<lb/>
the parking lot has occurred, there<lb/>
will be no confusion about this par-<lb/>
ticular suggestion. The best advice<lb/>
that this counselor has for the brave<lb/>
few who decide to keep their car<lb/>
would be to refrain from parking any-<lb/>
Patrick Ware<lb/>
Opinion Columnist<lb/>
If you have a<lb/>
car, give it<lb/>
away. Refrain<lb/>
from parking<lb/>
anywhere in the<lb/>
city limits.<lb/>
where in the city limits.<lb/>
A parking sticker, obtainable<lb/>
from the camp traffic office on 10th<lb/>
Street, will only provide a false sense<lb/>
of security for the ECU camper. You<lb/>
will get a ticket. You will leam to ig-<lb/>
nore signs. You will feel the power<lb/>
of the camp traffic office when at-<lb/>
tempting to complete any of the tasks<lb/>
discussed in the first section. Oh yes,<lb/>
you will have your records tagged.<lb/>
Do not fear, simply sell your car and<lb/>
you can avoid this common camp<lb/>
problem.<lb/>
Camp activities: Camp ECU has<lb/>
many extracurricular activities that<lb/>
can be beneficial to the general camp<lb/>
experience, but there are some things<lb/>
to know. When attending sporting<lb/>
events make sure to leam the proper<lb/>
clapping rhythms to the camp songs<lb/>
before entering any camp facility. It<lb/>
is a little known fact that improper<lb/>
clapping in a public place can result<lb/>
in social out cast<lb/>
Do not follow the trend of camp-<lb/>
ers past by driving circles around<lb/>
downtown until you see someone<lb/>
that you know. This activity has<lb/>
caused moral problems for some of<lb/>
the older campers and it has been<lb/>
suggested that I include this helpful<lb/>
tip.<lb/>
If anyone invites you to attend<lb/>
a facility named after a body part,<lb/>
run away. Find a safe house some-<lb/>
where, call a camp security officer,<lb/>
find someone who you can sing the<lb/>
camp song with.<lb/>
Lastly, if you are a camper that<lb/>
likes big hats and big belt buckles,<lb/>
which many of our campers do. make<lb/>
sure and restrain yourself from ex-<lb/>
hibiting these articles at the fore<lb/>
mentioned sporting events. Trust me,<lb/>
your counselor, your friend.<lb/>
We here at Camp ECU wish only<lb/>
the best for the new members of our<lb/>
community. It is the hope of the<lb/>
counselors that you will heed these<lb/>
little suggestions and find your stay<lb/>
here as wonderful as we attempt to<lb/>
make it. There will be basket weav-<lb/>
ing in Mendenhall and lunch in Todd<lb/>
dining hall all year long.<lb/>
Opinion Columnists<lb/>
Got an opinion? Let's hear it!<lb/>
We need columnists.<lb/>
Requirements:<lb/>
? ECU student<lb/>
 2.0 GPA or better<lb/>
Call Stephanie Lasslter at 328-9557.<lb/>
<lb/>
<pb facs="00058552_0017"/><lb/>
?.????????.II<lb/>
17<lb/>
Tuesday, Ausust 22, 1995<lb/>
The East Carolinian<lb/>
OLAS<lb/>
<lb/>
1<lb/>
<lb/>
Help<lb/>
Wanted<lb/>
For Sale<lb/>
For Rent<lb/>
RINGGOLD TOWERS<lb/>
Now Taking Leases for<lb/>
1 bedroom, 2 bedroom &amp;<lb/>
Efficiency Apartments.<lb/>
CALL 752-2865<lb/>
Help Wanted<lb/>
wamm<lb/>
o-Ulvrv wot ?&amp;oor4&amp;<lb/>
?1 and 2 Bedrooms<lb/>
AZALEA GARDENS<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/>
I.T. or Tommy Williams<lb/>
756-7815J58-7436<lb/>
3)tfrtnclUrU<lb/>
Open 24 hrs. 1-800-987-6204<lb/>
Now Hiring<lb/>
WANTED! PART-TIME DISTRIBU-<lb/>
TORS IMMEDIATELY. Be the First to<lb/>
Profit from the HOTTEST product on the<lb/>
market "DEBIT CARDS Now Avail-<lb/>
able! Call Today(919) 736-9151. 1-800-<lb/>
644-0901.<lb/>
$1750 WEEKLY possible mailing our<lb/>
circulars. No experience required. Begin<lb/>
now. For info call 301-306-1207.<lb/>
TLC ESCORTS is seeking ladies for danc-<lb/>
ing, modeling, and escorting. $1000 <lb/>
weekly. Flexible hours. Discreet &amp; confi-<lb/>
dential. Health Insurance available. Call<lb/>
9am-2am 758-2881.<lb/>
ATTENTION STUDENTS: Earn extra<lb/>
cash stuffing envelopes at home. All ma-<lb/>
terials provided. Send SASE to National<lb/>
Mailers PO Box 774. Olathe, KS 66051.<lb/>
Immediate response.<lb/>
NCASHtff<lb/>
We Bar CDS,<lb/>
? CmmUIumj moA Lp?<lb/>
Well pay tip to $5 eaaL for<lb/>
CD.<lb/>
? ? I <lb/>
Gumby's<lb/>
Drivers Wanted Earn ?<lb/>
SbO S'lOOPer Nigh!<lb/>
ike Your Own Schedule I'de-<lb/>
r College Stuck:<lb/>
Call 321-4862<lb/>
LOOK ATTENTION STUDENTS: LARG-<lb/>
EST selection of campus rentals available:<lb/>
Duplexes, Houses, Apartments CALL<lb/>
HOMELOCATORS 752-1375.<lb/>
FEMALE ROOMMATE WANTED to<lb/>
share house. $225 mth 12 utilities.<lb/>
Must love animals. Horse board also avail-<lb/>
able on premises. Call 758-7414.<lb/>
MALE ROOMMATE WANTED - Fur-<lb/>
nished Bedroom with Private Bath - ECU<lb/>
Bus Route - Washer-Dryer Priveleges, Lei-<lb/>
sure atmosphere Call 321-1848.<lb/>
AVAILABLE IMMEDIATELY: 2 rooms in<lb/>
new house 2 miles from campus. Very<lb/>
spacious. Fully furnished house with back<lb/>
deck and basketball court $200 a month<lb/>
includes phone &amp; water. 752-2116<lb/>
ROOMMATE WANTED: male or female,<lb/>
2 br. 112 bath townhouse. Rent $205 ?<lb/>
12 utilities, smoker or non-smoker. Call<lb/>
Christie at 757-0482 anytime.<lb/>
I<lb/>
A Help<lb/>
ii Wanted<lb/>
EMPLOYMENT OPPORTUNITIES ARE<lb/>
AVAILABLE: to students who are inter-<lb/>
ested in becoming PERSONAL CARE<lb/>
ATTENDANTS to students in wheel-<lb/>
chairs, READERS, AND TUTORS. Past<lb/>
experience is desired but not required. For<lb/>
an application, contact: Office for Disabil-<lb/>
ity Support Systems, Brewster A-l 16 or<lb/>
A-114, Telephone (919) 326799.<lb/>
THE OFFICE OF STUDENT DEVELOP-<lb/>
MENT, DEPARTMENT OF ATHLETICS,<lb/>
is now accepting applications for tutors.<lb/>
A minimum 2.5 GPA is required. Please<lb/>
call 328-4550 for more information.<lb/>
MALE DIVERS NEEDED ECU SWIM<lb/>
TEAM needs Guys Who Like to Flip and<lb/>
Twist A chance to be a Varsity Athlete!<lb/>
Contact Coach Rose at Minges Pool<lb/>
A.SAP.<lb/>
Gumby's<lb/>
Attention Ladies<lb/>
Earn $5.00 Hour<lb/>
Whille Excercising<lb/>
Putting Up Flyers 321-4862<lb/>
GREENVILLE RECREATION &amp;<lb/>
PARKS DEPARTMENT: FALL SOCCER<lb/>
COACHES: The Greenville Recreation and<lb/>
Parks Department is recruiting for 12 to<lb/>
16 part-time youth soccer coaches for the<lb/>
fall girls and boys soccer programs. Appli-<lb/>
cants must possess some knowledge of the<lb/>
soccer skills and have the ability and pa-<lb/>
tience to work with youth. Applicants must<lb/>
be able to coach young people ages 5-16,<lb/>
in soccer fundamentals. Hours are from<lb/>
3:00pm until 7:00pm with some night and<lb/>
weekend coaching. This program will run<lb/>
from September to mid-November. Salary<lb/>
rates start at $4.25 per hour. For more<lb/>
information, please call Ben James at 830-<lb/>
4567 or Michael Daly at 8304550.<lb/>
SITTER WANTED: For 3 year old. 2-5<lb/>
hours per week. Experience preferred.<lb/>
References, CPR and transportation re-<lb/>
quired. 321-4954.<lb/>
CHILD CARE - Need responsible person<lb/>
with own transportation for after school<lb/>
care 2-6 week days. Please call 830-0750<lb/>
and leave message.<lb/>
BABYSITTERS NEEDED: Community<lb/>
Bible Study, A Women's Interdenomina-<lb/>
tional Bible Study, Meeting at Oakmont<lb/>
Baptist Church. Thursday Mornings, 9am<lb/>
to 11:30am, needs several young women<lb/>
to work in our nursery area to provide<lb/>
patient, loving care to our youngest par-<lb/>
ticipants. Church nursery experience pre-<lb/>
ferred, references requested. Must provide<lb/>
own transportation amd be able to mak e<lb/>
commitment through December 7. Call<lb/>
Mrs. Baker, Class Coordinator at 355-8368.<lb/>
THE FIRST CHRISTIAN CHURCH is<lb/>
currently hiring for a Nursery Attendant<lb/>
in the toddler and crib nurseries during<lb/>
the Sunday Services from 9am to 12<lb/>
noon. Also hiring two substitutes. Look-<lb/>
ing for dependable and n urturing individu-<lb/>
als. Child care experience as well as CPR<lb/>
Certification a plus. Must be able to work<lb/>
during some Holiday periods. Please call<lb/>
321-0299.<lb/>
SPRING BREAK '96 SELL TRIPS,<lb/>
EARN CASH &amp; GO FREE Student<lb/>
Travel Services is now hiring campus rep-<lb/>
resentatives. Lowest rates to Jamaica,<lb/>
Cancun, Daytona and Panama City Beach.<lb/>
Call 1-800-6484849. <lb/>
HELP WANTED - Part-time position avail-<lb/>
able with Surgical Practice. Must have<lb/>
good typing and telephone communica-<lb/>
tion skills. Flexible hours. Please call Vicky<lb/>
at 7584300.<lb/>
PART TIME STUDENT NEEDED to help<lb/>
with lifting furniture and input ing com-<lb/>
puter inventory. Must have computer ex-<lb/>
perience. Call 931-6904 and leave message.<lb/>
?<lb/>
HELP WANTED: NEEDED: someone<lb/>
experienced in outside painting as well as<lb/>
yardwork. Pays $5.00 per hour - work on<lb/>
your own time. Call 756-2496 in t he after-<lb/>
noons up until 6:30pm.<lb/>
PART-TIME SALES POSITION: ME<lb/>
LANCE CONTEMPORARY WOMEN'S<lb/>
CLOTHING &amp; ACCESSORIES BOU-<lb/>
TIQUE. Located at the Lynndale<lb/>
Shoppes(next to Staccato Cafe) Hours 10-<lb/>
6:00 Mon-Sat Call 355-8771.<lb/>
ERNIE'S FAMOUS SUBS: Full or part-<lb/>
time help wanted. Apply in person any day<lb/>
between 2:00pm &amp; 4:00pm.<lb/>
NOW HIRING: Waitresses, Waiters, Bak-<lb/>
ery attendants. Cooks. Buffet attendants,<lb/>
meat cutters, utility. Apply at Golden Cor-<lb/>
ral, 504 SW Greenville Blvd.<lb/>
CAMPUS SALES REP wanted for part-<lb/>
time job. WORK AT YOUR CONVE-<lb/>
NIENCE! T-Shirts. sweatshirts, huggers,<lb/>
cups &amp; Advertising specialities. Call 1-800-<lb/>
758-5646 for information.<lb/>
TELEMARKETING - Davenport Exteri-<lb/>
ors Thermal Guard - $5.00 per hour plus<lb/>
bonus. Easy Work. Flexible hours start<lb/>
today. Call 355-0210.<lb/>
STUDENTS NEED A JOB? ROADWAY<lb/>
PACKAGE SYSTEM is looking for PACK-<lb/>
AGE HANDLERS to load Vans and Un-<lb/>
load Trailers for the AM shift, hours<lb/>
4:00am to 8:00am. $6.00hour, tuition<lb/>
assistance available after 30 days. Future<lb/>
career opportunities in operations and<lb/>
management possible. Applicat ions can be<lb/>
filled out at 104 United Drive, Greenville,<lb/>
752-1803.<lb/>
PRE-MED AND NURSING STUDENT S<lb/>
wanted for growing ophthalmic practice.<lb/>
Must be enthusiastic and a people person<lb/>
We will train the right person. Hours are<lb/>
Mon-Fri afternoon and early evenings.<lb/>
Send resume to: Eastern Carolina Eye<lb/>
Center: Att: Clinical Director, 2573<lb/>
Stantonsburg Rd. Greenville, NC 27834.<lb/>
$ Services<lb/>
' Offered<lb/>
I Jowiilo<lb/>
GUITARS - I will buy yours, or I'll sell<lb/>
you mine, or we can talk Trade, I sell<lb/>
cheap! Call Eddie (919) 637-6550.<lb/>
1992 GENERAL 14 X 70 $19,750. IM-<lb/>
MACULATE CONDITION. Very comfort-<lb/>
able. Special built. Many extras, ready to<lb/>
move in. Located in nice mobile park in<lb/>
Greenville. Ideal for students or family.<lb/>
Suitable for NC Coast. Interested parties<lb/>
call 919-778-8553 or 919-731-6075 for<lb/>
more information.<lb/>
FUTON FRAMES FROM $79. Black iron<lb/>
frames from $129. Futon mattresses from<lb/>
$69. Compare and save Bedroom Con-<lb/>
cepts 756-3161.<lb/>
NEED HELP ON GETTING THOSE<lb/>
PAPERS TYPED? Call Glenda at G. S.<lb/>
Typing Services. "Affordable Rates. Call<lb/>
Today - 758-7653 and Evenings (919) 527-<lb/>
9133.<lb/>
NEED A PLACE TO HAVE A BIRTH-<lb/>
DAY OR PRIVATE PARTY??? We have<lb/>
everything you need to make yours a suc-<lb/>
cess Call 7584591 or John at 7524715.<lb/>
24hr. SPORTS HOTLINE: ScoresPoint<lb/>
Spreads Trivia Games 1-900484-6000 Ext<lb/>
7042 $2.99min. Must be 18 yrs. old<lb/>
Procall Co. (602) 957-7240<lb/>
WATERBEDS FROM $239. Compare and<lb/>
save M-F 11 to 6 &amp; Sat 10 to 2. Bed-<lb/>
room Concepts 756-3161.<lb/>
WINDSURFER Fanatic Lite Viper. 4<lb/>
sails. 2 booms &amp; other misc. items. Mint<lb/>
Cond. $1,000.00 OBO Call 756-2719 or<lb/>
756-9039<lb/>
TWO BIKES FOR SALE: have flat tires<lb/>
$50.00 each call 756-7167<lb/>
INNERSPRING SLEEP SOFA with 2<lb/>
matching chairs- GOOD CO NDITION. Ron<lb/>
or Chris Robinson - 752-8585 or (even)<lb/>
321-8480.<lb/>
BRASS BED, QUEEN SIZE wDeluxe<lb/>
orthopedic mattress set, in Factory Box ,<lb/>
Never Used. Cost 750; 300.00 cash. (919)<lb/>
637-2645.<lb/>
DAY BED WHITE IRON AND BRASS.<lb/>
2 orthopedic mattresses. POP UP<lb/>
TRUNDLE, in Box Never Used. Cost 700;<lb/>
325.00 cash. (919) 637-2645.<lb/>
FOR SALE: Electric Range - $150. Bert's<lb/>
6FT Surfboard $150, Large Dorm Sized<lb/>
Refrigerator $75. 758-8975.<lb/>
MOUNTAIN BIKE N1SHIKI ARROYO<lb/>
S250.00 O.B.O. 754-2111 Ask for Scott<lb/>
Advertising Deadlines<lb/>
Fall and Spring<lb/>
Friday at 4:00 p.m. for<lb/>
Tuesday's issue<lb/>
Tuesday at 4:00 p.m.<lb/>
for Thursday's issue<lb/>
Display Advertising<lb/>
DC ads may be cancelled<lb/>
before 10:00 a.m. the day<lb/>
before publication. However,<lb/>
no refunds will be given.<lb/>
Terms are subject to change without<lb/>
notice.<lb/>
Circulation and Distribution<lb/>
g FALL AND SPRING <lb/>
s Tuesday and Thursday '<lb/>
?? 12,000 copies per issue<lb/>
IT<lb/>
Office hours are<lb/>
FALL AND SPRING<lb/>
8:00 a.m. - 5:00 p.m. Monday - Friday<lb/>
For more information, call ECU-6366<lb/>
'5<lb/>
Advertising Services<lb/>
Line Classified Rate<lb/>
(25 words or less)<lb/>
Students $2.00<lb/>
Non-students $3.00<lb/>
Each additional word $.05<lb/>
Display Classifieds<lb/>
$5.50<lb/>
All DC ads will not exceed<lb/>
two column inches in width<lb/>
or five column inches in<lb/>
depth.<lb/>
DO YOU NEED MONEY?<lb/>
We Will Pay You<lb/>
A'<lb/>
tue4dzcf<lb/>
CATHOLIC STUDENT CENTER<lb/>
The Newman Catholic Student Center<lb/>
wishes to welcome all students to ECU<lb/>
and invites you to worship with them.<lb/>
Sunday Masses are at the Newman Cen-<lb/>
ter, 953 E. 10th Street (2 houses from the<lb/>
Fletcher Music Building). Time: ll;30am<lb/>
and 8:30pm. For more information, please<lb/>
call Fr. Paul Vaeth, 757-1991.<lb/>
GREENVILLE-PITT COUNTY<lb/>
SPECIAL OLYMPICS<lb/>
The Greenville-Pitt County Special<lb/>
Olymics will be conducting a Soccer<lb/>
Coaches Training School on Saturday,<lb/>
September 23rd from 9am4pm for all in-<lb/>
dividuals interested in volunteering to<lb/>
coach soccer. We are also looking for vol-<lb/>
unteer coaches in the following sports:<lb/>
basketball skills, team basketball, swim-<lb/>
ming, gymnastics, powerlifting,<lb/>
rollerskating, and bowling. No experience<lb/>
is necessary. For more information con-<lb/>
tact Dwain Cooper at 830-4551.<lb/>
STUDENT ATTORNEY GENERAL &amp;<lb/>
STUDENT PUBLIC DEFENDER<lb/>
Applications are available today in the<lb/>
Dean of Students office (209 Whichard).<lb/>
These are stipend positions. Applications<lb/>
are due August 30.<lb/>
TAE KWON DO CLUB<lb/>
We will be holding our first meeting and<lb/>
demonstration on Wednesday Aug 30 at<lb/>
8:00pm. Ask that old members attend a<lb/>
meeting Thursday night. Aug 24 at 8:30.<lb/>
Both will be held in kChr istenbury Gym.<lb/>
Rm 112. Any questions, please contact<lb/>
Terrance Evins, Club President at 353-<lb/>
0926. All Student s and Faculty are invited<lb/>
to come.<lb/>
FOOTBALL PICK'EM ENTRY<lb/>
FORM<lb/>
Football enthusiasts can pick-up an NFL<lb/>
ECU Football Pick'em Entry Form from<lb/>
We Also Buy<lb/>
gold<lb/>
silver<lb/>
Jewelry-<lb/>
Also Broken<lb/>
Gold Pieces<lb/>
FOR YOUR USED,<lb/>
TOMMY HILFIGER<lb/>
NAUTICA<lb/>
POLO<lb/>
RUFF HEWN<lb/>
J.CREW<lb/>
ALEXANDER JULIAN<lb/>
GUESS<lb/>
LEVI<lb/>
ETC.<lb/>
We Also Buy:<lb/>
Stereo's<lb/>
T.V's.<lb/>
VCR's<lb/>
CD Player's<lb/>
Student Swap Shop<lb/>
(THE ESTATE SHOP) DOWNTOWN WALKING MALL<lb/>
414 EVANS ST.<lb/>
SUMMER HRS: THURS-FR110-12,1:30-5 &amp; SAT FROM 10-1<lb/>
COME INTO THE CrTY PARKING LOT IN FRONT OF WACHOVIA<lb/>
DOWNTOWN,DRIVE TO BACK DOOR &amp; RING BUZZER<lb/>
204 Christenbury Gym on Monday, Au-<lb/>
gust 28. Select the winning football teams<lb/>
and you will be eligible for prizes. For more<lb/>
information call Recreational Services at<lb/>
328-6387<lb/>
RECREATIONAL SERVICES CLUB<lb/>
PED KICKOFF<lb/>
Interested in joining a walking club and<lb/>
winning prizes? Come to Recreational<lb/>
Services Club Ped Kickoff August 28 at<lb/>
5:30pm in Christenbury 102. During this<lb/>
meeting you will bet your walking papers,<lb/>
receive instruction on walking posture,<lb/>
shoes and much, much more. For more<lb/>
information call Recreational Services call<lb/>
328-6387.<lb/>
BUSCH GARDENS<lb/>
The Natural Life Club will be going on a<lb/>
day trip to Busch Gardens on Saturday.<lb/>
September 23. The cost is only $28, which<lb/>
includes your ticket and transportation.<lb/>
Sign-up in Christenbury 204 before Sep-<lb/>
tember 20 at 5pm. For more information<lb/>
call Ernest Solar at 752-7530.<lb/>
tue&amp;dacf<lb/>
NATURAL LIFE CLUB MEETING<lb/>
The Natural Life Club will be having its<lb/>
first club meeting on September 6 at 8pm<lb/>
in Christenbury 102. We will be discuss-<lb/>
ing ideas for upcoming Fall Activities.<lb/>
REMINDER: There will be an Officer's<lb/>
Meeting on August 29 at 7pm in<lb/>
Christenbury 102.<lb/>
VIDEO YEARBOOK<lb/>
Have you seen it? Are you in it? Have you<lb/>
picked up your FREE copy? ECU'S pre-<lb/>
mier edition of our video yearbook- The<lb/>
Treasure Chest! To get your free tape,<lb/>
bring your student ID by the Media Board<lb/>
Office, or The East Carolinian, 2nd floor.<lb/>
Student Publications Building(across from<lb/>
Joyner Library). Hurr y while supplies last<lb/>
<pb facs="00058552_0018"/><lb/>
MMHiMfei ? ?<lb/>
Mmmmmmmmm imHii in - mimmm?m<lb/>
mOmtk mm, mnmm<lb/>
- r <lb/>
18<lb/>
Tuesday, Ausust 22, 1995<lb/>
77?e fast Carolinian<lb/>
ALUMNUS from page 3<lb/>
elected.<lb/>
"I am the only Gheen in the<lb/>
phone book and I will always return<lb/>
a phone call he said. "1 encourage<lb/>
everyone to contact me to voice<lb/>
their concerns, to register to vote<lb/>
and get involved with our commu-<lb/>
nity<lb/>
After speaking to his own<lb/>
graduating class about civic respon-<lb/>
sibility, Gheen decided to act by be-<lb/>
coming involved in the community.<lb/>
"Our generation must begin to<lb/>
act now if we truly hope to repair<lb/>
the deterioration of our neighbor-<lb/>
hoods and communities Gheen<lb/>
said. "We can no longer afford to<lb/>
defer action to others in hopes that<lb/>
they' will set things straight. We<lb/>
must take responsibility for the fu-<lb/>
ture  now<lb/>
Gheen plans to lower taxes and<lb/>
get tough on property crime. Dur-<lb/>
ing holidays like Thanksgiving and<lb/>
Christmas, property crime picks up<lb/>
dramatically, according to the<lb/>
Greenville Police Department.<lb/>
Gheen said that his neighbor-<lb/>
hood is particularly hard hit because<lb/>
thieves know most residents are<lb/>
away on break.<lb/>
"The young people in my dis-<lb/>
trict are the most vulnerable to vio-<lb/>
lent crime and theft he said.<lb/>
"Criminals know when they leave for<lb/>
the holidays. Young people deserve<lb/>
to be protected, and by increasing<lb/>
our security, we can protect the<lb/>
entire community.<lb/>
"By enlisting our involvement,<lb/>
we can capture or deter criminals<lb/>
that come to our neighborhoods<lb/>
looking for easy prey<lb/>
If elected, Gheen hopes to put<lb/>
more watch groups in effect.<lb/>
People returning from down-<lb/>
town late at night are often victims<lb/>
of violent assault, according to the<lb/>
Greenville Police Department.<lb/>
Gheen plans to put a stop to that<lb/>
"We cannot deter violent crime<lb/>
in our community without equal po-<lb/>
lice protection for the young<lb/>
Gheen said. "We must establish safe<lb/>
channels of communication that go<lb/>
behind our current crime stoppers<lb/>
hotline.<lb/>
"If elected, I will personally<lb/>
work with both the university and<lb/>
the student population to enhance<lb/>
communication and investigate vio-<lb/>
lent crime he said. "We also need<lb/>
better lighting in key areas and to<lb/>
develop community watch programs<lb/>
designed for students<lb/>
Gheen hopes to change occu-<lb/>
pancy ordinances that have con-<lb/>
cerned many for quite a while. The<lb/>
(ity forbids more than three unre-<lb/>
lated people from living together.<lb/>
Gheen believes many students live<lb/>
in fear of eviction because of the or-<lb/>
' dinance.<lb/>
"I believe the landlords should<lb/>
be able to lease four bedroom dwell-<lb/>
ings to four renters for their mutual<lb/>
protection in the agreement" Gheen<lb/>
said. "I do not believe that anyone<lb/>
should be evicted merely for living<lb/>
four to a house.<lb/>
"We have plenty of ordinances<lb/>
that deal with parking, noise, lawn<lb/>
care, etc that can keep our neigh-<lb/>
borhoods attractive without evict-<lb/>
ing. This current policy is discrimi-<lb/>
natory against students and I feel it<lb/>
would not withstand a court chal-<lb/>
lenge<lb/>
Gheen also wants to change the<lb/>
noise ordinance to a higher thresh-<lb/>
old if elected.<lb/>
"The current noise ordinance<lb/>
establishes a threshold of 60 deci-<lb/>
bels, this is too low and allows the<lb/>
police to disperse about any gather-<lb/>
ing Gheen said. "We should raise<lb/>
it slightly on weekends, and more<lb/>
importantly, we should insist that<lb/>
law enforcement officers actually<lb/>
use the noise meters that the city<lb/>
has purchased for them.<lb/>
"There are many reports of po-<lb/>
lice claiming that people have vio-<lb/>
lated a noise ordinance when they<lb/>
have failed to even bring a noise<lb/>
meter. This is equivalent with accus-<lb/>
ing a citizen of drunk driving while<lb/>
failing to administer a sobriety test"<lb/>
Next year the city will review<lb/>
private property in terms of taxa-<lb/>
tion. Gheen believes that because<lb/>
the city has run a tax surplus over<lb/>
the last several years, that it should<lb/>
lower taxes.<lb/>
"We just got hit with a dramatic<lb/>
tuition increase and the last thing<lb/>
we need is a rent hike Gheen said.<lb/>
"Property tax increases are usually<lb/>
passed down to renters<lb/>
Gheen said he will push to make<lb/>
campus a city council precinct. He<lb/>
said students can be represented bet-<lb/>
ter if they have their own represen-<lb/>
tative.<lb/>
"The students and young<lb/>
people of this city total between 20-<lb/>
25 thousand Gheen said. "It is un-<lb/>
democratic to leave us out of city<lb/>
government<lb/>
"By dividing the campus into<lb/>
three different districts, the city<lb/>
commits political apartheid<lb/>
Other universities across the<lb/>
state boast former students in city<lb/>
council.<lb/>
"To my knowledge, two other<lb/>
universities boast of a representative<lb/>
on their city councils Gheen said.<lb/>
"Now it's our turn to improve our<lb/>
image abroad by showing that ECU<lb/>
gets involved with the political pro-<lb/>
cess and we vote<lb/>
Gheen will run against Inez<lb/>
Freidley of the ECU housing depart-<lb/>
ment, Rev. Joseph Sturtz and<lb/>
Mathew Koeber.<lb/>
News writers needed<lb/>
Would you like to write lor lie East<lb/>
Carolinian! If so then drop by our offices<lb/>
and fill out an application, or call Tammy<lb/>
at ECU-6366.<lb/>
Happy's Pool Hali<lb/>
Open 7 days A week ? M- Sat 9a-2a ? Sun 12-12<lb/>
Tuesi $1 Domestics<lb/>
All Day &amp; Night<lb/>
Wedt Ladies Might<lb/>
Ladies Play All Dau Free<lb/>
Everudayt 32 oz. Bud draft $2.25<lb/>
Jtm&amp;-?<lb/>
You'll find lots of options<lb/>
in our classifieds.<lb/>
8:40 Worship Service <lb/>
i College Sunday School Classes<lb/>
1 lam Worship Service<lb/>
Kick-Off Luncheon<lb/>
Join<lb/>
IviAUZ&amp;U Student<lb/>
funedcotetcf dimity tU11 ttUcb S<lb/>
fettmdUfi<lb/>
510 S. Washington St.<lb/>
752-3101<lb/>
We Also Offer Adopt-A-Student<lb/>
Program<lb/>
Campus Commuter<lb/>
Assembled Free<lb/>
Ready To Ride only $199.95<lb/>
Ttek ? Cannondale ? GT ? Specialized ? And More<lb/>
Great Selection ? Great Service ? Great Prices<lb/>
Extended Hours During Back To School<lb/>
Check Out Our Extended Warranty<lb/>
530 Cotanche St.<lb/>
757-3616<lb/>
215 Arlington Blvd<lb/>
, 756-3301<lb/>
Visit Our Outpost Trail Shop<lb/>
Camping ? Hiking ? Climbing Clothing And Equipment<lb/>
Inside Bicycle Post - Downtown<lb/>
U-Bolt<lb/>
Locks<lb/>
$10.00 OFF<lb/>
With This Coupon. Coupon Expires <lb/>
10-31-95<lb/>
"TXinVOp"<lb/>
$24.95<lb/>
With This Coupon. Coupon<lb/>
Expires 10-31-95<lb/>
Allen Car<lb/>
Racks<lb/>
With This Coupon. Coupon<lb/>
I Expires 10-31-95<lb/>
! TEVA Contour"<lb/>
Sandals<lb/>
While They Last<lb/>
Not Good On Sales Items<lb/>
Exp. 10-3195<lb/>
Models RolierBlades &amp;<lb/>
Oxygen Inline Skates<lb/>
With This Coupon. Coupon<lb/>
Expires 10-31-95<lb/>
?<lb/>
i S<lb/>
Presents<lb/>
THE WELCOME BACK BASH<lb/>
111'<lb/>
mp ?mm<lb/>
Tlun-sikiwAiiiUisi 24ih 7pm l I pm Poolsiile<lb/>
All I XI i Sliulcnls Welcome<lb/>
"IihkL Iuik &amp; Rock if Rolf"<lb/>
tfreettvrfte 4 TUtet Pnetftytaou Student &amp;muMUtitt<lb/>
1526Charles Blvd.<lb/>
Acims fmni Ficklcn Stadium<lb/>
321-7613<lb/>
<pb facs="00058552_0019"/><lb/>
19<lb/>
Tuesday, August 22, 1995<lb/>
The East Carolinian<lb/>
irsCoutJrj<lb/>
THE PROF<lb/>
BY: PAUL HAGWOOD<lb/>
AM? J<lb/>
BY JOHN CARAVAN<lb/>
CfipTuRfrJ fhF ESSfCE CF<lb/>
' <lb/>
ir<lb/>
s<lb/>
t9<lb/>
?g&amp;.<lb/>
BY WALLy LAMB<lb/>
EITHER ITS PAtfftAll.<lb/>
P'AveRS SiMr?i?'CA?E<lb/>
OMEGA QUEST<lb/>
BY CHILDERS<lb/>
"EH<lb/>
:Z<lb/>
by Mark Brett<lb/>
THE Crossword<lb/>
6o,W05uSEWkSM!Oit6<lb/>
WHEtl ?E SAID TfiAT<lb/>
C!?WflS gucf<lb/>
TV?<lb/>
?<lb/>
a<lb/>
ACROSS<lb/>
1 Evergreen trees<lb/>
5 Old-fashioned<lb/>
10 Animal fat<lb/>
14 Cheese<lb/>
15 Use cleverness<lb/>
in escaping<lb/>
16 Concerned with<lb/>
17 Too<lb/>
18 Boundary<lb/>
19 Skirt length<lb/>
20 Sent an answer<lb/>
22 Material wealth<lb/>
24 Chihuahua<lb/>
25 Quiet<lb/>
26 Lover's song<lb/>
30 Despise<lb/>
34 Having wings<lb/>
35 Sunbather's<lb/>
color<lb/>
36 Certain chord<lb/>
37 Topper<lb/>
38 Lowers in<lb/>
character<lb/>
41 Eavesdropping<lb/>
device<lb/>
42 Venerate<lb/>
44 ?Aviv<lb/>
45 ? noire<lb/>
46 Indicate<lb/>
4fi Ran<lb/>
50 Ceremonial<lb/>
dinner<lb/>
52 Golf word<lb/>
53 Waiting period<lb/>
56 Keep lovingly<lb/>
60 Wrap<lb/>
61 Diadem<lb/>
63 Diva's song<lb/>
64 Spew<lb/>
O 1995 Tribune Madia Services. Inc.<lb/>
All rights reserved.<lb/>
65 Ancient<lb/>
66 Man<lb/>
67 Strike out<lb/>
68 Adjust<lb/>
69 Hem<lb/>
DOWN<lb/>
1 Terror<lb/>
2 Not working<lb/>
3 Grating sound<lb/>
4 Burn slowly<lb/>
5 Agent<lb/>
6 Enthusiastic<lb/>
7 Hat <lb/>
8 Decree<lb/>
9 Fine point<lb/>
10 Like another<lb/>
11 Distinct entity<lb/>
12 Volcanic peak<lb/>
13 Labor<lb/>
21 Electrified<lb/>
particle<lb/>
JERRY GARCIA-<lb/>
GRATEFUL DEAD<lb/>
23 Schemes<lb/>
25 Capitol Hill man<lb/>
26 Dinner course<lb/>
27 Eliminate a<lb/>
vowel<lb/>
28 Deadly gas<lb/>
29 Smidgen<lb/>
31 Lama land<lb/>
32 Terre ?<lb/>
33 Put a border on<lb/>
38 Prevent<lb/>
39<lb/>
40<lb/>
43<lb/>
45<lb/>
47<lb/>
49<lb/>
51<lb/>
53<lb/>
Calendar abbr.<lb/>
Trunk carrier?<lb/>
Ribbon flower<lb/>
Heavy curtain of<lb/>
artillery fire<lb/>
Magazine head<lb/>
"Norma ?"<lb/>
Author Zola<lb/>
Chilled<lb/>
54 City in Alaska<lb/>
55 Follow<lb/>
56 American Indian<lb/>
57 Angered<lb/>
58 Carol<lb/>
59 Dislike<lb/>
62 Madison Ave.<lb/>
output<lb/>
Join th<lb/>
ANSWERS<lb/>
Scratch<lb/>
and<lb/>
Sniff<lb/>
Holy Order of Comic Artist<lb/>
Thats right! HOCA!<lb/>
OK, So it doesn't make anv sense and what is the point?<lb/>
HE POINT IS WE NEED ARTISTS That's righjjM;<lb/>
East Carolinian is looking for a few brave souls EL-<lb/>
to take on this awsome task, just look at these benifits!<lb/>
1. Deadlines, Deadlines, Deadlines!<lb/>
2. Ink Stained 1 lands!<lb/>
3. A real Bonified Paycheck!<lb/>
4. Deadlines!<lb/>
5. Perhaps your own cult following!<lb/>
So if you think you've got what it takes, 11 UN Rl AD BE10W!<lb/>
Make sure all comics are drawn in a 8" x 13" space<lb/>
Make sure all your work is inked inNO PENCIL)<lb/>
Make sure you turn your work in at the Fast Carolinian<lb/>
Make sure vou eat your vegetables<lb/>
ARIES<lb/>
March 21-April 20<lb/>
If the pace seems hectic, take<lb/>
heart?it should slow down in the<lb/>
near future. Creative thinking will<lb/>
also help ease the stress. You may<lb/>
be able to find a shorter path from<lb/>
point to point.<lb/>
TAURUS<lb/>
April 21-May 21<lb/>
Gossiping this week has an<lb/>
unintended effect, so it may be<lb/>
wiser to refrain. A poor opinion<lb/>
someone has already formed about<lb/>
you will become set in stone this<lb/>
week if you're not careful.<lb/>
GEMINI<lb/>
May 22-June 21<lb/>
It's a good time to take matters<lb/>
into your own hands and get<lb/>
things settled?you'll be more<lb/>
satisfied when the decision is<lb/>
made, whatever it is. Manage<lb/>
money carefully, because a big<lb/>
purchase could be in the offing.<lb/>
CANCER<lb/>
June 22-July 22<lb/>
Although taking a vacation this<lb/>
week would be wonderful, it may<lb/>
not be the responsible thing to do.<lb/>
Refresh yourself with a few small<lb/>
indulgences, like a hot bath, and<lb/>
then plan a real trip for a more<lb/>
convenient time.<lb/>
LEO<lb/>
July 23-August 23<lb/>
A provocative encounter keeps you<lb/>
guessing as the week progresses.<lb/>
Subtle hints could further your<lb/>
cause?just be sure that outsiders<lb/>
aren't watching, or you may<lb/>
attract more than your share of<lb/>
attention.<lb/>
VIRGO<lb/>
August 24-September 22<lb/>
A powerful person's act of<lb/>
compassion is food for thought,<lb/>
both for you and a close friend.<lb/>
Take it to heart, because you may<lb/>
have an opportunity to make<lb/>
someone else's life easier in the<lb/>
near future.<lb/>
LIBRA<lb/>
September 23-October 23<lb/>
Maintaining a good frame of mind<lb/>
may take up much of your energy.<lb/>
It may be wiser to let tempers flare<lb/>
and die of their own accord, rather<lb/>
than trying to keep the seas calm<lb/>
by force.<lb/>
SCORPIO<lb/>
October 24-November 22<lb/>
Someone close to you may have an<lb/>
attitude problem. If so. try to stay<lb/>
out of their way. It's not in your<lb/>
best interest to try to improve their<lb/>
mood, since they may take it out<lb/>
on you in a very unpleasant way.<lb/>
SAGITTARIUS<lb/>
November 23-December 21<lb/>
The energetic approach yields great<lb/>
results this week and keeps you<lb/>
feeling great. A peaceful weekend<lb/>
with a dear companion is advisable<lb/>
as a way to maintain your good<lb/>
mood and productivity.<lb/>
CAPRICORN<lb/>
December 22-January 20<lb/>
Maintaining your self-respect<lb/>
this week may be difficult, with<lb/>
pressure coming from a dozen<lb/>
different directions. Try to keep<lb/>
your equanimity intact, and don't<lb/>
sell yourself short?you can do it.<lb/>
AQUARIUS<lb/>
January 21-February 18<lb/>
A creative solution to an old<lb/>
problem earns you respect at work.<lb/>
Be careful that you only take the<lb/>
credit which is due you. however.<lb/>
Take the opportunity to toot<lb/>
another's horn if you can?it will<lb/>
reflect well on you.<lb/>
PISCES<lb/>
February 19-March 20<lb/>
Another person's mistakes may<lb/>
appear to be your fault. Don't<lb/>
worry, because the truth will come<lb/>
out eventually. Meanwhile, take<lb/>
the fallout with as much grace as<lb/>
you can muster and try to avoid<lb/>
pointing fingers.<lb/>
For Entertainment Purposes Only<lb/>
<pb facs="00058552_0020"/><lb/>
<pb facs="00058552_0021"/><lb/>
Q1<lb/>
Tuesday, August 22, 1995<lb/>
The East Carolinian<lb/>
Get ready for Fall<lb/>
Bands, Bradys<lb/>
and more visit<lb/>
campus in the<lb/>
coming months<lb/>
Photo Courtesy of Random House<lb/>
ECU goes Brady on Sept. 6, as Barry Williams<lb/>
(Greg) arrives to speak on his career as a Brady.<lb/>
Brandon WaddeJI<lb/>
Assistant Lifestyle Editor<lb/>
Another new school year, another<lb/>
opportunity to start over, another<lb/>
chance to make good on all those<lb/>
promises made to ourselves and oth-<lb/>
ers. Many of us have such optimistic<lb/>
thoughts running through our heads<lb/>
as we charge fearlessly into the fall<lb/>
semester.<lb/>
As many student are returning<lb/>
from an easy-going, vet productive<lb/>
summer; the folks at the Student Ac<lb/>
tivities office have been working hard<lb/>
organizing different events and new<lb/>
programs with eager anticipation of<lb/>
the new school year.<lb/>
The single biggest event at ECU<lb/>
this semester will undoubtedly he<lb/>
Homecoming. The week of activities,<lb/>
the parade and the football game are<lb/>
all traditions commonly associated<lb/>
with Homecoming. But this Home-<lb/>
coming. Williams Arena at Minges<lb/>
Coliseum will open its doors for ma-<lb/>
jor music concerts periodically<lb/>
through the year. The first of these<lb/>
will he during Homecoming week.<lb/>
Several bands such as Hootie &amp;<lb/>
the Blowfish have been invited, but<lb/>
all have refused the offer to he the<lb/>
first hand<lb/>
to play<lb/>
Williams<lb/>
A r e n a .<lb/>
The Will-<lb/>
i a m s<lb/>
venue has<lb/>
approxi-<lb/>
mately the<lb/>
same seat-<lb/>
ing capac-<lb/>
ity as<lb/>
Cameron<lb/>
Indoor at<lb/>
Duke, yet<lb/>
no bands<lb/>
contacted<lb/>
by Stu-<lb/>
dent Ac-<lb/>
tivities<lb/>
will take a<lb/>
stab at be-<lb/>
ing the<lb/>
first.<lb/>
Speak-<lb/>
ing of Wil-<lb/>
liams, ac-<lb/>
tor Barry<lb/>
Williams,<lb/>
best-<lb/>
known for<lb/>
his role as<lb/>
C r e g<lb/>
Brady on<lb/>
the '70s<lb/>
era sitcom<lb/>
The<lb/>
Brady Bunch will be speaking on cam-<lb/>
pus Sept. 6. Coincidentally, the big<lb/>
screen version of The Brady Bunch<lb/>
will be showing at Hendrix Theater<lb/>
on the weekend immediately follow-<lb/>
ing Barry Williams' lecture.<lb/>
Continuing programs such as<lb/>
Noon Hay Tunes and the An Evening<lb/>
With series are going full steam into<lb/>
the fall semester. Noon Day Tunes fea-<lb/>
ture local musicians as well as nation-<lb/>
ally-known folk and roots bands. Vic-<lb/>
tor Hudson will start off the new sea-<lb/>
son of Noon Day Tunes and local fa-<lb/>
vorite Keller Williams is also sched-<lb/>
uled to perform this semester.<lb/>
The Second City is a traveling<lb/>
impromptu comedy caravan that has<lb/>
long been a stepping stone for cast<lb/>
members of Saturday Night Live.<lb/>
Many comedic favorites such as John<lb/>
Belushi and Dan Ackroyd are prod-<lb/>
ucts of The Second City. "It's their<lb/>
55th Anniversay Tour and tickets will<lb/>
he ottered to students dirt cheap. At<lb/>
around S4 it's an event students can't<lb/>
Reviews<lb/>
Leftover Salmon<lb/>
Ask the Fish<lb/>
Jay Myers<lb/>
Staff Writer<lb/>
Wh<lb/>
ented biui<lb/>
Scent were I<lb/>
r till<lb/>
Buffet!<lb/>
-tal<lb/>
calist Sammy Hagar? If you don't<lb/>
think this sounds like a night in<lb/>
Hell, then you'll probably like Left-<lb/>
over Salmon.<lb/>
The band describes their mu-<lb/>
sic as "a fusion of Cajun. funk, blue-<lb/>
grass, reggae, zydeco, rock and<lb/>
polka  100 percent Polyethnic<lb/>
Cajun Slamgrass" and this is the<lb/>
first tip-off that something just isn't<lb/>
right with them. Much like "Sumo<lb/>
High-Diving" or "Luge Bowling<lb/>
this musical hybrid might be funny<lb/>
in a 50 second beer commercial, but<lb/>
not as a 67 minute album of live<lb/>
music. It falls flat because these<lb/>
styles really aren't made to work to-<lb/>
gether.<lb/>
It just so happens that the<lb/>
band is a hybrid, too. It's a combi-<lb/>
nation of two other Boulder. Colo-<lb/>
rado hands: The Salmon Heads and<lb/>
the Left Hand String Band (hence<lb/>
the band name, leftover Salmon).<lb/>
This mixture doesn't work either.<lb/>
One band plays Cajun music, the<lb/>
other plays bluegrass. and from<lb/>
what I i an tell only the bluegrass<lb/>
hand has any talent. In fact, of the<lb/>
If) songs on the album, only three<lb/>
are any good and those are the blue<lb/>
See I.KIT page 30<lb/>
afford to miss stated .1. Marshall, as-<lb/>
sistant director of Student Activities.<lb/>
This event as well as a performance<lb/>
from comedian Chris Rock will be fea-<lb/>
tured comedy in An Evening With<lb/>
this year.<lb/>
Student Activities also axed a few<lb/>
programs this yeai Club 7:37 is an<lb/>
example ol a program that did not<lb/>
make the cut.<lb/>
All these programs and activities<lb/>
are paid tor by the students. Its im<lb/>
portant for us to attend as many of<lb/>
the campus activities as possible. Stu-<lb/>
dent Activities won't know what types<lb/>
of programs are popular it we Jon t<lb/>
give some input be it negative or posi-<lb/>
tive. It's our campus, it's our money,<lb/>
but it's also our responsibility to sup-<lb/>
port our programs.<lb/>
Sunday<lb/>
 in the<lb/>
Park<lb/>
Children root around in<lb/>
the grass at the<lb/>
Greenville Town<lb/>
Commons while the<lb/>
band entertains their<lb/>
elders at Sunday in the<lb/>
Park. <lb/>
Photo by KEN CLARK<lb/>
?<lb/>
f<lb/>
'Tft&amp;ttie 1R.eALeo(i<lb/>
? ?" ??????????????????? ?;?<lb/>
Costner drowns in Waterworld<lb/>
Photo Courtesy of Universal Pictures Presents<lb/>
An angry Mariner (Kevin Costner) rages in preparation for a savage attack on evil in<lb/>
Waterworld. This still photo is about as exciting as Costner gets in the ultra-expensive film.<lb/>
Our reviewer finds<lb/>
the Waterworld<lb/>
epic just plain silly<lb/>
Ike Shibley<lb/>
Senior Writer<lb/>
Waterworld. the 17" million<lb/>
dollar Kevin Costner action picture.<lb/>
has made a splash at t1 . box office<lb/>
in its opening weeks. Though the<lb/>
film will not be one of the big block-<lb/>
busters of the summer (like Apollo<lb/>
13 and Batman Forever) it will he a<lb/>
nominally successful film.<lb/>
But a critic must look beyond<lb/>
the hype, the propaganda, the nega<lb/>
tive press and the bloated budgets<lb/>
to the film itself.<lb/>
:npt dt<lb/>
id of logic<lb/>
rmance a<lb/>
and a silly StOI v.<lb/>
Kevin t. ostnei has dl the cha-<lb/>
risma of a tuna m Waterworld.<lb/>
Though his character aptly named<lb/>
the Mariner, is written as an aloof<lb/>
hero Costner cannot convincingly<lb/>
portray this disinterested loner.<lb/>
The story itself is full ol gaps<lb/>
in logic. The setting for Waterworld<lb/>
is five hundred years in the future<lb/>
and only the bare essentials remain.<lb/>
Dirt is a previous commodity and<lb/>
the Manner (Costner) even recycles<lb/>
his urine for drinl i. Yet<lb/>
cigarettes abound, Costner's leading<lb/>
ladv (Jeanne Tripplehorni has<lb/>
shaved leg<lb/>
he getting enough to eat though the<lb/>
food source is only hinted at (think<lb/>
big fish).<lb/>
The Manner also has an under-<lb/>
First, the negatives: Costner's water exploring vessel yet he would<lb/>
need it<lb/>
which allow him to breathe under<lb/>
By the way, how could gills<lb/>
appeal in one generation? The Man<lb/>
ems to have no others like him<lb/>
yet his mutation certainly gives him<lb/>
a select i intage. The<lb/>
scriptwritei lientiy break the<lb/>
laws of evolution. In addition the<lb/>
.hole search for dry land r<lb/>
around the map tattooed on a little<lb/>
girl's back (Tina Majorino) that con-<lb/>
sists of a single arrow. I had trouble<lb/>
understanding how such a map<lb/>
would be useful to anyone.<lb/>
The silliness ol the story hits<lb/>
its peak near the end of the film<lb/>
Though the action sequences look<lb/>
fantastic, the ending will leave au-<lb/>
diences scratching their heads in<lb/>
wonder The film also bortows so<lb/>
See WATER page 30<lb/>
Money management made easy<lb/>
Brandon Waddell<lb/>
Assistant Lifestyle Editor<lb/>
Unless your father is a million<lb/>
aire or you somehow manage to win<lb/>
big on the lottery, the chances of be-<lb/>
ing broke at least the majority of your<lb/>
time in Greenville are almost absolute.<lb/>
Atter you've been in town a few<lb/>
weeks, you'll notice the horde of<lb/>
people who swarm the downtown area<lb/>
virtually every night of the week<lb/>
spending money. Though profitable<lb/>
for downtown merchants, it is rela<lb/>
lively easy for students to become<lb/>
enthralled in the excitement and<lb/>
spend the entire month's budget in a<lb/>
single weekend.<lb/>
One of the first tasks for many<lb/>
students is obtaining a pei<lb/>
ing account. Superficially, this sounds<lb/>
like an easy assignment hut then is<lb/>
much more at stake than meets the<lb/>
eye.<lb/>
"Student; illy freshmen,<lb/>
tend to have trouble budgeting their<lb/>
money said Barry Allen, a branch<lb/>
manager at tinted Carolina Bank. "In<lb/>
most tases. it is the lust time they<lb/>
are managi . iwn money. The<lb/>
most important factor I can stress is<lb/>
the importance ol keeping accurate<lb/>
records so problems such as NSFs<lb/>
Non-Sufficient funds or bounced<lb/>
checks and trouble with the Credit<lb/>
Bureau do nut occui<lb/>
When looking for a hank to open<lb/>
.m account, keep Mas in mind<lb/>
bant . ' youi bu<lb/>
so don t go insidi their building un-<lb/>
informed One suggestion emphati<lb/>
ulted bank<lb/>
it-i resenl<lb/>
w 11! i<lb/>
So;<lb/>
include the following:<lb/>
? Is there a flat month<lb/>
the checking account?<lb/>
? Is there a limit on the number<lb/>
of checks written monthly?<lb/>
? Does the u count -1 me with an<lb/>
ATM card?<lb/>
?If so. are the bank's ATM ma-<lb/>
 hines lose to campus?<lb/>
? Is there a<lb/>
call for 2 houi u ount information?<lb/>
? Is over-draft, lilable<lb/>
on the account?<lb/>
Out-of state students who open a<lb/>
local checking account may n<lb/>
b more informed than their ii<lb/>
terparts. Al :<lb/>
Bank, for tiistan an out ot<lb/>
5tat check is processed into a<lb/>
?Mi ac i<lb/>
1 limp ??: the Bucket" is<lb/>
what it claims to be: a very<lb/>
tiny drop in the great scream-<lb/>
ing bucket of American media<lb/>
opinion. Take it as you will.<lb/>
Mark Brett<lb/>
Lifestyle Editor<lb/>
1 like birthdays. The idea of<lb/>
commemorating the anniversary<lb/>
ol someone's birth puts our lives<lb/>
in some kind of historical context<lb/>
and gives us a sense of perspec-<lb/>
tive.<lb/>
In that vein. 1 like to see if<lb/>
my friends share birthdays with<lb/>
famous people. For instance, my<lb/>
mother was horn on the same day<lb/>
as Ronald Reagan, while my grl-<lb/>
friend shares historical space with<lb/>
actor Anthony Hopkins and Sir<lb/>
William Cull (the Victorian-era<lb/>
physician who many people think<lb/>
was secretly Jack the Ripper).<lb/>
Most of my friends have the same<lb/>
birthday as somebody famous.<lb/>
Not me. Not a single interest-<lb/>
ing person who ever did anything<lb/>
even remotely cool was born the<lb/>
same day as me. When I was<lb/>
younger, this kind of ticked me<lb/>
off. I'm a Leo. for Cod's sake!<lb/>
We're supposed to be leaders of<lb/>
men. real take-charge types. But<lb/>
nobody cool was ever born on<lb/>
Auk.  So much for astrology.<lb/>
But as 1 got older. I did a little<lb/>
digging and discovered some-<lb/>
thing. Though nobody interesting<lb/>
was ever born on my birthday,<lb/>
some pretty interesting stuff did<lb/>
happen. I; fact 1 found that 1 was<lb/>
born on the anniversary of some<lb/>
of the most heinous events in<lb/>
modern American history.<lb/>
On Aug. 9, 1945, America<lb/>
dropped the second atomic bomb<lb/>
on Nagasaki. Japan. The<lb/>
Hiroshima bomb of three days<lb/>
earlier had been sufficient to send<lb/>
Japan scurrying to the negotiation<lb/>
table. In fact, Japan's leaders were<lb/>
about to surrender uncondition-<lb/>
ally when the Nagasaki bomb<lb/>
dropped. We knew the incredible<lb/>
destruction the bomb was capable<lb/>
of. hut we dropped it anyway. For<lb/>
nvincingly good reason.<lb/>
It that's not enough to tum<lb/>
your stomach, on Aug. 9. 1969,<lb/>
the Manson Family committed the<lb/>
infamous Sharon Tate murders. In<lb/>
the course "t this crime, a hahv<lb/>
was lipped from its mother's<lb/>
womb in one ol the most gro-<lb/>
tesque displays ot violence in the<lb/>
last .i' I years<lb/>
i n a lighter note. Richard<lb/>
Nixon resigned from the Presi-<lb/>
on Vug 9. 1974. The scan<lb/>
n wilding this action ruined<lb/>
ins' faith in our po<lb/>
litical system M own father<lb/>
' oted since<lb/>
now. .in ug 9.<lb/>
Sec DROP page 30<lb/>
<pb facs="00058552_0022"/><lb/>
t.<lb/>
.<lb/>
mrwrn<lb/>
22<lb/>
Tuesday, Ausust 22, 1995<lb/>
The East Carolinian<lb/>
Dance the night away<lb/>
Mark Brett<lb/>
Lifestyle Editor<lb/>
So, it's Saturday night and<lb/>
you've got nothing to do. You could<lb/>
spend the evening getting some<lb/>
work done or playing a little<lb/>
Parcheesi with your pals. Or, you<lb/>
could join the majority of the ECU<lb/>
campus in downtown Greenville.<lb/>
Conveniently located within<lb/>
easy walking distance from campus,<lb/>
downtown is the legendary place<lb/>
that earned ECU its "party school-<lb/>
reputation. Most of the town's bars<lb/>
are there, and nearly all of the fa-<lb/>
vorite student hangouts.<lb/>
What follows is an overview of<lb/>
the downtown experience. All estab-<lb/>
lishments listed welcome everyone<lb/>
18 and over, but remember to bring<lb/>
an ID; downtown bouncers don't like<lb/>
underage drinkers. This piece might<lb/>
seem to be for new students only,<lb/>
but even downtown veterans might<lb/>
want to keep reading. A few changes<lb/>
have occurred over the summer that<lb/>
may affect your weekends in the year<lb/>
to come.<lb/>
The Attic: The biggest venue<lb/>
for live music in town. Ten years ago,<lb/>
REM hit the Attic stage on a regu-<lb/>
lar basis. Last year it was Hootie and<lb/>
the Blowfish and Dave Matthews.<lb/>
Not every band you'll see here will<lb/>
become huge national stars, but you<lb/>
might enjoy them anyway.<lb/>
Peasant's Cafe: Every college<lb/>
town has its Deadheads, and this is<lb/>
where ours hang out. If you're<lb/>
granola-crunchy, wear tie-dies and<lb/>
are into Native American outer wear,<lb/>
this is the place for you. Peasant's<lb/>
features live music and sometimes<lb/>
strays from its low-key regulars to<lb/>
bring in cool weirdos like the King<lb/>
Missile, who are scheduled to hit the<lb/>
Peasant's stage in October.<lb/>
O'Rockefeller's: RIP. That's<lb/>
right, Greenville's home of alterna-<lb/>
tive music has died an untimely<lb/>
death. Rumors abound as to what's<lb/>
replacing it, but the inside word<lb/>
is that O'Rock's will soon be a<lb/>
dance club.<lb/>
Sports PadSplash<lb/>
Sharkey's: Three, three, three<lb/>
bars in one! Sports Pad is<lb/>
your basic pool room. Splash<lb/>
boasts seats and the occasional<lb/>
live music performance in one<lb/>
room, and pool tables as far as<lb/>
the eye can see in the other.<lb/>
Sharkey's features yet still more<lb/>
pool tables and, of course, a bar.<lb/>
The Elbo: For reasons known<lb/>
only to the gods, the Elbo is where<lb/>
most partying ECU freshmen hang<lb/>
out. Generally, the Elbo plays Top<lb/>
40 dance music. Tuesday night is<lb/>
freshman nifent; Thursday night is<lb/>
rave night. It's known as "a good<lb/>
place to meet people<lb/>
Kelly's: RIP. Yes, Kelly's has<lb/>
also gone the way of all things. In<lb/>
its place will be two new establish-<lb/>
ments: The Underwater Raw Bar<lb/>
and Graffiti's.<lb/>
Wrong Way Corrigan's: A<lb/>
blues-rock bar with comfortable<lb/>
booths, Corrigan's caters to a<lb/>
slightly older crowd than many of<lb/>
the downtown clubs.<lb/>
The Cellar: Located beneath<lb/>
the Attic, the Cellar offers three<lb/>
rooms with three different types of<lb/>
music. One room is country, another<lb/>
dance and the third, rock. The at-<lb/>
mosphere is like the Elbo, but with<lb/>
a twist (and fewer underagers).<lb/>
Happy's Pool Room: The name<lb/>
says it all. A great place to soak in<lb/>
some "local color<lb/>
The Percolator Coffeehouse:<lb/>
Greenville's very own hip coffee joint<lb/>
rolls on this fall. The Percolator of-<lb/>
fers an alternative to the beer-swill-<lb/>
ing may-<lb/>
hem of the other<lb/>
down-<lb/>
town<lb/>
bars.<lb/>
Its<lb/>
spite the frightening amounts<lb/>
of caffeine being consumed by the<lb/>
patrons. On a typical trip to the Per-<lb/>
colator you'll meet poets, professors,<lb/>
punks, frat boys. Deadheads, artists,<lb/>
intellectuals and just plain folks who<lb/>
like a good cup of Java.<lb/>
Alfredo'sAlfredo's II:<lb/>
Alfredo's is a tiny little pizza joint<lb/>
with a really good juke box. You can<lb/>
barely get in the door after 2 a.m.<lb/>
Alfredo's II, next door, is a small bar<lb/>
that attracts an odd assortment of<lb/>
students. It's usually packed to ca-<lb/>
pacity.<lb/>
BW3: A buffalo wings restau-<lb/>
rant that doubles as a bar at night,<lb/>
BW3 offers comfortable seats and a<lb/>
trivia game that can be played on<lb/>
any of the TV sets scattered around<lb/>
the room.<lb/>
Well, that's about it for the<lb/>
downtown bar scene. Expect to<lb/>
come home from most of these<lb/>
places tired, sweaty and reeking of<lb/>
cigarrette smoke. If that's your cup<lb/>
of tea, pick a likely environment and<lb/>
dive in. If not  there's always<lb/>
Parcheesi.<lb/>
Klein accused of kiddie porn<lb/>
NEW YORK (AP) - Denounced by<lb/>
some child welfare experts as kiddie<lb/>
porn, Calvin Klein's latest jeans ads<lb/>
seem to be about everything but jeans.<lb/>
Taken by Steven Meisel, the pho-<lb/>
tographer who shot Madonna's "Sex<lb/>
the photos feature pubescent boys and<lb/>
girls, some of them posing with a "Yo,<lb/>
come hither look.<lb/>
One boy isn't wearing jeans at all,<lb/>
just underpants and a vest In other<lb/>
cases, underwear peeks suggestively<lb/>
from beneath jeans.<lb/>
Although the ads are on television<lb/>
and in magazines, their appearance on<lb/>
150 New Yoik City buses ignited de-<lb/>
bate about sex, youth and gender roles.<lb/>
The Daily News quoted four child<lb/>
welfare experts Friday condemning the<lb/>
ads as something akin to soft-core por-<lb/>
nography.<lb/>
"He really scraped the bottom of<lb/>
the barrel rape prevention specialist<lb/>
Iona Siegel told The Associated Press.<lb/>
"He's made kids sex objects and<lb/>
put their pictures in a place where other<lb/>
kids will see them, with the crotches<lb/>
and belly buttons and hair and teeth<lb/>
and those very sexy expressions<lb/>
Such controversy seems to be<lb/>
Qah-in Klein's M.O.<lb/>
Earlier ads featured a welklevel-<lb/>
oped Marky Mark, the rapper, in briefs,<lb/>
and the not-so-developed Kate Moss in<lb/>
provocative poses, including naked with<lb/>
a large dog. Then there's Brooke<lb/>
Shields, who will always be remembered<lb/>
as the 15-year-old of "Nothing comes<lb/>
between me and my Calvins<lb/>
In New York, some people scrawled<lb/>
"FEED ME" on posters featuring Moss'<lb/>
waiflike body. And this week a group of<lb/>
San Franciscans hung posters with the<lb/>
words "Emaciation Stinks" printed over<lb/>
a nude photo of her.<lb/>
Klein's office issued a statement<lb/>
that claimed the latest jeans ads were<lb/>
inspired by "the strength of personal-<lb/>
ity and self-knowledge of young people<lb/>
today What these people show is that<lb/>
they know how to act, how to control a<lb/>
situation and how to respond in their<lb/>
own way<lb/>
The models were described as<lb/>
"regular people not professional mod-<lb/>
els, but Klein's company would not give<lb/>
their ages.<lb/>
In response to the uproar, NYC<lb/>
Transit said the ads will be reviewed.<lb/>
But Transit spokesman Tito Davila<lb/>
added that court rulings have given tran-<lb/>
sit system advertising First Amendment<lb/>
protection.<lb/>
He said the ads were approved by<lb/>
a private agency, which is obliged to<lb/>
follow guidelines barring "false, mislead-<lb/>
ing or deceptive advertising, and obscen-<lb/>
ity as defined by New York law (Trans-<lb/>
lation: Just about anything goes.)<lb/>
FREE PREGNANCY TE&amp;T<lb/>
while you wajj<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/>
Hours:<lb/>
757-0003 Moigriday<lb/>
STU DE NT I I TE I A RY ARTS MAGAZINE<lb/>
Rebel<lb/>
Pick us up annually in the Spring to view a showcase of<lb/>
campus literary and artistic creations.<lb/>
EAST C A R O I I N A UNIVERSITY<lb/>
MEDIA<lb/>
FOR ADOmONAl INFORMATION, (Ml32B-6009<lb/>
STUDENT<lb/>
Coming soon for your<lb/>
edification and amusement:<lb/>
Tuesday, August 22<lb/>
New Year's Party<lb/>
at Mendenhall<lb/>
Cravin' Melon<lb/>
at the Attic<lb/>
(roots rock)<lb/>
Big Stoner Creek<lb/>
at Peasant's Cafe<lb/>
Wednesday, August 23<lb/>
Noon Day Tunes:<lb/>
Victor Hudson<lb/>
outside Mendenhall<lb/>
Comedy Zone:<lb/>
The Fat Doctor<lb/>
at the Attic<lb/>
Moe<lb/>
at Peasant's Cafe<lb/>
Entertainers<lb/>
at the Hilton<lb/>
(beach music)<lb/>
Thursday, August 24<lb/>
Dillon Fence<lb/>
at the Attic<lb/>
(roots rock)<lb/>
Agents of Good Roots<lb/>
at Peasant's Cafe<lb/>
Panama Steel Band<lb/>
in the Hilton<lb/>
Movie:<lb/>
Legends of the Fall<lb/>
at Hendrix Theatre<lb/>
in Mendenhall<lb/>
Friday, August 25<lb/>
Chairmen of the Board<lb/>
at the Attic<lb/>
(beach music)<lb/>
Ominous Seapods<lb/>
at Peasant's Cafe<lb/>
Movie:<lb/>
Legends of the Fall<lb/>
at Hendrix Theatre<lb/>
in Mendenhall<lb/>
Saturday, August 26<lb/>
H.O.R.D.E. Festival featuring:<lb/>
Blues Traveler<lb/>
The Black Crowes<lb/>
Ziggy Marley<lb/>
and the Melody Makers<lb/>
at Walnut Creek Amphitheatre<lb/>
in Raleigh<lb/>
Breakfast Club<lb/>
at the Attic<lb/>
('80s retro)<lb/>
Knocked Down Smilin'<lb/>
at Peasant's Cafe<lb/>
Movie:<lb/>
Legends of the Fall<lb/>
at Hendrix Theatre<lb/>
in Mendenhall<lb/>
Sunday, August 27<lb/>
Jimmy V Celebrity Golf<lb/>
Classic Benefit<lb/>
Hootie &amp; the Blowfish<lb/>
Edwin McCain<lb/>
at Walnut Creek Amphitheatre<lb/>
in Raleigh<lb/>
SEND US INFO!<lb/>
Do you have an upcoming event<lb/>
that you'd like listed in our<lb/>
Coming Attractions column? If<lb/>
so, please send us information (a<lb/>
schedule would be nice) at<lb/>
Coming Attractions<lb/>
The East Carolinian<lb/>
East Carolina University<lb/>
Student Publications Bldg.<lb/>
Greenville, NC 27858<lb/>
PROCTOR BARBER SHOP<lb/>
Men's Hairstyling<lb/>
222-D Cotanche St<lb/>
758-3802<lb/>
Clipper &amp; Scissor<lb/>
fxx? $7.00<lb/>
Sl gl Comer of 3rd &amp;<lb/>
JcWaNcWst.<lb/>
WS5<lb/>
Cotanche<lb/>
Ron Nichols<lb/>
If It Dosen't Say<lb/>
Jiffy Lube - It Just<lb/>
Isn't Jiffy Lube<lb/>
Every 3000 Miles<lb/>
SERVING YOUR<lb/>
NEIGHBORHOOD<lb/>
FOR OVER<lb/>
8YEARS<lb/>
GREENVILLE ? 126 S.E. GREENVILLE BLVD.<lb/>
756-2579 READY IN MINUTES ?<lb/>
NO APPOINTMENTS<lb/>
r$T9T.99"i<lb/>
(most cars)<lb/>
Complete<lb/>
Oil<lb/>
Lube And<lb/>
Fluid<lb/>
Service<lb/>
With Coupon Only ? Not<lb/>
Good With Any Gcher Offer ?<lb/>
Bottled &amp; Synthetic Oil Extra<lb/>
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m m<lb/>
<pb facs="00058552_0023"/><lb/>
" :?-<lb/>
,wmm?mm.mm-<lb/>
77e fast Carolinian<lb/>
Tuesday, Ausust 22, 1995<lb/>
23<lb/>
Summer review 1995<lb/>
Brandon Wadded<lb/>
AMsh tant Ufestyle Editor<lb/>
Aimlessly walking around<lb/>
campus on rst day back to<lb/>
classes? Today most of us are<lb/>
completely absorbed in trying to<lb/>
figure out the perfect fall class<lb/>
schedule; some students compla-<lb/>
cently returning to the Emerald<lb/>
City after a summer hiatus may<lb/>
wonder about what memorable<lb/>
events they missed.<lb/>
It was summer, therefore<lb/>
only a fraction of the student<lb/>
body was even here. The live<lb/>
music scene was an overwhelm-<lb/>
ing hit; there was something for<lb/>
everyone. Staccato's continued<lb/>
its jazz gigs twice a month, pre-<lb/>
senting the ECU Faculty Jazz<lb/>
Band. They've has been so suc-<lb/>
cessful that Staccato's requested<lb/>
the band to play every Thursday<lb/>
night this fail instead of every<lb/>
other Thursday night<lb/>
Local businessmen Lee<lb/>
Crumpton and Paul Edwards pre-<lb/>
sented the Home Grown Music<lb/>
Festival during the second week-<lb/>
end in June. The event drew a<lb/>
huge crowd despite that fact that<lb/>
so few students attended ECU's<lb/>
first summer session. The Festi-<lb/>
val consisted of nine bands play-<lb/>
ing simultaneously at the Attic<lb/>
and Peasant's both weekend<lb/>
nights. With the closing of<lb/>
0 Rock's, these two nightclubs<lb/>
continue to be the only places<lb/>
to see live music in the down-<lb/>
town area.<lb/>
Last month The Texas Two<lb/>
Step hosted a hardcore hoedown<lb/>
to benefit PICASO (Pitt County<lb/>
AIDS Service Organization). Though<lb/>
the underground music benefit had<lb/>
plenty of good intentions, this day-<lb/>
long music event simply didn't get off<lb/>
the ground due to lack of support<lb/>
from hardcore music enthusiasts.<lb/>
North Carolina's own Edwin<lb/>
McCain Band soothed a savage crowd<lb/>
at the Attic If local music history tells<lb/>
us anything, we've probably seen the<lb/>
last of Edwin McCain as they and their<lb/>
rootsy sound are likely play much<lb/>
larger venues in the near future. The<lb/>
band recorded its full length major<lb/>
Pie Photo<lb/>
On the Fourth of July, the Greenville nightlife was alive with fire<lb/>
in the sky instead of the rowdy whoops of downtown resellers.<lb/>
label debut in Los Angeles over the<lb/>
summer, which included the song<lb/>
"Solitude" (recorded with Darius<lb/>
Rucker of Hootie &amp; the Blowfish).<lb/>
Should Edwin McCain have half the<lb/>
success of Rucker's band, the next<lb/>
time we'll see the Edwin McCain Band<lb/>
will be at Walnut Creek.<lb/>
Speaking of the Creek, the Ra-<lb/>
leigh amphitheater's summer sched-<lb/>
ule included acts such as Melissa<lb/>
Etheridge, Live, Phish, Elton John,<lb/>
Dave Matthews Band, Hootie &amp; the<lb/>
Blowfish and the Lollapalooza tour.<lb/>
Many ECU students were seen pass-<lb/>
ing each other back and forth on<lb/>
Highway 264 as a flock of cars left<lb/>
Greenville for Raleigh every night<lb/>
Walnut Creek presented a show.<lb/>
And, of course, Greenville put on<lb/>
its annual Fourth of July fireworks<lb/>
display to a thrilled audience at the<lb/>
Town Commons.<lb/>
The best part of the summer<lb/>
scene is the fact that it's over. Now<lb/>
that everyone is back, live music<lb/>
should quickly improve with student<lb/>
support<lb/>
Bloody new novel satisfies<lb/>
Ronda Cranford<lb/>
Staff Writer<lb/>
In the mood for a grisly tale?<lb/>
Feel like curling up with an intelli-<lb/>
gent, seductive old world serial<lb/>
killer? You're in luck. Andrei<lb/>
Codrescu's The Blood Countess is<lb/>
just what you need.<lb/>
Codrescu has done a wonderful<lb/>
job of crafting a sympathetic char-<lb/>
acter out of Countess Elizabeth<lb/>
Bathory, a Hungarian noblewoman<lb/>
who allegedly murdered young girls<lb/>
and bathed in their blood as a rem-<lb/>
edy for aging. What else was a girl<lb/>
to do in those dark days before Estee<lb/>
Lauder? She also had powerful<lb/>
friends, one of whom was an alche-<lb/>
mist devoted to the cause of mak-<lb/>
ing her live forever. Failing that, he<lb/>
endeavors to bring her back from<lb/>
the dead in present times.<lb/>
The story unfolds as Elizabeth's<lb/>
descendant. Drake Bathory-<lb/>
Kereshtur, confesses his sins and the<lb/>
story behind them to a judge in New<lb/>
York. Drake, who fled from Hungary<lb/>
to escape the communists, was sent<lb/>
back to his native land to report on<lb/>
life there after the fall of commu<lb/>
nism.<lb/>
Because of his<lb/>
royal blood, he is<lb/>
sought out as a pos-<lb/>
sible future king. In<lb/>
spite of not wanting<lb/>
to be drawn into the<lb/>
politics of his home-<lb/>
land, he gets swept<lb/>
up in the political<lb/>
drama taking place<lb/>
there. He also plays a<lb/>
critical role in resur-<lb/>
recting his famous<lb/>
and bloodthirsty an-<lb/>
cestor.<lb/>
Drake seems to<lb/>
be drawn in by fate.<lb/>
He is eventually ma-<lb/>
nipulated to commit a<lb/>
terrible crime, and<lb/>
while we are deeply<lb/>
disappointed in him<lb/>
it's hard to lose faith<lb/>
in his essential goodness. After all,<lb/>
he does confess to the crime when<lb/>
he could have easily gotten away<lb/>
with it Good and evil characters are<lb/>
hard to label in this book.<lb/>
Between the chapters dealing<lb/>
with Drake's confession, Codrescu-<lb/>
paints a picture of the life of Eliza<lb/>
b e t h<lb/>
Bathory be-<lb/>
ginning at<lb/>
the age of<lb/>
nine, when a<lb/>
peasant up<lb/>
rising forced<lb/>
her and her<lb/>
sisters to<lb/>
flee their<lb/>
castle and<lb/>
hide in the<lb/>
w o o d s'<lb/>
nearby<lb/>
Elizabeth<lb/>
wanders<lb/>
away from4<lb/>
the group<lb/>
and so is<lb/>
spared when<lb/>
her sisters<lb/>
are found by<lb/>
the rebel<lb/>
peasants.<lb/>
She watches as they are raped<lb/>
and killed. We watch as she grows<lb/>
up in a world full of political in-<lb/>
See BLOOD page 29<lb/>
She watches as<lb/>
her sisters are<lb/>
raped and killed.<lb/>
We watch as she<lb/>
grows up in a<lb/>
world of political<lb/>
intrigue, where<lb/>
the advent of<lb/>
Christianity has<lb/>
undermined the<lb/>
power of women.<lb/>
Japan offers action alternative<lb/>
Dale Williamson<lb/>
Staff Writer<lb/>
There is-light beyond the cin-<lb/>
ematic horizon. To much delight,<lb/>
Japanimation has become very<lb/>
popular in America recently. As a<lb/>
result, Japanese animated films are<lb/>
becoming more and more accessible<lb/>
here in the states, and they are of-<lb/>
fering thirsty Americans an alter-<lb/>
native to much of the dry-rotted<lb/>
fluff Hollywood is dishing out.<lb/>
One recent U.S. release in the<lb/>
wonderful world of Japanimation is<lb/>
Ninja Scroll, a tasty treat you can<lb/>
only find on video. Centering on<lb/>
the classic tale of good versus evil<lb/>
and backed by fluid animation, this<lb/>
film should find a secure home with<lb/>
American audiences.<lb/>
The story revolves around a<lb/>
young Ninja-for-hire named Jubei<lb/>
"in'iiqif<lb/>
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Pick up your free sample at ECU Student Store.<lb/>
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who is forced to team up with an<lb/>
aged, Yoda-like Ninja master in an<lb/>
effort to stop the Devils of Kimone<lb/>
from overtaking the established<lb/>
clans of Japan. Along the way, these<lb/>
two are joined by Kagero, a beauti-<lb/>
ful woman warrior who suffers from<lb/>
a rather frustrating condition: any-<lb/>
one who makes love to her dies. As<lb/>
one character states, "She is per-<lb/>
fect in this amoral world<lb/>
As opposed to much of the dis-<lb/>
jointed movies out this summer,<lb/>
this story is solid, focused and well-<lb/>
paced. Writerdirector Yoshiaki<lb/>
Kawajiri manages to fill his film<lb/>
with many dazzling action se-<lb/>
quences without sacrificing his<lb/>
characters. Jubei is a reluctant hero<lb/>
with a haunted past, but he is also<lb/>
someone who is sympathetic<lb/>
enough to see the good inherent<lb/>
in Kagero.<lb/>
Suffering from a desire to love<lb/>
but being unable to do so. Kagero<lb/>
exudes the strength and stubborn-<lb/>
ness of a human being unwilling to<lb/>
reveal her true emotions. In one of<lb/>
the more disturbing scenes, Kagero<lb/>
is nearly raped by a demon until<lb/>
Jubei rescues her. However, the ;<lb/>
woman warrior refuses to break<lb/>
down in tears until her rescuer<lb/>
leaves her alone. To reveal such<lb/>
emotions would only reveal her<lb/>
own weakness, and that is a weak-<lb/>
ness she has trained to silence.<lb/>
Both Jubei and Kagero are<lb/>
stubborn characters, but the sexual<lb/>
tension existing between the two<lb/>
is intense. When Kagero discovers<lb/>
that the only way to stop a poison<lb/>
in Jubei's blood is for her to make<lb/>
love to him, Kawajiri creates one<lb/>
of the most romantic moments in<lb/>
recent cinematic history.<lb/>
See NINJA page 28<lb/>
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<pb facs="00058552_0024"/><lb/>
r<lb/>
24<lb/>
Tuesday, Ausust 22,1995<lb/>
The East Carolinian<lb/>
Lollapalooza f95 surpasses prior outings<lb/>
Mark Brett<lb/>
Lifestyle Editor<lb/>
I I've been in the underground<lb/>
too long.<lb/>
. I had this revelation while walk-<lb/>
ing the promenade at Walnut Creek<lb/>
Amphitheatre during this year's<lb/>
Lollapalooza Festival. The sun was<lb/>
beating down hard and I was sur-<lb/>
rounded by a sea of people who sud-<lb/>
denly seemed very, very young.<lb/>
- I saw guys dressed like the Crow<lb/>
and girls in Tank Girl combat gear.<lb/>
I,saw women wearing bikinis with<lb/>
hiking boots and men in dresses.<lb/>
Black kids, white kids, Asian kids,<lb/>
couples younger than me with in-<lb/>
fants strapped to their backs, Indian-<lb/>
style. Goths, skins, punks, preps,<lb/>
Hell's Angels, frat boys, Deadheads,<lb/>
burn-outs and ravers. One million<lb/>
tow-headed Bobby Bradys out to<lb/>
enjoy a little subversive youth cul-<lb/>
ature.<lb/>
None of it fazed me.<lb/>
I've seen it all before. Even the<lb/>
Ifllew youth culture fad of dressing<lb/>
H<lb/>
?to look like you're 14 doesn't seem<lb/>
very extreme compared to some of<lb/>
Jfee excesses I've been privy to. So<lb/>
Uhen I found myself immersed in<lb/>
"this sea of people trying to be shock-<lb/>
ing, I found myself feeling  well,<lb/>
t$ise somehow. I felt like some kind<lb/>
jjjf Zen master, so at home with ab-<lb/>
surdity that I just found it all amus-<lb/>
rZ Satisfied that the youth culture<lb/>
"Was getting along fine without me,<lb/>
I settled in to enjoy the show.<lb/>
?? The action started ac a little af-<lb/>
Sfcer 2 p.m. with ska kings the Mighty<lb/>
Mighty Bosstones. Considering the<lb/>
popularity of ska in what's left of<lb/>
;tte underground, it's way past time<lb/>
"Collapalooza featured a little<lb/>
skankin' music in its line-up.<lb/>
l Ska is an odd mix of reggae, big<lb/>
3&amp;nd and punk styles, and the<lb/>
Bosstones are generally hailed as<lb/>
.the music's goodwill ambassadors.<lb/>
t They put on a good show at Wal-<lb/>
mit Creek, keeping the crowd mov-<lb/>
ing with a barrage of<lb/>
high-energy tunes.<lb/>
From my vantage<lb/>
point on the hill, I<lb/>
could tell that about<lb/>
half the audience<lb/>
had no idea who<lb/>
these guys were. But<lb/>
by the third song,<lb/>
most of those people<lb/>
had picked up the<lb/>
beat. That's impres-<lb/>
sive crowd control,<lb/>
considering that the<lb/>
Bosstones generally<lb/>
play nightclubs the<lb/>
size of the Attic.<lb/>
Another club<lb/>
band making the<lb/>
arena transition was<lb/>
Jesus Lizard. Their<lb/>
heavy, syrupy style<lb/>
wasn't everyone's<lb/>
cup of tea, but the<lb/>
set was well-played<lb/>
and, overall, impres-<lb/>
sive.<lb/>
Next up was<lb/>
Moby, a techno-rave<lb/>
act who replaced<lb/>
Elastica, who had in<lb/>
turn replaced the<lb/>
pregnant Sinead<lb/>
O'Connor. Moby's<lb/>
set was surprisingly<lb/>
entertaining, considering the repeti-<lb/>
tive nature of rave music. Moby<lb/>
made the obligatory attacks on Jesse<lb/>
Helms that have become a<lb/>
Lollapalooza standard, but he ham-<lb/>
mered on it for so long that it be-<lb/>
came tedious. When he lit into a<lb/>
cover of "Sweet Home Alabama I<lb/>
fled to the second stage.<lb/>
Once there, I caught one of the<lb/>
day's highlights, the Mike Watt set.<lb/>
Formerly of underground legends<lb/>
Firehose, Watt played his jazz-tinged<lb/>
rock with the confidence of a vet-<lb/>
eran.<lb/>
Next on the main stage was<lb/>
Beck, whose set was not nearly so<lb/>
lethargic as I expected. The extra<lb/>
energy paid off; Beck won over a lot<lb/>
of the crowd.<lb/>
BOOK<lb/>
AREHOUSEI<lb/>
jms e UmmU (V<lb/>
QfMfrnH) NC 27IM<lb/>
(MJSW7W<lb/>
i0-90<lb/>
OFF<lb/>
?<lb/>
Photo Courtesy of Mercury Records<lb/>
Ska music ambassadors The Mighty Mighty Bosstones opened a<lb/>
rousing afternoon of performances at Walnut Creek Amphitheatre.<lb/>
Even more lethargic than Beck,<lb/>
surprisingly, was Pavement. Nor-<lb/>
mally a dynamic live band, Pavement<lb/>
lulled the crowd on the hill into a<lb/>
myopic stupor with a set that was<lb/>
not only slow but sloppy. That said,<lb/>
I must add that I really enjoyed the<lb/>
Pavement set After a hot afternoon<lb/>
filled with high-energy sets, we<lb/>
needed a break, a chance to lie back<lb/>
and rest up for the rest of the<lb/>
evening.<lb/>
It's a good thing we had that<lb/>
break, too, because Cypress Hill as-<lb/>
saulted the stage next. Their set was<lb/>
bouncy, they made Walnut Creek se-<lb/>
curity really nervous and the crowd<lb/>
came to their feet. After they rolled<lb/>
a giant bong on stage, I kind of got<lb/>
the idea that these guys might like<lb/>
1<lb/>
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e<lb/>
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to smoke a little marijuana every<lb/>
once in a while.<lb/>
Next up was the most contro-<lb/>
versial act on the tour, Hole. Say<lb/>
what you will about Courtney Love's<lb/>
personal life, or her bratty rock star<lb/>
antics. That has no bearing on the<lb/>
fact that Hole is a damn good rock<lb/>
and roll band, and they put on a<lb/>
good show at Walnut Creek.<lb/>
There were no big surprises in<lb/>
the set; Hole played a big block of<lb/>
stuff from Live Through This and<lb/>
played it well. There were no daz-<lb/>
zling solos or enlightening varia-<lb/>
tions on the songs, but Hole's a<lb/>
punk band. They played up to their<lb/>
ability, and that's all I really ex-<lb/>
See LOLLA page 29<lb/>
Mon - Sot 11-7<lb/>
Sun 1-6<lb/>
We Carry:<lb/>
Clothes<lb/>
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??PBB<lb/>
<pb facs="00058552_0025"/><lb/>
The East Carolinian<lb/>
Tuesday, Ausust 22,1995<lb/>
25<lb/>
Sandra Bullock gets caught in a complex Net<lb/>
Ike Shibley<lb/>
Senior Writer<lb/>
ECU grad Sandra Bullock won<lb/>
audiences' hearts this spring with<lb/>
her performance in While You Were<lb/>
Sleeping. She was recently the sub-<lb/>
ject of a Hard Copy story, has been<lb/>
on the covers of many magazines,<lb/>
and now has a brand new movie in<lb/>
theaters called The Net.<lb/>
Cox Floral Service, Inc.<lb/>
Welcomes ECU Students &amp; Personnel<lb/>
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Can Send Your Flowers all over the<lb/>
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In The Net Bullock portrays<lb/>
Angela Bennett, an introverted<lb/>
computer systems analyst who un-<lb/>
knowingly stumbles across a top<lb/>
secret computer disc that has the<lb/>
capability of accessing almost any-<lb/>
computer system in the world.<lb/>
As The Net opens, a high rank-<lb/>
ing White House Cabinet member<lb/>
commits suicide. It turns out that<lb/>
the politician had been informed<lb/>
that he had tested positive for HIV.<lb/>
The information the politician re-<lb/>
ceived was incorrect, however. The<lb/>
data in the hospital had been<lb/>
changed because someone knew<lb/>
the outcome if the data were al-<lb/>
tered.<lb/>
Angela has a copy of the disc<lb/>
mailed to her by a hacker friend.<lb/>
Her friend's single-engine plane<lb/>
crashes before he can ever talk to<lb/>
Angela, thus leaving Angela in the<lb/>
dark about the peril she may face.<lb/>
BOB BABBOUB<lb/>
HONDA<lb/>
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Hew in<lb/>
Hondas<lb/>
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We Make All Options Available<lb/>
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Students &amp;<lb/>
Faculty<lb/>
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to receive 10 Off<lb/>
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your Hondo<lb/>
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September at<lb/>
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Monday<lb/>
Monday Night Football! (starts Sept. 11)<lb/>
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snacks each week. grab your friends and bring<lb/>
your four man team to play ntn's qb-1 for the<lb/>
end of the season grand prize of 500.00 cash<lb/>
plus the 10.00 whkly prize. you can also<lb/>
register each monday for the carolina panther<lb/>
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tions!)<lb/>
1.00 bottle beers and hi-balland many other<lb/>
specials too!<lb/>
Tuesday<lb/>
Back by Popular Demand!<lb/>
The Kdge Club Returns with ECU's<lb/>
best Hi Knefgy dance night! The best<lb/>
in the house euro techno, tribal and<lb/>
Trash Disco. '?<lb/>
1 Coors Light Draft Beer all night!<lb/>
Try the all new E-phoria shot for 1.00!<lb/>
-plus botilt beer and hi-ball specials too!<lb/>
Wednesday<lb/>
Classics Night<lb/>
ECU'S favorite Fun Night for over 20 years!<lb/>
the best chart topping hits from the 70's &amp;<lb/>
80's plus all your currant favorites tool<lb/>
1 Coors Light Draft Beer all night!<lb/>
1.25 Bottle Beers<lb/>
2.50 Teas<lb/>
&amp; Five 75 shot flavors just for you!<lb/>
September Special Events!<lb/>
Sept. 7th fall BIKINI contest<lb/>
Sept. 28th Sorority pledge of the year<lb/>
Sept. 30th RAVE until dawn!<lb/>
Thursday<lb/>
Ladies'Night<lb/>
Ladies' in FREE all night with all your<lb/>
favorite drinks on special.<lb/>
2.50 All 16oz. frozen cocktails<lb/>
3.50 Frozen Pitchers of Margaritas<lb/>
1.25 16oz. Sex on the beach<lb/>
1.50 Ice Cream Shots<lb/>
Light draft and bottle beer specials too.<lb/>
Guys bring your ECU I.D. &amp; get in for<lb/>
1.00!<lb/>
Friday<lb/>
Rush Hour FREE Admission<lb/>
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til' 10:30pm, and 1.00 off til' 11pm<lb/>
every Friday Night! We have a dif-<lb/>
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weekend off with the best in 70's, 80's<lb/>
and 90's dance music!<lb/>
3.00 Pitchers of Bud Light<lb/>
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2.50 Teas &amp; Sex on the beach<lb/>
1.00 E-PHORIA<lb/>
1.50 Ice Cream Shots<lb/>
Saturday<lb/>
Saturday Night Fever<lb/>
All the dance favorites from the<lb/>
70's, 80's and 90's all night long!<lb/>
1.50 16oz. Coors Light<lb/>
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1.50 Buttery Nipple &amp; ice cream<lb/>
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draft Beer Specials plus Lots of prizes<lb/>
everySat. Night!<lb/>
Angela only slowly awakens to the<lb/>
danger she is in. After a foiled at-<lb/>
tempt on her life, Angela's records<lb/>
are completely erased so that in the<lb/>
eye.s of the state and country, she<lb/>
no longer exists.<lb/>
Angela elicits the aid of a<lb/>
former boyfriend (Dennis Miller in<lb/>
a pleasantly subdued role) upon re-<lb/>
alizing the hopelessness of her situ-<lb/>
ation. Angela spends the rest of the<lb/>
film trying to elude the police while<lb/>
trying to stop the owners of the<lb/>
disc from killing her.<lb/>
The Net is not nearly the show-<lb/>
case for Bullock that While You<lb/>
Were Sleeping was but it still al-<lb/>
lows her to shine. Bullock in front<lb/>
of a computer screen can seem as<lb/>
captivating, even more so, than the<lb/>
overblown chase scenes in the film.<lb/>
Bullock again conveys the honest<lb/>
integrity that is quickly becoming<lb/>
her trademark. The audience can<lb/>
relate to Angela because of<lb/>
Bullock's sensible and honest por-<lb/>
trayal.<lb/>
Jeremy Northam has been re-<lb/>
ceiving positive reviews for his role<lb/>
as the killer assigned to eliminate<lb/>
Angela. I, however, found his per-<lb/>
formance rather staid. He never re-<lb/>
ally exuded evil. I was not con-<lb/>
vinced that he was falling for An-<lb/>
gela early in the film. The audience<lb/>
needed to believe that his infatua-<lb/>
tion with Angela could impair his<lb/>
judgment. Northam's character was<lb/>
also too bland, but then so is the<lb/>
entire film.<lb/>
Irwin Winkler directed The Net<lb/>
as if directing a regular episode of<lb/>
Starsky and Hutch. The chase<lb/>
scenes are amateurish and boring,<lb/>
the bad guys have no development<lb/>
(I could not even figure out what<lb/>
they would do with the disc), and<lb/>
the pace of the film is languid to<lb/>
the point of boring. Winkler could<lb/>
have made a much better film had.<lb/>
he concentrated on Angela faking,<lb/>
a fire alarm so she can obtain in-<lb/>
formation from a computer. And<lb/>
near the end she outwits the bad<lb/>
guys with a disc containing a virus<lb/>
But these scenes account for<lb/>
only a small fraction of film time.<lb/>
Too much time is wasted on<lb/>
Angela's relationship with her<lb/>
would-be killer and on scenes in-<lb/>
volving the police. The ending of<lb/>
the film, which takes place on a<lb/>
catwalk, is especially derivative and<lb/>
dull.<lb/>
The Net will probably help<lb/>
Bullock's career because she proves<lb/>
again that she can carry a film.<lb/>
Hopefully in the future she will also<lb/>
be given quality scripts and qual-<lb/>
ity directors to work with.<lb/>
On a scale of one to ten, The<lb/>
Net rates a five.<lb/>
TWICE-WEEKLY CAMPUS NEWSPAPER<lb/>
The East Carolinian<lb/>
Pick us up Tuesdays and Thursdays for news and<lb/>
information about campus issues and activities.<lb/>
EAST CAROLINA UNIVERSITY<lb/>
MEDIA<lb/>
FOR ADDITIONAL INFORMATION, CJUl32B'60Q9<lb/>
STUDENT<lb/>
Call<lb/>
more information! 758-4591<lb/>
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<pb facs="00058552_0026"/><lb/>
wm.ammmm<lb/>
26<lb/>
Tuesday, Ausust 22, 1995<lb/>
The East Carolinian<lb/>
Time-Warner sued over controversial rap lyrics<lb/>
NEW YORK (AP) - Already un-<lb/>
der fire for its artists' violent and<lb/>
sexually explicit lyrics, Time<lb/>
Warner asked to review new mate-<lb/>
rial by Tha Dogg Pound but was<lb/>
rebuffed by the rappers, a music<lb/>
Industry source said Friday.<lb/>
Interscope Records head<lb/>
Jimmy lovine - who has worked<lb/>
tfrivia Qvd<lb/>
Today's Topic:<lb/>
TV Sitcom Names<lb/>
1. What is the full<lb/>
name of the Skip-<lb/>
per on "Gilligan's<lb/>
Island?"<lb/>
2. Name the town in<lb/>
which "Petticoat<lb/>
Junction" is set.<lb/>
3. Name the kids<lb/>
from "Family Af-<lb/>
fair<lb/>
4. Name five sitcoms<lb/>
starring McLean<lb/>
Stevenson other<lb/>
than<lb/>
"MASH<lb/>
5. What was the<lb/>
name of<lb/>
Meathead and<lb/>
Gloria's baby on<lb/>
"All in the Family?"<lb/>
Answers on page 28<lb/>
with Bruce Springsteen and U2 -<lb/>
said this week he would not give<lb/>
in to the Time Warner request.<lb/>
"Asking to listen to our artists'<lb/>
lyrics or music content prior to<lb/>
completion would be disruptive and<lb/>
counterproductive lovine told<lb/>
The Wall Street Journal. "It would<lb/>
also go against everything<lb/>
Interscope has stood for since the<lb/>
day of its conception<lb/>
lovine was out of his Los An-<lb/>
geles office Friday, and Interscope<lb/>
officials would not comment fur-<lb/>
ther. But the source, speaking on<lb/>
condition of anonymity, confirmed<lb/>
the story.<lb/>
Will Tanous, director of media<lb/>
relations for the Warner Music<lb/>
Group, wouldn't comment.<lb/>
Tha Dogg Pound is the latest<lb/>
group of gangsta rappers from Dr.<lb/>
Dre's stable of West Coast rappers,<lb/>
which already includes the plati-<lb/>
num-selling Snoop Doggy Dogg and<lb/>
Warren G.<lb/>
1<lb/>
Snoop's album "Doggy Style<lb/>
with its violent and misogynist lyr-<lb/>
ics, became the first debut record<lb/>
ever to enter the charts at No. 1. It<lb/>
featured guest appearances by Tha<lb/>
Dogg Pound, whose upcoming al-<lb/>
bum is titled "Dogg Food<lb/>
Word of Time Warner's efforts<lb/>
to review Tha Dogg Pound's lyrics<lb/>
left some in the rap industry won-<lb/>
dering about its chilling effect on<lb/>
other rappers.<lb/>
"This is without precedent<lb/>
said veteran rap publicist Bill Adler.<lb/>
"It would be comical if it didn't<lb/>
have such an impact. You can't tell<lb/>
me that one of the chief reasons<lb/>
for the decline of the West is rap<lb/>
music<lb/>
Time Warner is a 50 percent<lb/>
owner of Interscope; the Los Ange-<lb/>
les-based Interscope is trying to<lb/>
buy back Warner's interest in the<lb/>
company. lovine and department<lb/>
store executive Ted Field turned<lb/>
Interscope into a money-maker<lb/>
since opening the label just five<lb/>
years ago.<lb/>
Interscope, in addition to han-<lb/>
dling Dre's Death Row Records,<lb/>
also represents jailed rapper Tupac<lb/>
Shakur and alternative rockers<lb/>
Nine Inch Nails. Both Shakur and<lb/>
Nails' leader Trent Reznor have<lb/>
come under attack for their explicit<lb/>
lyrics.<lb/>
Senate Majority Leader Bob<lb/>
Dole and former Education Secre-<lb/>
tary William J. Bennett are among<lb/>
those pressuring Time Warner to<lb/>
stop distributing such music.<lb/>
The showdown between<lb/>
Interscope Records and its major<lb/>
label partner follows a pair of Cali-<lb/>
fornia lawsuits filed against anti-rap<lb/>
activist C. DeLores Tucker, head of<lb/>
the National Congress of Black<lb/>
Women, and Time Warner.<lb/>
On Thursday, Death Row<lb/>
Records sued Tucker, Time Warner<lb/>
and two company executives for al-<lb/>
legedly launching a smear cam-<lb/>
paign against rap lyrics. Interscope<lb/>
had filed a similar suit two days<lb/>
earlier.<lb/>
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AKMONT BAPTIST<lb/>
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Welcomes Students<lb/>
College Bible Study<lb/>
Sunday 9:40 a.m.<lb/>
"Worship Service at<lb/>
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Musical Ministry<lb/>
Adopt-A-Student Program<lb/>
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Tue-Fri 9:30-8 Center near Harris Teeter<lb/>
Sat 9:30-5<lb/>
ECU Recreational Services<lb/>
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NEVER STOPS<lb/>
n<lb/>
Aerobic Fitness Class Registration<lb/>
Sign-up begins August 23 - September 1 in 204 Christenbury Gymnasium.<lb/>
Great classes at a great price. $12 for students and $15 for faculty &amp; staff.<lb/>
n<lb/>
IT<lb/>
ECU Climbing Tower Opens<lb/>
Monday, August 23 from 3:00 p.m. - 6:00 p.m.<lb/>
Start out with a beginning climbing lesson NOW!<lb/>
n<lb/>
Intramural Men's &amp; Women's Flag Football<lb/>
Tuesday, August 29 at 5:00 p.m. in room 1031 GCB<lb/>
n<lb/>
n<lb/>
Intramural Outdoor 3-on-3 Basketball Deadline<lb/>
Wednesday, August 30 at 5:00 p.m. in room 204 Christenbury Gym<lb/>
n<lb/>
Backpacking at Shenandoah National Park<lb/>
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The residence hall kickoff event of the year!<lb/>
Call Recreational Services at 328-6387 or stop by room 204<lb/>
Christenbury Gymnasium for program details.<lb/>
- <lb/>
<pb facs="00058552_0027"/><lb/>
'?<lb/>
The East Carolinian<lb/>
Tuesday, Ausust 22, 1995<lb/>
27<lb/>
Networks offer more than sitcom stupidity in fall<lb/>
NEW YORK (AP) - On the evening<lb/>
of Jan. 9. 1967, TV showed its colors <lb/>
and they were all the same.<lb/>
That night, two networks pre-<lb/>
miered virtually identical - and similarly<lb/>
awful - sitcoms: "Mr. Terrific" (CBS)<lb/>
and "Captain Nice" (NBC). This sitcom-<lb/>
synchronicity lasted seven 'months un-<lb/>
til, on the night of Aug. 28. both series<lb/>
bit the dust a half-hour apart<lb/>
Even so, three decades later much<lb/>
of TV's creative community is still aw-<lb/>
fully me-tooistic. This is evident as the<lb/>
networks begin rolling out 27 new<lb/>
sitcoms for the 1995-96 season.<lb/>
Granted, some people are trying<lb/>
to travel off the beaten path. I was re-<lb/>
minded of this a few days ago when I<lb/>
NEW<lb/>
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for s5.00<lb/>
saw the pilot for "Emmett and Earl<lb/>
one prospective series that manages to<lb/>
break loose from sitcom copy-catism.<lb/>
Not that "E&amp;E" escapes the con-<lb/>
ventions of the sitcom. Anything but It<lb/>
draws on the classic sitcoms of the<lb/>
1950s: their simplicity, sweetness, un-<lb/>
apologetic silliness. It's about two work-<lb/>
ing-class (though not always working)<lb/>
joes who are trying to get ahead or,<lb/>
barring that at least get by.<lb/>
Free of cutting-edge humor, self-<lb/>
conscious irony or breast jokes.<lb/>
"Emmett and Earl" is not onry funny,<lb/>
but for sheer originality probably<lb/>
eclipses anything viewers can look for-<lb/>
ward to this fall.<lb/>
Which is to say, "Emmett and Earl"<lb/>
won't be found on any network's lineup.<lb/>
It was one of many pilots pitched to<lb/>
CBS. CBS said no.<lb/>
There may be life in "E&amp;E" yet<lb/>
HBO has displayed interest in picking<lb/>
it up. For now, however, the TV audi-<lb/>
ence faces another season of numbing<lb/>
predictabiliby - maybe even more so<lb/>
than in the recent past<lb/>
One obvious reason is the smash<lb/>
success last season of "Friends which<lb/>
has spawned umpteen clones of en-<lb/>
semble buddy sitcoms (only television<lb/>
could tum friendship into a tiresome<lb/>
trend).<lb/>
Yet all is not lost On the schedule<lb/>
are four new sitcoms that at the least<lb/>
seem to have been created somewhere<lb/>
other than on a petri dish.<lb/>
In two instances, "seem" for now<lb/>
is the operative word: No pilot episode<lb/>
has been made available for "The<lb/>
Bonnie Hunt Show" or "If Not For You<lb/>
both on CBS.<lb/>
Student Discounts Available Witn Valid Student ID<lb/>
Call 1-800-830-4822<lb/>
Attention Students<lb/>
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But in both cases, the shows have<lb/>
persuasive names attached.<lb/>
"Bonnie" comes from David<lb/>
Letterman's<lb/>
Worldwide Pants<lb/>
production com-<lb/>
pany, which (as its<lb/>
sidelined "Emmett<lb/>
and Earl" amply<lb/>
demonstrates) is<lb/>
stubbornly insis-<lb/>
tent on trying new<lb/>
things.<lb/>
'Bonnie<lb/>
Hunt" also boasts<lb/>
herself, an improv<lb/>
comedienne who<lb/>
starred in the de-<lb/>
lightful sitcom<lb/>
"The Building" a<lb/>
couple of seasons<lb/>
back.<lb/>
This time<lb/>
Hunt plays a cor-<lb/>
respondent for a<lb/>
Chicago TV sta-<lb/>
tion, and all of her<lb/>
"news" reports<lb/>
will be improvised<lb/>
with ordinary people on location.<lb/>
Sounds risky - and promising. It pre-<lb/>
mieres Friday, Sept 22.<lb/>
Premiering Monday, Sept 18, "If<lb/>
Not For You" is a romantic comedy star-<lb/>
ring Elizabeth McGovern. That is all you<lb/>
need to know, and this: Larry Levin is<lb/>
the series' creator.<lb/>
Free of cutting-<lb/>
edge humor,<lb/>
self-conscious<lb/>
irony or breast<lb/>
jokes, "Emmett<lb/>
and Earl" is not<lb/>
only funny, but for<lb/>
sheer originality<lb/>
probably eclipses<lb/>
anything viewers<lb/>
can look forward<lb/>
to this fall.<lb/>
No, you may have never heard of<lb/>
him. But Levin has been behind some<lb/>
of the freshest, funniest - albeit short-<lb/>
est-lived - comedy<lb/>
shows of recent<lb/>
years. His latest<lb/>
was the gently<lb/>
madcap "Bakers-<lb/>
field P.D of two<lb/>
seasons ago.<lb/>
In short any-<lb/>
thing Le-in does<lb/>
deserves a look.<lb/>
There is more<lb/>
tangible evidence<lb/>
- their pilots - to<lb/>
recommend an-<lb/>
other pair of up-<lb/>
coming sitcoms:<lb/>
CBS's "Almost Per-<lb/>
fect" and NBC's<lb/>
"The Single Guy<lb/>
Perhaps the<lb/>
premise for "Al-<lb/>
most Perfect"<lb/>
sounds groaningly<lb/>
contrived: SHE<lb/>
writes for a TV cop<lb/>
show. HE'S a cop.<lb/>
How will they carve out time from their<lb/>
demanding, sometimes conflicting work<lb/>
lives for love?<lb/>
What makes this ordinary idea,<lb/>
well, almost perfect is its execution.<lb/>
Stars Nancy Travis and Kevin Kilner are<lb/>
See SIT page 29<lb/>
MARK A. WARD<lb/>
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ENTREES $3.99-$7.99 WFFKFND<lb/>
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3142-AMosely Dr.<lb/>
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(Behind Parker's BBQ off Greenville Blvd.)<lb/>
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6&amp;8 Cylinders slightly higher With Coupon Offer Expires 9-30-95<lb/>
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With Coupon Offer Expires 9-30-95<lb/>
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<pb facs="00058552_0028"/><lb/>
r "i i. ? r ii ? r-i y - ii.<lb/>
wmmKmammmmm<lb/>
<lb/>
28<lb/>
Tuesday, Ausust 22, 1995<lb/>
The East Carolinian<lb/>
NINJA from page 23<lb/>
However, what will make audi-<lb/>
ences take notice of Ninja Scroll<lb/>
is the nonstop action. To achieve<lb/>
their goal, our trio of heroes must<lb/>
defeat the eight demons of Kimone,<lb/>
and these demons must be seen to<lb/>
be believed. We are introduced to<lb/>
such nasty villains as a tattooed<lb/>
woman whose snake tattoos come<lb/>
to life, a quasimodo-like menace<lb/>
with a beehive for a hunchback, and<lb/>
a shadow demon who kills his vic-<lb/>
tims with a clawed projectile.<lb/>
On top of that, our reluctant<lb/>
ninja hero has to face a classic chal-<lb/>
lenge from a blind swordsman who<lb/>
proves that sight is overrated when<lb/>
it comes to sword fighting. Also<lb/>
worth a mention is the climatic<lb/>
battle between Jubei and the head<lb/>
demon, which is more satisfying<lb/>
than any other action sequence out<lb/>
this summer.<lb/>
Trivia Answers from page 26<lb/>
The violence, a topic of concern<lb/>
for many Japanimation films, is<lb/>
graphic but never excessive.<lb/>
Kawajiri creates a disturbing and<lb/>
violent world effectively and pro-<lb/>
vides his heroes with overwhelm-<lb/>
ing obstacles to overcome. The end<lb/>
result is a thoroughly quenching<lb/>
ninety minutes of unrelenting ac-<lb/>
tion.<lb/>
If you're a fan of the action<lb/>
genre and this year has been a bust<lb/>
for you, then try an alternative to<lb/>
what's playing at the local theater.<lb/>
Instead of spending five bucks on<lb/>
the latest brain candy from<lb/>
Stallone, take a trip to the under-<lb/>
ground and get a full meal from<lb/>
such goodies as Ninja Scroll. It's<lb/>
cheaper, more exciting, and (heaven<lb/>
forbid) might be a totally new view-<lb/>
ing experience. On a scale of one<lb/>
to 10, Ninja Scroll rates a nine.<lb/>
L Jonas Grumby. But you can call<lb/>
him "Skipper just like Barbie's kid<lb/>
sister.<lb/>
2. Hooterviile. It's amazing the<lb/>
name made it on the air in the '60s,<lb/>
considering that the show's focus was<lb/>
on three buxom southern belles who<lb/>
liked to skinny-dip in the town's wa-<lb/>
ter tower.<lb/>
3. Buffy, Jody and Sissy. Extra<lb/>
points if you remembered Uncle Bill,<lb/>
Mr. French or Buffy's doll Mrs.<lb/>
Beasley.<lb/>
4. "The McLean Stevenson<lb/>
Show in which McLean plays the<lb/>
owner of a hardware store.<lb/>
"In the Beginning with McLean<lb/>
as a cranky old priest<lb/>
"Hello, Larry" (the king of bad<lb/>
sitcoms), featuring McLean as a talk<lb/>
show host<lb/>
"Condo with formerly rich<lb/>
McLean moving (you guessed it) into<lb/>
a condominium in a Mexican neigh-<lb/>
borhood.<lb/>
And, finally, "Dirty Dancing<lb/>
with McLean as the hyper-protective<lb/>
father of an oversexed teenage daugh-<lb/>
ter.<lb/>
All of McLean's shows went down<lb/>
in flames just like the helicopter that<lb/>
took his "MASH" character<lb/>
(Henry Blake) to sitcom heaven.<lb/>
5. Joey Stivic. The kid later grew<lb/>
up to be an annoying sitcom brat on<lb/>
the spin-off series "Gloria<lb/>
&amp;<lb/>
CARIBBEAN<lb/>
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y Prizes awarded for each round!<lb/>
w Live Music On Patio Every Wednesday<lb/>
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With Satellite &amp;<lb/>
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You'll Never Forget<lb/>
Played Before Capacity<lb/>
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Lighting Effects<lb/>
Sunday. August 27. 1995<lb/>
? 6:00 Pm<lb/>
?<lb/>
Monday &amp; Tuesday<lb/>
August 28 &amp; 29 ? 7:00Pm<lb/>
Faith Assembly Of God<lb/>
1503 Hooker Road ? Greenville.<lb/>
North Carolina<lb/>
Free Admission<lb/>
For More Information Call<lb/>
(919)756-7676<lb/>
Faith<lb/>
Assembly Of God<lb/>
Welcomes Back ECU<lb/>
Students!<lb/>
College Class Sunday School 10:00 Am<lb/>
Sunday Worship 11:00 Am<lb/>
Sunday Evening Worship 6:00 Pm<lb/>
Wednesday Bible Study 7:00 Pm<lb/>
Located Next To Walmart On Hooker Road<lb/>
<lb/>
? ?? ?-<lb/>
?<lb/>
<pb facs="00058552_0029"/><lb/>
The East Carolinian<lb/>
Tuesday, Ausust 22, 1995<lb/>
29<lb/>
We knead an copyeditor<lb/>
two fix hour mixtakes .<lb/>
Requirements: jt Z0<lb/>
' Excellent grammar skills<lb/>
? ECU student<lb/>
? 2.0 GPA or better<lb/>
? Available Sun. &amp; T?esM<lb/>
or Mon. and Wed. afternoons<lb/>
Call Stephanie Lassiter at 328-6557.<lb/>
VAL-U-STOP<lb/>
2753 E. 10TH ST. BESIDE<lb/>
COLONIAL HEIGHTS SHOP.<lb/>
CENTER<lb/>
CONVENIENCES<lb/>
BUDWEISER MOLSON MOLSON ICE<lb/>
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STARTING ATS3.61)<lb/>
22 () BCD BOTTLE S.W 1 AX<lb/>
40 () MALT LIQl'OR SI .43 TA.X<lb/>
CIGARETTES<lb/>
KINGS &amp; 100'S<lb/>
$1.53 TAX<lb/>
BLOOD from page 23<lb/>
trigue, where the advent of Chris-<lb/>
tianity has undermined the power<lb/>
of women in society. Elizabeth<lb/>
learns the ways of the old religion,<lb/>
which glorifies the female and which<lb/>
the Christians call witchcraft.<lb/>
The larger theme at work in the<lb/>
story seems to deal with oppression.<lb/>
These royal characters, while they<lb/>
hold positions of privilege, are nev-<lb/>
ertheless oppressed themselves.<lb/>
They are exploited because of their<lb/>
stations. Elizabeth is born in a soci-<lb/>
ety that thoroughly oppresses<lb/>
women, and frustration with this op-<lb/>
pression is partly what drives her to<lb/>
commit such appalling crimes - she<lb/>
persecutes others in search of a feel-<lb/>
ing of power.<lb/>
Drake grows up in a communist<lb/>
society that hates aristocrats. He<lb/>
grows up an outcast and this cre-<lb/>
ates the weakness in him that leaves<lb/>
room for evil to manipulate him later<lb/>
on. All of this takes place against<lb/>
the political backdrop of Eastern<lb/>
Europe, where oppression and<lb/>
bloody uprising have been going on<lb/>
for centuries. The most deadly op-<lb/>
pressors were once oppressed them-<lb/>
selves.<lb/>
The chdiacterization of these<lb/>
complicated characters is brilliant.<lb/>
Through them, Codrescu raises<lb/>
some interesting questions about<lb/>
the nature of evil. The events that<lb/>
occur within the plot are graphic,<lb/>
fantastic and grotesque, while re-<lb/>
maining believable. The fact that the<lb/>
novel is based on a real figure from<lb/>
history adds to its disturbing qual-<lb/>
ity. C tdrescu balances the tension<lb/>
between the alternating Andrei<lb/>
?m<lb/>
ITS EASY TO EAT<lb/>
av?tcio;<lb/>
Piiiiii<lb/>
DINING<lb/>
With seven convenient campus locations, Campus Dining Services makes eating<lb/>
on campus at East Carolina University easy. The Campus Dining meal card<lb/>
makes that even easier!<lb/>
For more info on how to get your card, call 328-4286, or stop by the Office of<lb/>
Campus Dining Services in Todd Dining Hall.<lb/>
)pnesc Stck House<lb/>
Welcomes Students<lb/>
back to Greenville with a 10 discount for all<lb/>
Students with I.D.<lb/>
Offer good thru Sept. 12, 1995<lb/>
After a long day in claJej our Chefs make you laugh<lb/>
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756-8241<lb/>
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(next to Overton's)<lb/>
Countess chapters well - it's easy<lb/>
to frustrate readers with this kind<lb/>
of structure if both characters aren't<lb/>
equally engaging. On the whole, The<lb/>
Blood Countess is a giuesome and<lb/>
absorbing read.<lb/>
SIT<lb/>
from page 27<lb/>
irresistible not only to each other but to<lb/>
the viewer. And the writing zings.<lb/>
Carve out time for the premiere Sun-<lb/>
day, Sept 17.<lb/>
"The Single Guy" begins with an<lb/>
even weaker proposition: a<lb/>
thirtysomething bachelor whose married<lb/>
friends keep fixing him up.<lb/>
But as with "Almost" that objec-<lb/>
tion is moot thanks to sharp writing and<lb/>
a skilled, attractive and high-energy cast<lb/>
of actors, led by Jonathan Silverman as<lb/>
the fellow his friends want to see walk<lb/>
down the aisle.<lb/>
"The Single Guy" premieres Thurs-<lb/>
day, Sept 21.<lb/>
LjJRj?jA from page 24<lb/>
pected.<lb/>
Strong as the Live Through<lb/>
This songs are, I was disappointed<lb/>
that Courtney and company didn't<lb/>
play anything from the first Hole<lb/>
album. Pretty on the Inside. As a<lb/>
lyricist (and a good one), Love may<lb/>
feel removed from that material,<lb/>
dealing as it does with coming-of-<lb/>
age traumas and general depravity.<lb/>
Still, this long-time Hole fan would<lb/>
have loved to hear "Teenage Whore"<lb/>
or "Star Belly live.<lb/>
The best moment of the show for<lb/>
me happened about mid-way<lb/>
through, when Love took the stage<lb/>
alone with her guitar and played<lb/>
Nirvana's "Pennyroyal Tea Far from<lb/>
being an exploitation of her dead<lb/>
husband, Love's performance of this<lb/>
song (about the problems that drove<lb/>
Cobain to suicide) was heart-rending.<lb/>
Not nearly so heart-rending, but<lb/>
every bit as awe-inspiring, was Sonic<lb/>
?<lb/>
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Must arrive by 8:00<lb/>
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SDancers wanted$<lb/>
We do Birthdays, Bachelor Parties, Bridal Showers,<lb/>
Corporate Parties &amp; Divorces<lb/>
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Doors Open 7:30pm Stage Time 9:00pm<lb/>
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(behind John's Convenient Mart)<lb/>
Valid N.C. I.D. Reauired<lb/>
Mill!<lb/>
Youth. People flocked from the<lb/>
Amphitheatre during the first 10 min-<lb/>
utes of this edgy set. Sonic Youth's<lb/>
sound is not particularly user-<lb/>
friendly: raw, sharp noise and struc-<lb/>
tured feedback are definitely not ra-<lb/>
dio iare.<lb/>
It must be an acquired taste, be-<lb/>
cause I tHink Sonic Youth easily put<lb/>
on the best set of the day. leaving<lb/>
every other band at the show in their<lb/>
dust. Opening with "Sister from<lb/>
their 1986 album of the same title.<lb/>
Sonic Youth immediately pleased<lb/>
their long-time fans and probably left<lb/>
much of the crowd feeling perplexed.<lb/>
The set roared on with a long<lb/>
list of tracks from the band's long<lb/>
career. Highlights included the<lb/>
Sonic Youth anthem "Teen-Age<lb/>
Riot" and Kim Gordon's aggressively<lb/>
sensual performance of "Bull in the<lb/>
Heather<lb/>
But the real center of attention<lb/>
for me was guitarist supreme<lb/>
Thurston Moore. Not fitting the ste-<lb/>
reotypical image of a guitar god,<lb/>
Moore looks like everybody's kid<lb/>
brother. But put a guitar in his<lb/>
hands, and he turns into Jimi freak-<lb/>
ing Hendrix.<lb/>
Moore's performance held me<lb/>
transfixed as the band soared off<lb/>
into crazy noise fests like nothing<lb/>
you'll hear from any other band in<lb/>
existence. The final song sent me<lb/>
and several of the people around me<lb/>
into another dimension. As a friend<lb/>
of mine said, it was a religious expe-<lb/>
rience. I haven't been able to take<lb/>
Sonic Youth out of my CD player<lb/>
since.<lb/>
If Thurston Moore isn't the best<lb/>
living guitar player on Earth, I'd like<lb/>
to know who is.<lb/>
With a performance like that to<lb/>
top the day off, I must say that<lb/>
Lollapalooza '95 was a rousing suc-<lb/>
cess. Easily the best show since the<lb/>
first, this year was a vast improve-<lb/>
ment over the increasingly disap-<lb/>
. pointing shows of the last five years.<lb/>
For the first time in two years,<lb/>
I'm looking forward to next year's<lb/>
Lollapalooza. It's a good feeling.<lb/>
it.<lb/>
fp -<lb/>
DOWNTOWN GREENVILLE, NC<lb/>
The Best of All Request &amp; Live Entertainment!<lb/>
, ,32oX. O Tuesday<lb/>
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&amp; the Best in DANCE .music<lb/>
$2 Adm. Til 10:30<lb/>
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Welcome Back ECU!<lb/>
:<lb/>
.<lb/>
j<lb/>
mmmmmmm<lb/>
"?"<lb/>
<pb facs="00058552_0030"/><lb/>
?Jiiiiiniiiiiii)ri?if<lb/>
wwrtiiwiiiiiii-iii Ammiimmmmmmmmmm<lb/>
30<lb/>
-1?i'it? r?TiiiriiiBniiiiiiiiiiiir?pw?ii<lb/>
Tuesday, August 22, 1995<lb/>
The East Carolinian<lb/>
WA1 IlK. from page 21 LEFT from page 21<lb/>
heavily from other films that noth-<lb/>
ing original is given to the audience<lb/>
to savor. The film seems like a com-<lb/>
pilation of other, better films.<lb/>
But those negative aspects of<lb/>
the film, which are definitely prob-<lb/>
lems, still cannot detract from the<lb/>
three main positive aspects: incred-<lb/>
ible sets, great action scenes and a<lb/>
magnificently evil villain.<lb/>
The sets in Waterworld will<lb/>
dazzle the eye. An atoll made of<lb/>
trash, where an early confrontation<lb/>
occurs, looks appropriately shabby<lb/>
and lonely. The floating garbage<lb/>
heap seems to be the only sign of<lb/>
humanity for miles. The desolation<lb/>
of the atoll looks so frighteningly<lb/>
real that it alone can make one wary<lb/>
of the future.<lb/>
The Mariner's boat is another<lb/>
spectacular eyecatcher. At the begin<lb/>
ning of the film, the Mariner must ?<lb/>
speed away to avoid a group of pi-1<lb/>
rates who call themselves Smokers, i<lb/>
The sails unfurl in a wondrously <lb/>
grand fashion, allowing the Mariner <lb/>
to escape. The Smokers' home base. <lb/>
an old oil tanker, also provides an<lb/>
appropriately grungy set for the fi-<lb/>
nal confrontation between the mari-<lb/>
ner and the Smokers.<lb/>
Waterworld is. at its heart, an<lb/>
action film. Just like Mad Max (and<lb/>
the sequels) and Aliens, the science<lb/>
fiction aspects of the film get up-<lb/>
staged by the climatic battles be-<lb/>
tween good and evil. Chases be-<lb/>
tween boats and wave runners,<lb/>
fights between the Smokers and<lb/>
their victims and fights between the<lb/>
Mariner and just about everyone in<lb/>
the film provide the punch in<lb/>
Waterworld. Even the poor story<lb/>
cannot detract from the action<lb/>
scenes once they begin. The script<lb/>
seems to be only a poor excuse to<lb/>
fill the gaps between the action.<lb/>
Dennis Hopper quite easily<lb/>
steals the acting kudos in<lb/>
Waterworld. 1 have long maintained<lb/>
that a film with a credible villain,<lb/>
one you love to hate, can get by on<lb/>
that villain alone. Dennis Hopper, as<lb/>
the Deacon, does the equivalent of<lb/>
a perfect dive by making the Dea-<lb/>
con so outrageously evil that the<lb/>
audience cannot help but laugh at<lb/>
him.<lb/>
The Deacon is about to kill a<lb/>
man when the man reminds the Dea<lb/>
con that he promised not to kill him.<lb/>
"Did I?" asks the Deacon, somewhat<lb/>
confused. "Ah. maybe I did. I don't<lb/>
know. Here he says as he hands<lb/>
the gun to one of the Smokers to<lb/>
kill the man instead.<lb/>
At another point the Deacon<lb/>
asks a 10-year old girl if she would<lb/>
like to smoke. "Never too early to<lb/>
start he sneers with a mellifluous<lb/>
growl.<lb/>
Waterworld will probably stay<lb/>
afoat at the box office for a while<lb/>
yet. Though not a great action film,<lb/>
it manages to upstage many of the<lb/>
other action films of the season, and<lb/>
in doing so provides the viewer with<lb/>
a nice summer diversion.<lb/>
On a scale of one to ten,<lb/>
Waterworld rates a six.<lb/>
grass tunes. "Bend in the River<lb/>
"Lonesome Road" and "Rocky Road<lb/>
Blues<lb/>
The major reason the rest of the<lb/>
album can't succeed is the fault of<lb/>
the abominable lead singer. Vince<lb/>
Herman. He does a really good im-<lb/>
personation of another Vince - Vince<lb/>
Neil. This is not a good thing, by the<lb/>
way. There's a reason you won't find<lb/>
Motley Crue playing zydeco or blue<lb/>
grass in this millennia or the next.<lb/>
This Herman guy has a background<lb/>
in improvisational acting, and he uses<lb/>
this "talent" to ruin every possibility<lb/>
this band and live album might have<lb/>
had.<lb/>
They need to fire Herman and<lb/>
let the much more proficient har-<lb/>
mony singer. Drew Emmit, take over.<lb/>
He has a wonderful Wuegrass voice<lb/>
that is reminiscent of a young Bill<lb/>
Monroe, and he plays mandolin,<lb/>
fiddle, flute and guitar.<lb/>
Nevertheless, the choice of mu-<lb/>
sical style on this album wastes<lb/>
Kmmit's talents. In fact, the Leftover<lb/>
Salmon's banjo player, Mark Vann.<lb/>
is also a tremendously talented mu-<lb/>
sician who is misused. He has won<lb/>
top honors at the well-known Tellu-<lb/>
ride Bluegrass Festival, but only on<lb/>
a few numbers can you even hear his<lb/>
playing through the morass of "cre-<lb/>
ative live noodling" on this album.<lb/>
The only reason I can find to ex-<lb/>
plain why this band got together in<lb/>
the first place is that they are trying<lb/>
to capitalize on the new surge of<lb/>
bands riding on the coattails of the<lb/>
Grateful Dead, such as Widespread<lb/>
Panic. Phish and so on. This is evi-<lb/>
dent in the fact that their fans are<lb/>
called "Salmonheads much like<lb/>
"Spreadheads" or "Phishheads<lb/>
However, they've got a lot of changes<lb/>
to make before they can expect to<lb/>
make any real money with that<lb/>
crowd.<lb/>
All in all, I can see why this<lb/>
salmon was leftover and not finished.<lb/>
It leaves an incredibly bad taste in<lb/>
your mouth (and your ears don't feel<lb/>
so great, either).<lb/>
DROP<lb/>
from page 21<lb/>
Grateful Dead frontman Jerry Garcia<lb/>
died.<lb/>
Okay, maybe that's not so hei-<lb/>
nous.<lb/>
I've never been a very big fan of<lb/>
the Dead, and so maybe I'm not the<lb/>
best person to eulogize Garcia in print<lb/>
But then again, maybe that detach-<lb/>
ment makes me the perfect person.<lb/>
No offense to the late Mr. Garcia or<lb/>
his many fans, but all good things<lb/>
must come to an end.<lb/>
The Grateful Dead made a lot of<lb/>
sweet music and definitely added<lb/>
something irreplacable to the-rock<lb/>
world. They spawned one of the big-<lb/>
gest counter-cultures in the world and<lb/>
encouraged such subversive practices<lb/>
as the sale of bootleg live recordings<lb/>
for their fans.<lb/>
By all accounts, they were nice<lb/>
people who just wanted a little peace<lb/>
in the world. And that's a good thing.<lb/>
But they hadn't cut a really good<lb/>
album in years. Their musicianship<lb/>
was as strong as ever, but some of the<lb/>
creativity of their earlier years seemed<lb/>
to have left them. It was time for the<lb/>
Grateful Dead to rest.<lb/>
So mourn Jerry Garcia. He was a<lb/>
rr.an worth mourning. But just be<lb/>
thankful that he didn't carry on until<lb/>
he became a joke.<lb/>
Now if only Keith Richards and<lb/>
Mick Jagger could leam that lesson.<lb/>
I'm not sure what all that has to<lb/>
do with birthdays, except perhaps that<lb/>
they get the better of us all eventu-<lb/>
ally.<lb/>
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ATTENTION Ail STUDENTS<lb/>
- -<lb/>
Invites You To Join Us As We<lb/>
Kick Off the Semster<lb/>
Thursday Night, August 24th at 7pm In the General<lb/>
ClassroomBuilding Room 1017<lb/>
Friday Night August 24th Pizza Party<lb/>
(to be announced at meeting)<lb/>
For More Information Call Eddie and<lb/>
Kathryn Hilliard at (919)321-6262<lb/>
Welcome Back ECU<lb/>
At hi-lites, we're excited about being a part<lb/>
of the Greenville community for over 7<lb/>
years. The hi-lites staff extends a special<lb/>
invitation for you to come shop with us.<lb/>
hi-lites values are known in Greenville and<lb/>
throughout Eastern North Carolina with<lb/>
nearby stores in Washington, New Bern<lb/>
and Kinston. We're certain you'll discover<lb/>
that our prices-$7, $10, $12, $15-stand<lb/>
for excellent value and quality everyday.<lb/>
Remember hi-lites when you are looking<lb/>
for the newest trends in fashion for all your<lb/>
campus activities, hi-lites fits everyone's<lb/>
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Come see us whether you're shopping for<lb/>
back to campus trends, your working ward-<lb/>
robe or you weekend football events. Name<lb/>
brand fashions are simply irresistible.<lb/>
i Limit One PeTCustomer<lb/>
! $3.00 off any one $15.00 item.<lb/>
i Must present coupon for discount.<lb/>
j Not valid with any other discount.<lb/>
 Expires 10-15-95<lb/>
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Juniors, Misses,<lb/>
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Regular Store Hours<lb/>
I0am-8pm Mon-Sat<lb/>
1pm-6pm Sunday<lb/>
.? V<lb/>
<pb facs="00058552_0031"/><lb/>
-tf? I i it<lb/>
M  <lb/>
Page 1 11,1)<lb/>
<lb/>
ECU Athletics A-Z<lb/>
If you can't be an ECU athlete, then be an athletic supporter. Here's a quick A-B-C'&amp;of<lb/>
how to be a true Purple Pirate throughout next season's football season.<lb/>
z ? Athletic Department Ticket Office. Here, along with Mendenhall Student Center, is where you can pick up your free ticket for every home<lb/>
football game starting a few days prior to the game.<lb/>
D ? Busted. Public Safety got you for underage drinking. If you're 21, remember to carry your ID as you frolic through the tailgating fields. If<lb/>
you're under 21, it can get risky. Besides, they'll make you reluctantly pour out your cup in front of them. That's more painful than<lb/>
getting a ticket<lb/>
L, ? Coach Steve Logan. Took a 2-9 squad and turned them into last season's 7-5 Liberty Bowl competitors in Memphis, Tennessee.<lb/>
U ? Dowdy-Ficklen Stadium. Home football stadiurriQor your ECU Pirates. They're going to expand in a couple seasons, so fill the stands they<lb/>
have a reason.<lb/>
L ? "Experience the Excitement ?1995 ECU football team motto. The Sept. 16 home opener with Central Michigan won't be as exciting if we<lb/>
kick off with an 0-2 record.<lb/>
i ? First Down ? Pirates! (You'll learn)<lb/>
(jr ? You can bring Grills to cook while tailgating ? but let's not burn the woods down, OK?<lb/>
11 ? Half-price ticket. When you get your freebie, you are allowed to purchase one for nine bucks for a friend, grandma, or even your pet chimp<lb/>
Wait a minute ? animals aren't allowed to roam Dowdy-Ficklen (Unless it's a seeing-eye monkey.)<lb/>
I ? The University of Illinois. Whipped the Pirates badly in the aforementioned Liberty Bowl, but will host the Pirates in a rematch on<lb/>
September 23.<lb/>
J ? Jerris McPhail. Must step up play to help ease the graduation of ECU's all-time leading rusher Junior Smith in the Pirate backfield.<lb/>
ix. ? Kegstands in the tailgating area before all the football games. Kegs aren't allowed anymore. Games will start at two, so you might not wafiJ to<lb/>
make this buffet your breakfast of champions. Editor's note: Parents, please use the Armed Forces "don't ask, don't tell policy Thanks.)<lb/>
Liberty Bowl. We lost 31-0. Nuff said.<lb/>
Ill<lb/>
IVi Mike" linebacker BJ. Crane. Fun to watch play, even more fun to interview after a Pirate victory. The senior ranked second on last year's<lb/>
squad with 79 tackles.<lb/>
IV ? Not a good idea to play frisbee golf during tailgating. Leave the discs at home Saturday, but bring them back Sunday to play through the'<lb/>
endless piles of trash left on the fields. Better yet, clean up your trash on Saturday so there is no problem.<lb/>
L ? Only a certain amount of half-price tickets are available for each game, so line up early. Once they're gone, they're gone.<lb/>
I ? Porta-potties, good idea. Bushes and trees and behind your car, bad idea. Getting ticketing for public urination isn't a great way to start your<lb/>
college career. Although the lines may be long, it'll be worth the wait.<lb/>
ifJ ? A new Homecoming Queen and King will be crowned during halftime of the Oct. 21 ECU-Temple matchup.<lb/>
I ? Road trip! September 2 against Tennessee. Grab a few people on your hall that you don't really know yet and head to Knoxville.<lb/>
i ? Student gates. These are specially-marked to reduce the amount of time to get in and out of the stadium. You won't be able to get in the<lb/>
other ones, so don't bother trying. Once you get in, you can sit wherever you want on the student side.<lb/>
1 ? Tailgating takes place everywhere, but the two fields near the intersection of Charles and Greenville Blvds. are the major congregation sites.<lb/>
The Frisbee Golf course is on the left hand side, while freshman parking is on the right, so you might want to move your car somewhere else<lb/>
before the crowd gets there.<lb/>
Underneath the stadium stands, the faithful Pirate fan will find restrooms, snack bars and souvenirs. Use the stairs, though, don't go the<lb/>
back way. That whole gravity thing comes into effect when you're on the top row of the stadium and try to climb down, even if you are<lb/>
sober.<lb/>
V ? Vivarin. With a weekend of tailgating, football and nightlife, Monday morning's 8 a.m. test will come along much quicker than you think.<lb/>
VV ? "Wine and cheese" fans. Typical of a UNC or Duke game. You know them ? they're the ones who show up an hour into the game and leave<lb/>
forty-five minutes early. Don't do it here, ECU's thrown together some electrifying starts and finishes over the years, and you might miss<lb/>
another one.<lb/>
A. ? Xylophones! Xylophones! Xylophones! ECU's fine marching band performs at every home game.<lb/>
I ? Your fdjks want tickets for the big ECU-Tulsa matchup on November 11. Drop by the Athletic Ticket Office, and they'll be glad to hook you<lb/>
up with seats. Or, if you don't want to worry about your parents paying you back, tell them to call 1-800-DIAL-ECU and do it.<lb/>
L-i ? Although you may just think you're sleepy, don't try catching any Z's in the middle of the stadium or tailgating areas. People passing out all<lb/>
over campus is not a major drawing point. Wait till you stumble back to your cramped residence hall room.<lb/>
17<lb/>
-<lb/>
 ' M '???<lb/>
OF? ? -??<lb/>
<pb facs="00058552_0032"/><lb/>
? <lb/>
32<lb/>
Tuesday, August 22, 1995<lb/>
The East Carolinian<lb/>
Chancellor looks ahead<lb/>
to ECU's athletic future<lb/>
Brian Paiz<lb/>
Senior Writer<lb/>
Photo by KEN CLARK<lb/>
During summer practice. Head Coach Steve Logan prepares<lb/>
the '95 squad for its challenging football season.<lb/>
addition of the Univesity of North<lb/>
Carolina and N.C. State to our<lb/>
schedules. This will be great for ath-<lb/>
letics in North Carolina. This will<lb/>
provide us with new excitement. We<lb/>
have never lacked for excitement at<lb/>
ECU. Through the good years and<lb/>
the bad, we have always had good<lb/>
fan support. When 1 came here in<lb/>
1987, we were winning about 2-3<lb/>
games a year in football, and we still<lb/>
had fan support. We have also had<lb/>
wonderful success with our softball.<lb/>
swimming and baseball programs,<lb/>
plus basketball anf football . In the<lb/>
futur we are poised to reach even<lb/>
greater levels.<lb/>
When you sit down and start<lb/>
discussing East Carolina University<lb/>
Athletics with ECU Chancellor Rich-<lb/>
ard Eakin, a smile comes to his face.<lb/>
Chancellor Eakin, who will begin-<lb/>
ning his ninth year aas Chancellor<lb/>
at ECU, is not only a supporter of<lb/>
ECU athletics, but Mr. Eakin is an<lb/>
avid sports fan. He is the former<lb/>
president of the College Football As-<lb/>
sociation, and now serves on the<lb/>
Presidents Council of the National<lb/>
Collegiate Athletic Associaiton<lb/>
(NCAA). He believes academics and<lb/>
athletics are suppporting partners.<lb/>
He attended Geneva College, and<lb/>
was a member of the basketball<lb/>
team. Chancellor Eakin has a vision<lb/>
tor greatness in ECU athletics, and<lb/>
TEC recently sat down and spoke<lb/>
with him concerning some of the<lb/>
issues that are in the forfrunt for<lb/>
the upcoming school year.<lb/>
FUTURE OF ECU ATHLETICS<lb/>
"The future is very bright. We<lb/>
have had wonderful news concern-<lb/>
ing our football program with the<lb/>
HIRING OF MIKE HAMRICK AS<lb/>
ATHLETIC DIRECTOR<lb/>
"I guess the deciding factor<lb/>
when hiring Mr. Hamrick as athleic<lb/>
director, was that he has been in the<lb/>
situation where you have to try<lb/>
harder as was the case at the Univer-<lb/>
sity of Arkansas-Little Rock. He was<lb/>
instumental in getting them into a<lb/>
conference. A very stong selling point<lb/>
about Mike was the way he relates<lb/>
to peoplr. He is very appropriate for<lb/>
ECU and Eastern NC. Mr. Hamrick<lb/>
is very experienced in a variety of uni-<lb/>
versities, He has the spirit and dedi-<lb/>
cation and that I'm going to succeed<lb/>
attitude<lb/>
CONFERENCE AFFILIATION<lb/>
I believe the main objective for<lb/>
ECU is to have all our athleic pro-<lb/>
grams in various dimensions to im-<lb/>
prove itself. We have come along way.<lb/>
and we still have a ways to go. I thi <lb/>
if we improve all aspects of our ath-<lb/>
letic program, I think a natural con-<lb/>
sequence of that will be conference<lb/>
affiliation. I think if we imprve in all<lb/>
aspect of our athletic program, then<lb/>
we will be very desirable for a con-<lb/>
ference. We will be working towards<lb/>
the goal of conference affiliation each<lb/>
and every day.<lb/>
NEW BASKETBALL COACHES<lb/>
I am tremendously excited about<lb/>
both coaches. Each of them bring a<lb/>
sort of enthusiasm. Given there<lb/>
youthful ages and experiences, they<lb/>
will be very helpul to us and the pro-<lb/>
gram. Clearly, they are both great re-<lb/>
cruiters. They both have a very win-<lb/>
ning way They will be able to relate<lb/>
not only to the athletes, but to their<lb/>
parents.<lb/>
They both have very high stan-<lb/>
dards of performance, but also very<lb/>
high standards for themselves. That<lb/>
came out very clearly in my conver-<lb/>
sations with each of them. I believe<lb/>
we have two coaches that hvae the<lb/>
prospect of being very successful. It<lb/>
should be very exciting to watch East<lb/>
Carolina basketball in the future.<lb/>
STADIUM EXPANSION<lb/>
"The stadium expansion is a<lb/>
project that several of us have been<lb/>
working on for a long time. One of<lb/>
the difficulties we saw in the expan-<lb/>
sion was how we were going to fi-<lb/>
nance it. As a part of the Shared<lb/>
Visions Campaign, which ws now in<lb/>
the excess of $50 million . we have<lb/>
pledges for the stadium construction<lb/>
which is getting close to in excess of<lb/>
$8 million dollars. Those pledges to-<lb/>
ward that stadium construction is the<lb/>
main ingredient which will allow us<lb/>
to go forward. The stadium will cost<lb/>
about $12 million dollars, and we still<lb/>
have a little to do concerning the fi-<lb/>
nancial package. When we are fin-<lb/>
ished with the first phase of construc-<lb/>
tion we should have an additional<lb/>
8,000 seats. After all phases are com-<lb/>
plete we will have a total seating ca-<lb/>
pacity of 60,000 seats. It is a very<lb/>
exciting addition to East Carolina<lb/>
University.<lb/>
Away schedule a major challenge<lb/>
Dave Pond<lb/>
Senior Writer<lb/>
"Take me to another place, take<lb/>
me to another land<lb/>
Tennessee. Tennessee, Tennessee.<lb/>
Well, at least Auburn's not on the<lb/>
schedule too.<lb/>
Seriously, ECU, if they invest in<lb/>
a hearty supply of earplugs to drown<lb/>
out the 94,000 Volunteer fans present<lb/>
should be able to hang with Phillip<lb/>
Fulraer's UT squad.<lb/>
The Volunteer coaching staff<lb/>
took a big hit when six football play-<lb/>
ers were suspended for making unau-<lb/>
thorized calls on the UT phone sys-<lb/>
tem. In total, 31 Volunteer athletes<lb/>
were reprimanded.<lb/>
"Our athletes know they enjoy a<lb/>
rare privilege in being allowed to rep-<lb/>
resent the University of Tennessee<lb/>
Kulmer said. "We will not stand by<lb/>
and allow the university's good name<lb/>
to be tarnished by the actions of some<lb/>
of our athletes<lb/>
Free safety Jason Parker and line-<lb/>
backer Tyrone Hines lead the sus-<lb/>
pended group, and their abscence<lb/>
could have a significant impact on the<lb/>
fame's outcome. Both were named to<lb/>
numerous preseason All-Star rosters.<lb/>
Peyton Manning returns under<lb/>
center, where he stepped out of Heath<lb/>
Shuler's shadow a season ago. Man-<lb/>
ning threw for 1,141 yards and 11 TDs<lb/>
in 1994 (61.8 completion percent).<lb/>
All-time UT leading rusher James<lb/>
Stewart has left for the NFL, but jun-<lb/>
ior Jay Graham (4.5 yards per carry<lb/>
in '94) should be able to step in eas-<lb/>
ily. Junior Chester Ford should fill the<lb/>
other vacancy in the Vols backfield.<lb/>
Over the last year, UT attepted<lb/>
to add defensive depth. They suc-<lb/>
ceeded, but were then drilled with the<lb/>
suspensions. They're still tough<lb/>
though, with eight starters returning<lb/>
from a season ago.<lb/>
The Vols return game is solid with<lb/>
Shawn Summers and Nilo Silvan, but<lb/>
the kicking game is questionable. The<lb/>
jury's out on freshman PK Jeff Hall<lb/>
as well as punter Larry Binion, both<lb/>
wearing UT uniforms for the first time<lb/>
in 1995.<lb/>
All in all, Tennessee is a solid<lb/>
team that could contend for a major<lb/>
bowl berth while maintaining a Top-<lb/>
10 ranking throughout the 1995 sea-<lb/>
son. Most of the suspended players<lb/>
return for UT's second game against<lb/>
Georgia, but Fulmer's squad best not<lb/>
overlook the Pirates. It could be a wild<lb/>
day in Neyland Stadium.<lb/>
Oh where, oh where has my quar-<lb/>
terback gone<lb/>
That's the tune in Syracuse camp<lb/>
as the Orangemen get ready for the<lb/>
1995 season. With the departure of QB<lb/>
Kevin Mason, three young SU QB<lb/>
hopefuls are vying for the vacant posi-<lb/>
tion. Sophmore Keith Downing saw<lb/>
action in four games last season but<lb/>
threw just two passes, both incomplete.<lb/>
"I think Downing is obviously a<lb/>
year older and, from a mental stand-<lb/>
point, has probably got a bit of an<lb/>
edge Pasqualoni said.<lb/>
So. they'll have to run. Well,<lb/>
tailback Kirby Dar Dar, (who regularly<lb/>
posted career numbers versus the Pi-<lb/>
rates) is gone too. The outlook looks<lb/>
better here then at QB, though, as<lb/>
Malcolm Thomas is being touted as the<lb/>
best Syracuse back since Joe Morris.<lb/>
Junior Terry Morris returns at fullback<lb/>
where he will be again used primarily<lb/>
as a blocker.<lb/>
See AWAY page 39<lb/>
Logan, team to focus on<lb/>
"unfinished business"<lb/>
Aaron Wilson<lb/>
Staff Writer<lb/>
Some head coaches would be<lb/>
satisfied by the season East<lb/>
Carolina's football program had last<lb/>
year. They might feel content to rest<lb/>
on their laurels and enjoy the post-<lb/>
season banquet circuit, basking in the<lb/>
glory of leading a amazing turn-<lb/>
around from 2-9 to 7-5 and a Liberty<lb/>
Bowl appearance. Steve Logan, how-<lb/>
ever is not your typical college coach.<lb/>
Logan is at heart a teacher who<lb/>
began his career in education. He is<lb/>
one of those people who likes to get<lb/>
things done right, the first time and<lb/>
if that doesn't happen then you at-<lb/>
tack the problem and work as hard<lb/>
and smart as you can to make things<lb/>
right.<lb/>
The Pirates lost 30-0 to a pow-<lb/>
erful Illinois squad that featured last<lb/>
year's Butkus Award winner and the<lb/>
nation's sack leader humiliating the<lb/>
Pirates on New Year's Eve in front<lb/>
of a national television audience.<lb/>
Now it is time to make things<lb/>
right and avenge this loss and prove<lb/>
the Pirates are not a flash in the pan<lb/>
a charge the football powers that be<lb/>
placed on their heads after failing to<lb/>
duplicate their Peach Bowl success.<lb/>
Logan is on the fast track of col-<lb/>
lege coaching and besides an inno-<lb/>
vative offensive mind filled with trick<lb/>
plays and misdirection he possesses<lb/>
a competitive spirit that he has in-<lb/>
stilled in this football team. After be-<lb/>
ing snubbed by the Big East Confer-<lb/>
ence and Conference USA for mem-<lb/>
bership prior to the bowl game and<lb/>
being shut out on national televison<lb/>
you could say that Logan and his<lb/>
team have a healthy chip on their<lb/>
shoulders.<lb/>
"Unfinished business is this<lb/>
year's team motto Logan said. "It<lb/>
comes from the fact that our goal is<lb/>
t j go tc the Liberty Bowl and win it.<lb/>
We got there season, but we didn't<lb/>
win the game. We want to go back to<lb/>
Memphis and change things around<lb/>
End of the season results may<lb/>
be all that Logan needs to change<lb/>
on a talented Pirate squad that re-<lb/>
turns 20 positional starters and their<lb/>
long snapper and holder. Players<lb/>
with star quality are present at ev-<lb/>
ery spot on the depth chart and this<lb/>
team should have no problem equal-<lb/>
ing or surpassing their production<lb/>
of a year ago when they ranked<lb/>
among the nation's leaders in pass-<lb/>
ing offense and 20th in total defense<lb/>
allowing only 119 yards per game<lb/>
rushing.<lb/>
Several players have received<lb/>
heavy praise by various publications.<lb/>
Hard hitting inside linebacker Mark<lb/>
Libiano, a returning Independent<lb/>
Defensive Player of the Year has been<lb/>
named by the Sporting News to re-<lb/>
peat that honor and quarterback<lb/>
Marcus Crandell has drawn praise<lb/>
throughout the nation. Auburn head<lb/>
coach Terry Bowden after witness-<lb/>
ing the strong armed Crandell pick<lb/>
his nationally celebrated defense<lb/>
apart was very impressed with the<lb/>
Pirate signal caller.<lb/>
'That quarterback can play for<lb/>
anybody in America and be a great<lb/>
quarterback in any offensive system<lb/>
Bowden said.<lb/>
Despite all of this heady praise<lb/>
and recognition the Pirates remain a<lb/>
hungry team relishing in their under-<lb/>
dog status. One look in the eyes of<lb/>
Libiano will tell Pirate fans that this<lb/>
is no motivational toy to this team.<lb/>
They believe strongly in the fact that<lb/>
they are unappreciated, underated<lb/>
and have work left to do.<lb/>
"That loss has given us a desire<lb/>
that has carried us through the whole<lb/>
orrseason Libiano said. "It has nade<lb/>
us work even harder than beforeand<lb/>
it gave us a sense of reality in thai we<lb/>
need to show up for every game It<lb/>
definitely left a sour taste in my m?uth<lb/>
but I think we learned something<lb/>
"We will never just show up or a<lb/>
game like we did at the bowl. Dur<lb/>
goal is to win every game and hat<lb/>
comes from preparing hard eery<lb/>
week<lb/>
QBs, RBs prepare for<lb/>
'95 season opener<lb/>
Aaron Wilson<lb/>
Staff Writer<lb/>
This is the first in a series of<lb/>
articles on the '95 outlook.<lb/>
Quarterbacks: Marcus<lb/>
CrandeII(6-foot, 205 pound) is the<lb/>
catalyst of a Pirate offensive attack<lb/>
that can score faster than it takes to<lb/>
pass through his hometown of<lb/>
Robersonville, NC. He broke 14<lb/>
school records in 1994 finishing<lb/>
eighth in total offense in NCAA sta-<lb/>
tistics. He draws comparisions<lb/>
weekly with such names as former<lb/>
Peach Bowl hero Jeff Blake, starting<lb/>
Cincinnati Bengals QB, Eric Zeier of<lb/>
the Georgia Bulldogs and Cleveland<lb/>
Browns, Major Harris of West Vir-<lb/>
ginia. Tony Rice of Notre Dame, the<lb/>
list goes on and on.<lb/>
The comparisons to Blake are<lb/>
what interests Pirate fans the most<lb/>
who remember tha magic Blake cre-<lb/>
ated doing the impossible and lead-<lb/>
ing the Pirates to a number nine na-<lb/>
tional ranking. Many feel that<lb/>
Crandell has the arm and intelligence<lb/>
to do the same, if not better. Head<lb/>
coach Steve Logan shares their con-<lb/>
fidence in him and believes the two<lb/>
Pirate stars having coached both, fa-<lb/>
vor comparably.<lb/>
"I wouldn't trade our quarter-<lb/>
back right now for anybody in the<lb/>
country Logan said. "Marcus is a<lb/>
very special person, not just a foot-<lb/>
ball player. He has tremendous lead-<lb/>
ership skills and natural athleticism.<lb/>
He is the type of player to build our<lb/>
offense around<lb/>
Crandell who excels in the short<lb/>
passing game and scrambles well<lb/>
(sounds like Steve Young of the<lb/>
49ers) is determined to improve on<lb/>
the deep balls and by every indica-<lb/>
tion he should.<lb/>
"We were about three deep balls<lb/>
away from beating Auburn Crandell<lb/>
said. "That's stayed in the back of<lb/>
my mind<lb/>
Sophomore Dan Gonzalez, a<lb/>
sturdy drop back style quarterback<lb/>
from Neptune, NJ had the best spring<lb/>
of any Pirate QB but has limited<lb/>
game experience, playing the fourth<lb/>
quarter against Cincinnati in a mop-<lb/>
up assignment He has made steady<lb/>
improvement since coming to<lb/>
Greenville and should be ready to<lb/>
play on a more regular basis than last<lb/>
year. Gonzalez was recruited by<lb/>
Maryland and Rutgers out of high<lb/>
school.<lb/>
The third quarterback is tal-<lb/>
ented redshirt freshman. Ernest<lb/>
Tinnen a left handed gunslinger from<lb/>
Burlington Cummings. Tinnen holds<lb/>
nearly every state record for passing<lb/>
and is in the Top 10 in national all-<lb/>
time passing yards with 10.834 with<lb/>
102 touchdowns. He was named by<lb/>
the Associated Press as their North<lb/>
Photo Courtesy of EG SID<lb/>
Jerris McPhail will have some big shoes fill this fall. He will<lb/>
try to take the place of ECU'S all-time leading rusher.<lb/>
Carolina Player of the Year as a se-<lb/>
nior M?ny expect him to be the next<lb/>
great Pirate QB as soon as he be-<lb/>
comes more comfortable and consis-<lb/>
tent in Steve Logan's structured of-<lb/>
fense and Crandell graduates.<lb/>
Running Backs: With all time<lb/>
career rushing leader Junior Smith<lb/>
gone to the CFL's Shreveport Pirates,<lb/>
the tailback spot is all Jerris<lb/>
McPhail's who has waited his turn<lb/>
for seemingly forever. McPhail a 6-<lb/>
foot 200 pound speedster from<lb/>
Clinton, NC began his career at Wake<lb/>
Forest but also played basketball at<lb/>
Mount Olive College as a shooting<lb/>
guard before transferring to ECU in<lb/>
1992. After sitting out a year as <lb/>
transfer, McPhail led the Pirates in<lb/>
receiving as a wideout in 1993 be-<lb/>
fore backing up Smith in 1994. rush-<lb/>
ing for 326 yards and had a 20 yard<lb/>
per catch average out of the backfield<lb/>
with two of ECU's longest offensive<lb/>
plays with a 67 yard reception against<lb/>
Centra' Florida and took a screen<lb/>
pass 62 yards down the sideline ver-<lb/>
sus Southern Miss.<lb/>
McPhail who runs a blazing 4.37<lb/>
40 yard dash time also has a 37.5<lb/>
inch vertical leap and has won the<lb/>
school's intramural slam dunk cham-<lb/>
pionships two years in a row. His<lb/>
versatility and athleticism shouk<lb/>
enable him to equal or better anior<lb/>
Smith's production with a sightly<lb/>
different playing style.<lb/>
"Jerris is a different style c run-<lb/>
ner because he is more of a sksher<lb/>
than a squirmer like Junior Saith<lb/>
Offensive coordinator Todd terry<lb/>
said. "He is bigger, is a iittiemore<lb/>
physical and posseses flat out 9eed,<lb/>
so consequently it opens up some<lb/>
avenues<lb/>
These avenues should lead.o the<lb/>
end zone a place McPhail hoes to<lb/>
reach more often in 1995. McFiail is<lb/>
already drawing attention frori NFL<lb/>
scouts.<lb/>
Vying for the backup spt are<lb/>
three talented redshirt freshma who<lb/>
will see their first game actia this<lb/>
season. All three have outstading<lb/>
credentials and strengths to their<lb/>
game, each excelling in a dierent<lb/>
phase.<lb/>
Scott Harley (5-foot, Dinch.<lb/>
210- pound) is a brusing bac from<lb/>
Neptune, NJ who is the all-tins New<lb/>
Jersey career rushing leader aid was<lb/>
selected by USA TODAY as tie top<lb/>
player in the Garden State a a se-<lb/>
nior. He is a physical player wio can<lb/>
break tackles and run over lireback-<lb/>
ers and defensive backs. Harlej berth<lb/>
See ECU page 39<lb/>
<pb facs="00058552_0033"/><lb/>
The East Carolinian<lb/>
Tuesday, Ausust 22, 1995<lb/>
33<lb/>
Purple and Gold ready to fill Dowdy-Ficklen<lb/>
Dave Pond<lb/>
Staff Writer<lb/>
In his first season as the head coach<lb/>
of the Central Michigan Chippewas in<lb/>
94, Dick Flynn went 9-3. won the con-<lb/>
ference championship and went to the<lb/>
Las Vegas Bowl.<lb/>
In his second season, he returns just<lb/>
eight starters, mostly linemen and line-<lb/>
backers.<lb/>
"We lost so many great football play-<lb/>
ers, the big question is Where do we<lb/>
start? Flynn said. "We lost every starter<lb/>
at the skill positions<lb/>
Last season. CMU totalled over<lb/>
5.000 yards of offense as a team. In '95.<lb/>
just 280 yards return. All-American James<lb/>
Pruitt (1,891 rushing yards, 2( rush TDs)<lb/>
has graduated, as has QB Erik Timpf.<lb/>
Junior QB Chad Darnell went 5-for-<lb/>
5 for 60 yards in limited play last season,<lb/>
and is in fierce competition with<lb/>
sophmore Tim Crowley and redshirt frosh<lb/>
Tony Lorenzatti for playing time.<lb/>
Three players are in contention for<lb/>
Pruitts vacated slot, including senior<lb/>
Damon Tolbert. who rushed for 106<lb/>
yards in 1994. Senior Chad Frazier, a<lb/>
two-year letterman. takes over at fullback<lb/>
for the Chippewas.<lb/>
TE Steve Kelly has the honor of<lb/>
telling people that he is CU's leading<lb/>
receiver returning from last season. In<lb/>
'94. he caught all of three passes. Se-<lb/>
nior wideout Grant Elmquist caught a<lb/>
pass as well, for six yards and a TD.<lb/>
CMU returns both outside line-<lb/>
backers from last year, juniors Greg<lb/>
Spranger and Michael Hester, but<lb/>
Hester already lost his position to Nate<lb/>
Simington.<lb/>
Junior Con' Gildersleeve returns as<lb/>
well, while Shawn Alpers and Charlie<lb/>
Bush will share time at the other inside<lb/>
slot after playing as reserves last year.<lb/>
Both safetys are back as well, but<lb/>
new comerbacks must be found. Jason<lb/>
Husband, a sophomore, and freshman<lb/>
Shawn Williams look to fill the posi-<lb/>
tions.<lb/>
With an inexperienced D-line. op-<lb/>
posing running backs should have a<lb/>
field day against the Chippewas. Seniors<lb/>
Mitch Panchula and Carl Barth will play<lb/>
tackle and nose guard, respectively,<lb/>
while sophs Steve Black and Travis<lb/>
Allen are candidates for the other start-<lb/>
ing tackle slot<lb/>
"In reality, we probably don't have<lb/>
the ability to put ponts on the board<lb/>
like we have the last few years Flynn<lb/>
said. "The defense has to perform bet-<lb/>
ter to keep us in it<lb/>
A dollar is<lb/>
a terrible<lb/>
thing to waste.<lb/>
Used books cost a lot less. And UBE has a lot more used books than anyone else. Use your head. Shop UBE.<lb/>
f t f i -vj<lb/>
Book rush hours:<lb/>
Tuesday, Aug. 22 9:00 am<lb/>
Wednesday-Thursday, Aug. 23 &amp; 24 8:00 am<lb/>
Friday, Aug. 258:00 am<lb/>
Satuday, Aug. 26 9:00 am<lb/>
Sunday, Aug. 271:00 pm<lb/>
Monday-Thursday, Aug. 28-319:00 am<lb/>
Friday, Sept. 19:00 am<lb/>
Saturday, Sept. 210:00 am<lb/>
REGULAR HOURS:<lb/>
Monday - Friday, home football Saturdays 9:00 am<lb/>
Other Saturdays10:00 am<lb/>
8:00 pm<lb/>
9:00 pm<lb/>
7:00 pm<lb/>
6:00 pm<lb/>
6:00 pm<lb/>
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Fioff<lb/>
I H One coupon per customer.<lb/>
IB Mf valid with othei<lb/>
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CM! lost too much to be a serious<lb/>
in 1995. but will reluc-<lb/>
trave) to I towdy-Ficklen on Sept<lb/>
thn<lb/>
tantt<lb/>
16. <lb/>
West Virginia rode a 7-6 record to<lb/>
the Cat quest Howl last season, where<lb/>
they were pm nnptly shut down by South<lb/>
Carolina.<lb/>
Seventeen starters are back for<lb/>
Don Nehlen's Mountaineers, who<lb/>
started slowly (14) in '94 before catch-<lb/>
ing fire to earn the bowl berth.<lb/>
Quarterback Chad Johnston was a<lb/>
big part of that comeback, and passed<lb/>
for 1,623 yards and 14 TDs. All of the<lb/>
touchdowns came during the last seven<lb/>
games of the season.<lb/>
Senior tailback Robert Walker re-<lb/>
joins Johnston in the WVU backfield,<lb/>
and h nes b i regain his 993 form, when<lb/>
he rambled tor 1 .2f( i yards and 11 TDs.<lb/>
Last year, he recorded only 617 rush-<lb/>
ing yards - without a TD.<lb/>
"Robert Walker has the speed of<lb/>
the elite backs, but I'm not sure if he<lb/>
works hard enough Nehlen said.<lb/>
"Sometimes he doesn't work hard<lb/>
enough to be up there with the elite<lb/>
Senior Kantroy Barber will assume<lb/>
the fullback role after gaining experi-<lb/>
ence there in a reserve role in 1994.<lb/>
All receivers, except wideout and<lb/>
1994 team MVP Zach Abraham, are<lb/>
back for the new season. Senior tight<lb/>
end Loett Pumell is a great all-purpose<lb/>
player, and caught two TD passes in the<lb/>
Carquest Bowl. He had 481 receiving<lb/>
yards during the regular season.<lb/>
The offensive line will be Nehlen's<lb/>
main concern for the upcoming season.<lb/>
Three starters are back, but the group<lb/>
was very inconsistent, forcing Nehlen<lb/>
to take a longer look at some of his<lb/>
younger players.<lb/>
"On the offensive line, we have al-<lb/>
most a whole unit of seniors, but I'm<lb/>
not sure they are all going to be start-<lb/>
ers Nehlen said. "I'm probably most<lb/>
anxious to see some of our youngsters<lb/>
on the line, the freshmen we redshirted<lb/>
last season<lb/>
Rush linebacker Canute Curtis re-<lb/>
turns after gathering eight sacks last<lb/>
season, as does comerback Aaron<lb/>
Beasley. who led the nation last year<lb/>
with 10 interceptions.<lb/>
The D-Iine looks questionable, as<lb/>
does the overly-agressive attitude on the<lb/>
WVU secondary. The secondary .will<lb/>
probaMy come up with some big plays<lb/>
this year, but will also get bumed on<lb/>
more than one occasion.<lb/>
The Mountaineers, with all of their<lb/>
quality returnees, should be able to hold<lb/>
a Top-25 record during this season.<lb/>
See PURPLE page 37<lb/>
Open To Public<lb/>
2:00lm . 12:00 Am<lb/>
Tues. - Thurs. &amp; Sat.<lb/>
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<pb facs="00058552_0034"/><lb/>
34<lb/>
Tuesday, Ausust 22, 1995<lb/>
The East Carolinian<lb/>
?u<lb/>
PHL<lb/>
NOTES<lb/>
PIRATES REMAIN HEALTHY<lb/>
AND FOCUSED AFTER FIRST<lb/>
SCRIMMAGE<lb/>
With just two weeks remaining<lb/>
before the season opener with Ten-<lb/>
nessee, head football coach Steve<lb/>
Logan still feels as if the Pirates need<lb/>
to improve in order to win. In a post-<lb/>
game meeting at Dowdy-Ficklen Sta-<lb/>
dium Saturday, Coach Logan stressed<lb/>
the importance of winning all three<lb/>
aspects of the game.<lb/>
"There are three aspects of a<lb/>
football game that you have to win<lb/>
in order to win the game: Offense,<lb/>
Defense, and the Kicking Game<lb/>
Logan said. "We won one of those<lb/>
areas (today). Our offense would have<lb/>
put us in a position to win, but our<lb/>
defense didn't take the ball away. We<lb/>
would have lost that football game.<lb/>
Our kicking game lost it for us<lb/>
The offense proved successful at<lb/>
Dowdy-Ficklen, scoring four touch-<lb/>
downs while only allowing one turn-<lb/>
over, an interception early in the<lb/>
game. Sophomore Dan Gonzalez led<lb/>
the Pirate offense in yardage, amass-<lb/>
ing 173 yards and a touchdown, while<lb/>
redshirt freshman Ernest Tinnen<lb/>
threw for 151 yards and two touch-<lb/>
downs.<lb/>
"Danny and Ernest may be posi-<lb/>
tioning themselves to where they can<lb/>
finish a football game for us Logan<lb/>
said. "Dan had all of nine snaps last<lb/>
year and Ernest didn't have any, so<lb/>
we'll have to see (how things will<lb/>
go)<lb/>
Another pleasant surprise for<lb/>
the Pirates was the play of redshirt<lb/>
flanker Mike Sellers. Sellers pulled<lb/>
down six receptions for 108 yards<lb/>
including a 63 yard grab from<lb/>
Gonzalez early in the first half.<lb/>
"I'm glad to see Mike coming<lb/>
along Logan said. "He is very ath-<lb/>
letic and tall and he gives us some<lb/>
height on the perimeter<lb/>
The Pirates will open their sea-<lb/>
son against Tennessee at Neyland<lb/>
Stadium in Knoxville on Saturday.<lb/>
Spt. 2.<lb/>
ECU NAMES WILLIAMS<lb/>
HEAD COACH<lb/>
East Carolina University Athletic<lb/>
officials have announced that Kevin<lb/>
Williams, who has been affiliated<lb/>
with the Kinston (NC) Country Club<lb/>
as Head Golf Professional and Direc-<lb/>
tor of Golf Operations since 1987, has<lb/>
been named ECU's Head Golf Coach.<lb/>
Williams, inherits a tradition-<lb/>
rich ECU gold program after the re-<lb/>
tirement of Hal Morrison in June. In<lb/>
the last nine seasons, the Pirates<lb/>
have captured seven CAA titles in-<lb/>
cluding five straight from 1990-1994.<lb/>
Williams playing experience in-<lb/>
cludes winning eight Pro-Ams and<lb/>
qualifying for PGA Club Pro Cham-<lb/>
pionships in 1989 and 1992.<lb/>
Williams resides in Kinston with<lb/>
his wife, Trude and children, Patrick<lb/>
(9) and Anniken (1).<lb/>
ECU SWIMMER SETS TWO<lb/>
RECORDS IN PAN-PACIFIC<lb/>
GAMES<lb/>
Chris Bembenek. a member of<lb/>
the East Carolina University Swim<lb/>
team, set two individual national<lb/>
records for Panama while competing<lb/>
for the Republic of Panama national<lb/>
team in the Pan-Pacific games held<lb/>
A PIECE OF<lb/>
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Bembenek, who has dual citizen-<lb/>
ship, swam the 100 meter backstroke<lb/>
in 59:73 and the 200 meter back-<lb/>
stroke in 2:12:43. Both times set new<lb/>
marks for Panama.<lb/>
He also was a member of the<lb/>
record-breaking 400 medley team<lb/>
that set a new Panama mark of<lb/>
3:57:43 and placed eight overall.<lb/>
Bembenek. a rising junior from<lb/>
Annapolis, Md hold the ECU school<lb/>
record in the 100 and 200 backstroke<lb/>
and is a former Maryland State back-<lb/>
stroke champion.<lb/>
WIBERG NAMED ECU MEN'S<lb/>
SOCCER COACH<lb/>
Will Wiberg, a 1982 East<lb/>
CArolina University graduate, has<lb/>
been named head coach of his alma<lb/>
mater's men's soccer team.<lb/>
Wiberg begins his first seasonas<lb/>
a collegiate head coach and will draw<lb/>
from his stint as assitant coach of the<lb/>
women's soccer team at SUNY-Stony<lb/>
Brook from 1988-1991. While at<lb/>
SUNY-Stony Brook from 1988-91.<lb/>
While at SUNY-Stony Brook, Wiberg<lb/>
was also an instructor in the Depart-<lb/>
ment of Physical Education and<lb/>
served as an assistant Director of<lb/>
Sports Information.<lb/>
WALKER NAMED ECU VOL-<lb/>
LEYBALL COACH<lb/>
Kim Johnson Walker, who served<lb/>
as head women's volleyball coach at<lb/>
Indiana University of Pennsylvania<lb/>
from 1986-1993, has been named to<lb/>
the head caoaching position at East<lb/>
Carolina University.<lb/>
Walker begins her first coaching<lb/>
position in a Division I program and<lb/>
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The Plaza Welcomes ECU Students!<lb/>
Welcome to a new year at ECU! The merchants and management of<lb/>
The Plaza wish you all a perfect year at a great University!<lb/>
And for all your shopping needs, general gear and more,<lb/>
you'll find The Plaza perfectly stocked to please!<lb/>
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A 1993 graduate of Clemson<lb/>
University. Walker compiled a 103-<lb/>
147 overall record for IUP as the In-<lb/>
dians were consitently ranked in the<lb/>
top-10 of the Atlantic region's 32<lb/>
teams from 1988-1993.<lb/>
Under her direction, the IUP pro-<lb/>
gram produced five all-region selec-<lb/>
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<pb facs="00058552_0035"/><lb/>
-<lb/>
-? ?????? ? in iwmn I?<lb/>
The East Carolinian<lb/>
Tuesday, Ausust 22, 1995<lb/>
35<lb/>
Attention All Students<lb/>
Looking For A Church?<lb/>
Invite You to Attend<lb/>
REEfs VILLE<lb/>
an Sunday Morning at<lb/>
ELUOWSHIP<lb/>
GCF Provide:<lb/>
? Family Atmosphere<lb/>
? College Student Ministry<lb/>
? Contemporary Praise Of<lb/>
Worship<lb/>
lOAm<lb/>
(corner of Evans and 14th St beside<lb/>
Grand Slam)<lb/>
For More Inlormation Call<lb/>
Eddie Hilliard 321-6262<lb/>
Olympic sports preview<lb/>
Craig Perrott<lb/>
Staff Writer<lb/>
mmaammmmmmmmmttmmmmsrt'iimifi<lb/>
MEN'S SOCCER<lb/>
While the football team will have<lb/>
to wait a few more years to play UNC<lb/>
and N.C. State, you can catch the<lb/>
Pirates go up against the Tarheels<lb/>
and the Wolfpack this fall on the soc-<lb/>
cer field. Natural in-state rivals UNC-<lb/>
Asheville and CAA foe UNC-<lb/>
Wilmingtoi also dot the schedule.<lb/>
The Pirate hooters are looking<lb/>
to improve on last season's 4-14-1, 1-<lb/>
6-1 CAA record, although it was the<lb/>
most successful season the Pirates<lb/>
have ever had in its 11) year associa-<lb/>
tion with the elite soccer conference.<lb/>
The future looks bright this sea-<lb/>
son. Over 50 percent of last year's<lb/>
point production came from either<lb/>
freshmen or sophomores, so look for<lb/>
a more experienced team this time<lb/>
The ECU Popular Entertainment Commi<lb/>
ttee Presents<lb/>
out. Returning this year are seniors<lb/>
Drew Racine and Marc Mullin. Both<lb/>
were all-CAA selections last season.<lb/>
Joining them will be junior goalie Jay<lb/>
Davis. Kyle England, John Swaggert<lb/>
and last year's scoring leader Chris<lb/>
Pagget.<lb/>
WOMEN'S SOCCER<lb/>
The Lady Pirate soccer team is<lb/>
gearing up for their second season<lb/>
ever of intercollegiate competition<lb/>
after being elevated from club to var-<lb/>
sity status in December of 1993.<lb/>
During their inaugural season<lb/>
last year, the team compiled a 2-15<lb/>
record, 1-5 in CAA action. The<lb/>
women are ready to rebound off of<lb/>
that mark and earn some respect in<lb/>
'95.<lb/>
All but three players are ex-<lb/>
pected back this fall. Standouts<lb/>
Jameison Pierce, Heather Seanor and<lb/>
Eileen Moore will not return due to<lb/>
$r- 4uation, but Robyn DePasquale<lb/>
and Stacey Schott, the two leading<lb/>
scorers last year, are expected back<lb/>
to lead the Lady Pirates.<lb/>
DePasquale, despite missing three<lb/>
matches last year due to an ankle<lb/>
injury, earned second-team All-Colo-<lb/>
nial Athletic Association honors in<lb/>
1994.<lb/>
VOLLEYBALL<lb/>
There are some big shoes to fill<lb/>
this year for the ECU volleyball team.<lb/>
The Lady Pirates have vacancies to '<lb/>
fill at the middle hitter and setter<lb/>
positions with the loss of 1994 sec-<lb/>
ond team all-CAA selections Staci<lb/>
Winters and Sarah Laurent.<lb/>
Losing these key players may<lb/>
make things difficult this year for<lb/>
East Carolina, but an excellent re<lb/>
cruiting class will help fill in the gaps<lb/>
as well as pressure veteran players<lb/>
to be more competitive in trying to'<lb/>
keep their starting postitions.<lb/>
New recruits slated to play this<lb/>
year are: Dori Brain, who is expected<lb/>
to replace Laurent at starting line-<lb/>
up in the setter position; Nikia<lb/>
Ebron, who will see action at outside<lb/>
hitter for the Lady Pirates; Breigri<lb/>
Hickman, who could see action at<lb/>
middle hitter; Kristen Meininger, who<lb/>
See SPORTS page 39<lb/>
on sale at the Central Ticket Office in<lb/>
Student Center, East Carolina University.<lb/>
MasterCard and Visa accepted.<lb/>
For more information,<lb/>
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Live acoustic performances<lb/>
Hosted by Travis Proctor<lb/>
The Stage is Yours!<lb/>
Sound system provided<lb/>
<pb facs="00058552_0036"/><lb/>
36<lb/>
Tuesday, Ausust 22, 1995<lb/>
The East Carolinian<lb/>
GOLD from page 34<lb/>
At the end of "94 most teams fig-<lb/>
ured out how to stop the SU freeze-<lb/>
option game plan, but coach Paul<lb/>
Pasqualoni has vowed to stay with it<lb/>
For this reason, building a solid O-line<lb/>
should be high on the Pasqualoni pri-<lb/>
ority list<lb/>
Marvin Harrison returns to lead<lb/>
the receiving corps, along with Sir<lb/>
Mawn Wilson, Jim Turner and Deon<lb/>
Maddox. A season ago, Harrison shred-<lb/>
ded opposing defenses for 761 yards<lb/>
on just 36 receptions (21.1 yard aver-<lb/>
age).<lb/>
The defensive forecast looks bet-<lb/>
ter. SU is strong at linebacker, with<lb/>
Dulayne Morgan. Nate Helmsley and<lb/>
Antwaune Ponds leading the way.<lb/>
Helmsley missed 10 games last season<lb/>
with a knee injury, but Dana Cottrell<lb/>
filled in nicely during his abscence.<lb/>
CB Kevin Abrams and SS Darrell<lb/>
Parker return to the SU secondary, and<lb/>
sophomore Donovin Darius should<lb/>
step in at free safety. Competition is<lb/>
wide open to fill the other comer posi-<lb/>
Dar Dar will be sorely missed as a<lb/>
kickoff return man on special teams.<lb/>
Turner will replace him as the primary<lb/>
returner, while Harrison will again<lb/>
bring back punts (9.2 yard average in<lb/>
'94).<lb/>
Syracuse returns just 11 starters,<lb/>
and many young players will have to<lb/>
step up play if Orangemen football is<lb/>
to return to national prominence in<lb/>
1995.<lb/>
Hey, these guys look familiar.<lb/>
As most of us know ECU and Illi-<lb/>
nois met in last year's St Jude's Liberty<lb/>
Bowl in Memphis. End of story.<lb/>
In '95, things should be different<lb/>
11 starters (six offensive) return for Lou<lb/>
Tepper's squad, including preseason Ail-<lb/>
American Simeon Rice, who has regis-<lb/>
tered 33 sacks in 35 games for the Mini.<lb/>
Senior Johnny Johnson is back for<lb/>
his final season as well, after compiling<lb/>
a 137.6 efficiency rating last year with<lb/>
19 TDs. Junior TB Ty Douthard (765<lb/>
yards) also returns, along with<lb/>
sophmore Robert Holcombe. They'll<lb/>
give UI a solid backfield presence<lb/>
throughout the season.<lb/>
The offensive line, where just two<lb/>
of five starters return, is the area of most<lb/>
concern for the UI coaching staff. The<lb/>
experience of junior center Chris<lb/>
Koerwitz and senior OT Ken Blackman,<lb/>
both 300-pounders, will be essential to<lb/>
the success of the team's ground attack.<lb/>
If Rice wasn't enough, Kevin Hardy,<lb/>
another All-American linebacker, is back<lb/>
for his senior season. Hardy was labeled<lb/>
the team's Defensive Player of the Year<lb/>
in 1994.<lb/>
"Simeon should be the prime can-<lb/>
didate for the Outland and Lombaidi<lb/>
Trophies, and a strong defensive candi-<lb/>
date for the Heisman Tepper said.<lb/>
"Hardy may be the country's best<lb/>
Butkus Award candidate. He's the most<lb/>
complete player on our team<lb/>
Dennis Stallings, Jarrett Hansen<lb/>
and David James will also see playin?<lb/>
time at the other two linebacker slots.<lb/>
Senior safetys Antwoine Patton<lb/>
and Tyrone Washington, who racked up<lb/>
tackles in 1994, both return, and are<lb/>
among the best in the Big Ten.<lb/>
All-time UI scoring leader and<lb/>
kicker Chris Richardson has left and<lb/>
Brett Larsen and Bret Scheuplein bom<lb/>
hope to get a leg up on the other and<lb/>
inherit the position.<lb/>
Marquis Mosefy and Damein Platt<lb/>
will continue to be the special teams'<lb/>
return men for Tepper's squad.<lb/>
Illinois looks tough, even with the<lb/>
hits they took from graduation. They<lb/>
have an all-around balanced attack on<lb/>
both sides of the ball, and should stay<lb/>
in the National Top-25 throughout the<lb/>
season.<lb/>
Southern Miss QB Heath Graham<lb/>
set two school records (completion<lb/>
percentage and passing yards as a<lb/>
freshman) last season, and returns to<lb/>
do it again. However, he'll be battled<lb/>
by highly-touted JUCO quarterback<lb/>
Chris Windsor.<lb/>
Whoever the quarterback will be,<lb/>
he's going to need a nice set of lug-<lb/>
gage.<lb/>
SMU plays seven of their 11 games<lb/>
on the road this season, which is po-<lb/>
tentially damaging to any bowl hopes<lb/>
that they have.<lb/>
"It's not fair for a football team to<lb/>
have to play seven games on the road<lb/>
said SMU athletic director Bill<lb/>
McLellan.<lb/>
Also damaging is the recent drug<lb/>
problems of star tailback Chris<lb/>
Buckhalter, who totaled 814 rushing<lb/>
yards lastyear. He'll have to be replaced<lb/>
by Harold Shaw who is almost as good.<lb/>
Grahams favorite target is junior<lb/>
Ryan Pearson, who reeled in 37<lb/>
receptiond for 436 yards. He'll be<lb/>
jkoined in the receiving corps by<lb/>
sophmores Eric Booth and Harold<lb/>
Shaw.<lb/>
Only two things could stop the<lb/>
solid offensive attack - a more solid<lb/>
defense and a meager offensive line.<lb/>
SMU already has one strike against<lb/>
them. Coach Jeff Bower returns just<lb/>
two players up front both on the left<lb/>
side of the line.<lb/>
On defense, All-Everything tackle<lb/>
Michael Tobias is gone, leaving a huge<lb/>
hole up front He was regularly double<lb/>
and triple-teamed in blocking schemes<lb/>
during his college career. Junior<lb/>
Quentin Jackson should step up after<lb/>
amassing 43 tackles in 1994.<lb/>
"We do have a number of people<lb/>
coming back on both sides of the ball<lb/>
Bower said, "but there are some areas<lb/>
- our front lines - that are critical<lb/>
The Golden Eagle linebackers are<lb/>
some of the best in the region, if not<lb/>
the country. Fourth-year starters Eu-<lb/>
gene Harmon and Albert McRae head<lb/>
up an aggresive group of stars-to-be -<lb/>
the four member group totaled 300<lb/>
tackles in 1994.<lb/>
All four starters return in the sec-<lb/>
ondary' as well, including free safety<lb/>
L.T. Gulley (70 tackles in '94). Derrick<lb/>
Hervey led the '94 team with five in-<lb/>
terceptions.<lb/>
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<lb/>
<pb facs="00058552_0037"/><lb/>
The East Carolinian<lb/>
Tuesday, Ausust 22, 1995<lb/>
PURPLE from page 33<lb/>
Even though they return 10 often<lb/>
sive starters, the Temple Owls have been<lb/>
picked to finished last in the Big East<lb/>
by almost every collegiate magazine in<lb/>
the nation.<lb/>
Coach Ron Dickerson continues to<lb/>
rebuild a squad that went 2-9 a year<lb/>
ago, but threw the ball well and had a<lb/>
great turnover ratio.<lb/>
Junior Henry Burris returns under<lb/>
center, where he passed for 249.7 yards<lb/>
per game in 1994. He's got his top three<lb/>
receivers back in Troy Kersey. Marc<lb/>
Baxter and Van Johnson.<lb/>
The problem here is the running<lb/>
game - which there isn't one. Temple<lb/>
backs managed to run for a horrendous<lb/>
77 yards per game last year, and they've<lb/>
got the same running backs slated to<lb/>
start in 1995. Oops! No running game<lb/>
again, unless someone steps up big-time.<lb/>
As if that wsn't enough for Burris<lb/>
and Dickerson to worry about, super<lb/>
tight end PJ. Cook has moved on as<lb/>
well, leaving a huge void at the posi-<lb/>
tion.<lb/>
Just to show how bad the running<lb/>
game is, the offensive line for the Owls<lb/>
is super, senior O-guard John<lb/>
Summerday. who Dickerson predicts<lb/>
"will be a top-round draft choice" next<lb/>
year, leads the crew.<lb/>
The defense is improved as well.<lb/>
but the line needs to pick up the pace.<lb/>
Junior tackle Andy Phipps heads the<lb/>
good but unpredictable bunch.<lb/>
So. where's the improvement?<lb/>
"We feel we have three of the top<lb/>
linebackers in the nation in Lance<lb/>
Johnstone. Alshermond Singleton and<lb/>
Willie Brown Dickerson said.<lb/>
Johnstone led the Owls with 114<lb/>
tackles in '94. while Brown will don a<lb/>
Temple uniform for the first time after<lb/>
lettering three times at Alabama.<lb/>
Three-year vet Robert McWilliams<lb/>
leads an average secondary- He'll be<lb/>
joined by Allan Jackson (two INTs. 10<lb/>
pass deflections last year), and new-<lb/>
safety starters Ted McDuffie and Orrin<lb/>
Marshman.<lb/>
"I know the kids believe now that<lb/>
things are different Dickerson said.<lb/>
"They've gron up and they're talented.<lb/>
These kids are bound and determined<lb/>
to win<lb/>
As long as Dickerson doesn't ex-<lb/>
pect too much, this should be a suc-<lb/>
cessful year of rebuilding for the Owls.<lb/>
They should win a few more games but<lb/>
hover right around the .500 mark in<lb/>
1995.<lb/>
Ust season, the Memphis Tigers<lb/>
were a game away from a home-field<lb/>
advantage for the Liberty Bowl before<lb/>
falling at home to ECU. This year, with a<lb/>
new coach and 15 starters back, they<lb/>
VISA<lb/>
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37<lb/>
look to return.<lb/>
Rip Scherer came to Memphis fron<lb/>
I-AA James Madision, and has brought<lb/>
back fan interest to the football-crazei<lb/>
city.<lb/>
QB Joe Borich returns, but m iy not<lb/>
start because he doesn't fit Scherer <lb/>
offensive style. Sophomore Chad Reed<lb/>
and two newcomers will get long look<lb/>
in practice. The Borich-led offense aver<lb/>
aged just 14.5 point per game in 1994<lb/>
Quitman Spaulding returns at<lb/>
tailback, and should start He's quick<lb/>
mobile and a great athlete - the essen<lb/>
tial qualities to win Scherer's heart<lb/>
Senior Ryan Roskelly pulled in 44<lb/>
catches for 602 yards last season while<lb/>
averaging 11.7 yards per punt return<lb/>
He'll be joined by wideouts Ernest keefer<lb/>
and sophs Brian Powell and Chancey<lb/>
Carr.<lb/>
Three starters return to a solid O<lb/>
line, and should give the Scherer offense<lb/>
plenty of time to work its magic.<lb/>
The Tiger defense ranked third in<lb/>
the nation last season, and should find<lb/>
above-average success in 1995. Tackles<lb/>
Tony Williams and Brian Bamett lead<lb/>
the front four. Bamett finished '94 with<lb/>
76 tackles, sixth on the team.<lb/>
Junior middle linebacker Jesse Allen<lb/>
led the team with 128 tackles, and is<lb/>
sandwiched in between Richard Hogans<lb/>
and Dan Bonner, both big-play makers.<lb/>
The secondary could be a problem.<lb/>
Memphis lost two starters in Ken Irvin<lb/>
and Barry Dillard, as well as their 122<lb/>
tackles and five INTs. 6-foot-4 safety<lb/>
Jerome Woods will have to lead an oth-<lb/>
erwise-inexperienced group.<lb/>
"We want to play as aggresive of-<lb/>
fensively as we did defensively last sea-<lb/>
son Scherer said. "The players want<lb/>
to win so badly, and that gives us some-<lb/>
thing to build on<lb/>
Since Scherer is such an<lb/>
unpredictabe coach, it's hard to predict<lb/>
how far he can take the Tigers. They've<lb/>
got some quality players, and it wouldn't<lb/>
be suprising to see the Nov. 18 Tigers-<lb/>
Pirates matchup as the key in the Lib-<lb/>
erty Bowl berth once again.<lb/>
The Golden Hurricane returns 43<lb/>
lettermen. and lots of them are good.<lb/>
Tulsa was just 3-8 last year, but lost four<lb/>
games by a touchdown or less.<lb/>
The two top quarterbacks, rushers<lb/>
and receivers will all suit up in '95 in a<lb/>
group of eight returning offensive start-<lb/>
ers. They should find at least the same<lb/>
degree of offensive success.<lb/>
Sophmore John Fitzgerald com-<lb/>
pleted 53.3 percent of his passes last<lb/>
year in a reserve role. He threw for 1,409<lb/>
yards and 5 TDs - and 14 INTs. Tad<lb/>
Jones, now a junior, posted better num-<lb/>
bers (5 TDs, 1 INT, 785 yards, 64.1 comp.<lb/>
percent) in less time, but will most likely<lb/>
be a third-stringer this year.<lb/>
Solomon White returns at tailback,<lb/>
where he battled through a midseason<lb/>
ankle injury to become a 1,000-yard<lb/>
rusher. He also cught 31 passes for 181<lb/>
yards.<lb/>
A solid offensive line should give<lb/>
White and the Tulsa QB (whoever he<lb/>
is) plenty of time to work. They are led<lb/>
by enter David Milwee, whom coaches<lb/>
feel is the best in the country.<lb/>
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O n?nvil!? (3 itore?t<lb/>
<pb facs="00058552_0038"/><lb/>
?-<lb/>
38<lb/>
Tuesday, August 22, 1995<lb/>
Summer sports<lb/>
scene full of action<lb/>
The East Carolinian<lb/>
Brad Nelson<lb/>
Staff Writer<lb/>
ECU's 1995 summer sports season<lb/>
started out red-hot as the men's track<lb/>
team made a return trip to the NCAA<lb/>
Outdoor Track and Field Championships<lb/>
after posting a time of 39.63 in the 4 x<lb/>
100 Meter Relay race. The season-best<lb/>
time came en route to claiming the IC4A<lb/>
Championships in Fairfax, Va. ECU's time<lb/>
was one of the top 12 in the country.<lb/>
The Pirates finished eighth in the na-<lb/>
tion in Knoxville, earning them AU-Ameri-<lb/>
can Honors.<lb/>
"We ran probably as good as we<lb/>
could in that race said ECU head track<lb/>
coach Bill Carson<lb/>
ECU baseball came to an abrupt halt<lb/>
on May 18 after back-to-back losses to<lb/>
the University of Richmond and the Col-<lb/>
lege of William and Mary in the CAA<lb/>
Tournament held in Kinston. The losses<lb/>
dropped the Pirates record to a disap-<lb/>
pointing 29-26.<lb/>
"Like any good club, we had to im-<lb/>
prove and we never did said ECU head<lb/>
coach Gary Overtoa "It was disappoint-<lb/>
ing that we were no better at the end of<lb/>
the season than we were at the begin-<lb/>
ning<lb/>
Now, however, Overton and his<lb/>
squad are looking forward to contend-<lb/>
ing for the 19 CAA title and returning<lb/>
to the NCAA regionals once again. With<lb/>
the experience of this season behind<lb/>
them and forecasts of a healthy team<lb/>
ahead, ECU's baseball future may once<lb/>
again shine as bright as championship<lb/>
seasons of the past<lb/>
In football news, ECU's aUtime rush-<lb/>
ing leader, Junior Smith, found a new<lb/>
home in Cajun Country when he signed<lb/>
with the Shreveport Pirates of the Cana-<lb/>
dian Football League Smith left ECU as<lb/>
the leading rusher in school history with<lb/>
3,672 rushing yards.<lb/>
"Junior has been real impressive<lb/>
during camp running the ball and receiv-<lb/>
ing" said Missy Setters, media relations<lb/>
director for Shreveport<lb/>
"I believe Junior Smith will have a<lb/>
lot of success in Shreveport" said ECU<lb/>
assistant football coach Jeff Treadway. "I<lb/>
think that he will turn out to be an ex-<lb/>
cellent professional football player<lb/>
The Sporting News recognized jun-<lb/>
ior quarterback Marcus Crandell and<lb/>
senior linebacker Mark Libiano in their<lb/>
pre-season poll. Crandell is ranked num-<lb/>
ber 12 in the nation among quarterbacks,<lb/>
trailing Notre Dame's Ron Powlus and<lb/>
Duke's Spence Fisher. The 64bot 198<lb/>
pound Crandell ranked eighth in the<lb/>
nation last year in total offense averag-<lb/>
ing 253 yards per game.<lb/>
Libiano was also ranked number 12<lb/>
in the nation among inside linebackers.<lb/>
Libiano has led ECU in tackles the previ-<lb/>
ous two seasons and had 135 tackles last<lb/>
season. Miami's Ray Lewis topped the<lb/>
list as best inside linebacker in the na-<lb/>
tion.<lb/>
In related football news, former Pi-<lb/>
rate linebacker Willie Brookins worked<lb/>
out for the Carolina Panthers in their<lb/>
pre-season camp in Rock Hill, S.C. An-<lb/>
other former Pirate to make it at the next<lb/>
level is former ECU place-kicker Anthony<lb/>
Brenner, who is now kicking for Arena<lb/>
Football's division-leading Charlotte<lb/>
Rage.<lb/>
ECU's athletic department lost an-<lb/>
other great asset as Charles Bloom, as-<lb/>
sistant athletic director for media rela-<lb/>
tions, accepted a position in the South-<lb/>
eastern Conference (SEC). Bloom came<lb/>
to ECU in 1988 to fill the sports infor-<lb/>
mation director position, and was pro-<lb/>
moted to assistant athletic director in<lb/>
June 1994. During Bloom's tenure, the<lb/>
Pirates competed in Peach and Liberty<lb/>
Bowls, and the 1993 men's basketball<lb/>
team made a trip to the NCAA Tourna-<lb/>
ment<lb/>
The biggest news to hit ECU this<lb/>
summer was that of the rebirth of the<lb/>
Pirate, Wolfpack and Tarheel football ri-<lb/>
valry. The announcement came on the<lb/>
heels of numerous meetings between<lb/>
ECU Athletic Director Mike Hamrick,<lb/>
NCSU Athletic Director Todd Turner and<lb/>
UNC Athletic Director John Swofford.<lb/>
SO<lb/>
Film - "Crimson Tide" Hendrix Theatre (MSC) 8 PM<lb/>
BowlingBilliardsTable Tennis Mendenhall Student Ctr. 7-10 PM<lb/>
Weight RoomGym Workout Chrlstenbury Gym 11AM-9 PM<lb/>
Swimming Chrlstenbury Pool 11:30 AM-6 PM<lb/>
121<lb/>
Film "Crimson Tide" Hendrix Theatre (MSC) 8 PM<lb/>
Aerobics Drop InHWo Step Garrett Hall 3 PM<lb/>
Aerobics Drop InAqua Fitness Chrlstenbury Pool 5:30 PM<lb/>
BowlingBlillardsTable Tennis Mendenhall Student Ctr. 7-10:00 PM<lb/>
Weight RoomGym Workout Chrlstenbury Gym 11 AM-9:00 PM<lb/>
Swimming Chrlstenbury Pool 11:30 AM-6 PM<lb/>
SSI<lb/>
Aerobics Drop InFunk Garrett Hall 3 PM<lb/>
Aerobics Drop InAqua Fitness Chrlstenbury Pool 5:30 PM<lb/>
BowllngBllliardsTable Tennis Mendenhall Student Ctr. 7-10:00 PM<lb/>
Weight RoomGym Workout Chrlstenbury Gym 11 AM-9 PM<lb/>
Swimming Chrlstenbury Pool 11:30 AM-6 PM<lb/>
Mendenhall Student Center Lawn<lb/>
Merchants Fair 4-7 PM<lb/>
Panama Steel Band 5-8:30 PM<lb/>
Human Foosball 4-8 PM<lb/>
Abo available: Frtebee Golf, Bdk Basketball, Scott Sand Volleyball (For more Info call 3284911)<lb/>
2F<lb/>
F<lb/>
AUGUST 23<lb/>
Noon Day Tunes (Victor Hudson) MSC Patio<lb/>
1:30-3 PM<lb/>
AUGUST 24-26<lb/>
FHmLegends of the Fall"<lb/>
Hendrix (MSC) 8 PM<lb/>
ACTIVITIES CO-SPONSORED BY:<lb/>
ECU University Unions, Student Union,<lb/>
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KAPPA<lb/>
A<lb/>
LAMBDA<lb/>
M<lb/>
MU<lb/>
N<lb/>
NU<lb/>
-<lb/>
H<lb/>
XI<lb/>
O<lb/>
0M1CR0N<lb/>
B T A E Z H ? X E 2 H ? X O Y f E A<lb/>
BETA<lb/>
GAMMA<lb/>
DELTA<lb/>
EPSILON<lb/>
ZETA<lb/>
ETA<lb/>
PSI<lb/>
CHI<lb/>
PHI<lb/>
EPSILQN<lb/>
ZETA<lb/>
ETA<lb/>
PSI.<lb/>
CHI<lb/>
PHI<lb/>
UPSILON TAU<lb/>
SIGMA<lb/>
Sorority Rush Schedule fall 1995<lb/>
CONVOCATION- Information Fair Tuesday, August 29,<lb/>
4:00-6:00 pm Great Room in Mendenhall Student Center<lb/>
Thursday, September 7,<lb/>
Friday, September 8,<lb/>
RUSH Orientation<lb/>
4:00-6:00 pm Wright Auditorium<lb/>
1st Round INTRODUCTION Day<lb/>
4:00-I0:00pm ?panics<lb/>
1 4:00-4:30<lb/>
2 4:45-5:13<lb/>
3 5:30-6:00 ?food will be provided<lb/>
4 6:15-6:45<lb/>
5 7:00-7:30<lb/>
6 7:45-8:15<lb/>
7 8:30-9:00<lb/>
S 9:15-9:45<lb/>
2nd Round HOUSE TOUR D.iv<lb/>
10:00-4:00 pm 6 panic<lb/>
1 10:00-10:45<lb/>
2 11:00-11:45 ?<lb/>
3 12:00-12.45<lb/>
4 ? 1:00- 1:45<lb/>
5 2:00- 2:45 ?<lb/>
6 3:00- 3:45<lb/>
Rusliccs 10 computer tcnninals at 8:00 pm Saturday night<lb/>
1995<lb/>
1995<lb/>
1995<lb/>
Saturday, September 9, 1995<lb/>
3rd Round SKIT Day<lb/>
1200-4:00 pm 4 panics<lb/>
1 12:00-12:45 ?<lb/>
2 1:00- 1:45 ?<lb/>
3 2:00- 2:45 ?<lb/>
4 3:00- 3:45<lb/>
Sunday, September 10, 1995<lb/>
Fall Formal Rush 1995<lb/>
a<lb/>
East Carolina University<lb/>
September? -12<lb/>
j:?.i -<lb/>
Rushecs lo computer terminals at S 00 pm Sunday night<lb/>
4th Round PREFERENCE Night<lb/>
Monday, September 11, 1995<lb/>
4:00-7.00 pm<lb/>
t<lb/>
2<lb/>
3<lb/>
BID Day<lb/>
4:00-5:00 pm<lb/>
3 panics<lb/>
4:00-4:45 ?<lb/>
5:05- 5:50 ?<lb/>
6:10-6:55 <lb/>
Rushecs fill out pref cards at 7 00 pm<lb/>
Tuesday, September 12, 1995<lb/>
University Mall<lb/>
SORORITY RUSH INFORMATION<lb/>
' Sororities participating in Sept 7-Sept. 12 Rush<lb/>
are:<lb/>
Alpha Delta Pi<lb/>
Alpha Xi Delta<lb/>
Alpha Omicron Pi<lb/>
Alpha Phi<lb/>
Chi Omega<lb/>
Ceita Zeta<lb/>
Sigma Sigma Sigma<lb/>
Zeta Tau Alpha<lb/>
 Sororities choosing to hold Rush either late<lb/>
Septerr.jsi" or in the early Spring are:<lb/>
Pi Delta<lb/>
Alpha Kappa Alpha Sigma Gamma Rho<lb/>
Delta Sigma Theta Zeta Phi Beta<lb/>
Rush Week is simply the method sororities use<lb/>
to meet students interested in joining. On Sept.7<lb/>
there is a convocation meeting to give you the<lb/>
basic sorority information; you will also meet<lb/>
your Rush counselor who will help you through<lb/>
the Rush process.<lb/>
Rush Fee (non-refundable) should be sent in<lb/>
with application in the amount of $15 made<lb/>
payable to ECU Panhellenic Association.<lb/>
Rush Registration will be accepted until Sept.1.<lb/>
Mail to: ECU Panhellenic Association<lb/>
204 Whichard Building<lb/>
East Carolina University<lb/>
Greenville, NC 27858-4353<lb/>
Financial and Social Requirements:<lb/>
Each sorority will review grades and cost during<lb/>
rush. Sororities grade requirements begin at 2.0.<lb/>
(Some sororities require higher GPA's). The<lb/>
average cost is SS0-S80 per month during the<lb/>
school year. There is also an additional pledge and<lb/>
initiation fee.<lb/>
Questions: Please contact Laura Sweet,<lb/>
Panhellenic Advisor, at 328-4235 or<lb/>
204 Whichard.<lb/>
East Carolina University Rush Registration<lb/>
Your registration must be accompanied by a check for $15, non-refundable, made payable to the ECU Panhellenic<lb/>
Association. Rush dates are September 7 - September 12,1995. Tie established check-in times for students regis-<lb/>
tered to go through rush has been set for September 7 between 6:00 and 8:00 p.m. immediately following the con-<lb/>
vocation session. Transfer and new-to-ECU freshmen must send a transcript with this applicatioa You must<lb/>
also supply 8 photos of yourself at the beginning of rush (Only one pose is necessary.)<lb/>
Sorority Rushee Data<lb/>
LAST NAME FIRST<lb/>
FATHER'S NAME:<lb/>
MOTHER'S NAME:<lb/>
HOME ADDRESS:<lb/>
MIDDLE<lb/>
SOCIAL SECURITY t<lb/>
LASTrtRST fiKIDDLE<lb/>
LASTFIRSTMIDDLE<lb/>
STREET<lb/>
ST<lb/>
TTf<lb/>
HOME PHONE:J<lb/>
HIGH SCHOOL:<lb/>
NAME<lb/>
HIGH SCHOOL CPA:<lb/>
LOCAL ADDRESS:<lb/>
OFF-CAMPUS ADDRESS:<lb/>
ON-CAMPUS ADDRSSS:<lb/>
ROOM<lb/>
CURRENT ACADEMIC STANDING:<lb/>
HOURS:<lb/>
DORM<lb/>
GPA:<lb/>
IS THERE A SORORITY AFFILIATE IN YOUR FAHILY7 (Y A N)<lb/>
 NAME: SORORITY:<lb/>
RELATIONSHIP:<lb/>
HIGH SCHOOL ACTIVITIES<lb/>
OTHER COLLEGES ATTENDED:<lb/>
NAME: <lb/>
SORORITY:<lb/>
PREVIOUS COLLEGIATE ACTIVITIES:<lb/>
HOB3IES:<lb/>
PANHELLENIC COUNCIL INFORMATION RELEASE FORM<lb/>
In compliance with the Family Educational Rights and Privacy Act of 1974, I hereby grant the<lb/>
Office Student Services at East Carolina University the right to releaae the needed academic<lb/>
information for sorority pledging and initiation to Panhellenic or the appropriate sorority<lb/>
when necessary. Hy termination from rush or membership in a sorority will void this release.<lb/>
STUDENT SIGNATURE<lb/>
ALPHA<lb/>
0<lb/>
THETA<lb/>
I<lb/>
IOTA<lb/>
K<lb/>
KAPPA<lb/>
A<lb/>
LAMBD.<lb/>
M<lb/>
MU<lb/>
N<lb/>
NU<lb/>
XI<lb/>
Go Greek!<lb/>
QBrAEZHTXOEZHNr'XOYTE<lb/>
OMEGA<lb/>
BETA GAMMA DELTA EPSILON ZETA<lb/>
ETA<lb/>
PSI<lb/>
CHI<lb/>
PHI<lb/>
EPSILON<lb/>
ZETA ETA<lb/>
PSI<lb/>
CHI<lb/>
PHI UPSILON TAU SIGMA<lb/>
0<lb/>
OMICRO<lb/>
n<lb/>
pi<lb/>
Q<lb/>
omeg<lb/>
.<lb/>
<pb facs="00058552_0039"/><lb/>
?;  II n 1 ? I<lb/>
?NHM<lb/>
11 ic uujl sui sm nai i<lb/>
luesaay, Ausust '22,1995<lb/>
39<lb/>
I<lb/>
NEWMAN CATHOLIC STUDENT CENTER<lb/>
?-j- oJ: dJKi from page 35<lb/>
953 E. 10TH ST. (2ND HOUSE FROM FLETCHER MUSIC BLDG.)<lb/>
Mass Schedule:<lb/>
Sun: 11:30 AM and 8:30 PM<lb/>
Wed: 5:30 PM<lb/>
All Masses are at the Center<lb/>
Pkciie (?me cutd 1i4itfai mow utututtcott<lb/>
Sad 757-37601757-1991<lb/>
Fr. Paul Vaeth Chaplain &amp; Campus Minister<lb/>
For More Information About These and otter Programmes, call or visit daily between 8:30am and 11 pm<lb/>
will also see action at middle hitter;<lb/>
Erin Lenker, who will get some play-<lb/>
ing time at outside hitter for ECU;<lb/>
and Kristin Warner, whose versatil-<lb/>
ity will enable her to play at several<lb/>
positions.<lb/>
The Lady Pirates finished 16-17<lb/>
overall, and fourth in the CAA last<lb/>
season. The abundance of youth on<lb/>
this year's team will have to step up<lb/>
quick for ECU to do positive things<lb/>
in '95.<lb/>
WOMEN'S CROSS COUNTRY<lb/>
Coach "Choo" Justice is very<lb/>
optimistic about this season's cross<lb/>
country team. As well he should be,<lb/>
for he has a strong foundation to<lb/>
build on from last year's outing.<lb/>
Dava Rhodes(all-CAA), Tara<lb/>
Rhodes and Cyndi Szymanski have<lb/>
two years of eligibility remaining.<lb/>
Sophomore standout performer<lb/>
Emily Linnemier will also contribute<lb/>
to this year's squad.<lb/>
Leading the way in last years<lb/>
strong freshman showing, Linnemeir<lb/>
had three top 25 finishes and was<lb/>
consistently the fourth finisher for<lb/>
the Lady Pirates. Melanie House also<lb/>
had a solid freshmen season last year<lb/>
establishing a personal best at the<lb/>
Greensboro Invitational with a time<lb/>
of 20:52.<lb/>
The team enjoyed its best per-<lb/>
formance ever at the North Carolina<lb/>
Championships in 1994. Rhodes led<lb/>
the way with an eighth place finish,<lb/>
earning her All-State honors for the<lb/>
second straight year. She hopes to<lb/>
three-peat this season.<lb/>
The East Carolinian<lb/>
Distributed each Tuesday and<lb/>
Thursday, The East Carolinian<lb/>
serves the campus as the major<lb/>
source of information about activi-<lb/>
ties and events as well as a forum<lb/>
for discussion of issues and ideas.<lb/>
This student-run paper provides<lb/>
numerous opportunities, including<lb/>
communications, business and<lb/>
management experiences where<lb/>
students can apply what they learn<lb/>
in the classroom.<lb/>
TEC Newsroom  328-6366<lb/>
TEC Advertising  328-2000<lb/>
?. v. v.y<lb/>
WZMB<lb/>
WZMB is ECU's student-run<lb/>
FM radio station that offers a vari-<lb/>
ety of alternative music including<lb/>
rock, jazz, rap and heavy metal.<lb/>
The station also offers news and<lb/>
sports reports and call-in type par-<lb/>
ticipatory shows at 91.3 on the dial.<lb/>
Various opportunities, including<lb/>
both on- and off-air experiences,<lb/>
are available in this hands-on envi-<lb/>
ronment, allowing students to pre-<lb/>
pare for a future caxeerJlP<lb/>
WZMB Studio<lb/>
Request Line<lb/>
? ?????<lb/>
????<lb/>
?:?;?: ?;?? .M<lb/>
e offer the<lb/>
lifetime.<lb/>
,???<lb/>
Expressions<lb/>
fressions is a magazine that<lb/>
serves as the voice of the campus<lb/>
minority population.<lb/>
Published four times a year, its<lb/>
pages carry stories, artwork and<lb/>
poetry that address the concerns<lb/>
and problems of the various ethnic<lb/>
and religious groups represented<lb/>
on this multi-cultural campus.<lb/>
Various opportunities to write,<lb/>
design and illustrate are available<lb/>
between the magazine's covers.<lb/>
Expressions328-6927<lb/>
r<lb/>
The RBHVT<lb/>
The Rebel is EGWiily arts<lb/>
magazine published annually each<lb/>
Spring. The featured artistic and lit-<lb/>
erary pieces are selected by a panel<lb/>
of judges from entries submitted by<lb/>
the ECU community. An annual art<lb/>
display showcases those selections.<lb/>
Staff members can get various<lb/>
types of experience from adminis-<lb/>
tering the contest to arranging the<lb/>
annual art show to producing the<lb/>
magazine.<lb/>
The Rebel328-6502<lb/>
ECU Student Media<lb/>
I Join us or the experience!<lb/>
MEN'S CROSS COUNTRY<lb/>
The Pirates have a solid corps<lb/>
of good runners this year, who wil<lb/>
aid in building the cross country pro<lb/>
gram at ECU.<lb/>
Sean Connolly and Mark Mathis<lb/>
will be sorely missed from this year<lb/>
team. Juniors Larry Lewis, Paul<lb/>
Gorman, and Jason Gibbs will havt<lb/>
to turn it up a notch this fall as the<lb/>
team's only leadership. There are no<lb/>
seniors on this year's squad.<lb/>
The Pirates did not field a full<lb/>
team at the 94 District III Cham<lb/>
pionships, despite excellent perfor<lb/>
mances by Gorman and sophomore<lb/>
Mike Marini. The team can only get<lb/>
better this year as they attempt to<lb/>
continue making strides in the CAA.<lb/>
ECU<lb/>
from page 32<lb/>
presses 360 pounds and squats 650<lb/>
a new record for tailbacks at ECU<lb/>
The only drawbacks on Harley is hi;<lb/>
speed (4.6) and lack of experience<lb/>
catching the football.<lb/>
Raymond Mabry from nearb<lb/>
Vanceboro, NC is a Junior Smith<lb/>
look alike in equipment (5-8 175<lb/>
who has a slashing, jitterbug style<lb/>
similar to Smith's. He had the best<lb/>
spring of the three and is adept a!<lb/>
catching the football and knows the<lb/>
offense well. He is not the biggesi<lb/>
player but is sturdy bench pressing<lb/>
335 pounds and runs a 4.53 40 yard<lb/>
dash.<lb/>
Daryl Jones may be the best<lb/>
combination of size and speec<lb/>
among the backups. The 5-foot-l(<lb/>
208 pound Rockledge Florida native<lb/>
has outstanding size and good speed<lb/>
and ability to catch the football. He<lb/>
has great vision and cutback abil<lb/>
ity. He had a slight case of fumbleitis<lb/>
in spring ball and needs to run<lb/>
tougher but may wind up being<lb/>
McPhail's backup. Jones was highly<lb/>
rated coming out of high school and<lb/>
was a outstanding baseball player<lb/>
and track and field performer.<lb/>
Senior fullback Eric Blanton<lb/>
and sophomore John Peacock are<lb/>
competing for the blocking back<lb/>
position left vacant by Damon Wil-<lb/>
son. Both have shined in games<lb/>
before, Blanton with a strong per-<lb/>
formance against the Kentucky<lb/>
Wildcats and Peacock against<lb/>
Cincinatti a year ago.<lb/>
Peacock led the state of Florida<lb/>
in rushing his senior year at Cardi-<lb/>
nal Mooney High School. He is a<lb/>
very strong player who bench<lb/>
presses 385 pounds and has good<lb/>
hands.<lb/>
Blanton, a walk on from upstate<lb/>
New York is extremely physical and<lb/>
is a shift open field runner. He is a<lb/>
blue-collar worker who has im-<lb/>
pressed the ECU coaches from the<lb/>
moment he arrived in Greenville.<lb/>
The two remain locked in a<lb/>
struggle for the starting position in<lb/>
fall camp.<lb/>
FACT:<lb/>
Every year, Americans<lb/>
discard 16 billion<lb/>
plastic diapers, two<lb/>
billion disposable<lb/>
razors and L6 billion<lb/>
ballpoint pens:<lb/>
TIP:<lb/>
Use durable alterna-<lb/>
tives such as cloth<lb/>
diaper, razors that use<lb/>
replaceable blades (or<lb/>
even electric razors)<lb/>
and pens with refills.<lb/>
This Green Tip is sponsored by:<lb/>
Heron Bay<lb/>
Trading Co.<lb/>
"Greenville's Exclusive<lb/>
Nature Store"<lb/>
in The Plaza ?321-6380<lb/>
BRING TIP IN FOR<lb/>
20 OFF PURCHASE<lb/>
O 1995 Kevin A McLean. Tampa, FL<lb/>
"? -? .<lb/>
???<lb/>
<pb facs="00058552_0040"/><lb/>
MiMriiWiiniiiiii.ftiii<lb/>
? ?!?? i nil mnnfrw<lb/>
Home Of The<lb/>
Original<lb/>
'70S '80S<lb/>
DANCE MADNESS<lb/>
PARTY EVERY TUESDAY<lb/>
Ladies FREE till 11pm<lb/>
Only $1.00 Bottle Beer<lb/>
N.C's<lb/>
Legendary<lb/>
Rock N' Roll<lb/>
Nightclub now<lb/>
in its<lb/>
24th year In<lb/>
downtown<lb/>
Greenville<lb/>
Every Wednesday<lb/>
Tonight<lb/>
Only $4<lb/>
Adm.<lb/>
Before 11 pm<lb/>
Door Prizes<lb/>
WRDU 106.1<lb/>
WRDU Welcome Back ECU Party<lb/>
CR4VIN<lb/>
70s'S04j)anceJefoeJtanA<lb/>
Wednesday 23<lb/>
Ladies<lb/>
Free<lb/>
Admission<lb/>
Till 11<lb/>
Tuesday 29<lb/>
The Return of The Original<lb/>
'70s A '80s<lb/>
7iste To.kc?. Harness<lb/>
Every Tuesday<lb/>
$2.00 Mm<lb/>
For Nhmbon<lb/>
All New Light<lb/>
Show<lb/>
$1.06 Bottle Beers<lb/>
7m<lb/>
rt&amp;<lb/>
Fot<lb/>
In Concert<lb/>
I<lb/>
with special guest<lb/>
Mike Rivera<lb/>
00 ECU 1.0. only $1.00 ADM 9:00 ? 9:30<lb/>
$1.50 HiBoils and $1.50 Toll Boys<lb/>
$1.50<lb/>
HiBalls<lb/>
Wednesday 30<lb/>
COMeflf<lb/>
?'? Chip Flatow<lb/>
special guest<lb/>
Dan Carlson<lb/>
?nly $4<lb/>
Adm.<lb/>
Members<lb/>
$1.50 Tall<lb/>
Boys<lb/>
$1.50<lb/>
HiBalls<lb/>
Thursday 24<lb/>
Gravey<lb/>
$1.06 Bottle Beers Before 11pm<lb/>
WSFL 106.5 Welcome Back ECU Party<lb/>
'<lb/>
Dillon Fence<lb/>
Atlantic Recording Artist<lb/>
Just Back From European Tour<lb/>
Friday 25<lb/>
$1.50<lb/>
HiBalls<lb/>
$1.06<lb/>
32 oz<lb/>
Draft<lb/>
Thursday 31<lb/>
Capricorn Recording Mst<lb/>
LOOtfOH5U0T5??CNL$<lb/>
WSFL<lb/>
College Night<lb/>
$1.00 32 oz. Draft<lb/>
$1.00 Membership<lb/>
$1.50 Bottle Beer<lb/>
$1.50 HiBalls<lb/>
Only $5<lb/>
Adm.<lb/>
Members<lb/>
Beach Music's 1 Show<lb/>
Only $3.00 Adm.<lb/>
For 1st SO ECU I.Ds<lb/>
Saturday 26<lb/>
Coming In September<lb/>
purple<lb/>
schoolbus<lb/>
m mp town<lb/>
RETRO SO S DANCE<lb/>
Gray "wbmu<lb/>
MNP<lb/>
eu<lb/>
Wiq. muAic<lb/>
MikeMesmefEyes" rm tuAaf<lb/>
The Worlds Most Pjtfful Hypnotist ti)IU J W t5 Pi<lb/>
I ?i k Dccrs<lb/>
MOTHER NATURE<lb/>
CLASSIC ROCK<lb/>
Attic's 24th Birthday Party<lb/>
 Fall Stop<lb/>
?<lb/>
wemmmmiewin nittn. mpi. ml<lb/>
?<lb/>
<pb facs="00058552_0041"/>
</div></body></text></TEI>