<?xml version="1.0"?><TEI xmlns="http://www.tei-c.org/ns/1.0" xmlns:xsi="http://www.w3.org/2001/XMLSchema-instance" xsi:schemaLocation="http://www.tei-c.org/ns/1.0 http://digital.lib.ecu.edu/tei/xsd/tei_P5.xsd"><teiHeader><fileDesc><titleStmt><title></title><author></author><respStmt><resp>Text encoded by</resp><name>Digital Collections</name></respStmt></titleStmt><publicationStmt><distributor>East Carolina University. J. Y. Joyner Library</distributor><address><addrLine>Digital Collections</addrLine><addrLine>Joyner Library, East Carolina University</addrLine><addrLine>East Fifth Street, Greenville NC 27858-4353 USA</addrLine></address><date>2012</date></publicationStmt><sourceDesc><bibl></bibl></sourceDesc></fileDesc><encodingDesc><samplingDecl><p>All quotation marks retained as data.</p><p>All end-of-line hyphens have been removed, and the trailing part of a word has been joined to the preceding line.</p><p>All smart quotes have been converted into straight quotes.</p></samplingDecl><classDecl><taxonomy xml:id="LCSH"><bibl>Library of Congress Subject Headings</bibl></taxonomy></classDecl></encodingDesc><profileDesc><creation><date></date></creation><langUsage xml:lang="en-US"><language ident="en-US" usage="100">English</language></langUsage><textClass><keywords scheme="#LCSH"><list><item></item></list></keywords></textClass></profileDesc></teiHeader><text><body><div type="other">
<p rend="align(centerbold)">[This text is machine generated and may contain errors.]</p>
<pb facs="00058557_0001"/>
?gjp<lb/>
September 12,1995<lb/>
Vol 71, No. 06<lb/>
The East Carolinian<lb/>
Circulation 12,000<lb/>
East Carolina University<lb/>
Greenville, N C<lb/>
14 pases<lb/>
Downtown crowds maced<lb/>
Saturday's crowd<lb/>
too much for<lb/>
Greenville police<lb/>
J. Miles Layton<lb/>
Staff Writer<lb/>
Greenville Police sprayed pep-<lb/>
per gas into noisy downtown<lb/>
crowds late Saturday night.<lb/>
Several hundred students and<lb/>
Pirate fans went to Fifth Street bars<lb/>
to celebrate ECU's victory over<lb/>
Syracuse. Around 2 a. m the street<lb/>
was clogged with people which<lb/>
prompted several policeman to try<lb/>
and disperse the crowds. After<lb/>
shouting into bullhorns to leave the<lb/>
downtown area, students responded<lb/>
on both sides of the street with<lb/>
"F the police<lb/>
Seargent Bo Jackson of the<lb/>
Greenville Police Department said<lb/>
the crowd was getting unruly and<lb/>
blocking the street.<lb/>
"A public street is open for ve-<lb/>
hicular traffic and by getting the<lb/>
ECU students to disperse, we are<lb/>
looking out for their safety Jack-<lb/>
son said.<lb/>
According to Jackson, crowds<lb/>
began to throw things at officers.<lb/>
"Some of the people began to<lb/>
throw stuff at officers and one was<lb/>
hit twice he said.<lb/>
Jackson said that when people<lb/>
failed to disperse, officers began to<lb/>
spray Capston gas into the crowds.<lb/>
Capston gas, a deriative of pepper<lb/>
gas, causes eyes to tear up and<lb/>
lungs and air passages to burn.<lb/>
During the melee, police took<lb/>
four into custody and charged them<lb/>
with disorderly conduct. Sixteen<lb/>
others were cited for impeding traf-<lb/>
fic and there were four ABC viola-<lb/>
tions.<lb/>
Jackson said this was not like<lb/>
Halloween because the street was<lb/>
not closed off making it dangerous<lb/>
to pedestrians.<lb/>
"There's a possibilty that some<lb/>
crazy guy could have just decided<lb/>
to mow down anybody in his path<lb/>
Jackson said.<lb/>
Sensing the danger, police<lb/>
sprayed gas into the crowds.<lb/>
Freshman Stacy Jones did not<lb/>
hear any warning prior to the pep-<lb/>
per gas.<lb/>
"I was sitting next to Subway<lb/>
and all of a sudden I felt my throat<lb/>
burn Jones said. "I started sneez-<lb/>
ing and the worst part - my chest<lb/>
locked up. This meaning I have<lb/>
asthma and I had no prior warning<lb/>
 and, for the first time had a se-<lb/>
vere asthma attack.<lb/>
"If I did not have my inhaler<lb/>
on me, I would have dropped to the<lb/>
ground and probably would have<lb/>
been trampled. I did not come to<lb/>
ECU to get maced or attacked<lb/>
Gretchen Klein, Junior<lb/>
Yes, because we pay<lb/>
such high prices for the<lb/>
cafeteria food which is<lb/>
somewhat decent ? so,<lb/>
why can't we have fast<lb/>
food chains for the same<lb/>
price or even cheaper?<lb/>
Jamie Caviness, second<lb/>
degree student<lb/>
No, I think a mid-morning<lb/>
snack should cost<lb/>
$15.<lb/>
Jeremy McCullen, senior<lb/>
Yes, Campus food<lb/>
services are a rip-off.<lb/>
Taesha Inman, sophomore<lb/>
Yes, because the cost of<lb/>
the meal plans are too<lb/>
high. The school feels that<lb/>
they are helping you, but<lb/>
they are just making<lb/>
money off of you. It would<lb/>
be cheaper to have it on<lb/>
campus.<lb/>
Photo by KEN CLARK<lb/>
Student Government Vice<lb/>
President Dale Emery thinks the<lb/>
police were justified.<lb/>
"I could see why the cops were<lb/>
as harsh as they were Emery said.<lb/>
He said he saw a car full of girls<lb/>
stop in the middle of the street<lb/>
while a bunch of guys came and just<lb/>
sat on the hood.<lb/>
"That could have been my sis-<lb/>
ter, or my mom, or my grand-<lb/>
mother he said. "If it had been any<lb/>
of those three or anybody else I<lb/>
know, and they were as terrified as<lb/>
those girls were, then I feel that in<lb/>
that instance, as well a couple of<lb/>
others, they were justified.<lb/>
"But it is obviously wrong to<lb/>
walk down the street and randomly<lb/>
spray anybody and everybody<lb/>
While standing in front of<lb/>
Earthly Creations, Emery said he<lb/>
got sprayed.<lb/>
"I didn't enjoy getting a mouth<lb/>
full of pepper gas<lb/>
Gregory Joyner was talking to<lb/>
See CROWD page 3<lb/>
Pirate pride<lb/>
Photo by KEN CLARK<lb/>
Members of ECU'S football team lean out of their bus to greet enthusiastic Pirate fans.<lb/>
ECU came home victorious from New York after beating Syracuse 27-24.<lb/>
Injured student taken off life support<lb/>
Aaron Wilson<lb/>
Staff Writer<lb/>
The world is a sadder place for the<lb/>
many loved ones of James Calhoun, Jr.<lb/>
who passed away early Monday morn-<lb/>
ing. Calhoun, ECU junior majoring in<lb/>
Business Administration was one of the<lb/>
managers for the basketball team and<lb/>
member of the Event Staff for the ath-<lb/>
letic department<lb/>
Calhoun was paralyzed from the<lb/>
neck down after a diving accident at<lb/>
Emerald Isle Beach in Carteret County,<lb/>
Spt 2. He received extensive injuries<lb/>
including fractures to his fifth verte-<lb/>
brae as well as spinal cord damage.<lb/>
Calhoun suffered a stroke that night<lb/>
and remained in a deep coma until<lb/>
yesterday. After all medical options had<lb/>
been discussed, the decision to take<lb/>
him off life support was made by the<lb/>
family.<lb/>
He is survived by his parents<lb/>
James Sr. and Sandra Calhoun and his<lb/>
two older sisters Michelle and Linda.<lb/>
His girlfriend Tonya Oxendine is an<lb/>
ECU student and member of the Lady<lb/>
Pirate softball team.<lb/>
The 20-year-old Rocky Mount na-<lb/>
tive was a standout in several sports<lb/>
at Rocky Mount Academy, earning All-<lb/>
Conference mention in basketball and<lb/>
baseball. He also coached Little-League<lb/>
baseball this past summer, his team ad-<lb/>
vanced to the playoffs.<lb/>
He aspired to become a coach or<lb/>
athletic director at the collegiate level.<lb/>
Described as a fierce competitor,<lb/>
Calhoun's enthusiasm and caring made<lb/>
a big impact on the youths he came in<lb/>
contact with.<lb/>
"Jim is the type of kid you want<lb/>
your kids to grow up to be like<lb/>
Calhoun's uncle Terry Barbour said.<lb/>
"He wasn't perfect but he was a very<lb/>
good, decent young man who cared<lb/>
about others and left a positive impres-<lb/>
sion on everyone he met the kind of<lb/>
person you felt good about leaving in<lb/>
charge of your children. He loved kids<lb/>
and they loved him<lb/>
The Calhoun's never gave up hope<lb/>
for this special young man, praying and<lb/>
praying for a miracle. His girlfriend<lb/>
Tonya may have<lb/>
put it best with<lb/>
these words.<lb/>
"Jim will al-<lb/>
ways have a special<lb/>
place in my heart"<lb/>
she said. "I will<lb/>
never forget the<lb/>
past six months<lb/>
because they were<lb/>
the best He will al-<lb/>
ways be with me<lb/>
Funeral ser-<lb/>
vices will be con-<lb/>
ducted at 11 a.m<lb/>
Wednesday morn-<lb/>
ing at the Johnson<lb/>
I amily Funeral<lb/>
Home Chapel on<lb/>
Fairview Road in<lb/>
Rocky Mount The<lb/>
family will be re-<lb/>
ceiving friends and<lb/>
loved ones this<lb/>
Tuesday night be-<lb/>
tween 7 and 8:30<lb/>
p.m. at the funeral<lb/>
home.<lb/>
Photo Courtesy of Tonya Oxendine<lb/>
James Calhoun and his girlfriend Tonya<lb/>
Oxendine before his death Mcnday. TEC<lb/>
incorrectly printed the wrong picture in<lb/>
last Thursday's paper.<lb/>
Holiday accident<lb/>
kills student<lb/>
Tambra Zlon<lb/>
News Editor<lb/>
Another ECU student has been<lb/>
killed in an automobile accident.<lb/>
Karl Dwight Righter, 25, died<lb/>
Friday, Sept. 1 in a motorcycle ac-<lb/>
cident in North Myrtle Beach, S.C.<lb/>
Righter was pronounced dead<lb/>
at the scene after he was struck by<lb/>
a Cadillac crossing in front of his<lb/>
path at U.S. 17 and 33rd Avenue<lb/>
South. According to an article in<lb/>
The Daily Reflector, Righter was<lb/>
not wearing a helmet at the time<lb/>
of the incident, but the driver of<lb/>
the vehicle was expected to face<lb/>
charges.<lb/>
"Karl was a very people ori-<lb/>
ented person, he enjoyed being<lb/>
around people said Betty Righter,<lb/>
Karl's mother. "He would always<lb/>
wear a big smile and people would<lb/>
remember him by that<lb/>
Funeral services were held at<lb/>
11 a.m. on Sept. 4 in Knightdale.<lb/>
He was buried in Bethany Chapel<lb/>
Cemetary. Righter's family asked<lb/>
that any memorials be made to the<lb/>
ECU School of Medicine.<lb/>
"He had expressed interest in<lb/>
it (medical school) Righter said.<lb/>
She is hoping other students<lb/>
and victims will be able to gain<lb/>
from the loss of her son through<lb/>
science.<lb/>
"He was a friend to anybody -<lb/>
even in elementary school one of<lb/>
his teachers said  she would sit<lb/>
the new students next to Carl<lb/>
Righter said. She said her son had<lb/>
a way of making people feel com-<lb/>
fortable and getting to know them.<lb/>
A member of the Kappa Alpha<lb/>
fraternity, Righter had at one time<lb/>
hoped to go to medical school.<lb/>
"He always had the highest<lb/>
GPA said Mart Wooddal, fellow<lb/>
KA and Righter's friend.<lb/>
Righter had worked as a life-<lb/>
guard in North Myrtle Beach for<lb/>
quite a while, Wooddal said.<lb/>
"We're from the same home-<lb/>
town; he was my roommate said<lb/>
KA Jason Warren. "We lived to-<lb/>
gether at the beach. He was always<lb/>
happy. Nothing in the world could<lb/>
get him down<lb/>
Warren said Righter enjoyed<lb/>
playing basketball, football and<lb/>
wrestling. He was very athletic and<lb/>
according to Warren, "He was good<lb/>
in all sports<lb/>
Students connect<lb/>
at Career Day<lb/>
Recruiters travel<lb/>
from all over state<lb/>
to inform students<lb/>
Staff Reports<lb/>
Career Services and the School<lb/>
of Business will sponsor its annual<lb/>
Career Day on Tuesday, Sept. 19.<lb/>
"Career Day is open to any stu-<lb/>
dent that wants to work in a busi-<lb/>
ness environment said Margie<lb/>
Swartout, assistant director of Career<lb/>
Services.<lb/>
Career Day is also an opportu-<lb/>
nity for students to meet and talk<lb/>
with the 55 recruiters scheduled to<lb/>
attend.<lb/>
"This year we will also have rep-<lb/>
resentatives from government agen-<lb/>
cies Swartout said.<lb/>
Career Services stressed the im-<lb/>
portance of students doing some re-<lb/>
search on the companies they think<lb/>
they may be interested in before<lb/>
meeting with the recruiters. Students<lb/>
can find information on most of the<lb/>
agencies that will be attending in the<lb/>
Career Services Building. She also<lb/>
suggested seniors should look pro-<lb/>
fessional and carry a resume for po-<lb/>
tential interview opportunities.<lb/>
"Students need to make a good<lb/>
impression Swartout said. "This is<lb/>
the initial contact with recruiters<lb/>
who will return to do interviews in<lb/>
the spring<lb/>
Career day will be set up the<lb/>
same as in the past. Representatives<lb/>
from different companies will have<lb/>
tables set up on the first and third<lb/>
floors of the General Classroom<lb/>
Building and students can visit the<lb/>
tables.<lb/>
"A lot of these companies come<lb/>
back later in the year to conduct in-<lb/>
terviews Swartout said. "We usu-<lb/>
ally get from around 400 to 500 (stu-<lb/>
dents) and they're from all depart-<lb/>
ments with the exception of educa-<lb/>
tion and health majors because we<lb/>
have separate career days for them<lb/>
The business career day is fo-<lb/>
cused toward students in their junior<lb/>
and senior years, but all majors and<lb/>
classes are invited to attend. Career<lb/>
days will also be scheduled for educa-<lb/>
tion and allied health majors later this<lb/>
semester and in early spring.<lb/>
"Business Career Day is a wide<lb/>
variety of employers  its more infor-<lb/>
mational - it allows students to ex-<lb/>
plore possibilities in different careers<lb/>
Swartout said.<lb/>
lIFfc-e<lb/>
Utaftfc<lb/>
Food fight in campus diningpage O<lb/>
Are we our own worst enemy?page Q<lb/>
SPORTJWg<lb/>
How it feels to be a winnerpage<lb/>
8<lb/>
Tuesday<lb/>
Partly cloudy<lb/>
Wednesday<lb/>
Partly cloudy<lb/>
?fc<lb/>
High 78<lb/>
Low 62<lb/>
?fc<lb/>
High 84<lb/>
Low 62<lb/>
tlfoi- ? ftemdk m&amp;<lb/>
Phone<lb/>
(newsroom) 328 - 6366<lb/>
(advertising) 328-2000<lb/>
Fax<lb/>
328 - 6558<lb/>
The East Carolinian<lb/>
Student Publication Bldg<lb/>
2nd floor<lb/>
Greenville, NC 27858<lb/>
Student Pubs Building;<lb/>
across from Joyner<lb/>
4<lb/>
<pb facs="00058557_0002"/><lb/>
fl"<lb/>
2<lb/>
Tuesday, September 12,1995<lb/>
The East Carolinian<lb/>
Dining services<lb/>
says no to chains<lb/>
Tambra Zion<lb/>
News Editor<lb/>
North Carolina State has them,<lb/>
Chapel Hill has them, so why doesn't<lb/>
Dining Services allow competitive food<lb/>
chains here at ECU?<lb/>
Referred to as branded concepts,<lb/>
Director of Dining Services Frank<lb/>
Salamon has several reasons for not hav-<lb/>
ing them on ECU'S campus.<lb/>
"Creatively, we feel we're getting<lb/>
good mileage out of our units, since they<lb/>
are our units  we have total flexibility<lb/>
to come in and mix and match different<lb/>
food items in combination or try and<lb/>
experiment with different things<lb/>
Salamon said.<lb/>
Vice Chancellor for Student Life Dr.<lb/>
Alfred Matthews agrees that ECU allows<lb/>
for a great deal of flexibility through its<lb/>
current food service.<lb/>
"Aramark has an exclusive con-<lb/>
tract Matthews said. 'They're able to<lb/>
put together a complete food service. We<lb/>
started in 1988 with basically no food<lb/>
service at all  the program has been<lb/>
built since then<lb/>
Salamon said there is also a cost to<lb/>
working with national brands. A percent-<lb/>
age of revenue earned from such sales<lb/>
would have to be paid to the parent com-<lb/>
pany in order to gain advertising, licens-<lb/>
ing rights and so forth.<lb/>
Randy Lait, business manager for<lb/>
University Dining at North Carolina State<lb/>
University said the cost is worth the busi-<lb/>
ness.<lb/>
Lait said meal plan purchases from<lb/>
upperclassmen have actually increased<lb/>
since the introduction of branded con-<lb/>
cepts at State a few years ago, and the<lb/>
revenues brought in outweigh any fees<lb/>
paid to the parent company.<lb/>
"It gives you a real stamp of approval<lb/>
in quality Lait said. "Anybody can make<lb/>
a taco, but Taco Bell has it down to a<lb/>
science<lb/>
Salamon said external factors must<lb/>
also be considered when deciding<lb/>
whether or not to allow any branded<lb/>
concepts on campus. Because ECU is a<lb/>
major economic presence in Greenville,<lb/>
Salamon said several factors have to be<lb/>
taken into consideration.<lb/>
"It helps the off-campus brand be-<lb/>
cause it increases awareness, it increases<lb/>
customer acceptance of the brand <lb/>
Salamon said. "And then of course the<lb/>
other, opposite school of thought is that<lb/>
it hurts the local franchise because in-<lb/>
stead of people leaving the campus to<lb/>
get their Taco Bell tacos, they can stay<lb/>
right there<lb/>
Salamon said ECU's current food<lb/>
services are a great deal and offer stu-<lb/>
dents variety.<lb/>
"In food that we make, burgers,<lb/>
chicken, pizza and wokery sandwiches.<lb/>
I'm very comfortable with where we are<lb/>
in comparison to the marketplace, we do<lb/>
market studies as well as anyone else<lb/>
Salamon said.<lb/>
He said the high priced bottled soda<lb/>
prices and other convenience items car-<lb/>
ried on campus are areas he constantly<lb/>
struggles with. Salamon said he could<lb/>
choose not to offer items such as bottled<lb/>
drinks and other similar products but<lb/>
"I don't have that kind of luck, my cus-<lb/>
tomers demand that convenience<lb/>
Although he said the idea is always<lb/>
under consideration, Salamon said there<lb/>
are no plans for competitive chains such<lb/>
as Burger King and Taco Bell on cam-<lb/>
pus at this time.<lb/>
"We don't have any definite plans<lb/>
right now to introduce any branded con-<lb/>
cepts, we never know what the future<lb/>
holds Salamon said. "We are success-<lb/>
fully building our business right now we<lb/>
are in an expansion phase without na-<lb/>
tional brands<lb/>
Salamon said any profits made by<lb/>
dining services are reinvested in the pro-<lb/>
gram to provide improved facilities such<lb/>
as Todd Dining Hall and an expansion<lb/>
for The Wright Place. Programs and ac-<lb/>
tivities are also provided through dining<lb/>
services at a cost to the organization,<lb/>
Salamon said. Dining services often funds<lb/>
activities such as Midnight Madness and<lb/>
Mardi Gras.<lb/>
Seminar teaches dressing for success<lb/>
Holly Hagey<lb/>
Staff Writer<lb/>
Imagine going in for an inter-<lb/>
view with a firm for a position<lb/>
which you are well qualified and<lb/>
not getting the posuion because of<lb/>
the way you are dressed.<lb/>
The ECU School of Business<lb/>
hosted a beneficial seminar to com-<lb/>
bat this problem last week.<lb/>
The third annual Professional<lb/>
Dress and Demeanor Program was<lb/>
presented on Thursday, Sept. 7 in<lb/>
Mendenhall Great Rooms two and<lb/>
three from 3:30 to 4:30 p.m.<lb/>
In the past, concern was ex-<lb/>
pressed that many ECU students<lb/>
did not dress appropriately for job<lb/>
interviews.<lb/>
"Some on-campus recruiters<lb/>
confided in me that they saw a<lb/>
weakness in the preparation of our<lb/>
students for interviews and one of<lb/>
the concerns was the appearance<lb/>
of our students not wearing profes-<lb/>
sional dress sponsor Dr. Douglas<lb/>
Schneider said.<lb/>
Two parts make up the pro-<lb/>
gram, one addressing professional<lb/>
demeanor in business situations<lb/>
and the other part dealing with pro-<lb/>
fessional attire. Proper attire for<lb/>
women as well as men was dis-<lb/>
played by managers of The Casual<lb/>
Corner and Brody's.<lb/>
"The program, I think, has had<lb/>
some positive impact Schneider<lb/>
said. "Some of the recruiters have<lb/>
noticed a difference in the appear-<lb/>
ance of the students. They seem to<lb/>
be better prepared for the inter-<lb/>
views. The job market is so com-<lb/>
petitive now that recruiters are<lb/>
looking for any excuse to eliminate<lb/>
someone from consideration<lb/>
Important tips, such as appro-<lb/>
priate colors for business suits and<lb/>
how to prepare for answering ques-<lb/>
See DRESS page 3<lb/>
Surprise your folks.<lb/>
When you stay awake in class, you tend to learn more. (Unless you have an uncanny<lb/>
talent of learning through osmosis.) So don't let fatigue get in the way of your A, Revive<lb/>
with Vivarin. One tablet has the same amount of caffeine as about two cups of coffee.<lb/>
And it's just as safe. Hey, anything is possible, if you're up for it.<lb/>
?or'<lb/>
?SV<lb/>
CJf? SmithKhna (NCtall<lb/>
?1995 nJ&amp;JConsumer Healthcare<lb/>
Use only as directed.<lb/>
Revive with Vivarin.<lb/>
IJjGMJW OF<lb/>
meOfT<lb/>
Original<lb/>
70s'80s<lb/>
DANCE MADNESS<lb/>
RfkKTY 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<lb/>
now in it's<lb/>
24th year In<lb/>
downtown<lb/>
Greenville<lb/>
LAPIL5<lb/>
ADMI66ltfhl<lb/>
TILL t I<lb/>
Tonight<lb/>
The Return of The Original<lb/>
Only $2.00 him<lb/>
70s St 80s<lb/>
Discc T)ance Harness<lb/>
Every Tuesday<lb/>
.00<lb/>
bOTWJL<lb/>
All New<lb/>
Light Show!<lb/>
D<lb/>
Two Big Nites!<lb/>
WCike Weswek "Eyes<lb/>
World's most powerful Hypnotist<lb/>
$1.50 HiBalls<lb/>
$1.50 Tall Boys<lb/>
East Coast<lb/>
music<lb/>
Quicksilver<lb/>
Wash Pub<lb/>
Attic<lb/>
Advance tickets only $8<lb/>
Friday 15th<lb/>
32 oj. Draft<lb/>
SIGMA MJ<lb/>
Sept. 12,13,14; 8-11 pm<lb/>
Tues - Ultimate Slip and Slide<lb/>
Wed - Italian Stallion Night<lb/>
Thurs - Pre-Bid Night, Bar-b-que<lb/>
Located Behind Miami Subs<lb/>
For Rides and Info call 758-6450,830-5439<lb/>
ROILY GReY &amp; SUNHRef<lb/>
teLsNDRecGae<lb/>
Only S5<lb/>
Acfm.<lb/>
Members<lb/>
Saturday 16th<lb/>
32 o Draft<lb/>
Next Week<lb/>
QoveRNMeNT MDLe<lb/>
features Warren tfajes &amp; fllen Woodj of the tollman Bros, Band<lb/>
?Also Watt flbts of The Dickie Betts Band.<lb/>
SUV<lb/>
32-en, Draft<lb/>
WSFL<lb/>
Listener Appreciation<lb/>
Concert<lb/>
<pb facs="00058557_0003"/><lb/>
?nflu<lb/>
The East Carolinian<lb/>
Tuesday, September 12, 1995<lb/>
Rush<lb/>
Gamma Sigma Sigma<lb/>
National Service Sorority<lb/>
Chatterings will be held Sept 12, 13, 14 in Mendenhall<lb/>
Undergroundroom 8:00 - 9:30pm.<lb/>
Come see what Service and Friendship is all about.<lb/>
Dress is ccusal and refreshments will be served.<lb/>
Din<lb/>
Informational Smoker<lb/>
Tuesday September 12, 1995 at 7:00 pm in GBC 1028<lb/>
M<lb/>
&amp;&amp;&amp;<lb/>
$&amp;<lb/>
?<lb/>
it<lb/>
11<lb/>
? ??<lb/>
cUtc WANTS YOU<lb/>
If you have a 3.3 GPA or higher and between 32 and 96 credit hours.<lb/>
If interested and can't attend please call Jason Painter at 758-7077<lb/>
DRESS from page 2 CROWD from page 1<lb/>
tions, were discussed, as well as a<lb/>
variety of other topics concerning<lb/>
interviews and office visits.<lb/>
Schneider said this program is es-<lb/>
pecially beneficial for ECU stu-<lb/>
dents.<lb/>
"I think our students are at a<lb/>
little bit of a competitive disadvan-<lb/>
tage as compared to students in the<lb/>
triangle area because recruiters<lb/>
have to travel two hours here<lb/>
Schneider said. "We have to make<lb/>
certain that when recruiters come<lb/>
out here that our students are given<lb/>
every bit as much opportunity as<lb/>
students at North Carolina State,<lb/>
Chapel Hill and so forth<lb/>
friends when he got "maced<lb/>
"I was maced as I was stand-<lb/>
ing on the sidewalk talking to my<lb/>
friends about where we were going<lb/>
to go next Joyner said. "After an<lb/>
exciting day of watching one of the<lb/>
best ECU football games, this was<lb/>
just the way I wanted to end my<lb/>
birthday<lb/>
David Hisle heard no one shout<lb/>
disperse.<lb/>
"I was maced and heard no 'dis-<lb/>
perse' and suspected no danger<lb/>
Hisle said.<lb/>
Freshman Jennifer Schwan was<lb/>
sitting in front of the Catalog Con-<lb/>
nection.<lb/>
I7te 9aiCSaton<lb/>
ECU discount Days<lb/>
ECU students and staff recive 10<lb/>
off every Thursday in September.<lb/>
Register to win up to $200 in nail<lb/>
&amp; skin care products. Also win a<lb/>
set of nail enhancers.<lb/>
Call 355-1661 for your<lb/>
appointment.<lb/>
Certified reflexologist and aromat&amp;lrapist.<lb/>
218-C SlHington 'Blvd.<lb/>
Qreenville, $?27858<lb/>
(919)355-1661<lb/>
"I was sitting on the ledge of<lb/>
the Catalog Connection talking to<lb/>
friends around 2 a.m. when people<lb/>
started coming out of clubs<lb/>
Schwan said. "People started to get<lb/>
loud and all of a sudden, a friend<lb/>
of mine told me to walk, so we did<lb/>
and I could not breathe.<lb/>
"I was walking down Fifth<lb/>
Street unable to breathe and my<lb/>
eyes were tearing and watering and<lb/>
I could only breathe in my shirt<lb/>
Schwan can't understand why<lb/>
police gave tickets to students re-<lb/>
turning to campus.<lb/>
"We then proceeded to the cor-<lb/>
ner and the cops said to move be-<lb/>
cause we were trespassing she<lb/>
said. "I disagree because we moved<lb/>
to ECU property and the police<lb/>
started giving tickets when we go<lb/>
to school at ECU<lb/>
City Council Candidate Bill<lb/>
Gheen was also downtown and<lb/>
thinks the crowd should have been<lb/>
warned better before the police<lb/>
took action.<lb/>
"When hundreds of innocent<lb/>
bystanders are hit with pepper<lb/>
mace, we are lucky that the results<lb/>
of the stampede did not injure<lb/>
many students Gheen said. "We<lb/>
need to keep downtown safe and<lb/>
peaceful for both students and<lb/>
property owners, but this is going<lb/>
to be hard to accomplish when the<lb/>
police mace hundreds of bystand-<lb/>
ers<lb/>
No<lb/>
news<lb/>
writers'<lb/>
meetin<lb/>
r<lb/>
??<lb/>
Homecoming 1995<lb/>
<lb/>
'(?!?? Vr,<lb/>
Homecoming 1995<lb/>
5<lb/>
Tr<lb/>
iii<lb/>
i ri'i<lb/>
Remembering the fast<lb/>
Building for the Future.<lb/>
Remembering the rait<lb/>
BuMngfortbe Future.<lb/>
Applications are due by 4p.m.<lb/>
on Friday, September 22 in MSC 210<lb/>
ABSOLUTELY NO LATE<lb/>
APPLICATIONS.<lb/>
Checks and interdepartmental<lb/>
transfers by deadline.<lb/>
Homecoming 1995<lb/>
Homecoming 1995<lb/>
Remembering the Past.<lb/>
Building for the Future.<lb/>
The East Carolina University Student Union Presents<lb/>
Wednesday, September 13,1995 ? 6:30 PM - 7:30 PM<lb/>
Great Room - Mendenhall Student Center<lb/>
This is your opportunity to join one of the Student Union's committees<lb/>
and chat with committee chairpersons. f?fi?E fO O J)If ?<lb/>
Homecoming 1995<lb/>
Remembering the Past<lb/>
Buiidingforthe Future.<lb/>
-??<lb/>
Remembering the Past<lb/>
Building for the Future.<lb/>
SEPTEMBER 14-16 ? 8:00 PM ? HENDRIX THEATRE<lb/>
SPONSORED BY THE SU FILMS COMMITTEE<lb/>
Position Available for<lb/>
Day-Student Representative<lb/>
for ECU Student Union<lb/>
Board of Directors<lb/>
Deadline to Apply: Thursday, Sept 14th<lb/>
Applications Available in Room 236<lb/>
Mendenhall Student Center<lb/>
Annual Mother Nature<lb/>
ftiiiiiiai ate Ad<lb/>
r Slash<lb/>
Splash<lb/>
9<lb/>
WHhSpedal Guest<lb/>
Risse<lb/>
Hip Hop<lb/>
Friday, September IS, 1995<lb/>
Bottom of College Hill ? 7:30 PM -1! :00 PM<lb/>
 No Alcohol or Coolers Allowed <lb/>
i?5Ra<lb/>
 we're MSre tmw BAREFOOT!<lb/>
For More Information, Call the<lb/>
Student Union Hotline at 328-6004.<lb/>
J<lb/>
<pb facs="00058557_0004"/><lb/>
Tuesday, September 12,1995 The East Carolinian<lb/>
Our View<lb/>
How many<lb/>
times are our<lb/>
fellow<lb/>
students<lb/>
going to kick<lb/>
themselves in<lb/>
the butt<lb/>
before they<lb/>
realize they<lb/>
are only<lb/>
making<lb/>
complete<lb/>
idiots of<lb/>
themselves<lb/>
and the<lb/>
university?<lb/>
Are we never going to learn? Victory does not entitle any-<lb/>
body to be stupid. The hard-fought Pirate victory is again over-<lb/>
shadowed by people who gain superpowers in times of celebra-<lb/>
tion.<lb/>
The police and several unruly students went overboard in<lb/>
their pursuit to make ECU and Greenville and better place this<lb/>
weekend. Both sides lowered the banner of common decency<lb/>
when one side yelled obscenitigs and the other attacked with<lb/>
undue force.<lb/>
Those 'innocent' students who taunted police with slogans<lb/>
like "@! the police" or "Co home Pigs made a mockery of<lb/>
their education, upbringing and alma mater. Why does a foot-<lb/>
ball victory over Syracuse give these people the right to wreak<lb/>
havoc?<lb/>
These misguided souls feel it is perfectly alright to humiliate<lb/>
themselves and the school by getting intoxicated beyond all mea-<lb/>
sure and harrassing bystanders, bartenders and policemen. Sure,<lb/>
celebration is called for, but can't it just be responsible enough<lb/>
not to take away from our victory. When the Pirates beat the<lb/>
Wolfpack in 1987, a bunch of people stormed the field and de-<lb/>
stroyed the State ECU series which cost the school millions of<lb/>
dollars in game revenues. Despite a hardfought Pirate victory,<lb/>
all everybody could talk about was the riot afterward. Our<lb/>
credibilty was destroyed.<lb/>
We are not defending the police department either. One would<lb/>
almost think Barney Fife is in charge the way they love to dis-<lb/>
perse crowds. The police had no right to mace this crowd. Though<lb/>
unruly and stupid, this crowd was not marching to the mayor's<lb/>
house with torches in their hands.<lb/>
These irresponsible actions could have been a disaster. What<lb/>
if someone had been trampled? What if someone blinded by the<lb/>
gas had been hit by a car- Fifth Street was still open?<lb/>
How can anybody explain this away? "Sir, because we over-<lb/>
reacted your son got trampled when the crowds we maced dis-<lb/>
persed too efficiently. Sorry <lb/>
When the Tarheels won the NCAA basketball championship,<lb/>
students stormed Franklin Street the same way. They were not<lb/>
maced or harassed. Innocent bystanders were not herded down<lb/>
to city detention centers. Students, even stupid drunk ones, still<lb/>
have rights.<lb/>
Eoth sides have tarnished their image. The school again re-<lb/>
tains its title of an unruly animal house bent on destruction.<lb/>
The police department evokes images of jack-booted thugs de-<lb/>
termined to squash students.<lb/>
The key to this madness is a little understanding. Though<lb/>
this word may read like a politically correct, wimpy epitaph, it is<lb/>
the truth. The police should remember that people are going to<lb/>
get just a little unruly on such days. This is to be expected. Stu-<lb/>
dents should remember the people in those uniforms are just<lb/>
trying to do a job.<lb/>
Maturity is something both sides should look into before<lb/>
someone gets seriously hurt We have been lucky thus far but<lb/>
the odds are going to run out one day. If one student or police-<lb/>
man gets killed our town will be forever living under a horrible<lb/>
stigma.<lb/>
Every time someone mentions Kent State, the image con-<lb/>
jures up a riot of dead protesters and overzealous National<lb/>
Guardsmen. Do we want our community remembered nationwide<lb/>
as the place where people died because the Pirates beat State?<lb/>
The image people should speak of when they talk about our<lb/>
community is a safe place of National Champions. They should<lb/>
think of a team, that against any odds, can win. In this way, we<lb/>
all win.<lb/>
3<lb/>
A tobacco field trip?<lb/>
w<lb/>
The East Carolinian<lb/>
Stephanie Lassiter, Editor-in-Chief<lb/>
Crissy Parker, Advertising Director<lb/>
Celeste Wilson, Production Manager<lb/>
&amp;k<lb/>
Tambra Zion, News Editor<lb/>
Wendy Rountree, Assistant News Editor<lb/>
Mark Brett, Lifestyle Editor<lb/>
Brandon Waddell, Assistant Lifestyle Editor<lb/>
Paul Hagwood, Staff Illustrator<lb/>
Erika Gohde, Production Assistant<lb/>
Jeremy Lee, Production Assistant<lb/>
Ken Clark, Photo Editor<lb/>
Patrick Irelan, Photographer<lb/>
Xiali Yang, Systems Manager<lb/>
W. Jason Allen, Copy Editor<lb/>
Patrick Hinson, Copy Editor<lb/>
Lani Adklnson, Copy Editor<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 Buildinp ECU, Greenville, NC 27858-4353. For information, call (919)<lb/>
328366. <lb/>
Why China for women's conference?<lb/>
In one of the biggest jokes in the<lb/>
recent international scene. China has<lb/>
been selected to host a world confer-<lb/>
ence on women. From Aug. 30 to<lb/>
Sept. 15, delegates from 170 sover-<lb/>
eign nations will attend the United<lb/>
Nations Fourth World Conference on<lb/>
Women in Beijing, China. What is the<lb/>
joke? No country has abused and op-<lb/>
pressed more women than China.<lb/>
Beijing holding a conference for<lb/>
women's rights is like the Ku Klux<lb/>
Klan having a racial reconciliation<lb/>
party.<lb/>
China's record is horrendous at<lb/>
best. Rather than promoting freedom<lb/>
for women, China has forced abor-<lb/>
tion policies and laws limiting repro-<lb/>
duction to one child per family. The<lb/>
restrictions are so tight that China<lb/>
actually monitors menstrual cycles so<lb/>
it can identify young women with un-<lb/>
approved pregnancies.<lb/>
This is not just limited to restrict-<lb/>
ing women but also destroying<lb/>
women in the making. China is a<lb/>
country that has murdered tens of<lb/>
millions of female infants. These are<lb/>
not abortions but cases of infanticide<lb/>
based upon gender. The bias has<lb/>
been so effective that in large parts<lb/>
of China the sex-ratio favors men by<lb/>
64 percent.<lb/>
If that is not enough, China's<lb/>
overall human rights record is another<lb/>
joke that has no punch line. The<lb/>
atrocities are overwhelming and even<lb/>
nauseating.<lb/>
According to World, human fe-<lb/>
tuses have begun to appear on menus<lb/>
Shane Deike<lb/>
Opinion Columnist<lb/>
Rather than<lb/>
promoting<lb/>
freedom for<lb/>
women, China<lb/>
has forced<lb/>
abortion polices<lb/>
of Chinese restaurants as a delicacy<lb/>
and health tonic. They reported that<lb/>
an Eastern Express correspondent<lb/>
entered the state-run Shenzhen<lb/>
Health Center for Women and Chil-<lb/>
dren and requested a fetus for a<lb/>
feigned illness. The next day the doc-<lb/>
tor gave a small jar filled with thumb-<lb/>
sized fetuses. The doctor said There<lb/>
are 10 fetuses here, all aborted this<lb/>
morning. You can take them. Nor-<lb/>
mally, we doctors take them home to<lb/>
eat - all free. Since you don't look<lb/>
well, you can take them<lb/>
Gross, disgusting, revolting and<lb/>
even immoral are all words that come<lb/>
to mind. Not the kind of policy that<lb/>
seems to respect women or even hu-<lb/>
man life in general. This is not just a<lb/>
random event but an event that took<lb/>
place at a state run facility.<lb/>
But in reality we should not be<lb/>
shocked that China is the sight of the<lb/>
conference, because the conference<lb/>
itself is not exactly on solid ground.<lb/>
At the heart of the governing docu-<lb/>
ments for the UN and U.S. sponsored<lb/>
event are anti-family sentiments (mar-<lb/>
riage is bondage), gender feminism<lb/>
(gender is a product of upbringing not<lb/>
nature), so called "reproductive<lb/>
rights" (free and unrestricted access<lb/>
to abortion as contraception) and anti-<lb/>
religious rhetoric. Most of what the<lb/>
conference stands for is diametrically<lb/>
opposed to the beliefs and feelings of<lb/>
the average American.<lb/>
Countries reluctant to adopt the<lb/>
ideas about abortion and safe-sex ide-<lb/>
ology are not left to handle the deci-<lb/>
sion on their own. The good old U.S.<lb/>
will be doing a little coercion. U.S aid<lb/>
programs (our tax money) will be<lb/>
linked to the willingness of these gov-<lb/>
ernments to implement these so called<lb/>
"population control" measures. Those<lb/>
that fail to participate, mainly pre-<lb/>
dominately Muslim and Catholic na-<lb/>
tions, will be threatened with reduced<lb/>
foreign aid. The result is that coun-<lb/>
tries complain because they cannot<lb/>
get medical support or help in devel-<lb/>
oping clean water supplies, but they<lb/>
can get condoms by the truck load.<lb/>
This is not just talk. President<lb/>
Clinton has requested $635 million in<lb/>
the 1996 budget for international<lb/>
population control. Maybe "Condoms<lb/>
for the World" should be next years<lb/>
campaign theme. In the end the whole<lb/>
issue is not a joke but an organized<lb/>
attempt to allow governments to con-<lb/>
trol women, not respect them.<lb/>
Bottled smiles for miles and miles<lb/>
Last week WNCT-TV 9 ran a story<lb/>
on a group of children that took a field<lb/>
trip to a local tobacco warehouse. The<lb/>
event was sponsored by a group called<lb/>
Friends of Tobacco. The idea here, I<lb/>
guess, was to educate school children<lb/>
on North Carolina's largest industry-<lb/>
yeah, right<lb/>
I see seven or eight guys, in three-<lb/>
piece suits, sitting around a table in a<lb/>
dark warehouse somewhere. One guy<lb/>
says " Okay, here's the problem. We<lb/>
have to think of some ways in which<lb/>
we can get public exposure without<lb/>
reminding anyone that our group is<lb/>
dedicated to supporting one of Ameri-<lb/>
cas most addictive and mortal prod-<lb/>
ucts. Anybody got any ideas?" A<lb/>
shorter guy on the opposite side of<lb/>
the table pulls a giant cigar out of his<lb/>
mouth with a cloud of smoke. As he<lb/>
begins to speak, he ashes into midair<lb/>
on the man sitting next to him. " If<lb/>
we were to get a bunch of kids to walk<lb/>
around near some tobacco we might<lb/>
be able to put it on TV<lb/>
The point here is that the amount<lb/>
of rhetoric going on in the media<lb/>
about the tobacco industry makes me<lb/>
ill. I do not fault WNCT-TV 9 for run-<lb/>
ning the story. They were nice enough<lb/>
to provide me with a script from the<lb/>
broadcast when this story was shown.<lb/>
In fact 1 applaud them for giving me<lb/>
Patrick Ware<lb/>
Opinion Columnist<lb/>
 pray that<lb/>
Friends of<lb/>
Tobacco rethinks<lb/>
the ethics of<lb/>
teaching kids that<lb/>
tobacco is cool.<lb/>
a name to watch out for in the future.<lb/>
The simple fact that this group had<lb/>
the ability to convince school officials<lb/>
to take children to a stinky, nasty to-<lb/>
bacco warehouse is amazing.<lb/>
While watching the segment<lb/>
filled with pictures of children carry-<lb/>
ing tobacco leaves home to their re-<lb/>
frigerators- comforting thought, 1<lb/>
heard some genius comments about<lb/>
the standpoint that this group takes<lb/>
on tobacco regulations. The news<lb/>
cast reported that "The group of<lb/>
down east tobacco farmers says the<lb/>
government should stop meddling in<lb/>
tobacco I guess while I was in class,<lb/>
somebody in this special interest<lb/>
group decided that the "government"<lb/>
had no right to regulate a controlled<lb/>
substance. Need I remind anybody<lb/>
that tobacco use is not legal for ev-<lb/>
erybody?<lb/>
I don't think that this group is<lb/>
trying to fool anybody. I'm sure that<lb/>
everyone involved in this group does<lb/>
not think that school children should<lb/>
become a part of this kind of adver-<lb/>
tising. I'm also sure that there are<lb/>
some that simply want to protect<lb/>
their own self-interest. These being<lb/>
the people who make their living<lb/>
from the growth and sale of tobacco.<lb/>
The number of options to tobacco<lb/>
farmers who could lose income due<lb/>
to the further regulation of tobacco<lb/>
is limited. However, 1 think that they<lb/>
have to realize how harmful tobacco<lb/>
is. It is ridiculous to use children to<lb/>
sway the American public.<lb/>
I pray that Friends of Tobacco<lb/>
rethinks the ethics of teaching kids<lb/>
that tobacco is cool. Maybe this is a<lb/>
glimpse of the '96 campaign to put<lb/>
the virtue back into tobacco. We<lb/>
might see reports of tobacco compa-<lb/>
nies sponsoring "Chew till you drop<lb/>
" contests for local pre-school kids.<lb/>
Maybe they will hire Bill Cosby to<lb/>
eat Jell-0 and give out cans of dip at<lb/>
tee-ball games. At this point, noth-<lb/>
ing would surprise me.<lb/>
A friend of mine made a good<lb/>
point once, one that gave me the great<lb/>
proverbial reality check. She told me<lb/>
that I was the pessimist's pessimist.<lb/>
"You know how the regular pes-<lb/>
simist is supposed to see the glass as<lb/>
half-empty?" she queried. "Well, with<lb/>
you, not only was the glass totally<lb/>
empty, but someone ran off with it to<lb/>
sell it for an insultingly low price at<lb/>
some grubby flea market<lb/>
Not true, I told her. The glass<lb/>
never existed to begin with, it was just<lb/>
a figment of everyone's imagination.<lb/>
Depressing stuff. It's no small<lb/>
wonder that she went off to enjoy<lb/>
sunnier attitudes. I, of course, re-<lb/>
mained behind to tend the cobwebbed<lb/>
lighthouse of self-imposed misery.<lb/>
Years passed, each one pressing<lb/>
on me a growing aversion to glasses,<lb/>
and just when I was beginning to feel<lb/>
comfortable with feeling awful, a cu-<lb/>
rious thing happened. I fell in love and<lb/>
got engaged. The pall that had hung<lb/>
over my head for 20 years skulked off<lb/>
to go bother someone else.<lb/>
My friends wanted to hear noth-<lb/>
ing about it. Mention love in circles<lb/>
these days and you'll be kicked off the<lb/>
porch like a leperous weasel with its<lb/>
tail on fire. The disappointed are of-<lb/>
ten intolerant of other people's hap-<lb/>
piness, and quite a few of them have<lb/>
relegated ecstasy to anything 12<lb/>
ounces with a screw-off cap.<lb/>
But there's other exit doors.<lb/>
There always are, for those deter-<lb/>
mined to get out of Desolation Row.<lb/>
For those who choose to spin the<lb/>
medicinal roulette, the chemical ca-<lb/>
thedral can indeed provide a possible<lb/>
answer to desperate prayers.<lb/>
By now everyone's either stared<lb/>
straight into the face of the Prozac<lb/>
Brian Wright<lb/>
Opinion Columnist<lb/>
Valium is old hat<lb/>
by now, right<lb/>
down there with<lb/>
Tic-Tacs and<lb/>
supermarket<lb/>
party foods.<lb/>
Nation or have already packed up and<lb/>
moved there. That big yellow smiley<lb/>
face button has never loomed larger<lb/>
in the sky than it has in the last three<lb/>
years.<lb/>
This potential for relentless, un-<lb/>
breakable calm. It smacks of a weird<lb/>
cross between a Zen master and a<lb/>
Stepford wife.<lb/>
The pill wizards are getting bet-<lb/>
ter at their job, though, or at least<lb/>
more prolific. Valium is old hat by now,<lb/>
right down there with Tic-Tacs and<lb/>
supermarket party foods. Even Prozac<lb/>
is beginning to look like a likely can-<lb/>
didate for the ho-hum-may-as-well-pick-<lb/>
some-up-as-long-as-I'm-out category.<lb/>
HTH is the newest rung on the<lb/>
ladder, or at least it was a few days<lb/>
ago. It's a natural hormone for energy<lb/>
and as you get older the body pro-<lb/>
duces a markedly decreased amount<lb/>
Although it hasn't yet been approved<lb/>
by the FDA for energy elevation, doc-<lb/>
tors have been administering it to se-<lb/>
lect patients for just that purpose.<lb/>
The results have, so far, been<lb/>
quite positive: the sluggish and<lb/>
grouchy are bursting with newfound<lb/>
vigor and have become pleasantly easy<lb/>
to get along with. HTH may win this<lb/>
week's prize for New Wonder Drug.<lb/>
The most immediate hitdh,<lb/>
though, is the cost about $1,300 a<lb/>
month. That threw some wet sand on<lb/>
everyone's enthusiastic optimism,<lb/>
didn't it?<lb/>
How much is your happiness<lb/>
worth, the nightly ration of news bytes<lb/>
asked me yesterday. I didn't have an<lb/>
answer, and I found that both disturb-<lb/>
ing and amusing.<lb/>
It's funny. When you've gone<lb/>
through your hell and finally found<lb/>
your relief, the question of "How<lb/>
Long, 0 Lord? How Long? Where will<lb/>
it all end?" (courtesy of Hunter S.<lb/>
Thompson) becomes hazy in your<lb/>
mind. My happiness has, for me,<lb/>
blurred the sharp corners of past out-<lb/>
rageous misfortunes.<lb/>
Maybe I shouldn't step so hard<lb/>
on the chemical road to joy, but the<lb/>
thing that still bothers me about it is<lb/>
the question of what happens when<lb/>
the dream is over and everyone waks<lb/>
up? The '60s woke up to such a gross,<lb/>
mean world that the only thing they<lb/>
could do was to hunker down for an-<lb/>
other 10 years in a disco-doomed swirl<lb/>
of bad music and worse clothes. ;<lb/>
What happens when the legions<lb/>
of the Calm come out of it into a world<lb/>
that's been getting mor,e<lb/>
depersonalized with each year's new<lb/>
addition to the information superhigh-<lb/>
way? At least the denizens of the Sum-<lb/>
mer of Drugs had real people waiting<lb/>
for them at the other end of the tun-<lb/>
nel. It won't be much fun for the net<lb/>
batch to look around for that friendty<lb/>
shoulder and find it adorned with<lb/>
volume adjustment and tint control!<lb/>
"A broken bone can heal, but the<lb/>
wound a word opens can fester<lb/>
forever<lb/>
- Jessamyn West novsltst, poet 1979<lb/>
<lb/>
? t<lb/>
<pb facs="00058557_0005"/><lb/>
mmmmi nmmum? ,L m<lb/>
Tuesday, September 12,1995 The East Carolinian<lb/>
I ICE<lb/>
I<lb/>
:c:<lb/>
"A Drop in the Bucket" is<lb/>
just 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/>
Freshmen just catch hell.<lb/>
I don't think it's anything<lb/>
personal, really. All of us upper-<lb/>
classmen were freshmen once and<lb/>
we received our fair share of teas-<lb/>
ing, too. We're just sort of pass-<lb/>
ing the buck. Yes, that sucks, but<lb/>
you guys do look kind of pitiful<lb/>
to us.<lb/>
As you try to feel your way<lb/>
blindly through the bewildering<lb/>
experience of campus life, you're<lb/>
bound to make some bonehead<lb/>
mistakes, and we're bound to<lb/>
laugh at you.<lb/>
But let me tell all you fresh-<lb/>
men now, we all made bonehead<lb/>
mistakes, too.<lb/>
My freshman year, for ex-<lb/>
ample, was a parade of stupidity.<lb/>
Besides the usual freshman er-<lb/>
rors, like getting lost on campus<lb/>
and buying books for the wrong<lb/>
classes, I almost wrecked my aca-<lb/>
demic career.<lb/>
Having grown up in a<lb/>
stereotypically boring small rural<lb/>
town, the lure of the college so-<lb/>
cial life was overwhelming. Swiftly<lb/>
and systematically abandoning<lb/>
study in favor of fun, I became<lb/>
that ultimate college horror story<lb/>
you hear from preachers, parents<lb/>
and Jesse Helms. I was "cor-<lb/>
rupted" by the big city.<lb/>
It started small. I had this<lb/>
economics class that I found sort<lb/>
of boring. The main lecture was<lb/>
taught by this guy who looked<lb/>
like Jack Nicholson but had none<lb/>
of his charm. In and of itself, that<lb/>
wasn't so bad. There were about<lb/>
50 other people in the room, and<lb/>
we could all just anonymously<lb/>
take notes.<lb/>
But I also had to attend an<lb/>
econ lab, which was taught by San<lb/>
Sub Lee, the killer TA. By all ac-<lb/>
counts, San was a nice guy, and<lb/>
he certainly knew the subject mat-<lb/>
ter. But he had this really heavy<lb/>
Korean accent, and my Eastern<lb/>
North Carolina backwater ears<lb/>
couldn't understand a word he<lb/>
said.<lb/>
So I stopped going to lab.<lb/>
Then I stopped going to the main<lb/>
lecture, too. Not surprisingly, I<lb/>
didn't do very well on the next<lb/>
test, and wrote the class off.<lb/>
It was all downhill from<lb/>
there. Once I let one class go,<lb/>
another followed, and another,<lb/>
until I was attending only two<lb/>
classes.<lb/>
This left me with loads of free<lb/>
time, which I used to further my<lb/>
social life. I started hanging out<lb/>
with a bunch of comic book freaks<lb/>
and punk rockers, leading a bi-<lb/>
zarre dual life in two of the most<lb/>
outcast sub-cultures on campus.<lb/>
I developed unpopular political<lb/>
beliefs and a taste for weird com-<lb/>
ics, loud music and strange cloth-<lb/>
ing.<lb/>
Then there were the girls. I<lb/>
learned how to meet girls that<lb/>
year, girls who were as eager for<lb/>
new experiences as myself. Nature<lb/>
took its course, again and again.<lb/>
I was experimenting at nearly<lb/>
every opportunity. I won't go into<lb/>
any details here, but let's just say<lb/>
that I once had a conversation<lb/>
with a lamp post, and leave it at<lb/>
that. When I look back, I'm<lb/>
amazed at how lucky I was to have<lb/>
come out of it all addiction- and<lb/>
disease-free.<lb/>
I didn't escape completely<lb/>
unscathed, however. I ended my<lb/>
Jfreshman year in college on aca-<lb/>
i See DROP page 7<lb/>
Food Fight!<lb/>
Campus dining<lb/>
goes head-to-head<lb/>
with their closest<lb/>
competition<lb/>
Brandon Waddell<lb/>
Assistant Lifestyle Editor<lb/>
Alright I've been in class for the<lb/>
last three hours, and I now have a break<lb/>
before my last couple classes of the day.<lb/>
I'm starving. Got to get something on<lb/>
my stomach before I keel over.<lb/>
Where do I go to eat? Which res-<lb/>
taurant is going to give me the most<lb/>
for my money? Where will I get fresh,<lb/>
hot, tasty food? Or at least someplace<lb/>
where the food hasn't been sitting<lb/>
under heat lamps since last semester?<lb/>
How far away from campus will I have<lb/>
to travel to fill my now-growling stom-<lb/>
ach?<lb/>
These questions may seem<lb/>
frivilous at first glance. But neverthe-<lb/>
less, these are questions we ask our-<lb/>
selves.<lb/>
If you have a meal card there isn't<lb/>
much to decide, except maybe which<lb/>
of the seven campus dining facilities<lb/>
to visit Let's face it, you (or your par-<lb/>
ents) have already paid for the meal<lb/>
plan, and spending extra cash at<lb/>
Wendy's or Miami Subs would be ri-<lb/>
diculous.<lb/>
But for many non-meal-card-hold-<lb/>
ing students, this decision is a little<lb/>
more complicated. Rent's due, phone<lb/>
bill's due, utilities will be cut off if not<lb/>
paid by next week. Spending $5 on<lb/>
each and every meal adds up quick.<lb/>
In a recent interview, Frank<lb/>
Salamon, director of dining services<lb/>
told TEC, "In a fair apples to apples<lb/>
comparison, I'm satisfied that we mea-<lb/>
sure up very well  compare me to<lb/>
McDonald's, Hardee's or Miami Subs.<lb/>
Shop and compare, I think we'll do<lb/>
rather favorably<lb/>
This was exactly the challenge I<lb/>
eagerly anticipated. Campus dining ser-<lb/>
vices has a food service monopoly at<lb/>
ECU, unlike at UNC Chapel Hill, where<lb/>
students can purchase Taco Bell tacos<lb/>
or Burger King burgers. Alright Frank.<lb/>
Let's get ready to rumble!<lb/>
Chicken filet sandwiches are cur-<lb/>
rently a popular menu item. Hardee's,<lb/>
Wendy's, Miami Subs and campus din-<lb/>
ing services all offer their own version.<lb/>
Though Miami Subs' chicken filet sand-<lb/>
wich is substancially larger than any<lb/>
other local restaurants' version, so is<lb/>
the price tag at $3.49. For 50 cents<lb/>
more, Wendy's will give a chicken filet<lb/>
combo. It's a smaller piece of chicken,<lb/>
but fries and a soda are included.<lb/>
The Spot in Mendenhall, will sell<lb/>
you their grilled chicken sandwich for<lb/>
$2.69. At lunchtime, campus' grilled<lb/>
chicken combo (fries and a drink) costs<lb/>
$2.99. The campus chicken is smaller,<lb/>
but the combo is still substantially<lb/>
cheaper. Salamon won this round, but<lb/>
See FOOD page 6<lb/>
Staccato<lb/>
Jazz<lb/>
Associate professor of<lb/>
saxaphone studies Peter<lb/>
Mills blows his own alto<lb/>
sax with the ECU Faculty<lb/>
Jazz Band, who will play<lb/>
Staccato Cafe &amp; Grille<lb/>
every Thursday night this<lb/>
semester.<lb/>
Photo by Ken Clark<lb/>
CD. Reviews<lb/>
THIS WEEK'S Topic:<lb/>
James Bond Villians<lb/>
Name the actors who<lb/>
played the following James<lb/>
Bond villains.<lb/>
1. Scaramanga (from The<lb/>
Man With the Golden Gun)<lb/>
2. Jaws (from Moonraker<lb/>
and elsewhere)<lb/>
3. Kananga (from Live and<lb/>
Let Die)<lb/>
4. Odd-Job (from<lb/>
Goldfinger)<lb/>
5. Max Zorin (from A View<lb/>
to a Kill)<lb/>
Answers in Thursday's issue<lb/>
Psychic phenomena<lb/>
lurk inside Hendrix<lb/>
Photo courtesy ECU Student Union<lb/>
Dear Lord, the table is rising! Hypnotistmentalist Craig<lb/>
Karges visits Hendrix Theatre tomorrow night, where he<lb/>
hopes to make us all his psychic friends.<lb/>
"psychics" false, the interest is<lb/>
nonetheless there. How else can the<lb/>
immense popularity of the Psychic<lb/>
Friends' Network be explained?<lb/>
Many people, while claiming<lb/>
not to believe in such things, reli-<lb/>
giously read their horoscope, and<lb/>
even more dial up their own "per-<lb/>
sonal" psychic for advice on every-<lb/>
thing from money matters to their<lb/>
love life. Generations of children<lb/>
have played with Ouija boards, and<lb/>
stories abound in many families<lb/>
about ghosts, telepathy and<lb/>
miracles. How many of these sto-<lb/>
ries are coincidence, and how many<lb/>
are true parapsychic occurrences?<lb/>
The study of parapsychology is<lb/>
an extremely controversial one.<lb/>
While many scientists believe that<lb/>
psychic ability is a true and natu-<lb/>
ral part of the human psyche, there<lb/>
are just as many who claim that it<lb/>
does not exist.<lb/>
One of these people was Harry<lb/>
Jennifer Coleman<lb/>
Senior Writer<lb/>
Is it just an illusion, or could<lb/>
there actually be something to the<lb/>
psychic craze that is sweeping<lb/>
across America?<lb/>
Tomorrow night, ECU joins the<lb/>
action as the ECU Student Union<lb/>
Special Events Committee brings<lb/>
Craig Karges to ECU tomorrow<lb/>
night at 8 p.m. in Hendrix Theatre.<lb/>
Karges, a hypnotistmentalist,<lb/>
wants to prove that psychic pow-<lb/>
ers are more than just sleight-of-<lb/>
hand parlor tricks.<lb/>
To understand Karges' point of<lb/>
view, we should look at psychic phe-<lb/>
nomena more closely.<lb/>
It is reasonable to say that al-<lb/>
most everyone has some interest in<lb/>
parapsychology. Whether that in-<lb/>
terest is manifested in belief or in<lb/>
a desire to prove so-called<lb/>
Houdini. The master illusionist was<lb/>
one of the most well-known magi-<lb/>
cians in the world, but ironically he<lb/>
did not believe in psychic ability.<lb/>
"Spiritualism has claimed<lb/>
among its followers numbers of bril-<lb/>
liant minds - scientists, philoso-<lb/>
phers, professionals and authors<lb/>
Houdini wrote. "Whether these<lb/>
great minds have been misdirected,<lb/>
whether they have followed the sub-<lb/>
ject because they were convinced<lb/>
fully of its truth, or whether they<lb/>
have been successfully hoodwinked<lb/>
by some fraudulent medium, are<lb/>
matters of conjecture and opinion<lb/>
What exactly is psychic ability?<lb/>
Is it the ability to read minds? Is it<lb/>
the ability to move inanimate (or<lb/>
animate) objects without ever<lb/>
physically touching them? Is it<lb/>
nothing more than fodder for sci-<lb/>
ence fiction stories? Does it even<lb/>
exist?<lb/>
Many scientists say it does. In<lb/>
fact, those same scientists claim<lb/>
that everyone has some latent psy-<lb/>
chic ability. Russell Tong and<lb/>
Harold E. Puthoff, researchers at<lb/>
the Stanford Research Institute,<lb/>
conducted several experiments in<lb/>
the mid-seventies to try and explain<lb/>
psychic phenomena.<lb/>
Since then, research has been<lb/>
conducted at an amazingly rapid<lb/>
rate. It seems that everyone wants<lb/>
to cash in on the "psychic" wave -<lb/>
from illusionists like David<lb/>
Copperfield to self-proclaimed<lb/>
psychics found in infomercials on<lb/>
television.<lb/>
The question is, should the<lb/>
public blindly accept this new psy-<lb/>
chic trend as fact, or reject it as<lb/>
clever illusion? How much should<lb/>
be considered entertainment?<lb/>
Where do we draw the line?<lb/>
All of which brings us back to<lb/>
Craig Karges.<lb/>
Karges, of course, wants to<lb/>
make you a believer. Can he do it?<lb/>
His show, which he describes as a<lb/>
combination of "illusion and psy-<lb/>
chic happenings will feature feats<lb/>
of levitation, "mind-reading and<lb/>
audience participation. While<lb/>
Karges readily admits that part of<lb/>
See PSYCHIC page 7<lb/>
Edwin McCain<lb/>
Honor Among<lb/>
Thieves<lb/>
Brad Oldham<lb/>
Senior Writer<lb/>
It's always hard to follow in the<lb/>
footsteps of a band from your own<lb/>
region. Unfortunately, the music in-<lb/>
dustry is constantly looking at cities<lb/>
such as Seattle to produce the next<lb/>
Pearl Jam and Nirvana.<lb/>
Interestingly enough, the south-<lb/>
east region of the U.S. is getting more<lb/>
hype now than it did in the early<lb/>
R.E.M. days, thanks to MTV-favorites<lb/>
such as Hootie &amp; the Blowfish and<lb/>
The Dave Matthews Band.<lb/>
The word is, the next big hit from<lb/>
the south is South Carolina band<lb/>
Edwin McCain, which dropped the<lb/>
"Band" from their title, as well as per-<lb/>
cussionist Kevin Smith, who left the<lb/>
band due to family problems.<lb/>
The reality is, Edwin McCain just<lb/>
isn't ready.<lb/>
Don't get me wrong, I believe<lb/>
these guys are extremely talented.<lb/>
I've seen them live and their raw in-<lb/>
tensity and groove was very impress-<lb/>
ing. Its that same intensity that's<lb/>
missing on their new CD, Honor<lb/>
Among Thieves.<lb/>
Honor Among Thievesis the de-<lb/>
but release for Edwin McCain on<lb/>
Lava Records, a subsidiary label cre-<lb/>
ated by Jason Flom of mega-label At-<lb/>
lantic Recordings.<lb/>
Produced by Paul Fox, Honor<lb/>
Among Thieves makes Edwin<lb/>
McCain sound way too poppy, some-<lb/>
thing I never noticed about them<lb/>
seeing them live and back when they<lb/>
were on the indie-scene.<lb/>
As most bands are doing these<lb/>
days, Honor Among Thieves contains<lb/>
songs from the independently-pro-<lb/>
duced CD Solitude.<lb/>
Every song that is redone for<lb/>
new disc lacks the essence of what<lb/>
made it good to begin with. For ex-<lb/>
ample, one of the band's more well-<lb/>
known songs, "Don't Bring Me<lb/>
Down got wide praise due to the<lb/>
live version on the A WARE 2 compi-<lb/>
lation. A song about struggle and<lb/>
survival, the new version sounds way<lb/>
too jazzy and happy-go-lucky. Instead<lb/>
of jamming to it, I feel like I should<lb/>
be playing hopscotch and skipping<lb/>
around to it.<lb/>
Another example is "Solitude<lb/>
another song off the old disc and that<lb/>
is also on the new one. The song also<lb/>
See McCAIN page 7<lb/>
Rancid<lb/>
And Out Come the<lb/>
Wolves<lb/>
Jay Myers<lb/>
Staff Writer<lb/>
Finally, punk is back with a ven-<lb/>
geance! If any of you remember what<lb/>
punk sounded like in the early '80s (the<lb/>
stuff your older brother listened to<lb/>
when he had that weird, spiky haircut<lb/>
for you young guns out there), then<lb/>
get ready for a fat kick in die butt down<lb/>
memory lane.<lb/>
Rancid, with their new disc And<lb/>
Out Come the Wolves, has made a full-<lb/>
on musical attack plan to recapture<lb/>
PUNK for the PUNKS and everybody<lb/>
else should move out of their way.<lb/>
Present day acts like Green Day<lb/>
and the Offspring have put out some<lb/>
solid albums full of angst fast chords,<lb/>
arid punkishness, but Rancid is in a<lb/>
completely different ballpark. Seeing<lb/>
and hearing is believing. These guys<lb/>
are the early Clash reborn.<lb/>
With heavy bass, fast drums, driv-<lb/>
ing guitar and screaming, throaty vo-<lb/>
cals, Rancid is like a good headache.<lb/>
One of those that pulses and throbs,<lb/>
fills your head with anger, and every<lb/>
now and then sends you a shot of pain<lb/>
in your left temple right above the eye.<lb/>
Without these kinds of headaches, hu-<lb/>
man interactions would be peaceful,<lb/>
comfortable and nice. And that would<lb/>
be wrong. Nothing gets accomplished<lb/>
without dissatisfaction, passion and<lb/>
willpower - everything that Rancid rep-<lb/>
resents.<lb/>
These are the building blocks of<lb/>
anarchy, the roots of radicalism and<lb/>
the core of the punk movement "The<lb/>
common man doesn't suffer pain like<lb/>
this, only the soul that has never been<lb/>
kissed Rancid sings on their track<lb/>
"Junkyman Rancid, being the punks<lb/>
they are, have proclaimed that the<lb/>
world is not a happy place, but it is<lb/>
theirs.<lb/>
For those ska fans out there, this<lb/>
record does include some ska influence<lb/>
as well, which a couple of the band<lb/>
members brought in from their previ-<lb/>
ous outfit Operation Ivy (another band<lb/>
highly recommended). Overall, Rancid<lb/>
keeps well within the limits of early<lb/>
punk rock hardcore, though.<lb/>
If you're interested, Rancid, mem-<lb/>
bers of the Uptones, and the ex-Opera-<lb/>
tion Ivy drummer will be in a side<lb/>
project band called Shakin' 69 that's<lb/>
going to play strictly ska.<lb/>
And Out Come The Wblves is a<lb/>
See RANCID page 6<lb/>
??<lb/>
m ?'<lb/>
<pb facs="00058557_0006"/><lb/>
?a? ?<lb/>
w'?Mipm?i?mi?vnmntmj?<lb/>
Tuesday, September 12,1995<lb/>
TA?e East Carolinian<lb/>
FOOD from page 5<lb/>
I'm not convinced yet I refuse to go<lb/>
down without a fight<lb/>
Pizza is another popular Pirate<lb/>
lunchtime treat A one item slice of pizza<lb/>
at the Spot costs $1.49. The same at<lb/>
Alfredo's costs1.75. Alfredo's slices are<lb/>
sizably larger than campus' and served<lb/>
to the customer hot from the oven. Cam-<lb/>
pus dining has their Itza pizza kept<lb/>
warm in a self-serve heat lamp contrap-<lb/>
tion. The Alfredo's slice sounds better,<lb/>
but if you just want a cheap, hot lunch,<lb/>
Salamon has once again proven his<lb/>
point<lb/>
The cafeteria buffet meals served<lb/>
in Mendenhall and Todd are about the<lb/>
best deal around. For breakfast $2.90<lb/>
will give students an all-you-can-eat<lb/>
ticket They have everything from pan-<lb/>
cakes, sausage, waffles and bacon to a<lb/>
more nutritious meal of grapefruit and<lb/>
cold cereal. Virtually every breakfast<lb/>
item imaginable is served hot out of the<lb/>
dining halls for less than $3. One "Egg<lb/>
' A4 Mv ikv ??<lb/>
Carolina ui?r<lb/>
McMuffin" and some O.J. from<lb/>
McDonald's will cost about the same.<lb/>
Salamon wins again.<lb/>
A single hot dog at the Wright Place<lb/>
costs $1.49; at the Pantry, three cost $1.<lb/>
The Wright Place hot dogs are bigger,<lb/>
but those three Pantry dogs will still give<lb/>
you more for your money. Salamon fi-<lb/>
nally takes a punch.<lb/>
A 20 oz. bottle of Pepsi costs 89<lb/>
cents on campus, while the same prod-<lb/>
uct is only 59 cents at the Trade Mart<lb/>
across 10th Street This 30 cent differ-<lb/>
ence is another blow to Salamon's chal-<lb/>
lenge, but he does have a defense<lb/>
"I'm caught" he says. "We are a<lb/>
business; when I walk into the Pantry<lb/>
and buy a bottle of Pepsi there's one<lb/>
person working I walk into the Wright<lb/>
Place to get that same botde of Pepsi<lb/>
and there are 20 people working. It's a<lb/>
restaurant"<lb/>
Overall, Salamon met the challenge.<lb/>
Despite the price of snack items, cam-<lb/>
pus dining is competitive with locally fran-<lb/>
chised restaurants. As far as meals g,<lb/>
it's overwhelmingly more economical to<lb/>
eat on-campus. But for snack items, cam-<lb/>
pus dining just can't stay competitive.<lb/>
Thi Week at WZMB 91.3<lb/>
? Thursday night 7-8 Pirate Talk "Parents Weekend Speda! rwea of<lb/>
Syracuse game and preview of first home game v$i Central JfidWtfsn<lb/>
? Listen up for details on Portable CD player give aay<lb/>
? Specialty show-dub 91 new hours 7p.m12p.ia Sat and Sun.<lb/>
RANCID from page 5<lb/>
welcome call back to punk roots from<lb/>
Rancid. With all the press that's being<lb/>
given to punk these days it will be in-<lb/>
teresting to see if the "mainstream"<lb/>
picks them up. If so, be forewarned,<lb/>
these wolves are hungry and they don't<lb/>
care what they have to eat to calm that<lb/>
hunger.<lb/>
 Indies in<lb/>
l( Ml DIM (<lb/>
l(H 1RYC1 ASS1N<lb/>
; ()l lklATIO( 1 ASSIS<lb/>
KM( IM( 1I ANSIS<lb/>
S1MKI IV Al in (I ASS! S<lb/>
TUjffiufPs<lb/>
COASTAL C ASU AI. CLOTH I NO COMPANY<lb/>
I KIDAV SI I'll MHIK IS Al 2:00 I'M<lb/>
MONDAY SI I'll MB1 K IS Al 7:30 I'M<lb/>
Li,y: Ih Vwrmm (Vnior. l)M Kith Stro<lb/>
1 huiivs I rum the I L'k Ik'i Musk Huiklin.Li<lb/>
Attention Students<lb/>
Langston Park Apartments<lb/>
(Beside Tar River Estates, Near Campus)<lb/>
1400 &amp;T6AareA fAttxL<lb/>
"ff&amp;uvHs 0eeter<lb/>
Shopting Center"<lb/>
7S2-O5of<lb/>
0w0rtHe??jft<lb/>
Otu "Net<lb/>
Jfbcattofi" &amp;rauHntf<lb/>
Wigwam<lb/>
Lowe<lb/>
'alpine<lb/>
East Carolina Playhouse<lb/>
1995-1996 Season<lb/>
A Rip-Rorin Piitol-Shootin . RootinTootiri' Weitern Mu?ical Hit<lb/>
DESTRY RIDES AGAIN<lb/>
by Harold Rome and Leonard Gershe<lb/>
October 5, 6, 7, 8, 9 and 10, 1995<lb/>
Free Cable<lb/>
Free WaterSewer<lb/>
New Ownership<lb/>
?2 Bedrooms<lb/>
Appliances, Dishwasher<lb/>
Laundry Connections<lb/>
Cats with Fee<lb/>
Tout-King, Moving Dramatic Comedv<lb/>
SOMEONE TOO'LL WATCH OVER ME<lb/>
by Frank McGuinnest<lb/>
November 9,10, U, 12. 13 and 14, 1995<lb/>
ft Bewitching Legend of fbe Mysterious Smotey Mountains<lb/>
DARK OF THE MOON<lb/>
by Howard Richardson and William Bemey<lb/>
February 8,9,10,11. 12 and 13,1996<lb/>
Moore Realty<lb/>
-2533<lb/>
X 7 JhA, 830-5597<lb/>
Gd?&amp;-?i C??v t&amp;4ta?ry<lb/>
March 28, 29, 30, 31 April 1 and 2, 1996<lb/>
A Galvanic Evening of Dance<lb/>
East Carolina<lb/>
DANCE THEATRE<lb/>
April 18, 19, 20, 21 22 and 23, 1996<lb/>
.tmlin.i P.i hiiu'vL<lb/>
("h.ircc h phnnc<lb/>
328-6829<lb/>
Accepted at<lb/>
more Schools<lb/>
than you "Were.<lb/>
RUSH<lb/>
KAPPA<lb/>
SIGMA<lb/>
Location: 700 East 10th Street<lb/>
(Across from Umstead Dormitory and<lb/>
beside Darryl's)<lb/>
Date: Sept. 12-15<lb/>
Time: 8:00- 11:00<lb/>
Call 752-5543 or 757-1005 for<lb/>
information and rides<lb/>
VISA<lb/>
"r S10.<lb/>
HPiXJS<lb/>
It's every where<lb/>
you -want to be:<lb/>
O Visa U.S.A. Inc. 1995<lb/>
1? ? " ??<lb/>
&amp; ,1<lb/>
<pb facs="00058557_0007"/><lb/>
is a<lb/>
r<lb/>
The East Carolinian<lb/>
Tuesday, September 12, 1995<lb/>
Organization Presidents and Advisers<lb/>
It's That Time Again!<lb/>
Organization Registration Packets are now<lb/>
avalibie in MSC Rm 109.<lb/>
Register your group by Friday, September<lb/>
15. 1995.<lb/>
For more information call 3284796<lb/>
Courtesy of Student Leadership Develpoment Programs<lb/>
DROP from page 5 McCAIN from page 5<lb/>
demic probation, and with only a<lb/>
semester's worth of credit to my name.<lb/>
To say that my parents weren't pleased<lb/>
is an understatement To say that my<lb/>
dad threatened to pull me out of<lb/>
school, kick me out of the house, and<lb/>
leave me to find work at a gas station<lb/>
somewhere is entirely accurate.<lb/>
So, I cleaned up my act I started<lb/>
going to class. I started studying. I<lb/>
restrained my rampages to week-ends.<lb/>
Oh sure, I still liked (and still do like)<lb/>
weird comics, loud music and strange<lb/>
clothing. My political affiliation re-<lb/>
mained just as unpopular as ever, f<lb/>
didn't go back to being the same per-<lb/>
son I had been in high school. I be-<lb/>
came a better, different person.<lb/>
But I was talking about teasing<lb/>
freshmen, wasn't 1? Well, hey, what<lb/>
can I say? It happens. Just try to laugh<lb/>
and shrug it off. It's usually only<lb/>
meant in fun. And besides, the per-<lb/>
son laughing at your misery probably<lb/>
screwed up way worse than you.<lb/>
The Eost Carolina University Student Union Presents the<lb/>
Wednesday, Sept. 13 ? 6:30 PM - 7:30 PM<lb/>
Great Room - Mendenhall Student Center<lb/>
This is your opportunity to join one of<lb/>
the ECU Student Union's committees<lb/>
and chat with committee chairpersons.<lb/>
FREE FOOID<lb/>
For More Information, Call the<lb/>
Student Union Hotline at 328-6004.<lb/>
K T<lb/>
TOP TEN REASONS TO RUSH<lb/>
PHI KAPPA TAU<lb/>
1, Simply stated Phi Kappa Tau kicks ass<lb/>
2, Recently completed $100,000 of renovations to our fraternity house,<lb/>
3, largest fraternity house on campus, the historic 5icklen mansion,<lb/>
t fflost dtoerse brotherhood on campus,<lb/>
5, 'History of leadership on campus in 35C and Sgfl.<lb/>
6, ftul toman did it<lb/>
7, rfighestPfl of 5raternities with membership exceeding 20.<lb/>
8, Placed in top two for the Chancellor's Cup for past flue jears,<lb/>
9, Jn the last three jears haue held ouer 20 band parties,<lb/>
10, Come see forjourself on Tuesday September 12 from 7-11 pm,<lb/>
THE FORCE OF MANY<lb/>
THE POWER OF ONE<lb/>
since 1962<lb/>
757-1319<lb/>
Call for Information -&amp;<lb/>
Mr' Si , -v vh<lb/>
got exposure through AWARE 2, and<lb/>
if they were going to re-release it, they<lb/>
should have kept the same version.<lb/>
The new version features Hootie's<lb/>
frontman, Darius Rucker, as a guest<lb/>
vocalist. Rucker does little for the<lb/>
song, due in part because his vocals<lb/>
so similar to McCain you can barely<lb/>
tell the difference between them.<lb/>
Which gets me to McCain him-<lb/>
self. Obviously, McCain doesn't have<lb/>
a voice that came from years of train-<lb/>
ing with the Oxford Boys Choir. His<lb/>
raspy, deep voice sounds like a com-<lb/>
bination of a young Joe Cocker and<lb/>
Seal. His voice is definitely unique.<lb/>
Not great, but unique, which is very<lb/>
cool.<lb/>
The problem with his voice on<lb/>
this disc is that put together with the<lb/>
very crisp, jazzy-pop background<lb/>
music of the band, McCain's voice<lb/>
suddenly turns into the red-headed<lb/>
stepchild of the band. Something hap-<lb/>
pened from the live show, where<lb/>
McCain and company blended so well<lb/>
together, to the studio produced prod-<lb/>
uct, where the two don't blend to-<lb/>
gether well at all.<lb/>
Very rarely do 1 like a band's CD<lb/>
as much as much as I like their live<lb/>
show, and Edwin McCain is the per-<lb/>
fect example. The same uniqueness<lb/>
and intensity that engaged me when<lb/>
I saw these guys live is missing on<lb/>
Honor Among Thieves. But as long<lb/>
as they're opening for Hootie &amp; the<lb/>
Blowfish at Walnut Creek, I'm sure<lb/>
they feel they are moving in the right<lb/>
direction.<lb/>
VJtvAJlvl from page 5<lb/>
what he does is illusion, he firmly<lb/>
denies that any of his audience par-<lb/>
ticipatory segments are set up be-<lb/>
forehand.<lb/>
He backs his claims with cold,<lb/>
hard cash. $25,000, payable to char-<lb/>
ity, is offered if anyone can prove<lb/>
that he plants his "volunteers" in<lb/>
the audience before the show. In<lb/>
addition, Karges risks his fee in a<lb/>
special demonstration during the<lb/>
show. If he fails, the money is re-<lb/>
turned to the university.<lb/>
So come out to Hendrix Theater<lb/>
at 8 p.m. on Wednesday, September<lb/>
13. The show is free to anyone. See<lb/>
for yourself if Craig Karges is a true<lb/>
psychic or just a master illusionist.<lb/>
Either way, the show is bound to be<lb/>
an enlightening experience.<lb/>
Count Down<lb/>
Dance and Active wear<lb/>
Greenville's Choice For<lb/>
Quality Dancewear<lb/>
At Affordable Prices<lb/>
ECU Student I.D.<lb/>
Open 7 Days A Week<lb/>
Mon-Sat 10-9<lb/>
Sun 1-6<lb/>
The Plaza Mall<lb/>
321-1585<lb/>
RUSH<lb/>
2 AE<lb/>
PM.Jf<lb/>
"Word's largest Fraternity<lb/>
The True Gentlemen<lb/>
At AZD House behind Miami Subs Sept. 12-15, 7-10 pm.<lb/>
For a Ride or Info, call 752-1147 or 757-0999<lb/>
m<lb/>
LUNCH SPECIALS<lb/>
Monday thru Friday<lb/>
11:00 - 3:00<lb/>
CANTINA<lb/>
With All ABC Permits<lb/>
OPEN<lb/>
7 Days For Lunch &amp; Dinner<lb/>
521 Cotanche ? 757 - 1666<lb/>
' r<lb/>
<lb/>
<pb facs="00058557_0008"/><lb/>
8<lb/>
Tuesday, September 12,1995 The East Carolinian<lb/>
ECU takes Syracuse in<lb/>
impressive comeback<lb/>
Pirate watch<lb/>
Eric Bartels<lb/>
Senior Writer<lb/>
For the Pirates, the season should<lb/>
appear brighter now. They had their<lb/>
most impressive comeback in ECU his-<lb/>
tory against a nationally ranked team<lb/>
on the road, and they will finally be able<lb/>
to play in front of the home town fans<lb/>
in Dowdy-Ficklen this weekend.<lb/>
What could be finer? Do you 'Be-<lb/>
lieve' in '95?<lb/>
After a shaky first half marred by<lb/>
earry penalties and the Syracuse offense<lb/>
lighting up the secondary for big gains,<lb/>
even the biggest die-hard Pirate fan<lb/>
could have been in a state of disbelief.<lb/>
But the Pirates were victorious over the<lb/>
Orangemen with a 27-24 win.<lb/>
However, if you were to look on<lb/>
the ECU sideline, there was one man<lb/>
who was not Head Coach Steve Logan,<lb/>
poised with the intensity to single-<lb/>
handedly beat the Orangemen if he<lb/>
needed to, gambled on critical fourth<lb/>
down play, and went right after the un-<lb/>
tested SU secondary with three receiver<lb/>
sets and Jerris McPhail in the backfield<lb/>
with great results.<lb/>
"I have our players convinced that<lb/>
'it's not over he said. "Syracuse is a<lb/>
first class program and so is East Caro-<lb/>
lina<lb/>
If the first half was any indication<lb/>
of how the Pirates will play the rest of<lb/>
the season, then do not show up until<lb/>
the second half for the exuberant fire-<lb/>
works' display? led by junior quarter-<lb/>
back Marcus Crandell resembling a<lb/>
former ECU quarterback who used to<lb/>
wear no. 2 and did the same thing to<lb/>
the Orangemen four years ago.<lb/>
Syracuse, who exploited the Pi-<lb/>
rates defensive secondary, rattled off 21<lb/>
first half points on 36 plays covering<lb/>
259 yards. Each of the three scoring<lb/>
drives covered an average of 71 yards<lb/>
on eight plays.<lb/>
The Orangemen began the scoring<lb/>
with a Malcolm Thomas eight yard jaunt<lb/>
up the middle at the 2:59 mark in the<lb/>
first quarter. After an ECU fourth down<lb/>
attempt failed due to a false start on<lb/>
die offensive line, Syracuse orchestrated<lb/>
its second drive that saw Tebucky Jones<lb/>
cap off the series with a 10-yard gallop<lb/>
off the blocking of Harvey Pennypacker<lb/>
and Shelton Prescott<lb/>
After another quick three-and-out<lb/>
SU took advantage of a missed assign-<lb/>
ment in the Pirate secondary as redshirt<lb/>
freshman Donovan McNabb hooked up<lb/>
with senior Marvin Harrison on a 49<lb/>
yard completion. With 8:30 remaining<lb/>
in the second half and two plays later,<lb/>
McNabb found junior wideout Deon<lb/>
Maddox in the back of the Pirate end<lb/>
zone for the 21 point lead.<lb/>
"The first thing I'd like to do is give<lb/>
them credit for being down 21-0 in our<lb/>
facility and coming back to win SU<lb/>
coach Paul Pasqualoni said.<lb/>
Just before the intermission and vi-<lb/>
tal to Pirates to shift the momentum<lb/>
was the opportunity to get points on<lb/>
the board. With less than three minutes<lb/>
in the second half, Crandell led the two-<lb/>
minute offense against a well-rested Or-<lb/>
ange defense.<lb/>
Putting ECU on the scoreboard<lb/>
with 21 seconds left, Larry Shannon<lb/>
caught Crandell's five-yard touchdown<lb/>
pass in the back of the end zone quiet-<lb/>
ing the Carrier Dome crowd.<lb/>
"When something happens like<lb/>
that, it's important for the next guy to<lb/>
step junior tightend Scott Richards<lb/>
said.<lb/>
Showing signs of receiving an<lb/>
adrenaline shot at halftime, Crandell and<lb/>
the Pirates marched down the field on<lb/>
the opening drive of the second half to<lb/>
narrow the margin to a touchdown. Out<lb/>
in the left flat Crandell spotted senior<lb/>
halfback Derek Batson who eluded an<lb/>
Orange tackier and raced 29 yards for<lb/>
the score.<lb/>
Four series later, and on his way<lb/>
to a career day, Crandell spotted an open<lb/>
Richards in the SU end zone for the<lb/>
possible game tying touchdown, how-<lb/>
ever the extra point was blocked leav-<lb/>
ing ECU still in reach, 21-20.<lb/>
But Syracuse answered with a 54<lb/>
vard strike to senior Marvin Harrison<lb/>
.hich put the football inside the ECU<lb/>
35 yard line. Although ECU held the<lb/>
offense to just three points, it may have<lb/>
meant a big momentum shift if the Or-<lb/>
ange put six points on the board.<lb/>
See PIRATE page 10<lb/>
Hail to the Chief<lb/>
Photo by KEN CLARK<lb/>
Head Football Coach Steve Logan departs the plane in Kinston Saturday after the<lb/>
Pirates hard fought win over the Syracuse Orangemen.<lb/>
Photo by KEN CLARK<lb/>
Pirate fans await the arrival of the victorious football<lb/>
team outside the runway at the Kinston airport.<lb/>
mmPcue ?du ntou<lb/>
Aaron Wilson<lb/>
Staff Writer<lb/>
Record-setting quarterback<lb/>
Marcus Crandell added a new dimen-<lb/>
sion to his game this weekend against<lb/>
Syracuse - running the football. A<lb/>
quick Orangemen defense forced him<lb/>
out of the pocket and he responded<lb/>
with several long runs including one<lb/>
for 15 yards. He outrushed tailback<lb/>
Jerris McPhail with 78 rushing yards.<lb/>
Crandell was named the ECAC<lb/>
Player of the Week this week after a<lb/>
great performance in which estab-<lb/>
lished school records for passing<lb/>
yards (392), total offense (453), pass<lb/>
attempts (59) and most plays from<lb/>
scrimmage with 74. The junior from<lb/>
Robersonville, N.C. is third on ECU'S<lb/>
career passing yardage list behind<lb/>
leader Jeff Blake. He has amssed his<lb/>
total of 3,517 passing yards in just<lb/>
15 games.<lb/>
Doak Walker Award candidate<lb/>
Jerris McPhail continued to shine<lb/>
Saturday against the Syracuse<lb/>
Orangemen accumulating 200 all-<lb/>
purpose yards including a record-set-<lb/>
ting 122 yards receiving out of the<lb/>
backfield. He scored on a 14 yard<lb/>
touchdown catch in the fourth quar-<lb/>
ter, easily outracing the Syracuse de-<lb/>
fense.<lb/>
He leads the Liberty Bowl Alli-<lb/>
ance in rushing with 186 yards after<lb/>
the first two games and is third in<lb/>
receptions per game behind team-<lb/>
mates Jason Nichols and Mitchell Gal-<lb/>
loway. McPhail also ranks third in re-<lb/>
ceiving yards per game and all-pur-<lb/>
pose yards as well as sixth in total<lb/>
offense.<lb/>
Heady numbers for a player who<lb/>
was considered a question mark go-<lb/>
ing into the season, replacing record<lb/>
setter Junior Smith. The Clinton, N.C.<lb/>
native transferred from Wake Forest<lb/>
University three years ago and after<lb/>
one year as ECU's best wide receiver<lb/>
and another as Smith's understudy<lb/>
McPhail is making his mark this year.<lb/>
He is considered the best athlete<lb/>
on the squad with a 4.38 40-yard<lb/>
dash and a 41 inch vertical leap, win-<lb/>
ning the school's slam dunk contest<lb/>
the past two years. He has already<lb/>
drawn the attention of NFL scouts<lb/>
who have been at recent practices of<lb/>
the Pirates. Mel Kiper, ESPN and<lb/>
NFL Draft Analyst has McPhail rated<lb/>
among the top players at his position.<lb/>
Both impressed Central Michi-<lb/>
gan head coach Dick Frynn.<lb/>
"Marcus Crandell is one of the<lb/>
outstanding quarterbacks in the<lb/>
country Frynn said. "Jerris McPhail<lb/>
is a big, strong and fast tailback who<lb/>
also catches the ball well. And they<lb/>
operate behind a big, experienced<lb/>
line<lb/>
Two members of that line suf-<lb/>
fered injuries Saturday in tackles Ron<lb/>
Suddith (ankle) and Charles Boothe<lb/>
(knee). Boothe returned to action but<lb/>
Suddith was injured too badly to play.<lb/>
The All-Independent selection is ex-<lb/>
pected to miss two weeks of action.<lb/>
" In their place junior guard Jamie<lb/>
Gray (6-foot-3 285) and junior tack-<lb/>
les Shane McPherson and Mark<lb/>
McCall stepped in and did a job, keep-<lb/>
ing the speedy Orangemen defense<lb/>
off of Crandell.<lb/>
Gray, a native of Phoenixville,<lb/>
Pa. closed off the speed rush of the<lb/>
Syracuse defensive line, locking them<lb/>
out with his superior upper body<lb/>
strength (415 pound bench press).<lb/>
"I wasn't really worried about<lb/>
their upfield rush Gray said. "I was<lb/>
worried about them coming under-<lb/>
neath. You are sort of on an island<lb/>
out there, all by yourself. I just kept<lb/>
playing them inside-out and tried to<lb/>
stay between them and Marcus.<lb/>
Unrecruited by big-time north-<lb/>
ern schools like Penn State and Syra-<lb/>
cuse, Gray feels like he has proven<lb/>
himself against top competition.<lb/>
"A lot of schools felt like I was<lb/>
See NOTE page 9<lb/>
Here's the beef<lb/>
Aaron Wilson<lb/>
Staff Writer<lb/>
Stacey Whitehead was hard to<lb/>
miss on the football field in ECU's<lb/>
opener versus the University of Ten-<lb/>
nessee Volunteers. The junior col-<lb/>
lege transfer's number 91 jersey<lb/>
stretches across his huge upper<lb/>
body, the midsection isn't a<lb/>
sculpted one, he carries a little ex-<lb/>
cess weight on his 6-foot-6,300 plus<lb/>
frame, but there is no doubt that<lb/>
he belongs in the middle of the Pi-<lb/>
rate defensive line.<lb/>
Saturday against a UT offensive<lb/>
line, touted as one of the best units<lb/>
in the nation he dominated mak-<lb/>
ing two tackles for losses and push-<lb/>
ing the line of scrimmage back-<lb/>
wards. His efforts kept blockers off<lb/>
of inside linebackers Libiano (eight<lb/>
tackles) and Burke (11 tackles).<lb/>
The New Bern, N.C. native<lb/>
played last year at East Central Jun-<lb/>
ior College in Mississippi and was<lb/>
named to the All-Mississippi junior<lb/>
college team after registering 17<lb/>
sacks as a freshman. Whitehead has<lb/>
three seasons of eligibility remain-<lb/>
ing.<lb/>
He gives ECU a physical pres-<lb/>
ence it had been missing on the de-<lb/>
fensive line in years past. Already<lb/>
one of the strongest Pirates in the<lb/>
weight room, he has been slowed<lb/>
by an ankle injury that has kept him<lb/>
out of some pre-season practices.<lb/>
The injury has been detrimental to<lb/>
his conditioning, forcing him to<lb/>
miss some action against Tennes-<lb/>
see.<lb/>
Whitehead has converted to<lb/>
the offensive line following four<lb/>
other former defensive linemen<lb/>
Kevin Wiggins, Charles Boothe,<lb/>
Lamont Burns and Jamie Gray.<lb/>
Against Syracuse he did not see<lb/>
action, becoming acclimated to his<lb/>
new position.<lb/>
"Stacey Whitehead is a guy<lb/>
who we think can be an outstand-<lb/>
ing defensive linemen head coach<lb/>
See BEEF page 9<lb/>
Alums named to Hall of Fame<lb/>
GREENVILLE, N.C. - Fbrmer East<lb/>
Carolina University student-athletes Jim<lb/>
Bolding, Otis Melvin, Kathy Riley and<lb/>
Mike Tomberlin have been named as the<lb/>
1995 inductees of ECU's Athletic Hall<lb/>
of Fame, the Hall of Fame Committee<lb/>
announced Wednesday.<lb/>
Bolding, a 1977 ECU graduate, was<lb/>
a standout football player from 1973-<lb/>
119766 under head football coaches<lb/>
Sonny Randall and Pat Dye.<lb/>
A 1975 All-American selection,<lb/>
Bolding holds the ECU records for in-<lb/>
terceptions in a game (3 vs. Western<lb/>
Carolina, 1975), season (100 in 1975)<lb/>
and career (22). With his 10 intercep-<lb/>
tions in 1975, Bolding broke the South-<lb/>
ern Conference record for career inter-<lb/>
ceptions and also broke the ECU ca-<lb/>
reer record for the most punts returned<lb/>
(47).<lb/>
Melvin, a 1981 ECU gradutae,<lb/>
earned track and field Ail-American<lb/>
awards as he was a standout sprinter<lb/>
for the Pirates from 1977-80. In 1979,<lb/>
Melvin earned All-American honors in<lb/>
the 200-meters at the NCAA outdoor<lb/>
championships. In 1980, Melviin<lb/>
eeamed his second All-American hon-<lb/>
ors as a member of die 4X400-meter<lb/>
relay team at the indoor championships.<lb/>
Melvin, coached by current ECU<lb/>
men's track coach Bill Carson, per-<lb/>
formed as one of the nation's top sprint-<lb/>
ers with his selection to the U.S. team<lb/>
at the World University Games in 1979.<lb/>
He was also a finalist at the 1980 Olym-<lb/>
pic trials.<lb/>
Riley, a standout in women's bas-<lb/>
ketball and softball left her mark on<lb/>
ECU women's athletics in two years of<lb/>
competition from 1979-1981. In basket-<lb/>
ball, Riley was an honorable mention<lb/>
All-American for the Lady Pirates in<lb/>
11980-81. In just two seasons, she re-<lb/>
corded 1,150 points and is the only ECU<lb/>
player to accomplish that in just two<lb/>
seasons.<lb/>
A two4ime first-time AL1-NCAIAW<lb/>
selestion, Riley was a member of the 1981<lb/>
ECU women's team that made the NCAA<lb/>
tournament and finished 17th in the<lb/>
nation. She was also a finalist in the 1980<lb/>
Olympic trials.<lb/>
In softball, Riley gained national<lb/>
prominence as the Broderick Award win-<lb/>
ner (National College Player of the Year)<lb/>
in 1981. A first team ALL-American in<lb/>
softball in 1981, Riley's success in soft-<lb/>
ball has continued since her ECU career<lb/>
Ticket inf<lb/>
 . :   .  ??. .???? ? ????-<lb/>
(SID) - ECU students may<lb/>
pick up their tickets for this<lb/>
Saturday's PiratesCentral Michi-<lb/>
gan football game Tuesday<lb/>
through Thursday.<lb/>
Students may pick up their<lb/>
tickets on a first-come, first-serve<lb/>
basis at either the Athletic Ticket<lb/>
Office or at the Student Organi-<lb/>
zation Desk in Mendenhall Stu-<lb/>
dent Center. The Athletic Ticket<lb/>
Office hours are 9 a.m. until 5:30<lb/>
p.m. while the hours at<lb/>
Mendenhall are 11 a.m. through<lb/>
6 a.m.<lb/>
Students must show a valid<lb/>
ECU ID to pick up a free student<lb/>
ticket A driver's license and un-<lb/>
attached activity card are not<lb/>
acceptable. Students may present<lb/>
their ECU ID and one other valid<lb/>
ECU ID when picking up student<lb/>
tickets only during the desig-<lb/>
nated student pick-up days.<lb/>
Student ticket allotments<lb/>
have been exhausted on several<lb/>
occasions over the past four<lb/>
years. With the demand for tick-<lb/>
ets expected again, students are<lb/>
urged to pick up their tickets<lb/>
early on the designated days. Stu-<lb/>
dent tickets are distributed on a<lb/>
first-come, first-serve basis until<lb/>
student allotments are ex-<lb/>
hausted.<lb/>
A limited number of student<lb/>
guest tickets are available for in-<lb/>
dividual games at half-price on a<lb/>
first-come, first-serve basis. Once<lb/>
the half price guest ticket sup-<lb/>
ply is exhausted, all purchased<lb/>
tickets will be available at full<lb/>
price. Half price guest tickets are<lb/>
available only at the ECU Athletic<lb/>
Ticket Office, not at Mendenhall.<lb/>
On game days, student tick-<lb/>
ets will not be accepted at any<lb/>
gates other than those identified<lb/>
for students (Gate 5). Stadium<lb/>
gates will open one and a half<lb/>
hours prior to the scheduled<lb/>
kickoff.<lb/>
Volleyball<lb/>
team<lb/>
struggles<lb/>
Cindy Szymanski<lb/>
Avram Klein<lb/>
Staff Writer<lb/>
.p<lb/>
-? ??<lb/>
including being a gold medalist in soft-<lb/>
ball in the 1990 Olympic SportsFesti-<lb/>
val.<lb/>
Tomberlin, a 1968 ECU graduate,<lb/>
is one of the most decorated swimmers<lb/>
in ECU's history. The 1967 National 200-<lb/>
yard backstroke champion, Tomberlin<lb/>
earned seven All-American awards dur-<lb/>
ing his career from 1966-1969.<lb/>
In 1966, 19647 and 1968,<lb/>
Tomberlin earned All-American honors<lb/>
in both the 100 and 200 backstroke. In<lb/>
1968, Tomberlin was also a member of<lb/>
the ECU All-American 400-yard medley<lb/>
relay.<lb/>
A nine-time Southern Conference<lb/>
Champion, Tomberlin was the confer-<lb/>
ence record holder in the 100 and 200<lb/>
backstroke and the 400 medley relay.<lb/>
Tomberlin, a native of Hickory, N.C, re-<lb/>
ceived his Master's in Education from<lb/>
ECU coach and Hall of Fame member<lb/>
Dr. Ray Marttinez. Tomberlin joined the<lb/>
ECU coaching staff as an assistant coach<lb/>
from 1969-70.<lb/>
The 1995 inductees will join the<lb/>
following 65 members in the ECU Ath-<lb/>
letic Hall of Fame during ceremonies<lb/>
held Nov. 10-11 as ECU hosts Tulsa at<lb/>
Dowdy-Ficklen Stadium.<lb/>
4.<lb/>
The Ladies' Volleyball team pre-<lb/>
pared for their '95 season last weekend<lb/>
at The Towson State Labor Day Classic<lb/>
in Towson, Md. Although new Coach<lb/>
Kim Walker described the tournament<lb/>
as "tough it was essential in beginning<lb/>
the season.<lb/>
"With a new coach and new play-<lb/>
ers, we were learning each other and<lb/>
learning the system Walker said. "The<lb/>
tournament helped us find a point of<lb/>
reference to build for the season<lb/>
ECU went (04) against Towson,<lb/>
Rutgers, Duquesne and Cincinnati.<lb/>
The ECU Pirates began the tour-<lb/>
nament on Friday, Sept 1 by playing<lb/>
three separate matches in a round robin<lb/>
style tournament Although Towson,<lb/>
who went (2-2), beat the Pirates 154,<lb/>
15-11 and 15-9, it took both Rutgers<lb/>
and Duquesne four games to beat the<lb/>
team from ECU.<lb/>
The Pirates went on to lose 15-8,<lb/>
1S7 and 1S8 against the overall champs<lb/>
from Cincinnati during the second day<lb/>
of the tournament The game was high-<lb/>
lighted by Pirate freshman Kristen<lb/>
Warner's team-high of 21 sets.<lb/>
Last Tuesday in Conway, S.C. the<lb/>
Pirate Volleyball team beat Coastal Caro-<lb/>
lina University. The match was this<lb/>
season's first win for the team with a<lb/>
15-11,15-11,15-7 straight-game victory.<lb/>
Coach Kim Walker says, "I'm real<lb/>
pleased with where they were last<lb/>
night"<lb/>
Dori Brian recorded 31 assists, se-<lb/>
nior Melanie Richards, who represented<lb/>
See VOLLEY page 9<lb/>
 ,i<lb/>
<pb facs="00058557_0009"/><lb/>
Mmmwmmm<lb/>
? i i ? ? ii ? I. ???<lb/>
The East Carolinian<lb/>
Tuesday, September 12, 1995<lb/>
Oraad ?la? U.S.A.<lb/>
Indoor Baseball &amp; Softball Batting Range<lb/>
Full Court Basketball with Slam Goals<lb/>
? Concessions ? Pro Shop ? Video Games<lb/>
Bring Coupon In For:<lb/>
Buy one get one FREE Batting token or<lb/>
10 DISCOUNT on One Hour of Slam Ball<lb/>
Comer of Evans &amp; 14th Streets<lb/>
830-1759<lb/>
f tpfrn llW-?? Limit I per vliti<lb/>
MARK A. WARD<lb/>
ATTORNEY AT LAW<lb/>
NC BAR CERTIFIED<lb/>
State Criminal Law Specialist<lb/>
24 Hour Message Service<lb/>
209 Evans Street<lb/>
Adjaceot to the Greenville Courthouse<lb/>
Mae 752-7529<lb/>
VOLLEY from page 8 BEEF from page 8<lb/>
ECU on the All-Tournament team last<lb/>
weekend in Towson notched 15 kills,<lb/>
and Carrie Bme smashed in 10 kills<lb/>
against Coastal Carolina.<lb/>
"They worked hard to attain the<lb/>
goals that were set for the match<lb/>
Walker said.<lb/>
With the next match against North<lb/>
Carolina A&amp;T in Greensboro on Sept<lb/>
12, Coach Walker says, "We're gonna<lb/>
come in and continue to work hard and<lb/>
leam from matches and go forward<lb/>
VISA<lb/>
MasfetCard<lb/>
gpBE<lb/>
iwmjh oura.u am<lb/>
Items &amp; Prices Good Through September 16,1995.<lb/>
WED 13THUR 14FRI 15SAT 16<lb/>
Copyright 1995. The Kroger Co.<lb/>
Items &amp; Prices Good In Greenville. We reserve<lb/>
the right to limit quantities. None sold to dealers.<lb/>
Always Good, Always Fresh, Always Kroner,<lb/>
YOUR TOTAL VALUE LEADER.<lb/>
CAFFEINE FREE DIET COKE, SPRITE,<lb/>
Piet Coke or<lb/>
Coca Cola Classic<lb/>
Two 12-Packs<lb/>
per customer<lb/>
at this price,<lb/>
please.<lb/>
12-Pack 12-oz. Cans<lb/>
 U.S.D.A. CHOICE GRAIN FED BEEF WHOLE (12-14-LB. AVC.)<lb/>
Boneless<lb/>
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Save $1.00<lb/>
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Sliced Into Sirloin Stesks<lb/>
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TYSONHOLLY FARMS U.S. GRADE A<lb/>
Chicken Breast<lb/>
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Save 70t perLb.<lb/>
(10-LB. &amp; UP) U.S. GRADE A FRESH<lb/>
Kroger<lb/>
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5-Lb.Bag<lb/>
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Save 30t perLb.<lb/>
Save at least<lb/>
$1.00<lb/>
m<lb/>
GREEN BEANS, CORN OR PEAS<lb/>
Stokely's<lb/>
Vegetables<lb/>
14-15-OZ.<lb/>
Donald Puck<lb/>
Orange Juice<lb/>
64-oz.<lb/>
CANDY OR<lb/>
Caramel<lb/>
Apples<lb/>
3-Ct. Pkg.<lb/>
X<lb/>
Steve Logan said. "With his size<lb/>
and speed offensive tackle is prob-<lb/>
ably his best position.<lb/>
Mpumi Masimini is another<lb/>
huge (6-foot-4, 295-pound) new-<lb/>
comer who played well against<lb/>
Tennesee. The big youngster from<lb/>
Washington D.Cs Woodrow Wilson<lb/>
High School saw signigicant game<lb/>
action at left offensive tackle. He<lb/>
did allow one sack but it seemed to<lb/>
be more of a mix up on his assign-<lb/>
ment than any lack of ability.<lb/>
On several plays number 50<lb/>
dominated his opponent, planting<lb/>
him on the grass of General<lb/>
Neyland Stadium. This type of pro-<lb/>
duction is what was expected when<lb/>
Logan signed the Super Prep Ail-<lb/>
American out of the Capital City.<lb/>
Masimini considered Colorado, Illi-<lb/>
nois, Wisconsin and Syracuse be-<lb/>
fore deciding on ECU and immedi-<lb/>
ate playing time.<lb/>
He gives offensive line coach<lb/>
Jeff Jagodzinski another huge, ag-<lb/>
ile body to work with on the line.<lb/>
The two should form an impressive<lb/>
tandem for the years to come, mak-<lb/>
ing ECU no lightweight up front.<lb/>
The Pirates finally have the size to<lb/>
play with the "big dogs" of college<lb/>
football.<lb/>
NOTE from page 8<lb/>
too short, so it feels good to go out<lb/>
there and play well against big<lb/>
schools like Syracuse he said.<lb/>
Butkus Award candidate Mark<lb/>
Libiano is also rated among the top<lb/>
players at his position by Kiper,<lb/>
rated as the No. 6 linebacker pros-<lb/>
pect for this spring's draft. The 6-<lb/>
foot-3, 235 pound senior leads the<lb/>
team with 20 tackles, two tackles<lb/>
for losses and is tied for the team<lb/>
lead with three quarterback pres-<lb/>
sures.<lb/>
Hard-hitting junior inside line-<lb/>
backer Marvin Burke (6-foot-l, 240<lb/>
pounds) is bringing the wood op-<lb/>
ponents again this year. After sup-<lb/>
planting incumbent starter B.J.<lb/>
Crane in preseason drills Burke is<lb/>
second on the team in tackles with<lb/>
19. One of the most intense and<lb/>
physical players on the team Burke<lb/>
has an instinct for finding the foot-<lb/>
ball that can not be coached.<lb/>
Tight end Scott Richards had<lb/>
a career day catching eight passes<lb/>
including a long touchdown Satur-<lb/>
day. He was joined by Mitchell Gal-<lb/>
loway who had eight catches as<lb/>
well. The marks tie a ECU record<lb/>
for junior single game receptions.<lb/>
"This game the tight ends were<lb/>
a big part of the offense, catching<lb/>
the football Richards said. "Last<lb/>
week, we were needed for blocking,<lb/>
whatever the team needs us for<lb/>
whether that is in the passing game<lb/>
or getting the job done at the line<lb/>
of scrimmage, we are going to get<lb/>
it done<lb/>
Defensive linemen Walter Scott<lb/>
(two sacks), Lorenzo West (two<lb/>
sacks) and Travis Darden (moved<lb/>
from end to nose guard this week<lb/>
were impressive against the bigger<lb/>
Syracuse offensive line. Scott bull-<lb/>
rushed his way to sack McNabb<lb/>
twice while West and Darden used<lb/>
a blend of speed and strength to<lb/>
generate a pass rush. Darden, a<lb/>
true freshman is learning on the<lb/>
job, but is very aggressive and<lb/>
strong. He is described by Logan<lb/>
as a "tasmanian devil on the foot-<lb/>
ball field<lb/>
Aaron Black has recovered well<lb/>
from appendicitis to start at out-<lb/>
side linebacker. He had the option<lb/>
of redshirting this season, but de-<lb/>
cided to play instead.<lb/>
Emmanuel McDaniel, a return-<lb/>
ing starter at cornerback who had<lb/>
five interceptions last year may be<lb/>
on the start of another take-away<lb/>
string with a big interception<lb/>
against the Orangemen.<lb/>
E.J. Gunthrope, Brian Bentley,<lb/>
Tabari "Snoop" Wallace and Ber-<lb/>
nard Lackey have been the main-<lb/>
stays of ECU's punt and kickoff cov-<lb/>
erage making several solid tackles.<lb/>
John Peacock has changed his<lb/>
mind about his college choice and<lb/>
will attend Georgia Southern, a 1AA<lb/>
school in Statesboro. Ga. that has<lb/>
won two national championships.<lb/>
He is immediately eligible to play<lb/>
and will see game action at either<lb/>
tailback or linebacker.<lb/>
Jermaine Smith, who trans-<lb/>
ferred to Central State (Ohio) this<lb/>
summer had three sack and sever,<lb/>
quarterback hurries in his first<lb/>
game. He was expected to replace<lb/>
Willie Brookins at one defensive<lb/>
end spot this fall for ECU.<lb/>
 <lb/>
MMPiiHH?MM.MMMP<lb/>
<pb facs="00058557_0010"/><lb/>
-i?<lb/>
10<lb/>
Tuesday, September 12, 1995<lb/>
The East Carolinian<lb/>
PIRATES from page 8<lb/>
Beginning the fourth quarter, ECU<lb/>
took a seven play 80-yard drive in for<lb/>
the go ahead touchdown. Crandell hit<lb/>
McPhail underneath the SU coverage<lb/>
where the halfback ran unscathed into<lb/>
the end zone for the 14 yard score.<lb/>
"AH the Carolina schools are big<lb/>
time football programs, including East<lb/>
Carolina Logan said.<lb/>
With time winding down and sev-<lb/>
eral opportunities for the Orangemen<lb/>
to get back into the ball game, ECU<lb/>
nearly lost the momentum they would<lb/>
need to devastate the Orange. Two<lb/>
drives halted by Crandell interceptions,<lb/>
had even the biggest Pirate fan skepti-<lb/>
cal.<lb/>
But with the final Syracuse series<lb/>
stifled as McNabb was flushed out of<lb/>
the pocket in a fourth and 14 situation<lb/>
and converged on by nose guaai Walter<lb/>
Scott and defensive end Lorenzo West<lb/>
as he was releasing the ball, ECU fans<lb/>
and players alike were elated with the<lb/>
resounding conclusion and imminent<lb/>
victory.<lb/>
Looking like an episode of the<lb/>
"Rifleman Marcus Crandell set a ca-<lb/>
reer high 59 passing attempts for 392<lb/>
yards eclipsing the former ECU records.<lb/>
Not only did he pick apart the SU sec-<lb/>
ondary in the second half, hut Crandell<lb/>
also scampered through the middle of<lb/>
the Orange offense for a career setting<lb/>
61 yards.<lb/>
"Crandell really killed us with his<lb/>
FREE PREGNANCY TEST<lb/>
while you wait<lb/>
Free &amp; Confidential<lb/>
Services &amp; Counseling<lb/>
Carolina Pregnancy Center<lb/>
209-B S.Evans St<lb/>
Pittman Building<lb/>
Greenville NC<lb/>
757-0003<lb/>
Hours:<lb/>
Mondav - Friday<lb/>
8:00-4:00<lb/>
runs Syracuse linebacker Nate<lb/>
Hemsley said. "We had to maintain our<lb/>
coverage, and then we would look up<lb/>
bo see him sliding for the first down<lb/>
For those of you who made the trip<lb/>
north to support the Pirates, you will<lb/>
know that the weekend was hampered<lb/>
with mostly cloudy skys and rain. How-<lb/>
ever, as the Pirates departed the Syra-<lb/>
cuse airport for the trip back to<lb/>
Greenville, the sun peeked through the<lb/>
clouds on the western horizon. For<lb/>
coach Logan and the 95 Pirates,<lb/>
brighter skys lie ahead.<lb/>
Friends of Sheppard Memorial Library<lb/>
BOOK SALE<lb/>
Thursday, Sept. 14, 6-8 p.m.<lb/>
(Preview Sale for Friends only)<lb/>
Friday, Sept. 15, 9 a.m8 p.m.<lb/>
Saturday, Sept. 16, 9 a.m6 p.m.<lb/>
Sunday, Sept. 17, 1 p.m5 p.m.<lb/>
(Bag Day?$4 per grocery bag of books)<lb/>
Willis Bldg 1 st &amp; Reade Sts.<lb/>
Providing Adult &amp; Pediatric Care ? Women's Health ?X-Rays and Lab ? Physicals'<lb/>
Pregnancy Testing Flu and Tetanus Vaccinations ? Drug Testing ? Occupational<lb/>
Health &amp; Workers' Compensation Needs <lb/>
PartkJpatinQ With:<lb/>
Principal<lb/>
Provident<lb/>
PHP<lb/>
gQg 507 E. 14th Street, Greenville, NC 830-2900<lb/>
DOCTOR'S<lb/>
rZMM2<lb/>
CENTRE<lb/>
Now<lb/>
Open<lb/>
Mon-Fri 8am - 8pm, Sat 9am - 4pm<lb/>
Special discounts with student I.D.<lb/>
All Major Credit Cards and Personal Checks Accepted<lb/>
ECU<lb/>
Co-Ed Water Ski Club<lb/>
Meeting every Tuesday at 9:00 p.m.<lb/>
in Mendenhall room 14<lb/>
For more information call Kenny at 754-2892,<lb/>
Cyndi at 758-9755, or look for the display in<lb/>
front of Student Stores on September 12 &amp; 13.<lb/>
NO EXPERIENCE NECESSARY ? EQUIPMENT PROVIDED<lb/>
THE WATER SKI CLUB IS SPONSORED BY THE DEPARTMENT OF RECREATIONAL SERVICES<lb/>
Experience<lb/>
the<lb/>
Brotherhood<lb/>
September<lb/>
12-14<lb/>
8-11 p.m.<lb/>
rMjH<lb/>
312 CAST 11th Street<lb/>
758-6969<lb/>
-?<lb/>
<lb/>
-<lb/>
<pb facs="00058557_0011"/><lb/>
11<lb/>
Tuesday, September 12,1995 The East Carolinian<lb/>
m<lb/>
Help<lb/>
Wanted<lb/>
For Sale<lb/>
?1 and 2 Bedrooms<lb/>
AZALEA CARDENS<lb/>
Clean and Quiet, one bedroom<lb/>
furnished apartments. $250 per<lb/>
month, 6 month lease.<lb/>
ALSO<lb/>
UNIVERSITY APARTMENTS<lb/>
2899-2901 East 5th Street<lb/>
?Located near ECU<lb/>
?ECU Bus Service<lb/>
?On-Site Laundry<lb/>
"Special Student Leases"<lb/>
also MOBILE HOME RENTALS<lb/>
I.T. or Tommy Willams<lb/>
756-781 S758-7436<lb/>
RINGGOLD TOWERS<lb/>
Now Taking Leases for<lb/>
1 bedroom, 2 bedroom &amp;<lb/>
Efficiency Apartments.<lb/>
CALL 752-2865<lb/>
HOUSE FOR RENT; Excellent neighbor-<lb/>
hood with in walking distance to ECU.<lb/>
Ideal for facultv member. Corner lot with<lb/>
large yard. Central air, two bedroom, one<lb/>
bath. Living room, dining room, knotty<lb/>
pine den, eat in kitchen. Dishwasher,<lb/>
washer, dryer. Completely renovated with<lb/>
white walls and trim. Two car carport with<lb/>
large storage area. Call D. G. Nichols 752-<lb/>
4012.<lb/>
FREE RENT HALF OF SEPTEMBER:<lb/>
WESLEY COMMONS, 1 &amp; 2 Bedroom,<lb/>
Range, Refrigerator, Washer &amp; Dryer<lb/>
Hookups, Decks &amp; Patios in most units,<lb/>
Laundry Facility, Sand Volleyball Court<lb/>
Located 5 blocks from campus. FREE<lb/>
WATER &amp; SEWER. WYNDHAM<lb/>
COURT: 2 Bedrooms, StoveRefrigera-<lb/>
torDishwasherWasher &amp; Dryer Hook-<lb/>
upsPatios on first floor. Located 5 blocks<lb/>
from campus. These and Ot her fine prop-<lb/>
erties Managed by Pitt Proper ty Manage-<lb/>
ment, 108 A Brownlea Dr, 758-1921<lb/>
ROOMMATE WANTED: 3 Br. 2 12 bath<lb/>
FULLY FURNISHED Apt, 1 block from<lb/>
campus on Woodlawn Ave. Rent - 200 mo.<lb/>
 utilities. Call ASAP 757-1313-Home, 355-<lb/>
7833-Work, Ask for Chris or Brandon.<lb/>
UNDER NEW MANAGEMENT. One bed-<lb/>
room Apt located on RiverWuff Rd. New<lb/>
Carpet and Cabinets. Call POTAMAC<lb/>
PROPERTIES at 752-9722. No pets.<lb/>
TWO BEDROOM, TWO BATH duplex<lb/>
Wyndham Circle. For rent immediately!<lb/>
Please call 757-1984.<lb/>
ROOMMATE WANTED: 2br. 112 bath<lb/>
townhouse. Rent $215,12 dep 12 ut ili-<lb/>
ties. Free cable. Smoker. Call Joy 8300601<lb/>
anytime.<lb/>
NONSMOKING ROOMMATE NEEDED<lb/>
to share two bedroom, 12 utilities, and<lb/>
12 rent Three blocks from campus. Avail-<lb/>
able ASAP. Please call 7524912.<lb/>
JR. SR. OR GRAD STUDENT ROOM-<lb/>
MATE NEEDED: 6 blocks from campus,<lb/>
own room. Rent $112mo, WasherDryer,<lb/>
utilities, phone &amp; cable: 13. Call 758-<lb/>
7531.<lb/>
ROOMMATE WANTED FOR TWO BED<lb/>
ROOM APARTMENT IN OLD HOUSE. 1<lb/>
BLOCK FROM SCHOOL $175.0012<lb/>
UTILITIES. MALE OR FEMALE. CALL<lb/>
752-6491.<lb/>
486-SX25 WITH 14" SVGA MONITOR,<lb/>
4MB200MB, CD-Rom. 3.5 and 5.25<lb/>
drives, scanner, Fax,7 Modem, speakers.<lb/>
Includes Win 3.1, DOS 6.0, L otus 123 R.4,<lb/>
Wordstar 7.0, lots of Games. $950 neg.<lb/>
Call Richard at 752-5605.<lb/>
IBM COMPATIBLE 486DX33 4MB Ram<lb/>
245MB HD CD-ROM 3.5" 514" Disk<lb/>
drives SVGA monitor amplified speakers<lb/>
Canon BJ-200 printer good sftware desk<lb/>
and printer stand included $1500 758-<lb/>
2159.<lb/>
QUEEN SIZE WATERBED with linens,<lb/>
washer and dryer, vacuum cleaner, sec-<lb/>
tional couch, microwave, dresser. 746-<lb/>
4426- leave message.<lb/>
FOR SALE: 12-string guitar. Oscar<lb/>
Schmidt $200 firm. Also beginner banjo<lb/>
with case $100. Call Bruce at 7583582<lb/>
after 6pm.<lb/>
rtRLL 486-DX66 with Monitor, mouse,<lb/>
keyboard 3.5 drive wtwo expansion slots.<lb/>
Installed Win 3.1, DOS 6.2, Word Perfect<lb/>
MS EXCEL $1200 neg. Call Shawn 931-<lb/>
0940 leave message.<lb/>
ATTENTION COLLEGE STUDENTS<lb/>
Peel N' Stick Return Mailing Labels Avail-<lb/>
able. Choose from over 200 full color<lb/>
graphics. 300 only $4.95. 600 only $6.95.<lb/>
Call for FREE SAMPLES. 1-800-662-5984<lb/>
Ext 2<lb/>
CAR RADIO, KENWOOD, radio and cas-<lb/>
sette receiver. Orig. $189.00 Now $100.00.<lb/>
4 months old. Call 752-3900 Ask for Guy.<lb/>
f<lb/>
? Help<lb/>
11 Wanted<lb/>
if<lb/>
Help<lb/>
Wanted<lb/>
For Sale <lb/>
WANTED TO BUY! Mountain Bike Cood<lb/>
condition, no dog brands or stolen bikes<lb/>
please. Will spend up to $125 call 321-<lb/>
1634.<lb/>
BRASS BED, QUEEN SIZE w, Deluxe<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 Turndle,<lb/>
in box, never used. Cost 700; 325.00 cash.<lb/>
(919) 637-2645.<lb/>
1985 HONDA MAGNA V45 700cc,<lb/>
Burgandy, Shaftdrive, OD, Water cooled,<lb/>
Highway pegs, Saddlebags, Helmet.<lb/>
Smooth riding bike. Call Patrick or leave<lb/>
message at 321-6526.<lb/>
FOR SALE: Double-Tube Rear Bumper,<lb/>
fits any Ford Bronco II or Ranger, excel-<lb/>
lent condition, $75. 19" color TV wre-<lb/>
mote, $100. 100 wool Rug, like new,<lb/>
clean, $40. Call 551-6754.<lb/>
SLEEPING BAGS. $25 each. Straight<lb/>
from the manufacturer. Several styles<lb/>
available. Nylon, Cotton and Flannel fab-<lb/>
ric choices. 15 degrees to 40 degrees com-<lb/>
fort zone. Call Bob 3288935.<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 330-4550.<lb/>
GYMNASTICS TEACHERS WANTED<lb/>
Experienced males and females -for local<lb/>
Gym School - Good pay - Call Darlene at<lb/>
321-7264.<lb/>
NEED EXTRA $? Help sell pretzels at<lb/>
ECU Home Football Games. Call Kim at<lb/>
321-7539 for more information.<lb/>
NEEDED IMMEDIATELY: Student to<lb/>
drive 14yo girl to and from school. Must<lb/>
be prompt Monday-Friday. Perfer some-<lb/>
one active in Christian Campus Ministry.<lb/>
References. Call Susan 758-5345(no later<lb/>
than 8:30pm)<lb/>
BABYSITTER NEEDED for 2 year old.<lb/>
MWF 8:30-l:30pm. Mature, responsible,<lb/>
dependable, references, please call 756-<lb/>
8262.<lb/>
Career Fair<lb/>
September 19, 1995<lb/>
i<lb/>
OLDE, Americas Full Service Discount BrokerSM, is<lb/>
looking for motivated people to establish a career<lb/>
in the stock brokerage business.<lb/>
OLDE offers:<lb/>
4-12 month paid training program<lb/>
Potential six-figure income<lb/>
Excellent benefits<lb/>
If you possess excellent communication skills,<lb/>
general market knowledge and the desire to excel,<lb/>
see us at the Career Fair on September 19, 1995.<lb/>
If you are unable to attend the Career Fair call:<lb/>
1 800 937-0606<lb/>
or send resume to:<lb/>
OLDE Discount Stockbrokers<lb/>
National Recruiting<lb/>
751 Griswold Street<lb/>
Detroit, MI 48226<lb/>
jrfOLDE<lb/>
DISCOUNT STOCKBROKERS<lb/>
Member NYSE and SIPC<lb/>
fit<lb/>
DEPENDABLE, ENERGENTIC PER-<lb/>
SON wanted one day every other week-<lb/>
end to babysit three young children. Please<lb/>
call 7584454.<lb/>
QUALIFIED, RESPONSIBLE, AFFEC-<lb/>
TIONATE SITTER NEEDED for two<lb/>
children (ages 2 12 &amp; 9 mos.) on Wednes-<lb/>
day or Friday mornings 7am-Noon, non-<lb/>
smoker, references required. Call 830-<lb/>
0316.<lb/>
TREE FARM NEEDS bright good sense<lb/>
of humor, hardworking, honest responsible<lb/>
and non-smoking underclassman with<lb/>
lawnmowing or landscaping experience.<lb/>
Good pay, the outdoors and needs t rans-<lb/>
portation. Call for interview 758-6656<lb/>
between the hours of 10:00am to 8:00pm.<lb/>
LOOKING FOR A PART TIME POSI-<lb/>
TION that works with your hectic sched-<lb/>
ule? Brody's is accepting applications for<lb/>
part time positions. We otter a mercnan-<lb/>
dise discount on the new fall arrivals plus<lb/>
flexible scheduling options to fit the "early<lb/>
birds" or "night owls 10am-2pm, 12pm-<lb/>
9pm, or 6pm-9pm. (Retail positions include<lb/>
weekend hours.) Applicat ions accepted by<lb/>
store manager each Tuesday from l-6pm,<lb/>
Body's, The Plaza or Carloina East Mall.<lb/>
SZECHUAN GARDEN - 909 S. Evans St<lb/>
Experienced wait staff and cashier needed.<lb/>
No phone calls please. Apply in person<lb/>
between 2:00pm and 6:00pm.<lb/>
JOB AVAILABLE to help with lifting fur-<lb/>
niture and inputing computer inventory.<lb/>
Must have computer experience. Call 931-<lb/>
6904 and leave a message.<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/>
EARN $2500 &amp; FREE SPRING BREAK<lb/>
TRIPS! Sell 8 Trips &amp; Go Free! Best Trips<lb/>
&amp; Prices! Bahamas. Cancun, Jamaica.<lb/>
Florida! Spring Break Travel! 1-800-678-<lb/>
6386<lb/>
SPRING BREAK! TRAVEL FREE with<lb/>
SunSplash Tours. Highest commissions<lb/>
paid, at lowest prices. Campus Represen-<lb/>
tatives wanted to Sell reliable tours. Ja-<lb/>
maica, Cancun, Bahamas, Daytona,<lb/>
Panama City and Padre. 1-800426-7710.<lb/>
INTERNSHIP - POSITIONS OPEN for<lb/>
students who want to earn money while<lb/>
they learn. Five positions available for Fall<lb/>
Semester. Call 355-7700 and ask for<lb/>
Bonnie or Cassie.<lb/>
PHOTOGRAPHERS WANTED: Bring<lb/>
your outgoing personality, transportation,<lb/>
and 35mm SLR camera and become one<lb/>
of our professional photographers. No<lb/>
experience necessary; we train. Good pay,<lb/>
flexible PT hours Call 1-800-722-7033 M-<lb/>
F 12-5pm.<lb/>
ITS FUN AND EASY making Extra Cash<lb/>
and selling your own hours, selling T-<lb/>
Shirts. Call 931-1192 for info.<lb/>
ATTENTION LADIES: Greenville's Old-<lb/>
est and Largest Escort Service is now hir-<lb/>
ing due to our expanding Business. Ear n<lb/>
up to $1,500 plus per week, Escorting in<lb/>
the Greenville and surrounding areas. You<lb/>
must be at least 18 years of age, Have own<lb/>
phone and transportation. We are also<lb/>
hiring Male and Female Dancers for Pri-<lb/>
vate Parties. Call Diamond Escorts Inc.<lb/>
at 758-0896 or Emerald City Escorts at<lb/>
757-3477 for an Interview. Est 1990.<lb/>
TRAVEL ABROAD AND WORK Make<lb/>
up to $25-45hr. teaching basic conv ersa-<lb/>
tional English in Japan, Taiwan, or S.<lb/>
Korea. No teaching background or Asian<lb/>
Languages required. For information call:<lb/>
(206) 632-1146 extJ53621.<lb/>
NATIONAL PARKS HIRING Seasonal<lb/>
&amp; full-time employment at National Parks,<lb/>
Forests &amp; Wildlife Preserves. Benefits ?<lb/>
bonsuses! Call: 1-206-545-4804 ext.<lb/>
N53621.<lb/>
ALASKA EMPLOYMENT - Students<lb/>
Needed! Fishing Industry. Earn up to<lb/>
$3,000-$6,0O0 per month. Room and<lb/>
Board! Transportation! Male or Female.<lb/>
No experience necessary. Call (206) 545-<lb/>
4155 ext A53621.<lb/>
CRUISE SHIPS NOW HIRING Earn up<lb/>
to $2,000month working on Cruise<lb/>
Ships or Land-Tour companies. World<lb/>
Travel. Seasonal &amp; full-time employment<lb/>
available. No experience necessary, for<lb/>
more information call 1-20&amp;6344468 ext<lb/>
C53621.<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/>
$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/>
Services<lb/>
Offered<lb/>
<lb/>
Greek<lb/>
Personals<lb/>
NEED HELP ON GETTING THOSE<lb/>
PAPERS TYPED? Affordable Rates.<lb/>
Call Glenda today - 758-7653.<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/>
THE PARTY IS ON! YOUR PARTY ain't<lb/>
thump'n until MMP is pump'n. Mobile<lb/>
Music Productions is "the" disc jockey<lb/>
service for your party or social function.<lb/>
Widest variety of any disc jockey company<lb/>
in Greenville. Specializing in the needs of<lb/>
ECU Organizations and Greeks. Book a<lb/>
Show Now and get a FREE Keg at<lb/>
Graffiti's. Dates are filling fast so call<lb/>
early. Ask for Lee 7584644.<lb/>
FREE FINANCIAL AID! Over $6 Billion<lb/>
in private sector grants &amp; scholarships is<lb/>
now available. All students are eligible<lb/>
regardless of grades, income, or parent's<lb/>
income. Let us help. Call Student Finan-<lb/>
cial Services: 1-800-263-6495 ext F53621.<lb/>
Personals<lb/>
DAVID ? IT IS FRIDAY BEFORE YOU<lb/>
LEAVE FOR TWO WEEKS AND I AL-<lb/>
READY MISS YOU.<lb/>
LOVE DEB.<lb/>
5)ogg<lb/>
Find it in our classifieds.<lb/>
Only $2 for 25 words<lb/>
with a valid student I.D.<lb/>
&amp;Wr<lb/>
ANNOU<lb/>
"GREEKS OF THE WEEK " are all of the<lb/>
sorority rush directors. You are the rea-<lb/>
son our Rush 95 was so successful! A<lb/>
special thanks to: Kara Buttermore, Lisa<lb/>
Car wile, Ashley MacA lexander, Kathy<lb/>
Molnar, Alicia Nisbett, Christy Rogers,<lb/>
Jessica Theobald and Amy Williams!<lb/>
THE BROTHERS OF PI LAMBDA PHI<lb/>
invite all interested men to RUSH, no<lb/>
matter status or race. Break away from<lb/>
the Stereotypical Fraternity. Not Four<lb/>
years but a Lifetime.<lb/>
PI DELTA would like to wish all sorori-<lb/>
ties and fraternities good luck with fail<lb/>
rush.<lb/>
PI DELTA will be having fass rush Sept<lb/>
25th-28th. For more information on loca-<lb/>
tions and time please call Kerri at 758-<lb/>
9902.<lb/>
WE LOVE OUR NEW MEMBERS! Love<lb/>
the Sigmas<lb/>
TO ALL THE GIRLS who received bids<lb/>
from SIGMA SIGMA SIGMA, you'll real-<lb/>
ize today you've made one of the best<lb/>
descisions of your life. Get excited for bid<lb/>
day at 4:00. We can't wait!<lb/>
PIKA'S: It was the year of 94 and it was<lb/>
parents weekend for sure. The pig was<lb/>
roasting while we were all toasting. By the<lb/>
end of the game we weren't sure if we<lb/>
won or we lost All we know is we paid a<lb/>
cost Well pika's its now a tradition and<lb/>
the new year is 95, by the end of the<lb/>
game Central Michigan will be lucky to<lb/>
be alive. We will see you and your parents<lb/>
Saturday so make sure your all ready to<lb/>
play! Memorus to be or no memory. Lav?<lb/>
the Sigma<lb/>
KAPPA ALPHA: thank you for the pre-<lb/>
downtown last Thursday. Hope we can do<lb/>
it again some time. Love Chi Omega<lb/>
CONGRATULATIONS to all the new<lb/>
members and panhellenic sororities on Bid<lb/>
Day. Have a great year! Love Chi Omega.<lb/>
THE SISTERS OF DELTA ZETA would<lb/>
like to welcome Heather Brown. We are<lb/>
thrilled to have you affiliate with us!<lb/>
ALL RUSHEES get psyched for tonight!<lb/>
It's Bid Day and DELTA ZETA congratu-<lb/>
lates you!<lb/>
EHTS<lb/>
An Equal Opportunity Employer I<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 8304551.<lb/>
THE GREENVILLE-PITT COUNTY<lb/>
SPECIAL OLYMPICS<lb/>
Is hiring on aquatics supervisor who will<lb/>
be responsible for coordinating the Spe-<lb/>
cial Olympics swimming program. Special<lb/>
Olympics training sessions wil begin in<lb/>
October and be held on Monday evenings<lb/>
7:30-8:30pm and on Wednesdays from<lb/>
7:00-9:00pm. Applicants should have a<lb/>
strong aquatics background and be will-<lb/>
ing to work with volunteers and handi-<lb/>
capped individuals. $5.00hour. Please<lb/>
call Connie or Dwain at 8304551 or 4541.<lb/>
WRITING REQUIREMENT FOR<lb/>
GRADUATION<lb/>
Remember that if you entered East Caro-<lb/>
lina University as a first year-student in<lb/>
or after Fall 1993 or as a transfer student<lb/>
in Fall 1995, you need 12 hours of writ-<lb/>
ing-intensive courses to graduate. To meet<lb/>
the requirement complete ENGL 1100,<lb/>
ENGL 1200, at least three hours of writ-<lb/>
ing-intensive courses work in your major,<lb/>
and any other 3-hour writing-intensive<lb/>
course. Check depar tmental Schedules for<lb/>
writing-intensive courses in your major.<lb/>
SOCIAL WORKCRIMINAL<lb/>
JUSTICE<lb/>
Mar. 20-Aug. 3 1995 Qualified Applicants.<lb/>
Qualified Applicants for the S.W. and CJ.<lb/>
majors are reminded to attend an Admis-<lb/>
sions Group meeting in Rawl 130 on<lb/>
Thursday, September 14,1995 at 4:30pm.<lb/>
Qualified applicants must attend the meet-<lb/>
ing.<lb/>
SOCIAL WORK CRIMINAL JUSTICE<lb/>
ALLIANCE<lb/>
Meeting TODAY at 4pm, 218A Ragsdale.<lb/>
All SWCJ majors and expected majors<lb/>
invited! Help plan picnics, homecoming,<lb/>
elect officers, and volunteer.<lb/>
BOOK SALEFRIENDS OF<lb/>
SHEPPARD LIBRARY<lb/>
5th Annual Book Sale, September 15,16,<lb/>
17. Willis Building 1st and Reade Street<lb/>
Greenville. Great assortment at" titles.<lb/>
Hours: Friday: 9am to 8PM. Saturday: 9am<lb/>
to 6pm. Sunday: 1pm to 5pm. Sunday bag<lb/>
sale $4.00 a grocery sack.<lb/>
PPHA - PRE-PROFESSIONAL<lb/>
HEALTH ALLIANCE<lb/>
We invite you to our first meeting of the<lb/>
new year. On Wednesday September 13,<lb/>
1995. at 7:00pm in the Howell Complex<lb/>
Room N-109.<lb/>
WOMEN'S LACROSSE CLUB<lb/>
Women's Lacrosse Club meeting Septem-<lb/>
ber 14, 1995 at 8:00pm in Chr istenbury<lb/>
Room 102. All interested players please<lb/>
attend.<lb/>
EAST CAROLINA NATIVE<lb/>
AMERICAN ORGANIZATION<lb/>
The first meeting of ECNAO for the Fall<lb/>
semester will be held on Wednesday, Sept<lb/>
13 at 7pm in Mendenhall Room 212. All<lb/>
old members &amp; prospective new members<lb/>
are encouraged to attend. If you have any<lb/>
questions, please call Nikki Epps at 752-<lb/>
9042, Belinda Jacobs at 756-7013, or come<lb/>
by our table at "Get a Clue on Life We're<lb/>
planning a great year, so come &amp; join us!<lb/>
psicm<lb/>
Are you a Psychology Major with a 3.0?<lb/>
Join Psi Chi, National Psychology Honor<lb/>
Society. An interest meeting will be held<lb/>
Wednesday, Sept 13th at 4:30 in the Psi<lb/>
Chi Library (Rawl 302).<lb/>
UNIVERSITY FOLK AND COUNTRY<lb/>
DANCE CLUB<lb/>
First meeting and Dan ce of the year! Live,<lb/>
Old-Time Music. Sat, Sept. 167:30pm-<lb/>
10:30pm, at Baptist Student Union. FREE!<lb/>
Come alone or Bring A Friend.<lb/>
ATTENTION ALL EDUCATION MAJORS!<lb/>
Want to join a professional organization<lb/>
that can really five you an edge? Join<lb/>
SNCAE (Student Program of Nor th Caro-<lb/>
lina Association of Educators). Member-<lb/>
ship is open to all educat ion majors. The<lb/>
first meeting of the semester will be Thurs-<lb/>
day, September 14 at 4:30pm in Speight<lb/>
308.<lb/>
B-CLAD<lb/>
B-GLAD (Bisexuals, Gays, Lesbians &amp; Al-<lb/>
lies for Diversity) will hold its first meet-<lb/>
ing of the semester tonight at 730pm in<lb/>
Room 221, Mendenhall Student Center<lb/>
(2nd floor). B-GLAD is open to all stu-<lb/>
dents, faculty, and staff of ECU regard-<lb/>
less of affectional orientation.<lb/>
SOCIETY FOR ADVANCEMENT OF<lb/>
MANAGEMENT<lb/>
Attention all SAM members - The SAM<lb/>
Speaker Series begins today with Ms.<lb/>
Margie Swartout from Career Services at<lb/>
3:30 in 1022 GCB. Topic: How to prepare<lb/>
for Career Day.<lb/>
EAST CAROLINA FRIENDS<lb/>
East Carolina Friends is beginning its<lb/>
tenth year of continous operation. Volun-<lb/>
teers are now being recruited to operate<lb/>
as big brotyhers or big sisters in the Pitt<lb/>
County School System. We will be in front<lb/>
of Student Stores Sept 12 &amp; 13 and will<lb/>
be having interest meetings in Brewester<lb/>
B 305 at 7:00pm the same nights. For<lb/>
more info call Dan Davidan at 355-8823<lb/>
or Jean Picarelli at 752-6312.<lb/>
ECU INVESTMENTS CLUB<lb/>
Join us today at 5:00pm in room 3009.<lb/>
The club is open to all majors. If y ou be-<lb/>
come a member you'll have the opportu-<lb/>
nity to learn how to invest correctly, get<lb/>
hands-on exper ience managing a real port-<lb/>
folio, meet with professional managers to<lb/>
see how they invest and travel to Wash-<lb/>
ington, DC to visit mutual fund families.<lb/>
There will be pizza and refreshments, so<lb/>
come hungry!<lb/>
FBI SIGMA PI<lb/>
Attention: Students with a 3.3 GPA and<lb/>
at least 32 to credit hours. Rhi Sigma<lb/>
Pi requests your presence at an informa-<lb/>
tional smoker on Tuesday, September 12,<lb/>
1995 at 7 o'clock in GCB 1028. Dress is<lb/>
casual (men - dress pantsshirt &amp; tie,<lb/>
women - Sunday attire). If you want more<lb/>
information or can not attend call Jason<lb/>
Painter at 758-7077.<lb/>
ADULT STUDENTS<lb/>
If you are a continuing adult student we<lb/>
need your help in establishing a peer men-<lb/>
tor program for the new adult students<lb/>
who have just enrolled. This is your op-<lb/>
portunity to help someone get through<lb/>
that initial per iod of adjustment and make<lb/>
a new friend at the same time. If you are<lb/>
interested in being a mentor to an enter-<lb/>
ing adult student, please come by the<lb/>
Adult Student Services Office, 211<lb/>
Whichard Building.<lb/>
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